Continue Online (Part 4, Crash) (11 page)

BOOK: Continue Online (Part 4, Crash)
8.73Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

No, I would save my other ideas for later. One day of real life would be four inside the box. There was more than enough time to do whatever I needed. Or, and this would be an abuse of power, my admin access should be kicking in soon. It would be easy enough to kick all these players out, clear the dungeon, and move forward.

“So, Mister Daft, what are you gonna offer not to be killed?” Squisks asked. He looked to be on the verge of chuckling and his goatee was stretched wide in a huge grin.

I scratched my head and said, “Nothing?” The amount was fair for my digital existence. Right now, based on prison time, there was no reason to be insanely worried. Grinding out
[Redemption]
points couldn’t be more time consuming than working on the
[Wayfarer Seven]
’s hull. Though dying would set me back.

“What?” he sounded perplexed.

“Yeah.” My head tilted slightly in confusion. Did they expect me to be worked up over this? I had already been shoved into at least three situations where performance mattered. Right now, there was no reason to stress. “Worst that happens is you guys gang up on me. Then I know not to trust you, and none of us get anywhere.”

“Damn,” Viper said without a hiss. “You’re no fun.”

“I’ve had worse quests. This is just, repercussions of past choices, I guess.” Trying to sum up my thoughts wasn’t working well. The very name of
[Redemption]
and having a point value was simple enough. My actions had cost those with power. They wanted us to tear each other down, kill monsters then gather resources.

It was a rather good idea for putting Travelers to use, at least in kingdom terms. Everything bordered between kind of dark and standard Continue Online atmosphere. If this were a real fantasy world and I only had one life, then this process would be terrible. As it was, my stress was low.

“There’s sstill a threat. You’d be ssurprised what a mind can do, when there’s enough reward in place, at the very least people can make ssure you come out behind.”

“You can’t make it worse, can you? The way I read it, criminal points can only be added by those with the Condemnation skill.” I had read the text. These guys couldn’t put me farther in the hole, that I knew of. It should be possible to get a few points at a time.

“True. Either way, it’ss your call. As long as no one payss me, we can go down, kill a few thingss, bring out minor loot, or try to hit pockets of sstuff, but people may torture uss.” Viper didn’t care either way. Chances were he expected me to be dead weight like Squisks, or believed one of the other groups might kill us quickly.

“Why would they try to torture us? We have to be logged in for it to actually hurt. I can watch remotely at anything you might be doing, and pain is far less intense in-game.” The idea of another player threatening me felt laughable. Not once had any other Travelers' actions scared me, even when chasing down Commander Queenshand. They didn’t bother me in the same way that the Voices or various NPCs might have.

“How can you say that?” Squisks looked nervous at the thought of full on torture.

“Real life hurts a lot more,” I said quietly, then my head shook.

“Ssee, Hermess ain’t a wussss like you, Ssquiskss. It’s just a game, if you want back to your ladiess sso bad, sstart over. Maybe try not to touch the wrong person thiss time.” Viper hissed in a bright laugh.

“Yeah.” I shrugged while thinking about what they could actually do in the game. One of them would stab me in the back, the pain would be brief, and life would go on. Such feelings were why the game required being a legal adult to play. Rumination over the next thirty minutes provided a few possible ideas.

There were tons of ways they could handle group tasks. I looked at the other teams for a bit, then back toward my own. Using visual cues only to guess each person’s skill level was difficult. That being said, there were still certain ways of standing that I had learned from Shazam during our time together. Most of them came off as pretty bad physical fighters, except that Android Seven person, and maybe Viper.

“So, do people pay you to get your group killed, Squisks?” I asked the brown haired man.

“That’s none of your business, Mister Extra Daft,” he responded while waving a finger. There was an uncomfortable look on his face which was probably a yes. Too bad I hadn’t inherited William Carver’s
[Truth Sense]
ability.

“Then, you're probably paid with a stash of items near the end of each dungeon, if you successfully off someone?” I pointed at Viper. He nodded but didn’t smile. “Which means, we’ve been here long enough that you have a preferred drop point, or you trust the paying player enough to” my head shook and cut off the rambling.

Viper didn’t say anything. Either I was on the right track, or he simply didn’t care. It was probably best that our items were all still sealed or blocked from being used. One of them might try to kill me now in order to prevent too much musing. Did everyone else have
[Bound]
items? No one appeared concerned about the lack of equipment.

“You get paid at the end. Which is stupid. The math probably doesn’t work in your favor.” I had a degree in accounting. Really, killing each other and fighting over items was a terrible waste of resources, time, and effort.

“How sso?” Viper looked interested.

“Come on, we’ve got another thirty minutes to kill, someone give me numbers. How much is each part of the task list worth?” I motioned my hand at the other two in my team.

Both people spouted numbers, which also involved some arguing. Squisks, or whatever his name was, hadn’t actually survived once until the end of a dungeon. Viper insisted the survival value was one point per hour and compounded from there. The math ironed out to three hundred points for the first day. Another three hundred could be earned at the end of day two, three, and so on.
[Redemption]
only registered if I made it back to the two guards in their beams of light. Survival down there with four other groups prowling around and gaining points for killing us sounded difficult.

Still, freedom was possible. Notes from Mother would be in reach. In addition, I wanted to get away from here and reach
[Haven Valley]
. If we were at the
[Tower of Stars]
, which was near the central continent, then it would take a few weeks on a
[Callibur]
to reach the west coast. The idea that something had happened to take Wyl away had me worried. What about his son Dayl? The kid had looked as though he might be lost without his father around.

Remembering the goofy older teen made me pause in my calculations with a smile. That reminded me of the other players from William Carver’s era. Maybe they would know something. I tried to bring up the message system since we had used a Porter to become in-game friends.

 

Warning!

Traveler communications are limited as a result of the
[Convict Brand]
. Only by earning enough
[Redemption]
points can you once again use the messaging system for talking to other Travelers.

 

Well, that wasn’t very neat. I stopped laughing and looked up. For a moment, my gaze searched for a certain winged creature to be somewhere on the horizon. Then it occurred to me why he wasn’t back. Technically the
[Messenger’s Pet]
had died in Advance Online, which meant I needed to resummon him here.

Still, some people could use their abilities out here despite the restrictions. That struck me as odd. My own skills should turn back on once we got inside the dungeon. Then Dusk and I could be reunited, in some pit with people trying to stab me in the back while I tried to find a hole with enough light for some note reading. Topping that off would be needing to survive, make it to and from the surface, and not cross paths with Android Seven. I wanted to know the man’s secret, but I didn’t want to get close enough to be turned into
[Redemption]
points.

“Damn.” I poked around on my interface, sure enough there was an ability to bring him back titled
[Summon: Companion]
, but it was crossed out just like everything else.

“Ssomething wrong?” Viper asked. He had edged closer, which kind of creeped me out. The man was just inhuman enough to be disturbing. It might have been because he was a snake creature, instead of robotic like the
[Mechanoid]
s.

“No.” I shook my head and switched gears. “I’m just trying to go over the numbers.”

“You think you’re the first to try to sscam the ssysstem?” Viper asked.

“Mister Extra Daft.”

“Let me guesss, you’ve got a plan that will let uss all gain a little, and it only requiress that we all come together?” The snake-eyed man laughed uncontrollably.

“Daft as all hell.” Squisks giggled too but it came out forced. He rubbed me the wrong way, it wasn’t simply being accused of some fantasy version of pedophilia. The way he acted during our few minutes together made me wonder if the man had mental damage.

“No, based on what you’ve said, we’ll be lucky to earn, maybe one thousand points at this stop,” I corrected them. The action math assumed we could make it to the surface. “That’s presuming we actually work together.”

Squisks brightened for a moment upon hearing the values. That made me blink. I wanted to ask how close he was to freedom, but the idea of interacting with him made me sick.

“Then autopilot time-” the goatee man spoke seriously, “-will fuck us hard.”

My head kept going over
[Redemption]
task amounts. Common item drops could give half a point each. Anything that had a special effect could give up to twenty based on Viper’s responses. Ores and furs had a value based on rarity, up to ten for a stack. I missed my armor that Shazam had made and my skinning skills were low.
[Morrigu’s Gift]
transformed into pretty much any weapon, which included a pickaxe and skinning knife. I didn’t have time to sit in a mine for days learning to hammer nodes for ore.

“Sso?” Viper asked while trying to recover from excessive laughter.

“Whatever. Any plan Mister Daft’s got will fail like everyone else’s.” With that, the ball of sunshine called Squisks logged off, leaving his autopilot active. We stared at him as the color drained from his character.

“I have some ideas if I can trust either one of you.” I looked over at the other groups. Any group with three good dungeon divers would have been more put together. Honestly, this entire system was designed to throw us against an area without caring if we lived or died.

“Trust?” Viper hissed at me while weaving his head slightly. It reminded me of a cobra snake hypnotizing its prey.

I had a much better idea than trying to play numbers or build teams. Dusk, that little genius of a creature, could probably help me out a huge amount. These other players left behind caches of items. Dusk could sniff out treasure, I was sure of it.

Plus I had
[Sight of Mercari]
, which caused headaches after prolonged usage. According to Beth, having any sort of tracking skill was pretty rare. More commonly people had threat sensors that would tell them if danger was incoming from a direction. Travelers with low
[Reaction]
speeds made it difficult to use.

 

Skill
:
[Sight of Mercari]

Rarity
: Rare
[Variant]

Details
: Initial rank of
[Sight of Mercari]
allows the Traveler to see all sentient beings around them. This change in perception can be disorienting. As proficiency increases the skill will rank up allowing additional details to be received.

Rank 2 Unlocked!
Colors are added to targets based on hostility level

Rank 3 Unlocked!
Tracking extends to those with a lower stealth ranking than
[Sight of Mercari]

“Tell you what, if we can make it through a dungeon without betraying each other, then we can split our earnings,” I offered, in hopes that all these various thoughts would come together. It was about time something worked out vaguely in my favor. All my other Continue Online adventures came with mixed results, this probably would be the same.

“You think you’ll earn more than I could alone?” Viper asked.

My eyes went up in thought.
[Awareness Heightening]
,
[Blink]
,
[Morrigu’s Gift]
and
[Morrigu’s Echo]
, between those items I could probably come out ahead of most monsters. I could gamble for bonuses with
[Wild Bill]
. All those combined techniques had gotten me into dungeons delivering letters before but not through many bosses as Hermes. Most of the time I
[Blink]
ed past monsters.

“Probably. Why don’t we give it some time to find out?” I asked, hoping that we could reach at least a brief moment of cooperation. It was true that having another Traveler around would increase our
[Redemption]
points, in addition, our survival chance should increase.

Other books

Grave Attraction by Lori Sjoberg
Nightlife by Brian Hodge
The Passions of Emma by Penelope Williamson
El viajero by Gary Jennings
Burn: A Novel by Linda Howard
Doctor in Love by Richard Gordon