The Gate of The Feral Gods - Matt Dinniman
The Gate of The Feral Gods - Matt Dinniman
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DUNGEON CRAWLER CARL BOOK IV
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MATT DINNIMAN
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DANDY HOUSE
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Copyright © 2021 by Matt Dinniman
All rights reserved.
No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means,
including information storage and retrieval systems, without written permission from the author,
except for the use of brief quotations in a book review. Permission will be granted in exchange for
tasteful feet pics or not-so-tasteful boob shots.
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Thanks so much to everybody who has helped make this series something
really special, including all my friends over on Patreon and Royal Road.
Also, extra special thanks to the person who messaged me a random picture
of her (?) foot with no message or explanation. I’ve forwarded them off to
the AI for you.
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Capital punishment means those without the capital get the
punishment.
- EXECUTED PRISONER, JOHN A. SPENKELINK
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CONTENTS
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
Chapter 31
Chapter 32
Chapter 33
Chapter 34
Epilogue
Woohoo!
About the Author
Mailing List! Patreon!
Also by Matt Dinniman
The page where we tout Facebook groups so they let us spam them about this book
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[ 1 ]
Leaderboard rank: 3
Bounty: 800,000 gold
The Toe was a simple, inn-style tavern with a Dromedarian proprietor. The
place smelled like a petting zoo. This inn only employed a single prostitute,
a woman changeling named Juice Box, who sat pouting in the corner after
we all rejected her. In addition to the woman, the Toe also offered alcohol,
food, and a few rooms.
The incoming message was not a regular announcement as we still had
ten more hours until the recap episode. The bar had the traditional three
screens, but the middle screen with the top-10 was empty. A countdown
appeared, indicating it would populate in ten hours after the recap.
Apparently that was a normal thing.
We ordered drinks and food and sat at the table, waiting for the
message. It came quickly.
Hello, Crawlers. Welcome to the fifth floor! We are so very excited
for you to enjoy this new and exciting level! We have just over 178,000
of you joining us. The last floor was somewhat of a mystery, and
finding out how it worked was part of the fun. This floor is a little
different. The layout is not so much a secret, and the rules are pretty
simple. We want you guys to have a great time with this one.
There are over 4,000 castles on this floor. Every castle contains a
single stairwell. No two castles are the same.
Think of a sheet of bubble wrap. Every bubble is its own self-
contained world. Each individual world has four zones or “quadrants.”
There are a total of 1,172 bubbles. All of you are inside of a bubble,
equally and randomly distributed the best we could. That comes to a
little more than 150 crawlers per bubble. Like with the castles, every
bubble is different.
Each bubble is split into four quadrants. Land, Sea, Air, and
Subterranean. Each quadrant has a single castle within. Your mission
is to find the castle, raid it, and take the throne room. Once the throne
room is occupied or the quadrant’s boss is killed, the castle is
considered conquered. The stairwell is also located in the throne room,
so no need to be scrambling around, worried about not being able to
find it. Easy, right? Take the castle, take the stairwell.
“That sounds simple enough,” I said. But it wasn’t simple. If we
couldn’t fly, how the hell could we get up there? It’s not like we could build
a cannon to toss us. We were going to have to build a balloon. Or an
airplane. Or find a way to shoot it down. Something.
But, there is a small hitch. In order for your stairwell to actually
open up and be passable, all four castles in your bubble must first be
taken. That’s right, the Land, Sea, Air, and Subterranean castles must
all fall in order for you to proceed to the sixth floor.
Mordecai groaned.
“Goddamnit,” I said. I exchanged a look with Katia, who looked ill.
Even Donut seemed taken aback.
Luckily for you, once you have taken your own castle, you may
traverse outside of your quadrant to lend a hand to your fellow bubble
buddies. Once all four castles are taken, the bubble is popped, and you
may proceed outside of the bubble area if you wish. You may not enter
other bubbles until they are also popped.
Good luck, folks. Some of these castles are much easier to crack
than others. Also, the second round of sponsorship bidding is
underway. We’ll have another message in a few hours after the regular
recap episode. Now get out there and kill, kill, kill!
We sat in silence for several moments. Mordecai’s feathers around his
neck ruffled and unruffled. He turned to look at us.
“I’m going to assume right now that out of the 150 or so crawlers in this
bubble, every single one of them is an incompetent idiot. That means you
have less than four days to take each castle. So get that food in your
mouths, open all the boxes you’ve accumulated, get your asses to bed, and
then get back out there. We got a lot of work to do.”
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[ 2 ]
T he first thing D onut did was bounce over to the mailbox and grab
her spellbook-of-the-floor club prize as we headed toward our personal
space.
“Maybe it’ll be a flying spell,” Katia muttered.
“We won’t be so lucky,” I said.
We did, however, have three very rich sponsors amongst us, and we
were about to receive three more. I hated, absolutely hated, having to
depend on them for help, but I was at a loss as to what we were going to do.
“What’s the point of being able to leave the bubble if we can’t get into
the other bubbles?” Katia asked.
“Right now we need to focus on that flying castle,” I said.
Imani: Hey, Carl. What’s a backstay?
Carl: In sailing terms? It’s the rigging that runs from the mast to
the back of the boat. There are different kinds.
Elle: There are 20 of us, and not a one of these old farts has ever
sailed a boat. Can you believe that? I told them not to put me into
Meadow Lark. I would’ve been better off in one of the more expensive
old folks homes surrounded by rich old codgers who grew up on boats,
but no. The system is giving us a sailing tutorial, but it doesn’t tell us
where the things are. How are we supposed to pull the boom vang when
we don’t know what it is? This thing is more complicated than those
trains.
Imani: We need to figure this out quickly. There are rocks
everywhere. What’s a spinnaker? Wait. We don’t need that part yet.
Carl: Jesus, you guys need to be careful. Sailing a boat isn’t
something you can figure out on the fly. It takes months.
Imani: We would have an NPC helping us if Elle hadn’t iced him.
Elle: He was being suspicious. We’re on our way back to the island.
If we crash, we crash. There are boats everywhere. We have our pick.
Imani: Not all of us can float, Elle.
Carl: Weren’t you on the island already? You know what, never
mind. Just be careful.
Donut gasped. “Carl, Carl, I got a good one this time!” She glowed as
she read the book.
I took a deep breath. “Donut. We talk about the spellbooks before we
read them. Remember?”
“Unwad your panties, Carl.”
Katia laughed. “You got that from Elle.”
“I know, right? She’s been teaching me sayings from the olden times.”
“That’s not very princess-like,” I grumbled.
“Oh, Carl. Just chillax.”
“That is a good spell,” Mordecai said. “It’s another utility spell, like
Hole.”
“What is it?”
“Astral Paw,” Mordecai said. “Not as good as Astral Hand because
there’s no thumb to manipulate and hold things. But there’s more force to it,
especially at higher levels, and it can be used as a weapon. She can grow
claws on it at level five. At level 10, she can make the paw a lot bigger. At
level 15, her skills and abilities will translate directly to the paw. That’s a
big deal since her regular swipe is pretty strong. There’s a similar spell we
might want to get for you. Astral Fist. Anyway, she can manipulate items at
a distance as if she was physically touching them. Distance grows with
level-up. At level one, it’s about 10 meters.”
I laughed. “Hey, Donut. If we were back home, you’d finally be able to
knock that vase off the high shelf.”
“That thing was a menace, Carl. It was haunted.”
We’d had a high shelf covered with knickknacks and some heirloom
vase thing over the television in our apartment. She’d tried several times to
jump up there, but never got close. Sometimes she’d sit on my lap while I
was playing a game, and she’d stare up at it and start meowing.
We returned to our personal space. Almost two days later, and the
cleaner bot had not yet finished cleaning all the blood. It was almost done.
It was on the couch, sucking away at the back of the cushions when we
entered.
“That thing needs a raise,” I said.
The bot beeped in agreement.
“Open your boxes and then assign your stat points,” Mordecai said.
I sat in the kitchen chair and pulled up the achievements I’d missed. I
had several, including a few really good ones. I did not get any sort of credit
for killing the mimic, though I hadn’t been expecting it. Most of the
achievements revolved around dealing with Grull and tossing the
Nightmare through the portal to blow the soul crystals.
The first two crawlers were a pair of humans who’d set themselves up at a
brothel bar called Spit and Swallow. The bar’s logo was a bird skewered on
a stick. We entered the dark, incense-smelling saferoom. Mongo was in his
carrier. Donut stood on my shoulder. Katia stood beside me. A dromedarian
barkeep looked up at us. Multiple dromedarians were here, sitting at tables
and drinking at the bar. Quiet music wafted through the large, L-shaped
room. I saw it was a young, teenaged changeling playing a stringed
instrument that was like a square-shaped guitar. The music was subtle, but
haunting. It had kind of an Asian vibe. It was completely out-of-place for
such a dive.
The two crawlers were the same guys we saw when we went into the
Toe earlier. The first was a thin and tall man with an angular face, about 25
years old. He had olive skin and looked he might be of middle eastern
origin. He was a level-22 Hammersmith named Firas M. The second was
an overweight, balding guy about the same age. He looked maybe Spanish.
He was a level-22 Pest Exterminator named Louis Santiago 2.
Sitting on Louis’s lap was a prostitute. She was doing a rough
approximation of Jessica Rabbit. Louis and Firas were laughing as we came
in. “This is much better than the slave Leia,” Louis said.
The woman pouted. “You said that was good. What about my….” She
trailed off, seeing us stop at the table.
“They’re making her change into different famous people,” Katia said,
sounding disgusted. They could hear what she was saying, but she spoke as
if they couldn’t.
“Yup,” I said. Each time they would have to describe the character like
they were doing a sketch for a police artist. Their Jessica Rabbit was close,
but the woman’s forehead was too small, and the nose was much too big.
Plus the dress was all wrong.
The prostitute, a level 14 “Human” was looking at Katia up and down
with a sour expression. She spit on the ground before getting up and
moving to the other side of the room.
“Why I never,” Donut said. “Did you see that? I don’t think she likes
you, Katia.”
“Mordecai warned me,” Katia said, watching the prostitute move away.
The woman melded back into the weird, changeling shape before leaning
up against the bar. She was the only prostitute in the room. “He said
sometimes shapeshifters don’t like each other very much.”
“She’s probably just jealous,” Donut said. “You can turn into anything
you want, and they can only do regular monsters they’ve touched.”
“Maybe,” Katia said. “They can still change their features, obviously.
Plus they gain some of the abilities of the race they choose. Sometimes I
think that’s better. I’m never going to be able to fly, not like them.”
We’d discussed this earlier. Katia, as a doppelganger, could change into
a flying creature and possibly get herself off the ground. But even with no
mass added, she weighed more than most flying creatures anywhere close
to her size, making liftoff a problem. She’d have to go big, like a dragon or
something, but that would take a lot of work and time to get right, time we
simply didn’t have. A changeling’s mass changed wildly from body to
body. I asked Mordecai about it, and he said simply, “Magic.”
The two crawlers were just looking up at us, wide-eyed the whole time.
“You’re Carl,” Louis said. He turned to Firas. “I told you that was Carl.”
“I believed you,” he said.
“We’re working on a plan to get off this floor,” I said. “I’m collecting
everybody in town so we can discuss it. We’re all going to meet up at the
Toe after the recap episode.”
“Toe,” Louis said, cracking up. “Get it?” he said to Firas.
“Get what?” Firas asked.
“The joke! The name of the bar is a joke.”
“The Toe is a joke?”
“Yes, man. Come on. It’s a camel town. You wouldn’t call a restaurant
back home the human finger, would you? You’d just call it the finger.”
“What?” Firas said. “I don’t get it.”
I finally realized both of these guys were drunk off their asses. There
was no debuff warning over their heads. I still didn’t understand why it was
there sometimes and not others. The shitfaced debuff only appeared in
specific circumstances, I guessed.
“Look,” I said, leaning in. “We need to all work together. The recap is in
like six hours. Meet us there.”
“Or what?” Louis said, suddenly sounding inexplicably hostile. “You
gonna blow us up?”
“No,” Donut said, jumping on the table and scattering their glasses.
Vodka spilled everywhere. “Carl won’t hurt you. But if you’re not a part of
the team, we are going to make sure you are kicked out of town. Have you
seen the mobs out there in the desert? I haven’t seen anything lower than
level 30. And since you two chuckleheads are level 22, I don’t think that
will go so well. Now say, ‘We’ll be there, Carl.’”
“We’ll be there, Carl,” Louis said, swallowing.
“Lovely,” Donut said.
“Chuckleheads?” Katia asked. “Another Elle term?”
“I got that one from the AI!” she said. “I’ve been waiting to use it.”
“Those guys aren’t going to help,” I said. “They’ve already given up,
and they’re coasting.”
“I want to know how they got this far,” Katia said.
It’d only been dark for two hours, and dawn was already starting to
crack in the distance as we left the Spit and Swallow.
“Hey,” I asked a passing dromedarian who walked with a massive
bundle of reeds on his back. He stopped to look at us impassively.
“Is it only dark for two hours here?”
He looked at me like it was the dumbest question anyone had ever
asked. “Taranis strolls across the sky, chased by his red brother, Hellik, who
catches him four hours before dark. Taranis dismisses his evil brother with
the storm before descending to rest for two hours before it happens again.”
“How long does Taranis take to move across the sky?” Katia asked.
“And how long before Hellik appears?”
“You are truly new to this world, like they say,” the dromedarian said.
“Taranis’s stroll is about twenty-two hours, except in the dark months after
his brother finally catches and betrays him. Hellik is only in the sky for
eight hours a day. You don’t wish to be out there when both are in the sky,
as the heat is unbearable.”
“So there are two suns it sounds like,” Katia said. “How long until the
red sun rises?”
“You have 12 hours,” he said. “But we approach the time of the switch.
In eleven days is the Red Equinox. That is when Taranis will be caught, and
he will be gone for but four hours a day. The light of Hellik will wash the
world for eight hours, but four of them will be the blowing season. Now
leave me be.” He turned and walked off.
“Did you understand that?” I asked Katia.
“I think so,” she said. “Days are 24 hours long like on earth. It’s only
dark for two hours. The storms come every day at four hours before sunset
and last two hours. The second sun is up for eight hours, and it gets really
hot during that time. It sounds like our last three days here will be mostly
dark, and the storms will last twice as long.”
“So, he said we have 12 hours until it gets super hot?” I asked.
“That’s right,” she said. “And we have 18 until the next sandstorm. I
think.”
“It’s already super hot,” Donut complained.
“We better hurry then,” I said. Time was always weird here in the
dungeon. The dungeon timers were mostly based on earth’s 24-hour clock,
but the recap episode and some of the spell cooldowns worked on the
Syndicate Standard day, which was something weird like 30 hours and 17
and a half seconds. It reminded me of having to deal with both metric and
imperial measurements, something I’d had to cope with daily before all of
this.
After Louis and Firas, we found another group of six crawlers in
another bar. These guys were a party of half-elves and humans. They were
all level 21-24, and they all seemed older, mostly in their thirties and
forties. They were all Archers. All six of them had the exact same class.
Archer. All six were male. It turned out they were a group of automobile
salesmen from Helsinki. They worked at neighboring car dealerships and
had been at lunch when the collapse happened. On the first floor, they’d
been beset by bow-wielding goblins, and their group had been decimated.
But after striking back, bow-and-arrow themed weapons had been the only
thing they received in their loot boxes. They had swords and knives and
clubs, but the only weapon they all excelled at were the bows.
Them all choosing the exact same class had to be one of the dumbest
things I’d seen since entering the dungeon, but knowing how this place
worked, it probably wasn’t entirely their fault.
They’d hooked up with a much larger group the previous two floors, but
they kept their own party. The archer thing had worked well on the third
floor, but it had severely hindered them on the subway level. The “leader”
was a stocky man, about 45-years old with greying blonde hair and ice-blue
eyes. His name was Langley, and he was the highest at level-24.
These guys were more serious about their predicament despite their
lower levels. They’d also received the quest to find out what was in the
Town Hall and had been discussing what to do about it when we’d arrived. I
talked them into holding off for a bit and to start stepping out of town to
train themselves up while we walked over to the Bactrian town, which was
about three miles away on the other side of the dunes. We’d all meet up
later.
The town’s door was wide open, and there was no guard when we left.
Katia added extra mass, rising up and hulking out. She pulled her riot shield
and wore it on her left arm.
“I’m not gonna lie,” I said as we left town. “It still freaks me out when
you change.”
“That’s because you’re used to being the biggest guy in the room,” she
said.
“Maybe,” I said. “Or maybe it’s because it’s fucking weird. How is this
our lives now?”
Nobody had an answer for that.
The sand dunes spread out in all directions. Here on the ground, it was
hard to see how small this world really was. I knew the Bactrian town
wasn’t too far, and it was straight ahead. We had to just keep walking, up
and down through the dunes. The town’s walls would soon appear.
The Wasteland floated high above, having moved almost directly over
the desert. A handful of other flying machines circled about, brushing the
top of the bubble, but none were directly over the “bowl” as we called it. A
v-formation of birds flocked away in the distance, heading up and over the
lip of the bowl, diving out of sight and toward the land area.
Donut released Mongo and rode on his back while we attempted to
navigate south toward the other town. I was expecting to immediately fall
waist-deep into sand, but other than the random dunes, it was mostly hard
packed and no more than an inch or two deep. In some spots, bare stone
was exposed. We truly were walking atop a massive tomb. I hoped the team
working their way through it below our feet didn’t do anything stupid that
caused our world to collapse.
The ground wasn’t flat. I’d been assuming the up and down of the
bowl’s surface was caused by the dunes, but the ground itself was stepped
in places, creating a low, hilly landscape.
Rusted-out hunks of crashed flying machines dotted the bowl like
forgotten and scattered toys. There didn’t seem to be anything lootable in
the old wrecks.
“There’s a mob coming,” Katia said after about five minutes of walking.
“Coming in fast.”
“It’s big,” Donut added.
“Okay guys,” I said as the dot appeared on my own map. “Counter.”
Katia moved to my right while Donut leaped to my shoulder. Mongo
moved to my left just as two Clockwork Mongos appeared. The two
automatons spread out ahead of us and to the sides as Donut barked orders
at them. I prepared my Bang Bro spell, but I wanted to wait to see what we
were facing first. Katia widened, and her crossbow clicked into place over
her shoulder.
The monster crested the dune, looked at us, and hissed.
“Holy shit,” I said as Donut started pelting it with Magic Missiles. A
moment later, crossbow bolts commenced hitting the creature’s armored
surface, most of them bouncing off and away.
The monster was a brown and orange, speckled lizard covered with
angry, 10-inch spikes. Its long, red tongue darted at us. The thing was the
size of a goddamned grizzly bear. It hissed again and moved at us, its body
undulating back and forth like a crocodile running across land.
Male Thorny Devil. Level 34.
These pokey fuckers are pretty common in desert-themed worlds.
They’re big and fast and dumb and angry. Their bodies are covered in
defensive spikes, which begs the question, how did something so big
develop such a defense mechanism in the first place?
These guys tend to have a reverse harem thing going on. Odds are
good you’ll recognize the queen when you see her. Odds are even better
she’ll be the last thing you’ll ever see.
Warning: This is a lizard-class mob. It will inflict 20% more
damage against you thanks to your Extinction Sigil. That’s what you
get for killing so many poor, innocent monsters.
“Outstanding,” I muttered. Katia’s crossbow bolts weren’t doing shit,
but Donut’s newly-enhanced Magic Missile blasts were taking large chunks
of health away with each bullseye. The creature stopped at the top of the
hill, suddenly realizing he might’ve bitten off more than he can chew. He
started to back up as I unsummoned my gauntlet and loaded a banger
sphere. I twirled and fired, scoring a hit on the monster’s head. It dealt solid
damage, almost as much as one of Donut’s missiles.
Donut held off killing it while we allowed the clockwork Mongos to
attack. I wanted to see how they’d do. The mob roared defiantly, continuing
to back up while we kept pace, moving up the small hill. The two dinosaurs
leaped upon the larger creature, mouths biting at its armored body. It kept
moving, thrashing its tail and snapping back at the dinosaurs.
They did no damage. The thorny devil reached around and caught one
of the Mongos and crunched like a kid chomping onto a lollipop. The
automaton exploded. The other Mongo screamed and dug at the creature
with his claws, scrabbling ferociously while the real Mongo howled in
outrage. Donut cried for him to stay back. The remaining automaton
managed to open up a tear on the creature’s side, which started gushing
blood. The monster whipped around, rolling onto its back and to its feet,
moving astonishingly fast. It chomped on the second Mongo, also causing it
to blow.
“Their armor is really thick,” Katia said. She aimed her crossbow at the
tear in the creature, finally scoring some damage. Its health was deep red
now, almost gone. Donut could kill him with one more shot, but she held
off. We needed to experiment with all new mobs, see what worked and what
didn’t.
“Stay back,” I said, judging the distance. I loaded a quarter-strength
hob-lobber as the creature desperately tried to flee back over the hill. I
tossed the explosive in an arc, sinking it just past the horizon of the hill.
Bam!
A red geyser of lizard gore showered, mixed in with a bigger cloud of
dust. The ground shook with the small explosion. Debris and lizard bits
smacked into us like rain. The red dot turned to an X.
“Nice shot,” Katia said.
“I do like explosions, but why does it always have to be so disgusting?”
Donut asked from my shoulder. “Sand and blood is a terrible combination.”
She returned to Mongo’s back and started cleaning herself.
I grunted. “Those quarter strengths are still a little too strong for close
combat. That guy was what? Thirty feet away? Any closer, and we’d get
some shrapnel. I need to make some maybe half that strength.”
We walked up to investigate the corpse. Mongo whimpered at the sight
of the clockwork pieces, which started to whiff away. The monster dropped
twenty gold, a thorny devil liver, and several teeth, which appeared to be
moderately valuable. It all went into the inventory.
“Can you see the other town yet?” I asked Katia.
“Yes,” she said. “Once we left the gates, most of the bowl showed up on
my map. We should see the town after we crest the next hill.”
“Do you hear that?” Donut said, suddenly looking up into the sky. She
pointed up with her paw. “Look, there!”
“I think we attracted some attention with that explosion,” I said,
shielding my eyes. “Whoa!” I ducked as the plane rocketed by a hundred
feet over our heads.
The flying machine whined loudly, like a flying buzzsaw. It’d come
from nowhere. The thing must’ve dropped from the Wasteland. It looked
like a goddamn, open-air, twin-engine biplane, with each engine nestled
between the wings. I saw the distinctive red hat of the pilot along with a
second gnome passenger, facing backward. The creature pointed down at us
and shouted. Two ominous shapes hung under the main fuselage, hanging
vertically. Both of the egg-shaped objects were smaller than a knock-knock,
but not by much. Each were attached to the bottom of the plane by a small
net.
The plane started to bank back toward us. There was nowhere to hide.
I tossed three smoke curtains—I only had four left after this—and we
doubled back the way we’d come so we’d have a small dune between us
and the plane. The smoke started billowing into the air, twirling in eddies
and pushing out in all directions.
The plane lowered as it curved through the air. I could see it well now
through the smoke. The nose of the plane had a face painted on the side,
some sort of gray, screaming animal. It looked almost like a jacked-up,
rabid koala.
Gnomish Drop Bear. Contraption.
This is one of the Dirigible Gnome’s earliest fast-attack planes.
There are only a handful of these still in service. While able to quickly
reach most targets when drop-launched from home base, the twin
engines of these early models were famously underpowered. Damaged
Drop Bears oftentimes had difficulty obtaining enough altitude to reach
home, even after ditching their payload. This is why most of these
planes carry rapid-deploying, quick-escape balloons, making them
sitting targets for enemy aircraft and flak.
That information is not going to do you any good when you’re
sitting there on the ground watching this thing barrel at you like a
robin descending upon a glistening, fat worm.
Don’t worry, these guys don’t drop bombs. Their standard payload
is something much more entertaining.
The twin objects hanging under the plane sure as hell looked like
bombs, but my explosives handling skill didn’t activate. That did not make
me feel better.
The plane leveled out about thirty feet off the ground, lining up for a
bomb run. We only had seconds.
“Fuck,” I said, seeing how perfectly the plane was lined up with our
position. They could either sense us through the smoke, or they’d guessed
we’d backtrack. I pointed at the ridge to the right of us, back where we’d
encountered the Thorny Devil, now a good 300 feet away. “Donut.”
“That’s a little too close, Carl.”
“Do it,” I said. “We’ll jump behind the hill after. Katia. Make a shield.”
“On it,” she said, already starting to change shape. She formed into a
half-shell, something she’d been working on. She faced herself 90 degrees
away from the plane. I pulled a fused hob-lobber and prepared to light it. I
also turned to the left.
The plane’s twin, rotary engines sounded like chainsaws cutting through
metal, all grinding gears and pistons. They could clearly see our position,
despite the smoke. We’d discussed this possibility of being attacked by a
plane and had a contingency, but we hadn’t planned on the smoke bombs
not working. That was going to be a problem. If we fucked this up, we
wouldn’t have an escape.
“It’s cast,” Donut said. “Three, two, one.”
Thwum.
We teleported away just before the plane dropped one of its two objects
right on top of us. We appeared atop the small hill. I lit and tossed the hob-
lobber, trying to lead the plane best I could.
The dropped object clanged loudly into the ground and bounced once.
Nothing else happened.
The full-strength hob-lobber detonated in mid-air, much too low and
behind the fast-moving airplane, though it was enough to knock me and
Donut back. It sounded like I’d blasted a shotgun right by my ear. Katia
didn’t budge. The biplane shuddered in the air. The engine whined even
louder, and smoke started to trail from one of the two engines. The drop
bear banked away and started to climb. It was fleeing the fight.
Jesus, I thought, pulling myself up. My bombs were getting stronger.
“Carl, that hurt Mongo’s ears,” Donut said. Mongo croaked in
agreement.
“Did you hit it?” Katia asked as she watched the plane go.
“I don’t think so,” I said, brushing myself off. I kept my eyes on the
spot where the object had landed. The metallic egg was the size of a
garbage can. Nothing was happening. Nothing moved.
“Look, it’s turning into a balloon,” Katia said, still watching the plane.
“They just dropped the second bomb way over there. It didn’t go off either.”
“Their engine went out. They’re deploying their escape balloon,” I said.
“Donut,” I said after a few more seconds of nothing happening. “Do me
a favor and create some more clockwork Mongos and send them over to
that bomb thing.”
She complied. A moment later, the two Mongos ranged forward,
coming up to the dented bomb as we backed away, putting even more
distance between us. The metallic egg sat on its side. There was a clear line
through it, like it was one of those eggs they used to store candy at Easter. If
it was supposed to pop open, it hadn’t. The two clockwork dinosaurs
banged on the side of the object while we continued to flee even further.
After a minute of this, nothing still happened. They continued to jump and
attack at it.
The duplicates only lasted ten minutes. After eight minutes passed,
there was still no indication that the egg actually did anything.
“Wait,” Katia said a moment later. She’d returned to her she-hulk form,
but she kept the crossbow out. “I see something on the map now. I think
they cracked it.” She let out a stream of breath. “It’s a dead boss. I think
there’s a neighborhood map there.”
I felt relief. I was expecting something awful, like acid gas or a swarm
of bees or a magical blast. “Okay, let’s go check it out.”
We returned to the spot, keeping a wary eye on the distant location of
the second bomb. The two mongos stood proudly over the egg, which had
popped upon. They timed out and exploded as we approached.
A single corpse lay dead inside of the egg. It looked like it had been run
over by a truck.
It was a goose. A Canada Goose with the distinctive brown body and
black head with the white stripe.
Lootable Corpse. Feral Goose. Level 45 Neighborhood Boss. Killed
by getting splattered against the ground.
You are goddamn lucky this thing is dead.
I kicked at the egg, which was labeled as an Altitude-Based
Deployment Device – This Item is Broken. “The egg thing didn’t work.
Look how rusty it is. It didn’t open, and it killed it.”
“I think you’re right,” Katia said, looking over her shoulder at the
distant hills. “I’m pretty sure the other one didn’t open either. It bounced a
few times.”
Carl: Hey, Mordecai. Do you know what a feral goose is?
Mordecai: Not specifically, but anything with feral in the name is
usually bad news.
I reached down and looted the neighborhood map. Several red dots
appeared in the area. They were all Thorny Devils. None were moving in
our direction. I didn’t see the other boss, living or dead.
I couldn’t help but feel as if we were on rails. There was a storyline
here, and we were being forced along the path of the narrative. Them
dropping a boss on us, only for the boss to be dead didn’t seem so much an
accident as a clue. We were being forced along a scripted path. I did not like
that one bit. We needed to break away as quickly as possible.
“Yeah, let’s leave that other egg alone,” I said. “No use tempting fate.” I
picked up the corpse of the dead goose and stuck it in my inventory.
“That’s really gross, Carl,” Donut said.
I now had a tab in my inventory called Mob Morgue. The monsters’
bodies were all worthless, but one never knew when something might be
useful.
Even though the egg was broken, the mechanism that popped it open
looked interesting. There was a dial apparatus that I wanted to look at. I
tried picking up the entire shell, and while it had some heft to it, I lifted it
easily. I pulled the whole thing into my inventory.
“Okay, let’s keep moving,” I said.
Donut was looking up at the sky. “There are more airplanes up there all
of a sudden. I think we made them mad.”
“Oh, hell. We need to get our hands on some of those camel rocket
launchers,” I said.
“I count eight of them,” Katia said, shading her eyes. “They’re being
more cautious than the last one.”
These were different planes than the last. This was an eclectic mix of
vehicles, though they were too far up there to examine properly. They were
circling down, almost casually, like a flock of birds. At this rate it’d take
them several minutes to get here. We would never get to the Bactrian town
now. We had to run.
“Change of plans. Back to Hump Town,” I said. “Go, go.”
Donut and Mongo took off, heading back to the city as we followed and
started to run.
I looked up over my shoulder as we ran. I caught sight of the drop bear,
which was continuing to rise into the sky. A separate airship deployed from
the Wasteland, on its way to intercept.
“Katia, you still have those engine parts in your inventory? From that
interdiction cart we disassembled on the last floor?”
“I do,” she said, huffing as we ran. We’d taken apart one of the smaller
rail carts from the previous floor. I had most of the cart’s body in my
inventory. Katia had taken the mechanical parts. Her Earth Hobby potion
gave her an enormous wealth of knowledge regarding engines.
“Good,” I said. “We need to build ourselves a dune buggy. And fast. We
don’t have time for this shit. They’re making it so we can’t get to the other
town while the weather is good. They want us out here while it’s super-hot,
dark, or during the storm. I don’t want to do any of those.”
The walls of Hump Town loomed. The swooping airships stopped their
descent, though they kept a holding pattern a thousand feet up.
“We’ll need defenses,” I added. “You work on the engine, and I’ll come
up with an anti-aircraft system.”
OceanofPDF.com
[ 4 ]
“If they were in safe rooms, they’ll be okay,” Mordecai said as we waited
for the recap episode to start. They’d managed to purchase two dromedarian
bazooka tubes and ten rocket-propelled missiles. These were straight, line-
of-sight missiles. The camels absolutely refused to sell their guided ones.
I’d already taken one apart and given the chemical drive mechanism to
Mordecai so he could reverse-engineer it. He said he was certain now that
he knew how it worked. He could make me some components that I could
use to manufacture my own rockets at my sapper’s table. They wouldn’t
pack as much punch as I’d like, but their range would be amazing. And
once I added a surefire to some of them, I’d have actual guided missiles.
“If the whole town blows up, the safe rooms really are safe?” Katia
asked.
“Yes,” Mordecai said. “But not all bars are true saferooms. Generally if
the proprietor isn’t a Bopca, then there’s like a 50/50 chance. The Toe is not
a real saferoom, but as long as we’re in the personal space, we’ll be fine. I
think there might only be one or two other places in town that’ll protect
crawlers.
I remembered Growler Gary from the last floor. His bar had not been
safe for him.
“So the NPCs will be safe if they’re in the correct bars?” I asked.
From the sheer amount of explosives dropped from the Wasteland, there
was no way anything was left in the town.
“Well, it’s actually complicated,” Mordecai said. “Certain NPCs will be
safe. I would be safe if I was in a saferoom. The whole room would be
protected. If there aren’t any crawlers or basically any former-crawler or
off-world NPCs in the room, the room is probably destroyed. There are
additional rules if there’s only one saferoom in an area, but it’s pretty
complicated stuff. The long and short of it is, Borant-owned NPCs are not
protected by the saferoom system if they’re the only one there. They’re only
protected if you are there.”
“I’m not sure I understand,” I said. “You’re saying all the NPCs are
probably dead unless they were in a bar with crawlers? So saferooms are
only ‘safe’ if a crawler is inside?”
He shrugged. “Pretty much, yeah. Again, there are some other rules.
The manual on saferoom procedures is like a phonebook.”
“What about that other thing we were talking about? With the primary
and secondary zones?”
“That’s different,” he said, shooting me a warning glare. “That doesn’t
directly impact crawlers or NPCs at all.”
I sighed. There was still just so much I didn’t understand. And you
probably know more than 90% of the other crawlers.
“So there might be a bar that’s just sitting there in the middle of the
destroyed town?”
“That’s right,” Mordecai said. “Saferooms are protected spaces. That’s
the point. Sometimes during quests and special events, the system prevents
access to them, as you’ve seen. But if this town gets that same treatment
from the gnomes, just come in here, and you’ll be protected.”
“I hope the poor people in the other town knew all this stuff,” Donut
said. She sat on the counter eating a can of Fancy Feast from the food
synthesizer. I could tell by the look on her face that she was not pleased.
Mongo couldn’t get food from the boxes, so we still had to purchase it for
him. But tonight he received a pet biscuit.
We still didn’t know why the gnomes had blown the Bactrian town to
hell. From what I gathered based on the frantic activity by the
dromedarians, they didn’t know either. We kept sticking our heads out to
keep track of the ponderous fortress’s location. So far, it hadn’t made a
move in our direction.
The recap show started. It opened with what looked like a giant sheet of
bubble wrap. The camera quickly panned over it, showing bubble after
bubble. Snowstorms, hurricanes, thick jungles, swamps, mountains,
labyrinths, and more flashed by on screen.
But before it moved to the fifth floor, we watched multiple scenes from
the end of the Iron Tangle. We watched Miriam Dom cast a spell that
knocked out a giant province boss. The debuff only lasted a few seconds,
but in that moment, Prepotente hit it with a half of a dozen different potions
and spells in a row, causing its unconsciousness to jump from ten seconds
to five hours.
“Genius,” Mordecai said, watching the goat work. “He’s killing it with
stacking debuffs.”
But they didn’t manage to kill the province boss. On the screen, Quan
Ch zipped into the room from out of nowhere. He shot the boss with a blue
magical bolt, causing it to wake up. The goat team had to flee, with
Prepotente screaming he was going to kill Quan. Quan remained in the
room, shot the boss a few times, enough to get its health down halfway, but
after the thing swung at him, he ran off.
“He could’ve killed it,” Donut said. “He ran away like a wuss. He’s a
menace!”
“That robe of his is something else,” Mordecai said. “It looks like it
gives flight and the Shield spell and probably more. I’m not certain what the
blue energy bolt is. I think it might be Disrupter, which is a rare but strong
spell. It’s similar to Donut’s Magic Missile, but it is good for blowing holes
in things. Plus it has splash damage and has a stun effect. The only problem
is its short range.”
“That should be ours,” Donut grumbled.
Next, they showed my fight with Grull. They said Grull was being
controlled by Prince Maestro, but it was only a quick mention, and they
didn’t focus on him. Instead, they showed the teamwork of Elle, Donut,
Katia, plus Li Jun’s team. They portrayed the train falling through the portal
into the abyss, but they did not show Fire Brandy or Tizquick the dwarf at
the controls. Instead, they switched it back to me, showing the experience
points get showered onto me as the wall monitors all died and the soul
crystals across the tangle detonated, opening up the floor to escape.
Mordecai gave me an appraising look afterward. “You know you’re
crazy, right?”
I nodded.
The show abruptly changed, becoming a tribute to the life of the crawler
Ifechi.
“So it was Ifechi who died,” I said as they showed the African man
hesitantly enter the dungeon. “He was a healer. Poor guy.”
Ifechi entered the dungeon with a group of other men, all soldiers, all
wielding AK-47s. Ifechi was the only one who wasn’t armed. He was also
dressed differently than the others, wearing a bright red shirt with a vest. He
carried a medical bag over his shoulder with the familiar Red Cross logo.
“Not a guy,” Katia said suddenly, peering closely at the screen. “Ifechi
was a woman.”
“What?” I said. “Are you sure? How can you tell?” The crawler looked
like a dude to me. He was rail thin, smaller than the others. Everything
about him seemed timid and drawn-in, afraid. He kept his head shaved. Not
that I was an expert, nor did it really matter, but he looked like a bloke to
me.
“Call it a super power. I can tell.”
We watched as Ifechi’s former team, Le Mouvement, got zeroed out by
a translucent jelly boss the size of a house. From there, Ifechi, now all
alone, stumbled through the dungeon, eventually meeting up with Florin.
Florin, as a human, had kind of a mysterious background. He said he was
from France, but he had an Australian accent. He was in Africa when it all
went down. They didn’t really give the guy’s full story, but he mentioned
something about “private security.” I knew what that really meant. He was a
mercenary of some sort. He’d also come into the dungeon armed to the
teeth, but he now relied solely on his automatic shotgun, which appeared to
be heavily modified even before he received the magical, unlimited-ammo
upgrade. Ifechi eventually chose a healer class, and Florin picked the
crocodilian race. They had been separated when they hit the third floor, but
they quickly found one another. It showed them hugging and sobbing as
they reunited.
They were more than just friends, I realized.
Florin’s weapon was devastating to most of the mobs, and Ifechi,
despite being a healer, had an attack so effective, so unique, I could see how
the two had earned spots in the top ten. It was a staff that summoned and
flung leeches. A lot of leeches. They’d cover the mob, sucking at its fluids,
killing it in seconds. Afterward, the wriggling leeches would be filled with
blood and other fluids from the dead mobs, and they could be eaten, giving
a wide array of buffs. Florin would gobble them right up, getting
temporarily stronger. It was disgusting,
“Fascinating,” Mordecai said. “I haven’t seen anything like that in a
very long time. I thought they’d removed that spell. Crocodilians have the
ability to triple the effectiveness of any buffs they receive from eating
creatures. He probably chose that race just because of her staff.”
And then, finally, we saw the manner of Ifechi’s death.
The two were part of a group that had moved to one of the former ghoul
stations after the stairwell station had opened. A line had formed at the
stairs, and people were quickly descending. The station was almost empty.
Everything was moving nice and orderly.
And then Lucia Mar entered the room.
The number one crawler strolled into the station like she owned the
place, flanked by her two dogs, Cici and Gustavo 3. Lucia was in her
beautiful, magic-focused form. Her Lajabless species made it so she spent
half the day as the beautiful woman. The rest of the day she spent as a
strong, melee-focused, female version of Skeletor. The dwindling crowd
parted as the child-turned-woman walked through the room, her raven hair
sparkling. She walked with a slight limp due to her goat leg. She had a mess
of boss kills and player-killer skulls over her head.
Cici the rottweiler had also undergone a transformation, having grown
to be almost twice the size of the other dog. The larger dog growled at a
random crawler, who scattered back.
Lucia paused, looking about the room. The remaining crawlers
scrambled at their chance to hit the stairwell. A glut formed at the exit.
Florin and Ifechi approached Lucia, apparently in an attempt to say
hello.
“No. This is mine,” Lucia said, hugging herself. The two dogs growled.
“All right, mate,” Florin said, backing off, arms raised. He turned away
and muttered “crazy bitch,” under his breath.
Lucia did not hesitate. She grabbed the closest crawler, a man about 18
years old who was desperately trying not to be seen. She picked him up like
he weighed nothing and literally threw the man at Florin. The poor guy
wailed as he was tossed, which caused Florin to jump out of the way. The
thrown man hit the ground, bounced once, and crashed against the far wall,
unconscious.
“What the hell?” Florin shouted as Ifechi rushed to the injured man.
“Lady, you’re not right in the head. We’re all friends here.”
“There is nothing wrong with my head,” Lucia Mar said, sounding
strangely offended. “Why would you say that?” She pointed at Ifechi, who
was shoving something into the mouth of the unconscious man. “Speak no
more, or there will be something wrong with your girlfriend’s head.”
“Girlfriend. Told you,” Katia said, as we watched, transfixed.
“Jesus,” I said. “And I thought the goat was crazy.”
“Prepotente is crazy, Carl,” Donut said. “You’re crazy, too. Lucia is
something different. She’s insane.”
I couldn’t argue with that.
Florin backed away, not saying anything. I could tell the guy was smart.
He recognized her insanity. The last of the crawlers pushed their way to the
stairs, leaving just the three of them plus the injured crawler. And the dogs.
“That’s sad,” Donut said.
“What?” I asked.
“Nobody stayed behind for that poor guy Lucia threw across the room.
Only Ifechi helped him.”
I reached up and patted Donut’s head. The cat’s entire body was taut as
she watched the screen.
Florin said nothing as he walked backward, keeping his eyes on Lucia.
He reached to tap Ifechi on the shoulder and signaled for her to proceed
toward the stairs. She nodded. The injured man sat up, rubbing his head. He
gave a terrified glance at Lucia and scrambled toward the stairwell. Gustavo
—the regular-sized rottweiler—moved to block his access. Lightning
sparkled in the dog’s mouth as he growled.
“What did you say?” Lucia snarled at the fleeing boy. “What did you
say about my papa?” Gustavo took a menacing step toward him.
“What?” he asked. “I… I don’t know what you’re talking about.”
“He didn’t say anything about your father, you right cunt,” Florin said,
distracting her. “But if I could say something to him, it’d probably be, quit
dropping your babies on their heads. It makes them a touch daffy.” He
pulled Ifechi up. “Come on, Ife. To the stairs.”
“Don’t take shit from anyone. It’s just a game. It’s not real,” Lucia said.
She was talking to someone over her shoulder. Someone who wasn’t there.
Ifechi surreptitiously cast a spell by waving her hand. It looked like a
protection spell of some sort. She cast it twice. Once on Florin and once on
the other crawler, leaving herself unprotected.
“Why did you talk,” Lucia said to Florin. She sounded curious, her head
cocked to the side. “I said I would make your girlfriend’s head not right if
you talked.”
“We don’t want any trouble,” Florin said, edging his way toward the
stairwell.
“That’s what they always say,” Lucia said, moving sideways to block
the exit. She clicked her teeth.
Everything that happened next took place over the course of ten
seconds.
Cici the giant rottweiler rushed at Florin, launching herself at him.
Gustavo did the same, jumping over the other hapless crawler and rocketing
toward the crocodilian. The dog opened his mouth, as if ready to shoot
lightning from it.
Bam, bam, bam.
Florin’s shotgun was suddenly in his hand, and he fired three blasts so
quickly that I didn’t even see the movement. He sent one shell at Lucia, one
at Cici, and one at Gustavo, in that order.
Lucia and the two dogs all flew backward. Lightning misfired from
Gustavo, blasting off the ceiling. Florin continued to blast all three in turn.
Bam, bam, bam. He took a step toward them. Bam, bam, bam.
Next to me, Mordecai groaned. Katia gasped. And then I saw what they
saw.
Ifechi was leaned up against the chamber wall. Her head was gone. The
splatter of blood and brains painted the stone.
“What…” I began. Mordecai held up his wing for me to be silent.
That fourth crawler cast a spell as he scrambled toward the stairwell. It
turned the floor of the room to ice. He rushed down the stairs and
disappeared.
Lucia sat up, not injured at all. She grinned at Florin.
“I told you I’d do it,” she said.
“No,” Mordecai said. “No, no, no.”
Florin fired once more, right into the temple of Lucia Mar.
They both flew back this time, spinning and turning like pinballs on the
floor of ice.
Lucia Mar ricocheted off the wall as she sat up, again uninjured. She
cackled with laughter, laughter that abruptly turned to a strangled cry as she
continued her momentum and plunged into the stairwell and disappeared.
She crashed loudly to the bottom of the stairs.
Both of the dogs whimpered as they tried to get up, also uninjured. They
scrambled, their feet unable to purchase on the slippery ground. They spun
and turned and bounced off one another. They clambered, howling and
whimpering as they moved to follow Lucia Mar onto the stairwell.
If it wasn’t so horrifying, it would’ve been hilarious.
Florin sat up. His temple and neck was covered in blood, his health
mostly gone. He shook his head, confused.
And only then did he notice that Ifechi was dead. He looked at her,
bewildered, not understanding what had just happened.
“No,” he said, seeing her body against the wall. “No, Ife, no.”
That’s when I noticed the shining, golden skull over Florin’s head. He
dropped his gun, put an arm over his crocodile eyes, and he started to wail.
The show cut away to the smiling host, breathlessly starting to explain
the fifth floor.
“What the fuck did I just watch?” I asked as the show went on.
“Lucia appears to have access to a very powerful spell,” Mordecai said.
“It probably comes from something she’s wearing. It usually has a long
cooldown, but she either has multiples of the spell, or she has somehow
defeated the cooldown problem. Either way, it’s ridiculously broken. It’s no
wonder she’s so strong.”
“What’s the spell?” I asked.
“Rubber, most likely. It’s similar to your damage reflect and Donut’s
love vampire. When she’d cast it, it also applied to her two pets. So it’s at
least level ten. I bet it’s closer to 15. It reduces a high percentage of
incoming damage and reflects it to a target of your choosing. She’d cast it
directly on Ifechi’s head. So when Florin shot Lucia and the dogs, he was
literally shooting his partner in the head. And after she was dead, Lucia cast
the spell again, this time on Florin.”
“They gave him credit for the kill,” Katia said. “That’s awful. It doesn’t
seem right.”
“It’s not. That’s the dungeon being a dick,” I said.
“Dreadful. Just dreadful. How did Florin survive shooting himself in the
head?” Donut asked.
“It was that protection spell,” I said. “Ifechi cast it on him and the other
guy, but not on herself.”
“Certain protection spells can’t be cast on yourself,” Mordecai said. “It
takes a special type of person to want to use and train such enchantments.”
I thought of Imani, who was also a healer. She would have done the
same thing in this situation.
Goddamnit. Every time I saw or heard of a crawler killing one of their
own, it just made me angrier.
You will not break me. Fuck you all. I will break you.
I took a deep breath. “That kid’s brain is scrambled,” I said finally.
“Donut is right. She’s literally insane. She’s talking to phantoms and
hearing things.”
“Poor thing,” Katia said. “But she needs to be dealt with.”
“I agree,” I said. “We need to put her down.”
“I call dibs on the dogs,” Donut said.
Mordecai: Here’s the good news. If she does use that Rubber spell, it
has a vulnerability. A big one. They’d been editing out her using the
spell until now. There’s a reason for that. They might want her killed.
Carl: Okay. We’ll talk about it later. But if she’s not in our bubble,
it doesn’t really matter. We gotta survive this place first.
From there, they portrayed multiple crawlers entering the warehouse
and spinning the wheels. Lucia Mar was given the land quadrant in a bubble
that was designed similarly to our own, but it was a massive, stepped
pyramid in the center. And the weather was cold and covered in ice. I
laughed at that. Prepotente and Miriam Dom landed on the air quadrant of a
bubble that was like a giant cave with rock growing along the interior wall
of the sphere. Their domain was nothing more than a shelf of rock that
ringed the interior wall. Their target was a nest of spiders that hung from
the ceiling, thousands of feet into the air.
“Jesus,” I said. “They’re just as fucked as we are.”
Florin entered his room completely defeated. He sat down in the corner
of the warehouse and did not spin anything. He had Ifechi’s leech staff,
which he laid across his lap. He leaned his head against the wall and went
to sleep right there.
It portrayed a dozen more shots of people spinning and landing on a
wide assortment of quadrants.
The show ended with the promise of more bloodshed and more hilarious
outtakes of us silly crawlers struggling to survive. I pictured myself
punching the host over and over until his head caved in.
The show ended, and the new top 10 populated on the board.
1. Lucia Mar – Lajabless – Black Inquisitor General – Level 38 –
1,000,000 (x2)
2. Carl – Primal – Compensated Anarchist – Level 41 – 500,000 (x2)
3. Prepotente – Caprid – Forsaken Aerialist – Level 35 – 400,000
(x2)
4. Donut – Cat – Former Child Actor – Level 33 – 300,000 (x2)
5. Quan Ch – Half Elf – Imperial Security Trooper – Level 43 –
200,000 (x2)
6. Dmitri and Maxim Popov – Nodling – Illusionist and Bogatyr –
Level 33 – 100,000 (x2)
7. Miriam Dom – Human – Shepherd – Level 31 – 100,000 (x2)
8. Elle McGib – Frost Maiden – Blizzardmancer – Level 33 –
100,000
9. Bogdon Ro – Human – Legatus – Level 31 – 100,000
10. Florin – Crocodilian – Shotgun Messenger – Level 33 – 100,000
(x2)
“Carl! You’re number two! Katia! You fell off the list! This is
outrageous! You were a superstar.”
“Thank god,” Katia said. She looked genuinely relieved.
“Hey,” Donut said. “Wait a second. Why didn’t I go up? We’re
separated. This is not acceptable, Carl.”
I patted her on the head while she grumbled, swishing her tail angrily.
“Also, why did Florin lower so much?” Donut asked a moment later.
“That was so sad, and they’re punishing him for it.”
“I bet he hasn’t moved since he went down the stairs. He’s probably still
sitting in that room where you spin the wheels. His PR agent is probably
losing her shit,” I said. “Elle is back on the list, but her bounty didn’t
double.”
“She wasn’t in the top ten when the floor ended,” Mordecai said.
Quan Ch had hit level 43, making him the highest, though I had no idea
why or how. The asshole fled any fight that looked like it might be difficult.
Hopefully he was using his powers this floor to get everyone in his bubble
to safety.
I shuddered, thinking of the poor bastards stuck with Lucia Mar. The
kid had an obvious mental illness. If we were someplace else, my first
thought would be to lock her up and put her someplace where she could get
the treatment she obviously needed.
But we weren’t someplace else, and she was killing people. Good
people. She had to be taken care of.
I didn’t want to admit it, but part of me was happy that there was
nothing I could do about that right now. We only had a limited number of
fellow crawlers to deal with on this level.
That shit weighs down on you after a while, I thought.
OceanofPDF.com
[ 5 ]
Mordecai: Okay, here’s the deal with these assholes. Louis has an
enhanced, legendary-tier spell called Cloud of Exhaust. It has a high-
probability to knock out mobs for a variable amount of time,
depending on the level difference. I don’t remember the specifics, but
even high-level mobs will get conked out for a little bit. They’ll wake up
the moment they’re touched. But any damage to them is enhanced for
an additional thirty seconds after they wake. It’s one of those spells that
helps guarantee that you’ll breeze through all the early floors. I’m
almost certain it’s the same spell the goat lady Miriam Dom has. But
instead of utilizing this like she has, these two idiots have been fleeing
every encounter. It worked fine for them at first, but now they’re
screwed. That moron doesn’t even realize what he has. He should be
level 40 by now, at least.
I barely registered what Mordecai said. The two crawlers were still on
their hands and knees, scream-vomiting on the floor. Neither had stopped
for several minutes. It reminded me of that week of leave we got after boot.
Those of us without families spent it in Philadelphia drinking until we
blacked out.
Carl: Mordecai, what the hell did you give them?
Mordecai: They’ll be fine. It’s called Rapid Detox. Clears them of
alcohol and any negative effects of most drugs. Not Blitz, unfortunately,
but most everything else. Works great. It makes it so certain toxins will
no longer affect them. It only lasts for a single floor.
Carl: So they can’t get drunk anymore?
Mordecai: Or high. And if they do drink, they become violently ill.
It’s used to treat alcoholism. And to torture prisoners.
Katia: Why couldn’t he read the description?
Mordecai: I added sage beetle ichor. It disguises potions, but it
makes it so they go bad after an hour. It’s a good hack. Some places will
have protections against the use of certain types of potions. Like battle
arenas where you can’t use health pots. But if the potion is treated with
the ichor, it makes it usable again.
“Christ, man,” Louis said, standing up on unsteady legs. He was still
breathing heavily.
“Can we get on with this now?” I asked.
“I just got a notification that says I can’t drink anymore,” Louis said.
His voice turned to a whisper. “Not cool, man. Not cool. It’s all I got left.”
“That’s not true. You still have your date with Juice Box,” said Donut.
OceanofPDF.com
[ 6 ]
W hen the second , pale sun rose , it moved rapidly across the sky ,
closing in on the larger, yellow sun. This second sun was much smaller, but
it caused the temperature to rise about twenty degrees. Once the two stars
met in the sky, the sandstorm would start. I was never a physics guy, and I
didn’t know if this sun thing mimicked any sort of real, or possible, orbital
pattern. After talking with Imani and Elle, I knew this light/day pattern was
exclusive to this bubble, so it was all an illusion anyway, all projected onto
the bubble wall.
I shielded my eyes, looking for the Wasteland. I couldn’t see it at all
from here, which meant it’d already hit the outer ring. The entire town was
talking about the destruction of the other town, though not even Donut
could get anything out of the camels or the changelings about why it
happened.
The stars might not be real, but the sudden rise in temperature was no
joke. It was so hot outside, it was difficult to breathe. The camels did not
deploy the city-wide awning. They saved it for the sandstorm, which was
unfortunate. All the town’s outside activity ground to a halt. Everyone
stayed inside, though the temperature wasn’t much better inside the bars.
Outside of town, the thorny devil mobs were replaced with something else.
These were Donut-sized, fast-moving things called dune scythes. There
were a lot of them outside the town’s walls, their red dots swarming about. I
had no real desire to go out and face them, but I knew fighting them would
be inevitable.
“We’re going to need to install air conditioning on the Royal Chariot,” I
said as I leaned against the back of the adobe building. We stood in the alley
between two inns, facing the back of the town hall, which was behind the
two buildings across the street. The closer alleyway was mere feet from the
back of the Town Hall, and we didn’t want to get that close.
Katia was there in that closer alleyway, leaned up against a metallic
mechanism that snaked around the building that backed into the town hall.
She was pretending to be a long, attached pipe, which gave her a raised
view of the back door. She said the mechanism attached to the building’s
side was pumping cold air to the residents within.
“This is unbearable,” Donut said from my shoulder. “My paws are
sweating.”
“Cats don’t sweat,” I said.
“If cats don’t sweat, explain this, Carl,” Donut said, rubbing her paw on
my neck. I couldn’t tell if it was wet or not since my entire body was
drenched. I had a sweating problem. At the gym, I was one of those guys
who left a puddle everywhere. I couldn’t help it, and right now my skin was
doing a pretty good faucet impersonation.
“Shush,” I said. “Someone’s coming out.”
We’d noticed earlier there were two entrances to the town hall. The
main entrance, which nobody seemed to use, and the back entrance we now
faced. We watched as a dromedarian opened the door, tied his headscarf
tightly around his head, and loped away. I froze as the creature strode right
past Katia, but he didn’t pause. As the door closed, I caught sight of two
guards standing inside. These were Waster Patrol dromedarians. Level 48
each.
The other camel turned left onto the street and disappeared, rounding
the bend toward Weird Shit Alley.
Carl: Did you get a good enough look?
Katia: Yes. The guy who just left is named Henrik. He’s just a
regular level 30, but we have a problem. He showed some sort of ID to
the guard before he left. In a town full of shapeshifters, it makes sense
to have extra security I guess. While the door was open, I could see the
interior map for a minute. There are two guards everywhere. There’s
at least 12 of them.
Goddamnit.
Carl: We’ll have to go with plan B.
Katia’s plan had been to get a good look at the next dromedarian to
leave, emulate his clothes and looks the best she could, and “return” inside
just to get a quick peek. But with so many guards wandering about—guards
who were likely on high alert—that plan wasn’t going to work.
This was a problem. The whole building was high security, and if we
did breach, odds were good we’d only be able to do it once. We had no idea
what was hidden inside, nor did we know what we were going to do about it
once we learned. If it turned out to be the gnome leader’s child or
something, our best move was to leave him be for the moment. If my dual-
stage rocket idea worked out, we wouldn’t need to deal with this collateral
storyline at all.
Carl: Did you see any guards on the second or third level?
Katia: Just the offices. There’s a camel in half of them. The second
floor is less crowded than the third.
We’d learned from the Toe’s barkeeper that the citizens did not rest
during the two-hour night. Instead, they mostly slept in the hot hours before
the sandstorm started. And with less people out on the streets, now was the
best time to infiltrate the building.
I took a deep breath. This is a terrible idea. But short of going in there
and just killing all the camel NPCs, I couldn’t see an alternative. Not when
we were under such a time crunch. Gwendolyn’s team was building siege
engines to breach the walls on the land quadrant, but she was worried they
didn’t have enough people to assault the sandcastle of the “Mad Dune
Mage.” We hadn’t heard shit from either of the other two quadrants. We had
to get this done now.
Carl: Louis. We’re going with the frog plan. You’re up. Firas, you
too.
Louis: Fuck, man. Really?
Carl: Come on. Hurry up.
Both Louis and Firas were inside the tavern next door. The two crawlers
had been pouting about Mordecai’s potion, but the men were much easier to
deal with when they were sober. Firas was much quieter and more
introspective. He’d worked as a car detailer and audio installer before this.
His Hammersmith class was melee-focused, specializing in hammer-based
weapons and abilities. The only weapon he actually had was an
intelligence-enhanced mace designed for a cleric. But his Puddle Jumper
spell was at level 10, much higher than Donut’s six.
Sober Louis was still an ass. I was pretty sure the guy never had a job in
his life. He wouldn’t shut up about cartoons I’d never heard of. When he’d
found out Katia was from Iceland, he started calling her “Lazy Town.” I had
no idea why. He and Donut found common ground, however. Despite
pretending to hate the show, Donut knew quite a bit about the 80’s program
Knight Rider, much to Louis’s delight.
I’d much rather have one of Langley’s guys in on this, but that group
wasn’t very useful here. I had them all using their car-selling skills. On my
word, they’d all ascend to the rooftops and cover our escape if everything
went sideways. In the meantime, they went to work, the six of them
spreading out to the different bars. The taverns would be mostly empty at
this hour, but that was okay. Mordecai was currently doing the same. At this
moment, he was sitting inside the Toe, drinking blood wine, telling the
second-shift bartender about the group of grulke toad soldiers he’d seen out
in the desert.
The second floor of Town Hall was ringed by exterior balconies. Katia
said the one facing the alley was attached to an office that appeared to be
empty. We decided to keep Katia outside and hidden while Donut, Louis,
Firas, and I all puddle jumped to the terrace. Since the cooldown of Puddle
Jumper was five hours, we’d use Firas for the casting, and we’d save Donut
for our escape.
“Okay, once we’re in there,” I whispered, “keep your mouths shut. If
someone sees us, we’re gonna have to kill them. The camels are assholes,
but I want to avoid that if possible. So listen to me or Donut and do as
you’re told.”
They both nodded. I waited for Katia to give the all-clear, and Firas cast
his spell, teleporting us to the balcony. Part of me was shocked it actually
worked. All four of us crowded onto the metal railing. We all crouched
down, trying to make ourselves look smaller. Above, the twin suns beat
down onto us. I saw a single dromedarian from up here, two streets over,
but his back was turned. We needed to hurry.
A tall set of double doors led into the interior of the building. I grabbed
the handle and tried to turn it, but it was locked. This was a thick, metal-
reinforced security door, but thankfully it wasn’t magically locked.
“Door,” I said to Donut. “And wait a few seconds before you withdraw
the spell this time.”
We’d practiced this a little bit. The last time we tried it, Donut had
almost lopped my hand off. She cast Hole just above the handle. Thanks to
her Glass Cannon class, the spell was significantly more powerful on this
floor. The hole reached all the way through the thick door. I reached in,
found the bolt, and I slowly turned it. The door opened with a click. I
retracted my hand, and I peered inside, looking for threats. I saw nothing in
the office. Donut snapped off the spell.
“Remember when we cut that guy’s head off?” Donut whispered as we
sneaked into the empty room.
“Yeah, I still have that guy’s head in my inventory,” I said. Louis and
Firas stumbled in after me. Louis was sweating so profusely, he made me
look dry. He had to be losing an ounce of water weight a minute. I pushed
the door closed. This office didn’t appear to be in regular use. There was a
large, camel-sized desk and chair, a table with nothing on it, and an open
and empty chest. The walls were made of wooden pillars. The floors
creaked with each step. A complicated system of brass pipes ran along the
interior wall. They looked to be either part of a steampunk-style AC, or an
old-school pneumatic tube messaging system.
Now that we were inside, my map populated with everything on the
floor. There were multiple offices on this level, and only one appeared to be
occupied. The three roaming guards moved through the hallways, though
they hit the down stairwell and disappeared from my map.
“Be careful before you step,” I said, moving as quietly as I could to the
desk. I had a few buffs that disguised my footsteps. Louis and Firas had
nothing, and they both stood there with their arms out, like they were
surfing. “Let’s wait until the roaming guards return and go upstairs, and
then we’ll move. Louis, be ready.” Louis nodded, not saying anything for
the first time ever.
I rifled through the desk, looting everything that wasn’t bolted down. It
wasn’t much. I took the chair. I knew I could easily lift the desk, but I didn’t
want to risk making a loud noise.
Katia: Three guards just stepped outside. They’re smoking
cigarettes and talking, huddling against the wall in the shade from the
balconies. I think they’re taking a break. When the door was open, I
could see the four of you and one more camel on the second floor. Your
path to the room with the basement is clear. Go now. I’ll warn you if
they come back in.
I hesitated. This wasn’t the plan. The three guards could walk back in at
any moment.
Katia: Oh shit, I see several more camels out there. They’re making
their way down the street. I think it’s a shift change. Unless you want to
sit there for the next hour while everyone gets settled, go now.
Louis moved, and the floorboard creaked loudly. Damnit, I thought. We
couldn’t wait.
“All right, we’re moving out,” I said. “We can’t disguise our steps on
these floors, so walk with calm purpose. Not fast, not slow.”
“I don’t know what that means,” Firas said.
“Just follow me,” I said. I strode out the door, revealing a long hallway.
A row of paintings hung on the wall, each portraying the image of a stuffy,
bored-looking camel. The wood floor was covered with a runner carpet,
long and intricately patterned. The building was noticeably cooler. We
walked down the hallway and down the stairs.
We quickly crossed the hallway at the bottom of the stairs, which
branched off toward both exits. The guards at either end did not see us as
we walked past. We passed a few open rooms, a small kitchen, and then we
came to a fortified door at the end of the hall.
“Okay, same thing,” I whispered. “There are two guards on the other
side of this door, so we have to do it quickly. Donut will cast her hole spell,
and you’ll cast your cloud spell. You have to wait until after their dots turn
red. I’ll take care of that. Don’t step in front of the hole in the door. We
don’t want them seeing you. Once they’re down, I’ll try to open the door.”
Louis looked as if he was about to pass out. I didn’t know how this guy
had managed to make it this far. He cracked his neck and hopped back and
forth on his legs like he was getting ready to run a sprint. “Do it.”
Donut cast Hole, and I tossed one of my new sparklers through the
opening. I’d discovered them while trying to make lower-powered
explosives. All they consisted of was a wick and fuse from a hob lobber.
They did hardly any damage. They made very little sound. But they shot
sparks everywhere for a good five seconds. The crackling flickers shot off
like angry hornets, stinging when they hit.
“Now,” I hissed the moment the two dots turned red.
Louis flung his arms forward, casting his spell. I stood off to the side,
but in that moment, I saw the distinctive shape of a camel. He was sitting at
a table, holding playing cards in his hands, covering his face in surprise at
the sparkler attack. A heavy spear was leaned up against the wall.
A deep, black smoke filled the room. The two camels within collapsed.
One of them knocked over something, probably the damn card table, and a
loud crash echoed throughout the hallway.
“Fuck,” I whispered. I put my arm through the hole and reached
desperately for the latch. Only there was no bolt to turn. It was just a key
hole. And it was higher than I expected. It did not line up with the key hole
on this side. There were two bolts, I realized. One had to use a key to
unlock it from both sides to open the door.
“Shit, I can’t get the door open,” I said, retracting my arm.
“What was that?” a voice echoed from down the hall.
“Check it out,” another called. These were the guards from the front and
back talking to one another.
“I’m gonna have to blow the door,” I said. “Everybody step back.”
“Don’t be so dramatic, Carl,” Donut said. “Watch this.”
She snapped off her Hole spell. She cast it again, but this time she
placed it a few inches to the right, so the disappearing part of the hole
included the two deadbolts and part of the wall and door jamb. The spell
currently had an effective depth of about eight inches, which was plenty
thick. She pushed at the door, and it swung open easily. There was a half-
moon bite taken out of the door. The second half of the hole remained in the
wall.
“What the hell?” I said. “Why haven’t we been doing it like this the
whole time?”
I pushed my way into the room as the black smoke billowed out.
“How long does the smoke last?” I asked, waving at it, suddenly
alarmed. It was much thicker than I’d realized it’d be. Unlike with my
smoke bombs, I couldn’t see shit. It stank like diesel exhaust. I didn’t want
to move deeper into the room in fear of touching one of the two camels.
They woke up the moment you touched them.
“It’s only a minute.”
I heard steps. A camel was coming to investigate. “Shit, they’re going to
see the smoke.”
The smoke started to dissipate. I could now see the two forms on the
ground, though there was something off about them. I pushed the door
closed. “Turn off your hole, Donut.”
“Really, Carl. You need to find a less offensive way to say that.”
Shouting rose from down the hall.
Katia: A guard just opened the door and yelled something. All of
the camels are pouring inside. You have about 15 of them coming at
you.
“Goddamnit, Donut. Kill the spell.”
She killed the spell.
That ended up being a mistake. The moment it happened, I realized why
we shouldn’t ever use the Hole spell to break open doors if we wanted to
ever utilize said doors again. I’d either pushed the door closed too tightly, or
not tightly enough, but when the missing part of the door reappeared from
wherever it went, the bolts weren’t perfectly lined up with how they’d been
before. The door cracked loudly and then swung back open. Two hunks of
metal—pieces of the actual bolts, I realized—fell to the floor. The whole
side of the door looked as if I’d hit it with a small charge.
“Well that was unexpected,” Donut said. “Carl, what did you do? If you
were going to do that, you should’ve just blown it up.”
“Oh shit, oh shit,” Louis said. “What’re we going to do? Cat, you gotta
teleport us out!”
“Cat?” Donut said. “I am Princess Donut, you buffoon!”
I rolled a goblin smoke bomb down the hall and then pushed the free-
swinging door back closed. I pulled one of the heavy chocks from the
subway level. I leaned it against the entrance and pushed the brace against
the ceiling. They’d have to work hard to get in here now. But we were also
trapped.
“You two, be useful and hold this closed.”
Louis and Firas jumped up and leaned against the door. Louis
whimpered. Their presence against the door probably didn’t help, but it
gave them something to do.
I returned my gaze to the room, focusing on the two passed-out
dromedarians. Only they weren’t dromedarians anymore.
“What the shit?”
These were changelings. They’d both reverted to their faceless,
humanoid form. The one I’d seen just a moment ago playing cards was
passed out on the floor, cards spread out all around him, only now he was
much smaller. His head pulsed with an odd, sapphire luminescence, almost
like a jellyfish.
I examined his properties. He had a 50-second timer over his head,
which was significantly shorter than we’d anticipated, even with the level
discrepancy between Louis and the mob. Louis said they were usually out
for over five minutes.
Svern – Changeling Principal. Level 49.
This mob is Exhaust-ed.
Have you ever visited the home of an elderly widow and seen her
collection of miniature spoons? Or thimbles? Maybe they’re
refrigerator magnets, or salt and pepper shakers. It’s always
something. They’re all part of a set. There’s a display case involved,
with a special slot for each one. It was ambitious of her to buy the case
before it was filled. It sits there in her home, a layer of dust atop it
where she can no longer reach. A shrine to youthful optimism.
Inevitably, as life steamrolls on, she’s become more concerned with
what is missing from her collection rather than what she already has.
That ashtray from Niagara Falls was a hard-won souvenir, sitting
proudly next to the one from Branson. But the moment it was obtained,
it lost its value. And now all she thinks about is that empty space, right
there. Right next to Graceland. It eats at her.
It is a totem to everything she did not accomplish. Her failures. She
stares at it, sometimes. That space. That damn, empty space. All she
wants is to fill it.
That is both the curse and the driving force of the Changeling
Principal.
I lit a torch and dropped it. It fell to the bottom of the short ladder, and it
filled the cavern with light.
The shape of the room appeared on my map. It wasn’t big. There didn’t
appear to be anyone else in here.
Mongo appeared at the top of the trapdoor and squawked at me. “Stay
up there,” I said.
The ground was stone, carved with symbols that looked like Egyptian
hieroglyphs. I was standing atop the tomb. The ceiling was low enough that
I had to stoop. There was no way a camel could fit in here. There was a
table, and a small chair. On the table was a roll of paper. I picked it up.
Map. The Necropolis of Anser.
You’ve discovered the catacomb plans. The information has been
added to your map and to the map of everyone in your party.
“Shit,” I said as the scroll dissipated into dust. The minimap showing
the area below my feet populated. I zoomed the map out, revealing a maze
that made the map of the Iron Tangle look like child’s play. Fuck me.
There was also a small bowl on the table. It had a trio of shriveled,
black plants within. Mushrooms, I realized. Not the kind you eat. At least
not for food. I pulled the bowl into my inventory. Then I took the table and
chair.
Katia: Something odd just happened. Two of the level-30 camels
wanted into the town hall, but another camel stopped them. It was one
of the waster guards. They fought, and the guard camel killed them
both. He dragged their bodies inside.
Carl: Did they stay camels when they died?
Katia: Uh, yeah. Why?
Carl: I’ll explain later.
Donut: HURRY UP, CARL. I CAN HEAR THEM TALKING
ABOUT HITTING THE DOOR WITH A MISSILE.
I could now see the room went on even further than I realized. What I
thought was the end of the chamber was actually the boundary line to the
subterranean zone. Even with the map, I wouldn’t be allowed in there. Not
until we dealt with the gnomish castle.
But I also noticed something else. The white dot of an NPC. It was on
the other side of the barrier, so I wouldn’t be able to get to him.
“Hello?” I called. The back of the room was filled with shadow.
“Henrik? Is that you? Back so soon?” a voice croaked. “I heard fighting.
Who will you pretend to be today? My mother, perhaps? The last dose has
not worn off yet. If you feed me more, it might kill me this time. I can only
hope.”
I couldn’t see the creature, but the voice was similar to that of a Bopca.
I was about to light another torch when I saw the lantern hanging from
the ceiling. It had a tiny flame within, like a pilot light. I turned the handle,
and the whole room lit up.
The shimmering wall of the quadrant boundary appeared. And just past
it, tied up in chains to the wall was an elderly gnome. The creature was not
wearing the red hat, and he looked sickly and pale. He had scabs on his
face, and he looked half starved to death.
Wynne. Dirigible Gnome Flesh Mechanic. Level 50.
The Dirigible Gnomes were once a peaceful race. All they ever
wanted was two things. One, to figure out how the world worked. And
two, to be left alone.
In order to escape a busy, teeming world filled with competing
intelligent species, all of whom loved to wage war, the Dirigible Gnomes
learned how to take to the clouds, building a variety of airships and
floating settlements, allowing them to escape any sort of trouble.
But as we all know, trouble doesn’t care if you don’t want to be
found.
The history of the Dirigible Gnomes is long, complicated, and
tragic. But the end result is the inevitable result of all peaceful races.
They were, eventually, forced to choose between fighting or being
wiped out. They chose to fight.
Wynne is the great and favored uncle of Commandant Kane of the
Dreadnaught Wasteland. He is a Flesh Mechanic, a healer gifted with
the ability to bring the long dead back to life, if only temporarily. He is
being held as hostage by the Dromedarians, as a guarantee of peace.
Quest Complete. Stay out of city hall.
I now had more questions than answers. What had seemed so simple at
first was now shaping into a complicated story. The dromedarians had this
gnome guy as hostage. But it appeared the changelings had infiltrated the
ranks of the camels, and they had their own interests in the gnome. And I
still had no idea how I could use this information to get my ass into the
throne room of the Wasteland, thousands of feet into the sky.
If I can get him out of those chains, we can take him. Talk ourselves
onto the flying platform.
As if it was reading my mind, the system gave me an update.
New Quest. Free Wynne from his bondage.
Wynne the Dirigible Gnome is in chains. Free him, and he will
provide easy access to the Wasteland.
Reward: You will receive a Silver Quest Box.
Katia: Nice. Now get the hell out of there.
Donut: CARL. I DON’T KNOW WHAT YOU’RE DOING DOWN
THERE BUT YOU NEED TO GET BACK UP HERE BEFORE
LOUIS DIES OF A HEART ATTACK.
I couldn’t approach him. I had an idea, but it would require Donut. I
started to call her, but I paused the moment I saw the group of five blue dots
on the map.
Crawlers. On the subterranean side. They were running down a hall
toward me, coming fast.
“A human?” Wynne said, looking in my direction. “That’s a new one,
Henrik. Do you think a human can talk me into revealing the spell?”
“It’s this way,” a voice cried. A man. The five crawlers rushed into the
chamber, emerging out of the darkness. All five were male. All levels 23 to
26. It was an eclectic group. Three were human. One was an odd creature
with a human head and torso, but the body of a tarantula. I didn’t know
what the hell the last guy was. He looked like a dude wearing a goddamn
banana costume.
“You bastard. You goddamn bastard,” a man said before I could greet
them. “You destroyed the map.”
“Hello to you, too,” I said. I examined the man.
Crawler #4,778,551. “Low Thi.”
Level 25.
Race: Human.
Class: D-Bag Geek.
D-Bag Geek? Really? “The map was on the table back here out of your
reach. It disappeared the moment I picked it up. It installed itself into my
system.”
“Well, we’re now fucked. There were two maps, and we lost both of
them. This place is a goddamn nightmare.”
“It’s Carl,” another crawler said. This was another human named Tyler
Storm. A level 26 Weather Engineer.
“It’s not really a human,” Wynne the gnome said, looking between me
and the newcomers. “He’s a changeling named Henrik! He’s torturing me,
trying to get me to cast a spell that would give flesh to Quetzalcoatlus. He
drugs me, and I won’t last much longer. I have the map to the temple. I
know of your kind. If you kill me, you will have access. You can take it
from me. Kill me. Kill me fast!”
“No,” I said as Low Thi pulled a spear from his inventory. He raised it
and pointed it at the gnome’s head. “No, no, no!”
The man jabbed forward. The NPC slouched over, dead.
Quest failed. Free Wynne from his bondage.
Low Thi looked up. “Hey, I just got an achievement called Cockblock
for ruining your quest. I guess you really are Carl.”
“This guy doesn’t have a map on him. He doesn’t have shit,” the banana
guy said. His name was Mike Barnes 3. He was a level 23 Banana
Farmer. “We’re screwed.”
Deep breath, deep breath.
“Do you assholes have any sort of towns or villages in there?”
“Yes,” Low Thi said.
“Do any of you have Desperado Club access?”
“I do,” the spider guy said. He indicated the third human. “Bobby and I
are the only ones.”
“Meet me there in a goddamn hour.”
“Why?” the spider asked. His name was Morris Sp. A level 23
Freelance Psychiatrist.
“Because I’m going to kick your goddamn ass. And then I need to
transcribe your map to you. That is if this town doesn’t get blown to hell in
the meantime.”
OceanofPDF.com
[ 7 ]
Soon after, several dromedarians went to work manually affixing the storm
shield over the city. The town hall had been the tallest building, but they
had prepared for this contingency. A group of dromedarians tirelessly set up
a scaffolding system to hold the shield up. They worked quickly, unfurling
the canvas, filling the town with shadow.
“That material looks like it used to be part of a balloon,” Katia said.
“It’s definitely magical.”
I stared at the creatures feverishly working to protect the city. Were
these guys real dromedarians? Or were they changelings? Katia had
witnessed a shapeshifter murdering two dromedarians, so it was clear the
camels didn’t know that their ranks had been infiltrated. This was some
serious Invasion of the Body Snatchers bullshit.
Carl: Is there any way we can tell which ones of these guys are real?
Mordecai: I’ve been thinking about it, and I think I have an idea.
Donut. Do your sunglasses have the ability to see based on heat
signature?
Donut: I DON’T KNOW. THERE ARE LOTS OF MODES.
PROBABLY.
Mordecai: If it does, a real dromedarian and a changeling will have
almost an identical heat signature, but the brain of the changeling will
be a lot hotter. That might make their heads a little hotter. It’ll
probably be very subtle, but you might be able to make that work.
Donut: OKAY I WILL TRY BUT I WOULDN’T GET MY HOPES
UP. THEIR HEADSCARVES WILL MAKE IT EXTRA HARD TO
SEE.
I sent Louis and Firas off to a saferoom. There was only a single real
saferoom in town for folks without a personal space, and it was in Weird
Shit Alley. We hadn’t gone in there yet, but everyone was a little scared of
the street. I told them to go anyway. They’d both received several
achievements for participating in that fight, likely all boxes we’d already
received. They were both marveling at the sudden influx of views and
follows. After they collected their loot, they needed to hook up with
Langley and the other archers, who were going to spend some time outside
the gates grinding until the storm hit.
We needed to do that, too. This floor was going to require us spending a
lot of time in the crafting room, which meant less time for regular
experience. That was deliberate, designed to slow down our progress. We
couldn’t keep relying on boss battles to give us big bumps of experience.
Regular, old-school grinding was important, not just for experience, but to
keep training up our skills.
We were always juggling. We were slightly ahead of the curve, but the
archer guys were a perfect example of how lagging behind on a single floor
could bite you on the ass.
“Hey,” I said to a passing dromedarian. Donut was playing with the
settings on her sunglasses, trying to figure out how to overlay the heat
signature setting. She wanted me to get one to pause close by so she could
figure it out.
“Are the gnomes going to bomb the city now?” I asked. “Like they did
to the other town?”
This camel was a woman. A level-30 named Emerald.
She looked at me with disdain, but then Donut complimented her
headscarf, and the camel changed before our eyes.
“We need to get through the rubble. There’s something important buried
in the basement of the town hall, and… and it may still be with us,” she
said, though her voice held little hope.
They didn’t know if Wynne the gnome was alive or dead. They were
going to be sorely disappointed.
“What if it’s not?”
She paused. I didn’t think she was going to answer, but then she said,
“Then we move to the shelters. Every day after sunrise, we give the gnomes
proof of collateral. If that doesn’t happen tomorrow, what happened to the
Bactrians will happen to us.”
“Proof?” I asked. “What sort of proof?”
“Look, I’m going to help with the rescue efforts. But if I were you, I’d
go find a different town.”
“There are no other towns,” I said.
We headed toward the Desperado Club where I was to meet up with the
idiots from the subterranean level. I was going to speak with them for a bit,
maybe leave Katia and Donut in the club so they could transfer the map
over the best they could. In the meantime, I had to get back to base as soon
as possible. I was going to spend some time with the two-stage rocket,
though I feared even that wasn’t going to be strong enough to reach the
Wasteland. According to the guy Donut and Mordecai bought the rockets
from, the projectiles could only hit planes that were 500 feet off the ground.
Preferably under 300. That was no good. I was going to use my sapper’s
table to build a rocket that would, hopefully, have much more range.
I checked in with Gwendolyn Duet as we headed to the club. They’d
managed to breach a hole in the first of the four walls, which was made of
sand. The second was made of seashell, and they felt they could break
through that also instead of going over. She had them building siege ladders
and catapults just in case. They hadn’t seen or met any resistance from the
castle itself, but it was slow work because the mobs on the beach were a
constant threat and were always attacking.
Worst of all, however, was this massive bird that kept harassing them. It
was a giant version of the chainsaw buzzards she’d described earlier, only
this one was a borough boss. It was constantly circling the structure of the
necropolis. If it saw any crawlers out in the open, it would swoop down to
attack. It had wrecked two siege towers they’d started building, causing
them to abandon the idea. It was too strong for them to fight, so they had to
hide every time it appeared. The thing was so fast, they couldn’t even get a
good description off of it. The creature was seriously hindering their efforts.
Gwen: Oh, I do have some good news. I saw a pair of crawlers on
the water. They were too far away to talk, but they were in some 20,000
Leagues Under the Sea-looking submarine thing. It popped up like a
cork. The two crawlers emerged and fought a jellyfish thing attached to
the outside of the sub, and then they disappeared again. So we know
somebody is working on it under there.
Carl: That is good news. Take care of yourself.
Just before we entered the club, all three of us received a notification.
Admin Notice. Congratulations, Crawler. You have received a
second sponsor!
Viewers watching your feed will now see advertisements produced
by both of your sponsors.
Sponsor’s Name: The Open Intellect Pacifist Action Network,
Intergalactic NFC.
Additional details available in the Sponsorship Tab of your
interface.
My heart sank the moment I saw the word “Pacifist.” Who the hell were
these guys? I sent a quick message to Mordecai.
Mordecai: Never heard of them, but they gotta be rich. That NFC
stands for Not for Conquest. That means they’re not sponsored by any
system, and they are free from taxes. Like a non-profit.
Carl: A goddamned charity? Like some religion?
Mordecai: There’s no such thing as a non-profit religion. At least
not in the legal sense. It sounds like one of the many groups out there
that don’t support the crawl. They probably bought into your
sponsorship so they can show commercials. I hope that’s not the case. If
it is, you won’t be getting any boxes from them.
I started to respond, but I was interrupted by Donut.
“Carl, Carl, I got a new sponsor!” Donut said, hopping up and down on
the back of Mongo, which caused him to also start hopping up and down
with excitement. “They’re called, ‘Veriluxx RealPet Companions!’ Don’t
they sound just awesome? I wonder who that is! Who did you get? What
about you, Katia?”
“I got the Squim Conglomerate,” Katia said. “I don’t know who that is.”
“I do,” I said. “They’re the corporation who ran the crawl the last
season. They’re a planet-mining company just like Borant. They do the
battle royale style crawls. I don’t know what type of alien they are.”
“Huh,” Katia said. “Interesting. You can see who else they sponsor, and
the list has like 500 crawlers on it. I don’t recognize any of the names.”
I remembered that was a thing, but the Valtay hadn’t sponsored anybody
else. I checked now, and they still only sponsored me. My new one didn’t
sponsor anybody else, either.
“Hey, not fair,” Donut said, suddenly sounding dejected. “My new
sponsor sponsors a bunch of other people. And Princess D’Nadia just
sponsored five other crawlers, too.”
“They must be pretty special if Princess D’Nadia likes them,” I said,
reaching over to scratch Donut on the head. She harumphed.
“Well I’m probably the best one,” she grumbled.
Loita: Congratulations on the new sponsors. All three of you
commanded very high fees. Both Carl and Donut had bidding wars
that lasted until the final possible microsecond. Donut, you’ll be happy
to know that you brought in the highest sponsorship bid in the history
of the series, beating out both Carl and Prepotente.
Next to me, all signs of dejection fled as Donut did another little hop of
joy.
Donut: THAT’S PRETTY MUCH WHAT I EXPECTED. HOW’S
ZEV?
Carl: Lucia isn’t commanding the most sponsorship money?
Loita ignored both of the questions.
Loita: Furthermore, Donut, you will soon be receiving a benefactor
box from your new sponsor. It is a product sample. We are requesting
that you take it out and interact with it a few times. Carl, feel free to
make some of your famous comments about it. This will appear to be a
regular benefactor box, but it is in fact part of their sponsorship
contract. This box is a freebie for them. It is something new we are
trying with some select crawlers to attract more possible sponsors. So
try not to disparage the product too much if you want Veriluxx to send
you a real benefactor box. In six or seven days, assuming you’re still
with us, you two plus Mongo will be going on a program where you
discuss the product.
Carl: We’re going on an infomercial? Are you kidding me?
Loita: I am not Zev, Carl. Do not speak back to me like that. It will
not be tolerated.
I almost told her to go fuck herself, but I held my tongue. Now was not
the time to push it.
Donut: WHAT ABOUT KATIA?
Loita: Katia, I have you booked on a separate program around the
same time. You will be doing it solo. This will be a one-on-one interview
on a show called Dungeon Sidekicks.
Katia: I can’t wait.
Donut: HOW IS ZEV DOING, LOITA?
Loita: Zev is still in treatment. We expect her return shortly.
“A goddamned infomercial?” I said.
“I wonder what the product is,” Donut said as she dismounted Mongo.
The dinosaur whimpered as he went into the carrier, but he obediently
allowed her to store him. She jumped to my shoulder as we entered the
Desperado Club. Donut gasped with a sudden realization, putting her paw
on the side of my head. “Do you think there’ll be a script? Do you think I’ll
get lines? Like a real actress?”
“Penis Parade? Really?” Katia said, looking about the room. We sat at our
regular booth. Bomo and the Sledge stood guard nearby. With Katia’s
acquisition of the Desperado Pass, we decided to add a third regular
bodyguard to the team. This new guy was also a cretin. A rock creature. His
name was Very Sullen.
“I like the Penis Parade,” Donut said. “They give out hats if you tip
them a gold coin. Sledgie likes it too, isn’t that right?”
The Sledge rumbled.
“Where are those assholes?” I said, looking about. The club wasn’t very
full. I saw only a handful of crawlers, and most of them were going straight
for the Silk Road or the guild hall. Nobody had any leisure time any more. I
also needed to go to the market and stock up.
A pair of crawlers entered, and I turned to see Morris the spider creature
and the other human. They spotted us and hesitantly approached. I
remembered I’d told them that I was going to kick their asses the next time
I saw them. I waved them over and told the bodyguards to stand aside.
The first thing I did was exchange fist bumps with both, adding them to
my chat. I examined them each in turn.
I’d already examined Morris Sp. His half human/half tarantula race
was called an Arachnid, and he was level-23. His class was something
called a Freelance Psychiatrist. It was a psionic class. Those with psionic
skills had excelled on the previous floor, but Morris here didn’t seem to
have leveled much.
The other was a human, early twenties with dark hair and tan skin. He
had a Mediterranean look to him. Bobby D.J. He was a level-24 Spy. That
was a rogue class, and the guy looked a little frazzled around the edges. He
had an eye twitch, and his left hand never stopped trembling. I knew their
quadrant was covered in traps. If Bobby was the only rogue in the party, he
was probably their first line of defense. I wouldn’t want to be in his shoes.
“Tell me about your quadrant,” I said after they got their drinks. The
only one of the group who didn’t have alcohol was Donut, who was instead
sipping on a regular Shirley Temple, chatting away with the Sledge, who
grumbled happily in response to all of her declarations and observations.
Morris did not fit in the booth, so instead the spider stood over the table.
Katia didn’t say anything out loud, but she shivered every time the arachnid
moved. I wasn’t a huge fan of spiders, either.
“Our quadrant is terrible,” Morris said. “The whole place is a maze. A
big, fuck-you-you’re-going-to-die maze. We start at the top, and the Crypt
of Anser is at the bottom. That’s where the staircase is. We start in the
village, which is really a cavern filled with these things called Nude
Glabers. They’re undead mole rat creatures, but they’re naked with almost-
human anatomy, and they’re hard to look at. That’s where we are now.
There are dozens of paths away from town. Some of them are tunnels so
tight I have to be pushed to get through. We got a quest to find one of the
two maps, but we failed thanks to you.”
“I only took one of the maps,” I said. “You failed because you were set
up to fail.”
“Maybe.”
“Tell me about the other map, specifically the place where you were
supposed to collect it.”
Morris shrugged. “The other was a similar set up, but instead of a
dirigible gnome, it was a pig. We thought it was a mob. It wasn’t until after
we’d filled it with ‘nanas did we realize it’d been an NPC.”
“‘Filled it with nanas?’” Katia asked.
“We have a guy who shoots banana tree seeds from his hand. Yes, I
know how stupid that sounds. But he’s a druid, and he causes the seeds to
sprout really fast. They work great, but the range is really low.”
“A pig? I knew it was a pet!” Donut said proudly.
“Yeah, so we killed it. The map was in the same room, but out of reach.
It was in the air quadrant. We were building a tool to take it. You can throw
something through the quadrant barrier, but you can’t hold something like a
giant stick or grabber through the wall. You can’t cast spells, either.”
I remembered it’d let me roll a ball through the barrier, but the
clockwork Mongos couldn’t get through, nor my hands. Mordecai had
explained that the barriers wouldn’t allow anything under our direct or
indirect control through.
“But before we could figure it out, a two-humped camel thing, a
Bactrian it was called, came in and saw the dead pig and freaked out. He
upset the table with the map, and it fell to the ground, blowing closer to us.
Then he ran away. We spent hours trying to figure out how to get it. But
before we could, the damn room just blew up. And it said the map was
destroyed. So we moved to the second map.”
“But I beat you to it,” I said. “Have you seen the castle or crypt or
whatever yet? The building you need to storm?”
“No,” he said. “We need the map. It’s impossible to navigate without.
Every new hallway has a different type of trap. Bobby here is good at
disarming them, but it makes us slow. We just barely cleared the halls at the
top, and we need to work our way down. It’s going to take a long time.”
“Do you know who Quetzalcoatlus is? Wynne—the gnome you guys
killed—mentioned him.”
“Yeah,” Morris said. “I guess Anser was the emperor. He died, and
when he did, they built this tomb for him. They threw his entire court and
his wife in here even though they weren’t dead. Then they sealed it all up.
Quetzalcoatlus is his wife, and she’s somewhere in here still. She’s some
undead thing now. She’s non-corporeal. A ghost. She can travel through
walls within the tomb. And I think she’s really pissed off. Every once in a
while we can hear her, screaming. She sounds like a bird. After we failed
the quest to get the map, we all got a quest to find and kill her. Nobody
knows how to kill a damn ghost.”
“Weird,” I said. “You need magic to kill ghosts.” We’d learned that from
the krasue creatures on the third floor. In addition, there were extensive
instructions on how to kill ghosts in the cookbook, including bomb types
that would do the trick. “There are creatures here, on our level. They are
trying to resurrect Quetzalcoatlus. They’re trying to get a spell that will give
her flesh. They want to be able to physically touch her, I think. So they can
gain some of her special powers.”
“She’d probably be easier to kill if she had physical form,” Morris said.
“Probably,” I agreed. “Too bad you killed the guy who knew how to
cast the spell. So here’s where we stand. We have the gnomes floating over
the entire world, and they bomb the shit out of everybody. On top of the
temple, we have a few groups. The camels and the changelings. The
changelings are pretending to be refugees, but they have some plan of their
own that involves resurrecting the guardian of the subterranean level. On
the ground we have somebody called the Mad Dune Mage, and we don’t
know much about him yet. And then there’s one more castle in the water.
From what little we know, it sounds like it’s underwater.”
“Yeah, we-we keep getting water breathing scrolls and scrolls of d-d-
disarm trap, which are useless unless you know for sure a trap is right
there,” Bobby said, speaking for the first time. He had a stutter to his voice.
“Okay,” I said. “Here’s the deal. I can see the map, and you’re right. It’s
insane how complicated it is. There are tunnels. Rooms. Dead ends. Pits
with spikes. It’s nuts. Katia here brought paper and a pencil, and she’s
already started mapping out a path to get to the bottom. You two sit with her
and Donut. It’ll take a few hours, but she will give you the map when she’s
done. I highly suggest you try drawing it in your scratchpad while she maps
it out, just in case you lose it. We need to work together. I will help any way
I can. If you need something built, let me know, and I will make it happen.”
Morris turned to Bobby and smiled. “And you said he was going to
murder us.”
“The d-d-day isn’t over yet.”
I said my goodbyes to Donut and Katia, and I hit the Silk Road. I
topped-off my explosive supplies and bought a few newly-available toys.
From there, I exited the club and headed back to the saferoom. Outside, the
wind whipped at the town’s covering. The storm was here. As I walked
back, I received a pair of notifications.
You have received a Bronze Benefactor Box from the Valtay
Corporation.
You have received a Silver Benefactor Box from The Open Intellect
Pacifist Action Network, Intergalactic NFC.
OceanofPDF.com
[ 8 ]
T he first thing I did when I returned to base was open my two new
boxes. I also had a fan box coming, but it hadn’t come in yet. Mordecai
came out to greet me.
I handed him the batch of mushrooms I’d taken from the desk in the
basement. He looked at them and frowned. The system called them
Mairmei Mushroom – Alchemy Material. All the description said was:
These little guys are quite the trip. I assumed they were some sort of
psychedelic. The cookbook had very little information on mushrooms.
Mordecai was intrigued because he’d never seen this particular strain
before. I gave him the batch so he could study it further.
But first he wanted me to open the benefactor boxes in front of him so
he could see what I’d received.
“I’ve never heard of an anti-crawl group giving a benefactor box. I’ve
known a few to sponsor crawlers over the generations, but that’s usually
just to get people talking about their cause. They have no real investment in
the crawler himself. A silver box, too. So whoever these guys are, they
either have an endless supply of cash or they’re gambling a lot on you.
Especially if you’re the only one they’ve sponsored.”
“We’ll see,” I said. I wasn’t optimistic. I was in kind of an odd position.
If they really were a pacifist, anti-crawl group, then I supported their cause.
Sort of. Being a pacifist was one of those things that looked and sounded
great when you were trying to get laid. Not so much when you were
literally fighting for your life. I needed bombs and weapons and armor and
shit that would help me kill as many of these fuckers as possible. I wasn’t
going to get that from a goddamned group of hippies, no matter how
sympathetic we were for each other.
I started with the bronze Valtay box. The intricate box whirled and
twirled as it opened with great fanfare.
It was another pill. It looked identical to the last one they’d given me. I
examined it.
Valtay Corporation Neural Enhancer #275. Variant 35.j
This item is compatible with your Morphology and Interface.
Warning: This pill will cause a permanent change to your brain.
This item cannot be unequipped or undone once installed.
Warning: You do not have a Valtay Corporation Neural Interface
installed. While your current wetware system is compatible with this
Neural Enhancer, it is recommended you visit a Valtay Corporate
Outreach Center to discuss upgrade options. Payment and Legacy
plans available. Keeping the Best of You alive.
Current wetware: Syndicate Crawl Version 47.002b.Human.
Taking this pill will install the following upgrade to your interface:
Current elevation and airspeed.
That’s it? I thought. I didn’t dare say it out loud. I felt disappointment,
but then I remembered how damn useful that last upgrade had been.
Hopefully its utility would become self-evident. I popped the pill, looked up
at the ceiling, and said, “Thanks, brain worm dudes.”
I opened the next box. The first one had contained the logo for the
Valtay. This next one had a spiral galaxy symbol with some alien lettering
on it. Mordecai peered at the logo and shrugged.
The box opened, revealing what looked like a sweet potato.
“What the hell, man,” I said, picking it up.
Toraline Root Vegetable.
Alchemy Material.
This rare tuber only grows in dirt that has been covered by lava.
They are very rare. Nobody ever goes digging them up, either. You
know why? Because they taste like dogshit, that’s why. They’re pretty
much useless. In fact, fuck you for wasting my time with this.
“What the hell is this, and why is it in a silver box and not a bronze
one?”
“Its origin and value and rarity and a hundred other factors determine
the required box type,” Mordecai said, snatching it from my hand with a
talon. “I’ve never seen this before. I’ve seen potions that require a similar
vegetable. Most are salves for scaled creatures. Specialty healing.”
“You think they want me to make a potion with this?” I asked.
“Maybe. Or maybe an explosive. Or maybe it’s an inside joke,”
Mordecai said. He passed it back to me. “Some aliens have really weird
customs. For all we know, it’s a traditional marriage proposal. Still, I
have… a lot… of potion recipes in my scratch pad. I’ll search through them
and see if I can figure anything out. It’ll give me time to look for
information on these mushrooms, too.”
I nodded. I would do the same thing with the cookbook. There were
pages and pages of potion recipes. I’d already read through the names of the
potions and what they did, but I hadn’t committed the ingredient lists to
memory. I tossed the toraline into my inventory. It was listed as Very Rare,
but it had low value, equal with some of the unenchanted clothing items I
hadn’t yet sold.
I returned my gaze to the ceiling. “Thanks for the yam, mystery aliens.
I’m more of a mashed potatoes guy, but this’ll do. I guess.”
I returned my attention to the Valtay upgrade. I now had the ability to
add my current speed and altitude to my UI. I dove into my interface and
tried to figure it out. I clicked a toggle that only showed speed if I was
moving more than six kilometers an hour. There were multiple displays
showing different velocities at the same time, and I had no idea what the
hell that meant. Luckily there was a toggle titled Relative Surface Speed. I
clicked it, and all the other information disappeared, leaving only a single
gauge that currently had me standing still.
The elevation display was equally complicated. I turned it on, and it
filled my screen with a page of information I did not understand. It didn’t
have feet or miles as a unit of measurement, but it did have kilometers and
meters, so I selected that. There were some very big numbers in there. I
tried toggling Planetary Sea-level Only, but that was a mistake. It had me
at just over -92,000 meters. I realized that meant I was standing 92
kilometers under the surface of the planet. That was crazy. Was earth’s crust
even that thick? Wasn’t it all magma and oil and gooey shit once you got
deep enough? I’d never paid attention in geology class.
After some adjusting, I finally found two different gauges that gave me
what I needed. One was adjustable. I set it at 0.00, giving me a gauge to the
surface of the tomb. The second was at 8,932 meters. It was labeled
Gravitational Zone Sea Level. If I was reading it correctly, that meant we
were nine kilometers above the water quadrant. That was damn high.
Thankfully all the little things that came with such great heights weren’t in
play here in the bubble, which seemed to be equally pressurized throughout.
I didn’t even pretend to understand the science. If I was doing the
conversion correctly in my head, that meant we were standing about the
same height as the peak of Mount Everest. That also meant that the
Necropolis of Anser was fucking huge. I didn’t know how tall the tallest
building in the world was before the collapse, but it had to be way less than
1,000 meters.
We needed to give as much support to those assholes in the tomb as we
could. Because if they failed, that meant we’d have to go in there once we
figured out the gnome castle. And that was something I did not want to do.
The storm ended, and the town survived. The camels did not retract the sails
as usual. Langley told me they now had guards at the main gate, and the
camels were setting up anti-air defenses all around the city. They still
allowed us to come and go, but they interrogated everybody about grulke
toads and gnomes, demanding to know if they’d seen any.
We were now four hours from when the gnomes would know for certain
the collateral was dead, and probably five from when the bombs would fall.
The casual, laid-back atmosphere of the town had changed to that of a city
under siege.
I now had four modified missiles in my inventory. With Mordecai’s help
along with my level-four sapper’s table, I’d created a missile that might
reach high enough. We wouldn’t know until we tested it. And it just so
happened a perfect opportunity to test it was about to present itself.
Something that would help both us and Gwen’s team down below.
Katia and Donut returned from the Desperado Club as I was standing
outside of the Toe, waiting. They’d spent the entire two hours of the storm
in the Desperado. Katia had a feather boa around her neck. Mongo was free,
and he also had a boa, dangling freely from his collar. He kept snapping at
it, and feathers were flying everywhere. Donut and Katia had gone into the
Penis Parade together.
“Really?” I asked.
“Eight more visits, and I get a free dance from Anaconda!” Donut
announced.
“Wait, how much money are you guys spending at this place?”
“Oh, oh, Carl, guess what? I got another box from Princess D’Nadia!”
Donut exclaimed, ignoring my question. She hopped up and down on
Mongo’s back. “It’s only a bronze this time, but I bet it’ll be awesome!”
“You haven’t gotten the one Loita mentioned?”
“Not yet. She messaged and said it’ll come later today. She said the
sponsor wants to make sure we survive the bombing before they send the
prototype. Isn’t that exciting? I’m going to open Princess D’Nadia’s present
now!” She and Mongo scrambled inside. Katia and I watched her go.
Katia looked up at the sky, which was still covered with the sails. In the
twilight, the whole town was prematurely dark. “No bird yet?”
“Not yet,” I said. “How’d it go with spider boy and the other guy?”
Katia had given them a general map of the entire structure and a more
detailed path to another town about halfway down to the crypt. Assuming
we all survived the next 24 hours, they’d meet up again to get the rest. The
lower half of the necropolis featured much-larger rooms, and oftentimes the
map showed the only entrance and exit to each chamber was on the ceiling
and the floor. They’d need ladders and ropes to descend.
“They’re not as bad as Louis and Firas, but those subterranean guys are
total trainwrecks,” Katia said. “Their stress levels are off the charts. It’s
understandable, but they’re very tense. Too tense.”
I laughed. “That’s what Mordecai said about you when we first met. He
called you a train wreck. Also, we’re calling them the tomb raiders.”
She did not find any of that funny. “If something happens to that Bobby
guy, the entire team is dead. He’s the only one who can detect traps, and
he’s already missed a few. They make others go in tunnels ahead because
he’s too valuable, and they keep dying right in front of him. They described
a trap where needles popped up from the floor and injected the crawler with
a potion that filled his sinuses with flesh-eating beetles.” She shivered.
“Maybe you can make some really low-level explosives for them,
something they can roll down the hallways to set off the traps.”
“They need a spell like Donut’s Clockwork Triplicate,” I said.
“Something where they can make or control minions. The spider guy is a
psionicist. He should try to find something. I bet there’s something in that
town of theirs that’ll help them. Their situation sucks, but it’s not
impossible.”
Katia grunted. “They kept asking when they thought we might storm
our castle. I have the impression they want to hold back and wait for us to
have access so we can ‘help.’”
I shook my head. Goddamnit. “We need to push them. We don’t have
time for that.”
“I agree, and I did. I lied and told them that we don’t expect to complete
the air quadrant until time is almost up.” She looked at me, worry evident in
her eyes. “At least I hope it was a lie.”
I instinctively returned my gaze to the air. The protective sail, deflated
balloon, whatever it was, shimmered in the meager light. A camel on stilts
walked by, turning on lamps throughout the town. I knew the Wasteland
was still over the water. But right now we were waiting for something else.
“It’s coming,” Katia said. “I can see the dot on my map.”
I heard the low, angry buzz of a flying creature.
After my most recent discussion with Gwen on the land quadrant, I’d
asked the Toe’s barkeep about the creature, but the camel had been reluctant
to tell me anything. Juice Box, however, was happy to tell me all about the
borough boss in exchange for a gold coin.
The bird’s name was Ruckus, and she was a giant version of the more
common buzz-ard. She came to roost nearby every night after the storms.
The bird was half biological, half machine. A steampunk cyborg. Juice
Box claimed she didn’t know why the mechanical birds lived around here,
as everything else in the area was purely biological. She said they were
either a failed gnome invention that had escaped during the second war, or
it was something left over from the time before that. What she called the
“treasure hunter” era. The waster patrols avoided Ruckus, but one of their
responsibilities was to cull the regular-sized buzz-ards if they saw them.
“If it flies over the city every night, why don’t they shoot it down with
their anti-aircraft missiles?” Katia asked.
“Apparently there used to be a third camel city,” I said. “They tried that,
and it didn’t go well for them.”
Katia went pale. “And you want to fight this thing?”
I shrugged. “We’ll be like a mile away. I have a missile I need to test.
Don’t worry. It’ll be fine.”
OceanofPDF.com
[ 9 ]
P art of me felt bad about stealing from little S karn and his
burgeoning charge-people-to-look-through-his-telescope business, but we
didn’t have time to debate the morality of the issue. I knocked on the door
of his house to talk to him. I wanted to make sure Flint the adult wasn’t
there—he wasn’t—and I told the kid that I just wanted to check in on him.
“If they start to drop bombs, I want you to run to the Toe, okay? Tell all
your friends. Go there. Nowhere else.”
Skarn turned into the creepy human child form. “Flint says we’re
supposed to go to the Spit and Swallow or the Wiggle Room.”
I knew neither of those were true saferooms, and they wouldn’t be safe.
“No. The Toe. Nowhere else. I will give you and every one of your
friends a whole gold piece if they go there instead. It’ll be the safest place
in town. And you can tell Flint to go there, too.”
While I talked to him, Donut scaled the wall and leaped to the roof of
the home, stealing the Gnomish farseer telescope. She stole it in ten seconds
flat. She was in and out.
I’d told Donut to leave thirty gold pieces on the roof as payment, but
she told me she’d “forgotten.”
“Why don’t you tell them to go to the A.O.?” Donut asked. That was the
only real saferoom tavern in town. It was in Weird Shit Alley. It stood for
the Acrotomophilia Oasis. I didn’t know what that meant, but none of the
other guys liked going over there. “The Toe isn’t a real saferoom either.”
“No, it’s not. But our personal space is. We can fit a lot of camels in
there.”
“Mordecai’s not going to like that.”
“Mordecai can suck it if he doesn’t like it,” I said.
Donut didn’t have a response. She was still a little salty about the
contents of her benefactor box, though she was putting on a brave face. The
box had been empty, but then she’d received a notification that her
sunglasses had received an update. An update that greatly enhanced her
ability to determine the surface and the subsurface temperature of anything
she looked at with precise detail.
Mordecai said that was a common tactic of benefactors. It cost a literal
fortune to send exceptional items. It was more economical to send an item
on one floor, and then send an upgrade for that same item on the next. And
then another. Eventually, you’d end up with an item that would be
Legendary or even Celestial box-worthy. The cost of four or five silver and
bronze boxes was a fraction of the cost of sending a single Legendary.
Of course you’d have to survive through five floors to get the benefit. It
was possible for them to send more than one box a floor, but according to
Mordecai, the cost of that was even more astronomical.
In addition to its intended purpose—to help Donut root out changelings
—I could see multiple useful applications of the upgrade, including the
ability to find weaknesses on mobs. She could possibly use it to help me
find traps and secret doors. She could set parameters and get a warning
when things reached certain temperatures. There were dozens of options.
Unfortunately, Donut had little patience for all of that. I couldn’t wear them,
so Katia and I were baby-stepping her through customizing the glasses.
By the time we reached the town’s exit, which was now guarded by
multiple dromedarians, she had figured out the overlay system.
Donut: TWO OF THE GUARDS ARE DIFFERENT THAN THE
OTHERS.
I still didn’t know if all this changeling/dromedarian drama really meant
anything. As always, there were layers upon layers of backstory, and only
some of it was relevant. I knew from the last floor it was important to learn
as much as we could because it usually revealed victory paths that would be
otherwise obscured. But I couldn’t help but wonder if we’d already burned
out any benefit we could get from this storyline when the tomb raider dudes
killed the collateral guy.
I suspected that it didn’t matter anymore. But if it didn’t, why did
Princess D’Nadia spend money to send Donut that upgrade? She possibly
was as much in the dark as we were. In fact, considering the lack of people
in this bubble, that was a very distinct possibility. She sent the upgrade
because she thought she was being helpful and not because she knew
something we didn’t.
We had an hour until it was fully dark. Once night descended, more
mobs appeared. We wanted to get this done before then. The moment we
were outside the gates, we went to work assembling the Chariot. It took
four minutes this time.
The Chariot had a new addition since the last time we’d tested it. I
mounted a four-chamber missile tube to the right of my seat. My seat was
raised, and I could swivel 360 degrees. I controlled the Y axis of the tube
with a handle on the side, allowing me to swing the launcher up and down.
They were fired by me pulling a pin on the back. There was only a one-
second delay between me pulling the pin and the missile firing, which
wasn’t ideal. I needed to pull my hand away quickly, or it would be turned
into a piece of charcoal. And I needed to be careful about where the back of
the launcher was pointing when I fired. It’d be easy to accidentally blast the
back of Katia’s head with flames. I had a better design in my head, but it
would take too long to build. As always, safety came last.
Thanks to the neighborhood map we’d received from the dead goose, I
could now also see the boss’s location. She was only about a half of a mile
east of town, settled right atop a sand dune. She was just sitting there,
recharging her batteries or whatever it was cyborg death birds did at night.
“She’s too close,” I said. “We’ll need to go west. See if we can get a
mile and a half away.”
We wanted to see how far the missiles could go. I knew I couldn’t get
far enough to test the full range, but I wanted to make sure the second stage
portion actually worked. I knew in real-world conditions, the achievable
propulsion distance was different between horizontal and vertical flight, but
Mordecai seemed to think that didn’t matter. Especially since we were using
the magical guided upgrades on each of the four missiles.
“If we move too far from town, we won’t be able to retreat as easily if
the missiles don’t work,” Katia said. “I hope you know what you’re doing.”
She eased forward on the throttle, and we were off, moving across the
desert. The chariot moved smoothly and quietly. She gradually increased
the speed, the hot wind whipping at our faces.
“There,” I said, pointing to a raised dune near the center of the bowl.
We climbed easily, coming to a stop. From our position, I had a good view
of the entire area. Far to my right, the remnants of the Bactrian town
continued to smolder. A few of the male thorny devils lumbered about, but
they were all too far away to bother us.
High above, I caught the twinkle of the Wasteland. It was on the far
edge of the bubble, glowing red against the dark sky. I knew once the sun
rose, it’d be back, almost directly above our position now.
“Hand me the telescope, Donut.”
“I don’t like this, Carl,” Donut said. She sat on a little shelf just behind
my head. “It’s still hot out here, and the sand gets everywhere. It’s five
degrees hotter in the middle of the bowl than it is on the edges. I don’t
understand why the ground is still so hot now that the sun is sinking away.
It is not acceptable.”
I was starting to regret the new upgrade to her sunglasses. She’d been
commenting on the temperature difference of items for an hour straight
now.
“Just keep an eye out for mobs and give me the damn telescope.”
She grumbled some more but then produced the large, heavy scope. It
had a clamp on the bottom, designed to be attached to either a table or the
gunwale of a boat or airship. I attached the clamp to the left side of the chair
and swung it over. I could use the telescope and aim the launcher at the
same time.
I turned the chair 90 degrees and sighted the scope, looking for the
borough boss.
“There you are,” I said, zooming in.
Even in the dwindling light, the magical telescope gave me an excellent
view of the beast. Ruckus. The house-sized bird sat on the ground, head
hanging low like it was asleep. The body of the creature vibrated up and
down, like an engine.
I was expecting it to be more vulture-like, but it resembled a colossal
hawk. A hawk wearing steampunk-style body armor. A real beak protruded
from a brass, pipe covered helmet that obscured the bird’s eyes. A few
wheels and cogs spun along the exterior of the armored main body. The
folded wings on the sides of the creature appeared to be regular, organic
wings.
I moved the telescope slightly, focusing on the giant bird’s main
weapon. The regular-sized buzz-ards flew around with a chainsaw-like
device attached underneath their bodies. They swooped down and cut
through anything that tried to fight them. I knew Gwen’s team had a
difficult time with them, and even the veteran waster patrol had to work to
take one of them out. They used their guided missiles on those things more
than they did against gnomish airplanes.
Ruckus had something similar, but much larger. The weapon sat on the
ground next to the bird. It was permanently attached to the monster by a
pair of thick cables which I knew it could retract and lengthen. It wasn’t a
chainsaw, but more like a twenty-five-foot-long stick with ten spinning
buzzsaws on it. The weapon hung vertically under the bird as it flew. I’d
seen something similar once attached to a helicopter. They used it to easily
sheer through trees and branches along power lines in remote areas. Gwen
had said the flying multi-buzzsaw had trashed their under construction siege
towers in seconds.
I moved the telescope back to the bird. I zoomed in one more tick, and
the description popped up.
Ruckus. Spring-operated Chicken Hawk Sentinel.
Level 55 Borough Boss!
This is a bereft Minion of Shamus Chaindrive.
The great bugbear treasure hunter Shamus Chaindrive was known
as both a paranoid and a greedy bastard. Having been betrayed one too
many times, he no longer trusted any living soul. That is why his crew
was always comprised of constructs and automatons.
He dedicated his life to hunting down long-lost treasures and
artifacts. He prized one item above all others.
The Gate of the Feral Gods. Said to be buried in the long-lost
Necropolis of Anser.
Chaindrive set out to find the tomb. He boarded his great
submarine and sank beneath the waves, vowing to never surface again
until he had his prize.
It took the bugbear almost twenty years to find the tomb, poking up
like a monolith from a desert island. Using his submarine, he docked it
against an underwater entrance directly adjacent to the main chamber
of the trap-filled tomb. He quickly learned that he was not the first to
arrive. A young mage had recently landed on the island and was
attempting to magically burrow into the tomb. A colony of dirigible
gnomes were settled in the area. All sought the treasures held within
the tomb. All had failed so far.
Chaindrive unleashed his greatest weapon in an attempt to slow the
efforts of his competitors. Ruckus had been stored in stasis in the hold
of his great submarine. The self-replicating, spring-operated
automaton was given the task to kill all who wished to steal
Chaindrive’s prize.
Now that the bugbear is long dead, the sentinel chicken hawk is
content to spend its day circling around the island and being an all-
around asshole. The regular residents of the island are smart enough to
leave this powerful boss alone. The fact you’re reading this means
you’re not one of the smart ones.
“Strange,” I said to Donut and Katia. “It says the boss comes from the
underwater guy, who is dead. I think the ‘castle’ is a giant submarine. Also,
it sounds like there’s a hidden treasure in…”
System Message: Please Wait.
The world froze for about half of a second. It was like the beginning of
a boss battle. But nothing happened, and the short glitch was over as
quickly as it started.
System Message: Thank you for your patience. You may now
resume normal activities.
“What the hell was that about?” I asked, looking around.
“I don’t know. Weird,” Katia said.
Carl: Mordecai, did you feel that? Also, do you know what the Gate
of the Feral Gods is?
Mordecai: I felt it. It happens. It’s usually not a glitch, but a
gameplay timeout so dueling routines can clarify or reconcile rule
conflicts. But no, never heard of the gate thing. But remember what I
said about the word “feral?” Stay away from anything marked that.
It’s always bad news.
Carl: What about artifacts? It said the gate is one.
Mordecai: Odd. An artifact is a legendary or celestial-tier item one
may find sitting around the dungeon or as dropped loot. Like I told you
before, most of the best items in the game come from boxes for the first
several floors. After the sixth floor, dropped loot starts to get much
better and more magical. Artifacts start popping up around the eighth
or ninth floor. They’re usually very powerful items.
Carl: Eighth floor, you say? I can’t help but notice we’re only on
the fifth. It says it’s an item inside the necropolis under our feet. Do you
think that had anything to do with that weird pause?
Mordecai: Hmm. Maybe. I’m not surprised, honestly. This is like
what we discussed a while ago. The showrunners control the storylines,
but the AI picks out the specific loot. The AI can, and will, adjust
aspects of the story to fine-tune the difficulty level or to keep the game
“fair.” If you get what I’m saying.
Carl: 10-4. Talk soon. We’re about to test the missiles.
“Uh, Carl,” Donut said, pointing with her paw. “Ruckus is moving.”
The world once again froze. Haunting, eerie music started to play, echoing
across the desert.
B-b-b-boss battle!
The boss battle sequence played out with our portraits floating high over
the desert. But when they played the description of Ruckus, it had changed.
Ruckus. Spring-operated Chicken Hawk Sentinel.
Level 55 Borough Boss!
It’s a bird! It’s a landscaping tool! It’s a goddamned death robot!
Ol’ Ruckus is a left-over, anti-boat, anti-everything else security
and scout automaton that has lost contact with the Akula. Lost contact,
that is, until now. Having awakened and been given new orders, it is
now seeking out enemies of the captain.
And you, my soon-to-be-buzzsawed-to-death-friends, are enemies of
the captain.
“You woke it up, Carl,” Donut said. “The description doesn’t say
anything about it being a bereft minion.”
“What the hell happened?” I exclaimed as I aimed with the eyepiece.
The description had changed quite a bit. Ruckus flapped its gargantuan
wings a few more times and took to the air. The massive buzzsaw started to
lift from the ground.
Gwen: Hey bomber guy. Did you feel that weird glitch? Anyway,
thought you might want to know. Something is happening in the water
quadrant. The water is bubbling. The whole ocean is frothing like the
mouth of a rabid weasel. Somebody is doing something under there.
You guys find that giant buzzard yet?
Carl: Looking at him right now. Talk soon.
I put my hand over the back of the two-foot-long missile, and a tooltip
popped up.
Target missile?
I mentally clicked yes.
Designate target.
Warning: Once locked, you may not remove this designation.
It was awkward keeping my right hand on the back of the missile and
my left on the controls of the telescope. It didn’t leave my hands free to
adjust the chair. I focused on the center mass of Ruckus just before he flew
out of the viewfinder and clicked Target.
Target locked, bitches!
The missile started to blink.
“Fire in the hole. Watch your eyebrows,” I said. I grasped the pin on the
back of the missile, and I pulled the tab.
Whoosh.
A gout of flames rushed from the back of the tube as the missile
rocketed away, dipping slightly and then rising into the night air. My whole
right side flashed with pain as I was burned by the exhaust. Donut yowled
in surprise and scrambled to the left.
“Goddamnit,” I growled at the pain. It hadn’t done any real damage, but
it had hurt. We need a better way to do this. “You okay, Donut?”
“What do you think, Carl? You know I’m flammable, right? Warn me
next time.”
“I did warn you. Stay to my left.”
The bright, crackling exhaust lit up the desert momentarily, turning the
deep dusk into day. I grabbed a second rocket and shoved it into the tube.
“Go!” I said to Katia, who had already thrown the Chariot into gear and
was accelerating down the back of the dune.
I looked over my shoulder, watching the missile curve in midair and
then swoop up toward the boss, who was still gaining altitude. The giant,
multi-buzzsaw swung wildly back and forth in the air as Ruckus pumped its
wings.
We’d replaced the missile’s chemical propellent with one improved by
Mordecai. When it burned itself out, the back of the rocket would, in theory,
drop off and continue to coast for a few seconds. Then the second stage
would light the back of the rocket, effectively doubling its range.
The original rockets had a shitty payload. The warheads were the
equivalent of a quarter stick of goblin dynamite, which was nothing. At first
I hadn’t thought I could improve the design, but after recycling a few
impact hob-lobbers, I realized I could simplify the triggering device, which
gave me much more room to add the boom stuff. Each missile now packed
the same punch as a full stick of hobgoblin dynamite, which was enough to
kill almost any regular mob.
We needed these things to have a range of about three miles if we
wanted to fire them from the surface and hit one of the knock-knocks they
had parked underneath the gnome’s castle. But first I needed to see if the
two-stage rocket was even viable. If this worked, and we got out of here, we
could build a few slightly-longer missiles between now and morning.
The missile zeroed in on the giant boss. The flames in the back started
to sputter just before the missile reached the still-climbing target.
Come on, come on.
“Yes!” I said as I saw the first sparks of the second stage belch from the
back of the now-distant rocket. I pumped my fist into the air.
But then the missile abruptly blew. It detonated a few hundred feet short
of the target.
“Fuck. Fuck, fuck, fuck me, fuckity fuck,” I yelled, turning my fist into a
middle finger. Ruckus, still climbing, flew over the explosion, unharmed.
The buzzsaw cleaved the newly-formed cloud in two.
We used a tiny charge to drop the back fin of the rocket. It appeared that
explosion was too powerful. Or something in the second-stage propellant
caused the warhead to blow prematurely. I didn’t know. I wouldn’t know
until we tested it. But that did us no good right now. I had three missiles
left. Three missiles that all of a sudden had a much-shorter range. We’d
never be able to hit the Wasteland from the ground. Not with these things.
“New plan,” I said. “Turn around and drive straight for it.” I pulled the
third and fourth missiles and loaded them into the launcher. I wanted to
avoid storing explosives outside my inventory if I could, but I needed all
three of them now.
A second pair of eyes and mouth appeared on the back of Katia’s head.
The eyes protruded from her scalp on a pair of little stalks.
“Are you crazy?” she demanded from the second mouth as we hit a
bump. The Chariot sailed into the air and crashed hard into the ground. The
back tread whined, blew up sand, and continued on its way.
“Holy shit, Katia,” I said, recoiling at the sudden appearance of a
second face. “That’s really fucking weird. Do it.”
She grumbled but started the wide turn. If she turned any tighter, the
whole thing would flip. Ahead, Ruckus screeched into the dark. The
buzzsaw swung back and forth, a pendulum of death. We watched as it
cleaved a thorny devil in two. Blood geysered across the desert as the
massive bird zoomed toward us.
I quickly went through the three remaining rockets and locked all three
onto the boss. One on the joint of where the left wing met the body, one on
the exposed neck of the creature, and a third on the lower area where the
cable extended from the creature and attached to the buzzsaw.
The monster aimed right at us. It loomed like a tidal wave. The buzzsaw
was impossibly loud. It’d be on us in seconds.
“When I fire, bank left and floor it,” I yelled. “Donut, watch out. I’m
firing now.”
The screaming blades lined up with our path, waving back and forth.
The damn thing was huge. Each blade was the size of a truck tire. The acrid
stench of overworked machinery filled the air.
I pulled all three pins at once. All three rockets burst from the tubes.
They dipped, arced, and then all corkscrewed through the air. All three hit
the boss at the same moment as we turned away. The boss exploded high
over our heads. The Chariot rocked as we turned too sharply but Katia held
out her arm in the opposite direction, and a heavy weight appeared in her
hand, causing the vehicle to right itself. She dropped the extra mass, and we
zoomed away.
Nice, I thought.
The buzzsaw swung wildly as Ruckus tumbled. It flew into the air,
arcing in our direction. Fuck me. Donut fruitlessly shot a magic missile at
the approaching blades.
Just as the triple explosions rocked the creature, its left wing blew off
right at the joint. Metal showered. It screeched as it spun, wrapping up in
the cable for the saw. The screaming weapon suddenly jerked away and
then pinwheeled through the air with the momentum of the plummeting
bird. The momentum of the swinging weapon caught the wreckage and
pulled it along, flying in our direction. They overshot us and hit the ground
with a mighty crash as Katia slammed the gear into reverse.
Ruckus broke apart in a shower of blood and mechanical parts. The
giant buzzsaw, suddenly free of the bird, continued to whine as it hit and
bounced on the ground. The front of the weapon bucked against the rocks
and sand, still buzzing. Still cutting. The whole thing spun several times
then stuck itself sideways into the rock of the tomb. The two front blades on
the weapon stopped spinning, but the rest showered dirt and debris twenty
feet into the sky, like a truck stuck in the mud.
The Winner! Notification appeared. I assumed the music stopped, but I
couldn’t hear it over the whine of the buzzsaws. Ruckus had splattered all
over the desert. There was metal and machinery and thick, sticky blood
everywhere.
“I feel as if I didn’t do anything productive in that battle,” Donut said as
we watched the buzzsaw. “Mordecai says I need to be doing more, not less.
I’m already two spots behind you, Carl. I don’t want to fall off the top ten
like Katia did.”
I reached up and scratched her on the head.
I turned to Katia, who was staring at the shower of dirt and rock only
twenty feet in front of us. “That was pretty slick what you did there,” I said.
“With the counter weight to keep us from flipping.”
She nodded. She looked like she was about to throw up. “Why did you
make me drive toward it? The missiles worked. They would’ve worked if
we kept going in the other direction. The second stage doesn’t work, but the
first stage still has a really good range.”
“I wanted to make sure they hit accurately,” I said. “Mordecai said
sometimes they’re not all that precise. I didn’t want to damage the prize.”
“Prize?” she asked. But I could tell she knew what I was talking about.
The still-chugging chainsaw rumbled on the ground. The thing had to be 25
feet long.
“Get your backpack ready. We’re going to bulk you up so you can lift it
and stick it into your inventory.”
“Carl, you know how you’re always complaining that they portray
you…”
She didn’t finish. A mighty rumble filled the world. An earthquake. I
thought at first we were being bombed, but this was something different.
Something deep in the bones of the world. I looked worriedly at the
buzzsaw, but it remained firmly dug into the ground.
Bubble Notification. The Bridge of the Akula has been successfully
occupied. The Water Quadrant has been liberated!
All give congratulations to the crawler who successfully took the
throne room. All hail crawler Chris Andrews 2!
All crawlers who originated in the Water Quadrant may now freely
travel to the other quadrants.
The world rumbled again as Donut and I looked at each other.
“Chris,” I said. “Chris is in here with us.”
OceanofPDF.com
[ 10 ]
OceanofPDF.com
STAGE 2 OF 4. STILL ON THE GNOMES.
“S o C hris is from team M eadow L ark ?” K atia asked . “H e entered
the dungeon with Imani and Elle?”
“Yes,” I said as we drove back to Hump Town. We’d looted everything
we could from the wreckage. It was a lot, including almost a ton of
dwarfish aluminum, which was a light but strong metal. The giant buzzsaw
was powered by the same type of dwarfish battery that ran the Chariot. I
pulled the battery, and the whole thing shut off. There was a cable that
attached the saw to the chicken hawk, but it appeared the weapon worked if
it was attached or not. The thing was lighter than it looked, and Katia
managed to pull it all into her inventory.
We’d also obtained the field guide from the borough boss corpse. We
could now see the level and description of all the mobs in the area. The
guide covered the entire bowl. Right now, in the dark of night, multiple,
fist-sized monsters called Night Frights were emerging from the sand
dunes. They were everywhere. They were similar to the rot sticker mobs we
faced on the first floor. They ran, attached themselves to you, and exploded.
Katia and Donut sniped at them as we drove, but we didn’t stop to engage.
“When Elle and the others were still old,” I continued, “there were four
people taking care of them. There had been more, but we never met the
original crew. They were Imani and Yolanda, who were nurses, and the
brothers Chris and Brandon who’d both been maintenance guys at the old
folk’s home. Yolanda died protecting us from the rage elemental, and
Brandon died protecting the team from shade gremlins.” I swallowed,
remembering that last note Brandon had sent. I had it saved in my scratch
pad, and I often found myself pulling it up and reading it. He’d written it
after he’d gotten into a fight with his brother, and his brother had left the
team. I thought of one passage in particular:
He was never much of a talker. Mom said there was something wrong
with him, maybe he was slow. But he ain’t slow. And even if he was… I said
something stupid, and he got mad. He left, and now it’s too late to tell him I
love him. I never said it. I’m about to die, and it’s all I can think about.
I’d promised myself I’d give the message to Chris if I could, but there
was obviously something going on with him. He’d taken a race called an
Igneous. A rock creature similar to the Sledge and Bomo. He’d stopped all
communication with Imani, and Odette had tried to send me a warning
about him.
He’d also killed Frank Q soon after Frank had given me the Ring of
Divine Suffering. According to the Sledge, Chris had sat next to Frank at
the counter of the Desperado Club. They’d talked, and then Chris had
reached over and crushed his head. He’d simply gotten up and walked out
after. He was now banned from the club.
That was not the crawler I remembered. I remembered him as a quiet
man, dedicated to protecting his friends and brother. He’d sobbed after the
boss battle with the tuskling knights. There was no way the old Chris
would’ve done something like that. Imani said his personality had changed
soon after he’d chosen his race.
I sent a message to Imani that we’d located him. And while I couldn’t
yet go seek him out, there was a possibility he could come here. I didn’t
know how I felt about that. Imani seemed to think he wanted to team up
with me, but I feared he was too dangerous. I’d already had more than
enough of that bullshit on the last floor with Hekla. We had enough to
worry about already. It was just too much.
Imani: Whatever you decide, keep me updated. He still ignores all
of my messages. I hope the real Chris is still in there somewhere. He’s
the only non-resident left.
Carl: Will do. How’s the boating going?
Imani: Don’t ask. We need a boat with armor. Elle has figured out
how to use an ice spell to protect us from the fireballs, but we still can’t
get close to the oil rig. There are monsters in the water and pirate orc
archers everywhere.
Carl: What about approaching it from underwater? Build a sub.
Imani: You’ve been talking to Elle, haven’t you? Carl, do you know
how crazy that is? Build a sub, like that’s an easy thing to do.
Carl: Speaking of Chris, he has a submarine. I can’t imagine he’d
be able to get it to you, but maybe he has some knowledge we don’t.
Anyway, if you need a torpedo or something, let me know. We can meet
up at the Desperado and trade it.
Imani: We can trade using the shop interface in our personal space,
too. We just bought it thanks to Donut’s advice. You can list something
for private sale, so we don’t have to meet face-to-face to trade. The only
problem is that it doesn’t let you just give stuff away. It won’t let you
trade it away for less than 50% of its value.
Carl: We’ll figure it out. Be safe.
Imani: You too. And Carl?
Carl: Yeah?
Imani: Don’t kill him. Please. He’s changed, but he’s still my friend.
He’s still Brandon’s brother.
We stood near the collapsed remains of town hall. The dromedarian named
Henrik stood nearby, directing the rescue efforts.
Donut: HE’S A CHANGELING. IT SAYS HE’S LEVEL 30, BUT
HIS HEAD GLOWS EVEN HOTTER THAN THE OTHER GUYS.
CAN THEY HIDE THEIR LEVELS?
Carl: Yes, especially if they’re really strong.
Donut: YOU CAN COOK AN EGG ON THAT GUY’S HEAD.
Henrik was the one who’d been attempting to “convince” Wynne the
gnome into using his spell to resurrect the ghost. I figured he was the leader
guy, and we set out to find him. We didn’t have to search hard. The older
dromedarian stood over the wreckage, shouting at the others to keep
digging in the smoldering remains. The creature looked absolutely
exhausted. Even though he was a changeling, the weight of their current
situation was etched deep onto his dromedarian face.
They still hadn’t gotten to Wynne’s body. They were desperately trying
to find him.
There was a half an hour left until the sun rose. The dull light of the
Wasteland was almost back over the bowl, moving toward its spot in the
center.
I walked up to the camel and didn’t waste any time.
“How does the collateral work?”
The large camel looked down to regard me. “You should leave town the
moment the light hits. It is no longer safe.”
“There’s nowhere to go,” I said.
“Then go to a shelter. Buy a woman. We do not have much time. Now
leave us be.”
“Hey, I’m not asking for fun. How does the collateral work? Do you
drag the gnome out so the gnomes can see him through one of their fancy
telescopes or what?”
He narrowed his eyes. “You are the one who rented the telescope from
young Skarn, are you not? Are you also the one who attempted that poor
subterfuge with the grulke? If your goal was to kill everyone,
congratulations. You win. These poor bastards just don’t know it yet. If
you’ve come to gloat in your victory, get it over with. I am too old and too
tired to engage.”
“Look, I only have one purpose here, and that’s to stop the gnomes. I’m
trying to help.”
A dromedarian stuck his head up from the wreckage. “The entrance to
the basement is sealed off,” he called. “It’s not from the fire. Part of the
necropolis wall slid closed and sealed off the room. We can get through, but
it’ll take some time.”
“We do not have time,” Henrik growled at the other camel.
“Look,” I said. “We can stop the gnomes. But you have to help me help
you. I need to know how they know the collateral is still alive.”
Carl: Donut. I need a boost from your charm.
Donut leaped to my shoulder and looked up at the camel. “We will be
able to save this town if you tell us.” She lowered her voice to a stage
whisper. “We don’t care which ones of you are real camels and which ones
are changelings. I don’t know why you’d want to pretend to be something
so large and smelly, but that’s not our business.”
He gave only the slightest hint of surprise. But I could feel it. The way
she manipulated NPCs sometimes was almost a tangible thing. You could
feel the tension slide away. I could see the wheels turning in his head. He
seemed to come to a decision. He pulled a little pocket watch out from his
robes and then quickly put it away.
“The alarm goes off on the watch, and I open it up. There is a mirror.
The gnomish Commandant is on the other side. He makes a symbol with his
fingers. I show this to the collateral, and he tells me a time. I then switch the
hands on the clock to the correct time. Commandant Kane owns the watch’s
twin, and I believe the movement on the clock is mirrored. So when I
change the time on Henrik’s watch, the hands also move on the other clock.
It is a code we do not understand. Only then do the gnomes know Wynne is
alive and we have bought ourselves another day.”
It wasn’t lost on me that he’d just referred to himself in third person.
“A code?” I asked. I remembered that Wynne had pretty much offed
himself by tricking those crawlers into killing him. It had been both clever
and desperate. “And he cooperated with it?”
“He did for years. It was only when we moved him to the chamber
below the town hall did he start to resist. Only when he understood that the
dynamic of his situation had changed. So he stopped cooperating. We’ve
had to drug him to force compliance. It’s been getting harder. He has grown
a tolerance for the mushroom. We have to feed him more every day.”
There was a lot to unpack there. Mordecai said he hadn’t yet figured out
what the mushrooms did, but he was doing some alchemy that would help
determine all their uses. Apparently just eating them raw helped with
getting people to do what you wanted. He’d already said a lot of
mushrooms had that effect, but that was more of a secondary purpose,
especially when the system labeled it as an alchemy item. He said the mind
control effects weren’t very reliable, but apparently they’d worked well
enough in this case.
“Where’s the real Henrik?”
He looked at me with impassive eyes. “Do you really wish me to
answer that?”
“Did the Bactrians do the same thing?” I asked. “Did they also have a
watch?” According to Morris, they’d had some sort of pig collateral.
“No,” Henrik said. “They had a different sort of indemnity with the
gnomes. It was a favorite pet swine of the Commandant’s daughter. I do not
know the full nature of their deal, but I believe they were required to bring
the animal out to sun itself once a day. Once it was observed via farseer,
they were saved another day.”
“Can’t you guys turn to pigs? Why didn’t you go over there?” Donut
asked. “One of you snorting around each day for a couple of minutes, and
everybody is happy. The gnomes would never know.”
For the first time, Henrik cracked a smile. “That was the problem, little
one. When our village was destroyed, the bactrians did not take us in. What
you suggested would also be thought of by the gnomes. They would not
tolerate our presence for that very reason. The dromedarians were reluctant,
but they are, in their hearts, good people. They took us in.”
“Much good that did them,” I muttered.
Henrik looked me dead in the eye. “Sometimes we do things that are not
of our nature to protect our own.”
I felt a chill, but only for a moment. I remembered what Mordecai had
said about these guys, that they were basically doing this so they could
resurrect some ancient monster and touch it and add it to their libraries.
That wasn’t a very noble cause. Still, something about that story was
nagging at me. I had the sense there was more to it than that. Now was not
the time to delve into it.
I pointed at the box-shaped anti-aircraft battery atop of the wall. “Those
things can’t protect the town?”
“From individual airships? Yes. Not a full bombardment from the
dreadnaught.”
We had a few options here. There was a code of some sort. The gnomes
gave a hand gesture, and Wynne told the dromedarians what time to put into
the clock. That was just the sort of thing Katia and Mordecai could figure
out.
But probably not in the time we had left. They’d have to know what all
the former question and answers were, and even as charmed as he was right
now, we’d never get this Henrik guy to sit down and give us the
information.
Another option was to just let the town get bombed to hell. As long as
we stayed in our personal space, we’d be fine. We’d save as many of these
assholes as we could, and then we’d figure out what to do next from there. I
knew with some more time I could probably build a missile that went high
enough. And who knew? Maybe once both of the towns were gone, they’d
land the damn ship and give us the opportunity to storm it the old fashioned
way.
But it felt wrong. And we’d only be able to keep a handful of the town’s
residents sheltered using the saferoom method.
And even if we did protect most of them by crowding everyone into our
space, eventually we’d have to kick them out. And then what?
I looked up and stared at the fabric ceiling of the town.
“Can you talk to that commandant guy using the watch?”
“No sound, but we can exchange written messages. We often speak that
way.”
“Have they ever sent a representative? Like an emissary?” I
remembered reading once about hostages and ransoms during the Hundred
Years’ War. Oftentimes the whole thing ended up in disaster, but sometimes
there were negotiations that resulted in a ransom paid, which required both
parties to temporarily trust each other.
“Yes. They do often. There is an ambassador. Leon the Commissar. He
comes to inspect. He has a spell he casts to make sure the collateral is not a
changeling. I believe they fear we will one day break the code between him
and the Commandant.”
My interest was piqued. “Luckily they haven’t cast the spell on you
yet.”
“Yes,” Henrik said. “They were scheduled for an inspection in two days,
but I fear with these new developments, the situation will be accelerated.”
From there, we spent a few minutes discussing the ambassador and how
the inspections worked. This whole inspection thing was clearly put into the
storyline as a way for us to be able to get to the Wasteland, but it was all
screwed up now thanks to the death of Wynne. Still, as we talked, an idea
started to form.
Carl: Mordecai. If I need a parachute quickly, what are my
options?
Mordecai: How are your sewing skills?
Carl: They’re shit.
Mordecai: Then you need one of a few dozen potions, a flight
ability, or a fall shield buff. Or you can turn Katia into a hang glider.
Carl: Yeah, I don’t think she’s going to go for that. Do you have the
materials for a potion?
Mordecai: I’m looking at the stock right now. I don’t have the
Feather Fall materials. Those are common potions later on, but the
seed pods I need are scarce until we hit the sixth floor. Same with
Bubble Boy. I do have enough to make one type of potion, but you
won’t like it. And only enough to make maybe two of them, so whatever
death-defying stunt you’re planning, take Katia with you and leave
Donut on the ground. It’s an easy enough formula. Five minute brew.
I’ll double check the market to see if anything else is available, but I
wouldn’t count on it.
Carl: I’m coming your way. I need to make a few rockets really fast.
Make me the potions.
“Okay,” I said to Henrik. “I don’t know if this will save the town, but
we’re going to give it a try.” I turned to Katia, who’d been strangely silent
since we’d returned. Her eyes were flashing, so I knew she was talking to
somebody. She did not look happy. “Katia, I have a job for you.”
She blinked and looked at me. “What do you need me to do?”
“Two things. First one is a little gross.”
While Katia returned to the Desperado Club, I explained the assault with
Donut while we jogged back to the personal space. It occurred to me that
we were giving ourselves extra work, skipping past two pubs to get to the
Toe. Every single one had a personal space entrance in it. But as we rushed
by, I noticed they were all closed and boarded up. The camels all knew what
was coming and were already moving their way to the bomb shelters.
“Carl, that is not going to work. They know there are changelings in
town. They’ll check.”
“I know.” I explained the next part of the plan.
Donut did not look impressed. “This is a little janky, even for a Carl
plan.”
“Janky?” I said. “Where did you get that one? That is not an Elle term.”
“Louis told me,” she said.
“Louis? You’ve been talking to Louis?”
“I’m allowed to have friends, Carl.”
Before I could come up with a suitable response, I received a message
from Morris the spider guy:
Morris: Hey, so we did what you asked. Package delivered. But we
have a new problem.
Carl: Big or small?
Morris: They’re all big problems. Right after the water quadrant
was conquered, some of the walls changed inside. I think all the exits
are closed.
I remembered that the dromedarian had said that basement chamber had
been sealed off. The walls must have changed about. I looked at my map,
and it hadn’t changed as far as I could tell. But it didn’t tell me if entrances
were open or closed. The tomb raider guys couldn’t leave anyway, so it
wasn’t a big deal.
Carl: Okay. So what’s the problem?
Morris: We didn’t think much of it at first, but now something’s
happening below us. We can hear it.
Carl: What do you mean?
Morris: I think the necropolis is filling with water.
Carl: Oh fuck me.
Morris: Yeah, so I don’t know what we’re going to do. We have a
lot of those water breathing scrolls, but not nearly enough. And I don’t
think our torches work underwater. If it fills up all the way, then we’re
hosed.
Carl: Okay, make sure everybody has the water scrolls. If it fills all
the way to where you are, go to a safe room. Actually, you and Bobby
return to the Desperado and plant yourselves there. If I need to build
you something or get more scrolls to you, we can get it to you more
easily.
“Damnit,” I growled. When Chris had taken the underwater castle, it
had likely caused something to make the water rush into the tomb. The
entrances had all closed up, so there was nowhere for the water to go. It
hadn’t occurred to me that we might need to consider the order in which we
took these castles. There was nothing I could do from here.
I was expecting to find the Toe boarded up, but the bar was open and lit
up like a Christmas display. I opened the door and was greeted with a crowd
of about forty children, ranging in age from four to twelve. Almost all were
dromedarians, but a group of six were in human form. They were obviously
changelings. Juice Box was moving amongst the kids, talking to each in
turn. She had a bag in her hand and was handing something out to each
child.
Carl: Let me know if any of the kids other than the humans are
shapeshifters.
Donut: I DON’T SEE ANY OTHERS BUT IT’S HARD WITH
THE KIDS. JUICE BOX’S HEAD IS VERY HOT. JUST AS HOT AS
THE HENRIK GUY. OH, OH. AND THE BARTENDER GUY IS ONE
TOO! NOW THAT’S JUST SNEAKY.
“You owe us each a gold coin,” Skarn said. He was in human form,
standing with the others.
The other crawlers were also here. Louis and Firas stood with Langley
and the archers. Louis was sucking on… a goddamn, actual juice box. A
kiwi strawberry-flavored Capri Sun. I realized that was what Juice Box was
handing out to all the kids.
“All right,” I called. “I won’t be here to let you in later, so everybody
follow me.”
Donut scoffed. “Shouldn’t we take them to one of the actual safe rooms,
Carl? Like that one on that strange street?”
“No,” I said. “Mordecai said the saferooms are only safe if there’s a
crawler in with them. We can’t spare anybody.” I raised my voice.
“Everybody follow me.” I pointed at the bartender and Juice Box. “You
guys, too.”
The bartender refused to come, but Juice Box happily followed us. I
was glad because we’d need someone to wrangle the children.
“Yeah, what about our money?” Skarn demanded.
I pulled a gold coin into the air and tossed it at him. “Help me get
everyone inside, and you’ll get another and so will everyone else. Where
are their parents?”
“All the grown-ups are on defense duty,” he said. He raised his voice.
“Okay, everyone follow Mr. Carl.”
I noticed three of the human/changeling children weren’t fully…
complete. One, a girl named Ruby, did not have any arms at all, and her
head was sunken in at the top, like a deflated soccer ball that had been
kicked. She walked slowly, with a noticeable limp. She was hard to look at.
When I examined her, I saw she had an active debuff.
This NPC is suffering from Compression Sickness.
I sent a message to Mordecai asking what that was, but he said he’d
never heard of it. He then asked where I was just as I opened the door and
gave access to the first of several children.
OceanofPDF.com
[ 11 ]
O nce I was alone with D onut in the crafting room , I spent a quick
minute to open my new loot boxes. I only had two. The silver boss box I’d
gotten for killing Ruckus the chicken hawk contained two items. First was a
case of 25 more surefires, which was a relief. I’d already used up ten of the
ones I’d received earlier, giving the missiles the “guided” upgrade. I was
about to use the rest of the ones I already had, and this gave us some wiggle
room. I could now alter the plan.
The second item was a little worrying. It was similar to the boss-
damage-enhancing Seize the Day Toothpaste I had, which I was saving for
later.
“It’s a lotion bottle, Carl,” Donut said, peering down at the item. She’d
also received the same prize plus some healing scrolls in her box. “It’s just
like the bottle you used to keep hidden in your drawer by the bed.”
Jellyfish Salve (5 applications)
If you can’t talk someone into peeing on you after you get stung by
a Pain Amplifier Jelly, then this will do the trick.
Effect: removes the pain portion of the Kill Me Now It Hurts
debuff.
Warning: It does not remove the one-minute healing block effect
associated with the Jelly’s sting.
I really hoped that we wouldn’t have to deal with the water quadrant. I’d
received the box just before Chris had defeated that level, so maybe it was
something we could avoid.
My next item was the silver fan box I’d received at the end of the
previous floor. It’d become available just as we set out to fight Ruckus. I
braced myself as it popped open.
“Yes,” I said. “Finally.” I looked up at the ceiling. “Thanks, guys.”
It was a thick, enchanted roll of duct tape. I picked it up and examined
it.
Enchanted Roll of Never-ending Duct Tape. Fifty meters.
Odds are good you know who Ted Bundy is. Odds are even better
you don’t know who Vesta Stoudt is. And while this problem is not
exclusive to you hairless monkeys and your pollution-ridden world,
those first two statements are part of the reason why you have received
this prize.
Will you use it to tie people up? Will you use it to save the lives of
those you love? Will you wrap your ankles together and sensuously rub
your supple feet up and down a dungeon wall while you run your
hands through your hair? Who knows! But you just got yourself a roll
of the universe’s greatest duct tape.
This 50-meter-long roll of extra-durable, fabric-based tape
regenerates at the rate of one meter an hour until it returns to 50
meters.
“Awesome,” I said, keeping the tape out. I already had a use in mind. I
moved to my sapper table and went to work.
With just about 45 minutes remaining, we all left the protection of the safe
room and exited out the town’s main gate. I warned Juice Box not to let any
of the kids out of the personal space because once they left, they wouldn’t
be able to get back in. Mordecai had managed to squeeze out three copies of
the potion with his supplies, which was good. It would allow Donut to
participate in the raid. I doled the potions out, and we were on our way.
The six archers walked behind us in a V pattern. I attached the back cart
to the body of the Chariot. Firas sat in the back cart along with Henrik the
town’s leader. Louis sat in the driver’s seat while I walked to the left of the
cart, and Donut, sitting astride Mongo, marched to our right.
I caught the eye of Donut as we marched forward. She was nervous.
This was a complicated plan with a lot of moving parts, which meant there
was a lot of ways for it to go south. I took a deep breath. I was nervous, too.
The struggling form of Wynne the dirigible gnome sat on the raised,
back seat of the ATV. I originally planned on having him tied with rope, but
duct tape worked much better. The optional missile battery was not attached
and was sitting in my inventory along with two more four packs. I clutched
the farseer in my hand, and I used it to stare up at the flying fortress. The
damn thing was huge. I made sure I focused on several different gnomes
long enough that they’d receive a notification that they were being watched.
We wanted to make sure they knew we were here.
We gave a wide berth to several of the giant lizards as we made our way
across the desert, angling toward that large hill in the center of the bowl. We
didn’t quite make it that far. The ponderous Wasteland moved above us, and
I feared they’d drop bombs on our unprotected heads. Instead, the massive
structure continued south, moving toward the edge of the bowl where it
would soon be directly above the village of Hump Town.
Multiple flying vehicles dispatched from the main body and started
circling downward, reminding me of the whirlybirds that dropped off of
maple trees. As I expected, it was a mishmash of vehicles, no two the same.
I quickly counted. A total of thirteen vehicles were dispatched.
A single, traditional-style hot-air balloon remained in the center of the
formation. The large, black and gold striped balloon was covered in ribbons
and small flags. It looked like it was decorated for a parade or to advertise a
circus. It was not outfitted for war, unlike all the other vehicles. A large
basket hung underneath, equally doused in ribbons and flags. The basket
looked big enough to hold five or six regular humans. Three faces peered
over the edge down at us. The basket continued to descend as the other
vehicles kept to about 500 feet, circling and hovering. The ominous shape
of bombs and large, firecracker-like rockets dotted their undersides.
The decorated balloon continued to descend, slowing rapidly. I caught
the shimmer of a shield protecting the balloon. The moment it lowered
below 100 feet, the three dots on the balloon became visible. It labeled the
three dirigible gnomes as a Level 25 Aerostat Pilot, a Level 44
Negotiator, and a Level 52 Sniper Captain.
I looked up at the three faces as the balloon settled. It crunched heavily
into the sand while the pilot spun a wheel on the fire mechanism under the
open balloon. I knew real hot air balloons worked better in colder
environments, and I could sense the magic coming from the box that
radiated heat upward. There were a dozen controls on the thing. It reminded
me of the Nightmare, though less complicated. Slightly. I quickly examined
the balloon’s properties.
Gnomish Legate Balloon. The Vahana. Contraption.
Of all the vehicles left aboard the dreadnaught Wasteland, the
Vahana is perhaps the oldest.
Once, long ago, the gnomes believed they could avoid war.
And while they could not leave this conflict-infested world, they
could take to the skies, out of reach of everyone else. They hoped they
could set themselves up as neutral peacekeepers. Everyone knew that
the black and gold-striped balloons were off limits. The balloons were a
symbol of hope. The sight of a Gnomish Legate on the horizon heralded
the arrival of ambassadors, and perhaps peace.
But when new visitors came to their world, coming via a mysterious
portal, everything changed. These were winged predators who would
not have peace, and they would not suffer anybody else sharing their
skies. The Legate Balloons were traded for a different sort of vehicle.
The sylvan balloons were mostly dismantled and recycled, sewn
together to give extra security to the gnomish settlements, which were
also repurposed. The peaceful, flying communities changed their name
from sky garden to dreadnaught.
Interesting. I turned my attention to the balloon’s occupants.
The sniper gnome was a short, black-bearded creature wearing a dark
leather jacket covered in zippers and buckles. These gnomes were shorter
even than the Bopcas, and I realized they had to be standing on something
in order to peer over the edge of the wicker basket. He was the only one not
wearing a red, conical hat. He had an old-school, round and black half-style
motorcycle helmet on his head. The kind that didn’t have a face shield and
looked almost like a baseball helmet. My dad had worn something similar.
I had a sudden memory, of my father angry. It was soon after mom had
left us, a month before he, in turn, left me to fend for myself. He’d ripped
off the helmet and smashed my fish tank, spilling my mollies everywhere. I
hadn’t cried when my fish died, and I remembered it had bothered me for
weeks after. Ever since then, I’d think of my father and those fish whenever
I saw one of those helmets. I’d think of those fish flopping on the ground as
I desperately tried to pick them up, cutting my fingers on the glass. I’d think
of the pain and blood and of them not surviving, even after I put them in a
cup. Whenever I saw a helmet like that, I would think of that day and of
remember how easy it was to grow numb and not even realize it. I’d think,
I’m never getting a pet again. All they do is die.
It felt like the wrong lesson, especially now. But that’s what happens,
isn’t it? The universe shows us how cruel it can be, and we are worse for it.
I looked across the way at Donut, sitting atop Mongo, doing her best to
look menacing. She’s not a pet anymore. Was she better off now? I didn’t
know.
Henrik remained motionless, looking down. He kept his hand on the
shoulder of Wynne, as if he was concerned about the old gnome’s
condition. It didn’t look natural. I prayed they wouldn’t notice.
Then I looked up at the Wasteland. A war machine that had once been a
place where the gnomes could live in peace. I knew this was all a
construction. But it was so easy to get caught up in the story. So easy to
forget who the true enemy was.
But more importantly, the most difficult part of this, was knowing all
that and realizing it didn’t matter. Not today. If this went as intended, every
gnome on that thing would be dead in ten minutes.
What was it Henrik had said? Sometimes we do things that are not of
our nature to protect our own.
The sniper gnome held onto a large, metal tube that I first thought was a
polearm. I realized it was a launcher of some sort. The barrel on the thing
was big enough to stick my fist through. He also wore a bandolier over his
shoulder, dotted with round, grenade-like devices.
That’s the one we need to watch, I thought. The gnome glared back at
me, his dark eyes boring into mine.
As I instructed, the archers spread out behind us. Louis remained at the
chariot’s controls. Firas sat in the back of the cart, directly behind the sitting
Henrik. Donut looked nervously over at me as the Negotiator gnome
climbed out of the basket and sank knee-deep into the sand. The gnome was
wearing an olive-colored uniform shirt, but it was old and ratty. There was a
sizable hole in the left arm. The gnome took two steps toward us and
stopped and straightened his back. This one was not armed. His dot on the
minimap was white.
Leon. Level 44 Dirigible Gnome Negotiator.
Commisar of the Wasteland.
A master politician and stickler for rules, Leon might have been a
tax attorney in another life. Now he lives as the chief political officer
aboard the dreadnaught Wasteland.
I’d say he has a stick up his ass, but he’s always clenched so tight,
there’s no way a stick would fit up there.
“Please,” Henrik said to Leon the gnome. “Please call off the bombing.
There are children in that town.”
I cringed. Katia’s impersonation of Henrik’s voice was not very good. I
hoped they didn’t notice.
“We received your message,” Leon said, ignoring the appeal. “We will
take the Commandant’s uncle, but in your message, you said he required a
potion. We don’t know which potion you mean. Which of you is the healer?
Is it you?”
“Me?” I asked. “No.” I pointed across the way to Donut. Behind Leon,
the sniper gnome leaned forward in the basket.
All eyes turned to Donut. She cleared her throat and used her actress
voice. “It is I, Princess Donut the famed healer of Queen Anne! But there’s
been a misunderstanding, my dear. We already have the potion he needs.
My manservant holds it in his hand.”
I held up the yellow-green vial.
“What?” Henrik said, looking back and forth between me and Donut.
“You said…”
Firas stood, standing behind the still-sitting camel. He pulled a long
knife and ran it across the camel’s neck. Blood sprayed. Henrik gurgled and
slumped over. Firas remained standing there, staring at the knife stupidly.
Carl: Goddamnit. Stomp his head. Do it fast.
Firas swallowed and then stomped down a few times onto the robe.
Carl: Good job. Now sit. Be inconspicuous.
The gnomes barely reacted. Leon turned his gaze back to Donut.
Donut made a show of licking her paw, pretending to barely notice the
murder behind her. “We want passage onto the Wasteland. This sand is just
awful. In exchange, we will heal Wynne and offer our services. I am a
healer, and my crew here are all mechanics. My manservant is a world-
renown masseuse.” She leaned forward. “He’s an expert with feet.”
Carl: Goddamnit, Donut. Stick to the script.
Leon looked over his shoulder at the sniper who shook his head “no.” I
had my eye on the minimap. The moment it turned red, I would jam down
on my Protective Shell and all hell would break loose. Hopefully it
wouldn’t come to that just yet.
“We know your filthy town is infested with changelings,” Leon said,
“And it would be just like you to attempt to deceive us. Changelings are
like rats, and one does not invite rats into one’s home. Now remove
Wynne’s bindings, so I may converse with him. I wish to establish it is
really him.”
Donut made a show of looking up at the Wasteland, which was still
moving toward the town. It’d be directly overhead in twenty minutes. We
needed to hurry.
“It’s not my town,” Donut said. “I am not a changeling. Disgusting. Can
you imagine? Are you really going to bomb them?”
“If it’s not your town, then it is of no concern to you. But, yes,” Leon
said. “No matter what happens here, we are going to settle this conflict once
and for all. It has gone on much too long. And we are going to bomb you,
too, if you do not do as I ask.” The gnome looked at the struggling, hooded
form of Wynne dubiously. “I am beginning to suspect proof will be difficult
for you. I warn you, these pilots and snipers have no love for me. If your
plan is to take me hostage, they will not hesitate to kill us all. Now let me
look upon him.”
Carl: How much time left on Wynne?
Donut: SIX MINUTES.
“I will remove his facial covering, but I’m not removing his bindings,”
Donut said. “I don’t know what the silly camels told you, but they talked
him into using his magic to resurrect some ghost thing living in the tomb.
He is still suffering the ill effects of the spell. Carl, be a dear and unsheathe
the patient.”
I reached over and ripped Wynne’s hood off. The zombie, reanimated
gnome growled and snapped. The body had been chewed to hell by beetles,
but he’d only been a few hours dead when the tomb raider guys had
retrieved the corpse and brought it to Katia. The body was mostly intact.
Thankfully, the face was untouched.
Donut leaped off Mongo and landed on Louis’s shoulder. “I am an
alchemist and a healer. Like I said, Carl here holds a potion that will heal
his affliction. I want you to do whatever you need to determine he’s the real
deal. But I’m not stupid, gnome. I’ll give the potion to restore him once
we’re on the balloon and on our way to the protection of your village.”
I held my breath. Before he’d been killed, Wynne was a class called a
Flesh Mechanic. According to Mordecai, the type of spell he cast was
famously difficult on the caster. Had Wynne temporarily given flesh to
Quetzalcoatlus, he would indeed be in a zombie-like state for a short
duration. He would heal on his own, but I was pretending not to know that
part.
“There are too many of you,” Leon said. “We can only take you and
Wynne. Any more, and it’ll be too much weight.” He held out his hands
apologetically.
Donut scoffed. Above us, the line of airplanes continued to circle. She
waved at me. “I will take my manservant, or there is no deal. Besides,
who’s going to carry him? Me? Surely you jest.”
“Very well,” he said after a moment. He peered suspiciously at the
archers.
“But,” Donut added, “Once your favored uncle is returned safe and
sound, you’ll dispatch balloons to retrieve the others.”
Leon smiled wickedly. “He’s no uncle of mine, but of Commandant
Kane. However, this is acceptable. Forgive me for appearing mistrustful,
but first I must cast a spell. It will require me to touch him and a random
sampling of your men.” Behind Leon, the sniper gnome leaned even further
forward. The wicker basket creaked. He pulled up the weapon and pointed
it directly at Donut. Zombie Wynne snapped and growled.
“No funny stuff,” the sniper called to Donut. “If we gotta fight our way
out of here, you’re getting the first chest hole.”
“And you’ll get the second,” I called back to the sniper.
“There’s no need for such talk,” Leon said. “Surely this… dog
creature… would never be stupid enough to attempt to trick us. There
would be no purpose.”
“Excuse me?” Donut started to say, but I sent her a quick message to be
calm. To stay on script.
The sniper grinned at Donut’s outrage, revealing a row of sharp teeth.
Carl: If this goes sideways, Katia and Donut focus on the sniper. I
have the ambassador guy. Langley, you guys get the pilot before he can
retreat. Fire then scatter. Meet up at the ruins of the Bactrian town.
Donut took a breath and calmed herself. “Do whatever you need to do,
but be careful of the old gnome. He’s a bit cranky. He might try to take a
nip.”
“I am familiar with Wynne’s post-spell stupors.” Leon waded forward
through the sand. Mongo growled, so the gnome moved to the Chariot’s
port side.
He paused in front of Louis and bade him to lean forward.
“I will cast a spell on you that will detect if you are a changeling,” the
gnome said. “If you attack me, you will die.”
I told Louis to comply, and the gnome touched the man’s forehead. A
blue light burst into the air. He repeated it with Donut. He then insisted on
doing the same to me. I went to a knee, allowing the perfume-smelling man
to touch my head. The perfume was covering a deep, dirty stench I realized
when he was up close. I knew that smell. It was the stench of a man who’d
been rationed a gallon a week to shower with. They’re in trouble. Their ship
is floundering.
I felt a tingle, and there was another blue flash. That was it.
He nodded and then approached the bound hostage. He raised his hand,
but he couldn’t reach the tall seat.
I laughed, trying to cover my frustration. Donut’s Second Chance spell
normally only allowed her to resurrect any creature up to ten levels above
her own. At the spell’s current level of ten, it also normally resurrected the
creatures for up to fifteen minutes. But thanks to her glass cannon class, the
spell was remarkably more powerful. It now allowed her to resurrect any
corpse up to twenty levels above her own, and for half of an hour. Donut
was currently level 33, and Wynne had been 50. Still, the spell was about to
run out. We’d cast it too early. I was afraid that they would use a farseer to
examine him before they sent the ambassador, and if they saw he was dead,
they would’ve simply bombed us to hell. Him being undead was barely
better, but Mordecai seemed to think it would work. He insisted there were
a lot of quests that involved raising key NPCs from the dead in order to
trick the living. It was almost a trope. Either way, the spell was going to run
out in two minutes.
“Do you want me to give you a boost?” I asked Leon.
The gnome glowered at me as he pulled himself up the side of the cart.
Zombie Wynne snapped and thrashed as Leon placed his hand against the
creature’s forehead. He tried to bite the gnome’s finger.
Carl: Keep him calm!
Donut: I’VE NEVER RESURRECTED JUST A HEAD BEFORE,
CARL. OR SOMEONE THIS HIGH OF A LEVEL. THEY’RE A LOT
MORE SURLY WHEN THEY’RE JUST HEADS. AND I’M THE
ONE DOING ALL THE TALKING. MAYBE NEXT TIME YOU CAN
RESURRECT THE DEAD, HALF-EATEN CORPSE YOURSELF
WHEN YOU COME UP WITH A SUICIDAL PLAN.
We all held our collective breaths. I had no idea if this would work. The
spell supposedly only detected changelings. If it was anything else, we’d be
screwed.
Luckily for us, Leon was literally leaning up against Katia, who was
disguised as the chair—amongst other things. One word from me, and she’d
suck him into her mass.
A blue light pulsed. I let go of my breath.
“Well, he’s no changeling,” Leon said. He continued to peer
suspiciously at the reanimated gnome. “But this is not a healing stupor. I
have never seen anything like it.” He sniffed. “This is much worse than
usual. He appears to be a ghoul.”
“The camels made him resurrect an ancient ghost,” Donut said. She
indicated the potion, still in my hand. “Like I said, I can heal him. The
camels did not understand what they were doing. I don’t think he knew,
either. They were drugging him with mushrooms.”
Leon regarded the vial in my hand. “What is the potion anyway?”
Donut didn’t hesitate. “Healer’s Respite. Stichberries boiled with iron
slivers and manticore shavings.”
Leon nodded thoughtfully. “That is not something we would have. That
might work. If it doesn’t, you’ll wish we’d left you on the ground.”
The potion was actually a vial of Mountain Dew I’d gotten from a
saferoom on the second floor, but Mordecai said the coloring was the
closest of all the ones we had. We had no idea if this ambassador guy would
buy this line of bullshit, but we’d made sure that Donut could at least
pretend to know what she was talking about. I’d made her repeat the
ingredients three times as we’d walked over here.
“The dromedarians would never attempt to resurrect their old
slavemasters,” Leon continued, stepping down from the side of the chariot
before moving to the back cart and toward Henrik’s “corpse.”
Firas: What’s he doing? What’s he doing?
Carl: Chill. We anticipated this.
Leon first did his changeling check on Firas before he moved to the
body of Henrik and started rummaging through the remains.
As he did this, just behind him, the Second Chance spell timed out,
causing Wynne’s head to disintegrate into a cloud of dust. Shit, shit.
Carl: Katia.
Katia: I’m on it.
Nobody seemed to notice the new head grow into place. The sniper only
had his eyes on Donut, and Leon was bent over, rifling through Henrik’s
robes and pack. He pulled back the clothes to reveal the dead body of Svern
the changeling principal, the one we’d killed in the town hall. I’d kept the
corpse because Mordecai had wanted to get some goo from his brain. The
body was pretty beat up, especially the head, which was why I’d had Firas
pretend to stomp down on the empty robe.
“The town’s leadership must have been usurped by the changelings,”
Leon said, sounding disgusted. “I should have tested him, too.” He looked
up and shouted at the sniper. “He doesn’t have it on him.”
“That’s going to be a problem,” the sniper said. “What’re we doing?”
“Are you looking for this?” I asked, holding up the watch. I’d made the
facsimile from memory at my bench, only spending a quick thirty seconds
to shape the thing. It’d been a last-minute hunch. I’d asked Henrik where
the watch came from, and he claimed he hadn’t known, though I sensed he
was being sketchy about it, which made me wonder how important it was.
The prop would not pass a quick inspection, so I quickly put it away. “The
Princess had me slip it out of his pocket as we were leaving town. It’ll be
yours once you guys pick up our crew and bring them up there with the
Princess.”
“As you can see, I only hire the most qualified servants,” Donut added.
Leon’s demeanor relaxed. “Good, good. At least we don’t have to go
searching through the town’s remains looking for it.”
“So does that mean we have a deal?” Donut asked.
I looked up at the massive, floating structure. It appeared to be lowering
its altitude. From this angle, it almost looked like a rusting, flying oil rig.
Fifteen minutes.
“Very well,” Leon said. “We have a deal. Have your man take Wynne
and bring him to the basket. But I must insist you give Wynne the respite
now before we go. I can’t bring him in such a state onto the Wasteland. The
Commandant will not be pleased if his uncle tries to eat him.”
“Okay, but the potion will take a few minutes to work.”
“As long as it works before we arrive. Otherwise, we’ll throw you all
over the edge.”
“Carl, administer the medicine.”
I took the vial of Mountain Dew, yanked the cork, and poured it down
the throat of “Wynne.” I suppressed a grin as he gagged.
Carl: Sorry.
Katia: Holy shit who can drink this bile.
Donut made a show of putting Mongo back into his carrier. The
dinosaur screeched and put up a fight, hissing and complaining and kicking
up dust, causing Leon to back away with alarm. But eventually she got him.
Donut then leaped onto my shoulder as I picked up the duct-taped form of
Wynne and threw him over my other shoulder. We trudged toward the
wicker basket. As we marched, I prayed none of the gnomes would notice
that the entire back seat of the Chariot was now gone. Or that Wynne, even
though he was thoroughly wrapped in duct tape, was about two feet longer
than he should be. I kept most of the bulk behind me.
Carl: Okay guys. Follow Langley’s lead. All of you be ready. Firas
will puddle jump you out of there if necessary. Louis, you’re in charge
of the chariot. Those planes have missiles on them, so we will need your
ground support. I have confidence in you guys.
Louis: You know a plan is really desperate when it requires
confidence in people like us.
Firas: Shut the hell up, Louis. He’s trying to build our self-
confidence.
OceanofPDF.com
[ 12 ]
OceanofPDF.com
[ 13 ]
“Carl, they’re cheating!” Donut cried after ten solid minutes of fighting. A
gerbil launched itself at me, and I cried out as it attached itself to my neck. I
grasped it with my gauntlet and squeezed before it could burrow. It
exploded in my hand. “They keep coming and coming.”
Donut cast Wall of Fire just as the next wave of gerbils shot at our
defensive line. That ended up being a mistake.
The little bastards could launch themselves through the air, and when
they passed through Donut’s magical fire, they ignited, turning into
miniature, gnashing fireballs. The fire killed the attackers, eventually, but
not before they attached to the chests of the camel defenders, catching them
on fire in the process.
We’d been pushed all the way back to the entrance of Weird Shit Alley.
The town’s walls had too many holes to properly defend, so we’d run
through the main gates, screaming for the defenders to fall back. There
were just too many of them. Even though the screeching little fuckers were
only level 11, they could burrow themselves straight into flesh and eat their
way out through to the other side.
The dromedarians were forced to abandon their anti-air guns to meet the
creatures. But the things never stopped coming. All around us, camels
fought and fell.
Katia converted to her tank form with the shield on her arm and her
crossbow over her head while I tossed hob-lobbers into the street using my
xistera, killing dozens of them at a time. Mongo and two clockwork
versions roared and snapped and crunched on the gerbils. A camel fired a
rocket into the carpet of monsters only to be overwhelmed a moment later.
“Don’t swallow them whole,” I warned Mongo. I remembered a danger
dingo had done that once, and it hadn’t ended well for the dingo.
I punched then punted another gerbil. I had to be careful with the timing
of my attacks. The monsters’ mouths opened bigger than should be
possible, and they could get their physics-defying jaws around my entire
fist if I wasn’t careful.
Donut was right. There were too many of these things. These weren’t
just from the wreckage. They were being generated. This was a punishment.
Goddamnit. If this continued, we were going to lose the town. “Fuck you,” I
growled up into the air. “Fuck you to hell.”
I tossed a smoke curtain followed by a pair of hob-lobbers. I stepped
over the hastily-constructed barricade and waded out toward the street.
“Everyone stay back,” I called.
“Carl, Carl, what are you doing?” Donut yelled.
I extended my left arm shield. I caught a flying gerbil with the auto-
buckler, and it fell hard to the ground, blinded and dazed. I was too tired to
fight it anymore.
I stepped down on the squirming gerbil.
“This is not so funny anymore,” Katia said, looking over the mass of gerbil
corpses. The bewildered camels moved back to the walls and the anti-
aircraft guns, though it appeared all of the remaining airplanes had made
emergency landings. All that was left was a handful of balloons, and most
of those were making their way up and over the bowl, leaving the area.
“It was never funny,” I replied. I had blood up to my kneepads. I’d
stepped on and smushed at least fifty of the things before the wave had
stopped, as suddenly as it had started. I needed a shower. A long shower.
“It was a little funny,” she said. “But the AI is not even trying to be fair
anymore. That wasn’t just a temper tantrum. That was the equivalent of a
psycho ex-boyfriend going nuts and trying to murder you and your entire
family because of something you didn’t even know you did.”
I nodded. I had a new achievement. I was the only one who’d received
it. I was afraid to click on it. I did anyway.
New Achievement! You’re the reason why daddy drinks!
You have, for an unspecified reason, raised the ire of the System AI.
You have corrected the issue, and everything is back to normal. The
acceleration action has been suspended. This time.
Good boy.
Reward: You’ve received a Gold Makeup Sex is the Best Sex box.
You’re not going to break me. Fuck you all. I will break you.
“Acceleration?” Katia said after I read the description to the others.
“My original game guide mentioned that before.”
“Yeah,” I said. “We’ve been threatened with it a few times. That… that
really sucked.”
“You didn’t even do anything wrong,” she said, shaking her head.
“At least you two are back together now,” Donut said. “And you got a
nice box out of it. I know you find it unpleasant, Carl. But you being
stubborn about this is causing everything to be more dangerous. We have to
kill these things anyway, so if the AI wants you to kill in a certain way, I
don’t see why it matters. This is just like one of those agility courses that
Miss Beatrice used to insist I complete at all the regional cat shows. I did
not like doing it, and I never ribboned of course, but I knew if I did well, I
would get an extra brushing that evening. We are all prostitutes in one way
or another, I suppose. ”
“I…” I was too tired to argue. “Let’s go let everyone out of the personal
space. I need a nap.”
Louis and the others had made it to the Bactrian ruins and were
searching the remains for loot and any other signs of life, including other
crawlers. So far they’d found nothing except a single saferoom that was
abandoned but still useable and a caved-in Club Vanquisher entrance that
was useless anyway because nobody in the group had a pass. They were
going to spend the rest of the day grinding and searching. They’d weather
the sand storm in the saferoom before returning. In the meantime, we’d
open our boxes and reset and then formulate a new plan to get into the now-
undefended castle.
The camels went to work repairing the wall, putting out fires, and
mending the fabric cover for the sand storm. The changelings, Donut noted,
were all but gone from the ranks of the camels. I hadn’t thought about it
during the chaotic fight with the gerbils, but all of the fallen had been true
dromedarians. She didn’t see any of the changeling principals about,
including Henrik.
The Toe had been mostly destroyed. A massive chunk of Wasteland had
taken out the whole block. Luckily we could still go through the front door
and enter the personal space. I’d been worried that if we’d lost the entrance
here, all the NPCs still inside would be stuck.
The dromedarian children were in the middle of watching Toy Story 3
when we entered, and they insisted on finishing it before they left. For some
of these kids, their parents were likely now dead. They probably needed to
get back out there. But I didn’t have the heart or energy to say no, so I left
them alone. Let them have their movie, I thought. Juice Box sat upon the
kitchen counter, chatting away with Mordecai while the cleaner bot zipped
about the room, clicking and beeping angrily, cleaning juice stains.
“They’re all gone,” I said to Juice Box as we all settled in. “Henrik
disappeared soon after the Wasteland fell.”
She shrugged. “I am not a principal. Those guys have their own thing
going on. They’re probably in the necropolis looking for that ghost. I don’t
know what they’re going to do when they find her since you killed off the
flesh mechanic, but those guys are crazy.”
“The temple is flooding with water. They’re not going to get very far.”
She just looked at me. “They’re changelings. The water will be no
problem.” She hopped off the table. “Now I better get out there and see how
much of the town you three blew up.”
After we’d won that last quest, we’d all received a charisma bonus
when dealing with changelings. I could already see the effects. We needed
to talk more with Juice Box regarding this whole storyline with Henrik and
the ghost in the necropolis, but first she needed to get out there and see we
had indeed saved the town. I watched her head outside.
I had three boxes to open, Donut had three, and Katia had two. Juice Box
had left, but the horde of children remained, all glued to the screen. All
three of us received the same Silver Skydiver’s box, and all three of them
contained the same thing. Three potions of Half Splat.
Mordecai grunted. “Keep those in your hotlist until you can get a real
Featherfall, but they’re not that great. They’ll keep you from dying via
falling damage, but you’ll be at 5% health after you hit the ground.”
“They’re still better than that Dolores Doesn’t Splat potion,” I
grumbled.
“Hey now,” Mordecai said. “That potion is genius. It may not be
pleasant, but your health was still at 100% when you landed.”
I grumbled as I opened my next box. The Gold Makeup Sex is the Best
Sex box.
“What is this?” I asked, picking up the group of items. It was a sheet of
paper and a quill pen. There was also a little jar that was capped and filled
with black ink.
“Odd,” Mordecai said, leaning in to examine the prize. “These aren’t
rare, but they’re pricey. They’re used by scholar and arcanist classes who
focus on scroll production. You’ll never have the proper skills to use this
beyond a rudimentary level. If you can figure out how to write some basic
scrolls, maybe you can make some money.” He shrugged. “I can use it, but
I’m much better at potions. Besides, I can buy a writing table and be much
more efficient. Your best bet is to just sell the set.”
The last of my boxes was the platinum quest box. I held my breath as I
opened it. I needed something good. Everything I’d been getting lately was
either weird or something I couldn’t use just yet.
The box opened. It contained 5,000 gold coins, twenty healing scrolls,
and a little black rock.
“Excellent,” Mordecai said. “Good, good. This was what I was talking
about earlier. You’re starting to get items that will enhance your existing
items. You have to use it now. This is for your gauntlet. All three of you are
likely to get something like this.”
I examined the black rock.
Platinum Sharpening Stone.
Warning: This item has a short shelf life.
Apply this to any spiked offensive weapon to receive the following
buffs.
Plus (2 x current level)% damage to all attacks.
Plus 1 to all current stat buffs. Does not add new buffs if they do not
exist.
It also makes the weapon look extra oily and mean looking. In other
words, the weapon’s appearance may change. But only a little.
Since the item had a short shelf life, I had to apply it right away. I
formed my gauntlet and rubbed the rock it along the spikes. The whole
thing glowed. The actual spikes grew a little longer. I received an extra
point of dexterity and another to strength when the gauntlet was formed.
I examined the other prize, the paper and inkwell, as Katia opened her
Platinum box.
Coffee Shop Author Kit.
Alcoholism and crippling self-doubt not included.
So you want to be a writer. It started with sappy poetry in middle
school. You soon graduated to Naruto fanfiction. By the time you crash
landed face-first into adulthood, your brain swelled with the misguided
notion that your shitty novel with a self-insert protagonist sporting a
traumatic childhood would change the world. Spoiler alert. Nobody is
going to read your autobiography disguised as a space vampire and
minotaur romance. You and every other half-wit out there with a
nearby Starbucks and a laptop is writing the same bile. What you’re
really doing is inadvertently live-blogging the story of human
mediocrity, and the universe is now a better place that the Syndicate
has put a stop to it all.
Anyway, this is a magical sheet of paper. You will find you now have
a second tab on your scratchpad in your interface. You can write
something on this paper, and it will appear in the scratchpad and vice
versa. If the proper spell and glyphs are accurately copied onto this
paper, you can present the sheet at a market kiosk, and a scroll will
appear for sale. Or if you have a printing press, you can make your
own scrolls. Or even your own tome if you think you have the chops.
I panicked at the mention of a second tab in my scratchpad. I already
had a secret second one thanks to my cookbook. But thankfully I now had
three tabs, with the cookbook tab being the last. I relaxed and turned my
attention back to the paper.
“I’m confused. I can just write out a scroll, and it’ll let me put a copy
for sale in the market?” I asked, looking at the blank magical scroll. “How
many can I sell? Will I lose this paper?”
“Writing your own scroll requires skills you don’t have,” Mordecai said.
“It’d take a week of practice just to write a simple Light scroll. Potions are
much better, especially this season with the unlimited inventory. The only
advantage is that you can sell unlimited scrolls in the market as long as you
keep the spell written on the magical sheet. Once you erase it from your
scratchpad, it’s gone from the market. You can get a printing press table and
make your own scrolls, or you can set the price as low as it’ll let you and
buy your own scrolls from the market. I saw one guy do that last season
with Fireball scripts. Actually, that worked out really well for him. Turns
out if you use the same scroll more than 200 times, you learn the spell.”
I went to the new tab and wrote, “Does this work?”
The magical pen rose into the air as the top popped off the ink well. The
pen dipped within and wrote out “Does this work?” I drew a rudimentary
cat portrait, and the pen copied my work.
Donut looked at the cat art with distaste. “Am I a joke to you, Carl?”
I laughed as I deleted the image in the scratchpad, and it faded away
from the paper.
“This is both cool and completely useless,” I said.
“The ink isn’t bottomless, so don’t play with it too much,” Mordecai
added.
“Carl, are you quite done? I have a very important box to open, and you
promised you’d watch me do it. And we still have to learn what Katia had
gotten!” Donut said impatiently. She had her benefactor box from Veriluxx
RealPet Companions. The one that Loita had said wasn’t a real box, but a
“product sample.”
In addition to the same basic items, Katia received a single crossbow
bolt. “It replaces the free, unlimited basic ammo the crossbow normally
comes with. It adds armor piercing and adds damage based on my level.”
“That’s pretty cool,” I said, putting all my new gear into my inventory. I
turned to Donut. “Let’s see what you got.”
“Oh, goodie!” She hopped up and down a few times, her tail swishing
back and forth. She’d removed her sunglasses, and her eyes gleamed. “Now
remember, Carl. We have a television program to go on in a few days where
we review the product. So pay careful attention. I do hope it’s an accessory
for Mongo.”
Mongo screeched in agreement.
The benefactor box opened, and we all just stood there, staring at what
popped out.
Katia burst out laughing.
It was Donut. A toy, robot Donut.
The cat hopped out of the box, took a few steps out onto the table and
started licking her paw in a stilted, mechanical manner. She was about ¾’s
the size of the real deal, and her fur was wrong, like she was made out of rat
hair. The thing looked to be made with technology only slightly advanced
from where we were from before the collapse. Definitely not on the same
level as the planet-destroying, dungeon-making Syndicate. The mini-Donut
looked up at the room and said with a voice that wasn’t even close, “I sure
do like lasagna. I hate Mondays, Carl.” The cat resumed licking itself.
Donut continued staring at the thing open-mouthed as I examined its
properties. The voice describing it was not the system AI, but a slightly-
static, pre-recording of a deep voice that sounded like it came straight from
a 1980’s toy commercial.
Veriluxx RealPet Dungeon Crawl Special Edition Exclusive.
“Princess Donut the Queen Anne Chonk.”
Dungeon Crawler World: Earth.
The ultimate play toy, Veriluxx RealPet Companions are budget-
friendly, nearly indestructible collectibles that will give your child
hours and hours of fun. Because these interactive toys do not require
an implant certificate to play with and enjoy, parents needn’t worry
about how many hours their children are spending with their new best
friends!
Mix and match! They fight! They love! They will share your
deepest, darkest secrets! Each Veriluxx RealPet Companion is a fully
licensed depiction of your favorite personality or creature. The
onboard AI comes preprogrammed with a 100% accurate and realistic
persona, and it will learn as it goes. It’s like having a real pet, but
better! Available on the Syndicate Trade Network. Mongo companion
sold separately.
Veriluxx. For the children.
Action-grip Hekatonkheires coming soon!
“Lasagna?” Mordecai asked.
“It’s Garfield,” Katia said. “It’s like they didn’t have enough Donut
material, so they mixed her with the Garfield comic strip.”
The robot cat sniffed about the air. “Ferdinand?” She looked at Mongo.
“You’re not Ferdinand.”
Ruby, the deformed, armless changeling was sitting nearby, eyes glued
to the television screen, but she turned now as the robot approached her.
She was in her weird, blank changeling form. She made a muted, terrified
squeal and ran from the table.
“Hey kid, it’s not going to hurt you. It’s a talking toy. Just like in the
movie,” Mordecai said, moving away to go talk to her.
Donut still had not said anything. She remained where she’d opened the
box, stiff as a board.
“Uh, Donut,” I asked. “You doing okay?”
“I’m sorry, Carl,” the robot said, her head turning 180 degrees to look
back at me. “The void is wet and hungry.”
“Not you,” I said to the weird robot. “Donut?”
Donut finally looked up, her yellow eyes shining. “They… they made a
doll out of me, Carl. It’s merch. I have merch. This is the greatest thing that
has ever happened since I won Grand Champion Best in Show last year in
Cleveland.”
Mongo continued to sniff at the imposter cat.
“Are you a cocker spaniel?” the robot asked the dinosaur. The toy
hissed and swished its tail at Mongo. “Cocker spaniels deserve to have their
corpses desecrated.”
Mongo screeched.
“No, bad Mongo! Bad!” Donut cried, but it was too late. Mongo
chomped the robot on the head, decapitating it. The body seized up and fell
onto its side, smoke rising from within. The whole thing flashed and then
caught on fire. The cleaner bot zipped over, beeping angrily and doused it
with white foam.
I fell over with laughter.
“So much for being ‘nearly-indestructible,’” Katia said.
Donut sniffed and poked the still-smoldering remains. Mongo continued
to look indignant. A static shock burst out, striking Donut on the nose, and
she howled.
“This is most certainly going into my review.”
Donut’s platinum quest box contained the same thing her last platinum
quest box contained. A pair of fang caps and a skill potion. She promptly
drank the potion down, and it added three points to her Animal Wrangling
skill, bringing it up to eight.
The last set of fang caps had given Mongo a damage buff and the ability
to add a few debuffs like poison and paralyze, though neither seemed to
happen often. Usually the mobs were dead if the dinosaur got to the point
where he was chomping down on them. These two additional caps added
15% movement speed and 15% strength to the level-29 dinosaur. Once
again, Donut made me place them on the dinosaur’s teeth. He had a little
piece of robot Donut in there I had to fish out.
After, I spent some time cleaning up the rest of the dead robot while
Donut grumbled and complained. “I will not have my merch published by a
company who puts out a shoddy product. I can’t wait to give them an
earful.”
“Yeah,” I said. “We should probably tell them not to use the Garfield
thing, either. I’m not so sure they were using… official Garfield sources for
their AI.”
The movie finally ended, and the children reluctantly filed out of the
space and back into the real world. Their version of it, at least. I walked
them out while Donut remained inside. Katia and Mordecai were about to
go to the Desperado to pick up some more supplies. We had to prepare for
the assault on the floating house.
“Can we come back tomorrow and watch another movie?” Skarn asked
as we left.
“Maybe,” I said, distracted. I looked up in the air. The town’s covering
was half up, and the dromedarians worked desperately to repair the rest of it
before the next sandstorm. Through one of the many empty spaces, I looked
up into the sky. I couldn’t see it without the telescope I’d stolen from the
kid, but I sensed it there. The remains of the castle. I sighed.
I was so preoccupied, I didn’t see the blue dot approach.
“Hello, Carl,” a deep, rumbly voice said.
I turned to look at the tall rock monster. He looked similar to the guards
at the Desperado, but he was made of red and black lava rocks. He had a
whole mess of boss kills over his head and a trio of player killer skulls. The
last time I’d seen him, he’d been magic-based. It appeared that he’d
switched focus. He had a large, glowing spear hanging over his shoulder.
“Hello, Chris,” I replied. “I’m glad to see you.”
OceanofPDF.com
[ 14 ]
OceanofPDF.com
[ 15 ]
The sandstorm came, and we hunkered down in the personal space. Despite
the valiant efforts of the townsfolk to prepare the city for the storm, their
efforts weren’t enough. The moment the winds came, the not-yet-finished
shield ripped away, forcing everyone inside. The town would be buried in
sand by the time the storm was done.
The moment the shield failed, we all received a quest to “save” the town
by procuring a bunch of deflated balloons that they could use as a shelter. It
was a regular, bronze quest that I shoved off on Louis and Firas and
Langley, who’d finished searching the ruins of the other town. They could
use the experience.
They had spent the remainder of the day grinding and picking up loot.
There was no sign of any surviving bactrians except one in a single
saferoom bar. The group had also managed to secure an intact, gnomish
Drop Bear airplane. The pilot was nowhere to be found. They dragged the
machine to the edge of the other town and covered it with a tarp.
Down on the land quadrant, Gwen’s team had finally managed to breach
all the walls, but now they faced the main entrance to the castle, which was
magically locked. They were currently trying to figure out how to get in.
The mage still hadn’t shown himself.
The tomb raiders were stuck in saferooms. The entire catacomb was
now filled with water. They had dozens of water scrolls, but that wasn’t
enough. They were paralyzed for now.
Chris/Maggie remained entombed. Donut could see their dot on the map
as long as she stood nearby. The room was half-filled with water and was
pitch black, which had to be awful. We set Mordecai to work. He needed
something called vile dill for his potion. He hadn’t found it yet. He was
seeking an alternative using the store interface and by talking to folks at the
Desperado Club.
I couldn’t stop thinking about how horrible this had to be for Chris.
Being helpless was one thing, but what he was currently enduring was just
too much. The more I thought about it, the more I regretted not putting him
out of his misery.
I understood what Donut had done. Hell, if I had thought of it, I
would’ve done the same thing. Still, it felt like the wrong decision. It was
the easy way out, and in this place, the easy way usually came with dire
consequences.
But I had push all of that out of my mind and focus at the task at hand:
capturing the gnomish throne room.
Here’s what we knew. After we’d crashed the Wasteland, all that
remained was a single building held aloft by an enormous, magical balloon.
The building was a house, nothing more. There were no obvious defenses.
The entire gnomish airforce was now grounded. It appeared there were only
two living creatures up there. Commandant Kane and his daughter. The kid
was about ten years old. That was it.
Once the sandstorm ended, we had two hours before it got dark. All
around, camels emerged and started digging the town free. I pulled the
farseer and searched until I found the small house, which has settled high
above. It floated all the way to the top of the bubble, like a children’s
balloon that had gotten away from a kid and was now wedged in a high
ceiling.
“We can still try shooting it down,” Katia said, standing by my side.
“We could,” I agreed. “It’s probably the easier way to do it. But I want
to get that pocket watch. And if it falls now, I’m afraid it’ll land outside the
bowl. Then what would we do?”
“You also don’t want to hurt that kid,” Katia said. “I think I know you
well enough by now.”
I nodded. “Maybe you’re right.”
“They do that on purpose, you know. It’s no accident they put a child up
there.”
“Yeah,” I agreed. “But they should also know by now my stance on
killing NPCs. I don’t want to do it, but I think they’re better off dead
anyway. So I won’t hesitate if my hand is forced. Even if it’s a kid.”
We stood side by side for several silent moments.
“Did you ever want children?” Katia finally asked.
I turned to look at the woman, surprised at the question. I knew she’d
had some painful issues with this subject, but I didn’t know the details.
“No,” I said. “I wouldn’t be a good dad. Bea told me she thought she
was pregnant like ten times. She never was. The first few times, when I
thought she really was, I was goddamned terrified.”
“I… I have trouble seeing you with that woman.” She shook her head.
“Anyway, I can’t have children.” She paused, looking down at herself.
“When I was human, I mean. I was going to adopt. You can do that in
Iceland when you’re single. I got pre-approval. I was on the list. That’s all I
ever wanted. Something happened, and I got disqualified. It’s not important.
But I’m glad now. I keep thinking about that Maggie woman, and how
twisted she’s become. It’s because she’s a mother. Losing everything can do
that to you. I can’t help but wonder how different things would be for me if
I had a child. I’m glad now I don’t.”
The way she said it, I knew she wasn’t being truthful. It wasn’t
something I would ever understand, the need to have children. I said
nothing.
“Anyway,” Katia continued. “I still think we should just blow it out of
the sky.”
“You’re just mad you’re not going to get the chance to go skydiving
again,” I said, putting the telescope away.
“Usually, I get irritated when you want to leave me behind on your little
schemes,” Katia said. “I’m pretty happy to sit this one out.”
I patted her on the shoulder.
It was time to go. Behind me, Donut emerged from the bar, followed by
Mongo and another robot Donut. The toy company had sent her three more,
two of which had been promptly destroyed by Mongo. This fourth one was
supposedly more durable. It’d survived one attack, but the head was now
scarred from Mongo teeth.
“Come on, Donut,” I said. “Let’s roll.”
The robot version jumped onto my shoulder. This one was significantly
heavier than the last. It turned its head toward me. “There sure were a lot of
babies in there, Carl,” the toy said. “I wonder how long they will continue
to cry in the dark.”
“Get the hell off of me.” I pushed it from my shoulder, and it landed on
its back with a crunch. Mongo was on it in a second, grabbing it by the
neck and shaking. The head ripped, and a countdown timer appeared over
the toy.
“Goddamnit,” I said. “Everyone get back.”
We all scrambled away. The toy exploded in a shower of sparks and
smoke. It wasn’t a big explosion, but it would’ve hurt if we’d been closer. It
was enough to leave a scorch mark all over the front of the Spit and
Swallow.
“Yeah, that’s safe,” I said as I collected the pieces. The controller core
of the robot was a round, marble-sized metal ball. Like the last few times,
the core itself had exploded, making it look a metallic piece of popped
popcorn. “I can’t tell if these guys are a toy company or a weapons
company. Either way, they’re terrible at it.”
Mongo screeched in agreement.
The real Donut jumped to my shoulder and sat with a harrumph.
“They said this version was indestructible,” she said sadly. “Do you
think the Kardashians had to deal with defective merch? This is most
disappointing.”
“I don’t think the toy people know what they’re doing,” I said.
Loita: Carl, you know perfectly well that the real version of these
toys can take much more stress. Your boosted strength is what’s
causing the problem. The toy is meant to be played with outside of an
enhancement zone by children, not survive within a dungeon
environment.
Carl: Hello, Loita. You should tell Donut’s sponsors that parents
will shy away from toys that could potentially melt their child’s face off.
Donut: ALSO, I DON’T SAY CREEPY STUFF LIKE THE DOLL
DOES. IT’S REALLY WEIRD.
Zev: The audience loves the strange vibe of the doll, but I tend to
agree with the crawler. It does not sound like her. We put that in the
notes, but Veriluxx hasn’t changed it.
On my shoulder, Donut tensed up upon realizing Zev was a part of the
conversation. I knew she was still worried about the kua-tin’s well-being.
Donut: HI ZEV!
Carl: Nobody is going to care about the toy’s voice if it keeps
randomly exploding.
Donut: HE IS RIGHT. IT IS NOT A CARL DOLL.
Loita: After we realized you were going to fiddle with the toy, we
started requiring the sponsor to make the doll self-destruct if it is
sufficiently broken. We don’t want you unfairly getting your hands on
the important interior parts. The real version won’t have that feature.
Carl: So you’re the ones screwing the sponsor over? I bet they’re
not too happy then. I’m no marketing expert, but I can’t imagine this
thing is going to do well with how it’s being presented.
Zev: You are not wrong, crawler. There are memes.
Loita: That is not of your concern. You will be going on their
program soon. They assure us that before that happens, you will
receive a proper prototype.
Donut: TELL THEM I NEED TO HAVE THE ABILITY TO
CHANGE THE ROBOT’S NAME. CARL CALLS IT “ROBOT
DONUT” AND THAT JUST WON’T DO. I HAVEN’T DECIDED ON
CHARLIE OR IVY. WHAT DO YOU THINK, ZEV?
Zev: It’s inconsequential, crawler.
Donut’s claws dug so heavily into the side of my neck, I winced with
the pain. Her entire body was rigid. I reached up to pet her.
Loita: Very well. We are done here. Try not to break the next one.
Zev: If you must choose a name, I would go with Ivy.
Donut let out a very slight gasp.
Donut: I THINK YOU’RE RIGHT. BYE ZEV!
Donut did an excited little hop on my shoulder. “Okay, Carl,” she said.
“Let’s go take out that castle in the sky.”
The gnomish Drop Bear used actual gasoline for fuel. The abandoned
biplane’s tank was almost dry. I still had plenty of the fuel in my inventory,
all in metal canisters.
I examined the vehicle as I filled the tank. I needed the plane as light as
possible, so I was only going to fill it up a quarter of the way. It didn’t have
any bombs left under the wings, which would help with the weight. The
plane did not look real, like it was something a drunk dude had built in his
backyard out of scrap metal. Not something that was supposed to actually
fly. I took a deep breath thinking about what we were about to do.
The airplane featured a frothing, rabid koala bear thing painted on the
nose. There were also words in Syndicate standard stenciled onto the nose
above the artwork. I wiped the dust off to reveal the plane’s name.
“Wonderful,” I muttered.
The plane’s name was Death Trap. It had four bombs painted after the
tag. I took a can of spray paint and covered it up. I then wrote Nightmare II
on the side. Donut objected, but only half-heartedly. She’d been oddly
distracted since our discussion with Loita.
The plane was half buried in the sand when we arrived. Thankfully,
Langley had been smart enough to have it covered with a tarp before the
storm. Those other guys all had gone off in search of downed balloons.
They needed to collect five of the things to finish the “save Hump Town”
quest. There were plenty scattered about the bowl. They had to fight off
both gnomes and giant lizards, but at this point, the group of crawlers had
enough experience with both that they could handle themselves. They were
now on their way back to Hump Town to meet up with Katia.
After we finished cleaning the thing off, I sat in the pilot seat and Donut
took to the rear-facing gunner’s chair. I had to rip both of the arm rests off
just to fit in the thing. As I settled in, Donut put her paws up on the large
gun and started making shooting noises. There was no runway here, and we
wouldn’t be able to take off. Not in the traditional sense.
I started the engine to make sure it worked. Both engines spun right up.
I flipped the switch and turned them off. I had no idea how to fly the thing,
but the controls were similar to all the flight sims I’d played a dozen times.
And they were simplistic compared to the original Nightmare’s controls.
There were five gauges, two throttle switches that could be controlled
individually or in tandem, rudder pedals, and a stick. That was it.
Thankfully I only needed to “fly” the thing for a few minutes. And I didn’t
need to worry about landing or taking off.
“Ready for this?” I asked. The virtual sun had already fallen below the
horizon, and darkness spread across the bowl like an inky stain. High
above, our target glowed like a star.
“Let’s do it,” Donut said.
The emergency recovery balloon was deployed using a handle to the
right of the too-small cockpit chair. The balloons did nothing but elevate the
disabled vehicle to the top of the bubble.
I pulled the lever, yanking on it like a car’s emergency brake. The twin
balloons burst upward, hissing as they filled with… well I didn’t know what
they were filling with. It was some sort of chemical reaction instead of a
conventional balloon.
The whole plane jerked, tail first. We started to rise into the air. Slowly
at first, but soon we were moving faster and faster. I watched the needle
indicating our altitude as we rapidly rose into the air.
“Carl, Carl, there are still bullets left in the gun!” Donut suddenly
exclaimed. “I can shoot stuff!”
“Don’t you dare,” I called over my shoulder as we rocketed upward. We
climbed straight up, caught a breeze and continued to rise at an angle,
moving toward the very center of the bubble. I kept a wary eye out for the
large birds that sometimes patrolled the skies.
I didn’t see any enemies. Before the storm, there had been a handful of
balloons up against the ceiling, but they’d all disappeared. I knew a few had
simply fallen, crashing against the desert like meteors. Some had
plummeted onto the land quadrant. Some in the ocean.
All that was left was the target.
It took us less time than I expected to reach the top of the bubble. We hit
the ceiling with a bump, and suddenly we weren’t rising any more. I
checked the altitude, and we were just about five kilometers above the
bowl, which was already pretty high off the bubble’s sea level. This was
much higher than we’d been last time. I didn’t notice any change in
pressure or difference in oxygen levels. I pulled up my health pie chart
menu, and it didn’t show any sort of oxygen deprivation. That was good.
I formed my xistera, loaded it with a thumper, and I tossed it upward,
just to see what would happen. Even this close, I still couldn’t tell if the
bubble’s wall was transparent or just a screen. The metal ball clanked
loudly against the glass-like bubble wall before falling away.
Donut peered over the edge and watched the ball disappear into the
night.
“Really, Carl,” she said. “That’s going to land on somebody’s head.”
I turned until I could see the distant light, about a half of a mile away,
also pressed against the ceiling of the bubble. Damn, I thought. We were
further away than I’d hoped.
“God, I hope this works,” I said. “It’s about to get loud.” I reached
down and flipped the two switches to turn on the plane’s engines. “Hold
on!”
I pushed the dual throttle switch and grasped the stick. I balanced my
feet on the two rudder pedals and held the stick steady. The plane whined
and jerked forward, pulling the balloons along the ceiling. I held my breath
as we started to turn. Because we were still attached to the emergency
balloons, I wasn’t really “flying” the plane. It was more like using training
wheels on a bicycle and then pushing ourselves toward our destination by
pumping the pedals just a few times.
“Shit,” I mumbled as we turned too much. I eased the stick in the other
direction. I pushed the right rudder pedal, and we eventually lined up with
the house. I eased up the throttle and we started skittering along the top of
the bubble toward the flying house. I cut the power and let our momentum
take us in.
“Get ready,” I called to Donut.
The house loomed. A massive, glowing balloon kept the home aloft.
The balloon was huge, more than four times the size of the regular hot-air
balloons used by the other flying machines. It glowed with magic and shone
like a beacon, leading us in like moths to a flame.
The “castle” itself was nothing more than a square hunk of land with a
two-story home sitting upon it. The house looked like any regular house one
might find in a suburban neighborhood. I realized with surprise, that was
exactly what it was. It had a double garage, a porch, and even a little garden
out front, though half of it was gone. The building was painted a dull beige
and made of aluminum siding. There was even a basketball hoop attached
above the garage.
Still, the house hadn’t survived the crashing of the Wasteland unscathed.
The top floor windows were broken out. and part of the chimney had fallen
in on itself. The rain gutters hung loosely off edge of the roof. Christmas
lights clung to the gutters, blinking.
“Do you think they heard us coming?” Donut asked.
“Probably,” I said. “So be careful. Do you see them?”
“No,” she said. “I see the stairwell though. It’s on the second floor of
the house.”
The magical balloon was attached to the house with a massive net. The
airplane eased in like a boat against a dock, coming to a stop against the
edge of the colossal balloon. We were a good forty feet above the top of the
house.
“I’m going in,” Donut said. She jumped from her back seat to the net of
the balloon.
I held my breath, worried the magical protection would hurt Donut.
Mordecai said she’d be able to touch it, and he was thankfully correct. I
climbed up out of my seat, balanced on the nose, using the top wing to
steady myself. I jumped over to the balloon, also clinging onto the net.
Donut dropped to my shoulder.
“You’re not scared of heights, are you Carl?” Donut asked, looking
down. She had a death grip on my shoulder.
“No,” I said as I started to scale my way down the net. The Nightmare II
hung directly over my head, bobbing in the air. Once the escape balloon of
the airplane touched the giant balloon, it also started glowing, like the
balloon-protecting magic was contagious.
“Are you sure? It’s really far,” Donut said. “Look, we can see the lights
on the ground level. I think that’s the mage castle. It’s really far down
there.”
“We already fell once. There’s lots of shit that scares me, Donut. Height
isn’t one of them.”
“Well it should scare you, Carl. This is terrifying.”
“Don’t look down.”
“Where else am I going to look, Carl?”
“You didn’t seem afraid earlier when we were in the other hot air
balloon.”
“That was before we fell out of the sky. I would like to avoid doing that
again.”
We quickly descended. The net attached to the house at the four corners
of the lot. I didn’t want to risk jumping to the roof and sliding off the edge,
so I climbed all the way to the dirt lot and jumped down.
The ground felt unsteady. It wasn’t the same as being on water, but it
was an odd, stomach-lurching sensation. We took a few steps toward the
house. I moved slowly, wary of a trap or ambush.
“You don’t see anything?” I asked again.
“Nothing.”
They had to have heard us coming. We approached the porch. A
cockeyed “Welcome” sign hung from the center of the dirty, white door.
The sign was hand-painted in blue and silver paint and had a star at the
bottom, indicating the previous owners had been Dallas Cowboys fans. The
doormat had a picture of a pistol and said, “We don’t dial 911.”
“I’m getting mixed signals,” said Donut.
She released Mongo, who landed onto the porch with a screech. He
looked around, eyes going wide when he realized the ground was moving.
He turned and looked up at Donut and let out a worried squeak.
Donut leaped from my shoulder to the back of Mongo and gave him a
little pat on the top of the head. “So, are we just going to stand here, or are
we breaking the door in?”
I eyed the doorbell and contemplated just ringing it to see what would
happen. Probably a bad idea, I decided. “Okay, we’ll send Mongo and the
clockworks through the upper window, and we’ll breach in through the
front door. We’ll meet at the stairwell, but tell Mongo not to…”
I didn’t finish. The front door opened, and a young, female gnome stood
there, gazing at us.
“Hello,” she said. She wore an oversized Dallas Cowboys jersey as a
dress. She had brown pigtails peeking out from under her red, conical hat.
The front of the jersey was smeared with blood.
“Have you come to kill my father? You’re a little late. He’s already
dead. Do you want to come in? I’m making lemonade!”
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[ 16 ]
As I finished reading, I finally noticed that our altitude was starting to dip.
The lights in the house flickered.
“Oh great,” I said. Something had happened to the balloon. Our decline
was slow, thankfully, but that couldn’t be good. I wiped my gore-covered
hand on my shirt.
“That’s Denise,” Bonnie said, looking up. “When she gets mad, magic
stuff doesn’t work. The balloon starts to sink. She usually gets over it pretty
soon. She’s probably on the roof.”
Somewhere in the house, there was a crash followed by a distinctive
pop. That was the sound of the clockwork Mongos exploding, even though
they still had plenty of time left. Mongo let out a terrified screech.
I suddenly felt heavier and more tired. I’d lost most of my buffs,
including the 14 strength from my toe ring and my two regular rings. All of
my important stats had just taken a hit.
“Mongo?” Donut called, concerned. “Mongo, come to mommy!”
Mordecai: Sounds like a boss battle is about to start. The potion’s
purpose will probably become clear. Don’t drink it, but try to secure it.
Carl: The monster blocks magic!
Mordecai: Shit, okay. This can manifest in a lot of different ways.
But it likely means no spells. No scrolls. Your gauntlet won’t form.
Only inherent potions will work. Maybe. But if they do, they might not
work as well.
Carl: Goddamnit, in English!
Mordecai: Healing potions will work but only on yourself if they
work at all. That new splat potion you just got won’t work. You’ve
likely lost the protections of your gear. Your active buffs are probably
gone too. Be careful.
Mongo rushed into the kitchen, screaming, blood rushing from dozens
of places on his body. He made a pitiful, bleating noise. He hadn’t been
attacked, I realized. The other two clockwork Mongos had exploded and
injured him. The little clockwork pieces usually didn’t hurt him.
Donut gasped in panic. “Carl, Carl, my heal spell stopped working! I
can’t fix Mongo!”
She rushed to the dinosaur, whose health was about halfway down. She
glowed as she attempted to use a Heal Critter scroll. The spell fizzled out.
“Look, his health is going back up on its own. He’ll be okay,” I said.
“Stop wasting scrolls. They won’t work. We need to…”
“Do you want some lemonade?” Bonnie asked again, more insistent this
time.
I remembered what Mordecai had said. “Yeah, thanks kid,” I said,
reaching for the glass.
The walls shook again, followed by a mighty, distinctive honk! The
whole house lurched sideways. The pitcher of lemonade went flying. Little
Bonnie screeched and tumbled off the edge of the kitchen counter, throwing
the glass aside. Plates and cups flew from the cupboards. The kitchen
drawers opened, spilling cutlery everywhere.
I jumped for the flying glass of the yellow potion, but I missed. I
would’ve caught it, but the glass physically moved in midair away from my
hand.
Sonofabitch, I thought. That was on purpose. They were never going to
let me grab it. Me trying to grab the glass of lemonade was a trigger. It was
like I’d just tripped a trap, or stepped on a landmine.
The cup hit the ground, bounced once, then spun away, spilling the
potion. The house swung a few times and righted itself. Music started to
play. The open window over the kitchen sink slammed shut on its own.
“Oh, poo,” Bonnie said. “I spilled the drink everywhere. I’m going to
have to make more.”
We were locked in the house. It was just like a boss battle from the first
floor.
The music was different than usual. It was slow and haunting, but with a
distant, steady beat. A chink, chink, chink, almost like a hammer slowly
beating onto an anvil.
A giant timer appeared in the air, floating in the middle of the kitchen. It
was at three minutes.
“Uh-oh. That’s new,” Donut said.
I turned to face the hallway. The front door to the house was still open, I
started to point, but the world froze.
Fuck. Here it comes.
B-B-B-Boss Battle!
It’s a timed knock-out fight!
You have discovered the lair of a Borough Boss!
Ladies and Gentlemen, the stakes are getting higher, the battles are
getting harder, and tonight we have the day’s main event!
I want you to put your hands together.
Here are the rules, Contestants!
The house is falling. It will shatter against the ground in exactly
three minutes after the end of this message. In order to escape, you
must defeat the boss!
Easy, right?
Wrong, bitches!
Our mugshots appeared floating in the air. But this time the words No
Magic stamped on each of our faces.
You can’t use offensive or defensive magic for this fight!
I couldn’t move my head, but I could still speak. “Stay behind me,
Donut. You’re too fragile. I’ll do the punching. Keep Mongo back until he’s
fully healed.”
“Carl, I don’t like this. I don’t have anything without magic!”
A second stamp crashed onto our names. No Physical Damage!
Oh yes, that’s right! Your own physical attacks won’t do shit,
either!
“What the hell?” I shouted. “How is that fair?”
This should be a hoot! A hoot, I say! Actually, not a hoot. A…
“Honk!”
The world unfroze for a moment as the white goose walked through the
front door of the house. She waddled into the hallway and angrily honked
again as the door slammed behind her.
The thing wore a frilly, baby blue bonnet along with a blue shawl
around her neck. The shawl was torn and stained with blood. Other than the
blood, she looked like a regular white goose, plucked straight from the
cover of a children’s book.
It’s…
Denise! The Feral Goose Mother!
Level 53 Borough Boss!
Like most of the creatures in this godsforsaken bubble, Denise
shouldn’t be here. She was plucked directly from the seventh floor
when her grandfather, emperor Anser, decided to use a magical gate to
bring his people to this world. But like many of those who were
unwilling in their journey to this place, she lingered too long in the
inbetween. The Nothing.
She paid dearly for it. Her mind is all but gone.
The gnomes captured her long ago, but they do not know who she
really is. Denise doesn’t know, either. She has a few special abilities.
Abilities that only recently started to manifest themselves. She can
prevent magic from harming her. She is an environmental. She has an
overwhelming need to protect children.
But most of all, she just wants to kill everybody. Especially bitches.
And guess what you are?
Tick Tock, motherfuckers.
Aaaand here. We. Gooooo!
The world unfroze, the timer started to move, and the goose screamed in
outrage and charged.
Mongo and I both scrambled out of the way as the shrieking goose slid
into the kitchen, waving her wings furiously as she slammed into the
refrigerator, causing magnets to scatter. The door dented.
“Hi, Denise!” Bonnie said as she continued to stack lemons onto the
chair, as if this was the most normal thing in the world.
“Come on!” I yelled. “To the top of the stairs!”
“Mongo, no! Come!” Donut shrieked.
It was too late. The still-injured Mongo screeched and leaped across the
room, feet first. He raked his claws across the recovering goose. He
chomped onto the neck of the boss and started shaking it like a dog. The
goose honked angrily and flapped her wings as Mongo threw the creature
down. The boss bounced once and hopped back up. She jumped atop the
kitchen table with the gnome corpse and stood upon the dead body and
flapped her wings again, honking and growling at Mongo.
“You’re so silly, Denise,” Bonnie said.
The boss opened her bill to reveal multiple lines of shining, razor teeth.
A health bar had not appeared. Then the mouth opened further, from the
sideways this time, causing the whole mouth to open like a flower. A purple
tongue dripped from the beak. It honked, but this time it came out twice as
loud and deep, a terrifying, guttural cry straight from hell.
Its teeth shot out of its mouth, blasting at us like a shotgun. A line of
fire cut across my arm and face. Donut cried out in pain.
It hadn’t done much damage, but it hurt.
Mongo cried out in rage and pain and moved to attack again.
“Mongo, no!” Donut cried as I lobbed a banger sphere at the goose’s
head. The goose honked in surprise as the metal ball ricocheted off her bill.
It staggered her, but again, no health bar appeared. We weren’t damaging
the goose at all.
Donut chomped firmly onto the dinosaur’s tail and yanked, pulling the
indignant and screeching Mongo back just as the goose lunged. The boss
barely nipped him, but she dislodged a chunk of flesh and blue and pink
feathers. Blood sprayed.
Donut, mouth still full of dinosaur tail, let out a strangled cry. Mongo’s
health was now even deeper in the red. I grasped the dinosaur on both sides
and heaved, tossing him back, throwing him and Donut toward the kitchen
door.
“Go!” I yelled as I slipped backward on the bloody floor. As I
scrambled to my feet, my hand found a ceramic mug that had fallen from
the cabinet. I picked it up and flung it at the goose’s head like I was pitching
a fastball. The mug shattered, and the goose crashed back, flying off the
table, upsetting it and launching Commandant Kane’s corpse straight into
the air. The dead gnome splatted into the ceiling then sploshed wetly onto
the kitchen floor.
“Mongo, follow me!” Donut cried as she let go of his tail.
Mongo, having decided this was probably a good idea, shrieked again
but complied.
“Up the stairs,” I cried as I stumbled toward the door. The house was
falling faster and faster, and I could now feel our downward momentum.
“We need to get out of the kitchen! Bonnie, make your lemonade. Hurry
up!”
We needed to get the goose away from the kid. Whatever was in that
damn potion, it had to be the secret to killing the monster. It was the only
thing that made sense.
We rushed down the hallway. I tossed a side table over as the goose
cried furiously. I was about to drop a smoke curtain, but I thought better of
it. Even though her dot was still white on the map, I didn’t want to distract
Bonnie the gnome even more.
Two minutes.
How in the hell were we going to defeat it? Mordecai said there would
always be clues. But what were they? The stairs ended in a T with a
hallway reaching in each direction. There were several doors here, all ajar
except one. Two of the open doors led to small bedrooms, one a bathroom,
one a linen closet. The door furthest to the right was closed, and that was
the “throne room” where the stairwell to the sixth floor was located. It was
actually just the master bedroom to the house. The door glowed, and I knew
it would remain locked until this fight was over.
The area was scorched and burned from the clockwork Mongos getting
themselves dispelled prematurely.
Donut continued to be preoccupied with Mongo and not the fight. The
dinosaur was bleeding and injured, but he no longer appeared to be in pain.
He let out a frustrated shriek as Donut clucked over him.
“Carl, Mongo won’t stop bleeding! My pet carrier doesn’t work! His
health is still going down!”
There was a broken side table in the hallway. I picked it up and tossed it
onto the stairs. “Try using one of those bandages!” We each had hundreds
of the damn things. It wouldn’t heal him, but it would hopefully stop the
bleeding.
Downstairs, angry honking filled the hall as the goose left the kitchen
and went looking for us.
“We’re up here, ya overgrown duck!” I called.
“It worked!” Donut cried. “It’s okay. We’ll get you healed in a minute!
Carl, what are we…”
“Go into that room there,” I said, pointing to a bedroom with pink walls
and posters for some Korean boy band. “It’s directly over the kitchen.
Break through the floor and make the hole big enough for all of us to drop
through. Hurry!”
The beat to the boss music was getting louder and faster as the timer
moved downward.
Donut scrambled into the room just as the goose appeared at the bottom
of the stairs. It opened up its weird flower-mouth and honked. I ducked as
she fired her mouth teeth again. The little darts peppered their way across
the wall around me. Two of the barbs caught me in the face.
“Gah,” I cried, pulling a sharp tooth out of my cheek.
She wasn’t the most powerful mob we fought, but that didn’t matter.
She was practically indestructible, and all she needed to do was hold out for
just a little longer.
It was only then did I notice the boss now had a health bar. Her health
had barely gone down, but something had injured her. But what? The goose
charged up the stairs, hopping up one step at a time, bobbing her head back
and forth and hissing. Her blue bonnet flapped as she growled. I threw a
banger, catching her in the chest. She flew back in rage, opening her mouth
to fire again. I managed to dive out of the way this time. I risked dropping a
smoke bomb, and then I popped up and knocked her back again.
One minute.
“We did it!” Donut cried from the next room.
I jumped up and ran to the room, slamming the door behind me. I
looked down through the jagged hole. Donut had easily ripped up the carpet
and the wooden panels. Bonnie looked up at us through the hole. The
kitchen was a bloody mess. The corpse of Kane lay on the ground, face
down. Bonnie had a spoon in the pitcher and was mixing it.
“Is it done?” I called down to the kid.
“It’s better cold,” she said. “Why did you break the ceiling?”
The door to the room slammed as the goose blindly crashed into it.
“Come on!” I jumped down through the hole, followed by Donut and
Mongo. Mongo now had some stuffed animal in his mouth. A pink rabbit
thing he’d gotten from the room.
The description on the newly-mixed pitcher of yellow liquid hadn’t
changed. I still didn’t know if I should drink the potion or give it to the
monster. It wasn’t hurting the kid. She was under some weird spell, but it
seemed to protect her from the bird’s wrath. Plus, what did she say? Her
father had given her the recipe.
Fuck it, I thought. I grabbed the pitcher from the tiny girl.
“Hey!” she cried. “Let me pour you a glass! You can’t just take all of
it!”
“I’ll buy the whole pitcher,” I said just as the goose appeared in the hole
over our heads. It opened its mouth and hissed. It jumped down toward us
as I pulled the pitcher to my mouth.
The world froze once again, the goose hovering in mid-air. The timer
froze, stuck on thirty-eight seconds. I felt a swell of hope.
New Achievement! Wild Goose Chase!
Oh, I’m sorry. Did you think this was an important potion?
Magic doesn’t work, dumbass. It’s lemonade!
Reward: It really is delicious. Too bad you’re about to splatter
against the roof of the catacombs.
And just like that, the world unfroze.
“Shit,” I cried, scrambling out of the way as the goose slammed onto the
kitchen counter.
It was a trick. And I’d fallen for it. The whole lemonade thing was a
deliberately-placed misdirection.
Denise opened her flower mouth and prepared to fire point blank at me.
I clobbered her with the pitcher, causing her to rear back.
Her health went down. Barely, but I saw it move.
I finally understood. The description had said she was an
“enviromental.” I didn’t think about what that meant at the time. Everything
was happening so fast, and I hadn’t realized that was a specific type of buff.
Her health had gone down before when I hit her with the mug, and again
with the pitcher. She was impervious to my attacks and my weapons. But
she was vulnerable to damage from objects that were already in the house. I
thought of the bricks lying about the fireplace. Of the broken shards of glass
on the ground. It was too late to get to any of it.
Twenty seconds.
I leaped for the goose, and grabbed her by the neck. She let out a
strangled screech and flapped her wings. I tried to grab her bill, but she
dodged. She opened her mouth and fired directly at me.
I cried as the stinging line of pain marched across my face and neck. It
hurt a lot more this time. It was like getting hit with a flaming baseball bat.
My health plummeted. I slammed on a health potion. It did not work. I
suddenly couldn’t see from my left eye. The goose squirmed in my grip, but
I grasped again, this time grabbing her by the face and holding the bill shut.
She struggled, but despite being a higher level, I was stronger. I felt woozy.
I was going to pass out. I clung onto the goose for dear life.
What had the kid said about her father? She’d pointed to the sink. What
had she meant? I looked again. There was nothing there. What had Kane
been trying to do?
I saw the twin light switches to the right of the basin, and then I knew.
“Donut,” I cried, my voice a strangled shout as I lurched toward the
sink.
“What! What?”
Ten seconds.
I shoved the goose into the sink, face first. She struggled, feet
scrambling against me. Everything was suddenly hazy. I had to move my
hand back to get Denise’s bill in the drain. She tried to open her mouth to
block me. I shoved it in there. Her head was too big. I pushed and pushed.
Her bonnet ripped off as her head popped into the hole.
“The garbage disposal! Hit the switch!”
Five seconds.
Donut leaped to the counter and flipped the first switch as I held the
goose’s head in the hole. The light switched on. “The other switch!”
Donut hit it.
The garbage disposal whined, sounding like it was eating rocks. Denise
went rigid in my hands, her body convulsing like I was holding onto a
short-circuiting power tool. Blood showered up through the hole, geysering
into the kitchen.
The timer paused at one second.
The whole house jerked to a stop, and we all flew off our feet. The boss,
still head-first in the disposal and no longer being held still by me, started to
rapidly spin.
I cast Heal on myself, and this time it worked. I felt my buffs return.
The garbage disposal screamed. Mongo glowed as Donut healed him. She
turned back to the switch and turned off the disposal. The goose continued
to spin a few times, flap, flap, flap, flap before coming to a rest and
flopping over. The now-headless boss slopped out of the sink and into my
lap, where the blood continued to squirt out the neck hole.
Bubble Notification. The Commandant’s quarters of the Wasteland
have been successfully occupied. The Air Quadrant has been liberated!
All give congratulations to the crawlers who successfully took the
throne room. All hail crawlers Princess Donut and Carl!
All crawlers who originated in the Air Quadrant may now freely
travel to the other quadrants.
I looked up at the ceiling. “Wild goose chase? Really? How long have
you been waiting to use that one?”
The house bumped as it gently hit the ground.
OceanofPDF.com
[ 17 ]
OceanofPDF.com
STAGE 3 OF 4. THE MAD DUNE MAGE
“I did all that sewing for nothing ?” K atia said as we stepped out
the front door of the house. She and the others were waiting for us. I came
out and shook hands with Landry and the other archers. Louis and Firas
were also there, all looking wide-eyed at the suburban house that now sat
cockeyed in the sand dune.
“The parachutes will still come in handy,” I said. “Katia, this is
Bonnie.”
“Hey there,” Katia said, taking a knee in front of the child. “How are
you doing, sweetheart?”
“Do you know where I can get some lemons?” the child asked. “I want
to set up a lemonade stand, but I used them all.” She gave me a withering
look. “Somebody keeps spilling it.”
The house had landed along the edge of the bowl about a half of a mile east
of Hump Town. We still had a good hour of darkness left before dawn.
After the death of Denise, the magical balloon started to slowly refill itself.
The whole thing would take off again if we let it. Donut and I rushed out
onto the little square and attempted to sever the lines that connected the
home to the balloon, but the ropes were like steel cables. We were going to
have to abandon the house if we wanted to avoid having to jump out.
I rushed to the kitchen to grab the kid, but she looked at me like I was
crazy when I told her we had to leave.
“The house is about to take off again, and we can’t have you floating
around up there by yourself. It’s not safe,” I said.
“Well let’s just leave the house down here, then,” she said. She pulled a
small object from the inside of her oversized shirt. It was a necklace. It
looked like a walnut. She fiddled with it, and I felt the house settle.
“What is that? What did you do?” I asked.
She took the necklace from around her neck and handed it to me. “My
dad gave it to me when he gave me the potion. He said to give it to an adult.
I guess you’ll do.”
I took the necklace from the girl and examined it. It was a little, purple-
hued gem. I recognized what it was immediately.
Soul Crystal. F-Quality. Used to power the balloon that keeps this
house afloat. Nothing too exciting. You probably want to avoid
breaking it, though.
Charge: 89% Kill something to charge it up.
The crystal was housed in a sliding clamshell-like device. It appeared
one could control how much power it fed the balloon based on how much
the clamshell was opened. The thing had stopped feeding power to the
balloon all together when we were under the anti-magic aura of the feral
goose.
We’d seen plenty of these things before. They controlled the ghoul
generators on the last floor. I had, still sitting in my inventory, a broken,
about-to-explode soul crystal that would flatten everything within forty-five
square kilometers the moment I took it out. That one was “C-quality”
though it wasn’t much bigger than this one. I wondered how powerful a B
or A quality gem would be.
“I’m going to keep this, okay?” I said to the kid. I kept the little shell
open just a fraction, enough to keep the balloon off the ground, but not
enough to lift the house. Hopefully. I’d have to go out there and experiment.
Bonnie shrugged.
The house sat at an angle along a sand dune. The interior looked how
one might expect a house would after a boss fight with a murderous,
indestructible goose. Everything that wasn’t bolted down was on its side or
spilled. Now that I knew the house wouldn’t fly away, we had a lot of work
to do.
Donut and I had both gone up a single level. I was now at 44, and Donut
was 37. That was it. It felt as if we should’ve gotten more. Mongo had gone
up three, hitting level 33. I was pretty sure I’d never understand how these
experience points were allocated. It almost seemed random, despite
Mordecai’s insistence that it was not.
“See if you can figure out what’s wrong with the kid,” I said to Donut.
“Her dad gave her something. Talk with Mordecai and try to work it out.”
Bonnie was on her hands and knees picking up the forks and spoons that
had scattered everywhere.
The kid had barely reacted to anything that had happened. After the
gruesome death of Denise, she complained that she didn’t have enough
lemons to make another batch of lemonade and then set out to clean the
kitchen. Her eyes remained dilated as she went to work, cleaning up like it
was nothing. She worked around the corpse of her father. She was acting
normal, which was absolutely abnormal in this situation.
The power to the house remained connected. Same with the water.
While Donut talked to the kid, I had three goals. First I was going to check
out the stairwell and throne room—aka the master bedroom. Then I would
secure all the windows with tarp so this place didn’t get filled with sand.
And finally, I was going to loot every damn thing I could pick up. I was
going to inspect and remove the electrical panel if I could. Everything.
Mongo still clutched onto the stuffed pink rabbit he’d gotten from the
kid’s room. I patted the durable dinosaur on the head as I went upstairs. The
door to the master bedroom opened without any effort. I stepped into an
unremarkable room. A king-sized bed with crumpled, blue sheets stood
against one wall, and a tall dresser with all the drawers opened sat against
the other, still miraculously standing. Spilled men’s and women’s clothing
covered the floor. I eyed a uniform shirt for some plumbing company with
the name “Dale” sewn on the breast. A framed, University of Arizona
Master’s Degree in library sciences for the woman who used to live here
had fallen off the wall, but the glass hadn’t broken. Her name had been
Jennifer.
Jennifer and Dale. They’d had three kids. They’d likely all been asleep
when it happened.
I couldn’t stop thinking about what Maggie had said, that they could
bring people back. I didn’t want to think about it, about the potential horrors
we could face if we lived past this day or the next.
You’re lucky, I thought. There’s only two people out there they could
dredge up. For most, that number had to be a lot higher.
I noticed something else. On the nightstand, a photo that had fallen over.
I picked it up. It wasn’t a photo, but a drawing. It was Kane, a woman
gnome, and a baby. He’d removed the existing photo and placed it in the
frame. He’d slept in this bed.
It also appeared he’d been jerking off to Cosmopolitan magazines. A
pile of them lay scattered on the floor along with dozens of used tissues. I
sighed and turned to the large walk-in closet.
I could see it on the map, the stairwell. I opened the closet door, and
there it was. It was only wide enough for two people to walk down side-by-
side. It didn’t make sense, physics wise, since we were on the second floor
of a house, but there it was. A blue forcefield prevented me from entering.
We still had two more throne rooms to capture before it would open.
After I secured the windows the best I could, mostly by duct-taping
sheets and tarp over them, I went to work looting everything. Books, toys,
furniture. The man had been pretty short, unfortunately, so there was
nothing that’d fit me. The boys had been teenagers, and the girl had been
about twelve or so. I secured everything I could, including two laptops,
three televisions, and several gaming consoles.
Bonnie had been sleeping in the girl’s room. I took the bed and
nightstand. The closet was filled with Barbie dolls and tons of little animal
action figure things. I took it all.
I finally hit paydirt in the garage. In addition to two mountain bicycles
and a cheap, plastic kayak, they had a full workbench filled with tools that
had been meticulously organized. There were boxes and boxes of crap. A
bunch of Christmas supplies, including a fake tree, had been recently put
away. I took it along with a box of Halloween and fourth of July
decorations.
The electrical panel was also in the garage. I pulled the main house
breaker, and the power didn’t go out. It was as if all the lines were just
electrified without a source. I carefully snipped a line to test it, and the
downline outlet still worked. I removed the outlet from the garage wall, and
only then did it stop working. It didn’t make sense. It was some magic or
game bullshit. If it was attached to where it was supposed to be, it worked,
but not once it was removed.
I didn’t want to flood the house, so I didn’t try it with the pipes. I did,
however, completely disconnect the main house panel. and I took it. I
doubted I’d have use for it, but you never knew.
I did not locate what I was hoping to find. This house came from Texas.
They had a doormat that claimed they had guns. If they had any in the
house, however, the system didn’t include them when it reconstituted the
place. If the couple had a gun safe, it’d probably been in that closet in the
master bedroom.
Oh well, I thought. This was still a great haul.
I wandered back to the kitchen. This was the last room I needed to clear,
and I hadn’t covered the window or back door yet. Donut sat on the counter,
chatting away with Bonnie who continued to pick things up.
“She’s telling me about Sausage, her pig,” Donut said. “She says her
mother bought him for her.”
“Ahh,” I said.
Donut: SHE SAID HER DAD GAVE HER A POTION TO DRINK
AFTER WE BLEW UP THE WASTELAND. SHE’D BEEN CRYING
A LOT BUT IT HELPED HER STOP. SHE WAS SLEEPING NEXT
TO HER DAD IN THE KITCHEN WHEN WE CAME. MORDECAI
SAYS IT’S PROBABLY GOING TO WEAR OFF SOON.
Carl: Jesus. Poor kid. I’m glad we got to her before it wore off.
Katia and the others will be here at first light. They’re going to bring
Juice Box, who’ll take care of her.
Zev and Loita messaged us as we entered back through the town gates.
Loita: Congratulations. Barely surviving battles is great for your
numbers. Keep it up. Donut, you have a new box. They insist this
version will not explode as you don’t deliberately go into the had cavity.
Spend some time with it. If it works as intended, we are going to bring
you two up to do the show a day early.
Donut: I’M NOT OPTIMISTIC, LOITA.
Loita: I don’t care if you’re optimistic, crawler. Just do as you’re
told.
Donut: WELL YOU DON’T HAVE TO BE A JERK ABOUT IT.
Loita: Do not talk back to me. You keep forgetting your place.
Donut: I DON’T LIKE YOU, LOITA. YOU SMELL REALLY
BAD.
Loita: The feeling is mutual. And if you talk back again, I will have
Mongo taken from you. We’ll use him to feed a mob on the next floor
and we’ll make you watch. I can do that. Don’t test me.
On my shoulder, Donut let out a pained stream of breath.
Carl: Now, now. There’s no need for you to get your fish panties all
wadded up. We’ll play with the robot.
Zev: Anyway, the fans really enjoyed that battle. Good job you two.
I’m sorry to say this is goodbye, however. I will still be Loita’s assistant
working behind the scenes, but I’m afraid you no longer need a social
media manager.
I held up my hand to stop Donut from saying anything.
Carl: What do you mean?
Loita: She means you have purchased the social media board, so
you no longer need her to interpret and relay what the dry masses are
saying about you.
Carl: Can you at least send her down here so Donut can say
goodbye to her?
Loita: No. Of course not.
Carl: What about that infomercial for the robot? Can she go to
that?
Loita: No. It is not her job anymore. I will be there, of course. Now
get back to work.
The communication cut off.
“I didn’t even get a chance to say goodbye,” Donut said. She sniffed. “I
wouldn’t have asked for the social media board if I knew we wouldn’t get
to talk to her anymore.”
“It’s okay, Donut,” I said. “We’ll see her again. I promise.”
“You shouldn’t promise things like that,” she said. “You shouldn’t make
promises you can’t keep.”
I patted her on the head. “We will see her again, Donut. I keep my
promises.”
She butted her head against mine, purring loudly.
Once we returned to base, I slept for two hours, showered, reset my buffs,
trained, and ate. I spent some time with Mordecai, experimenting with
different types of explosive recipes, including making a toothpaste-like gel
that could burn long and hot. I was getting better at taking recipes from the
cookbook and then steering conversations to make it look like Mordecai
was coming up with the idea.
We watched the recap show. They featured the fight on the falling
house, and I watched updates on several of the others. Prepotente and
Miriam were just as far along as we were. They’d managed to scale the
interior wall of their bubble and kill all the spiders by applying some debuff
that made them all fall asleep and plummet to their deaths. That had
somehow also finished out the subterranean zone in their bubble, and they
were now preparing to go underwater.
The two-headed creature that represented the Popov brothers was on a
pirate ship firing cannons at other pirate ships. I didn’t know what was
going on there. Lucia Mar fought some multi-limbed mummy ice thing and
shattered him. She was actually working with a group of people, which
surprised me, though the show was low on details. Quan Ch had already
popped his bubble, and he was flying around farming all the mobs he could.
The top-ten list remained mostly the same, but Florin the crocodilian
had dropped off. The last we’d seen him, he’d been sitting in the starting
room refusing to choose a bubble quadrant after the death of Ifechi. I
wondered where he was now, if he was even alive. The top ten list was:
1. Lucia Mar – Lajabless – Black Inquisitor General – Level 41 –
1,000,000 (x2)
2. Carl – Primal – Compensated Anarchist – Level 44 – 500,000 (x2)
3. Prepotente – Caprid – Forsaken Aerialist – Level 38 – 400,000
(x2)
4. Donut – Cat – Former Child Actor – Level 36 – 300,000 (x2)
5. Dmitri and Maxim Popov – Nodling – Illusionist and Bogatyr –
Level 37 – 200,000 (x2)
6. Miriam Dom – Human – Shepherd – Level 34 – 100,000 (x2)
7. Quan Ch – Half Elf – Imperial Security Trooper – Level 45 –
100,000 (x2)
8. Elle McGib – Frost Maiden – Blizzardmancer – Level 35 –
100,000
9. Bogdon Ro – Human – Legatus – Level 35 – 100,000
10. Chirag Ali – Human – Sacred Paladin – Level 35 – 100,000
I still didn’t know who that Bogdon Ro guy was. Quan had dropped
several spots, probably because he’d cleared his bubble early and he wasn’t
making any moves to leave the area. People got bored easily. He remained
the highest level, but I was catching up to him. There was a new guy at the
bottom of the list. I wasn’t sure if I’d seen him or not on the show.
“I still don’t understand how that goat is so popular,” Donut grumbled.
“I don’t like being separated from you, Carl.”
“Do you wish to talk about it?” Robot Donut asked. “We can have a gab
session, just you and me, girlfriend.”
“Oh be quiet,” Donut said testily. The novelty of her having “merch”
had finally worn off.
This newest version of the robot toy weighed about three times as much
as the last one, and it was slightly bigger, too. Mongo had immediately
attacked it, but it hadn’t suffered any obvious damage this time. I spent
some time playing with the thing, and it was pretty sturdy. They hadn’t
fixed much else, however. It still threw out random, bootleg Garfield
quotes. It still reacted oddly to situations.
Still, this was the best version yet. And it worked as intended. Sort of.
Loita informed us we’d go on the show in a few hours to discuss the
product. Katia was still scheduled for another show, but she would go on
tomorrow evening. Hopefully we’d be in the land quadrant by then.
The robot toy had a small panel on the back of the head that was held
closed with a cheap, little tab, much like a battery compartment from a toy
on earth. I clicked open the flimsy tab and received a warning that the thing
was going to self-destruct in five seconds if I didn’t put it back. I was
genuinely curious what was going to happen since we were in a safe room,
but at the last moment, I shoved the little rectangle back into place with a
click.
Mordecai told me not to press my luck since this was a non-enhanced
toy.
“What does that even mean?” I asked. I flicked the little tab. Jesus, what
a piece of shit.
“You know how some video games required internet access to play?
Even though they’re single-player? This is the same sort of thing. Most toys
nowadays require access to a licensed enhancement zone to work. And
some even take it a step further and require the child to have a license key
installed in himself in order to unlock all the toy’s features. It makes certain
his parents are current in their taxes. This one doesn’t have any of that. It’s
not as fancy as most of the stuff out there, but it’s something that can be
played with by a child who is on a long spacecraft voyage outside of a
system’s net. Or by a family too poor to pay their access tax. If you activate
the self-destruct sequence, the AI can probably teleport it away, but it might
not, especially since that was added to keep you out of its head. I honestly
don’t know what would happen. This isn’t something you want to test.”
The robot hopped up and down in agreement. “Carl, Carl, let’s go kill
another mantaur!”
I reached over and patted the robot on the head. It moaned. Like a
sexual, human woman moan. I jerked my hand back. “Jesus Christ!”
Carl: So this company, Veriluxx, they’re genuinely trying to help
poor kids with this bullshit?
Mordecai: I wouldn’t go that far. I’ve never heard of them, but the
logo on the benefactor box suggests they’re associated with Veritan
Linkage. That’s a mostly-Soother lending fund that advocates for the
enslavement of those who can’t afford their taxes. I’ve been thinking
about why a company would spend so much on such a stupid toy, and
none of it makes sense. Only a mega corp could possibly afford such an
expensive campaign, and they’d only do it if there was some sort of
pay-off. I doubt just selling a cheap toy is their intent. Odds are we’ll
never know. It’s likely just a way to funnel money to Borant. They’re
closely allied with them and the Bloom.
Carl: Christ. Is the whole universe filled with assholes?
Mordecai: Just the ones with the money.
“Oh goodie,” robot Donut said. “I can’t wait to go onto another show.
I’ll get even more fans!”
I spent some time playing with the watch. The thing was identical to the
other one Henrik had. The description was less than helpful. I turned the
bronze watch over in my hand. There was a bone symbol etched onto the
metal. I’d seen that symbol before somewhere, but I couldn’t remember
where. The watch wasn’t ticking.
Mysterious Pocket Watch.
What in the hell is this thing? What does it do? It keeps terrible
time. Sometimes the hands move on their own. And there’s a mirror
built in that isn’t quite a mirror. You need to find a winding box to
make it work.
That was it. I opened it, and the little mirror above the face showed
nothing but blackness. There was a tiny indicator for an alarm. If I pulled
the tab on top of the watch out three times, I could set it. I moved it so it
reached the hour hand, and the watch vibrated in my palm like a cell phone
buzzing on silent. I’d set the alarm off.
The image on the little mirror changed. A fish-like creature appeared
and met my gaze. The window suddenly went dark.
That was Henrik, I realized. He was in the necropolis with the other
watch, and he was in the form of an underwater creature. I’d set the alarm
off and signaled him. I sighed and snapped it closed. At least we knew the
old changeling was still alive.
“Hey,” Katia said, sticking her head into the personal space. “Bonnie is
starting to wake up out of her stupor. She’s over at Skarn’s house. You
should go see her before you and Donut leave for your show.”
That was a good idea. We were going to do the infomercial, and the
moment we got back, we were all going to get into the house and fly it out
of the bowl.
“How’s she doing?” I asked as I followed Katia.
“Not so great. But she’s a kid. Kids are resilient.”
The dromedarians, to their credit, didn’t treat the girl poorly even
though she was partially responsible for bombing their town. I wasn’t so
sure humans would be so forgiving. A group of the camels stood outside the
home, quietly talking amongst themselves. I followed Katia inside.
“This is where you’ll sleep,” Juice Box was saying. She indicated a
corner of the room.
To my surprise, Donut and Mongo were already here. I hadn’t realized
she’d finished with her training.
“This isn’t my bed,” Bonnie said, looking down at the simple cot. The
little gnome had her arms wrapped around herself. She’d changed out of the
bloody, oversized football jersey into a simple dress that was also too big
for her. Skarn stood next to her, his hand on her shoulder. He’d transformed
into a gnome also.
“Hey, here you go,” I said, pulling the pink bed out of my inventory.
Everyone moved out of the way as I manhandled the bed into place. It was
absurdly large for the little girl, but the home was spacious enough to
accommodate it. This was the same bed she was sleeping in before. I then
pulled the little side table that had been next to it, and I placed it down next
to the bed.
The girl barely reacted.
“Denise killed my dad,” she suddenly said. “He knew she was going to
do it. He said there was nothing he could do. He told me to make lemonade.
I started to cry, and he gave me the potion, and I wasn’t scared anymore. Do
you have another one of those potions? Please?”
“No, sweety,” Juice Box said.
“It’s okay,” Skarn said. “When my town got bombed, my parents died,
too. But they take care of me here. The camels are grumpy, but they aren’t
mean.”
“Okay,” Bonnie said, her voice small. She rubbed her nose.
Mongo slowly approached the girl, and he dropped the stuffed pink
bunny in front of her. The girl picked it up and held it tight. She closed her
eyes. I took the photo from my inventory, the one of her and her mother and
father, and I put it on the nightstand.
Loita: Oh for the sake of the gods. Audiences like drama, but not
melodrama. Stop concerning yourself so much with NPCs. We’ll be
transferring you to your program in twenty minutes.
I motioned to Katia and Donut, and we left the girl with Juice Box. I
turned to look one last time, and the girl was sobbing, clutching onto the
changeling woman while she held the stuffed pink rabbit. Juice Box stroked
the girl’s hair.
That was the moment. Right then. I’d been toying around with an idea,
but I’d dismissed it as too risky. Too soon.
That was the moment I changed my mind.
OceanofPDF.com
[ 18 ]
The hosts of Veriluxx New Toys Showcase were a pair of tall, giant-eyed
alien soothers. The Forsoothed. A man named Gravo and a woman named
Liddi. I was beginning to realize these soother guys were one of the most
common types of aliens in the universe.
Gravo, the male alien, was inexplicably dressed like a cowboy and wore
a massive, Styrofoam cowboy hat. He wore a gun belt with a six-shooter,
and he wore a sheriff’s badge on his vest. The word “Sherif” was written in
English, and it was spelled incorrectly. I had no idea if the misspelling was
on purpose or not. He wore black and white cow-patterned chaps. He also
donned cowboy boots with spurs that jingled as he walked.
Liddi, the woman alien, was dressed in some sort of Wish dot com
superhero costume that didn’t fit her. The suit was blue and red like it was
attempting to approximate Superman’s colors, but the cape was also in the
black and white cow pattern, matching her partner’s chaps. Upon her chest
was the word “Veriluxx” where Superman’s “S” should be. She wore a
simple, orange-colored, eye-covering mask that clashed offensively with the
rest of her outfit.
“What the hell, man,” I said as we strode into the studio.
“Times like this, I wish cats really were colorblind,” Donut grumbled.
The room was set up to not have a studio audience. It was a simple table
with all four of us standing behind it. There was a raised chair for Donut
and a small box for me to compensate for the soothers’ height. The toys
would supposedly appear on the table, and we were supposed to discuss
how awesome they were.
Liddi approached and waved. “Hello, hello. I’d shake your hand, but
you know. I can’t!” The woman, superhero alien grinned down at us.
“Princess Donut, I must say, you are one of my favorites. I only have two
feeds favorited, and yours is one of them.”
“Oh?” Donut said, brightening. She jumped up into the chair. “Well it’s
always a pleasure to meet a fan.”
The female soother had a bunch of tiny, pinback buttons on her breast.
They were all showing different animals I didn’t recognize. Though there
was one pin at the bottom that was of Pinhead from the Hellraiser movies.
“I am just so excited to have you on the show today. It was my idea to bring
the Donut doll to life.”
“Yeah, was the Garfield thing your idea, too?” I asked.
“Who’s your other favorite?” Donut asked before Liddi could respond.
“You said you had two.”
“Oh, Lucia Mar of course. Everybody has her as a favorite.”
“So what is this?” I asked, indicating the alien’s outfit. “You always
dress like this?”
Gravo, the cowboy soother answered. “No, we don’t,” he said. He had a
much more dour personality. “The clothes are to attract attention from
children. We are about to film a commercial for a fake program called
Veriluxx New Toys Showcase. This commercial will play on screens of all
ships docked for fueling and repair if there is a demographically-targeted
youth aboard or if there is someone who might wish to purchase such a toy
for a youth. The item will be physically available for immediate purchase at
the waystation’s shop, or it’ll be available to order on the Syndicate
network. This is a low price-point toy with a few desirable features for low-
income families, so we are anticipating a very aggressive marketing
campaign.”
“Wait, so this is like a commercial that only airs at gas stations?” I
asked.
“Fueling depots and way stations, yes,” Gravo said. “It’ll be targeted at
children who watch Donut’s feed as well.”
I thought of all the toy commercials that had enticed me as a child. “So,
what? We’re just going to stand here and talk about the stupid robot?”
“That’s the plan. And we’re renting this trailer by the second, so let’s
get this started. And don’t call it stupid while we’re recording.”
“Wait,” I said. “Do these commercials actually work for you guys?
Wouldn’t it be better to have actual children playing with the toys? You
know, commercials with explosions and music and colors and kids running
around with the toys?”
Gravo made a scoffing noise. “Research indicates that children prefer to
have a trusted adult speak down to their level and present them with the
best possible options. As the parents are the ones who most often purchase,
this logical approach both piques the child’s interest and gives confidence to
the parents.”
I exchanged a look with Donut. I almost argued with him, but I didn’t
give a shit about the stupid robot toy’s success. I was too tense, anyway.
Too wound up to form a coherent argument, especially since I knew
Veriluxx’s parent company were just as terrible as everyone else in this
damn universe.
I thought of Loita, sitting there all smug in the next room.
“Okay, let’s do this.”
“This sure is a hoot,” Donut said, reading the line that floated in the air in
front of us. She was not doing a very good job of being natural. I knew that
she, too, had been thrown off by Loita’s comment about Zev’s family. She’d
already soured on the idea of going on this particular show and was phoning
in her lines.
Neither of the soothers seemed to notice.
“Yeehaw!” Gravo said. He was like a zero-personality tax accountant
who was being forced to perform for children. He pulled his six shooter and
shot in the air. “It sounds like this toy is a high falutin’ hit!”
I was pretty certain he was using “high faluting” incorrectly.
The toy Mongo screeched on the table and bounced around the toy
Donut. The Mongo was designed to mimic the real deal in his juvenile stage
and was pretty damn adorable. It stood about half of Robot Donut’s height.
As we watched, robot Mongo jumped up and chomped robot Donut on the
nose, who howled in pain. “Bad Mongo! Bad!” the robot said.
“So, Carl,” Liddi asked. The super hero costumed-soother was actually
going by “Professor Liddi” for the commercial. I didn’t know why. “What’s
your favorite part of the Veriluxx RealPet companion?”
A paragraph of text appeared floating in front of me. I ignored it.
“Actually,” I said. “I like how trainable they are. We only had robot
Donut for a few days, but I taught her several tricks.”
Gravo looked irritated and was about to pause the taping so I could get
back on script, but Professor Liddi rolled with it. “Oh?”
“That’s right,” I said. “She says the weirdest shit. But if I tell her to sit,
she sits. If I tell her to follow, she follows. She’s much more compliant than
the real Donut.”
“Hey,” Donut said. “Don’t be offensive, Carl.”
Both Liddi and I laughed. “I mean, that’s what we all want, isn’t it?
Compliance?”
“What do you mean?” Liddi asked.
“What is your parent company called again? Veritan Linkage? Isn’t that
their thing?”
Nobody said anything for several seconds.
“Stop rolling,” Gravo said. He turned on me. “I don’t know where you
heard that, but that’s absolutely not true. Veritan is our parent company, yes,
but we operate independently from them.”
I shrugged. “That’s not what I heard. Someone said your parent
company advocates for slavery. People are saying there are really trackers
hidden in the toys.”
“Carl, what are you doing?” Donut asked, looking up at me. She’d
removed her sunglasses for the show and looked at me wide-eyed.
“Just stick with the script, okay?” Gravo said. “Don’t be an imbecile.
There’s nothing you can say that’ll make it onto air, so why bother?”
“Nothing I can say in here,” I said. “The dungeon is another story,
though, isn’t it?”
“What?” Gravo said. “What are you trying to say? Are you trying to
shake us down for a loot box? Is this a joke? Do you really think that would
work?”
I had no idea if Veriluxx toys had any sort of sinister motive with all of
this. Mordecai seemed to think it was a money laundering operation or
something. Honestly, I didn’t care. This was dangerous. Stupidly dangerous.
I was gambling all of this was about to be forgotten.
I just needed Loita to get up off that damn couch.
“Listen here, crawler,” Gravo started to say.
The lights flickered. The two soothers disappeared. The floor shook.
The studio went black then filled with red lights. A terrible creaking noise
filled the chamber.
“Warning. Fire suppression system activating.”
The voice came over a loudspeaker.
Donut jumped to my shoulder. “Carl, Carl, we’re under attack!”
“Hold on,” I said. “Be ready for anything.”
“I can’t cast my spells in here!”
I bolted for the green room door. It irised open as I approached. Smoke
poured out through the hole.
The couch against the back wall was obliterated in the explosion. I took
a deep, relieved breath that the picture window hadn’t ruptured.
But then I realized the window had ruptured. A massive crack ran
across it, like a lightning bolt. The blue forcefield was the only thing
keeping the water out. Shit, shit. It appeared the forcefield was holding.
Thank god. Thank fucking god.
Actually, no, I thought. Not god. Coolie. Thank you, Coolie for the
information.
“Carl, I think robot Donut blew up!” Donut said, looking around.
“Where’s Loita? Did she…” Donut gasped. The crumpled form of the
dungeon admin had been blown across the room and had smashed against
the wall. Donut rushed to her. The small kua-tin was missing her left arm
and both of her bottom legs. Her rebreather, miraculously, still worked. Her
entire fish body was blackened. She looked as if she’d been flash-fried in a
pot of oil.
But she wasn’t dead. I felt my heart quicken. She couldn’t just teleport
away. They had to first lower the shield. But if they lowered the shield, the
window would break, and Donut and I would die instantly.
Borant had to make a choice, I realized. They could probably heal her in
seconds, but only if she teleported away. Save a low-level admin or save
their two highest-grossing crawlers?
I looked down at the injured woman and smiled.
“You… you did this,” Loita panted.
“What do you mean?” I asked. “It was an accident. The robot blew up.
You’re the one who made them put that self-destruct sequence in it. I was in
the other room. I have no idea how it blew. You saw how buggy that damn
thing was.”
Outside through the broken window, multiple lights appeared, rushing
toward the sub. These were other ships, coming to repair the trailer. They
wouldn’t get here in time.
“You won’t win,” she gasped, gurgling the words. Foamy, colorless
liquid oozed from her mouth and gills. “The Bloom will prevail. You will
be forgotten.”
“Nobody likes melodrama, Loita,” I said as the kua-tin died.
<Note added by Crawler Carl. 25 th Edition> Coolie. I know you can’t read
this, but I want you and every future reader to know that I used the
information from your passage to help plan the first step. If it wasn’t for
your words, I wouldn’t have had the confidence or knowledge to act. What I
did today I did for you and for a little girl named Bonnie. My only regret is
that my first step was a small one, and I don’t know yet if I’ll survive long
enough to take a second.
But if I do manage that second step, please forgive me. What I do from
here on out is solely for me and my people. As long as I am alive, I will do
everything I can to make them burn.
They will not fucking break me.
<Note added by Crawler Carl. 25 th Edition> One.
OceanofPDF.com
[ 19 ]
I t only took the repair subs about thirty seconds to mend the
damage. The moment it was fixed, Donut and I teleported away. But when
we jumped, we did not return to our personal space. That did not surprise
me.
Our destination, however, did.
Entering the Desperado Club.
We were in a small, cluttered office. The paper-covered desk was
occupied by a tall man. The shadowy figure wore a dark cloak with a hood,
which supernaturally obscured his face, grim reaper-like. His hands, the
only flesh I could see, were a dark, dark purple, almost black. His elongated
fingers were almost elf-like, though the man’s height suggested he was
nothing of the sort.
It was a small office, with wood slat walls and the same tiled floor as
the rest of the Desperado Club. A tapestry hung from one wall, looking
almost like a Turkish rug. There were no other decorations. Through the
wall, I could hear the very distant pulse of the nightclub dance floor.
Our status indicators did not snap back on, but I could examine the
man’s properties. Sort of.
Orren.
Syndicate Liaison.
There were a pair of old, wooden chairs in front of the desk.
“Please,” the man said, indicating the chairs. “Carl and Donut. Sit.” He
had the voice of a British professor. Authoritative, but not aggressively so.
We both wordlessly sat down. I chewed on the jagged edge of my
fingernail. The chair wasn’t high enough for Donut to look over the desk,
and she suddenly looked very small sitting there. I reached over and gave
her a pat. She was trembling.
The man put his pen down and folded his hands together. He regarded
us. The darkness under his hood swirled.
“My name is Orren. I do not work for Borant. I am an independent
consultant retained by the Syndicate. I am a neutral third party observer. I
work in concert with the current season’s showrunners, the Syndicate
government, and the controlling AI. You would not normally meet me or
one of my colleagues but under certain extreme circumstances. And as you
can imagine, these are extreme circumstances.”
“So, what? You’re like the vice principal of a high school? You collect
the naughty boys and girls and tell them what their punishment is?”
He approximated a shrug. “I am a non-AI fact finder. Not quite a sheriff.
Not quite an attorney.” He paused. “Not quite a judge.” He moved in his
chair, and it creaked, like his body was heavier than it looked. “If the
Syndicate sees something that requires more information, they will ask both
the kua-tin and AI for reports on what happened. Sometimes those reports
contradict each other. Sometimes those reports are inconclusive. In such
cases, a liaison such as myself investigates. And if the facts warrant it, I
recommend what should be done about it.”
We were in extreme danger here, and we both knew it. I felt for poor
Donut, who’d had nothing to do with what had happened in the trailer. But I
didn’t regret it. Not one bit.
The creature steepled his fingers. “Do you know how many
assassination attempts there have been on dungeon admins over the solars?”
“Probably a lot,” I said.
“More than we would like to admit, yes,” the man—Orren—said. “And
quite a few have been successful, too. Two seasons ago, a crocodilian
managed to snap the head off of his outreach associate. He shouldered the
admin into the hallway and literally bit the man’s head off. And instead of
teleporting him away into the crawler disposal unit, the idiot Fortent admins
sent two of their own security agents to subdue the crawler and also got
themselves killed before the AI finally intervened. Three admins at once,
which were the only admins killed by crawlers that season.”
Orren casually leaned back in his chair, which continued to groan and
creak ominously. I knew he was wanting me to say something, to offer up
information—much like how a real vice principal would if he was trying to
get an unruly student to admit their guilt. I wasn’t going to say a word
unless he asked me a direct question.
“Three was nowhere near the record, of course. But three is still
considered a lot. Last season the Squim Conglomerate had no admin
fatalities due to crawler attacks. I’d like you to guess how many have died
this season so far due to your fellows.”
That was a trick question if I’d ever heard one.
“Zero,” I said.
The man grunted with amusement. “Not including this most recent
death of Admin Loita, the number for this season currently stands at 15.
Lucia Mar has killed two. Three if you count her first game guide, which
we do not. The rest were all one-off attacks.”
I was genuinely intrigued at that, and more than a little proud of my
fellow humans. “I thought all violence against admins was met with
immediate justice from the AI. That’s what the warning says.”
Orren ignored me. “Fifteen is already considered a disaster. Do you
know why that number is so high this season?”
I shrugged. “Probably two reasons. My people don’t like fish telling
them what to do. And the kua-tin are running this show as cheaply as
possible. I don’t know the details on how these zone things work, but I
know they make it more dangerous for the workers.”
“You are correct, on both accounts.” He drummed the desk with his
hand. “However, crawler. Every one of those fifteen deaths, and in fact,
every single admin murder from the first crawl until this very moment all
have one thing in common.” He leaned in. I detected a very slight distortion
to his voice, like he was talking through a speaker. “We know exactly how
the crawler pulled it off. This dungeon is the most scrutinized, most
surveilled location in the universe. Yet, nobody knows exactly how you did
it.”
“She died because that stupid cat blew up,” I said.
“Carl, I’m beginning to suspect this Orren fellow thinks we murdered
Loita,” Donut said, speaking for the first time.
“No, no, you misunderstand, crawler Carl. We know exactly how she
died. It took longer than I’d like to ascertain all the facts. We were, at first,
thrown off by the force of the explosion. There were no extra explosives
brought into the production trailer. Yet, the explosion was more powerful
than it should’ve been. That was the first mystery, though the AI did have a
quick explanation for that. Do you know what it was?”
“I had the cat on my table,” I said. “She was watching me decant those
infusions.”
He slapped the desk and pointed at me like I’d just given him the
answer to an equation. The sudden and unexpected sound was like a
thunderclap. I tried not to flinch, and I hated myself for flinching anyway.
“Yes! The yield on the toy’s self-destruct mechanism was artificially
enhanced by the AI simply because it sat upon your sapper’s bench while
you were working on it, which as you know is one of the benefits of your
table and your explosive handling skills. But that happened on its own.
Records indicate you made no direct adjustments to the toy’s explosive. It’s
what you did next that caused the explosion.”
Donut scoffed. “Oh my god, he does believe we did it on purpose.” She
made a frustrated noise and then jumped onto my shoulder so she could
look directly at the man. “If Carl was going to purposely kill Loita he
would’ve shoved a stick of dynamite in her gills and then kicked her in the
head. Carl is very good at killing things, and he can be very clever about it
sometimes, but he doesn’t do secret Asian man style murders.”
“Agent,” I said.
“What?” Donut asked.
“It’s secret agent man. Not secret Asian man.”
“Are you sure?”
“Yes, I’m sure. How does ‘secret Asian man’ make sense?”
“Yes, I supposed that does make more sense. Anyway, that’s not his
style, and besides, every one of his plans always screws up somewhere
along the way. He would’ve been caught. When he was with Miss Beatrice,
his definition of ‘subtle’ was pulling his boxers down and saying, ‘me so
horny.’ No offense, Carl.”
“What? I never did that.”
“Oh, right. That was Brad, wasn’t it? Anyway, you get my point. This
was not my Carl’s handiwork. It’s quite impossible. He is not a ninja. And
before you ask, it wasn’t me, either. Do you have tape of the actual
explosion? I would just love to see it. Are you certain it wasn’t one of those
Skull empire orcs? Or maybe the Veriluxx people remote detonating it
because Carl had discovered their secret, evil plan?”
Orren nodded. “We have surveillance from the Mexx unit in the trailer,
but that is it. Since you weren’t in the room, the footage isn’t nearly as
holistic as we’d like. But it doesn’t matter. What happened is quite clear.
Administrator Loita jumped down off the couch. The toy jumped down to
follow, and a few seconds later, it exploded, killing her and almost killing
you two as well. The panel on the back of its head dislodged when it
jumped, which activated the creature’s self-destruct sequence and set off the
explosion. Due to the interface lock-out because of Admin Loita’s presence,
neither of you received the self-destruct warning.”
I grunted. “So that shitty little panel on the back of the cat’s head fell
off? Look, it’s no secret that we didn’t get along with her. But that panel
was made out of plastic. That toy was a cheap piece of crap. I mentioned it
was going to fall off on its own more than once.”
He nodded. “I know. I watched the recording multiple times. It’s not
plastic, at least not as you know it. The panel was made of a reactive,
tamper-proof polymer called Zentix. It’s very popular throughout the
galaxy, especially in children’s toys. It’s designed to fail under certain
circumstances. Obviously, the explosion part isn’t usually a feature of the
toy, but the panel is designed to break if someone tampers with or attempts
to illegally modify the toy’s innards.”
“Then why is there a panel in the first place?” Donut asked. “If you
can’t play with it, then why is it there?”
“It depends on the toy. Most have varying degrees of features depending
on the user license. Some panels can only be accessed by authorized users.
Some have controls that can only be adjusted by qualified personnel. It’s a
smart polymer with multiple security settings. It’s not important. We are
straying from the point.”
“So what is the point? What’re you trying to say?” I asked.
“I’m saying the residue dust left behind by the disco ball smoke curtain
started to slowly eat away at the panel. That process was greatly enhanced
when you placed the toy within range of Admin Loita’s rebreather
apparatus. The moisture caused the remaining dust to run across the panel
and along the edges. Then you engineered a situation that would cause the
admin to get up off the couch. And because the toy was programmed to
follow her, the act of jumping down dislodged the panel and thus caused the
explosion. It was, quite simply, one of the most brilliant assassinations I
have ever seen a crawler execute. And I applaud you for it.”
“This is just like the end of a Perry Mason episode,” Donut said. “I’m
almost disappointed it’s all made-up and Carl isn’t really going to start
crying from the witness stand and confess to the murder.”
Donut was cracking jokes, but I knew that she was very tense. And
worried.
“But,” Orren continued, ignoring Donut, “as impressive as it was, we
cannot allow crawlers to murder admins, even low-level ones such as
Loita.” He slid a piece of paper from the pile on his desk and turned it
toward me. It was a mostly-blank sheet of paper with a signature line at the
bottom and a hand-written headline at the top in Syndicate Standard that
read, “Admission of non-sanctioned violence by Crawler number 4,122
‘Carl.’”
“You want me to sign a blank piece of paper?” I asked. I was mildly
offended that they’d think that would actually work. “Yeah, no.”
He shrugged. “You might just survive if you admit it. Lucia Mar happily
signed a confession both times, and she’s still in the dungeon. We’d give
you a similar deal.”
“If you really thought I’d killed her, we wouldn’t be having this
conversation. You wouldn’t be asking me to sign anything.”
Orren didn’t say anything for several moments. “You knew the
forcefield would protect the trailer’s hull from the explosion. You asked
about it. You knew about the chemical reaction that would eat the panel.
You created one of the few explosive combinations that leave behind a
persistent residue.” He pulled the blank sheet of paper away and produced a
second one, and this one was covered with many, many paragraphs of text.
It still had a blank signature line at the bottom. “You’re obviously getting
information from an outside source. We know it wasn’t Agatha or any of
her helpers. None are in your bubble. We don’t believe it was Odette,
either.”
I reeled at the mention of homeless, shopping cart-pushing Agatha.
What was it she’d said to me way back on the second floor? Them critters
already know I’m here. They just don’t know what to do about it.
“Tell us who your source is and how they communicate with you, and
you will be returned to the dungeon with no penalties, and you will be given
a Legendary box that will contain an item that will all but guarantee your
survival until the ninth floor.”
I was stunned at the offer, but only for a moment. Contract or not, there
was no way I was going to trust them about anything. Besides, my “source”
was the cookbook, and I did not want to give it up. If I mentioned it, it
would disappear. Would they even believe me? It wasn’t worth the risk. No
fucking way.
Plus, this guy’s version of the assassination was significantly more
complicated and high-tech than what had really happened.
I had no idea about the polymers or the residue of the disco ball reacting
with the weird space plastic. That shit was well beyond anything I’d be
willing to trust. Donut was right that my plans usually went off the rails.
This time it had been to my benefit. That whole chemical reaction thing was
nothing more than a happy little misdirection.
I had known about the forcefield thanks to Coolie’s passage in the
cookbook. I had known that the disco ball would’ve covered everything in
technicolor dust, also thanks to the cookbook. My purpose with that had
been simple. I wanted to get that crap all over the toy so they wouldn’t want
it brought into the studio. That was it.
I had not known that little panel was made of some weird type of
plastic. I did, however, know it was a piece of shit. I’d been worried from
the start that the stupid panel would fall off. I’d been toying with using my
duct tape to hold the thing in place.
Instead, I came up with an idea for it to fall off exactly when I wanted it
to.
If I was going to risk everything, then all of the circumstances had to be
perfect, and I wouldn’t know if they were until the last possible minute.
Only then could I gamble on “arming” the toy. I hadn’t realized the dust
from the disco ball was already doing the job for me.
Any kid who’s had battery-operated toys—or any adult who’s had a
remote control for their television—knows exactly what happens when that
ridiculous little plastic tab over the battery compartment breaks or somehow
gets out of whack. The whole cover refuses to stay put, and any big jolt
causes it to take a dive, usually disemboweling the batteries in the process.
I couldn’t just outright break off the little tab. That would’ve been both
obvious and would’ve caused it to fall right away. So instead of breaking it,
I simply pushed it down with my left palm, placed my left thumb between
the little tab and the holder, and I broke off my strategically-cut left thumb
fingernail, creating a shim.
I’d been collecting all the broken pieces of the robot Donuts every time
Mongo killed one. I had a perfectly-preserved back panel from the first
iteration in my inventory. I sat on the toilet and practiced the move several
times with other fingers before I got it right. I’d cut my nail 3/4s off, but
close to the finger so it wasn’t noticeable. The panel thing was such an utter
piece of crap, it easily fell off with just a little foreign object. In fact, it was
so flimsy, so easy to fall off, I was starting to suspect the toy had actually
been a low-effort assassination attempt on us.
When I’d leaned in to tap on the glass and ask Loita if the trailer could
go into space, thus confirming Loita was really there thanks to the moisture,
I’d attempted to get my nail in place, but it’d slipped out. I’d had to lean in
a second time to get it right. I leaned over the couch, and I’d made the move
with my left hand, pressing the robot toy against my chest. In the end, it’d
been simple. I held the panel in place as I pulled my hand away. When I
placed the toy on the couch next to the admin, I’d pulled away with enough
force to dislodge my fingernail, which held the panel precariously in place.
I practically crapped myself when the robot Donut had turned its head
to say some creepy shit to Loita. But the little panel had held. It wasn’t
visibly loose. But I knew it would go flying the moment it jumped to the
ground. When I’d told robot Donut to stay by the admin, I knew the heavy
robot would jump off the couch the moment she’d stood up. Loita had been
so distracted by my attempted extortion of Veriluxx, she likely never
noticed the little piece of plastic falling off the cat and landing on the
carpet.
And that’s what killed her.
“I’m not signing anything because I have nothing to give up, nobody to
rat out,” I said. “And believe me, I’d love to get a free legendary box. But I
have nothing to give you in exchange. This was an accident. But you’re
obviously not an idiot, so I won’t lie to you. I wish I had thought of this. I
wish I had outside help because if I did and thought I could’ve gotten away
with it, I would’ve done it without hesitation, but I wouldn’t have wasted
the opportunity on some low-level bitch like Loita.”
Donut, still on my shoulder, was stiff as a board.
The faceless man said nothing for a moment. “And who would you have
used it on, then?”
I didn’t answer. There were only so many lines I could cross. There was
so much I wanted to say. I thought of Brandon. Of Yolanda. Of everybody
else in the world. They had all died, and nobody cared. Yet someone like
Loita died, and we had to go through all of this?
You will not break me. Fuck you all. I will break you. I will break you
all.
Orren sighed and pulled the paper away. “Very well. As we are unable
to determine what happened and no consensus exists regarding the incident,
I have no choice but to recommend that the Syndicate close the matter.
However, you should know we have implemented a punitive measure onto
Borant for the remainder of this floor, as this wasn’t an isolated incident. No
crawlers will be allowed to be teleported away by third parties until the next
floor opens. Yes, that means your next appearance on Odette’s show has
been cancelled. She’s already filed an appeal.”
I had so many new questions. Lucia Mar had killed two admins and
gotten away with it? How? Why wasn’t she dead?
“You can leave via the door,” the man said, dismissing us with a wave.
“Your bodyguards are outside waiting.”
“Sledgie is here? Yay!” Donut said.
“And just so you know, Carl. That was lucky. I admire your grit. It
makes for good entertainment, but I wouldn’t press that luck. Whomever
this is that’s helping you, they are not doing it for your benefit. If the kua-
tin hadn’t intervened on your behalf, this would’ve gone much differently.”
I paused as I stood. “What do you mean? How did they intervene?”
He didn’t look up. “Certain crawlers are simply too valuable to just
throw away off screen, no matter how recalcitrant they are. Ultimately it’s
their call. And even though I can’t find legal cause to place Administrator
Loita’s death upon you, if it were up to me, I’d have you removed anyway.
We discussed this in council, and it was decided that my personal
recommendation be ignored. For now. The mudskippers aren’t known for
their ability to recognize threats. If the rumors are correct and we do take
over after the next floor, I hope my own people will be much more willing
to listen to my personal assessment.”
My interface was still turned off so I couldn’t look at the timer, but I
suddenly felt a chill. As far as I was aware, Loita had blown up about 45
minutes ago. But all of this… council meetings, court appeals, hand-written
confessions...
“How long have we been away?” I asked.
“It’s only been five days. You’re lucky it wasn’t longer. You still have
five days left to finish your bubble. Your partner Katia has gotten into some
interesting adventures while you’ve been gone. She’s back on the top ten
list. Above you, actually. You two are about to slip off, so you probably
want to get back to work.”
“Goddamnit,” I said. I slapped the man’s desk in frustration, and papers
went flying. I wasn’t upset about slipping off the top-10 list. I was pissed
about losing all that time. Don’t be too mad. You’re the luckiest
motherfucker in the dungeon right now. You did it. You got away with it.
Next time it won’t be so easy.
Orren looked up then, and the man’s hood slipped. The swirling black
coalesced, and I realized it was actually a face-shaped bowl of liquid, made
to look like swirling darkness. Within that liquid I caught a tiny glimpse of
light. Mordecai had described what they looked like to me, so I recognized
what was in the liquid. A worm. A Valtay worm.
OceanofPDF.com
[ 20 ]
Part of me was proud that Katia had just rolled with us going missing.
She’d gotten a lot done. She’d managed to get the whole house down to the
land quadrant, and she’d figured out how to breach the magical door that
guarded the front of the land quadrant castle. All without us. Firas told me
that they would have finished with the castle already if Zev hadn’t asked
Katia to wait for us.
At the same time, part of me stung at the notion that she could do this
without me. It was stupid. Selfish. And it was more than a little narcissistic
to think that without me and Donut, Katia and the others were absolutely
screwed. But that feeling was there, and I was simultaneously relieved that
I’d been wrong and horrified I’d been thinking it in the first place.
I still didn’t know if we’d get there in time, but Katia and the others’
actions while we were away proved that I wasn’t as indispensable as I
thought. And in the end, I realized it was a necessary feeling.
You’ll die in a gutter without me. You need me. You think you’re just
going to be fine? What will you do, you disrespectful little shit? You will
break after just one day. And then you’ll die. That’s what you’ll do. Just like
your fucking bitch of a mother.
I took a deep breath, clearing the memory away. I dove into my chat to
check in on everybody.
Bautista had already cleared all four of his quadrant’s castles, though
most people in his bubble hadn’t survived. He wasn’t a man to show his
true feelings in his chats, but I had the impression he was having a hard
time with it. Li Jun and Li Na and their team were about to storm some
underwater castle, the last in their bubble. Meadow Lark were building a
cannon to shoot oil into the sky which would hopefully take down the last
of their castles. If that didn’t work, Elle was going to use her new Graupel
spell to crash the air castle.
While we descended, Louis and Firas also gave us updates on some of
the more popular crawlers. One of Lucia Mar’s rottweilers—Gustavo, the
smaller one—had somehow “accidentally” killed a group of crawlers after a
battle. The event had caused Lucia to undergo some sort of psychotic break
—one worse than usual. They’d shown the strange crawler sitting alone in a
room sobbing, which was the first real emotion they’d ever portrayed other
than rage and pure insanity. Florin the shotgun crocodile guy had finally
emerged into a quadrant to find everybody else in the entire bubble was
already dead. He was desperately trying to make his way through it, but
he’d only managed to clear one castle so far, and the general consensus was
that he was screwed. The goat squad was almost done with their bubble, but
Miriam Dom the shepherd lady was hit with some curse that ended up
changing her into a goddamned vampire. Apparently she was a vegan
before this, and the assholes thought it’d be hilarious to do that to her.
I listened to it all as I watched the side of the necropolis fly past us. The
massive tomb was even bigger when you were looking at it from this angle.
The volcano-shaped building was more mountain than actual structure. The
exterior wall was covered with intricate carvings depicting pterodactyl-like
creatures and other birds, all in an angular, Aztec-like style. I kept looking
for a repeating pattern, but I didn’t see any two stones that were the same.
There was probably a story there, in those carvings.
Nests dotted the side of the structure. Firas said that’s where the buzz-
ards lived, but they were mostly gone now. We saw no mobs as we
descended.
As for the poor assholes stuck in the subterranean quadrant, they were
all still hiding in saferooms at the very top. Two of them—Mike, the one
dressed like a goddamned banana and Bobby the trap-finder—had gathered
several water-breathing scrolls and ventured out. They ended up setting off
a trap in a water-filled tunnel. Mr. Banana got himself killed when a tube
shot from the wall, pierced his stomach, and filled him with “Finger-sized
Flesh Weasels.” They ate the poor guy from the inside out. Bobby had
quickly retreated after that. The others were now paralyzed with fear and
were waiting for us to drain the place before proceeding.
I examined the sandcastle as we approached. The dark building was
huddled against the side of the necropolis, making me think of a scared dog
cowering against a wall. The castle looked as if it really was made out of
sand. It wasn’t as huge as I thought it’d be based on Gwen’s description, but
it still had the look of a medieval-style fortress. Or maybe a small casino
that was medieval-themed. It stood about three stories high with thin watch
towers on either side of the front façade. It appeared the castle was actually
guarding the entrance to the massive tomb beyond it, and I wondered if
there was an entranceway there. Probably, I decided.
Darkness spread across the landing zone. I caught quick sight of the
receded beach. The exposed and dried coral reef looked like a forest of
brambles in the darkening sky. It gave the O-shaped land quadrant a
menacing, fairy-tale appearance.
“Does anything come out of the water?” I asked Firas.
“We see shark fins and the tops of giant, blue jellyfish, but nothing
comes out. Not anymore. There were snakes for a while. Big ones that
could go in and out of the water. Gwen killed the boss, and they’re gone
now. The two other survivors from that water quadrant are here, and they do
not want to go back in there. Vadim and Britney. They say there are horrors
deep down near the ocean’s floor.”
I had forgotten that Chris had not beaten that level alone. “Did you tell
them about Chris?”
“Yeah,” he said. “Neither of them were surprised.”
Donut stiffened at the mention of the water quadrant. She’d been
relieved when we learned that it had been defeated. I knew the poor cat was
terrified of the idea of getting wet. I hoped we could avoid it.
We landed in a circle painted on the beach with red rocks. Two crawlers
stood nearby waiting for us. Katia was one of them. She stood there in her
seven-foot-tall warrior form, crossbow over her shoulder, grinning up at us
as we disembarked.
Mongo spied her and screeched joyfully, jumping off the still-
descending platform to bounce all around her as she patted him on the head.
Louis and Firas went to work securing the broken water main as Donut and
I jumped down.
“So you just thought you’d take a vacation?” Katia asked. “Next time
you plan on getting away for a while, please warn me.”
I patted Katia on the shoulder. We’d literally just seen her in the safe
room, but Mongo was screeching and bouncing like he hadn’t seen her for a
month. “So,” I asked. “How was the Dungeon Sidekicks show?”
“Don’t ask,” she said. “They made me do karaoke with Miriam Dom.”
“Firas was just telling me that she’s turned into a vampire.”
Katia nodded solemnly. “She did. That was after. While she was on the
show, apparently Prepotente had a panic attack and went berserk and went
running off. When she got back from the show, she went looking for him,
and that’s when she got attacked and cursed.”
“Yeah, that goat guy is a weird dude.”
“I liked him. I thought he was a gentleman,” Donut said.
Katia grinned. “Anyway, I’m glad you’re back. We really need you for
this next part.”
I turned to face the short, chainmail-clad woman standing next to Katia.
“Hello, Gwen,” I said.
“Hello, bomber guy. Hello, Princess Donut. So you two finally fucking
made it,” she said.
Now that we were face to face, I vaguely remembered her from the
previous floor. We’d exchanged fist bumps when Donut was collecting all
the now-worthless engineer hats. The woman was about 45-years old and
solid. She’d remained human and stood just about five feet tall. I knew from
earlier conversations she was from Canada, and I realized now she was of
First Nations origin. She wore a glowing, metal skull cap with a fur lining,
but from what I could see of her dark hair, it was cut short. She had a no-
nonsense metal spear slung over her shoulder.
The most distinctive feature on the woman was the forehead tattoo. It
was old and weathered and faded, and it was obviously from a time long
before she ever ventured into the dungeon. It was a double-v tribal pattern.
The back of her hands and fingers were also covered with simple, straight-
line tattoos ending in arrowheads. They almost looked like doodles.
The woman examined me with hard, dark eyes. At first I thought maybe
she was a little pudgy, but upon closer examination I realized my error. I
recognized that look from my years working at shipyards. This woman had
a body built on hard labor, a nose that had been punched so many times it
likely crinkled when you touched it, and scarred knuckles that had probably
finished just as many of those fights as they started. I guessed she’d been
either a dock worker, a farmer, or in construction. Someone whose work
required her to spend most of her days working at varying physical tasks
and whose nights were likely spent at the bar drinking and fighting her
paycheck away.
I knew the type very, very well. I examined her properties.
Crawler #1,293,776. “Gwendolyn Duet.”
Level 34
Race: Human.
Class: Boring Ol’ Fighter.
“Oh, I just love those tattoos,” said Donut. “What do they mean?”
Gwen laughed. “They mean that we are wasting time, little princess.
Now you two get your asses in gear. Your partner has been stalling me for
almost a full day now, and that clock keeps getting lighter by the minute.”
The weather down here was still warm, but it was much cooler than it’d
been up above. It smelled like the beach, which was oddly comforting. The
sand formed deep channels during the most-recent sandstorm, ringing the
land quadrant with concentric circles, like lanes on a track. We walked in
one such channel, approaching the castle.
“Sorry we can’t wine and dine you first, bomber boy, but we need to get
trucking on this bullshit your friend is making us do,” Gwen said as we
marched toward the castle. “The storm that’s about to hit is the last one
before the weather change, and we don’t know if that’s going to fuck us
over or not. We can only do Katia’s electric door thing during the sand
storm.” The ring of walls spread in front of us, each about twenty feet tall.
Each had been breached, allowing for a wide doorway.
We passed the remains of what looked like a siege tower made out
wood and bicycle parts. I itched at the idea of just leaving all that good
material just sitting there.
“That mechanical boss bird trashed that,” Gwen said, seeing my
interest. “When you killed the thing, it saved our asses. The walls were a
real pain. Each one had to be picked apart in a different way. But we did it.
Of course this was before you guys showed up with a flying house. And
now you two, and that Arnaaluk of a friend of yours are going to go in there
and try to kill the mage for us.”
“And Mongo,” Donut said.
Mongo screeched in agreement.
“Just us?” I asked. I felt my eyebrow raise. I looked over my shoulder at
Katia, who smiled sheepishly.
“Oh, she didn’t tell you of the deal, did she?” Gwen made a clicking
noise with her mouth. “Why does that not surprise me?”
“She’s going to tell me now,” I said.
I decided it was for the best that we have this discussion over chat.
Carl: What are we walking into? Also, what’s the deal with you
two?
Donut: I LIKE HER. SHE REMINDS ME OF A MINIATURE-
SIZED HEKLA.
Carl: Yeah, because that turned out great.
Katia: She is an amazing fighter. She’s fast, too. Her class trades
fighting skills for no magic spells whatsoever. I watched her use that
spear to pierce a pazuzu in the back, vault over him, and use the
momentum to throw his body at another monster. The problem is she’s
a real bitch. She is like Hekla in some ways, though instead of scheming
in her head, she just says it out loud the moment she thinks it. And if
she doesn’t like you, she will tell you. And then just to make sure you
were paying attention, she’ll say it again, but in a different way. At least
Hekla pretended to be supportive.
Carl: I was actually surprised when Firas said you two were always
fighting. I thought you could get along with everybody.
Katia: I made a promise to myself not that long ago. I wasn’t going
to take shit any more. When Gwen makes up her mind about
something, it’s impossible to change her mind. And then she becomes a
bully about it. I don’t like that.
Donut: THAT MAKES HER SOUND MORE LIKE CARL THAN
HEKLA. HE’S NOT A BULLY THOUGH.
Katia: Agreed. Carl doesn’t insult you when you have a different
idea.
Carl: She’s exactly the type of person who would survive here. So
what’s the deal with the castle?
Katia: Okay, so here’s the problem. We’ve discovered there are two
ways to take the castle. Easy way and hard way. Gwen wants to do it
the easy way. But if we do it her way, I think we’re going to lose our
chance at getting that winding box from the mage. Honestly, I’d also
much rather do it her way too, but Zev has been unusually insistent
that we wait for you two.
Carl: So you told Gwen to wait for us. And now you’re fighting a
lot.
Katia: Bingo.
Carl: Okay. Lay it out for me.
Katia: The castle is made of sand. There are no tunnels or rooms or
anything inside. It’s just sand with a stairwell buried in the middle.
Carl: Wait, what about the mage? What was his name? Ghazi. That
was it. The note I found in the air castle said he’d basically destroy
everything before he’d allow the ghost in the last quadrant to escape.
So we know there’s something going on in there.
Katia: Yeah, so most of this information is from a drunk scorpion
guy. He’s like this quadrant’s version of Juice Box. The Mad Dune
Mage—Ghazi—turned himself into a sand elemental while trying to
search for the Gate of the Feral Gods. That’s how he managed to get
that one part he has, the winding box. He’s all mixed in with the sand
now. There’s a magical door to get into the castle, but you can dig
behind it. At first I thought it was a portal, but it’s not.
Carl: So it’s just a door leaning up against a pile of sand?
Katia: Sort of. I’ll explain in a second. After they breached the last
wall, Gwen’s team found a secret drainage panel up against the side of
the necropolis wall. If they turn it, it will release all the water inside the
necropolis and shoot it back out into the ocean through the main
drainage tunnel, which is what the sandcastle is built around. We
wouldn’t even need to get through the magical doorway. It’ll just
destroy the sandcastle, like we were hitting it with a water hose. Easy,
though apparently it would only half drain the necropolis because the
water is still being pumped in. So the water will be running in a loop.
The pump on the submarine needs to be turned off in order to fully
drain the necropolis. Our friend Maggie didn’t do that before she left
which means no matter what happens, we’ll have to go back down
there.
Donut: NOT GONNA HAPPEN.
I sighed. I could see the game design, the hands of the bubble creator in
all of this. I had no idea how the math worked out, but there had to be at
least two dozen different ways this could’ve gone depending on the order in
which these castles were taken. Because the water quadrant had gone first,
the subterranean quadrant filled with water. And since it was filled with
water, it allowed for the easy destruction of the land quadrant. But we were
still screwed, even if we did take out the castle the easy way.
Carl: So if we blow it out with the water hose plan, we take the
castle, but the mage guy gets turned to mud, and we’ll never find the
winding box. What’s the hard way?
Katia: You see those two towers on either side of the sandcastle? At
the base of each tower was a coiled-up electrical line with clips at the
end. If you attach the line to the tower and then to the door, when the
sandstorm hits, lighting hits the towers, and they act like lightning
rods. They electrify the doorway, and a glass hallway appears. If you
examine it while it opens, the message says it only opens once per
sandstorm. But the door closes really fast. There’ll only be enough time
for a few of us to enter. I made a deal with Gwen that we would do it.
She thinks we’re idiots for trying it this way when there’s an easier
solution.
Donut: WE NEED LIGHTNING? THAT’S JUST LIKE IN THAT
TIME MACHINE MOVIE WHERE THE GUY MAKES OUT WITH
HIS MOM.
Carl: Jesus, Donut. How much television did you really watch?
What happens after the door closes? Wouldn’t the castle turn back to
sand? Also, what about Louis and Firas?
Katia: Uh, so I was thinking that too. I asked Mordecai while you
were coming down here, and he thinks it’ll probably remain intact, but
only as long as the storm lasts. So about two hours. The storm will last
longer starting tomorrow, but we don’t know if it’ll still work when
everything changes. We have to do this now. I told Louis and Firas to
stay outside to make sure Gwen doesn’t get all Hekla on us and decide
to flood the castle while we’re in it.
Carl: So we’re just going to run inside the castle and then fight
some crazy magic user guy who has the power to toss us into a different
dimension? Do we have a plan other than that?
Katia: You’re the one who wants that box.
The doorway to the sandcastle of the Mad Dune Mage looked like any other
regular dungeon door. Like Katia said, it was not a portal. Just a magical
door. There was a small moat in front of the castle, but there was no bridge,
and the moat itself was empty. Like everything else, it was just made out of
hard-packed sand. I knew if we followed the moat semicircle all the way to
the necropolis wall, we’d find the panel that would allow one to open up a
large pipe that would quickly turn the whole castle into mud.
A small group of battle-hardened crawlers watched us as we approached
the doorway. The electrical lines that snaked from the bottom of the two
towers were still attached to the entrance frame. One was pulled tight. The
other hung loosely. The moment I saw that second wire I could hear the
booming, teeth-rattling voice of my instructor at “A” school where I learned
the basics of electrical repair. Loose wires cause fires! Loose wires cause
fires!
These were high voltage jumpers covered with plastic insulation. Each
cable was as thick as my leg, though they were light, made of some alien
conductor. The line on the north tower was pulled taut against the contact
atop the left side of the doorway. The line on the south tower was
ridiculously long and sat coiled like a snake.
I looked up at the sky. The wind was starting to howl. There wasn’t any
lightning just yet, but it would arrive at any minute. I also noticed another
pair of cables high above, connecting the two towers.
“Gwen, Katia. Have you seen any other contacts anywhere? Anywhere
else where these clamps might fit?”
“No,” Gwen said. “And we searched pretty good. It worked yesterday
when the lightning hit.”
“Shit, did we do something wrong?” Katia asked, looking nervously up
at the sky.
“I’m not sure,” I said. “These two towers are already connected, so this
second, long cable is redundant. We either need to bring it in with us or it
might attach to something out here we haven’t found yet.”
“There’s nothing metal to attach to,” Gwen said. She pointed at a human
crawler, a level-28 human Swashbuckler. He was a tired-looking Asian
man. That was the same class as Bautista. “Tran here has a metal-detecting
ability.”
“There’s nothing?” I asked the man.
He shrugged. “Nothing except that wheel that opens the drainage pipe.
Actually, you know what? There is a ring under the wheel. I thought it was
a handhold.”
I had a thought. “Okay. Disconnect it from the tower so you won’t get
zapped, but I want you to grab the other end and pull it all the way to the
wheel. Let me know if it reaches.”
The man looked uncertainly at Gwen, who nodded. He ran off. We
watched him disconnect the lead from the south tower and disappear around
the side of the side of the castle, dragging the long cable behind him.
I returned my attention to the entrance. “The door should still open with
only one lead attached. Also, I wonder how much power it requires to
activate. We might be able to hook it up to a dwarven battery or even the
flying house and test it to see if there’s any reaction. Even though lightning
carries a pretty big…”
Bam!
I felt the hair on my arms stand on their ends. I remembered the moment
when Gore-Gore the mantaur had been electrocuted by the third rail in the
tunnels. The ground all around us danced as the sand momentarily
electrified. The painful tingle of a near miss washed over everything.
Mongo yowled. Donut’s hair all poofed out as she hissed. A bolt cut low
across the sky, and the two towers glowed.
The door was only five feet in front of me. It also glowed blue, the door
disappeared, and with a crackling noise that sounded like all the ice in the
world breaking at once, a hallway appeared, leading off into darkness.
“Let’s go!” Katia cried, bounding forward and disappearing inside.
OceanofPDF.com
[ 21 ]
OceanofPDF.com
[ 22 ]
I peered down the stairs , and I examined the slow - moving ooze . T he
closer it got to the top, the slower it went. I realized the thinner it stretched
itself, the more difficult it was for it to move.
The thing looked like a god had sneezed over the stairwell, and the
mucus pile had rolled in kitty litter. Some of the magazines that Donut had
knocked off the table along with some other junk items from the lab were
mixed in with the creature, hitching a ride up the stairs.
The voice of the AI’s description of the ooze was different than usual.
There were no stupid jokes thrown in there, and it seemed more morose
than normal, which probably was the joke. I just didn’t get it.
Mrs. Ghazi
Sand Ooze
Level 52 Borough Boss!
This is a minion of Psamathe
Every living creature seeks the same thing. A sense of contentment.
No matter what their origin story is, no matter what they are made of,
the moment they first exist, no matter how dumb, how smart, how
confused, they seek a place of comfort. What that comfort looks like to
them can vary wildly, even amongst creatures of the same species.
Oftentimes, that journey to felicity is what defines their entire lifecycle.
When that creature crosses paths with another, it is inevitable that the
weaker of the two will fall further away from their goal.
This is the sort of thing that might go through Mrs. Ghazi’s mind as
it spends its day watching over a man it has grown to love at the behest
of someone more powerful than itself. The knowledge that the man’s
feelings are not mutual is like a dagger in its heart, if it had one. It
wrestles daily with this realization, teetering on the edge of indecision.
Do I protect him because I love him? Do I kill him because he doesn’t
love me back? Do I continue with my duty? What would become of me if I
simply disobeyed?
It’s a lot of stress for a creature not used to having any emotion. It’s
almost too much. But even if this creature wanted to end it all, it
couldn’t. Its master has the ability to bring it right back, over and over
again.
“I think the AI is smoking weed,” Katia said.
“This tells us absolutely nothing new about the creature,” I said,
irritated at the description. “Except that it’s a borough boss. But the music
didn’t start.”
“I think we broke it when we didn’t go into the room,” Katia said.
“Are we sure it was actually talking about the ooze?” Donut asked.
Killing the sand ooze, even temporarily, was going to be impossible
from where we stood. Without a sufficient burst of electricity, I was going
to need to burn it. And while I had plenty of materials to make an ooze
scald hot enough to shrink it away, we’d screwed ourselves by running up
the stairs.
According to Ghazi, I had to drop the fire on the ooze’s core, which was
always kept in the same place: directly under the recliner that sat in front of
the flatscreen television nestled in the corner of the room.
We couldn’t use regular fire, either. We could tell that the ooze had
already snuffed out the flames leftover from Donut’s spell, so the creature
wasn’t completely fire averse. We needed something that’d burn hot. I had
two boom jugs left, but I feared those would burn a little too hot. I had a
better idea. Earlier, I prepared some of the “burn gel” at my crafting table. I
had the recipe already from my cookbook. I’d forced a conversation a few
days before that with Mordecai by telling him about how I used to set hand
sanitizer on fire. He’d responded with a way to make a flammable gel that
would burn better, longer, and hotter. We found when we used moonshine in
conjunction with some paste he could easily put together, the resulting gel
burned hot and bright with little smoke. It wasn’t too useful in combat
situations because the stuff had the consistency of toothpaste and took a
while to apply, but it would work here. I had a plastic shopping bag full of
the gel in my inventory, already shoved into a funnel so I could apply it like
a giant piping syringe for a cake decorator.
The sand ooze had stretched itself almost all the way up the stairs. If I
touched it, it would overwhelm me, dragging me down and suffocating me.
So I had to somehow get all the way down the stairs, around the corner, into
the room and to the core without it touching me.
Donut’s puddle jumper wouldn’t work, not without an egress or suitable
place to land. Same with just tossing Molotov cocktails. The most obvious
solution was indeed to burn our way there. If we flamed our way toward the
core with fire that was hot enough to do damage, it would constantly shrink
until we were close enough to hit the core.
We didn’t have time for that.
A further wrinkle was that Ghazi said I could absolutely not use
explosives. Especially not in the basement level, especially not in his lab.
Ghazi insisted that a big boom would crack the walls, and the entire glass
interior would collapse. We’d find ourselves buried.
That left only one quick, feasible solution. We use Donut’s Hole spell to
drop the fire onto the core from the level above. About four feet of sand
separated the bottom glass floor and the top of the basement level. Her spell
could reach that far thanks to her glass cannon class, but only barely. The
problem was that Ghazi’s workshop wasn’t lined up correctly with the floor
above it. We’d have to go into the large room where we’d accidentally
destroyed the crystalized sex doll, move all the way to the corner, and that
would overlap with the edge of the basement. The wrong edge of the
basement. So we could make a hole into the chamber, but we’d still be
thirty feet away.
We worked the problem, brainstorming different solutions. Katia didn’t
have enough mass to stretch herself that far. I could probably pop into the
hole and use the xistera to upside-down toss something at the core. Same
with a few Molotovs. But I feared it wouldn’t be enough.
I needed to move the recliner out of the way, liberally douse the core
with the fire gel, set it aflame, and do it without getting captured and
suffocated by the ooze.
Mordecai had been particularly alarmed when I told him what the
monster was.
Mordecai: Do not let it touch you. Once they get ahold, it’s like
quicksand you can’t escape. And since you already used your Protective
Shell, you’d be fucked. They don’t just suffocate you. It will actively
pour sand into every available orifice, filling you until you explode.
And since you’re only wearing boxers with relatively easy access to
your… southern entrance… Yeah. Don’t let it get you.
Carl: Christ, Mordecai. You always make horrible things seem even
more horrible.
Mordecai: That’s my job, kid. Have you been keeping your hair
short?
Carl: Yeah. Katia cut it for me the other day. I don’t think it grew
while we were away.
In the end, we went with my least favorite idea. I’d already come up
with it, but I was saving it as a last resort. Donut suggested it out loud.
With all of my equipment buffs but before my daily buffs, my dexterity
currently sat at 32. I’d mostly been spamming my strength and constitution
stats, though I had managed to throw a few points into my dex here and
there. I wished I’d thrown more.
Thanks to my newest toe ring, I had an ability called Sticky Feet. It
allowed me to walk along the ceiling for my dexterity times two seconds
once every six hours. I’d practiced it a few times, but not yet in combat.
That was about to change.
Carl: How do these things sense people? Will it know I’m hanging
upside down over it?
Mordecai: It will absolutely know if you don’t distract it. Oozes
hunt by vibration and sound. Not heat like slimes, which is good. But
you clomping on the ceiling will still be enough to gain its attention, so
you’ll have to use one of those things you were building earlier.
Donut: CAN IT SMELL? CARL STARTED GETTING ALL
SWEATY WHEN WE DECIDED HE WAS GOING IN UPSIDE
DOWN.
Mordecai: Normal sand oozes can’t smell. But again, this might not
be a normal one, so be careful.
Carl: The thing is named Mrs. Ghazi, and it’s in love with a human.
I’m pretty certain this isn’t a normal ooze.
Mordecai: Probably not. Speaking of the mage, I wouldn’t trust a
guy who fucked an ooze. Katia, keep an eye on him, especially when
Carl is in that chamber.
Carl: I don’t trust him either. He didn’t seem too upset when I stole
the winding box.
Katia: I have my Crowd Blast ability cocked and loaded. If he tries
anything, he’ll be splattered like a bug against a windshield.
Donut and I posted up in the corner of the fountain room while Katia
remained at the top of the stairs with Ghazi. The ooze was just about to get
to the top step, and she was going to slowly back away as it approached.
I’d already given Katia the device. I’d earlier made five of these at my
sapper’s table, each one labeled with a different purpose. Since I’d put them
together at the table, I’d actually been able to pick the song. This one was
simply labeled, “Bass heavy. For distraction.” It was a hollow banger
sphere with an impact-detonated alarm trap inside of it. It’d taken me less
than three minutes to make the whole lot. I’d quickly chosen the songs from
memory.
“You’re up!” I yelled to Katia from the next room.
“Here we go,” she called back.
A moment passed, and the announcement came.
Peaking at Number 2 on October 10 th, 1992, it’s, “Jump Around!”
The music wasn’t as booming as usual because the alarm module had
been sealed inside a metal ball. Still, the incredibly-loud, bass-heavy tune
blared enough to shake the walls, drowning out all other sounds. Katia had
just lobbed the ball down the stairs. I was afraid the ooze would
immediately snuff it out, but the ball appeared to protect the trap
mechanism.
Katia: Oh wow. The ball is bouncing up and down on its own with
the beat. The ooze keeps trying to grab it, but it’s slipping away.
Donut: IS THIS SERIOUSLY THE ONLY BASS-HEAVY SONG
YOU COULD THINK OF? WHAT ABOUT LIL PUMP?
Carl: Make the goddamn hole.
Donut: THE BASS ISN’T EVEN THAT HEAVY. IT’S JUST
BOUNCY.
Carl: Goddamnit, Donut. We’re on the clock.
Donut appeared to sigh and then cast the spell. We peered down into the
cavity, looking into the scorched room below. The place was a mess. The
body of the ooze was stretched taut, like sandy bubble gum. The television
had somehow unpaused itself, and it played a scene from some anime,
filling the chamber with a frenetic rainbow of ever-changing colors. I
couldn’t hear it. The ooze spread to all corners of the room.
The small, glowing doorway stood next to the television. The level
stairwell room. If it wasn’t glowing, it’d look like the entrance to a utility
closet or something equally innocuous. Once we took care of the boss, we’d
have access to the room.
I could see the set up for the boss battle that had never happened. There
were multiple tables of various heights throughout the room, though most
were now wrecked. I would’ve had to jump from table to table and then
figure out where the core was. Mordecai had said to look for the yolk-like
dome in the ooze. I could see it now, exactly where Ghazi said it would be.
The yellow glow emanated from under the chair near the door to the level
stairwell.
I lowered myself into the hole. Getting my feet to touch the bare ceiling
wasn’t exactly the easiest thing to do when you were coming in from above.
I wanted to keep Katia—who could’ve easily lowered me—posted at the
stairwell, so I’d quickly fashioned a rope system.
Carl: Don’t let this slide.
I didn’t trust anything in the room made of glass to anchor me, so I
pulled the heaviest chunk of metal I had in my inventory and gently placed
it on the ground. It was a piece of dwarven automaton, and even though
dwarven metal was lighter than steel, this thing had to weigh at least a half
ton. It was about the size of a forklift and was covered with lots of jagged,
uneven, sharp pieces of broken metal. I’d been saving it to throw at
something or to drop if we had to make a fast getaway. It was one of those
things that I wouldn’t be able to even budge before, but now that my
strength clocked in at 80, I could lift it with no problems. I tied the rope to a
curved, solid rivet. It’d hold my weight easily.
I lowered myself upside down into the hole, entering the chamber of the
ooze, spiderman-style. No boss music started. There was no announcement.
The ceiling of the chamber was low, meaning when I was attached to the
roof, my head would only be an inch or two above the top of Mrs. Ghazi. If
it sensed me, it’d surge up and drag me face-first into the sand.
I lowered myself enough, placed my bare foot onto the ceiling, and I
prepared the sticky feet special ability. The moment it activated, I’d have
70-something seconds..
The song ended and then started right back up again. It would go on
forever.
Carl: I’m going to activate my spell in five seconds. Send in the
bozos. Donut, maybe you should put Mongo away after you make the
clockworks. I don’t want him accidentally getting into the sand.
Katia: Here they come.
I activated the ability, and my feet stuck to the ceiling. I let go of the
rope, and I dangled free as the countdown timer began. This was much
different than the Reverse Gravity spell. That one made me actually feel
like the world was upside down. Here, I was just glued to the ceiling, like I
was wearing those ridiculous, ab-killing gravity boots. I had to shuffle walk.
If both of my feet left the ceiling at the same time, I would fall.
Outside the door, I heard the distinctive twin shrieks—even over the
music—of the clockwork mongos as they jumped down the stairs and into
certain death. I knew Katia was starting to throw random crap from her
inventory at the monster, all in an attempt to distract it. I turned toward the
recliner in the corner, and I started to gingerly walk toward it.
I had multiple, passive, low-tier stealth movement abilities that never
worked for shit because I traveled with a dinosaur and a talking cat, but I
hoped it would help cover my passage now.
I shuffled quickly across the ceiling, dodging tables and other debris
without incident, coming to the spot next to the recliner. I had to hunch over
to get myself directly over it.
I needed to make a choice here. I could grab the recliner and stick it into
my inventory, which would certainly alert the ooze, or I could pour the gel
directly onto the chair and set that on fire, which would probably work just
fine. That gel burned hot and was next to impossible to put out.
I had thirty seconds. I went with the set-the-chair-on-fire method. I
pulled the gel dispenser from my inventory and started to squeeze the thick,
cloudy gel directly onto the chair.
Donut: IT’S MOVING! CARL, IT’S MOVING! I CAN’T STOP
IT!
Carl: What’s moving?
Donut: THE METAL CHUNK THING!
I looked over my shoulder to see a line of ooze had somehow
discovered the rope that’d been dangling a foot off the ground and through
the hole. It’d reached up and grasped it and was now yanking on the rope.
The metal was significantly larger than the hole, so it didn’t really matter,
but that had been my escape route. It also showed how terrifyingly strong
the ooze was.
Carl: It’s okay. Turn off the hole. Make a new one next to it right
away. I’m setting the chair on fire now and will make a run for it.
I pulled a torch from inventory, lit it, and dropped it on the chair that sat
atop the core. I turned and started scrambling away as an orgy of flames
burst forth, burning white hot, filling the corner of the room with more
flames and heat than I expected.
Oh shit.
I suppressed a cry of pain. Even as I scrambled away, the heat caused
damage. The back of my head felt like it’d been dipped in lava. My
stomach started to burn with the effort as I upside-down crab-walked across
the ceiling like something out of a goddamn horror movie.
The ooze immediately reacted. The whole room vibrated. The sand
rippled. The flaming chair went flying straight up like a rocket, and it
slammed into the low ceiling right where I’d just been standing. It shattered
into flaming hunks and fell upon the now-exposed, yolk-like core,
spreading the gel everywhere.
Yes, I thought.
The ground of the whole room rose, like it was filling with sand. It
folded upon itself, trying to snuff the flames, but they wouldn’t go out.
Even buried, I could see the glowing, sparking fire.
Katia: It’s retracting!
A health bar appeared floating over the core, and it started to fall. It let
go of the rope, which fell on its own as Donut closed the hole. The monster
pulled further in on itself, piling into the corner and blocking the door to the
stairwell. It buried the television, which was rapidly melting in the heat,
plunging the room into a murky, half-lit darkness. The boss sparkled as the
heat damaged it. The ooze started spinning, tendrils of gooey sand creating
circles that caught brilliantly in the low light. It would be dead in seconds.
And that’s when the roof of the chamber collapsed, and the room started
to fill with sand.
I’m not exactly certain what caused it. It was probably the heat. Or
maybe it was the way the level was designed. The floor was engineered to
collapse just as the ooze was about to die because fuck you. One moment I
was running toward the new hole in the ceiling with five seconds left, and
suddenly I was buried upside down in the sand, completely blind and
unable to move.
Donut: Carl! Carl! Help! I fell! There’s sand all around me!
Oh fuck, this is it. I struggled to free myself, but I couldn’t move. The
weight of the sand above me started to increase, pressing down, like I was
buried in the bottom of an hourglass. Sand filled my mouth. I couldn’t
breathe. I struggled more, but the only thing I could move was my toes.
A notification appeared, quickly flashing by. The boss was defeated,
and the quadrant was now open.
Katia: Carl! Donut! Where are you! The stairwell just filled with
sand! The walls are starting to crack and creak. I think it’s all going to
collapse! Are you okay?
I suddenly felt myself moving, rapidly sliding through the grit. I
plopped unceremoniously onto the floor. I gasped for breath, coughing. It
was Donut. She had bitten down onto my foot and dragged me free.
“Thanks,” I coughed, spitting hot grains from my mouth. Donut’s torch
lit up the tiny sliver of a space. I had barely enough room to stand. We were
in the back corner of the basement. The roof had fallen in at an angle. It
would’ve given us a ramp back up to the first level, but the ceiling of that
chamber had also collapsed, and what had once been the ceiling between
the first and second floor now stood precariously over our heads, bowing
and creaking. To our right was the large chunk of dwarven metal, which
helped shore up the ceiling. It had fallen through with Donut. If I pulled it
back into my inventory now, we’d be immediately buried.
We had three stories worth of sand over our head, and it was going to
come crashing down at any moment. We were trapped.
“The floor broke right after I cast my hole spell,” Donut said, out of
breath. “I didn’t know it’d do that. Carl, what are we going to do? There’s
nowhere to go!”
“I think it was the heat,” I said. I tentatively reached up and touch the
new ceiling. A crack splintered across it. “That gel burned hotter than I
thought it would.”
I sent a note to Katia, telling her where we were.
Katia: I don’t know what to do. The whole place is about to
collapse. The chamber where Donut was fell in, and Ghazi is flipping
out about saving his love doll. He’s freaking out. I can’t tell if he’s
crying or laughing.
Gwen: Congrats. Now get out of there. The storm is almost over.
The door just reappeared, but I don’t think it’s going to last long. It’s
flickering!
Carl: Katia, run for the door while you still can. Bring Ghazi. See if
pulling him from the castle fixes the crystallization.
Donut: Kill him! That’ll fix it! Mordecai says killing mages fixes
most problems!
Warning: Your oxygen levels are low. In case you’re wondering, yes,
you do need that stuff.
Shit, shit. We didn’t have time.
Carl: We need him to explain the winding box.
“We’re not going to need anything in a few seconds, Carl.”
I sent a note to Gwen.
Katia: Holy shit guys, I’m not going to leave you. Hang on. I’m
going to dig.
Carl: Listen. We need you to get him out of the castle. That’s how
you fix it. Hurry. And do what Gwen says when you get out there.
Katia: Okay. Okay. I’ll tell you when I’m out.
To our left, the wall broke, and more sand poured in. Donut jumped to
my shoulder, trembling. We could still hear the music from the trap, but it
was distant and pounding, buried nearby. The bouncing and pounding ball
probably wasn’t doing us any favors.
Well this turned out to be a real clusterfuck.
“I don’t think taking the guy from the castle is going to work,” Donut
said, panic rising in her voice.
“No,” I agreed. “I just wanted her to get out of there.”
“Carl, I don’t want to be buried alive.”
Gwen: You mean electrify it, right?
Carl: No. Hurry.
“Donut, it’s going to be okay. How many water breathing scrolls do you
have?”
“They’re called water breathing, not sand breathing, Carl,” Donut said.
“I didn’t get to say goodbye to Mongo! What’s going to happen to him?
He’s just going to sit in his pet carrier forever!”
“Goddamnit, how many scrolls?” I asked again.
“Eight.”
I also had eight. That was good. That would be enough.
Katia: I’m out.
Nothing had happened. I hadn’t expected it to. I suspected that I already
knew how to de-crystalize the castle, and it was too late. We’d fucked it up.
I’d fucked it up. We should’ve brought that electrical line in. Damnit.
Donut: Kill Ghazi. Quick!
Carl: No. Wait! That’s not going to…
Katia: Uh, I already did. We had a small fight. I looted a note from
him that explains the winding box. But nothing changed with the castle.
I think he’s dead. It said he was dead. His body turned to sand after I
looted him. I’ve never seen that before.
I swallowed. Above, the ceiling splintered. The chunk of metal shifted.
Shit, shit, shit.
Gwen: Hold onto your hats. Tran is opening the valve now. He’s
only doing it part way, but it’ll be enough to blow your skirt up.
“Take a water scroll,” I said. “Do it now. Put the rest in your hot list.
Fast. If your health gets low, don’t take a health potion. Take Mordecai’s
Special Brew.”
“Carl, I changed my mind. I would rather be buried alive than…”
I pulled Donut from my shoulder and wrapped myself around her,
muffling whatever she was about to say. Above, the ceiling finally
splintered, and sand poured over us as a distant, roaring sound filled the
chamber, reminding me of the sound of an oncoming train.
The world tumbled. It felt as if I’d been hit not by a train, but by a dozen
baseball bats all at once. My health plummeted as I protected the fragile
body of Donut. Complete darkness encompassed us. I spun like a ball,
bouncing and hitting things both hard and soft and painfully inbetween. I
closed my eyes. Let it happen. Let it happen. Be calm. I watched my health,
and I clicked a potion just as it reached about 25%. My health moved up,
and then I gasped with pain as I felt myself smash through what felt like a
barbed-wire fence. Metal pierced my leg. A spear of glass pierced my hand
and plummeted into Donut, who’d gone limp. She had not taken the
invulnerability potion like I had suggested. Goddamnit, Donut.
I targeted her and slammed on a heal scroll as we continued to spin.
It’s not that bad. He only opened the valve a little bit. It’s like a water
slide.
I cast Heal on myself. I became aware that the thing that had pierced my
leg was actually a spar of metal coming from that dwarven automaton
piece. I cried anew as the metal pulled away. The metal chunk spun away
into the murk. The temperature plunged, and I finally realized we were
underwater in the water quadrant, and we had been for a bit now.
Notifications flew past, and I spun and spun.
I clutched onto Donut with all of my strength. I curled protectively
around her the best I could.
My health was, again, in the red. Donut’s health was also again
perilously low. She’d gone unconscious. I could taste the blood streaming
from her. We were no longer in the direct blast of the water current, and we
were now sinking. It’d taken maybe three seconds from the water hitting us
to this point, but it’d seemed much longer. Donut’s torch was dutifully
following us, barely keeping pace, barely lighting up the cloudy water.
Mordecai: What is happening? Donut’s health keeps bottoming out!
Carl: Not now.
I used a second heal scroll on her, though she would remain
unconscious for another thirty seconds. Thankfully she had taken the water
breathing scroll, which lasted as long as one’s intelligence stat times three
seconds. The scroll would be active for a total of over two and a half
minutes for her. For me, it’d only last 54 seconds, and I was already getting
close to needing to take another.
I examined Donut as we continued to sink. Debris from both the castle
and the interior of the necropolis plunged all around us. I caught sight of
multiple dead bodies of creatures, but I couldn’t tell what they were in the
dark. They all trailed dark blood, like airplanes smoking as they plummeted
from the sky in slow motion.
Donut looked okay. Her long hair flowed all around her, almost making
her look like a sea anemone. With that last healing, she’d stopped bleeding.
I turned the limp cat around in my hands, looking for injuries. She’d been
pierced through the stomach by the shard, but she appeared to be okay now.
I didn’t know if her cockroach spell had activated or not. Either way, it’d
been much too close. If I hadn’t protected her, she’d been dead for certain.
I became aware that the pressure of the water was getting higher. I
panicked for a moment, suddenly not certain which way was up. I pumped
my legs, and it didn’t feel as if I was going in the correct direction, which
caused me to panic even further. It was dark on the surface, so I had no
frame of reference. Calm. Calm. I remembered the little indicator in my
vision that gave my position relative to sea level. We were only 150 meters
below the surface. That was far. Very far. But it was much less than I
anticipated. I was thankful for Donut’s torch spell and that it worked
underwater, and I was especially thankful the spell still worked while she
was unconscious.
I pumped my legs a few times, and we quickly rose. I started to relax. I
couldn’t tell how far we were from the shore, but that was okay. The
quadrant wasn’t that wide. Just deep.
I took a breath, and it felt like normal air. I hadn’t grown gills or
anything weird. The water seemed to dissolve as it entered my mouth.
Goddamn magic.
I tried talking, and it worked. The words sounded odd to my ears, but I
could hear myself. Above, I could hear the loud rush of water as it funneled
out of the necropolis, across the beach, and back into the ocean. I could also
hear something else, not too far away, but getting quieter. It was the trap
module, still playing that song, sinking away with the rest of the debris.
I had multiple, increasingly frantic messages from Katia and Mordecai,
and I quickly answered them, telling them we were okay.
The castle had washed away, much the same way a real sandcastle
would under a garden hose. I’d hoped that since we were in the basement,
we would’ve been spared getting plunged into the water quadrant, and the
blast would’ve just erased the castle away over our heads, stopping the sand
from crushing us. No such luck, but at least we were still alive. I clicked on
another water breathing scroll.
Gwen: Hey, bomber guy. This is where I point out that if you’d
simply let me open the valve in the first place, we could’ve avoided
whatever the hell that was.
Carl: And this is where I tell you to shut the fuck up.
I was about to say something else when I sensed movement under me.
Something large shot through the water. It crunched onto a falling body.
The dull, box-like sound of munching bones was even more sinister in the
darkness, like a large boot stomping through frozen snow. Whatever the
thing was, it was big and long and cut through the water with ease. The dot
appeared on my map, moving rapidly through the sinking corpses, zig-
zagging. Holy shit, time to bounce. I pumped my legs again, pushing toward
the surface. It’d probably been attracted to the blood. I needed to avoid
bringing attention to myself, and I needed get the hell out of here as quickly
and as quietly as I could.
Donut awakened in my arms.
Donut freaked the absolute fuck out.
OceanofPDF.com
[ 23 ]
OceanofPDF.com
STAGE 4 OF 4. THE NECROPOLIS OF ANSER
O ne morning , back when B ea and I first moved in together , I
decided to make pancakes. Bea was still asleep, and I thought it’d be a nice
thing to do since she’d been doing most of the cooking.
I was still getting used to the idea of sharing a home with a woman and
a cat, and there was a lot I didn’t know. Even though I had known Donut
since she was a kitten, I’d never actually lived with a cat before, and things
like changing the litter box, not leaving the window open, and finding
vomit on my pillow were all new.
So I had a bowl of flour, a cup of milk, and a single egg sitting right
there on the edge of the counter. I was foraging through the refrigerator,
looking for the missing syrup container when suddenly there was a huge
crash behind me. Donut had come out of nowhere, knocking the flour, milk,
and egg off the counter, splattering everything onto the floor. She then
turned to run, touched the very edge of the hot burner on the oven, yowled,
rocketed into the air, and then landed on the floor, covering herself with a
little bit of everything while she did that Scooby-Doo scramble in the
slippery mess, everything flying everywhere while her legs pumped several
times before she actually moved.
“Goddamnit, Donut,” I’d cried, chasing after the cat as she squealed,
running away into the living room, trailing it all onto the floor. She jumped
up into her cat tree and started growling while she furiously licked at
herself.
Bea was going to lose her shit when she saw the cat, so I figured I’d
mitigate the damage.
I’d mitigate it by giving the cat a bath.
After quickly cleaning up the kitchen, I went into the bathroom, and I
turned the water on, filling the tub with several inches of warm, soapy
water. And then I went to retrieve the cat.
I picked her up, holding her with two hands while she squirmed. I went
into the bathroom, I closed the door, and while holding her gently but
firmly, I placed her in the bathtub.
A few hours later while I sat in the emergency room waiting to get my
hand, my arm, and my goddamned ear stitched up, I’d described, to the
unimpressed nurse, the noise Donut had made the moment she’d entered the
water. “Man, it was like a screeching, amplified baby combined with an
outboard motor revving at a high rpm. I’m not even joking when I say it
was one of the loudest, most terrifying things I’ve ever heard. Holy shit.”
That memory came to me now in the moment Donut awakened from
unconsciousness to find herself fully submerged in the water.
This scream had a lot more power behind it than it did the last time.
AHH AHH AHH RAWR AHHHHHHHHH, Donut squealed, twisting
and turning and lashing out with her claws, like she was trapped in a
dishwasher. I let her go after she almost caught my arm in her slash, and she
started to sink like a rock, still twisting and fighting and going absolutely
apeshit.
“Donut,” I cried. “Donut. It’s okay!”
Below, the shadow that was happily munching on the falling corpses
paused. It started to lazily circle upward, vectoring itself toward our
position, stopping to eat everything along the way.
It’s the quadrant’s janitor mob.
“Donut,” I called again. “Calm the fuck down!”
Carl: Donut. Chill. You’re sinking. There’s a mob coming.
Donut: AHHHHHHHHHHHHHH
Carl: MONGO NEEDS YOU.
Donut quit twisting, her hair fluttering around her. She quickly looked
about, still in a panic. Strange lights flashed under the sunglasses that’d
become a fixture on her face whenever she left the saferoom. She tried
kicking her legs, but the best she could manage with her stubby Persian
paws was an inefficient tread. She could not swim. She was about to start
flipping her shit again. I swam down and grabbed her, pulling her into the
crook of my arm. I started pumping my legs upward as she dug her claws
into my chest. Her ears were pinned to the back of her head. She breathed
heavily, her head on a swivel, looking about with terror.
“Carl, Mongo is in his carrier. You lied to me! We’re drowning! Help!
Help!”
“Calm down. We have company. You need to be quiet. Deep breath.”
“How can I take a deep breath when I’m drowning, Carl?”
“The water scroll, remember? Keep an eye on the countdown. You’ll
need to renew it soon.”
A pair of bloated corpses floated past, sinking. These were pink-
skinned, naked, human-like creatures, but they were covered in wrinkles,
and their heads were like that of a naked mole rat. Their eyes were white
and bulbous, like onions. Their mouths hung open in death, revealing large,
yellow, and rotting teeth.
Corpse. Tuco. Nude Glaber. Level 30. Killed by drowning.
The Nude Glabers were the NPCs who lived in the settlements within
the necropolis. I’d never seen one, but one of the tomb raider guys had
described them. All of these corpses must’ve been from one of those
settlements after the temple filled with water. They’d been described as
“undead,” but I didn’t realize an undead creature could drown. It was
probably an inaccurate description. Most of those necropolis guys didn’t
know what they were doing.
Donut squirmed in my grip. Her voice sounded distant and hollow even
though she was right next to me. “That’s a shark down there. A shark! I can
see more coming. They are everywhere. This is not acceptable. I told you I
am not to be brought into the water. This is a betrayal worse than when you
gave my pet biscuits to that danger dingo.”
“You take a shower every five minutes,” I grunted as I swam. “This is
practically the same thing.”
“This is quite obviously not the same thing, Carl. Get me out of here
this instant.”
I was furiously pumping my legs, swimming upward. The rushing noise
of water streaming from the necropolis was getting louder. I didn’t think we
could just swim right into the stream. It’d be like stepping into a tornado.
But what could we do? The monster—apparently a shark—was still lazily
circling toward us. We were being sandwiched between the current and the
mob. The creature crunched on the corpse of Tuco and some other debris.
When it opened its mouth, I could hear the distinctive beat of “Jump
Around” blast out into the ocean. It’d eaten the goddamned alarm trap.
“Please, Carl. I’m sorry. I don’t like this. Can we go? Please?”
None of my explosives with exposed fuses would work, at least not
well, under water. I was pretty sure dynamite would work, but I’d have to
use the inherent instability of the explosive and not the wick to set it off. I’d
seen enough blast fishing videos in my time to know that you didn’t want to
be anywhere near any such explosion. I didn’t trust in our ability to swim
away in time. I’d been working on a depth charge design, but that didn’t
help me now.
My impact-detonated hob-lobbers would probably be effective against
the creature, but there was all sorts of debris flying about down here, and
again, I couldn’t guarantee we’d get away in time.
The corpse of yet another creature floated past us. This was a dolphin
thing, and it’d been pierced right through the head with a glass shard.
Lootable Corpse. Bubble Beluga. Level 29. Killed by getting her
brain pierced by a spear of glass. It hurt a lot, too.
“Are you calm? Donut, listen to me. I’m gonna need you. Are you
good?”
“No I am most certainly not good. I am really far from good, Carl.”
“Listen. Hekla,” I said, pointing at the corpse of the beluga. “Send them
after the shark. Do it now.”
This was one of Donut’s favorite moves. We’d originally called it
“Slime Time,” but it had somehow evolved to “Hekla.” Katia thought it was
distasteful and a little fucked-up to call it that, and it was, but it was also
pretty damn funny.
Donut, to her credit, didn’t hesitate. She cast Second Chance on the
beluga corpse and then immediately cast Clockwork Triplicate, creating
three of them. The two copies appeared with glass spikes through their
heads, which was a nice touch. Donut sent them after the monster while I
swam under the rushing current. I had to slam on yet another water-
breathing scroll.
Almost immediately, one of the clockwork belugas exploded
underwater. I felt it mostly in my ears, like I’d just blown them out. The
mob roared, lion-like as it was injured by exploding shrapnel. Before I
could compose myself, the second clockwork exploded behind us.
“Carl, watch out!” Donut cried.
“Holy shit,” I gasped as two more sharks rushed in out of nowhere.
They swarmed right past us, skirting the bottom of the fast-moving current.
They ignored us and headed straight for the injured shark. Christ that was
close. Each was about fifteen feet long and jet black with glowing red eyes.
Other than the terrifying color and eyes, they looked much like a typical
tiger shark. I caught a glimpse of their description.
Concierge Shark. Level 41.
These psychos are of the bite-first, ask-questions-later school of
underwater diplomacy.
Also known as the “Death’s Welcoming Committee” Shark, the
Concierge Shark is one of the fastest and most voracious of the ocean’s
predators. They’ll eat anything. ANYTHING. Even those circus peanut
candy things. It’s really kind of gross.
They are attracted to the scent of blood, making them the most
common death dealers of any water-themed dungeon.
The two newcomers barreled into the first shark, who’d been injured in
the explosion. They started ripping at each other, causing a cloud of blood
to bloom under us.
“There are more coming,” Donut hissed.
“Let me know if any follow.”
Since I couldn’t swim up through the fast-moving current, I swam
across and below the water stream, attempting to get to the other side. I kept
pumping my legs, swimming with only one arm while Donut clutched to
me, whimpering. A school of small fish rushed past, cutting through us like
a hailstorm, but they came and went, not doing any harm. Donut sputtered
as a fish slapped her in the face.
Above, the sense of rushing water eased. I put more distance between us
and the shark fight. Donut said more were coming, all headed straight for
the plume of blood.
I swam to the surface, poking my head above water. Donut popped up
next to me, unnecessarily gasping for breath. Her whole body trembled. I
had to keep her from sinking back in.
“Oh wow,” I said, looking off at the blast of water pouring from a hole
in the side of the necropolis. It was pitch black outside, but multiple lights,
mostly from other crawlers, stood near the castle’s remains, lighting up the
area. The castle was just gone. The walls surrounding it were obliterated.
All that remained were the lightning rod towers that stood on either side of
the entrance, the tops of which glinted in the light like twin obelisks.
We were about a quarter of a mile off shore. I warily looked about for
mobs. Far to our right, splashing rose in the night air. It was a feeding
frenzy. First there had been one. Then three. Now there were dozens of
sharks fighting each other.
I weighed our next move. We needed to get to that submarine. The
Akula. We had to turn off the pump. But I knew the sub was located on the
opposite side of the ring-shaped water quadrant, and we sure as hell weren’t
going to swim there from here. I decided to put Donut out of her misery and
take her back to the shore for now.
I had a kayak in my inventory from the floating house’s garage. I pulled
it free, popping it out onto the surface, where it bobbed up and down like a
cork. I lifted Donut and placed her within. I pulled myself into the kayak
and pulled the double-sided paddle. I figured this would be faster than
swimming.
My water-breathing scroll ran out, and I suddenly vomited. Dark, brown
water rushed from my lungs. I hadn’t even realized it was there. It felt as if
I’d been kicked in the stomach while breathing fire. It reminded me of the
time Mordecai gave Louis and Firas the anti-alcohol potions. A moment
later, Donut also vomited, loud and long, the retches traveling across her
body like a sine wave. The amount of water that came out of her seemed to
be way too much. When it was finally over, she gave out a little whimper
and then vomited again, and this time a little fish fell out of her mouth and
started flopping around on the top of the kayak.
I started paddling toward shore. Donut sat there glowering, completely
flattened out and soaked through. She had a piece of seaweed attached to
her tiara. While she’d appeared almost majestic and fairy-like underwater,
up here she looked like a dead rat that’d been resurrected and then run over
by a garbage truck.
“That was pretty awesome,” I said once it was clear we were safe from
the sharks.
“Go fuck yourself, Carl,” Donut said.
“This is an outrage!” Donut cried when we were back at the home base.
She’d showered and was once again dry and clean. “I was buried alive, shot
out of a water cannon, drowned, and then almost eaten by a shark, and I
didn’t even get a boss box for that? We won the level. The slime thing died,
and we get nothing? Carl, the game is cheating again.”
Mongo made a chirping noise, agreeing with Donut’s outrage.
“The ooze isn’t dead. We’d melted it down, but then it got washed
away.”
We’d had to track a quarter turn around the land quadrant before we
could get to a town that’d take us in. It was me, Donut, Katia, Louis, and
Firas. The town was called Pandinus, and the occupants were half human,
half-scorpion centaur-like creatures called pazuzu. They were all dressed in
ridiculous, post-apocalyptic gear: punk-rock style leather and tassels and
goggles and chains and dreadlocks, like they were all heading out to a Mad
Max convention.
Louis and Firas went off to get some sleep. Louis grumbled something
about not being able to drink alcohol as we left them to enter our personal
space. Gwen and her team remained at the site of the castle. Even though
we’d defeated the quadrant, the stairwell was now buried. It was directly
under the spray from the necropolis drain, so they were going to turn it off
and then dig it out. I sent a warning to the tomb raider guys that it would fill
back up with water. They hadn’t moved yet, so it didn’t matter.
We knew the stairwell remained because those with the pathfinder
benefit could still see it sitting there. Once the team dug it out, they’d
attempt to put a roof over it and maybe dig a separate tunnel to it. Or at the
very least, seal it off. We’d have to turn the drain back on, especially after
we turned the submarine’s pump off. That was the only way to fully empty
the necropolis of water.
Apparently the sand slime wasn’t fully “defeated” and was still hanging
around somewhere. It was probably floating around as a single grain of
sand somewhere in the ocean where it wouldn’t be able to properly
regenerate. If that was the case, we’d never see it again. And because it
wasn’t dead, we’d gotten screwed out of the boss box. I wasn’t too worried
about it. On the first two floors, the bronze and silver boss boxes held great
loot, but the boxes were now shit compared to how they’d been on the
earlier floors.
The good stuff would now only be had in the city boss and above boxes.
Still, I’d received multiple achievements and other loot boxes for that
last stunt. The notable ones were:
The I’m Wet box contained an additional ten scrolls of water breathing for
each of us. Donut’s box, for some unfathomable reason, was silver instead
of bronze, and she received an additional item: a Belt of Buoyancy. It was
a simple belt that wrapped around her stomach that’d keep her from
sinking. It only worked in the water, and she spent a good three minutes
bitching about it, about how she was never going back there again.
The silver Pacifist box contained a skill potion for Donut that raised her
Dodge skill by one, taking it to 10. That was a big deal because she’d been
training with it for a while now, and the skill had been stuck on nine. That
happened a lot with certain skills. Now that she’d hit level 10, she had a
permanent Deflection buff, which caused both magical and physical
missiles to be less accurate when they were shot at her. Mordecai said it
wasn’t complete protection from arrows, but it halved their accuracy. It also
meant they were more likely to go into either me or Mongo if she was
nearby.
In my Pacifist box, I received two potions that gave Mordecai pause.
“Don’t use those,” he said the moment he saw them.
“Why not?”
He didn’t answer for several moments. “Because the last time I saw
someone drink that potion, they accidentally killed half of their party.”
Potion of Bloodlust
It’s like giving yourself a PCP enema after spending the day riding
the Night Train Express.
Drinking this potion gives the following effects for (Constitution)
seconds.
Strength times two.
Movement speed times two.
Dexterity times .5
The Where the Fuck Am I? Who the Fuck Are You? Debuff
Constitution times .5
For every crawler, NPC, or mob killed by you while this potion is
active, your movement speed increases by an additional 25%.
“So, it’s like a berserking potion?”
“That’s exactly what it is,” Mordecai said. “But that debuff makes it so
you don’t remember where you are or why you’re fighting. It’s too
dangerous to use.”
I put the two potions away. I agreed with Mordecai. The last thing I
wanted to do was take a potion that would make me lose control, even if it
greatly enhanced my strength. I’d look in the cookbook and see if it had any
advice that’d make the potion more useful.
Gwen: That was easier than I thought it’d be. We found the wall to
the stairwell chamber. We’ll finish digging it out, seal it up tight, and
then we can figure out how to do this last part.
Carl: 10-4. Watch out for any remnants of the ooze.
I pulled out the two pieces of the artifact. The winding box and the
watch. I placed them on the table. I was a little afraid of the winding box
now that I knew there was a way to use it to open a portal to the Nothing.
And that things would come out when you did.
Katia wordlessly handed me the note she’d gotten off the Mad Dune
Mage when she’d been forced to fight him. She wasn’t certain if he really
was dead or not. She’d gotten experience, and she’d looted his body, but
he’d turned to sand. I didn’t know if that meant he was dead or not. Either
way, the system said we’d defeated the quadrant, and that was the important
part.
The note was several pages long. The first few pages were a note to
Tish, the same person who’d chewed him out in that other letter we’d
found. The remaining bulk of the pages were lists of words followed by a
set of numbers. The final page was filled with drawings.
Tish,
I know you hate me, but please listen. Hope is not lost. They asked me to
use the box to destroy this entire island and to suck it into the Nothing.
Doing so is a mistake. All three pieces of the artifact are in the area, and all
three pieces would end up in that alternate dimension. It is too dangerous
for the feral gods to possess, even in pieces. So instead, I have a plan. If the
ghost of Psamathe ever leaves before I can implement my fix, I will be
forced to destroy myself, but I hope it will never come to pass.
I have discovered something useful. This familiar of hers, the ooze, has
split loyalties. I truly believe it loves me, as odd as it sounds. It knows of my
affection for my now-frozen Lika, and it is jealous. I can use this. I don’t yet
know how.
I still conduct my research during the times when I have a body and am
able to work. Here is what I’ve learned.
The gate of the feral gods is both a complicated and a simple device.
You first dial to a time, which represents a place. Both watches are
connected magically. If you dial a time on one watch, it is mirrored on the
other. This time represents your destination, and how this works is a
byzantine process that I do not yet understand, though I have determined
multiple destination and time combinations, even without a watch of my
own. I have included those notes with this letter.
Once you have dialed into a location, you place both watches in the
box, and you activate the winding process. The second watch will start
ticking and moving. This is the only time the two watches will be out of
sync. Once the time on the second watch syncs up with the time representing
your current location, the alarm will go off on the second watch, and it will
stop ticking. The box is now armed. This process can take anywhere from a
simple moment to a full turn of the watch, depending on the distance you
wish to travel. You cannot move the box from its current location, or it will
reset. You remove the two watches, and the portal appears.
The portal is one-way, and it will last about twenty minutes or until the
winding box and the watches are brought through. Once that happens, the
exit closes at the destination location.
However, you must beware. The portal lingers at the location where it
was opened, and it is now a two-way portal into the Nothing. It remains
open until a creature comes through that horrible dimension. And, believe
me, they will come through. It will be fast. Oftentimes, this will be a feral
god. Depending on the god that escapes, or its level of power, there may be
great destruction. And if certain gods or minor deities—like Psamathe—
make it through, the current pantheon may be forced to react.
It is also said that those who use the portal, those with weak
constitutions, mustn’t linger as they pass through. Even close proximity to
the open door is enough to touch their weak minds and paint them with the
feral madness.
But I have also discovered that the winding box itself is a conduit to the
Nothing. All one must do to open a passage is open the lid, wind the box,
and send a stream of charged energy into the device, and a portal will open
directly to the Nothing.
Yes, this is dangerous. I know, I know. But love makes us do the most
dangerous of things. Isn’t that the way of the worlds?
This is how I opened a portal to seek out Yarilo, banished god of lust.
This is how I was tricked by Psamathe into marrying her familiar. My
beloved Lika remains banished in her own version of hell because I was
fooled. And now Psamathe is free in the necropolis, where she has
supposedly usurped the ghost that is known as Quetzalcoatlus.
Here is what I am going to do to defeat her. If I am successful, I will die,
but you will receive this letter along with the winding box. Then you can
send another expedition to seek the remaining two artifacts. I believe they
are…
The note ended there. There was a missing page.
“So,” Katia said. “I was looking at the page of numbers, and they are all
locations we can travel to using the gate, but it looks like they’re all in the
area surrounding the city of Larracos. Once we have the second watch, we
just move the watch to the time representing the location, stick it in, and
wait for the alarm to go off.”
“Are you saying we can open a gate directly to the ninth floor?” I asked.
“That’s right,” Katia said. “Also, I think I can make a map of the ninth
floor with these notes.”
“Don’t get too excited,” Mordecai said. “You might be able to open a
gate to the Plains of Larracos, but you won’t be able to go through it.
Crawlers can’t hop floors. There’s a gate right there in the Desperado Club
in the casino, but it’s closed to you. So if you get the grand idea of opening
a gate, you won’t be able to go through, and when it closes, you’ll have to
deal with something awful coming through that will surely kill everything
in the entire bubble.”
“Maybe,” Katia said. She shuffled the papers and pointed to a note on
the last page. It was multiple drawings of the two watches and the winding
box along with two gates, depicting various scenarios. The first depicted the
three items on one side of the gate, and the second depicted just the winding
box on the far side. It went on from there with each possible combination,
indicating what would happen. All but one of the scenarios ended with a
monster emerging from the gate on the opening side. That last illustration
was circled, and it depicted one watch on each side of the gate and the
winding box inside the portal. “It looks like if we do this last way, we’ll
lose the box, but no monsters will get out.”
Mordecai grunted. “It’d be a waste. You ain’t using this thing to hop
floors no matter what.”
I barely heard him. I was focused on the second-to-last scenario. Holy
shit. Holy fucking shit.
I shook my head, and I decided to focus on the problem at hand. “Do
you think if we summon one of those feral god things it’ll be able to travel
outside the bubble? Or break the bubble wall?”
“I don’t know,” Mordecai said. “Some of them are bigger than the
bubble. Summoning them usually resizes them, but this isn’t a true
summoning. It’s them, in their true form, without a time limit. It’s them
escaping imprisonment. You’re all getting ahead of yourselves. You don’t
even have the last watch yet. And if you do get that watch, my advice will
be to stick it in your inventory and not do anything with it until you’re
strong enough to deal with whatever comes out, which will be never. Now
if you need me, I’ll be in the crafting room. I think I’m onto something with
that yam you received earlier.”
I glanced at the level timer as Mordecai walked away. We had just over
four and a half days left. “Is there a Desperado Club in this town?”
OceanofPDF.com
[ 24 ]
“What I’m saying is you take two sometimes three showers a day. That’s
water. I don’t understand how that’s any different than going into the
ocean.”
“It’s not going to happen again, Carl. No. Take Katia. Or Louis. Or
Gwen. Or Samantha the love doll for all I care. It is not happening, and
there is not a thing in this world you can say that will get me to change my
mind.”
I reached up and scratched her. Her entire body was tense. “It’s okay.
I’m just teasing you. You won’t have to go into the water this time. I will
need you to float over it in that house, though. You’ll be in charge of the
depth charges.”
She sniffed. “I do like the death charges.”
We’d taken a nap, spent some time in the craft room, and reset all of our
buffs. Zev had messaged us earlier and reminded us that our normal
appearance on Odette’s show was canceled. Zev still spoke to us in her
robotic, Stepford Wife voice, but Donut had greeted her cheerfully and no
longer seemed concerned about her condition. There was more going on
there, but I couldn’t ask her about it.
I’d gone into the training room to work on my Powerful Strike. It was
currently at 14 with my gear, but only eight unenhanced. We needed to find
a guildhall for it. It was one of those stubborn skills that didn’t like to move
up no matter how much I trained. We really needed to find a place to just
grind and kill mobs without gods or quests or distractions.
Mordecai said the sixth floor would have plenty of that, but I already
knew if we made it down there, we were going to be very, very busy.
I’d taken the Psamathe—Samantha—head and placed her in the corner.
She started squealing at me while I trained, so I turned her around and
threatened to stick her in the bathroom or seal her in a bucket if she didn’t
shut up. She stopped after that, though I occasionally heard a few random
growls from her.
Afterward, it was time to start planning our next move in earnest. The
first step was we needed to get to the submarine, get inside, and figure out
the pump system. Gwen was going to meet us with the two other survivors
from that quadrant in an hour. In the meantime, they turned the drain back
on. I sent a message to the tomb raiders and told them they really needed to
start carving a path down to the water line.
If those assholes refused, and I feared they would, we’d have to spend a
day or two grinding traps, and nobody wanted that.
Outside, we were hours from the start of the equinox where the
sandstorms would last twice as long, and the days would be mostly dark.
“You know what,” I said to Donut. “When was the last time you
checked your social media board? You know you can do that now again
since Zev has gotten her job back.”
Donut lit up. “Carl, you are a genius! Mongo, come on, let’s see if
Fleek-Otter12 got people to sign up for the unofficial fanclub!”
Katia watched her run off. “So she really can’t swim?”
“She sank like a rock.”
Katia laughed. She was, on my direction, leaning over a piece of paper
and drawing out a map of the ninth floor. Mordecai wandered into the room,
muttering something.
“Hey, Mordecai. Come here a second,” I said.
He seemed distracted. “I think I need one more ingredient, but I don’t
know what it is,” he grumbled. He was talking to himself. He did that a lot
while he worked at his table. “What do you need?”
I pulled the map from Katia’s hands and flipped it over. The map looked
like a flower with the large city in the center. I already knew some of what I
was about to ask, but I didn’t know everything, including one crucial piece
of information.
“Is this an accurate depiction of the ninth floor?”
“Guys,” he said. “Do not worry yourselves about something that is very
far away.”
“I know,” I said. “But I’m curious. Especially since the sixth floor is
coming up. They’re all part of that weird volcano storyline, and I just want
to be prepared.”
“You’re not going to get to the sixth floor if you spend all this time
worrying about what’s not right in front of you.”
“Indulge me, please,” I said.
He sighed and hopped up onto the table. He picked up a pen with his
talon and drew lines on the map, creating nine petals for the flower. “This is
pretty close. Larracos is in the middle, and the nine faction areas surround
the center. You have the diameter of the city a little too big, I think,” he
said. He drew a smaller circle. “There’s an NPC shanty town, but it’s not
part of the city. This is Larracos here.”
“That’s way smaller than I thought,” Katia said.
“The city is huge, but it has a narrow diameter. It’s shaped like an
inverted cone. It’s dug deep into the ground. Built by dwarves. Different
levels have different things. The castle is at the bottom.” He continued to
make small corrections, moving back to the flower petals. “This whole area
is mostly rolling hills and pre-dug trenches. There’s a forest that surrounds
the whole thing. The deeper you get into the forest, the more difficult the
monsters are, but they’re usually hunted to extinction by the time you get
there.”
“So how does it work?” I asked.
“Back when the third floor opened up, each of the nine factions arrived
at their designated area. Each spot is randomly picked with one exception.
The previous winner is allowed to choose where they start. From there, they
start building their army and their defenses and their fortifications. Once the
sixth floor opens, they have access to the market, and they can start buying
armor and magical supplies from the crawlers. They can only bring one
large chest of supplies, so it’s not enough to outfit their army. Everything
else has to be purchased or looted. They aren’t allowed to fight each other
until the crawlers arrive. But before that happens, they make the officers
fight and grind in the forests, leveling themselves up. Plus they all bring
several cheat potions to buff themselves.”
“Where do the armies come from?”
“They all start with fifteen thousand troops, and there’s a pool of
mercenaries and specialists they can hire. The additional mercenaries are all
collected via games and gambling and trades up until when the ninth floor
opens.” He tapped the small circled he’d made, indicating the city. “The
mercenary market is near the castle. Deep in the city. Same with the
markets.”
“But they can’t really die?” Katia asked.
“The tourists? No. Not on that floor. It’s like a game for them. The
system holds some of their health in reserve and teleports them away before
they can die. They feel real pain, though. The troops are mostly NPCs, but
the richer of the factions can pay for their own people to fill the ranks. They
are equally protected. The real people can respawn too, up until the time
you guys arrive. The NPC troops don’t respawn. Dead is dead for those
poor bastards.”
I felt my heart quicken. “How many of the fifteen thousand are outside
people usually?”
He shrugged. “A rich faction will bring maybe two hundred. It’s not
very many because it’s expensive. A poor faction, like the Blood Sultanate
will only bring about twenty. It’s a little like the dance floor for the
Desperado Club. For every person they bring in, one of the NPCs is
removed, so there’s no major tactical advantage to bring too many people in
unless they’re well-trained already. And these guys usually aren’t.”
“So they have to build all of their fortifications from the ground up?”
“That’s right,” Mordecai said. He pointed to one of the petals at the top
of the flower. “This petal comes with a pre-built, fortified castle. The King’s
Point. It’s a more narrow area, but with steeper hills. Most previous winners
choose this so they don’t have to waste time and resources building, and it’s
naturally defensible.”
I nodded. “Okay. So with the sixth floor, how does that work in
conjunction with the ninth?”
“The Hunting Grounds are a different sort of thing. The factions can,
and sometimes do, send people to the sixth floor to collect gear. But it’s
dangerous because they are not protected. It’s the only place in the game
where they can really die. And like I said before, they do die. Most of these
guys are rich assholes who treat the whole thing like a weekend excursion
playing paintball. A lot of bets are made regarding the outcome of the
faction wars, but most of the ones who are here are so rich they don’t care.
If there’s an upset, a lot of credits can change hands. Plus there is a cash
prize to the winner. It’s more about the bragging rights than the cash,
though.”
“But,” I said, “The people who do decide to hunt on the sixth floor, they
can bring gear back to the factions?”
“Yes,” Mordecai said. “That’s pretty much the point for some of them.
Someone on the ninth right now can go down to the sixth. But more often,
the hunters are people who aren’t a part of any faction. They come to win
gear. Things like that ring you still need to ditch. Then they sell it to the
factions.”
“Okay,” I said, thinking hard. “One last question. When can someone
decide to participate in all of this? Say I’m a random guy floating around in
a spaceship, and I decide tomorrow I want to get in on the action. Can I?”
“Yeah, if you have the credits and can get here in time. Hunters can sign
up until the opening of the sixth floor. It’s not too late for the ninth floor
guys, or any of the tourists and party-goers on the 18th for that matter, to
wander down to the sixth if they dare. But most of the hunters are already
there. It would be dumb to wait until the last minute.”
“Why is that?”
“Because all hunters start out as level thirty. They can start arriving
when you hit the third. There are appropriate mob areas for them to train, so
they can be pretty strong by the time you arrive. Especially since the
lethality doesn’t get turned on until you get there. The hunters tend to be
around fifty, though with the shortened timers, it might not be that high. In
fact, I’m willing to bet my tailfeathers they won’t be that high.”
“Thanks, Mordecai,” I said.
“Carl,” Katia said as Mordecai returned to his work. “Why do I get the
feeling you’re about to do something really stupid?”
I grinned. “Let’s get the bubble popped first. Then we’ll worry about
how stupid or not I am.”
OceanofPDF.com
[ 25 ]
I opened the pocket watch and set off the alarm in hopes that
Henrik would respond. I had my ink quill ready to write him a note, but he
didn’t answer. He hadn’t replied since that first time. I relayed this to Juice
Box via Langley. He said she was concerned about her brother, so much so
that she was about to go in there herself. I told him to try and talk her out of
it.
Meanwhile, the tomb raider guys had finally started moving toward the
water line, which was about halfway down the necropolis. The water had
done a fine job of killing almost every non-ghost mob in the quadrant, but
it’d only triggered about half of the traps. Bobby, the trap-finding spy, was
on the verge of a literal breakdown and kept stopping to compose himself.
Chris and Maggie My remained in their tomb. I still didn’t know what
we were going to do about them. Mordecai was having little luck finding
the supplies he needed to kill the parasite. I had Langley’s crew physically
drag the decapitated top floor of the house containing the stairwell to just
outside of Hump Town. That way, Donut could open up the chamber, and
Katia could use her remaining rock-monster-paralyzing bolts to knock them
out. We could then easily toss the paralyzed creature through the portal if
we had to when the time came.
I did not want to do that. Chris clearly didn’t want us to do that. Since
we probably wouldn’t teleport to the same place, it would just unleash
Maggie onto the sixth floor, and all of this bullshit would start over again.
Imani was insistent we do everything to save him. It felt like the wrong
move, but what could we do?
None of this would matter if we didn’t take the final castle. The
Necropolis of Anser.
The first step: draining the rest of the water. In order to do that, we had
to turn off the pump inside of that submarine.
The town of Pandinus was smaller than Hump Town, but it still featured
several inns and taverns. There was no Desperado Club here, but there was
a Club Vanquisher. Of all of us, the only one who could get in was Gwen.
She said there was a big fight in there recently, which was unusual for the
club. Apparently Miriam Dom had her membership revoked once she’d
turned into a vampire, which caused Prepotente to lose his absolute shit. He
unleashed their third companion—that scary-ass hellspawn familiar goat—
into the main lounge, and it had devoured a bunch of clerics before they
fled. There was now a “Holy Crusade Bounty” on the trio, whatever that
meant. But in the meantime, the club was closed so it could be cleansed.
We met up at a tavern called “The Death Stalker” that was nothing more
than a few tables and a bar. And, inexplicably, a gelato cart. The scorpion
guy behind the counter had about twenty flavors of the stuff, and you could
get it in a waffle cone or in a bowl. The moment I saw the cones, I was
reminded of another cone of ice cream I’d eaten earlier in the dungeon, one
made of worms, and I suddenly felt ill. Both Katia and Gwen got
themselves cones. Donut happily bought a bowl of raspberry while we all
sat down. She’d talked the pazuzu down from two gold to one for the bowl.
It was me, Donut, Katia, Gwen, Tran the human swashbuckler guy, and
two newcomers, both crawlers from the Ukraine.
I examined the two strangers. One was a human named Britney
Proskurina, and she was a level-27 Pit Fighter. The dark-haired woman
was outfitted in a fur bikini and carried a spike-covered stick over her
shoulder. She was really leaning into the barbarian theme that the dungeon
had chosen for her.
The other crawler was a level-28, spotted gecko-like creature called a
Kuhli, which I thought was weird because I knew that was a type of fish,
not lizard. His name was Vadim Zbar, and his class was something called a
Gut Rearranger, which was apparently a healer/rogue combo. He was
covered head to toe in little sheaths filled with daggers of all types.
These were the two other survivors of the water quadrant. It turned out
Vadim was a cosmetic surgeon in the real world, and Britney had been at
his office for a consultation when it all went down, and they were the last
two survivors of their original party. It was just by sheer luck that they’d
stepped outside to take some “before” photos for her surgery when the
collapse happened.
“I’m not going back down there,” Britney said the moment we sat down
at the table. “I’ll tell you what you need to know, but I’d rather die than go
back in that water.”
“Oh, I just love your furs,” Donut said, after coming up for air between
bites of her raspberry gelato. “And I feel you. I’m not going back in there,
either.”
She just looked at Donut.
“What about you?” I asked Vadim, the gecko man.
“I’ll go,” he said.
“No, you will not,” Britney said. “You will die. Everybody who goes
down there dies. We were lucky to get out the first time.”
“I’ll go,” he repeated. “I think I know where the pump controls are.”
I nodded, pointing to Katia and Tran the swashbuckler. “The four of us
are going into the water, we are getting to the submarine, and we’re going
to turn off the pump. Once it’s off, we’re going to get the hell out of there. I
hope to be in and out in an hour, tops.”
Tran turned to Vadim. “Do you own a red shirt? I feel as if I should put
one on.”
“What does that mean?” Vadim asked.
The gnomish Drop Bear, the Nightmare II, remained in the large garage of
the house. The garage was the only part of the uprooted, flying home that
still had a roof over it. Louis and Firas did an admirable job of lashing the
small biplane down. I inspected it as the entire garage and the rest of the
house rose into the air, the ground swaying under us.
Donut was in a foul mood. Apparently the AI had showed her a
message from the intergalactic internet that had pissed her off, and she’d
been grumbling about it for an hour straight.
“‘No redeeming qualities whatsoever,’” Donut muttered. “He said that,
Carl. Can you believe it? He also said I ruined the viewing experience and
almost made him stop watching the whole show! Stupid Shuruga36. What
kind of name is that anyway? Shuruga. It sounds like the noise one makes
as he’s getting whooped by a group of angry toddlers.”
I peered into the rear-facing backseat of the airplane. The tail gun was
still loaded with a semi-circle-shaped magazine, but I couldn’t tell how
many rounds were left. “You spend too much time reading that stuff. Don’t
pay attention to it. It’s just people talking. It doesn’t mean anything.”
She ignored me. “Plus, he insulted Mongo. He said, and I quote, ‘Donut
and her stupid dino-chicken irritate me to no end.’ Mongo is just a child. If
he could read, he’d be appalled. I can take criticism, but picking on a child?
That’s just uncalled for. I bet he sucks his thumb and thinks of his
grandmother when he touches himself.”
“You can take criticism?” I asked.
“I’m serious, Carl.”
Katia entered the garage.
“I still can’t believe you guys flew that thing,” she said.
“We didn’t really fly it. We just kinda went up into the air using it as a
balloon.”
“Well, the chum bombs are ready.”
“Okay. Go ahead and start dropping them. Donut has the detonator in
her inventory.”
The chum bombs were nothing more than triple-ply garbage bags filled
with various dead bodies along with fused, 1/8 th-strength hob-lobbers, each
with a piece of hobgoblin pus attached to them. They were all timed to the
same detonator, so when Donut hit the button, they’d all blow at the same
time, sending a mighty plume of gore out into the ocean.
We were dropping them near the edge of the current from the draining
necropolis. The bags would probably start leaking before we got into
position, but that was okay. All I really wanted was a distraction for the first
layer of underwater security, the concierge sharks. We needed them as far
away from our position as possible.
We had not dived deep enough to meet any of the other denizens of the
ocean. Vadim spoke of several, including jellyfish and squids and
hammerhead sharks. The man was very matter-of-fact and emotionless,
unlike his companion, Britney, who seemed to be on the edge of hysterics
the whole time.
“Did Langley tell you about that Vadim guy?” Katia asked as I finished
inspecting the airplane.
I paused. “No. What about him? How do they know each other?”
They’d never even met as far as I was aware.
“I guess Doctor Vadim is, or was, pretty famous in the Ukraine. He had
television commercials and billboards and stuff everywhere, advertising his
cosmetic surgery clinics. He was always getting sued for botched surgeries.
Langley says he has like 50 children. He’s known for impregnating many of
his clients.”
“Oh my,” Donut said. “I just love gossip like that when it’s extra
delicious. I wonder why he turned himself into a lizard, then? I once knew a
red Persian like that. Someone who pollinated his seed everywhere. His
name was Santana’s Famous Solo. He once got out of his cage at a CFA
event and impregnated a Sphynx. Can you imagine? It’s the equivalent of
royalty impregnating an uncooked chicken. It was quite the scandal. Do you
think Vadim has knocked-up Britney? She looks like the type who’d get
knocked up by a plastic surgeon.”
“How does Langley know about some Ukrainian guy?” I asked.
“That’s where he’s from,” Katia said.
“I thought he was Finnish.”
Donut made an exasperated noise. “He is from Finland. Really, Carl.
Sometimes I feel you don’t pay proper attention. Langley is originally from
the Ukraine, but he immigrated to Finland not that long ago. Almost all of
those guys in his group are from other countries.”
I didn’t actually care where anybody was from as long as they were
from Earth, though the story about Vadim did worry me somewhat. If it was
true, and who knew with this sort of thing, then it made him sound like a
weasel. Not the sort of person you wanted to go with into dangerous
situations. Especially when you had a large bounty on your head.
“Britney is not pregnant,” Katia said. “If she was when she went in,
she’d probably be showing by now. Women can’t get pregnant in the
dungeon. Our periods stop, and we get a notification informing us we are no
longer able to conceive until after we fulfill our crawl.”
“Wait, really?” I asked. “I never received anything like that.” I realized
how stupid that sounded the moment I said it out loud. I, did, however
remember an oddity from the cookbook. Rickard, the guy who’d written the
most recent version of the book, didn’t add too much content, but he did
mention that he’d entered the dungeon with his pregnant wife, but the
moment he went through the gate, she’d disappeared, and he never saw her
again. I thought it was just one of those things. I knew dudes still had the
ability to knock creatures up. The whole reason Brandon had died was
because another guy in their party, one of the formerly-ancient residents,
had banged a succubus in an alleyway on the third floor, and she’d given
birth to hundreds of baby monsters with the guy’s face.
“Has anybody seen any pregnant women in the dungeon?” I asked.
Katia shrugged. “I don’t think so. Except Fire Brandy on the last floor.”
“And Eunice the dwarf on the third floor!” Donut added.
“Those were both NPCs. I wonder if they do something special with
pregnant crawlers,” I said.
“Probably something awful,” Katia said. “But I can’t imagine someone
who was pregnant would come in here voluntarily.”
Firas popped his head into the garage. “We’re in position to drop your
chum bombs,” he said. “The barrel launchers for the depth charges are all
installed, too. They’re ready for you to load them. We have five hours
before it gets dark and six before the first of the equinox sand storms hits,
so let’s get a move on.”
“All right,” I said. “Let’s get to work.”
After we dropped the chum bombs, we quickly flew around the side of the
necropolis and directly over the position of the sub. Louis and Firas had
some system where they could adjust the elevation of the house, and it’d hit
an air current that would blow the balloon in the direction they wanted it to
go. They were very good at it, and Louis said they’d received a half dozen
achievements for flying the magical balloon.
“Hit it,” I said to Donut as we sank toward sea level.
Donut did a little hop and then hit the hobgoblin pus detonator. We were
too far away to hear the sound of the bags exploding, but I knew there
would now be blood and guts and floor-four wraith body parts spreading all
over.
“Carl, Carl, I went up a level! I’m now 38!”
“I guess some of those sharks got into the bombs before we could blow
them,” I said. I was hoping that would happen. With those missing five
days, both Donut and I had lost a lot of grinding time. We hadn’t done
nearly as much fighting and leveling as we should have by now, and we
needed everything we could get.
“Does anybody see anything down there?” I asked as we hovered about
fifteen feet off the calm surface of the water. The water level had risen
somewhat once we’d turned the drain on, but it was still lower than when
the floor opened. That’d change, hopefully, once we finished here.
“I can see the sub on the map,” Katia said. Tran, who also had the
Pathfinder skill, nodded in agreement.
“Donut?” I asked.
“I don’t see any monsters. I see some small fish here and there, but
they’re all white on the map.”
“Okay. Remember. We don’t roll the depth charges into the water unless
I say we do. They are a last resort.”
Donut jumped from my shoulder. “Aye, aye, Captain Carl.” She paused,
looking between me and Katia. “You two be safe. It’s horrible down there.”
“This is really damn weird,” Tran said as we watched Katia form into the
diving bell.
“Fascinating,” Vadim agreed, walking in a circle around her.
I continued to marvel at Katia’s growth. She was forming this on the fly
without having made it before. We were at the corner of the house, standing
on the crumbling ground of the garden. Katia hung off the side, with a
single arm anchored to the magical brace that held the balloon high above.
The whole house and balloon dipped at the corner as she continued to add
weight.
I remembered when she first started playing with her shapeshifting
abilities, it physically hurt her to make even a small change. Now she could
contour herself into just about anything at a moment’s notice. She still
wasn’t perfect with faces unless she sat in front of her makeup table, but
with this sort of inanimate stuff, she was an expert.
The Akula was 500 meters under the surface. Although that didn’t sound
like much, it was an alarming depth. Vadim said the massive submarine had
a chamber on the roof to enter and leave, but one of their mini-subs had
been docked to it before they started their assault on the bridge. After
they’d succeeded, something happened, and the mini-sub had blown, which
caused the Akula to fill with water. The nose of the sub was now physically
attached to the base of the necropolis below the water line, and the massive
torpedo tubes along the bottom were somehow pumping vast amounts of
ocean water directly into the structure.
Like with the extreme height of the Wasteland, I knew diving 500
meters below the surface simply wasn’t something that’d normally be
possible. The crush depth of most submarines was around 400 meters. But
Vadim and Britney both insisted they’d free dived those depths—and much
deeper—with no real issue with the help of the water-breathing scrolls.
Whatever physics engine was running this shitshow, it was designed to
allow us to do the impossible. It didn’t want us dying from stupid
environmental hazards, unless it was a deliberately placed trap or mob.
Dying from the bends wasn’t nearly as entertaining as watching us get eaten
by a shark.
“Be careful,” I said to Donut as Katia opened up an entrance for me to
step inside of her. “Katia is really heavy right now. The moment we drop
away, this thing is going to fly up into the air. I don’t want you falling in.”
Donut just nodded. Despite her loud insistence that she was never going
back into the water, I could tell she was struggling with guilt over this. I
patted her on the head. “We need you to keep us safe. Okay?”
“Be careful,” she said, rubbing her head against my hand.
I stepped inside. Katia was spread thin, which allowed her to make
herself pretty large. The three of us—me, Tran, and Vadim—stood in the
middle of the shape. She’d helpfully grown three poles in the middle so we
could steady ourselves. She called it the diving bell, but she was really
shaped more like an elevator with a ring of heavy, dense metal at the bottom
to prevent her from flipping. She would grow flaps and pull some mass and
attempt to slow our descent as we approached the sub. We wanted to
acclimate to the water as soon as possible, so we weren’t sealed in. With
Tran’s pathfinder skill and Vadim’s Torch spell, we’d hopefully be able to
navigate the drowned halls of the submarine and quickly accomplish our
task.
The boss had been a borough boss, not a neighborhood boss, so the map
it left showed Vadim monster types in an area, but he still didn’t have a full
map of the Akula, which was unfortunate. There had apparently been a
sentinel gun thing that’d been a neighborhood boss, but he said he’d never
looted the map. Things had been happening quickly.
“Everyone read a scroll,” I said. All around us, we each cast Water
Breathing on ourselves. All four of us now had enough of these things in
our inventory to last at least four hours submerged, four times the amount
we’d hopefully need.
I nervously watched the little needle that kept me apprised of our viewer
count, and it was starting to spike. That was always a bad sign.
“And away we go,” Katia said from a mouth that sat against the interior
wall of the diving bell, right next to my ear. I almost crapped my boxers at
the sound of the voice so close to me.
Before I could say, “Jesus, Katia,” we dropped. The elevator hit the
ocean and only gave the slightest pause before we were underwater. We
sank, and the force of the water rushing inside almost pulled all three of us
up and out.
I kept my eye on our altitude as we rapidly fell. We moved at about five
meters a second, rocketing toward the depths. I did feel the increasing
pressure of the water above us as we passed 100 meters, then 200, then 300,
but it wasn’t nearly as much as it should.
“I see it,” Katia said after only a minute, her voice carrying through the
water. “I’m pulling my mass in small amounts now and flapping my wings.
Oh, wow. It’s bigger than I thought. The whole top part is ripped away.
There’s a strong current. I can actually see the water getting pulled in. It’s
mostly under the sub. It’s like water is being sucked in like through a
vacuum cleaner. The whole front of the submarine is stuck in a hole. The
whole sub is the pump.”
I felt us start to slow. The Akula finally showed on my map, the
structure stretching to completely fill it. The thing was the size of a small
carrier.
“There are a bunch of jellyfish near the entrance,” Katia said.
“What color are they?” Vadim snapped.
“Blue. They’re big.”
“Okay, good. Watch out for the white ones. The pain amplifiers.
They’re smaller. The big blue ones will wrap around you if you get close,
but they’ll leave you alone if you avoid them. But you must watch because
they drift.”
“Okay, I’m aiming for an area without them,” Katia said. “Landing
now.”
Crack. We hit the hull, and Katia’s form instantly changed. The elevator
opened like a flower, revealing the deep, dark world. It wasn’t completely
dark. Some light still filtered in through above, but everything had a deep,
blue hue to it. I crouched, still standing atop Katia’s form. It felt as if
someone was standing on my shoulders, but the pressure wasn’t too bad.
The Akula, like Katia had said, was huge. It looked more like a damn
spaceship than an actual submarine. The slick, metallic structure spread out
into the darkness in every direction. The whole thing vibrated. I could feel
the water deep below being pumped through the vehicle. Directly ahead, the
sail—the conning tower-like structure on top of most submarines—had
been violently ripped away, giving me an unobstructed view of the bottom
of the necropolis. From here, it was nothing more than an imposing, dark
wall.
Katia continued to change. She was transforming herself so she’d cover
the hull, camouflaging herself. She was going to stay out here and keep an
eye out for the large, dangerous monsters while the three of us entered the
sub. The ripped away entrance was about twenty feet away. In most subs,
the con was directly below the sail. That wasn’t the case with this
submarine. According to Vadim, the con (called a bridge by the game), was
at the fore of the vessel, just short of the nose. That’s where the stairwell
was. I couldn’t see it, but Katia could.
Vadim had described a room directly below the bridge that I believed
was the fire control. That was our target.
Above, the glowing, blue jellyfish floated like sentinels. Each were
about fifteen feet in diameter, and their tentacles dangled underneath them
ominously, hovering about twenty feet over the top of the submarine. They
drifted aimlessly, bouncing off one another.
Their dots were white on the map, meaning they weren’t naturally
hostile.
Big Boy Blue – Level 40
The good ol’ Big Boy Blue is the largest of the jellyfish one might
find floating around. They’re a little like that guy you used to know in
high school who was always wearing either overalls or a jersey of some
sort. The dude is like six foot five and pushing 300 pounds when he was
a freshman. He always had a crewcut. Dad’s a trucker. Never talks.
Never does his homework. He’s just always, you know, kinda there. He
doesn’t mean any harm. But he’s so goddamned dumb he does harm
anyway if you get in his way. Plus he always has a super-hot girlfriend
for some reason, but that has nothing to do with the damn jellyfish.
Anyway, you get the point. Harmless as long as you don’t touch them.
I put my hand on the now-silver-colored edge of Katia and said, “We’re
going in. Be safe. Keep that salve I gave you in your hotlist.”
“In and out, Carl,” she replied. “If you can’t figure it out, set the
bombs.”
I patted her, and the three of us half-walked, half-bounced along the top
of the submarine and headed inside.
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[ 26 ]
Neither Bobby nor Morris the human spider guy answered me. It didn’t say
either of the tomb raiders was dead on my chat, so I didn’t know what was
going on there. But we couldn’t wait any longer. Everyone else was in a
safe room. Donut, Louis, and Firas were back in Hump Town. They were in
the personal space with Juice Box and half the town. Juice Box was not
taking the death of her brother well. I was having Donut and Mordecai relay
to her what we wanted her to do, and Donut believed she was going to
agree.
We weren’t certain enough of the coordinates to the top of the
Necropolis, so we had to dial in the location just outside of Pandinus, the
town on the land quadrant. The plan was simple. We’d use the Gate of the
Feral Gods to teleport ourselves to the town and then we’d get our asses to a
saferoom as the god was summoned, and then we’d see what happened
next.
I was keenly aware that we were possibly about to fuck over everybody
in the bubble. Gwen was pretty vocal with this fact, but even she seemed
morbidly curious about what was going to happen next. I also worried about
the safety of Chris and Maggie, but there really wasn’t anything I could do
about it. If the mountain exploded or something, we’d all probably be dead.
Not just them.
The necropolis remained half-filled with water. I’d had her turn off the
drain once I read how to kill Quetzalcoatlus. And now thanks to the Map of
the Stars I’d received from the city boss corpse, we’d be able to see exactly
where she, along with every other boss, was on the map. Katia could
actually see her right now, and she was right by the exit, still fully
submerged.
Once the storm started in a few hours, the lightning would hopefully hit
the tower and zap everything still inside the submerged parts of the
necropolis. And probably the water quadrant, too, which was another reason
why we had to get the hell out of here.
“Ready?” I said. I’d already dialed in the first watch and placed it in the
first spot of the winding box. The second watch was also dialed to the time.
We’d stepped back out onto the ocean floor.
“Let’s do it,” Katia said. Tran nodded nervously.
“Remember. Go through quickly. Don’t linger in the middle. I’ll go
last.”
I placed the second watch in, closed the lip, and turned the winding
mechanism on the box of the watch. It took less than a second for it to start
to glow.
Quest Complete. The Gate of the Feral Gods.
I opened the winding box, and it rumbled in my hand. A swirling portal
appeared in front of us, huge, bigger than I expected. The portal was twenty
feet tall.
“Gah,” I cried as the three of us were instantly sucked through before I
could even examine it.
We splashed onto the beach outside of the small pazuzu town,
surrounded by a wall of water. I hadn’t realized the ocean water would get
sucked in, too. Luckily the portal had closed the moment I’d been pulled
through. I looked about to make sure both Katia and Tran had made it. They
had.
Even though the portal had only been open for about three or four
seconds, the spray of pressurized water had been enough to topple over the
metal wall just outside the town of Pandinus. A guard tower had also fallen
over. Further down the street, a wide-eyed pazuzu peered from his home. A
chunk of metal had pierced through his front door, skewering it like a
javelin. If we’d kept the gate open any longer, it would’ve done the same
thing to this town that we’d done to the sandcastle. Whoops.
“Into town,” I said, “Quick.” Even though we were out of the water, I
took another scroll of water breathing to stave off the vomiting that would
incapacitate me. A steady wind blew across the beach. The sun had already
gone down. The three of us turned and ran toward the closest pub.
New Achievement! Who Let the Gods Out?
You have allowed a feral god to enter your current realm. That is
the equivalent of dropping a grenade down your pants and shouting,
“Yolo!”
Here’s a fun fact. Other gods don’t like feral gods. They’ve been
thrown into the Nothing for a reason. They tend to react to this sort of
thing, depending on who you’ve brought out.
Reward: Whatever is about to happen is going to hit the Dungeon
Crawler World blooper reel for sure.
We stumbled toward the closest inn. Gwen and the rest of her team were
there, waiting for us. A pazuzu stared at us as we burst inside, sopping wet.
“Follow me!” I yelled at the bartender, moving toward the door to the
personal space. It didn’t follow, and I spent a maddening full minute giving
permission to Gwen and her people so they could get inside.
We fell into the room, which was already packed, landing in a heap in
front of Donut and Mordecai.
Donut leaped down from the counter and sniffed at me.
“Really, Carl. You smell terrible. And you have seaweed in your hair.”
I started to vomit seawater onto the floor.
Outside, the world rumbled.
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[ 28 ]
This next one was in the AI’s creepy, I’m touching myself voice. I
suppressed a shudder.
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[ 29 ]
Gwen vaulted over a pazuzu, twisting in the air. Her spear flashed as I
caught a face full of bloody sand. Katia’s crossbow appeared, and her
magical bolts pelted into a pair of the scorpions. The wind screamed, and
our visibility was next to nothing. It was like they were coming up through
the sand.
One lunged at me out of nowhere, stinger dripping with poison. I caught
the jagged point in my hand. I was immune to the venom, but my hand was
pierced, and I cried out in pain. I formed a fist around the barbed spike as
the feral creature struggled. The thing was frothing at the mouth like it had
goddamned rabies. My gauntlet appeared, ripping the end of the tail off.
Gore spewed from the wound as I kneed the monster in the chest. I hit him
in the jaw with a left cross, and then I stabbed him in the neck with the
point from his own stinger.
Donut: WE DID IT. I CAST HEAL CRITTER, AND IT WORKED.
I CAN’T BELIEVE IT. THE HEALTH IS STILL GOING DOWN
THOUGH. THE STUPID DOG DOESN’T EVEN APPRECIATE IT.
Louis: The house is breaking up. The balloon is slamming back and
forth. We’re getting whiplash. It’s like riding a bull.
Firas: I did that once. I fell off.
Carl: What about lightning?
Louis: It’s mostly below us. I’m more worried about the dog. We’re
trying to keep behind the heads, but they keep moving and howling. If
it sees us, we’re in trouble.
Carl: You have to keep that dog’s health topped up. Do your best.
Firas: Holy shit! Half the bowl just broke away! The side with the
Bactrian village is just gone!
A huge chunk of rock slammed onto the beach nearby. The ground
trembled. The other side of the island had probably just been buried in an
avalanche. We didn’t have much time. Above, the dog howled anew. I kept
my eye on the map of the necropolis. The dot of Quetzalcoatlus was
moving toward the room with the connector, but suddenly it veered away.
Morris: Bobby is gone! Oh god! I think he was crushed.
Carl: Stay on mission.
Morris: Almost there.
Low Thi: It’s chasing me! I have it distracted. Do it!
Warning: This message is from a deceased crawler.
The boss, which could move through walls, barely paused as it
apparently ripped through the crawler. It rocketed back toward Morris’s
position. Oh, god. I sent them to their doom.
Morris: It’s connected! I did it! Going back up…
Warning: This message is from a deceased crawler.
The same moment the message appeared, the towers in front of me lit
up with a lightning strike.
The sound was like that of every branch on every tree in the universe
cracking at the same time. The sand under the tower, including the sand I
was ankle-deep within, flashed. Pain ripped through me, and for a
horrifying moment I thought both of my feet had been ripped off. My health
went down almost half way. I was suddenly frozen in place. I stumbled, but
I couldn’t fall because I couldn’t move my legs. The entire beach around
the twin lightning towers for about two hundred feet in every direction had
turned to glass.
Katia, Gwen, and Tran were all equally stuck. Tran’s health was almost
zeroed out, but it moved back up as he healed himself. I pulled my leg, and
the glass splintered. I pulled myself free just in time to punch down a
charging pazuzu who hadn’t been caught in the glass. It was the last one.
I didn’t know if Quetzalcoatlus or the sudden electrification of the
interior of the temple was what killed Morris Sp, the final crawler within
the subterranean quadrant. It didn’t matter.
I wasn’t sure how many people started in the necropolis. They all died.
Each and every one. I was pretty sure they’d been dealt one of the worst
hands they could’ve gotten this entire floor. And that really sucked. I took a
moment in their honor.
But in the end, their sacrifice meant something. They completed their
job.
Bubble Notification. The guardian of Anser’s tomb has been
successfully destroyed. The Subterranean Quadrant has been
liberated!
All give congratulations to the crawlers who successfully liberated
the throne room. All hail crawlers Gwendolyn Duet, Low Thi, and
Morris Sp.
All crawlers who originated in the Subterranean Quadrant may
now freely travel to the other quadrants.
Oh, wait. They’re all dead!
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[ 30 ]
OceanofPDF.com
[ 31 ]
The celestial grenade had been a sponsor prize to Chris and Maggie from
the Skull Empire, and it was supposed to have been used to summon a pain
god to kill me. Instead, I used Prince Maestro’s gift to save myself. Myself
and everybody in two different bubbles.
The ball blinked once, and it seemed to wink out of existence. Quan
moved to fire his main attack. I leaped from the top of the spiraling plane,
plummeting out of range.
It didn’t matter. Quan never got a chance to fire his spell.
The grenade was designed to summon a god. It would be a random god.
That is, unless the person who threw the grenade worshiped a deity.
Emberus appeared, having been involuntarily summoned to this location
from just a few miles over. As I plummeted out of the sky and toward the
ground below, I twisted in the air to see the god manifest above us. I
cringed, preparing for the heat. It never came.
He took on a strange form, different than before. He was nothing more
than a massive, floating head and shoulders. The god was huge and angry,
his skin a sort of shimmering, smoldering rocky gray dotted with multicolor
hotspots, almost like acne. A secondary mouth screamed on his right cheek,
glowing red. Above this second mouth, his skin was sunken in and
flattened, like an ancient injury that had healed poorly. His empty eye
sockets trailed smoke and rained blood.
The spiraling drop bear hit him right in the nose and exploded.
You have been imbued with Divine Intervention. You are
invulnerable for sixty seconds.
I was invulnerable. Donut wasn’t.
Quan had been in there somewhere, and he wasn’t there now. I didn’t
know if he’d been killed or not, but if he was still alive, he’d been knocked
from the sky.
The head was huge, city-sized, but still smaller than the god had been
just moments before when he’d been pounding on the side of bubble 18.
It looked as if we were going to miss hitting Orthrus. Instead, we’d land
in what looked like a flat valley that was part of the land quadrant of this
world. There was a level stairwell just sitting there not too far away, out in
the open. I could see the light shining off of it, reaching desperately into the
sky like a spotlight.
“Orthrus,” the god said, his relief-filled voice flowing into the world,
filling the valley with sound. The blood pouring from the god’s eyes turned
to rain. “Orthrus. There you are. I’ve been looking for you. I was so very
worried.”
The god was supposed to hang around for sixty seconds. He didn’t.
Even before we hit the ground, Orthrus just blinked away. I twisted, and the
god was also gone, leaving a shimmering wake in the sky. The world
around us plunged into darkness, lit only by the spotlight from the stairwell
location.
I flipped onto my stomach. “Hold on,” I cried.
We slammed into the ground. Donut, on my back, cried out in pain as
she bounced up off me. The wind knocked out of me, but my bones didn’t
break. I took no damage. I jumped to my feet, breathing.
Entering the land quadrant of the Soulless Prophet.
Donut was unconscious. Her health had been knocked all the way down
to 5%, and I realized her skin was smoldering, her hair singed. Smoke had
finally stopped pouring from her paw. I immediately cast a heal scroll, and
her health returned. I rubbed her fur, and my hands came away black. The
god, even in the giant floating head form had been blazing hot. The Divine
Intervention buff that came with the celestial grenade had protected me, and
I hadn’t even realized it.
The only light came from the stairwell, a quarter of a mile away. It
reminded me of when it all started, of that stairwell shining into the
freezing, night air.
Something slammed into me. I went flying back.
Quan. He’d sneaked up and hit me with his lightning attack. My
invulnerability was still active for another few seconds. You goddamn idiot.
I leaped to my feet, turned toward him, and I charged.
The half-elf’s eyes went huge. I punched him straight in the face with
my bare fist, and he flew back. A health bar appeared.
“You murderous fuck,” I yelled as he scrambled to his feet. “I’m going
to rip you to pieces.”
A knife appeared in Quan’s hand, and he stabbed at me. The knife
exploded in his hand just as my invulnerability ran out. The buff was
invisible, I realized. I had no indicator over my head saying I was
invulnerable. There was no other explanation as to why the idiot would’ve
attacked me now.
I was now able to be hurt, but he didn’t know that. I gasped, and I tried
to hide it. Even though the god was gone, the air felt as if it was on fire. The
ground, I realized, was burning hot to the touch. It didn’t hurt my feet, but I
could sense it. The stench of burning flesh filled this world.
I growled, anger building and building. I thought of what he’d done.
What he’d purposely done.
“Don’t you realize,” I said. I was unable to make a coherent sentence
come out. “Don’t you realize?”
Don’t you realize what you’ve done, I was trying to say. You only care
about yourself. You’re stronger than all of us, but you don’t care. Think of
all the good you could do. Think of how much better we’d all be if you
weren’t such a selfish prick. But that’s not what came out. “Don’t you
realize,” I said again, the words a jumbled growl. “You’re a bully. You’re a
bully and nobody likes you. That’s why…” I caught myself.
The man turned and tried to fly away. I grasped him by the magical
robe, and I slammed him to the ground. He hit face-first into a rock, and
teeth went flying. I activated Talon Strike on my foot and slammed down.
But the man was quick, and he rolled away.
Stop, a distant voice cried in my head. Stop. He’s not the enemy.
Fuck you, I said to that voice. He is the enemy. He’s the worst kind.
Quan was a small guy, but he was fast. Blood poured from his mouth.
He glowed as he healed himself.
I lunged, and he continued to roll on the ground. He suddenly leaped to
his feet, backflipping. His hand glowed blue. I jumped forward, grabbed his
glowing left arm, and I yanked it, trying to interrupt the spell and pull him
off balance.
At the same moment, he tried once again to take flight and escape, only
this time he used some sort of special ability that caused him to launch
away like a rocket, superman-like. The crawler screamed in agony as I fell
back onto my ass. He took flight, disappearing into the darkness. Stunned, I
watched the trajectory of the blue dot on the map. He landed a quarter mile
away, and he stumbled into the stairwell station, disappearing.
“Coward,” I shouted, my rage bubbling over. “This isn’t over!”
Carl: Tran, send a message to Quan for me. Tell him that was just a
deposit.
I stared down at the severed arm in my hand. It was his whole damn
arm, all the way to the shoulder. It sagged, dangling limply in my grip. I just
stared at it, breathing heavily.
I’d ripped his goddamned arm off. He had three rings on his fingers.
I turned, and Donut had awakened. Her luminous eyes blinked at me. I
couldn’t read the expression on her face.
I sat on the hot ground, which was rapidly cooling. Fog filled the world.
Holy shit, I thought. Holy shit. That just happened. Holy shit, we’re still
alive.
Before I could bring myself to say anything to Donut, the
announcement came.
Quest Failed! Get Orthrus.
Not a single one of you was able to kill a level 10 puppy. A puppy.
It’s no wonder you guys keep dying.
Jimbo the monkey is never going to get adopted now!
As a penalty for failing the quest, all safe rooms will only serve
monkey soup and saltine crackers for the remainder of this floor.
I groaned, rolling onto my back. I felt as if I’d been run over.
Quest Complete! The Dumber of the Flunkies!
You saved a sweet, innocent puppy! He’s now frolicking on the
twelfth floor where he will soon resume his training. Nun-defiling is
back on the menu!
Reward: You’ve received a platinum quest box!
I briefly wondered who lived here in this bubble. I didn’t see anybody,
mobs or crawlers. They’d likely all fled when Emberus started his rampage.
I could go to sleep here. That, of course, would be a terrible idea.
Donut just sat next to me. She still hadn’t said a word since we’d
jumped from the plane.
I sent a message to Imani.
Carl: Might as well get started.
Imani: Are you sure? Shouldn’t we wait until you’re back?
Carl: Don’t have time. If a bunch of gods start popping up, we’ll
deal with it when it happens.
I still had a whole page of notifications to read. I was putting it off. I
now had two new tattoos, one on the back of each of my hands. Each was
of a sun. Both tattoos glowed vaguely orange.
“You know what, Carl? I’ve decided something,” Donut said, finally
speaking. She released Mongo, who squawked and started investigating this
strange, new world.
“Yeah, Donut?”
“I think they’re right about you. I think you’re crazy. Like, not a little
weird crazy. Not guy who eats cereal without milk crazy. But crazy, crazy.
Straitjacket crazy.”
I took the cat into my lap, and then I pulled her to my chest. She purred
heavily into my ear.
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[ 32 ]
A drop of blood and some coins once a day didn’t seem so bad.
I didn’t know what a “Church quest” was. I couldn’t remember seeing
anything like that in the cookbook, but that was the most worrisome of all
the rules. Donut was going to be pissed by the 5% gold payment, but we
could work around it by making her loot the majority of our kills. I didn’t
have anything in my inventory that had anything to do with Hellik. I moved
on to the benefits.
All adherents in good standing with the God Emberus receive the
following holy benefits:
That was actually pretty good, especially the access to Club Vanquisher.
There was an asterisk after “Free Access” without any sort of corresponding
information, which was worrying. But I guessed I’d figure that out when I
tried to get inside. Last I heard, however, the club was still closed thanks to
Prepotente going apeshit.
The burn effect was good. It was similar to poison, where it continued
to damage the target over time. I wasn’t sure what the benefits of temples
were. There was very little information about this stuff in the cookbook,
likely because this was all cleric territory, a class that’d never receive the
book in the first place.
The only temples I could recall seeing were entrances to Club
Vanquisher, but I hadn’t noticed if they were for different deities. I knew all
clerics and paladins had to pick a god upon class selection, and they’d all
been doing this stuff since the third floor, so temples had to be all over the
place. I had one additional notification waiting for me.
Message from Emberus.
I swallowed. It was set up just like a regular chat notification, but it
glowed with a golden light. I clicked on it.
Emberus: My child, you have reunited me with my son’s lost pet. I
am grateful. I have granted you a boon. But our work is not done. I
have two tasks for you.
You have a received a boon from your god!
Your constitution has been raised by 25% for 30 hours!
The message seemed so normal. It was odd that the message came to
me this way. The system described him as unhinged, but nothing about any
of the benefits or requirements seemed too crazy. If all the boons were this
good, then it was totally worth it. The moment I clicked away from the
message, I received two new notifications.
Unlike regular quests, these came in the god’s gravelly voice.
New Quest. Find Out Who Killed My Son.
Geyrun was murdered. Find out who did it and why. My only clue
is that the most obvious suspect, my brother Hellik, was in council with
the rest of us when it happened. Visit the high cleric at the Emberus
Shrine at Club Vanquisher for additional details.
Time Limit: There is no time limit for this quest. However, you will
receive a smite if you attempt to exit the 18 th floor of the world
dungeon before this task is complete.
Reward: That depends on who did it.
Based on all the previous hints at this, I figured this was coming. At
least there was no hurry. I clicked over to the next notification. Emberus’s
voice took on a decidedly angry tone for this one.
New Quest. Kill Hellik.
My twin brother Hellik, god of Sun and Life seeks to kill both me
and my older brother, Taranis God of Thunder and regent to the
Celestial Throne. He is a fool. He is a danger. He has no right to exist.
As an adherent, it is your task to kill him. You will receive a bonus if his
death is painful.
Time Limit: Hellik must die before you reach the 12 th floor. If he still
lives, you will receive a smite.
Reward: Slaying Hellik will result in a Celestial God Box.
Warning: Killing a god may have some unintended consequences
for all crawlers.
I took a deep breath. If Hellik looked anything like Emberus did, killing
him wasn’t going to happen any time soon. Gods were invulnerable and
level 250.
Again, this was something to worry about later. The idea of a celestial
box was intoxicating, but the notion of harming one of those things was
absurd. Even with Katia’s special bolt that removed their invulnerability for
a few seconds, it just seemed impossible.
We paused at the stairwell as I explained to Donut and Mordecai all of
the god’s benefits and tasks. As expected, Donut lost her mind at the 5%
tithe.
“Well you’re just going to have to immediately remove yourself from
this religion. It’s as simple as that, Carl. I don’t know what you were
thinking. We’ll just have to live with whatever this smite business is. Surely
it can’t be worse than five percent. It’s an outrage!”
“Five percent is a lot, but it’s nothing compared to some religions. You
know Bea’s parents paid twenty percent of their income to their church?
They used to get mad at her when she didn’t donate, too.”
“Twenty percent? I find that hard to believe, Carl.”
“It’s true. And her dad was a lawyer. They made a ton of money.”
“Wow. It’s no wonder they were always so grumpy.”
Mordecai also called me an idiot, but he was distracted. He said we
needed us to get back to the saferoom as soon as possible. Thanks to
Samantha’s help, he’d figured out the yam thing. He had a potion for me.
The stairwell was placed atop a perfectly-square, large sheet of metal
with a small lip around it, like a giant cookie sheet that was about 10x10
feet. The stairwell was just a magical hole cut in the center. I wondered
what had happened here in this bubble.
Fresh blood splattered on the metal. That was from Quan’s passage. I
smiled, looking down at the bare arm still in my hand. Had I just been
walking with this thing in my hand? Huh. I hadn’t managed to rip or tear
the robe, unfortunately, but I was pretty sure I’d stopped him from using his
lightning attack for good. Some crawlers had a limb regeneration benefit,
but the spell was pretty rare. And apparently the limb didn’t just regrow
right away. Hopefully he learned his lesson.
“He’s going to try to hurt us now,” Donut said, looking down at the arm.
“We already have Maggie and Maestro and Lucia after us. You should have
killed him.”
“I would have, but he got away,” I said.
“Are you really going to keep the arm? Because that’s really gross,
Carl.”
“Of course I’m going to keep it.” The saferoom now appeared on my
map, but I still couldn’t see anything. Donut said it was a hatch into the
ground.
He had three rings on the fingers. I pulled the first one off. It was a
simple plus two ring of strength. These things had been pretty common on
the first two floors. I put it on, making it my fifth ring. I could wear a total
of ten rings, but I’d try to avoid putting one on my thumbs if I could.
The second ring was more interesting.
Rockard’s Ring of Sniping.
This amber-stoned ring is named after Rockard, one of the
dungeon’s most infamous crawlers. This orcish warrior was known for
his uncanny ability to swoop in at the last moment and steal glory from
other crawlers, gaining the best loot and experience. Everybody hated
him. It was great!
Fun fact. This guy led his season’s top 10 list until he was knifed in
his sleep by his own mother. Luckily for you, crawlers can’t be killed
by other crawlers in saferooms anymore. A shame, really.
Wearing this ring imbues the following benefits:
The Ripe benefit.
The Loaded benefit.
I looked up both of the benefits.
Ripe.
All creatures with less than 50% health are indicated on your map.
This does not increase your map’s view, but used in conjunction with
other skills such as Pathfinder, it makes being a glory-stealing asshole
really easy.
No wonder Quan had received such a reputation. The description was
correct. Something like this made experience sniping simple. I remembered
what had happened at the end of the last floor when he’d attempted to kill
the province boss that Miriam Dom and Prepotente had been trying to kill.
He’d screwed it up and fled.
The next benefit probably hadn’t been too useful thus far. That
would’ve changed for him starting the next floor. I grinned.
Loaded.
All non-hidden creatures wearing magical gear are indicated on
your map. Particularly useful when you only want to hang out with the
real fashionistas and not just the posers wearing fake shit. Also good if
you want to sneak up behind someone, bonk them on their head, and
steal all their stuff.
I also added this ring to my finger.
The last ring wasn’t enchanted. I blinked at that until I realized this was
a ring from before. It was a gold band stuck on his index finger. It didn’t
come off easily, like it was too small. I twisted and pulled. The finger
crunched. “Whoops,” I muttered.
The description just said Sappy gold ring. Worthless. Toss it. I held it
up to the light orb floating over us, and I could see a few faded characters
carved on the inside of the band. “For Daddy.” I shoved the ring back on the
finger, but it wouldn’t go all the way. I pushed it to the first knuckle and
then pulled the whole thing into my inventory.
I touched the metal sheet containing the stairwell. I was expecting it to
be burning hot, but it was cool to the touch. I pushed it like a sled all the
remaining way to the saferoom. It moved easily.
I figured it’d be best to have an escape directly outside the safe room. I
didn’t want to stay here in this weird world since we had so much to do, but
we were stuck for the moment, and it was better to be prepared.
Katia: Louis just ate some monkey soup and got sick. He rushed
into the personal space bathroom before I could stop him.
I cursed and immediately moved to my menu, clicked over to the
second tab of my scratch pad, and I erased everything in the notes section,
including the map and the coordinates. I wrote: Louis, if you see this,
don’t say a word. The words underlined themselves one by one as the
magical quill started to write on the paper attached to the inside of the
toilet-stall door. The underlining stopped at Louis, if you see.
Warning: You are out of ink.
I suppressed a growl. Last I’d checked, we’d still had half of a jar left.
The container sat on a little shelf I’d installed on the inside of the stall, and
both Katia and Donut knew by now to be careful when they pushed the
door open since the whole thing wobbled. That idiot must have spilled it,
especially if he was rushing toward the toilet and slammed into the door.
The main bathroom in the personal space was like the bathrooms in
regular saferooms. You walked in, and there was a sink and mirror against
one wall. The upgraded shower was on one side in the pink-tiled room, and
the stall was on the other. The metal stall door had a lock on it and looked
just like any typical bathroom stall one would find anywhere from before.
They were not exclusive spaces like the random ones throughout the
dungeon. Inside the wide stall there was a single toilet, a stand-up urinal,
and a magical litter box. Mordecai, as a shapeshifter, apparently didn’t ever
use the bathroom unlike Katia.
NPCs couldn’t enter the bathrooms, or any of the other rooms like the
training room or crafting room, without being escorted in. When the
dromedarian kids needed to go, we sent them back out into the safe room or
just told them to hold it. If that wasn’t possible, like when a god was outside
trashing the world, Katia escorted them in and removed the paper, ink, and
quill before they could see it and say something out loud.
Fellow crawlers were a different story. They had free access to the
bathroom once they were inside. However, we told everyone to use the
bathrooms out in the attached saferooms instead. Katia said it was because
they gave us limited supplies, which was true, but it was also because the
stall was now the only place we could trade messages without anybody
seeing.
We’d started trading messages by using one of Mordecai’s dry erase
markers against the interior metal, but the cleaner bot kept erasing it. I
eventually figured out that the magical paper, pen, and quill set—the Coffee
Shop Author Kit—worked even better since it was two ways. I attached the
paper to the interior wall using a magnetic clip I’d looted from the Juicer’s
boss room all the way on the first floor. If Katia wrote something using the
magical pen, It’d appear in my scratchpad, and I could respond right away.
Donut could also use it, but it required her to jump on the shelf housing the
ink and to write on the paper using her mouth. She’d only attempted it once.
She wrote, I AM NOT USING THIS, CARL, and that was it.
Katia had removed everything once we packed the personal space with
refugees, but she’d just replaced the quill and paper to relay some
information about the coordinates from her latest calculation. She had failed
to remove it before Louis barged in.
Louis: Hey Carl, you didn’t tell me your bathroom was haunted!
Also, don’t eat the monkey soup. It’s gross.
Carl: We’ll be inside in a minute. Why don’t you check out the
magical shower? You won’t get the buffs, but I think you can still use it.
Louis: Uh, okay.
That would shut him up for a minute.
We finished positioning the stairwell by the saferoom hatch, which was
a round, trap door in the rocky ground. I pulled it open, and I went down a
short ladder into a standard-looking pub.
Entering the All-Seeing Spleen.
The saferoom’s proprietor was a human-sized cyclops guy who
appeared surprised at our entrance. He was dressed in rags and had a
homeless look about him. His name was Xander.
“Hey,” the man said. “I thought you lot left. What was all that rumbling
outside?”
“Just a god,” I said. “He’s gone now.”
Xander the cyclops nodded. “At least the prophet is dead. If you want
food, you’re out of luck. All of my supplies just disappeared. I only have
cans of Jimbo soup. And crackers.”
“That’s okay,” I said. “We’re just passing through.” I paused before the
entrance to the personal space. “Hey, do you know if there are any
Desperado Clubs near here?”
The man leaned back and rubbed his grizzled chin. “There was one the
next crater over, but it’s quite a walk. Dunno if it’s still there. There was one
in the tunnels, too, but since the Rat Queen died, the bloodworms took over,
and I wouldn’t dare go in there.”
“Thanks,” I said. I tossed him a gold coin. He tried to catch it, but he
missed by a wide margin. We entered the personal space.
Carl: We’re in the space now. It doesn’t look like we can get to a
Desperado Club easily, so you’re gonna have to run it. Katia is coming
over now to help with the coordination. Remind those guys that it has
to be quick. How many bubbles are we doing?
Imani: Only eight bubbles have met the requirements. The eighth
one only has one crawler in it. It’s just over 500 crawlers total, and
most of them are in the first four groups. There’s several more begging
for our help, but they’re gonna have to wait until phase two.
In order for us to help people trapped inside bubbles, they had to meet a
few requirements. First, they needed someone with access to the Desperado
Club. Second, all survivors of the bubble had to be in the same quadrant.
This second requirement was a tough one. We could only feasibly open
one gate per bubble. It meant three of the four castles had to be taken,
everyone else had to be dead, or some combination thereof. Sometimes
people weren’t 100% sure if another quadrant was empty of crawlers. Those
guys got put on the standby list. We didn’t do it to be assholes, but we
weren’t about to unleash a feral god in a closed bubble filled with crawlers
who couldn’t escape.
That rule was instituted by Imani in exchange for her helping with this.
She absolutely would not help a bubble’s population escape if it meant
leaving someone behind, even if it was only one person.
Elle, apparently, had a knack for telling if someone was lying. She,
Katia, and Imani were conducting the interviews at the Desperado, and
she’d already weeded a few crawlers out after it was determined they were
lying about the populations of their quadrants. Honestly, I was glad I wasn’t
a part of the process. I really wished there was a way to mass-pop bubbles,
but if a god such as Emberus couldn’t get inside one, then it didn’t seem
possible.
We still had three days left. We told everyone who didn’t meet the
requirements to do their best. We’d help in any way we could, but there was
only so much we could do.
Donut: ALSO, TELL THEM THAT IF THEY TRY TO STEAL
THE GATE, CARL WILL RIP THEIR ARMS OFF LIKE HE DID TO
QUAN.
Imani: Did you really rip his arm off?
Donut: ALL THE WAY TO THE SHOULDER. IT CAME OFF
LIKE A PIECE OF CHICKEN. CARL KEPT THE ARM AND IS
GOING TO USE IT AS A BACK SCRATCHER.
Elle: God, I hope they put that on the show tonight.
Carl: Remind them how dangerous it is. Don’t linger. Just hop right
through and stay away from the open gate.
The plan was pretty simple. Everyone in each group had to gather
outside the entrance of the Desperado Club in their bubble. The person in
the first group would enter and obtain the gate pieces. Once outside, they’d
dial into the coordinates provided by Katia, and the gate would open. Since
the distance wasn’t that great, the amount of time was usually less than a
minute for the portal to open. The gate would open, and they’d all go
through. They would end up in Hump Town just outside the Desperado.
The gatekeeper would be the last. The moment they went through, the gate
would close, and a feral god would appear in their still-closed bubble.
While this was happening, the gatekeeper would return to the Desperado
and hand the gate to the next in line, who would do it all over again.
Once the gate was handed off, Langley’s team would escort the refugees
to the stairwell, where they would descend. We didn’t want a huge crowd
gathering atop the bowl—which was now a half bowl thanks to Orthrus—so
we made it a rule they had to descend immediately.
If phase one went smoothly, this whole process would take about a half
hour.
By the time we were done, there’d be eight feral gods trapped in
bubbles and quite possibly eight real gods prowling around the lacuna
looking for them.
The last thing we wanted was eight more world quests like the last one.
It was a risk that could very easily backfire in a dozen different ways.
Mordecai’s advice was for everybody to just stay in their saferooms if a god
attacked their world. He or she would eventually go away, especially if
another god started roaming around nearby.
“Gods have a tendency to either fight or start fucking—usually both—
when they encounter each other outside the twelfth floor,” Mordecai had
said when we started planning this. “The best way to distract a god is with
another god. When that happens, they get unsummoned pretty quickly. I’ve
seen it happen a dozen times.”
I had two major worries with this plan. One was that Grull—or some
other sponsored deity—would get summoned and would make a beeline
toward our world to screw everything up. A second was that Maggie, who
was pinging around our bubble somewhere, would try the same. We’d
ferried Gwen’s team up onto the bowl, and they were acting as lookouts, but
so far nobody had seen signs of her.
Imani: Okay, everybody. We’re going to start the extractions. Pass
it on to all of your contacts. If you’re not a part of the groups, get to a
saferoom. If your bubble is popped, it’s probably a good idea to go
down the stairs. If you see a god, call it out in the chat so we can keep
track of them all.
“Here we go,” I said out loud. There was nobody in here except the
dromedarians and changelings.
I’d sent Louis out to escort Katia to the Desperado. After, he and Firas
would help wrangle the refugees. He’d blurted out a few things about our
bathroom being “haunted” and was about to say something else, but Katia
had put her hand on his shoulder and squeezed so hard, even he finally
realized to shut the hell up. Still, an observant fan would probably figure
out what he was yammering about. I hoped any such revelations would get
lost in the noise. I sent Donut into her room to observe her social media
board. If she saw any hints that the masses suspected what we were really
planning, she’d warn us.
Mordecai was back in the crafting room, working on the second potion
he’d made with the yam. Each one only took about an eighth of the
vegetable, and I told him we better have at least three, one for me, Katia,
and Donut.
At this point, there wasn’t anything else I could do but wait. On the
main screen in the saferoom, the kids were watching The Last Unicorn.
Juice Box was in her human form with little Bonnie the gnome sitting on
her lap. I watched the woman for a few moments as she stroked the kid’s
head. I thought of all the NPCs I’d killed on this floor.
I thought of the tens of thousands we were planning on killing during
phase four of the plan.
They’re better off dead. We are freeing them.
I thought of Coolie, the cookbook author who’d sacrificed everything
just in an attempt to kill two admins. I thought of Priestly, who wrote the
14 th edition and was the single best source of info on the ninth floor. I
wondered what either would do in my situation.
Coolie would do exactly what you’re doing. Priestly would not.
But first, Donut and I needed to make it back to bubble 543. We were
planning on making the journey tomorrow, after phase two.
But we weren’t going to risk it if there were a bunch of crazed gods
running around out there. This next hour was crucial, and it would
determine what happened next. The fact I wasn’t actively participating was
driving me up the wall. I’d been purposely putting off opening my boxes so
I’d have a distraction.
Everyone else had already opened their platinum quest boxes. Most
everyone got great stuff. Most of it was spell books. Donut received a tome
of Twinkle Toes, a cheap spell which made Mongo—or any other minion—
run really fast for as many seconds as her intelligence level. She’d been
pretty excited about it.
Katia also received a spell called Hanzo, which drew mobs closer to her.
Louis and Firas also got spellbooks, but I wasn’t sure what. Gwen got a new
spear she was pretty stoked about. Tran received a subscription box similar
to Donut’s tome of the floor club, but for scrolls.
I moved to open my achievements now.
An organ played hymnal music as this first achievement appeared.
New Achievement! Man of God!
Ever since that first monkey looked up into the sky and saw
something twinkling up there, you meat puppets have tried to force
twenty pounds of existential meaning into a ten pound sack of chaos.
You have found religion! You have pledged yourself to a life of
worship and piety! Finally. Now there are consequences for all of your
actions!
Reward: One of the greatest things about having a religion is the
unshakeable certainty that you’re right and everyone else who doesn’t
believe the same as you is wrong! That’s a pretty good reward. Oh, and
don’t forget about the eternal life thing, too. That’s always one of their
big selling points.
I grunted with amusement. A little changeling kid sat at the end of the
kitchen bar and was staring at me. I looked at him and said, “The System AI
is totally going to hell.”
“Okay,” the kid replied, not appreciating my lame attempt at humor. He
turned back to the movie.
New Achievement! Disarming Personality!
You ripped a fellow crawler’s arm off! With your bare hands! Holy
shit!
Reward: You’ve received a Silver Savage Box!
I received a few other airplane-related ones plus an achievement for
sustaining a certain amount of damage while invulnerable, but each only
resulted in low-tier adventurer boxes that contained nothing special except
another potion of dinosaur repellent.
I only had two more boxes to open. My fan box still had another twelve
hours on it.
This was my first savage box. They were meant for player killers, and I
was not looking forward to whatever this was. I wanted to avoid getting a
skull if I could. I cringed as the box opened.
A pair of handcuffs popped out. They were encased in red, fuzzy velvet.
Enchanted Handcuffs.
My safe word is, “Harder, Daddy.”
You know what these are. Your mom had a pair in her drawer, and
your dad was probably no stranger to these things, either.
Used to lock a person’s arms together at the wrist. This set of
novelty handcuffs is magically reinforced. Requires a strength of at
least 200 to break. There’s no key. These are locked and unlocked
magically by you. You may also institute an optional safe word or
phrase that disengages.
“Oh for fuck’s sake,” I said, putting the fuzzy handcuffs away.
The platinum quest box contained a magical tome. I picked the book up
and turned it over in my hands. The black, leather hardback was warm to
the touch and had a skull on the cover. I looked up at the ceiling and
grinned. “It’s nice to see we’re on the same wavelength for once.” I opened
the book, which caused it to glow. The spell added itself to my list.
Ping
Cost: 5 Mana
Also known as, “Here piggy, piggy,” or “The Night Dread,” Ping is
a hunting and artillery-aiming tool for those who do not care if their
quarry knows they’re coming.
The elven gunnery officers of the Dream all learn this spell the
moment they hit adulthood. Anyone who sits in a trench lives in abject
terror of the noise this spell creates.
Target: An area of one kilometer around the caster plus 500 meters
for every ten points of intelligence. Environmental factors and obstacles
may increase or decrease range.
Duration: Instantaneous. Ping travels at the speed of sound.
Cooldown: Five minutes.
Sends out an audible ping that gives the distance and location of all
non-crawlers and non-red-tagged mobs in a circle around you. It will
mark targets beyond the range of your map. Targets hit with Ping will
hear an audible ping noise, but they will not know from where the ping
originates.
Higher levels increases the amount of information about the target.
At level 5, you may imbue the ping with Fear.
It was disappointing that the spell didn’t work on mobs or crawlers, but
that was okay. This was a spell meant to be used on the sixth and ninth
floor. It would find NPCs, and more importantly, it would find both elites
and hunters.
Katia: It worked! The first group is coming through now.
Donut: DID THE GUY STEAL THE GATE?
Katia: No, he’s through and has already handed it off to the next
group. They came through really fast.
Louis: They’re all crying, they’re so happy. A hot orc chick just
hugged me.
Firas: That was totally a dude. And don’t let Juice Box know.
Carl: Okay, good. Keep me updated.
I hunkered down and waited for the hammer to fall.
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[ 33 ]
“I don’t see why Louis and Firas couldn’t just come and pick us up,” Donut
grumbled as we brushed ourselves off. A dark fog surrounded us, and the
air stank like dead meat. A couple of inches of water sat on the ground,
much to Donut’s dismay. Even with her Torch spell, the lacuna was
oppressively dark. In the distance, I heard the screech of the goddamned
turkey.
It was eerily quiet down here. And damp. I felt claustrophobic, despite
the lack of ceiling and walls. It felt as if we’d fallen into a sewer. I looked
up at the edge of the bubble we’d just plummeted off. It’d been pretty far.
“I don’t want them leaving 543 and risking the Twister. They’re gonna
have to leave in a few days, and if something happens to the balloon before
then, it’ll screw everything up.”
“They still have to leave to pick us up,” Donut grumbled.
“Yeah, but we’ll be right there. Come on,” I said as I pulled the chariot
from inventory and prepared it. “We’ll be there in less than an hour.”
Phase two was now finished, and we’d managed to save about 1,500
crawlers total. We’d added a few additional bubbles at the last minute. The
gate was back in Katia’s possession. Nobody had tried to steal it, much to
Donut’s surprise.
I wished that number of saved crawlers was higher, but more and more
bubbles were popping on their own thanks to the work of the survivors
inside.
A distressing amount of bubbles had gone dark.
There were also bubbles where the people inside had no access to the
Desperado Club or Club Vanquisher—which was still closed for repairs. It
turned out if you destroyed the entry pub to the Desperado, or the church
for the Vanquisher, it removed access to the club. For those crawlers, we
could only offer our sympathies and advice.
The only feral gods we unleashed into the lacuna were the giant turkey
and what appeared to be a city-sized swarm of insects. Luckily, the swarm
remained in the general area of their bubble number 801, way on the far
side. It’d eventually dispersed. In addition, we’d summoned five more gods.
These gods did more damage but eventually went away. I never got to see
any of them.
The turkey was actually the most dangerous of anything we summoned.
It was now sitting on top of some random popped bubble and screaming. It
had evidently tripled in size after it ate the remainder of the exploded feral
god. The thing was level 150.
I heard through the chat lines that Miriam Dom and Prepotente were
attempting to kill it using their debuff method.
After Phase two ended, we waited a few hours for anything else to
happen. Nothing did once the five gods wandered off. Donut and I couldn’t
wait any longer. After getting the chariot back from Langley and doing
some repairs, we decided to make the treacherous journey across the lacuna
back to bubble 543. Getting out of our current bubble was the most difficult
part. Donut attached herself to me as I did a spiderman impersonation using
only my feet on the side of the almost-invisible bottom half of the bubble.
Once I found the lip, we both used a half-splat to fall into the dark fog of
the lacuna.
The ground here was completely flat. A few red dots appeared on the
edge of my vision, but they shied away from us. Donut said they were
small, like rats. I used my new Ping spell to see if any weird NPCs or
hidden, small-sized gods were out here, and there was nothing.
We didn’t waste time. I revved up the chariot, and we were off. I kept a
lookout for the Xs of crawlers, but I didn’t see anything. Even here, there
were janitor mobs at work.
The pickup went as planned, and we were soon back atop the bowl,
which had broken in half. With the lip gone from the bowl, the world up
here had taken on a new appearance. A nearby, closed and glowing bubble
dominated the distant horizon, like the curve of a planet as seen from space.
“It’s pretty,” Donut said as we landed.
It was oddly beautiful, until I remembered each intact bubble was
potentially a tombstone, a monument to crawlers who’d fallen victim to this
fifth floor.
“Welcome home,” Firas said as we landed just outside of Hump Town.
A small crowd of crawlers had gathered to watch us descend. They
started clapping as we alighted.
“I thought everyone had gone down the stairs already,” I said.
“Obviously not, Carl,” Donut said, stiffening on my shoulder. She
waved. “People know they wouldn’t have been saved without you and me.
Now wave at them and don’t look so grumpy.”
A crocodilian stood in the front of the crowd, standing with Katia as we
landed. He stepped forward and gave me a fist bump.
“Hello, Florin,” I said. “I’m glad to see you made it out.”
The man rested his weight on his Mossberg shotgun. The modified and
now-magical weapon supposedly had unlimited ammo. “I managed to get
three of the castles on my own, but that last air one was impossible. Thanks
to you and Elle and Katia, I am free.” He looked at Donut. “You, too, pretty
girl.”
Donut preened. “Oh, you’re quite welcome.”
He’d been the last rescue of the first phase. He’d gotten access to the
Desperado Club because he’d “killed” Ifechi. He had a golden player killer
mark over his head, similar to Katia’s. They were the only two marks like
that in the dungeon.
“I’m glad to have helped,” I said.
He nodded.
“I’m headin’ down the stairs since there’s no more training to be had,
but I wanted to meet you first. I understand you’re going to throw a feral
god onto the ninth floor to jumble them up a bit. Good for you, mate. I’m
looking forward to hearing about it.”
“That’s the plan,” I said. I looked up. “We’re going to fuck those guys
up. We’re going to toss a god right into the camp of the Skull Empire.”
He leaned forward and clasped me on the shoulder with his green,
scaled hand. He kept his hand up there, and suddenly it was super awkward.
He stared at me with his dark, intense eyes.
“I was done, mate. I didn’t have anything,” he said, suddenly emotional.
“You should have met her. My Ife. She was amazing. A ray of light. She
was the bravest, kindest person I’d ever met. She gave me hope. I was done
until I went into the club, and I met Elle. She told me a story about this man
and his cat who’d stopped everything he was doing to help a group of old
people in wheelchairs and how this same man was planning on using this
artifact he’d found to save people stuck in their bubbles. And it reminded
me that Ife wasn’t the only one. That there is good in this world. There is
something left to fight for. I might die tomorrow, but it won’t be because
I’ve given up. And I want to thank you for that.”
“I’m just doing the best I can,” I said, not sure what else to say. The
dude’s claw was still on my shoulder. I reached up and clumsily patted it.
He retracted his arm quickly, as if surprised by my touch. “If you ever
need a backup gun, I’m in your debt.” Then just like that, he turned and
walked away. We watched him walk away in silence. He went straight to
the stairwell, and without turning around, he disappeared.
“That dude is pretty intense,” I said.
“I like him. Still, that would’ve been much more emotional if he wasn’t
a disgusting crocodile man,” Donut whispered after he was gone. “He’s
really dirty, too. He smells like a dead frog. And how does he get that shirt
on with such a giant head?”
“Goddamnit, Donut,” I said through gritted teeth. “Don’t say that shit
out loud.”
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[ 34 ]
I took out the two watches and clinked them in the winding box . I
placed the box right there into the sand dune atop the bowl, about ten
meters away from the stairwell. I dug the box in so it wouldn’t shift and get
messed with. If the box moved more than five feet in any direction once it
was set and counting down, the gate would get canceled. It was completely
dark out here. The only light was the distant sliver of a dead bubble,
glowing from within like they’d accidentally nuked themselves, and the
world was now irradiated.
A light breeze that smelled like cooked turkey wafted across the world.
Langley and his archers were now the only other crawlers left up here
with me and Donut. Langley stood beside me, watching as I pushed the box
deeper into the sand. I stood and wiped my hands on my boxers.
“What’s your plan?” I asked.
Langley cracked his neck. He was now level 32. He’d gained eight
levels since I’d first met him. “We’re going down there, and we’re going to
keep doing what we’ve been doing. Katia asked if we wanted to work with
her new team, but I am thinking we might join up with some others. We’ll
see. There are many large groups forming. The Popov brothers are looking
for archers. They wish to hunt down team Cichociemni, who have been
preying on weak crawlers. We need to break up the player killer groups
before they get too strong, so we might join up with them.”
I shook the man’s hand, and I wished him luck. The group turned and
left.
“They all lived,” Donut said. “Not those weirdos in the other quadrants,
but all the ones in our quadrant made it.”
I reached over and scratched her head.
It was just me, Donut, Mongo, and Juice Box. A few dromedarians
remained, rebuilding their town a short distance away. I watched as a pair of
camels on stilts worked to lift up a new wall.
“It’s not going to matter for them, is it?” Juice Box asked. She was
currently in the form of a buzz-ard, and it was disconcerting talking to her
like this. “This world isn’t real. All of that construction is for nothing. In a
few hours, this will all cease to exist.”
I didn’t respond.
“I can’t lose them,” Juice Box added after a moment. “They’re all I
have left. Remember our deal.”
“I will do my best,” I said. “I promise.”
The only quadrant in this whole bubble that still contained mobs was
the water quadrant. Katia and Tran were down there. She’d announced they
needed to train as much as they could, and they were going to go shark
hunting.
Katia: By my calculations, the gate you just placed will open in five
hours and four minutes.
I looked at the clock. The level would collapse in five hours and 27
minutes, giving us 23 minutes once the gate opened. Gates stayed open on
their own for twenty minutes unless all three pieces of the gate went
through them.
Carl: That’s cutting it pretty close.
Katia: Hey, it’s your plan, big guy.
Carl: True enough. Aren’t you going to miss this stuff?
Katia: Ask me in five and a half hours.
When we’d looted the letter and papers from Ghazi the mage, it’d
contained more than just a group of coordinates. At the back was a list of
scenarios that showed what would happen if different parts of the gate were
brought through an open portal. The very last scenario showed a method of
keeping the gate from unleashing a monster into the world. That required us
to leave one watch on one side, another on the opening side, and the
winding box inside the gate. It’d basically ruin the artifact, but it would
make the portal safe.
But it was the second-to-last scenario that had intrigued me. If the first
watch was left in the box, and it was taken through the portal, but the
second watch remained on the opening side, it’d result in a feral god
appearing on both sides of the portal.
The plan, as I loudly and happily explained, was straightforward. We’d
open a portal to the ninth floor, I’d keep the second watch, and we’d send
Juice Box through with the rest. That would result in a feral god appearing
on the ninth floor and hopefully trashing the area where it was summoned.
I remembered when Prince Stalwart had made his stupid little video
after he’d killed Manasa the singer. He’d been in a castle overlooking a
field of soldiers. This was right after the ninth floor had opened. Since there
was only one pre-built castle on the faction wars playing field, we now
knew in which of the nine locations where their army was located. Thanks
to the book of coordinates, I knew exactly where to summon the gate.
Seven of the nine factions had sued to stop this from happening. They
knew the armies weren’t yet strong enough to hold back an attack from a
feral god, especially if a second god was summoned to their location. The
ensuing chaos would be enough to flatten their fortifications and kill their
armies.
“You’re just going to kill people like me,” Juice Box had said when I
explained the plan to her. By this point, Louis had opened her eyes to the
reality of her existence. She was now fully aware of who she was and of her
place in this world. She was even more aware than Fire Brandy had been on
the previous level. “If these people, these game masters are truly immortal
in this place, then what’s the point? How is this a blow to them?”
I’d shrugged at the time. “If you were going to die no matter what,
which would you prefer? Die as a puppet, or die while striking back against
those who are doing this to you?”
“I suppose,” she’d said, but she didn’t seem convinced. Eventually, after
Donut spent some time working on her, she agreed to the plan in exchange
for a promise. A promise that I would attempt to bring her people with us
down every floor from now on. I’d told her I’d do my best, but it would be
difficult.
“I have seen you do the impossible,” she’d said. “I have faith. Just
promise me you’ll try, and I will carry your box through the portal.”
In the distance, a mighty, monkey-like screech filled the lacuna, echoing
strangely. This was far, far off. It was likely the feral god getting summoned
over on Imani and Elle’s now-empty world.
“Carl, I’ve decided I don’t like giant monsters,” Donut announced. “I’ll
be much happier when we’re done here.”
A second roar filled the darkness. This was a different sound. A
different creature. A deeper roar. The sky rumbled and flashed a few times,
like a distant thunder storm.
The sky went from sheer darkness to a series of pyrotechnic flashes and
bursts. Several seconds later, the sound of the clash reached us. The world
rumbled under our feet.
“Whatever we summoned on Imani’s world also summoned a god,” I
said, watching the distant lights. Since the feral god wasn’t protected by a
bubble, whatever this was should be over soon.
Zev: Hello, crawlers.
Donut: HI ZEV!
Zev: Just so you know, there was yet another last-minute legal
challenge to what you’re about to attempt. It, again, failed. They almost
won the injunction, but the Valtay Corporation sent in an attorney to
assist Borant’s position. They had some interesting legal arguments
regarding you, Carl. Apparently, since you now own stock in a
company based in the Skull Empire, the lawsuit needed to be filed in a
different court. Taxpayers who are not in arrears are afforded different
protections. It was enough to dismiss that last-minute effort.
Carl: Borant and the Valtay working together? Wow.
Zev: It’s no surprise since the sole plaintiff for this one was the
Skull Empire, and even though we are currently at odds with the
Valtay, neither entity is a big fan of the orcs.
I bit my lip, not allowing my sudden anger to bubble over into the chat.
A lawsuit. A lawsuit because I was threatening their goddamn toy soldiers
and imaginary fortifications. A goddamn lawsuit.
The ground rumbled again. Was that a third monster? It sounded like an
angry bellow. Actual words being shouted. Thankfully it was still far off.
Zev: Anyway, I’ve been asked to pass on a message from my boss.
Carl: Okay. Let’s hear it.
Zev: This is directly from the politburo, who have recently replaced
the board of directors as principal controllers of the Borant
Corporation. This is a direct quote. “Crawler Carl and Donut. While
we approve of what you are planning, we wish to make something clear.
Game-breaking antics that directly affect sponsors will not be tolerated
in the future.” That was the whole message. It came from the top.
I tried to suppress a grin. I copied the message and pasted it into my
scratchpad just in case they decided to nuke the message string later. A deep
sense of satisfaction replaced my anger. The goddamn mudskippers
approved of what we were planning because it meant the other sponsors
were going to lose a metric fuck ton of money, which would in turn force
them to spend a ton more to make up for their losses. And since nobody
could actually die on the ninth floor, it was all in good fun for everybody
involved. Something everybody would laugh about after it was all over and
done with. After all, it was just money, right?
Carl: Tell them I said fuck you very much, and if they don’t want
the game “broken” maybe they shouldn’t give us the tools to break it.
Zev: Crawler, you know such language is not acceptable. Best of
luck to you.
Donut: BYE, ZEV!
Almost as soon as the message from Zev ended, we received another
message.
Gideon: Hey, uh, Carl and Donut?
Donut: OMG HI GIDEON!
Gideon was a crawler who was pretty active in the chats. I’d only met
him once. He was some sort of human tank class. I couldn’t remember his
details. We hadn’t needed to save him because his team had popped their
bubble early. He’d been there during the last fight on the previous floor, and
I knew the man could handle himself. I couldn’t remember where he was
from. Donut liked him because he’d once said he was allergic to dogs.
Carl: Gideon, you shouldn’t be out here. Go down the stairs.
Gideon: I’m about to go down, but I wanted to warn you. Two god
things just rolled past my world while beating the shit out of each other.
One was a giant, hairless gorilla thing, and the other, I think the real
god, was a snake with the head of a bald guy. Kinda looked like Woody
Harrelson. You know, the guy from Cheers?
Donut: HE WAS IN THE ZOMBIE MOVIE I LIKED. THE ONE
ABOUT TWINKIES.
Gideon: Yeah, so the Woody Harrelson god killed the monkey god,
and they both disappeared. But just before he killed him, he threw the
gorilla against one of the bubbles with a monster inside. I could see the
bubble pop from here, and the monster got out. I think it might be
headed in your direction. It’s carrying a very large whip.
That new, third roar filled the world again. It was definitely shouting
something, getting closer.
This was a deep, beefy voice. I couldn’t tell if it was male or female,
though it reminded me of the Hoarder boss. It sounded absolutely irate.
“It’s a woman,” Donut said after a moment. “She really needs a throat
lozenge or something. She sounds like she’s been smoking nonstop since
she was a baby.”
The feral god cried again, and this time I could understand what she was
saying.
“Psamathe,” she screamed. “Samantha! I can smell you! I know you
escaped! You may be hiding, but I will find you, you worthless little
whore!”
“Uh oh,” Donut said. “That doesn’t sound good.”
I was about to send a message to Katia, telling her to abort everything
and to get to a stairwell when I received a surprising notification.
You have received an Emergency Platinum Benefactor Box from
your sponsor, The Open Intellect Pacifist Action Network, Intergalactic
NFC.
“Samantha!” the massive feral god shouted. In the distance, I caught
sight of a pair of batlike, beating wings. The creature stood atop that distant,
glowing bubble. It was only in silhouette, but the shape was of a fat
creature, overflowing with rolls of flesh and with no neck. The thing wasn’t
nearly as big as the other gods, not even close, but it was still huge. It
carried a sparkling whip that crackled with lightning. “Samantha,” it
howled as it approached.
Not a god. A demon. A feral demon. It would be here in minutes.
“If it gets too close, go down the stairs, Donut,” I yelled, and I sprinted
back toward Hump Town. I needed to open the goddamn loot box.
We’d been waiting for a few hours now, just sitting there while Juice Box
changed form to entertain us. After the appearance of the demon, the
following hours of silence were jarring.
Juice Box was actually being super helpful, showing us forms of
monsters I’d never heard of and then showing me the best way to kill them.
Some of these monsters were listed in the cookbook, but for many of them,
the weaknesses weren’t noted. I was taking notes of everything.
Each time she changed, Juice Box reverted to her buzz-ard form before
forming into something else. The creature had a special hunting ability that
could find creatures hidden in the sand.
Eventually, I got sick of waiting. We were running out of time.
“I know you’re there, Maggie. I don’t know what you’re waiting for. If
you want to talk, come on out.”
A full minute of silence followed. But then the voice came. “They told
me about the potion,” Chris—Maggie—called from their hiding place. A
chill washed over me.
It sounded as if they were directly below me, which startled me. It was
muffled, but still super close, almost like the voice was whispering in my
ear.
It was why nobody had been able to find them. Rock creatures all came
with camouflage abilities. It turned out Chris had the ability to burrow into
sand dunes and disappear.
“Yeah,” I said. I slowly moved away. Next to me, Mongo squawked.
Juice Box took flight, pointing downward. They were actually several feet
away from where the voice was coming from. Another ability? Donut
moved to jump atop the dinosaur.
I continued, talking loudly. “I got this weird yam thing in a sponsor box,
and at first, our manager guy couldn’t figure it out. I don’t know if you saw
what happened earlier, but that Samantha doll head that was out here? She
helped him figure it out. It actually has multiple uses. The yam thing grows
in lava or magma or something. I honestly don’t remember what the
difference is between the two. But anyway, the yam can either be used for a
type of special ink for scrolls, or it can be used for a few different lava-
themed potions. It can be a special type of healing scroll for lava rock
monsters like Chris, or it can be used as a phase potion for people to be able
to easily pass through lava rock. And that’s what Mordecai made for us. A
Phase Lava Rock potion. Once I take it, you won’t be able to touch me.
Chris’s arms will go right through me.”
Juice Box indicated they were moving. They’d been slowly, slowly
creeping through the sand in full camouflage mode. Juice Box had sensed
their presence an hour ago, and she’d quietly pointed it out to us. I wouldn’t
be able to do anything until they revealed themselves.
My pulse quickened. We didn’t have Katia here with her special bolt.
This was it.
“They have my other daughter, Carl. They’re going to bring her back.
They’re going to turn her into a monster and make someone kill her if I
don’t do this. I can’t let it happen.”
“They’re doing this to all of us,” I said, slowly sliding along the sand.
“We all lost someone, Maggie. We could’ve worked together. You got
misled. I regret what happened with Yvette. But you’re focusing your anger
on the wrong people.”
“You don’t understand,” she replied after a moment. “I’m not angry
anymore.” They had to move very slowly to keep from being detected. She
could throw her voice, and she made it seem like she was stalking me, but I
wasn’t the target. The winding box was. They’re going to try to move it, or
drop it down into the temple below. They only needed to move it five feet.
“Chris is a good guy,” I said, slowly moving away from the sand dune.
The Phase Lava Rock potion only lasted a minute, so I didn’t want to take it
too soon. “He didn’t do anything to you, and you’re torturing him.”
“You should just go down the stairs,” Maggie said. “I’m sorry it has
come to this. I was so angry, so blinded by what you’d done. I wasn’t a bad
person before this. I swear I wasn’t. But I have to protect my family, no
matter what. I thought it was done when I killed Frank, but I was wrong.
When the caprid came to us in the rest area, it told me it’d help if we killed
you.”
Caprid? Prepotente? That didn’t make sense. She had to be talking
about another creature.
Maggie suddenly shouted. “Fuck your warnings. If it’s legal to happen,
then it’s legal to say out loud. Fuck all of you. What’re you going to do,
accelerate me? Now?”
I realized she was talking to the AI. Or someone else.
“He’s a cleric. A goat thing. A liaison. He said I have to stop you, or…”
She stopped talking.
Carl: I think she’s lost her ability to speak.
Donut: SHE’S STILL THERE. SHE’S GOING TO TAKE THE
BOX.
Carl: Katia, how much time is left?
Katia: Ten minutes, give or take.
Carl: It’s close enough.
“Maggie,” I called. I edged closer to the box, positioning myself just
behind them. “I hope you can hear me. I’m sorry it’s come to this. That
doesn’t mean we can forget what happened, but I’m sorry how everything
played out. You got dealt a shitty hand, and that really sucks. I’ll let you...”
Chris erupted out of the ground next to the winding box. I slammed
onto the phase potion. I rushed toward the lava rock creature as he picked
up the box out of the ground, and he hurled it as hard as he could. It sailed
through the air in the same direction I’d tossed the Samantha head. The
door atop the box ripped open, and the two watches went flying in different
directions.
The phase potion made it so I could move through both lava and lava
rock. I reached forward, fingers open, right into Chris’s head. I grasped
until I felt it there, lodged in his brain. The worm was the size of my palm,
the only part of his body that was solid, and it felt like an uneven, squirming
sausage. I thought of that god crushing Slit the demon.
I pulled. I was expecting it to explode in my hand. I was phased, but it
wasn’t. But it didn’t die. Instead, it bit my palm and started to burrow even
as I retracted my hand.
“Gah,” I cried, pulling my hand to my chest. Chris collapsed in front of
me. I reached to grab the tail end of the long, black worm with my left
hand, but I missed, and it burrowed inside. I felt her there, in my arm,
moving through my body, like a sub diving below the waterline. She
disappeared.
“Shit, shit,” I cried. I scrambled into my inventory. There. I waited the
two more seconds on my potion countdown, and I slammed on the double-
healing potion. The same one I’d used to cure my parasitic infection on the
third floor. Mordecai had said this would work, but only if I drank it before
she got to my brain. And she’d get there fast.
The last time I’d taken the potion, I’d vomited out the parasites. This
time, she came right out of my goddamn neck, bursting forth like I’d been
shot by a sniper. Blood showered as she rocketed out of me. It felt as if I’d
been hit with a hammer. She thrashed, her health in the red with Poisoned
pulsing over her. Blood spewed from the hole in my neck. I moved to stomp
her down, but before I could get her, Mongo jumped forward and grabbed
her.
“Chew,” I croaked as I clenched my hand against the massive neck
wound. I tried to click Heal. You’ve been rendered Woozy! You ain’t
clicking shit right now! Nighty-Night.
Before I passed out, I watched Mongo gleefully crunch down on the
form of the Scree worm, ripping the tiny crawler into mulch and thus
ending the saga of Frank Q and Maggie My.
I was only unconscious for about two minutes. Donut healed me using a
scroll. I awakened to find her sitting over me worriedly. Chris sat nearby,
hand on his rocky head. He, too, had been healed by Donut.
“That hurt,” he said.
“Ditto,” I groaned.
Carl: Hey Imani. He’s safe. It worked. We’ll get him to you on the
next floor.
Mongo vomited the corpse of Maggie and then ate it again.
“Wait,” I gasped. “We need to loot her inventory.”
“I got it all the first time he barfed her up. She had a lot of stuff,” Donut
said.
“Give it to Chris,” I said, falling onto my back.
“What do you mean? She has a lot of hats in here. Why does a worm
need hats? What does Chris need with a bunch of hats? I collect hats. I feel
strongly I should be able to keep them.”
Carl: Time?
Katia: Two minutes. Are you okay?
Shit, shit. Showtime.
Carl: Maggie is dead. Chris is safe. Make sure you’re anchored.
How about Tran? Is he safe?
Katia: He’s already away. He and Gwen’s team have gone down the
stairs.
Juice Box was back in human form and holding one of the watches that
Chris had tossed.
“What is this?” she asked, turning it over. “This isn’t my brother’s
watch.”
It was a facsimile, one of the ones I’d made long ago to trick the
dirigible gnomes. Katia had actually made the facsimile winding box. She’d
made it while pretending to learn how to use the engineering table. She was
much better at fabricating shapes than I was. She’d made the box in pieces
and had assembled it all within her own inventory. We’d exchanged the
pieces, facsimile and real when we’d hugged at the Desperado Club.
“Plan is changed,” I said to Juice Box, talking rapidly. I grabbed her by
her shoulders. My head still swam, and my neck ached. “You need to go.
Now. The gate will be open in a few moments, but it’ll only be open for
twenty minutes. Don’t worry about bringing anything with you. We’re not
sending a god to the ninth floor. Not this time. We’re actually keeping the
gate. This isn’t going to be a one-time thing, not by a long shot. But I still
want you to go to Larracos. You need to stay hidden, but you need to tell
the others what you know. Do you understand? We’re not done with you
yet. By the time we get there, I want all the survivors to know what they
really are. Do you understand?”
The changeling prostitute couldn’t find the words. “What?... Where’s
the gate?”
“You can emulate a shark, right?” I asked. “Turn into a bird, and fly. Fly
as fast as you can, over the lip and then down into the water. The location
will be pretty obvious in a few minutes. It’s on this side. Hurry.”
She kissed me on the cheek. “Watch over my people. We have a deal.
And keep him safe, too. I love him.”
“Who?” I asked.
“Louis,” she said. “We’re going to be married.”
A few days back I had been chased by a massive, two-headed puppy. I’d
crashed an airplane into the face of a god. I watched a talking goat snuggle
up with a vampire after they killed the universe’s largest turkey. I’d just
chucked a haunted sex doll head fifty kilometers in order to settle a girl
fight between that same head and a makeup-encrusted demon the size of a
small town. I’d just reached into the head of a rock monster in order to
pluck a parasitic worm from his head.
And yet, despite all of this, what Juice Box had just said was the most
astounding thing I’d heard since this floor started. I looked at her like she
had slugs crawling from her nostrils. “Louis?” I asked. “Our Louis? You’re
in love with Louis? You’re getting married? Are you serious?”
The scowl she gave told me she was deadly serious.
“Remember your promise!” she said, not waiting for me to respond. She
leaped to the air, and she formed into a skyfowl. She rocketed away. In
seconds, she was gone. I rubbed my eyes, and I took a deep breath.
“Louis?” Donut said. “Carl, the whole world has gone insane.”
A groan turned our attention back to Chris, who was just sitting there in
a daze.
“Brandon,” Chris finally said, lowering his head. “Brandon.”
That sobered me up. I kneeled down before the man, and I placed my
hand on his leg, which was burning hot. “Your brother died saving the lives
of a lot of people. We’ll do this next part in his honor, okay?”
Time to level collapse: 21 minutes.
Katia: The gate is open. Those timed charges you made got sucked in. I
dropped the chum bomb nearby just before, and it worked really well.
The sharks are also slurping right in, and they’re already in their
feeding frenzy. Hopefully the bombs went off before the sharks got
there. I guess it doesn’t really matter. Some of those pain amplifier
jellies are getting pulled in, too.
Carl: Okay. Good job. Get to the stairs. Tell me when you’re out
and away. Hurry.
It was going to be tough for her to move through the water with the pull
of the current draining into the lowest level of the city of Larracos, but
she’d anchored herself to the rocky wall of the temple. She was going to use
the subterranean stairwell to exit, as there was an entrance right there near
the shelf where the Akula had been parked. This was the most dangerous
part for her, and I was worried, but she insisted she’d be able to do it no
problem.
For the next twenty minutes, the inverted cone of the city of Larracos
would be filled with a rush of water. The gate opened right inside the
faction market. There was probably a drainage system, but it would be
temporarily overwhelmed. The bombs would explode moments after they
arrived, leveling the market and scattering the shoppers and shopkeepers.
And then the sharks would come. If Katia’s math was correct, and the map
she’d made was accurate, more than half of the city would be submerged by
the time the gate closed. The only parts that would be spared were the upper
levels, the NPC residences.
The onslaught of water and bombs and sharks and other mobs would be
sudden, violent, destructive, and nowhere near where they thought it would
be.
Zev: Oh my god, Carl. They are enraged. This is not what you
promised.
Zev had dropped any semblance of her good little citizen of the Party
persona.
Carl: I promised nothing.
Zev: If you fill Larracos with water and mobs, it’s going to kill all
the NPCs. The markets will be flooded. The mercenaries will be killed.
If you kill the NPCs at the entrance bar, access to the Desperado Club
will be cut off. The sponsors won’t have entry to the Club to gamble.
They won’t be able to get to the markets where they can buy the
magical gear. Borant depends on that money. The sponsors need that
market to outfit their troops.
Carl: Oh, I’m sure they’ll patch it. That water’ll drain right out. It
might take a few days since there’s some sharks mixed in there, but it’ll
be fine.
Zev: No, Carl. You know this. We can’t add new worker NPCs once
a level is created. Mobs, yes, but NPCs? That’s written into the rules.
We can’t just replace the shopkeepers. The food market for the troops
was down there, too.
I did, indeed, know all of this. That was the point.
Carl: Whoops. My bad.
Zev: If they want to fix this, they’ll have to get the Syndicate to vote
on it. And they won’t have the votes. And even if they did, they’ll have
to get the AI on board, and that’s not going to happen. The whole
system is already spiraling, and it’s the earliest this has ever happened.
I’d killed people today, innocent people. A lot of innocent people.
But they were all NPCs, and none of them were former crawlers, and
that’s what mattered to me. Former crawlers with contracts like Mordecai
were valuable. They didn’t waste them in a city that was razed every
season. Still, there was no sugarcoating what I’d done.
We didn’t have time for moral debates. I was doing them a favor. And
while the emotional abuse of NPCs such as little Bonnie had been enough
to nearly break my sense of resolve, the knowledge that I’d just saved those
NPCs the horror of having to endure a bloody conflict that would end in
their inevitable deaths anyway was enough to ease any concern at what I’d
done.
Priestly had fallen into that trap, caring so much that it had paralyzed
him into inaction. It had finally broken him. I wasn’t going to make the
same mistake.
A distant part of me was alarmed at this attitude. But this was war, and
there was no use pretending like it wasn’t.
Zev continued to breathlessly rant. It was finally dawning on me that
her astonishment and outrage was actually an act, and what she really was
doing was relaying crucial information to us. She was practically giddy and
was barely containing it. She and Donut were talking somehow. Likely via
the social media board, but I didn’t dare ask, not even using the magical
paper we had hanging in the bathroom.
Borant’s outrage at what had really happened was testament to the idea
that they hadn’t caught on to our method of communication. I’d been half
certain that they’d known what Donut, Katia, and I had been meticulously
planning for days. Even Mordecai didn’t know all the details.
Zev: Half of them had their armies hidden in the city, so they
wouldn’t get hurt by the god. I’m sure plenty will get out, but you don’t
know what you’ve done. You’ve killed thousands. Tens of thousands.
Who knows what the playing field is going to look like when it settles.
Carl: I’m sure it’ll be wonderful for the ratings.
Zev: There’ll be consequences.
Carl: Probably. But tell them they approved this. We didn’t cheat.
We used the tools they gave us. Also, say they’re gonna want to wait to
see what happens next before they decide to, you know, accelerate me
or throw me into the disposal unit or whatever. I know they’re in real
danger of losing control of the season. Whomever ends up in control of
the next floor is going to make a lot of money.
Zev: What do you mean?
Carl: Just watch.
I closed out the message.
Katia: I’m out. Going down the stairs now.
Donut: BYE KATIA!
Carl: Okay. I’m adding Chris to the party so he travels with us. See
you on the other side. Good job today.
Katia: Good luck with class selection.
“I’m sad we’re not going on Odette’s show this time,” Donut said as we
walked to the stairwell. Chris walked ahead of us, head down. Mordecai
was ranting and raving at me over the chat, but I tuned him out.
“Don’t worry,” I said. “If I know Odette, she’ll probably have us on in a
day or two.”
“Do you think Juice Box made it?” Donut asked. “It didn’t let me add
her to my chat like it does with Sledgie and Mordecai.”
“She made it,” I said. “She’s had a hard life, and she’s a tough lady.
Plus, she’s in love. That gives people strength.”
Mordecai: And I don’t care how much that ring is valued at. Time
is up. I want you to toss it before you go down the stairs.
Carl: Mordecai, you really need to chill, you know that?
Mordecai: Carl. Son. You don’t know the forces you’re dealing
with. You can’t tempt fate like this. You only made it this far because
you’re making them a lot of money. But you just kicked them in the
financial balls. Do you think that’s going to stand?
Carl: Hey, I got my sponsor to purchase that box, didn’t I? I think
they got a deity sponsorship, too. That has to be worth something.
Mordecai: You can’t fight a war like this and expect to win.
Donut: DON’T BE MEAN TO CARL, MORDECAI. HE DIDN’T
DO IT ALONE. WE’RE ALL IN THIS TOGETHER.
Donut didn’t know how correct she was. I wasn’t nearly as alone as I
once thought I was. I pulled the xistera extension from my inventory, and I
examined it again. I ran my finger over the wicker-like substance, rubbing
the tiny inscription on the side.
Made for Crawler Carl by the Open Intellect Pacifist Action Network,
Intergalactic NFC with design approval by CEO and president of Outreach
Operations, Dr. P. Hu.
I put the head-tosser away, and I pulled the Ring of Divine Suffering out
of my inventory. I held it up to the meager light. It was one of the most
sought-after items by the treasure hunters.
“Are they still going to hunt us if they can’t sell on the market?” Donut
asked.
“I’m sure,” I said. “They’re going to want everything we have. Not just
the ring, but the gate, too. Can you imagine how powerful that’ll be on the
battlefield? There’s two different marketplaces. There’s the Desperado Club
market where the hunters sell their wares, and there’s the online one where
the crawlers sell using the kiosk. The kiosk ones are trashed. Crawlers use
the interface, but the faction wars guys have to actually go down to a
merchant and buy it. We just killed all those merchants. So no more buying
from crawlers.”
“But Zev said they can’t get into the Desperado Club anymore, so they
can’t buy from the bounty hunters, either.”
“Maybe, maybe not,” I said. “It’ll probably be closed for a while. But
what I’m guessing is going to happen is that each of the factions are quickly
deciding whether or not to send someone down to the sixth floor to collect
stuff manually and buy stuff from the other hunters while they’re there. We
didn’t wipe out all the armies, but we wiped out most of their ability to get
more gear, and we upset the power structure. They’re scrambling now,
wondering how they’re going to outfit their soldiers. There’s only one
feasible way. Either they don’t outfit them, or they risk sending their own
people down to the sixth floor. I could be wrong, but I suspect it’s going to
be crowded down there.”
We paused at the entrance to the stairwell. Chris entered and didn’t look
back. Poor guy. There were five minutes left. I looked about one last time.
A few hundred meters away, Dromedarians continued to fix their city. I
sighed.
“So we’re just going to have more hunters down there,” Donut said.
“Donut, have you ever heard the term, ‘seeding the pond?’”
Donut wasn’t impressed. “The kill, kill, kill lady said the hunters can
also collect bounties, and you’re worth a lot now. Everyone is going to be
coming after us.”
“That’s exactly what I’m hoping for.”
“I don’t like people hunting us, Carl.”
After the last recap episode, Lucia Mar had finally fallen off the number
one spot. The top ten list hadn’t changed too much, but there were a few
notable differences:
1. Carl – Primal – Compensated Anarchist – Level 47 – 1,000,000
(x2)
2. Lucia Mar – Lajabless – Black Inquisitor General – Level 48 –
500,000 (x2)
3. Prepotente – Caprid – Forsaken Aerialist – Level 55 – 400,000
(x2)
4. Donut – Cat – Former Child Actor – Level 39 – 300,000 (x2)
5. Dmitri and Maxim Popov – Nodling – Illusionist and Bogatyr –
Level 43 – 200,000 (x2)
6. Miriam Dom – Vampire – Shepherd – Level 52 – 100,000 (x2)
7. Elle McGib – Frost Maiden – Blizzardmancer – Level 47 –
100,000
8. Bogdon Ro – Human – Legatus – Level 44 – 100,000
9. Eva Sigrid – Half Nagini, Half-Orc – Level 40 – Nimblefoot
Enforcer – 100,000
10. Quan Ch – Half Elf – Imperial Security Trooper – Level 48 –
100,000 (x2)
I was now the number one crawler in the dungeon.
I patted Donut on the head. “Once the sixth floor opens, we’ll all be
locked in together. They’ll be just as trapped as we are.” I tossed the ring in
the air, and I caught it. I looked up into the sky, ending all pretense that I
was actually saying this to just Donut.
“You guys see this thing? I’ll tell you what. If you want it, it’s yours. It’s
right here. Come and get it, motherfuckers. Actually, you know what? I
have a better idea. No need to come to me because I’ll be coming to you.
That’s my pledge to you and to everyone else watching this. By the time the
sixth floor collapses, every single hunter who dares to set foot on the same
floor as us will be dead." Donut, Mongo, and I moved into the stairwell.
"This I swear on my life. One by one, I will break you. I will break you all.”
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EPILOGUE
“I got her,” Lexis said into the communicator. A floating image of her boss
appeared over the screen. “Killed a sac pirate. Captured another. I suggest
we make it look like he turned on his partner. Shot him right in the back.
He’s a null, so they’ll buy it. Oh, I also had to shoot a human. Bea’s partner.
He’s still alive. He tried to get to the pirate’s flechette. I’d call him brave,
but he’s crying like a little girl. He’s going to bleed out in a few minutes if I
don’t intervene.”
“What about the cat?” asked Odette.
“He’s knocked out with the rest of the settlement. The thing is fast. He
almost got away. Security will arrive in three minutes. The first responders
are on our payroll, but a supervisor will want to come down for this one.
I’m guessing we have twenty minutes at most. Do you want me to bring the
cat? Also, I can wipe the whole town if you want.”
Odette thought for a moment. “Any witnesses?”
“Just the ones I mentioned. The null, Beatrice, the human I shot, and the
cat.”
“Okay. Here’s what we do. We’re not going to vaporize the town. Leave
the null alive and plant the weapon like you suggested, but let the human
expire. Put the cat in a bounty cube and leave him there. Shoot the null with
the flechette gun. Maybe in the leg. Then drop it on the human. We’ll have
our security guys clean the scene up so it looks like the whole fight was
over the cat, and nothing else.”
“The null will talk,” Lexis said. “He’ll be facing multiple charges.”
“Don’t worry about that,” said Odette. “I’ll get a message to him after
he’s arrested. We’ll buy out his warrant. That’ll guarantee his cooperation.
I’ll have one of the security guys sneak the cat over to Borant. Let him
collect the walk-on bounty. How’s Beatrice taking this?”
“I, uh, had to knock her out and then stick her in a cube. She’s a little
freaked out about the whole thing. I don’t think she’s all there. She has
scratches all over her face.”
Odette nodded. “When she wakes up, make sure you tell her that I can’t
wait to meet her. And reassure her that we won’t be selling her to Borant.
Tell her we have a much better use for her.”
Lexis laughed. Her scanner beeped, indicating a security shuttle was
about to land. “So, I guess it worked out for everybody.” She looked down
at the dead sac. She thought of the poor cat, and what they were going to do
to him. She shuddered. “Well, almost everybody.”
Odette grunted. “We can’t all have happy endings. Now get to work.”
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WOOHOO!
You did it! You read another one! It’s almost like we’re dating. Pretty soon
we’ll be introducing each other to our parents and fighting about me eating
shredded cheese directly from the bag at 3 a.m..
Four books written. Wow. Book five is well underway with plenty of
chaos and mayhem, but it’s not quite done yet. As such, I don’t have an
exact date to give you, nor do I have a secret title to give to you just yet.
Don’t worry. It won’t be too long. If you sign up for my mailing list or
follow me on Amazon or on Facebook, you’ll know as soon as I put the
preorder link up.
Let’s talk about reviews. It’s kinda important. I know, I know, I beg you
guys for reviews every time. But reviews are super important. Without
reviews, Toby the pug will starve to death, and he needs to eat like five or
six meals a day. So please, please leave a review. Thanks so much!
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ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Matt Dinniman is a writer and artist from Gig Harbor, WA. When he isn’t attending cat shows,
wrangling dogs, feeding turtles, playing bass in a punk/metal band, or writing books about acid-
spitting chinchillas, he designs cat-themed greeting cards and decorations. If you’ve ever walked into
a Target or an IKEA or a Home Goods, looked at the weird wall art they have for sale there, and
thought to yourself, who buys this crap? The answer is, “Not nearly as many people as Matt would
like.” So please buy all his books. (Or his art!)
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MAILING LIST! PATREON!
Join the Matt Dinniman mailing list and get the dope on new releases and
more! Join up here!
If you’re feeling especially saucy, you can join the Matt Dinniman Patreon
and read advance chapters and whole books before they come out on
Amazon.
www.patreon.com/dinniman
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ALSO BY MATT DINNIMAN
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THE PAGE WHERE WE TOUT FACEBOOK GROUPS SO THEY LET US
SPAM THEM ABOUT THIS BOOK
Over on Facebook, if you want to talk about Gamelit. I mean if you really
want to talk about Gamelit, check out the Gamelit Society!
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