In contrast to the last one, this entry is after my self imposed deadline. Hopefully I don't make a habit out of this. Mid-terms fucked me up while I was writing the first draft of this. The good news is, I'm about to finish an online class I've been doing this semester, so my schedule will soon have some extra breathing room. I hope everyone enjoys the entry. If you do, please consider becoming a patron. There are numerous benefits, including deleted content, information from my personal notes, and the right to have me critique your story, or write one for you according to your specifications.
Ryan and Sophia were still catching
up—Ryan could have kept talking with her all night—when they heard a faint
whirring by the door. In flew a
fist-sized red and white drone carrying a camera. Following behind it, looking straight into the
camera, was Marvin Blackwood, the captain of Sad Cake Binge Gaming. Two more members of his team entered behind
him. They both had their own mini-drone:
one blue and gold, one dark purple and black.
The drones were AI piloted and programmed to follow them around. Presumably, they were using them to
live-stream their entrance to the party.
“And here we are!” Marvin said into his camera. He kept talking, but Ryan didn’t keep paying
attention to what he was saying. Max
walked off the stage, where he had been dancing, and over to greet the entering
team. Sophia stared at them.
“You’re thinking of pulling
something?” Ryan said to Sophia.
“More like daydreaming,” Sophia
said. “They’re good sports. They can handle it.”
Marvin went to the dance floor. The other two headed toward the swimming pool. Ryan wished he could use the pool himself,
but he hadn’t thought to pack swim trunks.
Ten minutes later, the music by the
dance floor stopped, and Max’s voice rang out in its place. “Hey, everyone, the annual Battle Royale game
will begin in about twenty minutes. Everyone
should find their teammates and prepare to meet me in the lobby.”
Ryan sighed. “Do you think I can get away with not seeing
Mitch until we’re in-game.”
“No.”
“You’re probably right.” Ryan had agreed to come here. He needed to think about Lisa. He filled up his punch glass and packed some
thickly sweet chocolate pastries onto a paper plate, and then he and Sophia
made their way over to the corner where Jay and Mitch each had an arm around
the other’s shoulder. They adopted a
chaster posture when they saw Ryan and Sophia approaching. Ryan had expected some kind of glare from
Mitch, but instead, the look on his face reeked of awkwardness. He was shorter than any of them, including
Sophia, and had neither a chin nor cheekbones.
He wore a gaudy light blue shirt under his jacket.
“Hey, guys,” Sophia said, sitting
down on the couch next to Jay.
“Hi,” Mitch said. Ryan took a seat on the chair next to the
three of them.
“Glad you guys came right over,” Jay
said. “We should spend a moment
discussing strategy before the match starts.”
“I guess,” Ryan said.
Some things went unspoken. They were playing Red Arachnia, which, in a Battle
Royale match, was a very good thing. Battle
Royale matches differed from standard ones.
All eight teams would be set loose in one giant map, and they would go
around trying to kill each other, with each player’s death eliminating them
from the match. Eventually, only one
team would still have living members, and that team would be the winner.
In this kind of match, it was
normally a good idea to try not go get into too many fights, and of all the
factions, Red Arachnia was the best at stealth.
They would have been even better off if they didn’t have Zap among
them. However, Zap could be stealthier
than his size would lead one to expect.
He was immune to radar tools and wasn’t loud.
Breach-bot would have designed the
map so that hunkering down and hiding in one place would be unlikely to work,
but that didn’t mean a stealth-oriented strategy couldn’t be effective. If they played well, Unbroken could avoid
fights, set a lot of traps, and wait around while the other teams killed each
other off. Of course, then they’d have
to take on whoever was left, which would probably be one of the strongest teams
in the match. However, they’d go into
that fight fresh, unlike their enemy.
“Reigning Fire is obviously the
biggest threat,” Mitch said. “And since
there’ll be another Gray Fungus in the arena along with them, we need to be
very concerned about infection.”
The other three agreed.
“At the same time,” Jay said, “we
don’t want to do anything that will slow the spread of infection in the arena.” Infection was a status effect, meant to
represent the Gray Fungus assimilating you into their hive mind. Several of their abilities could affect you
with it, and if they did, you would lose some control of your avatar. If you tried to harm Gray Fungi, or help your
teammates, there’d be a chance you’d seize up for several seconds. If untreated, infection grew worse over time,
and once it reached its final stage, you’d turn into an NPC drone, controlled
by Breach-bot and allied with the Gray Fungus.
In a normal match, you’d then respawn as though you’d died. Indeed, the infected often killed themselves
to begin the respawn counter early rather than put up with the status effect. In a Battle Royale, there was no respawning,
so infection was all the more powerful.
As a robot, Zap didn’t have to worry about it, and Dash’s cybernetic
components meant that he couldn’t be taken over completely, but for Mitch and
Sophia it was a very serious hazard.
However, Jay argued, if they made
sure they were properly prepared to resist infection and then forged an
alliance with one of the Gray Fungus teams, where they would help spread
infection in exchange for being left alone, they would seriously harm the other
teams.
“I don’t feel like Reigning Fire
would be up for an alliance like that,” Ryan said.
“I see where you’re coming from,”
Jay said, “but I think you’re wrong. I
take it you met Joss?”
“Yep,” Ryan said. “Would it be bad form to talk to Epidemic, or
Reigning Fire I guess, out of game and coordinate this?” Ryan asked.
“Probably,” Sophia said.
“I’m not so sure,” Jay said.
“Maybe you should ask Max,” Ryan
said.
“That would mean letting him know
we’re doing it,” Sophia said.
“If it’s allowed, most teams are
probably doing it,” Jay said.
“Fair point,” Sophia said.
Jay rose from his couch. “I’ll go find him.”
He walked off.
Mitch scooted away from the chair Ryan
was sitting on and crossed his arms. “Objectively,
the second biggest threat is Ours is the Glory,” he said. “But for us specifically, I think to us it’s
a toss-up between Dying Gravity and Sad Cake Binge Gaming.”
“Agreed,” Ryan said. Sophia scooted closer to Mitch, as if to
provide him moral support, and only then did Ryan realize what was going
on. He tried to think of something
mildly encouraging but non-awkward he could say. “Where Ours is the Glory and Pheonix are
concerned, I think we just need to be careful to lay enough traps to keep them
from fighting us at full strength.
That’s your job, of course.”
“Right,” Mitch said. “But back to the Pickciez teams. Hiding from them is going to be a
problem. Do we have any particular
strategies in mind.” Pickciez were
harder to hide from, because they were fast-moving and could search and area
efficiently.
“Be lucky, so they don’t happen
across us” said Sophia.
“That’s always plan A,” said
Mitch. “Failing that, though…”
“Our best answer is probably raw
power,” Ryan said. “Especially if we
have an alliance.”
“And if we don’t?” Mitch said.
“We can still probably take them in
a straight fight, so long as they don’t catch us by surprise. We just have to be wary enough not to let
them sneak up on us.”
“Stealthy approaches are sort of Sad
Cake Binge’s whole thing.”
“I’ll have my all-around
vision. Depending on the map, that’ll be
enough on its own.”
“I guess.”
The conversation paused when they
saw Jay coming back over to the couches.
“He said no,” Jay said as he sat down next to Mitch and grabbed his
hand.
“Drat,” Mitch said.
Sophia told Jay what they’d said
while he was gone, and by the time she was done it had been fifteen minutes or
so since Max’s announcement.
“Do we know where the bathroom is?”
Ryan asked.
“No,” Sophia said.
Ryan stood up. “Alright, I’ll see if I can find it. I’ll meet you in the lobby.”
“We’re cheering for you,” Sophia
said.
//////////
When he was finished in the bathroom,
Ryan headed back to the ballroom. He
didn’t make it back to the couches before Max got back on the microphone and
told everyone to gather in the lobby.
Ryan got together with his team. All
eight teams, save Ours is the Glory, gathered outside the door to the ballroom. Ryan could identify the Epidemic kids by
their age. Only one of them had to be
eighteen to force the team into the senior league, and it was easy to tell
which one that was.
We Rise as One stood next to them. The youngest member of that team was middle
aged. They were also the best
dressed. Actual suits. The only other people wearing those were the
business executives and investors. Dying
gravity were dressed the most casually.
“Thank you all for coming,” Max said
from the top of the balcony that overlooked the lobby. “And thank you for indulging this little
tradition of mine. I’m sure you know
better than I do how much the fans love this.”
For just a moment, he looked directly into one of Sad Cake Binge
Gaming’s camera drones. “Please, follow
me upstairs to the theater. The helmets
are in there.”
The theater was large and dark, with
eight rows of luxurious dark-grey leather reclining chairs. They faced a large projector screen, like an
old movie theater, but each one also had a holo-helmet built into its headrest. Even all eight world championship teams would
only take up half the seats. Why did
every chair have to have its own helmet?
When did Max use all of these at once?
“Take your seats,” Max said, himself
walking down to the front row and sitting on the rightmost seat. Ryan took the closest seat to the
entrance. The rest of his team funneled
in next to him. Ryan reclined his seat
all the way, then lowered the helmet over himself. It fit over his head snugly, making physical
contact with his neck and, microscopically, his spine, through which it would
affect his brain. He switched it on and
closed his eyes. The world around him
faded all at once, like he was falling asleep, and a dream was beginning. For a moment, he was weightless and blind. Then, in an instant, the full proprioception
of Zap’s body kicked in. The sudden
perception of weight made him stumble.
Once he’d gotten his balance, the black interior of a ship popped into
existence around him, along with hum of electronics and the sound of working
metal pipes. The room was caked with
rust, though the metal pipes in the corner seemed to have had recent
maintenance. Below Ryan, there was a
red-brown metal floor. Above him, bright
strips of light on metal planks. To his
right and left, his teammates, each half his height: Sophia as Boost, Jay as
Dash and Mitch as Spark. Behind him,
another wall with a manually-operated sliding door. In front of him, a holo-terminal. A hologram of Blast appeared in the center of
the cabin.
“Greetings, Comrades!” she said.
“Hey,” Ryan said, in Zap’s robotic
voice.
“Greetings, Comrade Zap. I hope you’ve all been enjoying your leisure
time, but I’m afraid I must end it.
There’s a resort planet called Ju-Tai 2, and there’s a Terran general on
it. This is a particularly nasty
one. He once glassed a mining colony,
killing about a thousand families, because he believed I was being harbored
there. I wasn’t, but I still took the
gesture a bit personally. The scumbag is
allowing himself some R&R, because he doesn’t think we can figure out where
he is. We did. He’s in a little cabin in a lovely valley. Beautiful forests, and the most spectacular
waterfall you’ve ever seen. Shame to
visit it with violence, but I think we’ll be doing the place a favor by
scrubbing it free of this odious lump.
He’ll have a few guards, but I trust you can take care of that. I’m sorry to send you on a mission with such
little notice, but we only just discovered this opportunity, and we need to act
now. We don’t know when his vacation
will end. You will arrive there in a few
hours. Equip yourselves for the fight
ahead, Comrades. I’ll be in contact with
you once you’re on the planet.” Her
hologram went away, and the four equipment selection terminals lit up.
Ryan walked up to one. As he chose his items, the main factor in his
decision making was longevity. This was
going to be a long match, and he might get into several fights. He would prefer to avoid choosing items he
could only use a limited number of times.
His minigun would never run out of ammo.
He selected that. His grenade
launcher wouldn’t run out of its standard grenades, but it would run out of
special grenades, including stun grenades, which were one of its main benefits. “I’m going mini-gun and rocket launcher,”
Ryan said. Rockets were more accurate
and did more damage than grenades. With
special grenades out of the picture, that made the rocket launcher a better
choice.
Ryan took two packets of healing
potions hoping that would last him multiple combats. The expandable shield was so broadly useful
it was a must-have in any scenario, even though it was single-use. Ryan also got a grappling hook. “I have a grappler,” he told the others. Him selecting that meant they didn’t need
to. He was large enough that they could
all ride him while he climbed something.
Not needing their own grappling hooks meant they could use that slot for
air filters that would prevent infection, or for the potion that healed it.
When he was done selecting his
tools, Jay had everyone list their choices.
Everyone agreed with Ryan’s decisions.
Mitch and Sophia made a few adjustments based on Jay’s advice. Everyone but Ryan had an air filter and at
least one anti-fungal potion. Sophia had
taken the spell that suppressed de-buffs.
Jay told Breach-bot that they were
ready. Blast led them on a short walk
through the ship to a hanger bay, where they boarded a landing craft. Once the craft took off, they had nothing but
a display screen through which to see the outside world. Their ship had stopped at the edge of Ju-Tai
2’s solar system. They traveled swiftly
toward its center, passing a bright blue gas giant surrounded by three
concentric rings. Their destination came
into view. It was a tiny green dot. They approached. The planet looked like the earth, but with
the blue and green switched. They made
contact with the planet’s atmosphere.
“You should be down there in just a few min—” Blast began, before being
cut off by a burst of static.
“Ma’am, you cut off,” Jay said.
Another burst of static.
A glob of Gray Fungal biomass came
into view from the corner of the viewscreen, careened toward the ship and
slammed into the hull, making the viewscreen go to static, and sending the
lander tumbling end over end. An alarm
sounded. Ryan grabbed Sophia, Jay and
Mitch and held them to his person to keep them from tumbling around the ship
and taking damage.
“Warning, impact imminent,” said the
ship’s computer. Everything shook. The lander roared down toward the planet’s
surface. A shield similar to Zap’s
invincibility shield appeared around the four of them as their ship crashed into
the valley. The ship disintegrated
around them, exploding, throwing their bubble off into the distance. It hit the ground and popped, the four
falling out onto a still clearing. They
were surrounded by the strange and varied chirping of alien crickets and the
cawing and hooting of alien birds. Ryan
let go of his teammates. All four of
them stood. Below Ryan was bright-green
curly grass. Above him was an open sky
in the midst of a radiant pink and orange sunset. Forest stretched off into the distance all
around them. The horizon was dominated
to the left by a giant, black metal dam which seemed to seal off the bowl-like
valley. Blast’s voice echoed through
Ryan’s head, fizzy and quiet.
“…hostiles surrounding you, and we
cannot retrieve you any time soon…” and with one last burst of static, she
disappeared.
Other than the forest, the main
feature of their surroundings was a small dusty cabin, the size of a single
room. “Do you think the General is going
to be important?” Mitch said into his helmet’s communicator. His helmet was sealed, so if there were any enemies
around, they wouldn’t overhear him.
“Probably, or he wouldn’t have been
mentioned,” Jay said.
“Maybe We Rise as One is protecting
him,” Ryan said.
“Yeah, probably,” Sophia said.
The others looked around to get
their bearings. “I’m not seeing anything
notable about our surroundings besides that cabin, the woods, and that dam,”
Jay said. “Anyone disagree?”
“The sunset is pretty,” Ryan said. “That’s about it.”
“Our first order of business is to
find a good hiding place,” Jay said.
“From there, we can figure out how to contact one of the Gray Fungus
teams.” The valley seemed to be big
enough that, if the teams were distributed equally, they had a decent amount of
time before anyone stumbled across them.
Sophia conjured a blue-gray ball and
tossed it at Ryan. This was a buff that
would make him quieter and lighter on his feet so he wouldn’t leave tracks. “Thanks,” he said, but as they went into the
forest proper in search of a suitable hiding place, Ryan still had trouble not
leaving evidence of his passing. Zap was
agile for his size, but moving through the forest required some tight squeezes,
and he occasionally knocked over a rock or crushed a bush or bent a pair of
trees away from each other while trying to squeeze between them.
After about ten minutes, they hadn’t
seen any sign of other players or of an obvious hiding spot. “We need to figure out a direction to head
toward,” Mitch said. “Wandering
aimlessly is just making metal-head over here leave more tracks for the other
teams to find us with.” Ryan held in his
offense.
“You’re right,” Jay said. “Does anyone remember which way the canyon
wall was closest?”
“West,” Ryan said.
“We’ll start heading that way,
then. There might be caves in the valley
wall to hide in.”
They changed direction. “Do you think it’s possible break the dam?”
Sophia asked a few minutes later.
“What makes you ask?” Jay asked.
“I mean, if I were Breach-bot, and I
was going to design a set-piece for this big important showcase match, I might
make a giant destructible dam. Plus, if
we can break it without hurting ourselves, we might kill off everyone else.
“Maybe,” Jay said. “Hmm.
We’ll head that direction if we don’t find a cave.”
A few more minutes passed.
“Get down!” Ryan said, falling flat
against the path below them just slowly enough to make no noise. The others followed suit.
“What is it?” Jay asked.
“We Rise as One,” Ryan said. They had just come into view behind Ryan.
Their travel was far less subtle
than Unbroken’s had been. They had their
own giant robot: The nine-foot Heavy Dynamic Operations Unit. He looked a lot like Zap, but more pristine:
his armored plates were sleek white instead of rust brown. His movements were less agile, but stronger. His every step left an imprint in the earth
beneath him.
In front of him walked the sniper,
Nealson, scanning his surroundings with his sniper scope. That thing could see through cover. If he looked in Unbroken’s direction, he’d
see them. We Rise as One also had a
McCormick, and this one carried a flamethrower, with which he was trying to
light the forest ablaze. The trees
weren’t taking to that strategy well.
They were burning, but the fire wasn’t spreading from tree to tree. We Rise as One’s captain, a Morrison, was
boosting the McCormick’s damage.
“Will they see us?” Jay asked.
“Nealson was looking around,” Ryan
said. “If he thinks to look down while
checking this direction, yes.” They were
crouched, so he wouldn’t see them if he didn’t dip his gaze below his eye level.
“Was he looking down?”
“I didn’t see him look down, but I
don’t know for sure.”
They waited. They could tell by the sound of H.D.O.U.’s
footsteps that We Rise as One wasn’t heading directly toward them.
“I don’t think they know we’re here,”
Ryan said. “Should we use this
opportunity to sneak attack them?”
“That would kind of go against our
stealth strategy,” Jay said.
“And a brawl would attract others,”
Mitch said.
“True,” Ryan said.
“I’ll buff us just in case shit goes
down,” Sophia said, and she threw balls at everyone, making Jay and Mitch
faster, herself more robust, and Ryan’s damage output greater.
Then, the H.D.O.U. stopped. “I see something,” he said, in a booming
mechanical voice. “This tree is
uprooted.”
“It could just be a feature of the
map,” the McCormick said.
A moment passed. “I don’t think so,” Morrison said. “This dirt has been freshly moved.
“Do we think it was another player,
then?” McCormick asked.
“I think it just might be,” Morrison
said. “Either a Huel-drark or the Zap.”
“Prep for battle,” Jay said.
Ryan pulled out his rocker launcher
and pointed it in the other team’s direction.
If he was lucky, he’d be able to score a direct hit on Nealson.
“Any idea when they might have been
here?” McCormick asked.
“No way of telling exactly,”
Morrison said.
“They’re over there!” Nealson
shouted.
The entirety of Unbroken sprang
up. Ryan fired a rocket at Nealson. Jay drew his stun pistol and rushed toward We
Rise as One’s flank. Sophia summoned a
sphere of crackling yellow energy and threw it at H.D.O.U. Mitch strafed to the right and took cover
behind a tree. Perhaps he intended to
hack H.D.O.U. from that position.
The enemy’s Morrison shot a stream
of red energy at H.D.O.U. Now glowing
and crackling with said energy, the robot fired his rail-gun at Ryan. McCormick fired his flamethrower toward Jay,
and Nealson rained sniper bullets at Sophia.
But neither side managed to hit the
other. Instead, everyone’s projectiles
struck an invisible wall, which shimmered with every impact. McCormick’s flames blasted back toward
him. Nealson’s bullets flew straight
back at the rifle that had fired them, phasing through it and hitting Nealson
in the chest. H.D.O.U.’s rail-gun slug
reflected back into him and knocked him backward and onto his back. Sophia’s flew shot back at her, freezing her
in place. Ryan’s rocket flew back at him
doing a lot of damage and making him stumble.
Ryan used a healing potion. Jay smacked
into the invisible wall like a pigeon, stopping dead and falling backward. Laughter echoed in the trees above them. Ryan had heard the same laughter before. It belonged to Marvin Blackwood of Sad Cake
Binge Gaming. Marvin’s character Cloun
had the ability to summon a reflective wall like that one.
The wall went away after only a
second or two, but neither team resumed firing on the other. As Morrison healed him, Nealson pointed his
rifle upward, and shot through the canopy at something Ryan couldn’t see.
Ryan got an idea. “Give me a speed buff,” he said, once Sophia
was unfrozen. Sophia did. Ryan shifted into sphere mode and plowed into
the weakest tree he could see. It fell
in one clattering piece. The fallen
tree’s contribution to the canopy was now gone, making a patch of starlit sky
visible above them. Ryan ran straight
into another tree. Mitch got a robotic
drone out of his backpack, and threw it into the air, instructing it to seek
out Pickceiz and destroy them. Jay
dashed over to the area Ryan had cleared, pointing his stun gun upward.
The H.D.O.U. seemed to like Ryan’s
idea of taking away the enemy’s cover.
He grabbed a nearby tree with both arms, and tore it out of the ground,
its roots ripping, then dangling from its base as H.D.O.U. tossed the tree
aside. McCormick switched to his
mini-gun and pointed it toward the new hole his ally had created. As H.D.O.U. got to work on another tree, Mitch’s
drone flew over the first gap H.D.O.U. created.
It fired at something still hidden behind the canopy. Nealson snapped his aim over to it and
started firing at a spot just past the canopy’s new edge. Ryan took his humanoid form and pointed his
rocket launcher in the same direction.
He fired a rocket into the canopy, but it harmlessly brushed through
leaves and flew off into the sky.
As the H.D.O.U. worked to uproot
another tree the ground he stood on fissured then opened below him, revealing a
pit lined with colorful stripes. The
robot fell in and crashed into the bottom with a clank. A purple streak, which could only have been
SCBG’s Spukee, moved into the pit, taking a bit of fire from McCormick on the
way down, but managing to avoid a stunning shot from Jay. The sounds of tearing metal and human
screaming echoed from the pit. Railgun
slugs rained out of it. A thin yellow
beam shot into the pit from above. Jay
dashed to the side of the pit and fired his stunning pistol toward the source
of the beam. He hit its originator:
Lyfe, the Pickceiz’ healer. The creature
fell to the ground, stunned. Ryan took
his sphere form and rolled over the creature, crushing it.
There was an explosion in the pit,
and Spukee flew out, cackling. He was showered
with gunfire as he flew back into the trees but most of it missed him. Just before he faded from sight, he summoned
an illusion, the image of a giant, sickly black, and rotting raven, crawling
with maggots. The creature spread its
wings and cawed. All of the humans ran
away from it in terror. Only Ryan was
immune to the effect. We Rise as One ran
to Ryan’s left, and Unbroken ran to his right.
Ryan followed his team.
Behind him, Sord, the Pickcei with a
large magical blade, flew at the fleeing Nealson and buried its sword into him. That broke the fear effect and allowed Nealson
to turn around and retaliate. Ryan
pointed his rocket launcher backward and fired at the pair of them, hoping to
hit the Sord dead-on and cause the Nealson splash damage. The opposite happened. Sord flew to the left, and the rocket blew
Nealson to pieces. Sord turned around
and rushed toward Unbroken. All at once,
the fear effect on Unbroken wore off, and they turned back toward the battle. Ryan shot at Sord with his minigun, but only
managed to graze him. Jay fired a
stunning blast at the creature. It
swerved to avoid that shot, and then flew back above the trees. Unbroken pointed their weapons upward, but
Sord did not return to menace them.
“We should leave, and let them fight
each other,” Jay said. “It’s very
unlikely that all of them will follow us.”
Unbroken retreated, and, fortunately for them, were not pursued. Once they were sure of this, they stopped,
and Sophia made sure everyone was at full health. They slowed down and resumed trying to move
stealthily. They were close enough to
the cliff face to see it looming over them in the distance through occasional
gaps in the trees. The rock was light
beige and filled with thick orange stripes.
They came upon another clearing, lit
by starlight. Four moons loomed above
them. One giant, bright white and full
of craters. One was dark but gleamed
like marble. One was small and dark blue,
and the final one was whitish blue, like a pale imitation of the third. The sky was thick with stars, and the Milky Way
streaked across it. The ground was
covered in tiny gray mushrooms. Mitch
and Sophia covered their faces.
“Spores!” Mitch said. They were
invisible, but no one could miss the scent of their wet, dusty, shroomy
rot. Everyone but Ryan activated their
air filters, which would reduce their risk of infection.
“This is good,” Jay said, as he
adjusted his mask to fit snugly over his nose.
“We were looking for a Gray Fungus team.
One of them has been this way.”
“We should track them, then?” Mitch
asked.
“Yes,” Jay said, after a
moment. “We need to track them.”
“And if they refuse our alliance,
the plan is to run away?” Sophia asked.
“Only from Reigning Fire,” Jay said. “We can take Epidemic in a fight.”
“This trail is from Reigning Fire,”
Ryan said. “Look around. All the trees are in place. There’s no way Epidemic’s Mog’Inub has been
here.” Mog’Inub was the largest playable
character in the game: four stories tall and just as long, shaped like a giant
L with spidery legs, covered in eyes, mouths and rupturing pustules from which she
could summon horrible spawn. There would
be no mistaking the signs of that creature’s passing.
“That’s the better party to make the
alliance with, anyway,” Jay said.
Neither Mitch nor Sophia objected.
Ryan sighed. He took note of all
the mushrooms he could see. They formed
a line that bisected the clearing diagonally.
“The trail goes like this,” Ryan
said, pointing one arm ahead and to his right and the other behind and to his left.
“So which way did they come from and
which way did they go?” asked Mitch.
“The right leads away from the
center of the valley,” Jay said. “That’s
probably our best bet.”
And that’s the way they went,
following the trail of mushrooms. They
occasionally encountered more than a mushroom.
There were strands of fungal mass hanging from some of the trees. Elsewhere, patches of ground were covered in
thick, rough fungal growth. Among those
patches of ground was the whole surface of a small hill in the shape of a
perfect half-circle. Half-sticking out
of was a fully infected Clypeus. Clypeus
was a member of the Legion of the Iron Star, who normally possessed a massive
shield. This one, however, had lost
track of it. The monster roared and
raved at Unbroken as they passed. Ryan
put it out of its misery.
Things like these grew more common
as they advanced. They were catching up
to their enemy. What would Jay do to try
to get Reigning Fire’s attention? What
would they think Unbroken had to contribute to an alliance? They had speed and stealth. That was sort of the opposite of what
Reigning Fire had going for them. They
were big and powerful but left this fungal growth everywhere they went.
Eventually, there was stomping in
the distance. Unbroken stopped following
the trail and headed directly toward it.
Jay picked up a rock and got out his laser gun. He used the laser to carve ‘we want to talk’
on the rock.
“I’m apprehensive about that plan,”
Ryan said.
“I am too,” Jay said, “but I think
it’s our best shot. Hopefully, I’ll be
able to gauge their reaction to it without having to put myself in danger. I’ll run back this way if anything goes
wrong. Jay dashed ahead. After he was out of sight, the others heard
Jay through their communicators. “I see
them,” Jay said. “It’s Reigning Fire.” Their footsteps came through as clearly as
Jay’s voice. Each one made a terrible
squishy thromp. “I’m throwing the
rock.” A pittering sound as the rock hit
grass. “They saw it,” Jay said. “They’re stopping to examine it. They’re talking about it.” Half a minute passed. “They’re looking around. They’re raising their weapons. Fuck! Fuck!
Start running! I’ll catch up with
you!” Unbroken turned around and started
running.
“How far away are they?” Ryan asked.
“A few hundred feet behind you.”
Jay caught up with the rest of the
group and slowed down to keep pace with them.
Mitch pulled out another drone and ordered it to go back and hold off
Reigning Fire. About a minute later,
they heard an explosion. Not long after
that, a member of Reigning Fire came into view.
It was the giant cloud of fungal spores, Ichaboth. The creature was ten times Ryan’s size,
spread out like a bank of fog across the ground. Ryan held his minigun out and fired into the
creature. These bullets wouldn’t do much,
but anything was helpful. Jay ordered
the team to spread out, forcing the creature to go after only one of them. It chose to follow Mitch. It approached and then surrounded him,
causing him to disappear within its fog.
Jay ran over, pulling out a little hand-held flamethrower, and shot it
at the monster.
Something beeped inside
Ichaboth. The monster started moving
away from Jay at full speed. Jay dashed
in the opposite direction. Mitch flew
out of the top of Ichaboth, riding the blast of his jetpack. He grabbed a high branch of a thick oak. A fiery explosion engulfed more than half of
the monster, making him dissipate. He
reformed a moment later but was smaller.
The rest of Reigning Fire emerged
from the trees behind them. Joss’ own
character was in front. Huel-drark was a
gray giant, covered in smooth, moist flesh.
One arm was a cannon. The other
was a shield. Behind him, Xig’zah, a jagged
creature shaped like a ten-pointed star with a spindly leg protruding from each
point, skittered across the ground. The
titanic walking mushroom Avaggdon lumbered behind the two of them. Joss pointed his cannon directly at Ryan, who
took sphere form and rolled out of the way.
Ryan took his normal form, and shot a rocket at Joss, who was likewise able
to dodge him.
From the top of his tree, Mitch
tossed a grenade at the approaching foes.
Xig’zah leapt onto the trunk of a different tree to avoid it. Jay emerged from behind yet another tree and
shot a paralyzing bolt at the spider, who fell back the ground, landing close
to the grenade. It exploded, throwing
Xig’zah into the air and setting him aflame.
Joss jumped forward, allowing the blast of the grenade to push him
toward Ryan. He aimed at Ryan’s chest,
then, when Ryan dodged, he took his actual shot, landing a hit. Sophia tossed a healing orb into him, and Ryan
used one of his own healing potions.
The Avaggdon plugged itself into the
ground. It lit up, glowing bright
blue. It spun in place, and the ground
shook. Joss grabbed onto a tree to keep
his balance. Ryan had nothing to grab
onto, so he fell backward. Sophia
managed to keep her balance for a few strides, but then tripped. Joss charged up his cannon, aiming at Ryan’s
prone form. Ryan took his sphere form
and barreled straight toward Joss. The
laser blast shot through him, knocking off a chunk of his health, and he
crashed into into Joss, knocking him back and onto the ground. Ryan took his normal form and shot a pair of
rockets straight at Joss’s face.
Once Joss’ laser cannon recharged,
he fired up at Ryan, but Ryan anticipated this and dodged to the right. Before Joss could stand, he leapt into the
air, took sphere form, and landed on his prone enemy. Joss was half-crushed, but still alive. He lifted Ryan and threw him backward, away
from the rest of Unbroken. Ryan took his
main form. Ichaboth flew over to Joss,
and settled over him, healing him.
Xig’zah leapt toward Ryan. Ryan
jumped out of the way, and the spider landed on the ground near him. With another spin, Avaggdon morphed the
ground around them, raising a great wall that sealed Ryan and Reigning Fire off
from the rest of Unbroken. Xig’zah
jumped Ryan again, this time managing to latch onto his face. The monster made a noise like a deep but
shrill chuckle and vomited a sticky viscous gray blob onto Ryan. Ryan ripped the creature off his face and
tossed it aside, but the glob stayed stuck to him. Ryan knew from experience that there was no
point trying to get it off. At the same
time, Ichaboth reshaped itself to surrounded him. The fog penetrated him, moving between his
rusty metal plates and leaking into his circuits. He expected to take damage but didn’t. Ichaboth was doing something else. Ryan’s one-million eyes went wide at once. Only one of Ichaboth’s debuffs would be
useful in this situation. Ichaboth could
inflict frailty. He was ensuring the
bomb would kill him in one shot. That
only left one question left to be answered: Where was Joss? He’d been down on the ground just a second
ago. Ryan listened for the creature’s
squishy footsteps.
They were to the left. Ryan lunged toward them, tackling Joss as he
tried to escape the fog. Ryan pinned him
to the ground. Joss struggled, but Zap
was bigger than Huel-drark, and Ryan kept the monster under him. The blob on his face exploded, consuming the
two of them in a flash of light and pelting them with sharp gray shrapnel.
//////////
Once he had exited the game, Ryan
took his helmet off and stood. To the
right of the theater, several seats away, Joss did the same thing. Ryan waved politely at Joss, but Joss didn’t
acknowledge him as he left the theater.
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Kevin
Mom
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