This month Leon would turn sixteen years old. That meant a lot of things were about to happen, and they were about to happen very quickly.
Leon had lived at Academy 119 since he was three years old, when his parents died of the infection that had somehow spared his own life. Most of the kids here shared a similar story. Parents, often in search of the basic necessities, ventured out into a world that was growing more dangerous with every passing day. They were either murdered at the claws of a feral Pokémon or left alive long enough to die of a Pokérus infection - an incredibly excruciating process. This left behind hundreds of orphaned children, far too young to care for themselves.
Leon didn't remember much from before the Academy. But he did remember his rescue by the heavily armored members of TAP - the Taskforce Against Pokérus. It was dark, and he had been sleeping. Suddenly there was a commotion outside his door, and he could swear he remembered-
He could swear -
He heard a woman scream. His mother scream.
But the counselors at the Academy assured him it was a false memory, conjured in place of the reality his brain did not want to accept. His parents were dead, and he was all alone in this world.
Alone, but not without purpose. TAP had rescued him for a greater cause.
Academy 119 was housed in what used to be the old Weather Institute on Route 119 in Hoenn. The building was quickly abandoned when everything went south in the original Pokérus outbreak, forty-something years ago. Long enough ago that Leon didn't know any other world than this. But the building was sound and it was a good size, and the scientific instruments that had been left behind were repurposed for all kinds of missions. About a hundred students lived here, packed into small living spaces in one wing of the Institute where they shared space four to a room. Twenty support staff, adults of all ages, taught classes and administered discipline, raising these children into soldiers for one endgame: the eradication of the virus and the return of a peaceful lifestyle between Pokémon and humans.
Somewhere out in the forest, a few humans still lived. The few Breeders left with an immunity to Pokérus. They raised teams of Pokémon for the Academy's use, allowing young trainers to remotely control their teams in order to explore the surrounding area and capture any Pokémon they could find. These Pokémon were then transferred to Kanto where most of the research on the virus was being conducted. What exactly happened to the Pokémon there, Leon was unsure. The teachers at the Academy were vague in their responses. But the general idea was to cure the Pokémon of the virus that at some point had mutated to become deadly to humans and then release them back into the wild.
The scientists in Kanto must be having some success with that program, Leon thought, because every once in a while they would get in a huge shipment of recycled Pokéballs to the Academy, ready to be used again.
"LS! Over here!"
Leon looked up as his nicknamed was called - his initials, really - and took his tray from the cafeteria line to sit at a table with a handful of trainers a few years younger. He already knew what they were going to ask him.
"Are you scared?" One boy asked, leaning over the table intently.
He gave a lopsided smile. "Scared? Scared of what?" he asked incredulously, tearing a roll in half and dipping it in a puddle of gravy. Leon was well-mannered, polite, and friendly. He got along well with just about anyone, but he wasn't particularly interested in making friends. He was focused on his training; focused on graduation.
Not every student that graduated the Academy was allowed into TAP. Only the best of the best were sent to the Taskforce where they operated real missions in the real world with their real Pokémon. Doing things like saving orphaned children from dying alone in a hostile world. They donned the armor and fought the most vicious fight humanity had faced since the dawn of their species.
TAP had been Leon's dream since as far back as he could remember. So he remained focused on his training and fought hard to be the best, but it was a struggle. He wasn't the only student at the Academy who wanted one of those coveted top slots at graduation that would assure them a place in TAP.
He had a 100% catch rate in the sims, which translated to about a 94% in the real world where you had to deal with things that the computers couldn't compensate for. Despite this Leon often came in second place during missions, focusing more on accuracy than on quantity. But catching Pokémon was the name of the game, as many and as often as possible. So his instructors usually had a few words for him after a sim or mission.
The students around him continued to chatter, regurgitating rumors of what it was like to graduate and the transition to TAP. Not much was known about the organization, really. Everything was Top Secret and even if the instructors here at the Academy knew anything about it, they sure weren't telling. But every once in a while they would get a visit from one of the TAP soldiers. Their helmet with the luminous yellow eyes tucked under their arm, hair plastered to their head with sweat, deep gouges in their armor from what could only be assumed as violent battles with feral Pokémon... they were badass.
Leon had lived at Academy 119 since he was three years old, when his parents died of the infection that had somehow spared his own life. Most of the kids here shared a similar story. Parents, often in search of the basic necessities, ventured out into a world that was growing more dangerous with every passing day. They were either murdered at the claws of a feral Pokémon or left alive long enough to die of a Pokérus infection - an incredibly excruciating process. This left behind hundreds of orphaned children, far too young to care for themselves.
Leon didn't remember much from before the Academy. But he did remember his rescue by the heavily armored members of TAP - the Taskforce Against Pokérus. It was dark, and he had been sleeping. Suddenly there was a commotion outside his door, and he could swear he remembered-
He could swear -
He heard a woman scream. His mother scream.
But the counselors at the Academy assured him it was a false memory, conjured in place of the reality his brain did not want to accept. His parents were dead, and he was all alone in this world.
Alone, but not without purpose. TAP had rescued him for a greater cause.
Academy 119 was housed in what used to be the old Weather Institute on Route 119 in Hoenn. The building was quickly abandoned when everything went south in the original Pokérus outbreak, forty-something years ago. Long enough ago that Leon didn't know any other world than this. But the building was sound and it was a good size, and the scientific instruments that had been left behind were repurposed for all kinds of missions. About a hundred students lived here, packed into small living spaces in one wing of the Institute where they shared space four to a room. Twenty support staff, adults of all ages, taught classes and administered discipline, raising these children into soldiers for one endgame: the eradication of the virus and the return of a peaceful lifestyle between Pokémon and humans.
Somewhere out in the forest, a few humans still lived. The few Breeders left with an immunity to Pokérus. They raised teams of Pokémon for the Academy's use, allowing young trainers to remotely control their teams in order to explore the surrounding area and capture any Pokémon they could find. These Pokémon were then transferred to Kanto where most of the research on the virus was being conducted. What exactly happened to the Pokémon there, Leon was unsure. The teachers at the Academy were vague in their responses. But the general idea was to cure the Pokémon of the virus that at some point had mutated to become deadly to humans and then release them back into the wild.
The scientists in Kanto must be having some success with that program, Leon thought, because every once in a while they would get in a huge shipment of recycled Pokéballs to the Academy, ready to be used again.
"LS! Over here!"
Leon looked up as his nicknamed was called - his initials, really - and took his tray from the cafeteria line to sit at a table with a handful of trainers a few years younger. He already knew what they were going to ask him.
"Are you scared?" One boy asked, leaning over the table intently.
He gave a lopsided smile. "Scared? Scared of what?" he asked incredulously, tearing a roll in half and dipping it in a puddle of gravy. Leon was well-mannered, polite, and friendly. He got along well with just about anyone, but he wasn't particularly interested in making friends. He was focused on his training; focused on graduation.
Not every student that graduated the Academy was allowed into TAP. Only the best of the best were sent to the Taskforce where they operated real missions in the real world with their real Pokémon. Doing things like saving orphaned children from dying alone in a hostile world. They donned the armor and fought the most vicious fight humanity had faced since the dawn of their species.
TAP had been Leon's dream since as far back as he could remember. So he remained focused on his training and fought hard to be the best, but it was a struggle. He wasn't the only student at the Academy who wanted one of those coveted top slots at graduation that would assure them a place in TAP.
He had a 100% catch rate in the sims, which translated to about a 94% in the real world where you had to deal with things that the computers couldn't compensate for. Despite this Leon often came in second place during missions, focusing more on accuracy than on quantity. But catching Pokémon was the name of the game, as many and as often as possible. So his instructors usually had a few words for him after a sim or mission.
The students around him continued to chatter, regurgitating rumors of what it was like to graduate and the transition to TAP. Not much was known about the organization, really. Everything was Top Secret and even if the instructors here at the Academy knew anything about it, they sure weren't telling. But every once in a while they would get a visit from one of the TAP soldiers. Their helmet with the luminous yellow eyes tucked under their arm, hair plastered to their head with sweat, deep gouges in their armor from what could only be assumed as violent battles with feral Pokémon... they were badass.