Dark Paladin:
Restart
by Vasily Mahanenko
Release - March 6, 2018
Preorder here - https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0791J9CHW
Chapter 1. The Day Before
“Paladin Yaropolk!” the herald announced, and the wide double doors
opened before me. Containing my worry, I stepped into the hall for official
ceremonies of the Residence of the Sector 446 Coordinator, nobleman by birth, Count
Bernard Kalran. My suzerain graciously put his “humble” abode at Madonna’s
disposal, and representatives of all the game worlds hurried to pay their
respects to the Great One. No matter how great the hall was, it was unlikely
that all the creatures gathered here felt comfortable ̶ they
were devoid of any personal space. In other words, the hall was full to
bursting: everyone was in a great hurry to look at the reincarnated Madonna. But
anyway, whom was I trying to deceive? Who would want to simply take a look at
the Great one? They were all attracted by the hype that inevitably accompanied
those kinds of events. Where else would one see the grand scale characteristic
of the Creators, as they reward the undeserving and punish the innocent?
I was standing at
the entrance to the hall, completely unwilling to move any further. Thoughts
were idly circling around in my head – what would it be for me, reward or
punishment? Everyone else was doing the same thing; they were not even
bothering to hide sidelong glances and whispers. No one had tried to divide
those who came before me into the guilty and the worthy, so for the rest of the
guests our appearance and Madonna’s reaction were intriguing. Since I was the
last in the line of the lucky (or not) ones, I already knew that Archibald had
been pronounced guilty of the problems that had occurred during Madonna’s
return. He was declared an outlaw, stripped of all the ranks he held and condemned
to oblivion. The guests were highly entertained. After that they became
somewhat bored: the moment of excitement was followed by the standard procedure
of receiving rewards from the hands of the Great One. Some even dared snorting
if they considered the reward useless or insignificant. The NPCs described all
this in vivid detail to us as they came back to fetch the next in line. The
Head of the Order of Paladins, Gerhard van
Brast, was seen before me, and the crowd was astonished the second time that
evening, but this time with the scale of the reward. As I was listening to my
escort on the way to the Hall, I allowed myself to dream about a personal world
with millions of slaves. Since I was the player who had done most of the work
to make sure the Great One returned.
Casting an understanding
glance over the whispering guests, I started out for the throne after all. The
crowd parted, as was expected, enabling me to pass forward down the road at the
end of which the powerful and eccentric Great One was waiting for me. Madonna
easily occupied the throne of the host, moving Bernard aside. Meanwhile the
Coordinator was nearby: he was standing to the right of the throne like a most
devoted servant, and showed not the slightest displeasure about his current
situation. On the contrary, he was being witty, and did everything to serve his
Mistress and guest of honor. There was a reason for that. The Coordinator of a
backwater sector instantly became an important figure in the Game world, and he
was not about to miss his chance. I spent the entire week before the ceremony
in my suzerain’s residence, and had plenty of opportunity to observe Bernard basking
in the attention of other Coordinators and influential players, condescendingly
accepting their gifts and requests to put in a word for them to the Great One. Madonna
did not like the premises provided to her by the Priests, so she stayed with
the Coordinator instead, making him first among equals.
Bending her head
down to Bernard, the Great One was listening to him with a fleeting smile, responding
something from time to time. However, her eyes followed my approach
unswervingly. Even though I had had enough time to steel myself for this
meeting, I still fell out of stride. Madonna noticed that and, smirking
contentedly, averted her eyes. The enemy was defeated and could now be
forgotten. I did not know whether that was the deal, but at least I could
continue in peace.
By the way, to the
same extent that my master was demonstratively basking in the Creator’s
attention, he was just as demonstratively ignoring my approach. That was easy
to explain. First of all, there was no way to know my future fate. Then, Bernard
still retained his misconception that I was under his full mental control due
to the activated Book of Lumpen. For that reason I had been for a long time
assigned to one of the least valuable categories in his listing of animate and
inanimate property. Even though I was considered a slave without rights, I
still knew I was remembered. Before the ceremony started, Bernard’s loyal guard,
the vampire Malturion, handed me a looped
anti-grav with Light Source so that the dear guests would not be bothered with
my hundredth level of Darkness.
I almost reached my
goal, when I noticed a completely impossible creature. The Necromancer Lumpen
was present in the hall for official ceremonies. Not in person, of course: his
status of “Enemy of all Life” did not really help him move about the Earth
freely. Even the Sanctuary would not fully protect him from being attacked by
other players. Lumpen came to the
meeting in the form of a hologram projected by a device hovering closely above
the floor. The horrid dark specter was looming over the other players, and even
though the hall was chock-full, there was almost a yard of empty space around Lumpen.
Only the Viceroy kept the necromancer company, and now those two were talking
quietly but urgently, ignoring the ceremony. Madonna had already been presented
to the world, most of the ceremony was behind us, so one could work on his own
affairs without having to waste one’s time dealing with the unworthy.
“Paladin Yaropolk!”
I kneeled and Madonna’s eyes settled on me again. The humming in the hall died
down. As they say, curiosity is not a sin, but unsatisfied curiosity is a major
headache. My peripheral vision seemed to indicate that even the Lumpen and the
Viceroy put their conversation on hold, waiting for the outcome. “We know of all the facts as you took part in
the recent events. Having measured all your deeds undertaken for the sake of Our
return, and taking into consideration external evidence, We desire to fully
give you your due and …”
Madonna paused and glanced
at Bernard. The Coordinator dispassionately waited for the conclusion of the
statement, while those around demonstrated lamentable lack of restraint now and
again. The woman did not hurry, enjoying the few tense moments as everyone felt
silent; however, her sense of timing did not let her down. Turning towards me
without extending the pause too much and ruin the moment, she finished:
“We pronounce you
guilty!” The sentence seemed to nail me to the floor. What did that mean –
“guilty”?! And of what?!
“By your stupid and
presumptuous actions you jeopardized Our reincarnation. You treacherously
snatched the activation process from the hands of experienced players.”
Apparently, that was a hint about Zangar and his teacher. Madonna was getting
more and more aggravated with each new accusation. “You wasted time, which
delayed Our resurrection, and spurned help. You brought Lumpen back to this
world!” At this point the woman jumped up, not at all regally, and pointed
accusingly in the direction of the hologram of the necromancer; that gave so
much more expression to her words. Everyone hastened to turn their glances
towards Lumpen, who was now serving as a visible illustration of my shame. Ignoring
the necromancer’s moment of fame, I stared at Madonna expectantly. Unless my
eyes were failing me, a fleeting coquettish smile had just graced the face of
“The Great One” and it was intended for the “Enemy of all Life”! What kind of
circus was that? I was being publicly whipped for resurrecting him, while she
was flirting with him? Some Creator, indeed! Or was she just trying to build a
safety net for herself? Despite his Game status, Lumpen was a very interesting
and, most importantly, a very, very powerful figure. In the upcoming war he
would have excellent chance of winning. Apparently, I was not the only one who
thought along those lines…
“The only way I was
able to resurrect was by sheer luck.” Madonna said, calming down and returning
to the throne. “We are displeased with you, Paladin Yaropolk! We consider that
you deserve a most severe punishment. However…” at that point she turned
towards Bernard and smiled at him openly, patronizingly. “We value servants who
are loyal to us, and accept the petition of our kind Coordinator. It does not
mean that you will avoid punishment! We grant you a month to serve to
everyone’s benefit, and then you will suffer the just punishment at our hands!
We are announcing to the entire Game community: we would be extremely
displeased if due to someone’s stupidity the guilty one were to not live long
enough to face his sentence.”
The Hall hummed
with approval. Madonna waved her hand in disgust:
“Get him out of my
sight!”
Immediately a
couple of genies materialized next to me: they grabbed my arms and dragged me
out of the Hall as if I had been a naughty kitten. They did not teleport nor
escort me, but dragged me out. They deprived me of an opportunity to leave the
Hall on my own, preserving my honor and dignity. The entire Game community was being
shown that no one should have anything to do with me.
The genies dragged
me beyond the door, and the world around me swirled in a portal. Multicolored
lines started jumping in front of my eyes. Gradually the colors settled,
showing me a small office. The bright setting sun flooded the room through wide
French windows; for a few seconds I was blinded.
“The Paladin has
been delivered!” One of my escorts boomed. I was released and lightly pushed
down into a soft armchair. A friendly voice said peacefully:
“Good afternoon, monsieur
Yaropolk.”
Squinting from the
light, I looked around the room, but could not see anyone. Feeling my confusion,
Steve hurried to help me, highlighting in red a small creature next to the far
wall. The stranger blended in with his environment so well that I immediately
called him “Chameleon” to myself. Had it not been for Steve, I would not have
been able to see through the creature’s camouflage, no matter how much I turned
around.
“Hm, you are quite
observant: good for you, monsieur!” The creature immediately sensed that his
presence and location were no longer a secret to me, and paid me the compliment
in an annoyed voice. Separating from the wall, it moved towards the desk. It
kept changing its shape and coloration; besides, it used light refraction
masterfully. It was impossible to determine the true shape of the owner of this
office; nor was it easy to look at him for a long time. I squinted, trying to
single out or identify at least individual body parts, since I was unable to
see the entire image. At some point it even seemed to me that the true shape of
the creature was not that different from an actual chameleon that existed on
Earth. Finally, I gave up on that, letting the professional do his work. Steve would
process the images and show me that wonder in all its glory. The Chameleon
chuckled contentedly:
“Don’t burden
yourself. I am used to it – members of your species have a hard time looking at
us.” The creature settled in an armchair in front of me and got down to business.
“Monsieur Yaropolk, you are here in order to understand the role you are
supposed to play in upcoming events. My name is Delcatran de Lure, and I am the
personal assistant to the Great One.”
The Chameleon looked
at me expectantly; however, due to recent events I was unable to produce any
reaction other than wariness and deep grunts. Perhaps that was the reason the
creature offered:
“Would you care for
some Cartanian liqueur?”
Two glasses with
ominously red liquid appeared on the small table. My tired brain considered
that a pretty bad sign, yet did not pass up a chance to relax. De Lure joined
me. Several minutes passed in silence as we enjoyed the strong drink. I was not
worried for my life. The status of the Sanctuary was reassuring; besides, if Madonna
had in mind to kill me, she would not have bothered with all the trappings and bringing
in personal assistants. One thing I did not doubt was that in another month I
would face either a painful wiping out or tortures directed personally by the Great
One. Moreover, she might stoop to not only directing, but to personally putting
in a “Great hand” to it. Or foot. That would not surprise me. Such fresh
thoughts popping up in my head indicated that I did in fact manage to relax. I
really did need this liqueur to become myself again. The Chameleon was right.
“What a grrreat
thing this is.” I rolled the “r” on my tongue for a bit, cleared my throat and took
control of the subject. “So what role are you talking about? The Great Madonna
was very clear in her indication that I am not worthy of fulfilling her
directives.” It took a great effort to
keep sarcasm out of my voice.
“It’s not up to us
to judge the words and deeds of the Great Ones,” the chameleon cut me off. “The
Great Mistress is displeased with your actions during preparation for Her
return. For good reason, too ̶ you nearly botched everything! And yet as the
Guide you still have certain obligations to the entire Game community. And
until now you have not been doing your best to fulfill them. That was what
caused Her displeasure. However, She is very kind. And, as it turns out, you
have worthy protectors. Rejoice! You now have a chance to right everything,
prove your competence and loyalty to the great cause! You understand what I
mean, monsieur Yaropolk?”
“Are we talking
about finding Merlin and the Nameless One?” I ventured a guess.
“Only Merlin,”
Delcatran hastened to reply; apparently, he did not expect that some lowlife
would know about the third participant of the Restart. The fingers on his right
hand came into motion and Steve pointed that out to me. The sly chameleon was
quickly typing a message on the keyboard built into the armrest of the chair. Unfortunately,
neither Steve nor I were able to read the missive.
“It does not
matter; I don’t know anything about them anyway.” I tried to look careless.
Internally scolding myself. What an idiot! How could I relax! The last thing I
needed was Gerhard worrying what I might know about the Nameless One. Those who
know too much don’t stay in the Game for long, even if they are thrice the
Guides! I immediately tasked Steve with working out a plausible explanation about
how Zangar had told me about the third participant in the Restart. I needed to
cover all possible scenarios for future developments.
“That’s what we are
talking about here ̶ that you have no information,” the Chameleon nodded,
pleased. “The Guide’s task is to bring all the participants of the Restart together.
How will you do this if you have still not identified Merlin? At this time this
is the highest priority for you ̶ the purpose of your very existence!!!”
The logic of the
conversation called for me, a humble wretched creature, to become self-effacing,
and I hurried to present myself as such, nodding all the way. Nobody asks much
of daft people. Particularly since I already had the right kind of reputation.
So off we go; follow the chosen course and make sure the interlocutor remembers
the effect he wanted to see in the first place.
“You are right there ̶ my bad.
But I do have an excuse here – my training went awry, I was not trained like
the others. Archibald…,” I sighed for effect and made a guilty face, hoping I
was not playing it too hard. But Delcatran was affected by the liqueur as well.
He was inspired by my contrition and willingness to cooperate. The Chameleon even
leaned back in his chair, feeling that he was in control of the situation.
“We are aware of
the gaps in your education, and we are willing to help.” The Chameleon was now
substituting “we” and “us” for “I” and “me”, copying his mistress’s manner of
speaking. “But only within the scope of your mission.”
“Madonna’s generosity
knows no…” I was not even hiding my sarcasm any more, but Delcatran interrupted
me so harshly that for a moment I was afraid he had figured it out:
“The Great Madonna.
You must treat our Mistress with respect.”
“Do I only need to
find Merlin, or something else?” I was getting bored with the games. I wanted
to finish it quickly and find out what it was that Madonna wanted from me.
Actually, over the
past week I had been quite impressed by her “grandeur” and “saintly deeds”. A
hysterical woman, wallowing in her own strength and power. Given to showering rewards
and punishments without any reasonable cause. Today’s reception was not the
only demonstration of her grace. The day before she had demoted the Heads of
Clerics and Priests who somehow had not curried her favor enough, sent some
players into exile as she did Archibald, stripping them of class and rank… she
actively interfered with the Game on Earth without bothering to familiarize
herself with current issues. There was growing discontent among the player
masses, but it found no relief. Everyone kept quiet, unwilling to draw fire on
themselves.
“You are instructed
to find, within a month, the creature into which Merlin reincarnated.” The Chameleon
now assumed a businesslike manner of conversation as well. “It would be enough
to simply find out who he is and report to the Mistress. Then your mission will
be considered complete.”
“Simply find him?”
I was genuinely surprised. “I do not need to bring him to command
headquarters?” \
“Command
headquarters?” The Chameleon smirked and aimed both his fantastic eyes at me.
“Perhaps you happen to know where it is located?”
“What do you mean,
where?” I mumbled. I simply had to confess to myself that I was not pretending
to be an idiot – I actually was one. “I think it’s here, on Earth. I could be
wrong of course, but it seems logical to me.”
“So you don’t know
for sure?” My interlocutor kept questioning me. In response I simply shrugged
my shoulders once again and nodded. “Why do you find it logical?”
Figuring that I was
not losing anything by sharing my considerations I clarified:
“Command
headquarters is a standard feature in practically all Games. It would be
logical to consider that it exists here as well. Would you agree? All the known
key figures reincarnated on Earth: the Guide, the Keymaster, the Great Madonna.
Moreover, She is certain that one should look for Merlin on our world as well. That brings about a reasonable question: why?
What did Earth do to deserve such an honor? Maybe the answer is that it has the
Command headquarters on it?”
“It could be, it
could be…” Madonna’s personal assistant said contemplatively. “But it does not
matter. Monsieur Yaropolk. We are realists here and we prefer to task players
with what they are capable of doing. So, find Merlin and report that to me. We
do not require more from you.. My comm number has already been sent to you. If
you manage to succeed, you will receive a substantial reward from the Mistress;
if not, you will lose the status of Guide
̶ I am sure you understand the
consequences.”
So simply and clearly
he put me in my place. I imagined the consequences quickly and vividly.
“Can I count on any
help?” Since “the realists” gathered here, perhaps I could hope for some perks and
additional bonuses.
“We have put in
place everything that is necessary to start the search. Players have been warned
that it is not a good idea to attack you. As for the eccentrics and other
crazies that think they are messiahs of whatever sort, you will have to fight
them off on your own. However, there are not many of those on this world.” I
was not particularly upset; in all fairness an extra month of life was quite a
fat perk in and of itself.
“Where should I
start the search?”
“There is really
nothing I can do for you there. You should be in a position to know better.”
The Chameleon disappointed me again. “Trust your intuition. Your essential
aspect will let you know where is the path that would lead you to Merlin. Let
me remind you, you have one month. It’s time for you to go!”
The assistant made
a gesture, and the familiar genies lifted me from the armchair. Another portal
trip, and I was at the Paladins’ Citadel. This trip destination was unexpected
to me, but everything was clarified at once:
“The Head is
waiting for you, brother Yaropolk. Follow me.” An orc Paladin immediately
appeared next to me. Escorts and guards were replaced with more escorts and
guards. That was oppressive. We moved forward and had already passed two or
three halls when a belated thought struck me: we were moving away from the
reception. As far as I could tell based on the 3d projection of the Citadel. I
was turning my head in confusion, trying to figure out what to do. My companion
noticed that:
“We can’t go
through the reception now. You are an outlaw now, brother. Gerhard cannot see you
openly. So…”
The orc let the
sentence trail off meaningfully, and sighed a few times. That made me feel
wronged. At the same time, I kept walking, calmer now. We walked for another
minute before I figured out what bothered me. “Gerhard!” Not a single Paladin from
Earth would be so deliberately casual when speaking about the Head. Only
outsiders would do that! This orc was not from our world! I rolled over,
activated all my defenses and my artifact as well.
“Your debt is paid,
Sharnadan.” A shadow in the far corner of the room turned into an entity about which
I had short-sightedly forgotten. This was really bad timing on the part of Garlion
to try and satisfy his craving for revenge. In the thick of things I had
already forgotten about this couple of advantage-seeking elves: Nartalim, whom
I had killed, and his mean dad.
“I will take it
from here.” Keeping his eyes on me Garlion gestured to the orc, indicating that
the latter was free to leave. At the same time, the two six-foot gremlin
statues standing near the door came into motion, extracting some nets.
“Nothing personal, brother
Yaropolk,” the orc boomed, indifferent to my fate now, “I just needed to pay
off a debt.”
One of the gremlins
allowed the orc to freely leave the room; then he stood motionless at the door,
blocking the entrance with his massive body. A silvery net whistled through the
air, trying to tie me up, but this role of prey was not to my liking. Preempting
his move I dodged sideways, letting the net flash above my head, and keeping
the gremlin between myself and Garlion. The elf did not follow the practice of
villains from various movies wasting half an hour to tell everyone about his
malevolent misdeeds. He attacked silently, but viciously. Blue lightning
flashed from his hand, and I dashed away from the line of fire, jumping around
like a mountain goat. The floor in the spot I just vacated exploded with shards
of stone. Lightnings of this level of power from a Paladin worried me quite a
bit. Steve immediately revealed to me the reason for this inconsistency: the
elf was using a small staff that generated those lightning bolts.
The stone gremlin
regarded his empty net sadly, then hurried, to the extent it was possible for
one like him, to make another attempt. I was only happy that it took the dummy
at least a couple of minutes to prepare for the next throw, or sometimes even
longer; this way I did not have to be too distracted from my main opponent. I
realized my mistake too late, as the silvery threads covered me head to toe. I
had forgotten about the other gremlin by the door, and turned my back to him.
My artifact was powerless against the net; only sparks lit the air every time I
used the “Templar’s Blow”.
Garlion came
closer, still silent, without lowering the staff that was still aimed at me. He
looked me straight in the eye, and I knew full well that words would change
nothing. I was counting the seconds in my mind and waiting to go for respawn
without closing my eyes. Let my enemy wait in vain for fear in them. All that
was there was frustration with this whole situation, and looking for it to
resolve itself quickly.
Lightning flashed,
but practically nothing changed. At first I did not even understand what had
happened. I was steeling myself for pain, but instead I lost feeling in my
legs. I stared at the elf in bewilderment, trying to understand the point of
his actions. But all I received was an evil grin and another lightning bolt.
That’s what made his intentions clear: with each new bolt my body was becoming
more and more frozen and numb. Garlion rendered me completely motionless, and I
had a hard time breathing. I tried to hold my breath to try and trigger a
respawn, but my reflexes worked all too well: I was gulping air raggedly, while
the elf was laughing at me. Having enjoyed this view of my humiliation, Garlion,
finally, started talking:
“Don’t count on respawn,
brother Yaropolk.” His voice was dripping with hatred. “That would be too
simple. I have something different in store for you. I will lock you up in a
place where no one will ever find you! You will spend millennia in confinement,
motionless: the only sound you will hear will be the sound of dripping water!
Drip! Drip! Drip! It will drip, second after second, minute after minute, day
after day, counting off your worthless existence, and driving you mad! An
infinity in darkness and solitude, without any hope for welcome
unconsciousness! Would that not be a worthy punishment for the death of my son?”
The elf was so
carried away that he did not immediately hear a knock on the door that grew
louder and louder.
“Don’t let anyone
in!” Garlion ordered the gremlins. The dummies obediently headed for the door
and thought of nothing better than to sit down straight on the floor, creating
a stone door-block. But the visitor or visitors were obviously tired of trying
to gain entry peacefully, and proceeded to actively attack. Whoever was
storming the door, they did not consider either the doors themselves or a
couple of monumental dummies much of an obstacle. With a thunderous blow that
sounded like a cannon shot, the doors splintered to pieces and the gremlins
exploded into tiny stone shards. Before the dust had a chance to settle Sharda
calmly stepped into the room, wearing a full battle outfit. His battle hammer
shone so bright that it looked like the sun rising from the morning fog.
Garlion did not
waste any time on excuses, and immediately attacked the unwelcome guest with
lightning bolts. The gnome grabbed a huge shield out of the air; the lightning
just licked at it and petered out harmlessly. Sharda obviously had something
more to show the librarian. A few more lightning bolts flashed, with a similar
result. The gnome immediately teleported himself right next to Garlion. A deceptively
slight swing of the hammer, and the elf’s staff, broken in half, went flying to
some unknown corner. The elf’s hand was now hanging lifelessly twisted while Garlion
was wailing hopelessly, holding his shattered limb. The enemy was defeated. It
was a pleasure to watch a real Paladin work: fast, precise and to the point. I
had a lot to learn.
“I warned you, brother
Garlion.” Sharda said calmly, having made sure that Garlion had lost all his
battle ardor. Sharda clicked his tongue, extracted an elves’ potion and offered
it to the elf. The gnome’s care could mislead one, but his eyes did not hold
anything good in store for the now quiet librarian.
“I am within my
rights! He killed my son!” Garlion hissed, as if trying to justify his actions.
“You are just an
old and evil elf! Had Nartalim survived the Academy, you would have had to kill
him yourself!” Sharda cut him off decisively, raising his voice. “He betrayed
his brethren in class! He ceased being a Paladin! Brother Yaropolk saved you
from disgrace, Garlion. You are the one who brought up your son this way!”
Garlion, indignant,
kept opening and closing his mouth, unable to respond anything to the gnome,
and only shuffling in place clumsily. Sharda exhaled noisily, but in a few
moments continued in a calm and tired voice:
“Get thee back to
your library, brother. I will notify the Head of your actions.”
Considering this
issue settled, Sharda grabbed me by the scruff of my neck and dragged me out of
the room. In the hallway there was a team of five Paladins with their weapons
at the ready, waiting for the gnome’s return. The support team was prepared to
come to their brother’s aid at any moment, but, seeing how things turned out,
the Paladins sheathed their weapons. Sharda approached his team and handed me
to the largest warrior. He slung my body over his shoulder like a trophy that
one would grudge to discard, but that was quite heavy to carry. So that’s how
we started out through the corridors and halls full of echoes. The brothers
joked good-naturedly about my Bucephalus. The warrior laughed at the jokes
together with them, not at all offended, but did not talk back. Finally I saw a
regular patterned wood floor instead of the stone slabs; then I was relieved
from the need to look at the butt of my strong and patient “steed”.
“Brother Shardangabat,
your timing is always impeccable. I found a most curious plant…” first I heard
the local doctor, and only after that was I able to see him. As a true warrior
of Hippocrates, the healer immediately switched his attention to the new
patient. “What happened to him?”
“Zeroed lightning, brother
Dragore,” Sharda explained. “He is conscious and is still breathing. How long?”
“If we are speaking
about time, it would be three to four hours. We need to restore the frozen
muscles. I can’t send him to respawn, right?”
“Preferably not. Brother
Yaropolk has changed the anchor point, and it is unclear how long it would take
him to return. And we need to do it fast, the Head is waiting for him.”
“Fast?” The doctor
scratched his beard in contemplation and started going through scores of little
vials on his shelf, muttering under his breath. “What do we have here? No, that
won’t do… Or maybe… No, let’s not risk too much… Oh, here it is… wait, it may
have a strong adverse reaction on the digestive system… What’s that…? oh, that
would erase the personality… that would not do at all ̶ no,
sir! Oh! Finally! That’s what we need. Fast, easy and very painful. Oh well,
whatever ̶ the result is what we need first and foremost.
And the result is guaranteed in thirty minutes! But after that, no later than
in four hours, make sure you let him sleep for a long time.”
“Go for it. Brother
Yaropolk will remember everything; he will endure now and sleep later.”
Half an hour later
I was sitting in Gerhard van Brast’s waiting room trying to stop myself from
shaking. That was not easy; sometimes my legs seemed to develop a life of their
own and started to shake so hard that I had to hold them in place with my
hands. The doctor had not lied. It really had been painful. Several times
during the procedure I fainted as my body tried to escape the torture, but I
was brought to immediately, as the method required that I stay conscious
throughout.
Sharda was sitting
next to me in the room, and watched my every move. The gnome did not say a word
as he carried me there. Sharda generally seemed different from the gnome I used
to know. He was glum and silent. He had not made any ironic comments or jests. He
stared from under his eyebrows. My mood had really plummeted, and I tried to
strike up a conversation, looking for topics that would interest him:
“Have you been able
to find out anything about the third participant?”
Sharda’s left
eyelid twitched, but that was the only reaction I got.
“Did Archibald call
you?”
Same twitch of the
left eyelid and nothing else Maybe that was a sign for me to shut up, but I was
irritated by his silence to such an extent that felt unable to stop.
“I was able to find
out that they call the third participant the Nameless one. He erases all the information
about himself. Who could that be, now is only known to…”
“Enough!” Sharda
cut me off sharply. “Want to know nothing about the Nameless One, nor about the
Restart. You have already said too much. How many times do I have to tell you,
knucklehead, that even walls have ears?”
I hunched
noticeably, recognizing that the reproach was justified. Yet that was his own
fault; he could have said something to me
̶ say, about the weather. I had
just been frozen all the way to my brain. By the way, speaking of the freeze and
its consequences:
“What will happen
to Garlion? He…”
“Forget about the
library.” Sharda cut me off again, not hoping for my aptitude any more. “You won’t
be able to get in there, period. That topic is closed. Shut up and sit quietly!”
Sharda hunched up
like a sparrow on a perch. Now the gnome had really destroyed all my
willingness to talk, and drove away the thought that his condition had anything
to do with me. Why? Simply because he cut me off on the topic of Restart, and
shut me up with a reproach that I talk too much. Here he also had the last word,
like the mentor of infinite numbers of dumb students. I was really not able to
become the cause of Sharda’s great headache. The only reasonable explanation
for this behavior was Archibald being in disfavor. The gnome and the catorian had
been close, and the latter’s exile and the stripping of his class and rank
would upset Sharda quite a bit. An indirect proof of my supposition lay in the gnome’s
tone of voice as he mentioned the topic of Restart. If they had not gotten
themselves into this whole Restart business up to their ears, perhaps the catorian
would have still been on the good side of the Head. Hm… That’s it! Sharda simply
feels guilty! And the things I said only exacerbated that feeling.
“If I were to see
my teacher in the near future, what should I tell him?” I asked, holding the gnome’s
heavy stare. The silence lasted for a long time, until finally Sharda said
quietly:
“Delra kan rog.
Videotape it, or else you’ll forget it, you knucklehead!”
“Delra kan rog.” I
repeated, and nodded. “I will tell him.”.
Sharda puffed his
cheeks, obviously about to say something else, but at that moment the doors to Gerhard’s
office opened and I was invited to come in. Alone. I went through the security
and sanitation zone quickly, getting just three signals of the markers removed.
I accepted the message telling me I was totally clean now, and finally I was
standing before the Head. During the week that had passed since Madonna
appeared, Gerhard had changed. And not for the better. Perhaps it was just my
subjective opinion, and I simply pitied the man whose Doll was such a bitch. It
seemed to me that his face was drawn, his cheeks were hollow, his eyes were
red, and generally all his features looked peaked. Gerhard looked like someone
who last rested a couple of Restarts ago. However, he greeted me as always,
with a fatherly smile and wisdom in his tired eyes..
“You had a long and
difficult week, brother Yaropolk.” With this simple phrase Gerhard indicated
that he was fully aware of all my troubles and the reasons why I had not been
able to report to him for training earlier. Immediately after Madonna’s return Bernard
had taken me to his estate, and did not let me out until the ceremony. I was
certain that the incident with Garlion had already been reported to the Head as
well.
“Quite a few people
could say the same thing.” I responded. “But I do agree, calm and boredom are
in fact lacking in my life.”
Gerhard smiled at
me supportively.
“Have you decided
on the ability you would like to learn?”
“The diamond protection
dome.” Even though I had spent a week under home arrest, I had been able to
study some of the Paladin abilities. Thanks to Alard who had not abandoned a
brother in hard times. Now I knew precisely what I wanted. The absolute
protection that Gerhard had set up for me during the battle near Lecleur estate
required an enormous amount of Energy. Even if my crystal had been fully
charged, I would have only been able to maintain this kind of shield only for
about ten minutes. With respect to my attack abilities, everything was more or
less clear: several hundred bunches of scrolls with the Templar’s Blow were
sitting in my inventory in case times got tough. But my defense left a lot to
be desired. My fight with Garlion demonstrated this one more time: the elf did
not even have to work hard in order to break through. The diamond dome was not
a universal method either, but it would have helped against Garlion. Probably.
“Good choice,” Gerhard
praised me. He spent some time looking for a clean sheet of paper on his desk,
then quickly sketched a few symbols on it, and extracted a jar of golden powder
from the top drawer; covering the still-wet inscription, he carefully shook off
the excess. Satisfied with the result, the Head handed the paper over to me. As
soon as my fingers touched the sheet, and his left the paper, the Game immediately
highlighted the message on me receiving a new ability. The scroll flashed in
magic fire, and disappeared without as much as a trace of ash on my fingers. My
training was completed.
“You will go to
Moscow.” Gerhard said without wasting time. “Try to keep quiet and not be
noticed by anyone undesirable. Work on explorer tasks: walk around the city, watch
the ways players interact with NPCs under normal conditions. It will take time
to bring everything back to normal again. Madonna’s disfavor won’t last
forever, since women have short memories.”
“I understood the
subtle hint, but could not agree with the Head. Such power-seeking creatures
are actually likely to bear grudges for a long time. But of course I did not
say that out loud. Just shook my head and brought up another important problem:
“Moscow is full of
churches.” Gerhard had promised to teach me to block sources of Light. It was
high time to work on that.
“Yes, clerics are
fond of that city. Russia is generally an extremely strange country; under
certain circumstances people are capable of latching onto an idea and start
implementing it with the self-sacrifice of real fanatics. For example, there
was a time when the country’s rulers decided to promote atheism among the
population, so immediately all the attributes and external signs of a faith were
actively condemned by the authorities and mass media. All the churches and religious
communities were eradicated. Then the government changed its mind, and
immediately the whole county was full of repentance, preparing for the arrival
of the next messiah. There are no subtle shades in that country. Even though
this is the reason it wins all its wars against external aggressors. The
bravest soldier is a fanatic ready to sacrifice everything for the sake of his
country. Others are just not capable of that.”
“I disagree.” I was
never an avid patriot, but this made me feel for my country. “It’s not right to
equate patriots with self-sacrificing fanatics! Besides: regarding the faith…”
“I did not imply
that they were equal; nor did I make any value statements as to whether that
was good or bad.” Gerhard grinned, making me fall silent. “It was just a
statement of fact. I consider this feature of the Russian people amusing.
Nothing more than that. But you are right: at this time Russia is chock-full of
Sources of Light, so you need protection. Let’s start with theory.”
The difference
between Light and Dark ones was purely in the mechanism for generating Energy. Dark
ones were able to obtain it directly from their environment, while Light ones
needed an intermediary that would accumulate Energy within it. The so-called “Source
of Light”, which destroyed all free emotion around itself. Actually, that was
the main problem of the Dark ones: they continuously absorbed available free
emotions from the surrounding world. If there are none available, as is very
common on Earth, since all emotions are aimed at specific deities, they would
have to absorb whatever is available. In this case it would be Energy infused
with Light, and that is quite detrimental for Dark ones.
“What is the
conclusion you make from all that?” Gerhard was not about to present it to me
on a platter; rather, he wanted me to take active part in the learning process.
“In order to be
able to stay near a Source of Light, one needs to conduct the absorption of
emotions from the ambient space to… for example…. Now that stumped me. To
oneself? But that’s physically impossible. To an accumulator? That would not
work either, because it did not generate emotions. Generally the only sources of
emotions are living beings, but you can’t continuously drag around a… I got an
idea!
“A pet!” I exhaled,
proud of myself, and was rewarded with an approving nod from my teacher. The
gift from the Chancellor of the Academy had a twist to it!
“Specifically, the
kind of pet that is capable of feeling emotions. Whether they are negative or
positive, the choice is entirely yours. The important thing is that in order to
overcome the effects of a Source of Light within a certain proximity to you,
the pet should be nearby and feel strong emotions. The stronger the Source, the
more vivid his feelings must be. Otherwise you still feel the effects of the
Light. Unfortunately, pets are incapable of strong positive emotions. And no
matter how noble the Dark Ones’ intentions, sooner or later we take the easier
path to reaching our goal. The instinct of self-preservation wins. So here is
my advice to you: don’t get attached to pets. Some feelings should be rejected
right away, or else they make us weak. And nobody forgives that.”
“Pets don’t live
very long, right?” The horrible realization dawned on me.
“A year, sometimes
two if you work hard on avoiding Sources. At the Auction one can purchase
special cages and devices that scan the ambient space, searching for Sources of
Light, and initiate the torture process automatically. The Dark one will just
have to remove the remains from the cage and replace them with a new pet. There
is no reason to bother feeding them, either.”
It probably would
take time to get used to those things being common. It’s easier to torture
people, most of the time they are really begging for it, and, at least theoretically,
they are in the same league as you. One would really have to change one’s mind
in order to torture a helpless creature. But Gerhard was right; guided by
self-preservation I would quickly become used even to this.
The Head gave me a
few minutes to think about the new information, and made sure that I fully
understood everything that had to do with blocking the Sources of Light. But in
any case, Darks are the way they are. One could not help but expect oceans of
blood and suffering. I had known what I was getting into.
“Brother Alard requested
permission to accompany you,” Gerhard said, realizing I was not going to ask
any questions. Orcs from Zagransh have their own notions of honor and dignity;
I see no reason to deny his request. I have already approved his assignment to
Moscow, al the logistical problems are being resolved now.”
If a being at the
level of Gerhard van Brast decided that in Moscow I would benefit from the
presence of brother Alard, so be it. In this I could rely completely on the
Head. The orc would be useful to me even if he had another directive, whether I
knew about it or not. For a spy the Paladin would not be a suitable figure at
all, so on the whole I was actually quite pleased with the news. So pleased
that despite my initial intent not to be the first to bring up the issue of Madonna’s
task, I decided to ask for advice.
“Sir Gerhard, I
need your help or advice. I think you know that Madonna told me to find Merlin
within a month. If I were to fail I would no longer be the Guide. It seems
unlikely that I would remain Paladin Yaropolk either, unless her anger fades.
But I intend to do everything within my power. I am asking your permission to
visit the classified section of the library. Archibald was certain that in
there one could find references to Merlin’s Diary, or, rather, indications of where
one should look for it. Perhaps you know what my teacher had in mind. I don’t
even really need access – I just need information. Please forgive my
forwardness, but one month is too short a time to rely only on one’s own
abilities.”
Gerhard was taken aback
for a moment, not expecting such direct talk from me. However, he was the Head
of Class for a reason, and knew how to deal with the unexpected.
“I will think how
to help you. Issuing books or copies thereof, particularly from the classified
section, is strictly controlled, and even I am powerless to change it. It will
take time. Now go. Brother Demitre will see you to the Auction and back.
Gerhard pressed a
button on his desk, and immediately a hulking Paladin entered the room. Brother
Demitre, the new Head of the Battle Wing who had replaced ousted Iven, turned
out to be an interesting character. He was a typical rough warrior, one of
those who intercept any attempt of speech by terrifyingly squinting their eyes and
barking thunderously: “Silence! Enemies are close by!” But this particular one
advanced this skill even further. At first, as he listened to his orders
silently, he nodded and immediately
gestured me to the door, I thought that was cool and laconic. But throughout
our outing, not only did I not hear a word from him, but his face was totally
expressionless. All information was conveyed to me with very spare gestures,
basically reduced to orders “Stop” or “Go”.
In the hallway we
were joined by another six brothers, who fully surrounded me in a square
formation. It was very serendipitous of Gerhard to take care of my safety. My
new guards were like their commander, except they actually sported some facial
expressions. At least they were capable of frowning, and, occasionally, smiling.
In the Sanctuary, one
of the Paladins extracted a long feeler which he used to examine space far
ahead of himself. I tried to find out the name of this strange contraption, but
all six turned their heads to me and gave me such a look that it drove away any
desire to communicate. So we kept moving silently all the way to our
destination. The NPCs did not notice us; other players tried to clear out of
the way as fast as they could, so we reached our destination without any
delays. There was just one instance when the Paladin with the feeler drew back,
as a portal flashed in front of him. The feeler departed in an unknown
direction, and the Paladin simply frowned in displeasure and took out another.
The strange portal indicated that in the foreseeable future I might be in for
an unexpected trip. After I left the Sanctuary these silent Paladins would
leave me, and in Moscow I would have to sort out my problems by my lonesome.
I liked the
Auction. The process of purchasing items was not what attracted me the most. A
host of figures and pictures, descriptions, and generally mountains of
monotonous information. What I liked was a different thing: with each reviewed item
my artifact experience level would grudgingly creep up by one hundredth of a
percent. If I had had more time, I would have made the Auction my second home.
At the point when
the hatred of my bodyguards reached a level I could physically sense, I stopped
aimlessly leafing through the catalogue pages and proceeded to actual
purchases: a cage, a couple of torture devices, a few other small items. It
took me a record amount of time: five minutes. As I turned in my hands the
steel cage with its horrible contraptions, I realized very clearly that I simply
would not be able to stuff small furry Rragr in there. Having realized and accepted
the thought, I started looking for a new pet for myself, preferably something
disgusting both in terms of character and appearance. I did not have to search
for long: there was a mean blob of fur, with fangs and claws. It emitted
horrendous smells and drooled green goo. Just as I was about to confirm the
purchase of the beast, I noticed a system information warning. It turned out
that the rules of the Game limited the number of pets for all players, except
hunters. Everyone else was only allowed one per player; the small font below
indicated that if the player confirmed his purchase while already in possession
of a pet, the money would not be refunded. I had to pause and verify Rragr’s
status. My assistant studied the question of ownership of my furry pet and reassured
me. At this time the pet was listed as the property of my Doll, and the process
of transfer of ownership was successfully completed. Only in case of Helen’s death
would Rragr revert to becoming my pet again. With this welcome information I
completed the purchase of “cannon fodder”.
Having finished
with the Auction, I visited the bank. A goblin with a “D” license immediately
appeared from the infinite stream of employees and froze expectantly:
“Mister Yaropolk: our
bank is at your service.” The goblin was completely unabashed by the presence
of the steely Demitre, who followed just a couple of feet behind me. By the
way, it took quite an effort to get the silent Paladin to stop at the bank. It’s
hard to ask for something when it seems that you are being thoroughly ignored.
Eventually I stooped to threatening to complain to Gerhard, and that worked.
“Only today we have
special offers for deposits on extremely beneficial terms. I am sure you would
be very interested to know…”
“No.” I rudely cut
off the clerk and his waterfall of words. I preferred to talk with their lot as
little as possible. Otherwise, before you know it you would give them all your
money “on very beneficial terms” and will owe them to boot. Just like peddlers
from my life while I was still an NPC. “I need a normal account and exchange of
one granis into gold, with subsequent conversion into Euros. That is all.”
“Sure, sure,
whatever you prefer.” The goblin’s ears twitched, but his professional training
kicked in. The goblin quickly logged in on the nearest machine, fulfilling my
request, and then voiced an unexpected proposal: “I recommend that instead of
Euros you take US dollars and Rubles at the rate of two to one. It would be
more practical for you.”
“Fine,” I agreed,
looking at the goblin suspiciously. He hurried to explain:
“The bank is
informed about your assignment location, Mr. Yaropolk. In Moscow ordinary
people tend to prefer dollars and Rubles. You would have to exchange Euros, and
then you would lose money paying commission. I am sorry if I embarrassed you.
Are you already familiar with the procedure for cashing granises?”
My negative
movement of the head was welcomed by the goblin, who briefly outlined the
method to me. As it turned out, regarding the situation with money in the Game,
not everything was as transparent as I had thought at first. Just because a player
converts granises into game coins, gold, securities or foreign exchange, the
player’s granis balance in the Game did not change. The Game would
automatically calculate it regardless of the conversion. At any given time everything
was calculated as granis equivalent, and the Game monitored this very carefully.
As soon as it exceeded the number of basic granises, it would activate the
“terror” mode. So one would not be able to get around this by converting granises
into gold: it wouldn’t work.
Without dragging
out the formalities I signed a couple of agreements and finally received two plastic
cards. The money available in those accounts would provide for decent existence,
even in Moscow, which had been expensive for a couple of Game years. But one
thing became obvious to me: I urgently needed to increase the number of basic granises
available to me. Once I was done with the Explorer’s tasks I would work on the
Dungeons. Of all the ways I knew to earn some money, that one was the most
effective.
Moscow greeted me
with fair weather, which was suspicious in and of itself. The city I remembered
as stuffy and dusty was, to my surprise, a poster-child of great
infrastructure. My eyes kept stumbling on ideally clean cobblestones, while my
nose wrinkled from air that smelled too fresh. The contrast with the Moscow I
knew was so stark that I just kept standing in front of the stationary portal
in the center of Red Square. I just stood there, astonished, getting in the way
of newly arriving players.
“Paladin Yaropolk?”
The player who was meeting me had to tap me on the shoulder to get my attention.
I turned around, and instead of going through with meet-and-greet kept staring
at a luxurious limo nearby. A limo. A government limo, no less. A well-known
brand. Right in the center of Red Square. Which is closed to vehicles. The
greeter cleared his throat a couple of times, making sure that I focused on
him, then waved carelessly towards the limo without introducing himself:
“Get in ̶ the meeting
is in thirty minutes. I hate being late.”
With the flashing
beacon on, we dashed across the square and rolled up to the entrance to the
Kremlin. The gates opened as we approached and a whole dozen of guards, both NPC
and players, saluted our cortege. The car rolled up to the main entrance of the
Great Kremlin Palace. Several NPCs rolled out a red carpet on the stairs to the
limo. Soldiers from the Kremlin Guard lined up on the sides, looking very smart
at attention; an orchestra nearby played a welcome march. Everyone’s eyes shone
with trepidation and ingratiation. Everything was so ceremonial it made you
want to take a huge spoon and scrub all that idiotic corniness to the nearest
dumpster and slap everyone on the face for their slavish outlook and perpetual
desire to curry favor. It is so sad that people all too frequently turn the
noble concept of service into the farce of servility.
The guards opened
the doors of the limo, and my companion stepped out regally. The guards stood
at full attention with even more fervor. No one showed any interest in me at
all. The gentleman started ascending the stairs slowly and pompously. I looked
at the back of the player as he was walking between the two lines of guards,
but I was in no hurry to rush after him.
So who was it that had deigned to meet me?
A shortish guy
rushed out from the crowd and pushed me forward a little to encourage me to
follow the big boss. The latter had meanwhile reached the top of the stairs and
heartily kiss the young girl holding the round bread in the welcome ceremony.
Only after that did he first notice that I was not by his side. He looked back and
asked in surprise:
“What’s keeping you?
Come on, I have to register you still! Keep up!”
So then it was the Registrar
himself who did me the honor and welcomed me personally. Not bad! Immediately
following the entrance I was scanned several times for prohibited items. I was
forced to leave my machine gun; that indicated that the contents of the player’s
personal inventory was no secret. For quite some time the guards pursed their
lips at my Book of Knowledge, arguing with me about the need to surrender it as
well. Only the interference of my companion protected me from being forced to
feel completely naked. The registrar’s vice in all of that was being
patronizing and casual. As if he were a denizen of heaven deigning to descend
from his official Olympus for the sale of the problems of a mere mortal.
Our journey ended
in a huge office. I noticed a few players in the anteroom, waiting for their
turn to register, but they were a lot less lucky than I. Once in the office,
the Registrar occupied a luxurious chair at the head of the desk, and opened a
shiny leather folder which had been prepared in advance. I spent several
minutes in silence, waiting for the Registrar to finish his reading and speak.
Notably, the room was devoid of any kinds of seats for visitors. Either because
its occupant preferred communicating through his secretary, or because visitors
were supposed to remember their place in that office.
“Well, well, well…
So you are assigned to Moscow, then.”
I nodded,
confirming the obvious.
“You were allocated
an initial stipend for two months and a studio apartment in Nth street? The
keys were issued to you in the Sanctuary?”
I nodded again. The
Registrar looked concerned, sitting still for a while, with only his searching stare
traveled over me trying to find something visible only to him. After a lengthy pause
he continued harshly:
“So, then, Paladin Yaropolk,
all the preliminary agreements are now void. Return the keys to the apartment
to the secretary, and there is no initial stipend for you either.
“I don’t get it…” I
said slowly, surprised.
“What is there to
get? There was an apartment allocated, but then the drift changed and no, there
is no apartment. Same thing with the stipend.”
The drift, eh. I
would expect that this drift was not drifting from the Registrar himself. That’s
too petty for someone at his level; besides, he would not bother to personally
welcome me if it had been so. It looked more like a woman’s stupid willfulness on
the part of certain pissy individuals. Bitch! Right, put some hobos under my
door, too, so that I would realize more fully how powerful you are! And the
local tycoon ran off to fulfill the order personally and to satisfy his
curiosity about who was that guy being personally humiliated by Madonna Herself?
“Is there anything
at all that is provided for me?”
“Sure there is. A
room in a dorm. It’s a decent room; the neighbors are good, too. Just the
ticket for a beginner player.” I could not understand any more whether he was
mocking me or just trying to cheer me up in earnest. “My secretary will issue
the keys to you.”
My patience ran
out. I had already opened my mouth to tell him my thoughts, but the Registrar
raised his palm, stopping me:
“Before you say
anything, you need to know that according to the rules of the Game you cannot
say no. And for insulting an official on duty you will be designated persona
non grata. I am not touchy, but the order is the same for everyone! Head
hunters would be issued a permit for your respawn. You have any extra levels?”
“No.” I felt
deflated. My interlocutor hemmed, satisfied that he had discovered my reactions
to be adequate. Relaxing, he reached for the bottom drawer of the desk, and I
heard the sound of some liquid being poured. Leaning back in his chair the
Registrar swished some amber drink in his glass.
“Don’t fret so
much. Anyone could be in your place. Never say never… to the dorm.” The
Registrar laughed at his own joke, superstitiously spat over his left shoulder and
knocked on the desk before taking a great swig from the glass. This player,
even if he were to end up in the “dorm”, would only be there if he wanted it
himself. People like him feel great under any kind of “drift”, they always land
on all fours because they are really good at adjusting to any environment. “By
the way, we cannot force our guests to stay in social housing projects during
their work trial period if they have their own real estate. You just have to
officially notify us. You have some granises?”
The Registrar raised
his eyebrow quizzically.
“I have some granises.”
I repeated like a parrot.
“Good deal.” The Registrar
beamed at me and clasped his hands exaggeratedly. “Oh, my God, why did I take
my medication on an empty stomach! That’s wrong, I should not do it ̶ my
doctor will yell at me! I need to correct that right away.”
“I do beg your
pardon, sir Registrar, but I just arrived, and have not eaten since morning. I
hope it would not be too forward on my part to ask for some indication of good
places for lunch?”This was a game two could and should play. What is not
expressly forbidden is allowed. Can one player not provide a simple service to
another player? Why not, if he is paying in granises? The Registrar jumped off
of his chair immediately and pushed the speaker button on his desk:
“Sveta, I’m off to
lunch. I will be back tomorrow. Today please provide the housing key to Paladin
Yaropolk and tell him about the notice procedure.” As he was at the door, he
added quickly as he was locking the office: “It’s not like it is a problem normally
dealt with at my level, but why not provide some help. May everyone be rewarded
according to his deeds…at some later point in time, as they say.”
Followed by many
displeased looks, we left the anteroom and went down to the local cafeteria, which
was decorated in an old but rich design. The Registrar took a table in the
corner, far from curious onlookers, and waited silently till the chef came out
to greet us.
“Good afternoon!
The usual?” The chef’s voice was polite and his back was bowed, despite the
fact that the chef was an elf.
“Yes, Master
Silturine. If it is ‘the usual’, you know best.”
Elf bowed to the
Registrar again, gave me a fleeting glance, grimaced and left proudly. No one
offered me a menu. Seeing that I was bewildered, the Registrar laughed:
“Master Silturine
is a chef with a broad field of expertise, and is a true professional. In order
to determine one’s tastes in food he only needs one look. When he prepares the
dishes, he takes into consideration the guests’ mood or the nature of the
negotiations. He likes visitors with exquisite tastes… While your attitude to
food is only so-so. You are not an aficionado , to put it in one word.” The
Registrar laughed again.
“I see…” I replied
slowly. It seemed as though I did not hear anything new, but it hurt.
“While the food is
not yet here, now is time to talk business. As I mentioned, you do not have to
stay in the housing that is assigned to you
̶ just take the keys, say ‘Thank
you’ politely, then buy yourself some property and live there. What else did
you want to know?”
“Information. A
detailed guide to all the interesting and useful places in Moscow. An
unofficial one, of course. And some contact information for useful players. The
standard set to get me out of trouble fast in case I encounter trouble.”
“You are asking for
a lot… two granises.” The profiteer said without a pause. I nearly choked.
“This is rob …”
“Do be careful in
your choice of words.” The player cut me off rudely.
“Sorry,” I said
calmly now, not willing to spoil relations from the outset. “I was not thinking
right. I meant to say, that is expensive for a beginner player.”
The Registrar hemmed
contentedly and agreed:
“I know. But it was
worth trying.” He laughed loudly.
“One granis.” I
countered his proposal.
“One and a half. Or
else you’ll have to get by without the useful contacts.” The Registrar would
not give up.
I sighed sadly and crossed
the useful emergency contacts off my “good to have” list.
“Fine, but please
tell me, what was the precise wording of Madonna’s order, and why are you still
helping me? Even though this help is far from being free.” I could not let this
just pass by without a dig at him.
“Deal. There is
nothing to hide there. ‘Make his life complicated without going too far. Take
away his privileges, but play within the rules.’ As for the help, that really
is clear. She metes out a punishment, but it is a petty one. A purely female
way of doing it ̶ just for the fun of it. This is not serious,
so that means the exile will not last long. She needs you, or else we would not
be talking here now. See the logic?”
“I do.” I agreed. I
would like to believe those convincing conclusions…
The first courses
were presented and that put a stop to our conversation. It is hard to
communicate when your mouth is full and all your thoughts are circling through
“Divine!” Incredible!” “Delectable” “I’d kill to have him nearby!” and the
whole sequence repeats with each change of course. An hour passed by before I
felt any urges that did not have to do with food. I did not care anymore that
at the first encounter the elf was unhappy with my tastes and attitude towards
food. He was a Master, and those are allowed a lot. For him food was like a
separate religion which bestowed pleasure on others, and enabled him to greet
each new day with joy.
“Your granis.” I
offered the exchange to the Registrar and, finally, found out his name: Yurmil.
In return my interlocutor passed me a substantial volume.
“This is an atlas of
all the areas in Russia that are related to the Game. From nightclubs to the
mysterious burial sites of giants in the Urals. I am sure that as an explorer
you will be interested in this. Consider this a gift from me.”
“Or an investment.”
I offered my own interpretation.
“We shall see, we
shall see,” the Registrar replied, not without irony, and we hastened to part
our ways, pleased with each other.
Two hours later I
was stuck in a traffic jam, “flying towards my bright future”. In the past I had
frequently been indignant about active road construction at the height of rush
hour traffic. Some sorry bums posing as road workers would come up and dig out
a hole in the freshly repaired road, then slowly proceed to take a smoke break,
never bothering to as much as tape the area off. But now, as I passed by yet
another construction site, I could see the complete picture, which explained a
lot. There were several ugly monsters belly up in a ditch. Mages, presented as
road repair engineers, were casting spells over them. That meant that every
time I had seen some out-of-place road construction there had in fact been
monsters breaking into the Earth, and various services worked on capturing them
and eliminating the consequences. The situation was quite similar with respect
to buildings: now and then I saw various airships of most improbable designs
that had lost control and crashed into buildings. The aforesaid services, this
time posing as renovations to historic buildings, were working on the results
of those collisions. This way the Game took care of NPCs, or rather of their
frail minds.
The dorm that was
allocated to me was in the suburbs. There was a little local market, a couple
of large malls; also within easy walking distance I saw some branches of a popular
bank, a post office and a Vital Statistics registration office. It was
noteworthy that right next to my building, right across the marriage
registration office, there was a bus stop with a large billboard indicating “To
N Cemetery”. Old ladies formed a little market there. Selling plastic flowers and
wreaths for the grieving relatives. But that was not the funny part. What made
me laugh was that even though it was a work day, rather tipsy young men who
must have been drinking to someone's health would run out of the office and buy
flowers from those old hags. As I headed to my new home, I noticed one of those
buyers:
“Granny, give me
the nicest one! And keep the change!” He proudly handed her a hundred-ruble
bill. The guy was deeply in his cups.
“Here, dearie, one
moment. Here, take some lilies. They’re nice flowers ̶ for
purity ̶ and I tell you right, they’ll be just the
thing!” the old woman happily cajoled him. The guy grabbed a paltry bunch of
flowers without looking twice and rushed right back to the marriage office.
“Good woman, why do
you sell them flowers for the dead? You could make up some fit for marriage,
no?” I asked the spry old lady, stopping next to her.
“Why bother,
dearie? With live flowers, they’re such trouble, an’ they cost a bunch, too.
An’ them boys wouldn’t even see, they won’t… And that’s right ̶ sure
it is ̶ we all need to drink to the death of the
girlie’s freedom; there, they are dragging ‘nother one, to wash an’ cook an’
clean them rags an’ such. It’s all the right way, dearie,” said the old woman,
her old teary eyes following yet another bride. The Judge in me did not even
stir, since the truth was different for everybody.
As I was ascending
the bedraggled stairs to the third floor, my heart grew heavier. Narrow dirty
stairs, dank air, constant noise… That was far from an exhaustive list of
features for a “normal dwelling area for a beginner player”. The walls were
dirty, the plaster was peeling. You could hear all the noise from every
apartment, and the windows were broken, no doubt to improve natural lighting and
ventilation, since there were no light bulbs at any of the landings. Dirt and
dilapidation reigned everywhere. Judging by the aroma, there was only one
toilet available for the entire building. Its powerful smell brought a strong
note into the overall stench of food these people must have been making. Some
hallways were adapted by practical gals for drying clothes, so I had every
chance to enjoy ragged underwear and badly stretched flowers on someone’s
nightgowns and underpants.
The local denizens
deserved separate mention. All along the way I felt their heavy menacing stares
on my back. I was glad that was all I felt. The local thugs near the entrance
way spat on the ground and turned away, moms with their offspring pretended to
turn away and lose all their curiosity, and the kids ran off in the opposite
direction from me, while the local hags stopped cursing at the local winos as
soon as I appeared within their field of view. The Game came to my aid, creating
in the head of each NPC an image necessary for their mind to activate a
conflict avoidance algorithm. Had it not been for Helen, I would have never
bothered showing up here. Finally, I got to the right door and opened it
quietly.
“Yaropolk! You are
back!” A small blond whirlwind rushed towards me and threw her arms about my
neck. I never even had a chance to say anything. I was showered with kisses mixed
in with little noises to show how much I was missed. That was nice. Well, not just.
Actually, I was really happy that I had her and she was capable of such open and
sincere joy. I was not trying to deceive myself about freedom of choice on the
part of my Doll; I simply enjoyed what I had. My main mistake was that I was
unable to perceive Helen as my property, despite all the laws of the Game.
The next few days
flew by. I bought an apartment, a new car, and, following Gerhard’s advice, did
everything to simply forget that I was part of the machinery called “the Game”,
and that the list of my priorities starts with the item marked “urgent”:
finding Merlin. I dedicated all my attention to Helen. Unbeknownst to myself I
was starting to fall in love with her. That comes easily when your partner is loyal
to you to their last breath. I had no doubts whatsoever about it. How could it
be different? The very point of existence of the Doll was to make me happy. May
it be so then! We walked around for days on end, returning to our cozy nest
only for the night, but not for sleeping. Sex with the Doll was outstanding,
and every time I felt on cloud nine with pleasure.
The only reminders of
the Game were visits from Alard and Mizardine. The hunter settled in Moscow as
well. They were both making everyday arrangements, while making sure they took
time to see the main points of interest in the city. Then they came back
bursting with impressions from the huge megapolis with its urban ways. There
was nothing of the sort in my companions’ native worlds. They were particularly
overwhelmed with Red Square. At the place of the historic execution platform,
Lobnoye Mesto, where, as far as legends had it, many hundreds of criminals had
been executed over the years. In fact, it contained a very large hole in the
ground that housed quite a strange creature. It had neither eyes nor mouth – it
just looked like a rounded lump of brown flesh with a few thin tentacles
extending from it. The creature gorged on the emotions of the people around it.
The more impressionable a person was, the more emotions he or she generated.
There was a viewing bridge above the pit for all those willing to look. Mostly
those who were willing were NPCs, even though they could not see the monster. They
were just drawn to the bridge, and they did not resist their urges. The NPCs
“felt” the atmosphere of the place, sank into thoughts about their pointless
existences, and left the viewing platform deep in those thoughts. They left all
the positive emotions to that bottomless pit of a creature. Players were rare
guests here ̶ understandably so. The monster affected them a
lot more. So the ones that made it to the bridge were either enthusiasts who
had lost a bet, or, on the contrary, wanted to win one by demonstrating their
resistance to the consumer of emotional delicacies. But as far as I knew,
everyone lost, ending up doubled over and nauseous on the viewing bridge.
However, somehow new ones came up every time.
Carried by this
wave of nostalgia, I could not resist the temptation to visit the city district
where I had grown up. The things that had been my reality for the twenty-three
years of my previous life demanded that of me. I wanted to see something or
somebody. Not my relatives – of course there was no way to bring them back. But
at least the courtyard where I used to play, or the local wino who hung out
there all the time with his perpetually hungry cat. Everyone in the yard always
offered Barsik some food, pitying him for having a torn-up ear and only one
eye. No one actually knew how or when the cat had been injured, and the guy
told a different tragic story every time. We all admired the cat’s courage, and
pilfered fancy bologna for him from home.
However, the Game disposed
of all my hopes cruelly. The building was simply not there. There was a paid
parking lot in its place instead. I went into a nearby courtyard to ask when
the building had been demolished, but was unanimously assured that there had
never been a building there. I was unable even to find out what had been there
prior to the parking lot. People were confused, and everyone came up with their
own story. No one had heard about a wino with a cat, either. It could be that
he still was in existence somewhere – there were all sorts of alcoholics
hanging around, and some even with cats. I was even more upset when I decided
to visit my first school. That was something that should have been there for
sure! I would have even been happy to see our horrid home room teacher, who had
scarred my young mind for life.
There was in fact a
school around the corner, but it was a different type of building, and with a
completely different set of teachers. Even the school name was different. I had
to put up with this final hint from the Game that the past should be laid to
rest, and left the area.
Helen consoled me
quickly, and distracted me from all the dark thoughts. I kept immersing myself
more and more into the illusionary world that we created for ourselves. There
was nothing preventing me from doing so. Other players tended to avoid us
remembering Madonna’s instructions. I was completely satisfied with that. Alard
and Mizardine worked on their own affairs and did not interfere with our lives.
No one attacked me; it was as if everyone had simply forgotten about me, and that
was cool! It was so cool that I would have never left that bubble on my own. But
reality came to bite me precisely on the sixth day of my personal bliss:
“Paladin Yaropolk, you
are instructed to immediately report to the Judge Supervisor.” A low hoarse
voice boomed from the speaker of my comm. The call came precisely at three
o’clock in the morning. I nearly jumped out of my skin when I heard scary alarm
bells instead of the usual ring tone, and did not understand why. But once I
saw the comm screen light up while Helen was still sleeping, I quickly took the
call.
Oh well, when I
heard the orders I was very tempted to tell them all to go to hell, turn the
phone off and go back to sleep, but the caller was very insistent: “I repeat! Paladin
Yaropolk, you are instructed…”
The words filled my
empty sleepy head, and seemed to echo on and on without the caller having to
repeat them. It made you want to jump up and run headlong to pay respects to
the Supervisor, whom I actually, let’s be frank, had been ignoring all those
days. When the voice repeated for the third time what I was supposed to do, I
decided to agree with it, and thankfully the line went dead at last. Just about
the last thing I needed was a reprimand from the Game for tarrying too long. As
soon as I got out of bed, the portal opened next to me. The Game did not wish
to waste a moment of its precious time.
A slight bout of
vertigo, and then I found myself once again in the familiar place: in the
middle of Red Square. A young lieutenant ran up to me right away, introduced
himself and explained that he had been sent to bring me to the Supervisor. As
it turned out all roads in Moscow led to the Kremlin. Particularly if you were looking
for someone of higher rank.
The Supervisor of
Judges, in the same way as the Registrar, and any player in general sporting
any kind of high Game rank in Moscow, lived and worked directly in the Kremlin.
Once Steve showed me the level of Light Energy within its territory, that
explained why players were so attached to the red brick walls. The Kremlin in
and of itself was a powerful Source of Light. Perhaps not as strong as the
remains of saints. Yet it was plenty for the local inhabitants. That was not
surprising: one hundred and fifty million NPCs living in Russia revered the Kremlin
as a symbol of the unity of faith and power. The compound simply accumulated
all the emanations directed at it, converting them, essentially, into free Energy.
Who would ever give up such a feeding source on their own?! Nobody. They would
all agree to it, and would guard it with their lives.
As I was proceeding
down the hallway to the office, I noted to myself that I never felt the
pressure of the Light – neither when I visited Kremlin for the first time, nor
now. That meant that the new pet was coping with its task and I needed to make
sure I set up the purchase of a new one in advance for that purpose. With those
thoughts I entered the office of the Judge Supervisor. He was an elf. And a
priest. His reddened eyes betrayed chronic fatigue and lack of sleep. His face
was just physically incapable of looking friendly, and I could easily see the
reasons for that: there were some jobs that simply did not include an easy life
and sleeping in your own bed.
“Sit down.” I
received a curt nod. As he was downing the dregs from his coffee cup, the elf continued:
“According to the determination of the Great Madonna, you shall receive case
No. 557732. Review that.”
A thin folder
plopped on the desk. I was not hiding my bewilderment as I opened the document and
started reading. A ritual murder. Victims: four NPCs. No witnesses. No signs of
death by violence, even though the bodies had sustained odd damage. It was
possible that magic was involved, but no traces of it had been discovered. No tracks
or footprints were found around the crime scene. The case was being investigated
by the Moscow Police Department. Priority task: find the motive for the crime.
The clue: the victims’ bodies had been set in a particular pattern, probably a
sacrificial seal. Preliminary version: summoning a demon. There were grounds to
suppose that the murderer was a player. Everything seemed to be clear and written
in a way that was easy to understand. It was not clear, however, why Madonna
had decided to remember me in view of these murders.
“You will report to
me every day on your progress. Sign up for appointments for the entire ten
days.” The Supervisor finished and leaned back in his chair. From the way his
eyes gleamed I guessed that whatever was in the cup, it was definitely not
coffee. But I was far from blaming him: it had been a long and difficult night,
and the body needed some stress relief. After that latest piece of news I would
not turn down an offer of some hydration for my throat and brains.
“Why for the entire
ten days?” My mind caught on the specified timeframe.
“You’ll see in a
moment. Take it: I have offered you an exchange. My guys took a preliminary
look at the scene. In the center of the sacrifice there is an inscription. NPCs
just don't have the skills for that. This was done by a player.”
The Supervisor
offered me a video from the crime scene. No matter how horrible it was, one
could not ignore precise lines and perfect symmetry. The bodies lay on the
ground like broken dolls, forming, however, an elaborate pattern. Its
horrifying beauty and precision would satisfy a most demanding perfectionist.
That enabled me to rule out fanatics or maniacs. The master’s hand was too
precise.
The pinnacle of
that horror was a flaming inscription in the center of the pattern:
IN TEN DAYS CHAOS
SHALL REIGN ON EARTH!
“I received
instructions from my superiors to transfer this case to you. I reviewed your
file and I am wondering, what use are you?” the Supervisor added, without too
much reverence to Madonna or her protégée, myself. “But an order is an order.
Keep working. There are no injuries on the corpses, and no indication that they
were killed by magic. If it really is a summoning, that means we have a drifter.
I have no illusions that you would be able to catch him, but I have very clear
orders not to interfere with your investigation, nor to start my own
investigation, and generally to pretend that nothing happened. But bear in
mind, Paladin, that if, through your incompetence, more NPCs die or we get into
some serious kind of trouble… you’d be better off removing your sorry ass from
here in whatever way you know. Got that?”
“Is this a threat?”
I was surprised. From the tone and words of the Supervisor it seemed as though
he genuinely cared about the Earth, which was not normal for high-ranking
players, who mostly care about their own well-being rather than the motherland.
And even less for NPCs.
“Just a statement
of fact,” the Supervisor corrected me curtly. “You have ten days. I repeat, I
expect daily reports on your progress in the investigation. Unofficially, you
may count on my support. It’s time to remember that you are a Judge and not a
piece of shit. Go on ̶ they are expecting you at the crime scene.”
Chapter 2. Day One
Moscow at night was
beautiful. Regardless of the season, after sunset it turned into a huge and tangled
set of Christmas lights. Bright commercial signs blinked at each other like
fireworks. Lit-up windows of tall apartment buildings posed a contrast to the
mood lighting of historical buildings. In addition, few and far between and therefore
fast car headlights dashed all around the city. All those who like the Christmas
holiday would by default like Moscow at night. It gave you a special holiday
atmosphere; all your daily troubles would seem remote and far away.
Unfortunately, my troubles were not linked to a particular time of day.
The Supervisor did
not bother to create a portal; instead, he was kind enough to let me use his
official vehicle. It took us only about 15 minutes to reach the Tsaritsyno
Park. Empty roads, flashing lights on top, a driver who did not have to obey
the traffic rules for commoners… That trip was a dream for any hoi-polloi
inhabitant of the great city.
We entered the park
through the main Park Gate. After we passed the entry checkpoint one of the
guard policemen ran up to the car and explained that we would not be able to
get any further with the vehicle, and that we had to go through the night
forest on foot. For about forty yards we walked along the main avenue, but then
we had to leave it, straight for the thicket. There was a path there, but the
ground was still uneven; periodically I stumbled on the terrain, and so did the
sergeant walking ahead of me. Steve navigated by offering comments and
highlighting particularly dangerous areas, but that was not enough. I was
trying to look underfoot so as not to fall over, but then I missed a couple of
particularly nasty trees, which then hit me across my face and hands... In this
way we slowly plodded along in a south and west direction for at least ten
minutes, until finally we reached a well lit clearing. It was eerily quiet: not
a sound could be heard in the night forest. The trees did not rustle, birds
were silent, and even moths and mosquitoes were not flying towards floodlights.
Looking at the
thick brush, I thought that the case had no mention of who had discovered the
bodies and when. Other than park workers I could not think of any candidates
for that role. It was impossible that someone would discover this place simply
by accident, was it not?
“Why are there unauthorized
people at the site? Lartsov, you want to go on the beat again?” The bear-like
growl floated from the darkness. Following the voice we heard the crunching of
dry branches and the huffing and puffing of a body moving towards us.
“Well, it’s, like… the
higher-ups, they called…” The sergeant obviously had not expected this
encounter, and was trying to retreat backwards from his advancing boss.
A portly figure
appeared from the forest, its glasses glistening menacingly.
“Who called?! To
whom?! Why did no one report anything?!” The law-enforcement officer stopped
nearby, shaking his double chin in indignation, and constantly adjusting his
glasses that would slide down after every question.
Expecting a logical
outcome for the young sergeant, I decided to interfere, and waved my hand at
Lartsov to disappear:
“Colonel Yaropolk, FSB,
Department thirteen.” My supervisor had provided me with a story and
instructions as to what would be my position and role in the case. Naturally, I
had not received any real documents confirming my employment at FSB. I simply
extended my empty palm to him, letting the Game conjure up a projection of whatever paper it required with the necessary
data. The local boss bent down trying to read the card, and then tried to
straighten up to make his belly seem smaller.
“FSB? Fine. Hail,
Sir Colonel and welcome to our humble forest.” The policeman’s voice was loud
in itself, and here in this weird silence it was downright deafening. From
behind me I heard the muffled cursing of the sergeant, who tripped over
something in the dark. The kid was in no hurry to get out of the cordoned-off
area.
“Good health to
you, too. Show me the bodies,” I ordered, following my role. There were no
objections, and the policeman, waddling from side to side, turned in place. I
coughed meaningfully in the direction of Lartsov, and started climbing over the
warning tape. The sergeant immediately emerged from the darkness and called
after us:
“Sir Colonel,
asking permission to accompany you!” The youngster stared straight at me, completely
ignoring his direct superior who had turned bright red from indignation. I
decided to reward his courage:
“Granted. Just keep
out from underfoot.” I heard an indignant huff nearby, but no objections.
A minute later we
were looking at four corpses. The broken bodies enthralled, urging one to
admire the sight in silence. I looked over the bodies, trying to note every
detail, and discussed it with Steve. Suddenly the sergeant behind my back made a hoarse sound and
started slowly crumpling to the ground. Had he overestimated his endurance, or
perhaps he had never seen any bodies before? The corpulent policeman, looking
at him, hemmed with distaste and grumbled:
“You are no good, sergeant.
You, idiot, were being sent away from here for a reason. But no, you decided to
brown-nose your way into the thick of things!”
The sergeant bent
over in a fit of nausea and moved slowly, trying to get away from the corpses.
The fatso continued his lecture, pointedly ignoring the sufferings of his
underling:
“This will teach
you for the future. What, you think I decided to engage in necrophilia and sent
all the witnesses the hell out from here? Get out of here, sissy, before I slap
you with an official reprimand.”
I looked around.
Really, why was there not a single person? What a case! What hype! After
talking to my supervisor I had gotten the impression that half the city should
be here. While in reality there was just one office rat, judging from his huge
belly, and a young curious eager beaver. Even though the latter doesn’t count. He
was quickly leaving the crime scene, running away in short spurts, bending down
at every bush. I turned towards the fatso, who had already forgotten about the
sergeant, and who stared at me waiting for something he alone knew.
“Why is there
nobody here?” I posed my question.
“What do you mean,
nobody? I am here!” The strange NPC was in no hurry to explain the situation. “Don’t
you feel anything?”
“What is it that I
am supposed to feel? Would you please explain?” This was not a good time to
play guessing games.
“Major Vesnin,
Senior Investigator, Tsaritsyno Police Department” The major deigned to
introduce himself and extended his hand for a shake. His hand was soft to the
touch, but very strong. “There is no one here because at the site of the murder
my subordinates have a strange reaction. You have seen it just now. Whatever
you might think, normally they don’t behave like that. I have trained them
well. Well, with the exception of this dolt, I guess. It’s his first time at
the crime scene. They are still wet behind the ears, straight from the police
academy, damn it…”.
I liked it that the
major managed to incorporate in his explanation a way to exonerate his guys in
the eyes of a “competitor”. New information
set in motion the gears in my brain, and I asked a logical question, looking at
the investigator with interest::
“What about you?”
“For me it’s the
same as you,” the major said, smiling bashfully
and spread his hands. “You feel fine here, I can tell. Are you going to take
over the case?”
Now, in the bright
glare of floodlights, this not-so-young investigator did not seem dumb or funny
to me. A smart and experienced NPC was looking at me through the old-fashioned
horn-rimmed glasses, and it had been negligent of me to quickly dismiss him as
an office rat. He quickly asked me the question that bothered him, but I could
bet that his agitation was due to the fact that he did not want to give up the
case in favor of “competitors”. After talking to Steve I decided that it would
be better to have on my team an experienced homicide investigator, so that’s
what I told the major:
“I am here as an
observer, you should be leading the investigation.”
My ideas were
confirmed as I saw relief on Vesnin’s face. He perked up, and shared his
thoughts with me:
“That is strange.
Something is going on with my kids. Even my coroner could not deal with it. And
he’s seen stuff in his life that I wouldn’t wish on anyone. I sent them off to
take a breather, but they are not far. They’ll be right here if need be. They
train you tough out there in your Department thirteen. Or have you seen stuff
like that before?”
I shook my head for
a “no”, noting that Vesnin said nothing about himself. His properties bubble
indicated clearly that he was an NPC, but the aura of this crime did not affect
him.
Together we again
examined the bodies and the site of the crime. My certainty that a player was
involved only strengthened The NPCs were unable to do things like that with the
bodies of their own species.
“I need to make a
call.” I did not feel like diving into the darkness for the sake of calling,
but I was weary of talking in front of the major. “Could you… take a walk? See
how your guys are doing.”
The major nodded,
showing his understanding, and left the circle of light. Just to make sure, I protected
myself with a “curtain of silence”, and dialed my Supervisor:
“What did you find
out?” He picked up immediately, as if he had been waiting for my call.
“Not much so far. I
need a demonologist and a necromancer. ASAP.”
“Want to talk to
the bodies?” The Supervisor interpreted my request. “Good idea. They will be
there in half an hour. What is your first impression?”
“It’s someone from
this world. Not an NPC. Those just bend over double next to this pentagram.”
“Why did you call
the seal a pentagram?” The Supervisor was surprised. “There are only four
bodies there, not five. And there is no five-pointed star, either.”
“My mistake.” I had
to admit my terminology error, since I knew nothing about demonology. “I
thought that it’s pentagrams that are used to summon demons…”
“What the hell, Paladin?!
You consider yourself a Judge and meanwhile use the terms the meaning of which
you don’t understand precisely?!” The Supervisor blew up. “Pentagrams are only
used to summon fire demons of the third circle! Any cretin is capable of
finding that out! Why do you think you were sent there by car? So that you
would pick your nose instead of learning your basics? Another blooper like that
and I will have to bring up the issue of your competence! Keep working! I am
waiting for your report at the end of the day!”
I was looking at my
now silent comm, rather stunned. I did not understand what had happened just
now. Not only had he yelled at me as if I were a little kid, he was now
attempting to threaten me! Steve shook his head, informing me that the case
materials never mentioned the seal. I did not know what the Supervisor
expected, but in any case it would have been stupid to expect that a fifteen
minute trip would be enough to turn me into an expert demonologist. Apparently,
the elf was getting weak in the head. Too much work, too high responsibility… There
was no other way for me to explain these overstated expectations. To hell with
him anyway, if only he sent some help.
“Your boss rewarded
you with a hearty scolding?” I did not notice the major’s approach due to the
“curtain of silence” that I had just removed. He was standing right next to me and
smiling compassionately, extending to me a plastic cup full of aromatic liquid.
“Don’t worry, I
just got back and did not hear anything. It’s just that you have an expression
that is impossible to miss. I expect I look no better myself.” I gratefully
accepted the cup of coffee, and nearly burnt myself. Vesnin poured another cup
for himself from his thermos. “My bosses called me as well. Wanted a result
here and now. It’s easy for them to make orders as they sit in clean offices,
while with this one you can tell a cold case a mile away. No footprints, no
witnesses, no tracks of any sort. When they were brought here is not clear.
When and how they were mutilated is another hard question.”
“People with
special equipment will be here shortly. We’ll take a look. Perhaps we’ll find
something. By the way, who discovered them?” I nodded towards the taped-off
area. “It’s a remote place, it does not seem frequented by anyone for walks.”
“You shouldn’t say
this. I take a walk here every evening. It’s pleasant and relaxing after work.”
Vesnin even seemed a little embarrassed. After a brief silence he continued.
“So that was some walk today. I left home about ten at night, I live nearby.
Discovered them about midnight. Tripped over the foot of the one we are calling
Number Three here. So then I called in my guys. It’s our area anyway.”
The major’s
uncomplicated response was so unexpected that Steve had all the alarm bells
going. Vesnin is not simply a pawn on this chessboard. He personally discovered
the crime site. He was the only NPC not affected by the dark aura of that same
site. One coincidence can be random, but two are a pattern. I made sure that the
Game initiated a case concerning a ritual sacrifice and said the sentence
indicating the start of an interrogation. It was time to remember that I was a
Judge and not a piece of shit, according to the advice I had received the day
before.
“In the name of
justice I demand that you tell the truth and nothing but the truth! You are
summoned as a suspect in the case ‘Ritual Sacrifice’. For the duration of your
testimony you are released from all physical, moral and emotional binds.
Everything you say can and may be used against you in determination of the
verdict.”
“Whaaat?!” Vesnin
was taken aback. “Colonel, did you go bonkers while your boss was yelling at
you? What in hell do you mean, I am a
suspect?”
Now it was my turn
to be surprised, to put it mildly. What happened to the standard response “I
acknowledge your right to administer justice”? I checked again. Everything was
correct. Vesnin was an NPC. There could be no mistake there. Maybe I was no
longer a Judge but actually a piece of shit?
According to all
the rules, by now the major was supposed to play a vegetable in his patch and confess
to me about all his thinkable and unthinkable crimes. Instead, Vesnin took a
couple of steps backwards and was gauging his chances for victory from afar.
It was worth noting
that he heard my entire statement the way it was. There was only one
explanation I could think of: Vesnin was immune to magic directed at him. He
read my paper as it was part of my “story”; for the same reason he saw the FSB
uniform instead of my real armor. NPCs must not know anything about the Game,
whoever they are! Like Monstrichello had not known, until a certain point.
It seems that here
on Earth the Game had generated another immune one, even though Archibald had
stated that it was an extremely rare occurrence.
Postponing this
puzzle – once more – until a more opportune moment, I hurried to correct the
situation:
“Sorry, major.
Stress resistance check. Consider that you passed it.” I reinforced my words
with the most sincere smile I could produce.
“You son of a
bitch…” Vesnin blurted out, but did not come closer. “That’s going to scare
anyone, when you hear ‘you are a suspect’ from an FSB guy. Don’t do that any
more.”
“I won’t.” I nodded,
and finally tried the coffee. It tasted really great: a little bitter, medium
roast, just the way I like it. It was obviously made by a master, an expert at
making coffee. As I was finishing my drink I still could not identify the
unusual aftertaste. It was definitely not cinnamon, cardamom or, as an extreme,
chili pepper. The secret ingredient gave it a refreshing and piquant taste.
“What is it? I
can’t figure it out, but it tastes great.” I extended the empty cup to Vesnin,
hoping for a second helping. The major must have felt generous, for he opened
his thermos again. The steam immediately fogged the thick lenses of his glasses.
“Some secrets
should stay secret. You agree, Colonel?” Vesnin was flattered by my reaction to
the coffee. “It’s an old family recipe. I felt this would be a long night. So,
the coffee came in handy.”
Setting all cares
aside we spent a few moments enjoying our coffee. Then Vesnin asked busily:
“When are your guys
coming? I need to call our meat wagons and pack those bodies up.”
“Should be here in
about fifteen minutes. We’ll check something out. You have any ideas?”
“Nothing to write
home about. Not real ideas, just guesses. Suppose the criminal is an old guy
obsessed with the idea of demons. A psychopath, but not a dangerous one, or
else they would have ratted him out a while ago.” The major took his glasses
off and started wiping the lenses methodically, squinting his already small
eyes. The habitual, automatic motion indicated it was more of a habit than a
necessity.
“Why would it be an
old guy?” I asked evenly, so as not to derail the investigator’s thoughts.
“There are four
bodies; each victim is about twenty-five.” Vesnin pointed at them. “Look at the
mutilations. It’s impossible to deform their limbs in such a way without
breaking them. But there are no fresh injuries and no blood. As I was checking
them for pulse I examined a couple of legs. They were mutilated a long time
ago, perhaps even when they were small children. These are not simply
fractures; their limbs were set like that on purpose so they would stay in
zigzag shape. So then, these people lived like that for a long time, unable to
move. The fractures healed, but it would be impossible to stand, walk or work
with those deformities. Therefore, the criminal must have been preparing them
for the ritual. That makes that butcher at least fifty, or maybe older. We
would have to dig up the cases on missing children from twenty years ago or so.
I expect we might be able to find some clues.”
However crazy, that
was a possible explanation. Without consulting with expert players it was
impossible to tell whether one could use Game magic to twist the bodies of NPCs
this way while still keeping them whole. Steve’s answer to my question was
negative: we had not encountered anything of this sort in any of the books that
we had processed.
“Where are they?
What, you couldn’t clean it up a little here? Get rid of the damn lights!” We
turned in unison in the direction of the irritated voice. The grumpy elf
demonologist had been yanked out of bed, just as I had, and dumped straight
into the park. The long-eared beast did not even bother to hide his annoyance
with this turn of events, and shared it generously with all around. A portal
blinked nearby and the necromancer joined us. Another long-eared one. As I felt
prejudice against their whole race I could swear that Madonna was choosing them
for me on purpose.
Vesnin did not seem
to care much about the new arrivals. The Game concealed from him both the
portals and the race of the newcomers.
“So?” The
demonologist singled me out from the group and attacked me with complaints. “You
couldn’t figure it out on your own? What do you need me here for?”
Instead of
explaining I pointed in the direction of the bodies, and the demonologist was
enthralled. His eyes were shining, his ears trembled with anticipation, his
irritation was replaced by delight.
“Amazing!” the elf
said, enchanted. “What a perfect ‘seal’! Were the bodies prepared in advance?
Necros, what are you standing here for? Come on, get to work! We need to
interrogate them!”
Vesnin beamed –
some oil was thrown on the fire of his lame theory.
On the face of it,
the necromancer did not share the demonologist’s excitement. On the contrary,
he appeared completely unperturbed and businesslike as he started working. He
barely cast a sideways glance at the corpses, and extracted a cat from his
inventory. Poor animal yowled and hissed loudly as if sensing its coming
demise. With a quick slash of the ritual blade the sound stopped, blood flowed
from the furry creature. Holding the body by its hind legs, the necromancer made
a circle around the crime scene, sprinkling the bodies with the blood. That’s
when we heard Necros’ voice for the first time. In a low monotonous chant he
called on the Game, requesting for the consciousness to be returned to the dead
bodies for interrogation. A minute passed, then another, but nothing happened.
The bodies stayed motionless.
“Draw back ten
steps.” The necromancer told us. His big eyes went dull, the whites darkened,
but he seemed fully sane and coherent. “Make the NPCs leave and go about a
hundred and fifty yards away from the clearing. They might die. The recoil will
be significant.”
I did not know what
major Vesnin saw instead of the cat and the ritual, but upon hearing the
request of the mysterious expert, he ordered his troops to immediately retreat
as far as possible. Vesnin obviously did not consider that the necromancer’s
request pertained to him as well. Neither the elves nor myself cared about the
major. He had been warned. Now he could do whatever he felt like.
Returning to the
bodies, the elf extracted a dog from his inventory now. The ritual was
repeated, but the end result was the same. The dog was followed by a cow, then
by an adult copy of Rragr, then by a very strange animal that was similar to a
human, but without any sign of intelligence… the bodies failed to respond.
Finally the necromancer addressed me:
“The bodies are
dry. Their souls have been completely drained as if a demon had done it. In
order to find out more I need to sacrifice an NPC. A conscious one and not
subjugated. I guarantee the result. Grant permission to sacrifice an NPC, Judge,
if this information is important for you. These are the rules. I have the
potential victim with me.”
“Two questions. Do
you actually think someone summoned a demon?” This seemed to be our main
theory.
“No.” The elf
corrected me. “I said it looks very much like the souls were drained by a
demon. I will be able to tell you more after the ritual. As for the seal – ask
the demonologist. What’s your second question?”
“I got it. Who is
the sacrifice?” I wanted to know where necromancers come up with the sacrifices
for their rituals. They would not be buying them at the Auction, right? I
expected that for those purposes NPC criminals were being made available. The necromancer
did not disappoint me.
“A criminal from
death row. Sentenced to die on the electric chair for pedophilia. Raped and murdered
twenty-two minors. I have a copy of the case and sentence with me. Are you
going to check it?” I had no reason to doubt Necros. Mostly just to make sure I
nodded and received a copy. The first three pages were enough to make an
immediate decision.
“I permit the
sacrifice of this NPC for the purpose of the ritual.” Good riddance. That
should make the world a little better.
The necromancer decided
to keep the ritual and his preparations for it secret. Both he and the maniac
that he started working on were enclosed in a dark fog. I approached the demonologist:
“What do you think?
Is this a summoning seal?”
“I am not certain.
I am not familiar with this seal. The demon could already be here, captive to
someone. It could come here because of the disturbances in the Energy…”
The elf did not
finish the sentence, drowned out by a horrendous scream of inhuman pain. The
necromancer had started his ritual. We heard more monotonous chanting by Necros
followed by a brief silence.
“A higher demon!”
The necromancer fell out of his dark cloud. He looked as if he had been through
a meat grinder. His arms and legs were twisted at unnatural angles, blood was
dripping from his ears and nose, one eye was missing. But before he fainted he
managed to nod at the “seal” that appeared from the dissipating fog. I
swallowed convulsively: It’s not every day that you get to see a dead body
coming to life. The eyes of the nearest corpse opened, its empty gaze staring
at the sky.
“The souls are not
available,” an unpleasant hoarse voice stated. “Drained by a higher demon. The
bodies do not recall the point from which the higher demon arrived. The bodies
do not recall their death or their souls.”
The Energy provided
by the necromancer ran out, the body shut its eyes and went silent. The necromancer,
without regaining consciousness, shimmered and disappeared: the player’s body
could not cope with the injuries and respawned.
“Damn, a higher
demon in Moscow,” the demonologist grumbled despondently, impressed by the
sight. “I can’t help you here. We need to bring in head hunters.”
“Can any of you
guys determine the level of that visitor?”
“The Head might be
able to.” The demonologist thought for a moment. “We don’t have higher ones in
this world. So if anyone could say anything about the demon summoned by this
seal, it would be the Head…”
The elf provided me
with the coordinates of the demonologists’ residence in the Sanctuary, walked
around the crime scene one more time, then activated a portal and took off to
do whatever he was doing.
I looked for the NPC.
The major had in fact left the clearing when the fog appeared, but it turned
out he hadn’t gone far. As soon as I started looking around he stepped out of
the shadows, completely unharmed. Another point in favor of the theory that he
was an immune one.
“Major, we are
finishing up. Don’t mention any of the things that happened in your report. As
I said, we are supposed to be observers only. Give me your phone number; if I
find anything out, I will call you.”
“As you say,
colonel. But give me your number as well then.” Vesnin gave me his official and
personal phone numbers, demonstrating his readiness to cooperate, and waited
for my move. I grinned inwardly: I was sure that he would immediately run
looking for me in the database to find out more.
“I only have an
official number. We are not allowed to have personal ones, according to our
procedure. I grinned, leaving the major guessing whether I was lying or whether
FSB rules were indeed so draconian. Or else Vesnin would do a search on the
number and discover that today he had talked not to an FSB colonel, but to a
fitness instructor, “Evgeniy Frolov”.
I left my new
partner to clean up the bodies and tried to figure out a way to quickly get
into the Sanctuary. I needed to talk to the Head of demonologists quickly and
decisively, but how could I do it if I had no scrolls? Reluctantly I dialed the
Supervisor again and listened to another bunch of insults. This time I was not
so affected by it, since I felt there was a certain amount of truth to his
words. After screaming to his heart’s content, the elf informed me that the
only player who could sell me a scroll to go to the Sanctuary was himself, and
the price of this service would be at least a granis. Because, first of all,
stupid idiots must be made to suffer, second, that was the night rate, third he
wanted to see my ass in the Kremlin in order to give me the scroll, fourth… I
stopped listening and called a taxi to leave for Zurich on a night flight like
any common NPC. Since, thankfully, flights for it departed just about every
hour. I wasted half a day, but saved my poor brain from all that headache, and
reached the Paladins’ residence. There I bought some scrolls for the future, and
finally found myself in the demonologists’ residence.
“What brings a Paladin
to our abode?” It was weird, but the gatekeeper at the demonologists’ place was
an old crippled guy, same as for us. The right half of his face had been
mutilated by the claws of some demon or other monster. Maybe it’s some form of
an ad campaign, or just a move to demonstrate the toughness of the class to
visitors. Like, you come in to demonologists, say, and right from the start an
old guy shows you: “Demonologists are not some silly pansies! We are tough
warriors! We fight evil demons! Every time we walk the edge of the blade! And
we all rush into battle! Look, even guys like me serve the common cause and die
old with their boots on! Join our army!”
Maybe there was
something to it, but, since I was a blatantly cynical guy, I preferred the
bloom of youth, and female youth at that. Unfortunately, it’s not like I had a
choice.
“I need to see the
Head!” I stated straight away. And it’s an urgent problem.”
“Just the Head?
This member of the species was just about as caustic as the one we had at our
Residence. “You don’t want me to call the whole conclave, invite experts from
other worlds? Would just the Head by himself be enough for such a high guest?”
If one were to remove
the sarcasm from the old guy’s voice, his reaction was not at all unexpected.
Quite the opposite: it would have been extremely surprising if he had let me in
right away. To save time and effort I presented my main trump card:
“The problem is a
higher demon that appeared on Earth. Your demonologist already visited me at
the scene. The case is managed by the Great Madonna herself, and I report daily
on the progress of the investigation. And it will include a statement that the
Head of demonologists denied me help. And may I explode in this very place if I
am not telling the truth!”
My words were
confirmed by a curtain of white light that washed over me from head to toe. The
old keeper just opened and closed his toothless mouth, terrified by the
possible consequences that his rudeness might cause for the Head.
“Demonologists never
deny help to their brothers in the Game.” Another member of the class was
coming down the stairs from the second floor to aid the keeper. His cape
concealed his face in deep shadows; however, four arms indicated that it was
obviously not human. “First Circle Magister Erhaville. How can I help you, outcast?”
A Magister was a
high rank in a class; he would be aware of various events in the Game. He
called me an outcast to put me down a notch. But that did not bother me. I did
not come to tell him my sob story about the unfairness of the world. Steve had
prepared a video reflecting the events in Tsaritsyno Park, and I sent the file
to Erhaville. I did not care if he were the Head or a Magister; I just needed
some help.
“Last night a
‘seal’ was discovered in Moscow. The court necromancer was not able to raise
the victims’ bodies for interrogation. We only know that they were drained by a
higher demon. The court demonologist was unable to help and referred the
request to the class management. That’s why I am here.”
“Incompetence on
the verge of idiocy.” Erhaville spat out, having watched the video, and turned
to the old man. “Master Glott, please revoke Master Velsar’s license.”
The old man started
doing something hurriedly, and Erhaville switched to me:
“Come, I’ll tell
you what’s wrong with this seal.”
We went upstairs to
his office. The demonologist never raised his cape, and his hands, once he slid
them out of the sleeves, were sheathed in thin leather gloves. Steve was
shaking his head in disappointment: We had not encountered anyone like that
among the races we knew.
“It’s fake,” Erhaville
stated unequivocally. “The seal that’s made out of the bodies makes no sense and
it is not possible to summon any demon using it. No demon at all.”
“The necromancer…” I
started, but Erhaville did not let me finish.
“He was right. The
souls of those victims were, in fact, drained by a higher demon ̶ the
ritual did confirm that.”
“So, then, someone
made a counterfeit construct similar to a seal, brought along a higher demon
which he had summoned somewhere else and got it to drain the victims’ souls?
That seems like total nonsense.”
“Nonsense is the
absence of a control line in the seal; unfortunately, Velsar did not pay attention
to that. Another thing that makes no sense is the configuration of the bodies.
They are set out very prettily, that’s true, but they don’t cover the astral
loop. I understand it’s hard for a Paladin to understand these fine points; so
I suggest that you simply put it in your report - First Circle Magister
Erhaville considers the seal is a fake.”
I exhaled, upset: my
only possible theory was dashed against harsh reality.
“Summoning a higher
demon would inevitably be reflected in the astral plane of the game world.” Erhaville
deigned to explain things to me. “Nothing like that has happened in our world –
neither yesterday, nor a month ago, nor over a year, nor, in fact, for several
decades. The last time a higher demon was summoned into this world occurred in
August of 1939; that led to the Second World War. Have I convinced you?”
“Where did the
demon come from, then?” I was bewildered.
“Someone brought
one with him. Someone who has the power to rule a higher demon. To make the
search easier for you, I will tell you right away – there is no such player
among the inhabitants of Earth. Even the Head of our class would not be able to
stop a higher one after just four souls. It would need at least ten to dull his
eternal hunger just for a moment. The master of the demon must have phenomenal
magic power. There is no other explanation for what happened in Moscow
yesterday.”
I was despondent as
I left the demonologists’ Residence. I had no idea what to do next. All I knew
about detective work I had learnt from stories about Sherlock Holmes and
Hercules Poirot. However, it seemed impossible to transfer this “astounding”
expertise into the modern world. Should I perhaps try the deductive method,
though?
So, an extremely
powerful player arrived on Earth without announcing his arrival or his
strength. He brought a higher demon with him. What would follow from that? That
brought to mind my “beloved” suzerain! Because everyone who arrived on Earth
had to obtain a permit to visit the world and declare especially dangerous
objects and creatures. Bernard must know that player! Otherwise what kind of Coordinator
is he?
I barely restrained
myself from jumping up and down with excitement, and rushed to visit Bernard.
My joy was
premature: there was no one at the estate. I tried calling him, but also to no
avail: Malturion did not pick up and neither did the Coordinator. I did not
want to hang around waiting for the host: the servants did not know how long
their master was going to be away, and I would rather avoid a chance encounter
with “the Great One”. I passed on a request for an audience through the
servants, left a voicemail for Malturion and decided to take off back to Moscow
to see Helen. I needed a short break.
I felt that
something was wrong when I was just approaching the building. It was the height
of day, yet not a soul around. The playground, that was always bustling with
noisy children, was now empty. Only a swing was creaking in the wind. No winos
on the benches, no stray cats… Not even any ubiquitous pigeons! It gave me the
impression that someone was lying in wait for me and wanted me to know that.
The diamond shield
boosted my confidence. I decided it made no sense trying to approach the
building: I was out in the open, and whoever it was, they were unlikely to let
me disappear within. But outside there was not much for shelters either: the
playground and a couple of cars. Not much protection however you parse it.
A light breeze
touched the back of my head. I twisted around preparing to fight, but only
caught the air. Again there was dead quiet, the creaking swing… and a light
breeze on my neck. The bastard was trying to play on my nervousness. I had to
restrain myself from fidgeting. With a curse I was about to call on my
invisible opponent, but then a dark arrow appeared out of nowhere and crashed
mightily into my shield, blowing it to smithereens. My inertia neutralizer did
its job really well: I staggered a couple of steps backwards, but kept my
footing. As it shattered, the shield completely annihilated the arrow. If the
enemy planned to kill me, now was his best chance: I was stunned, disoriented and
defenseless. That was the plan of my strong and experienced opponent. Her
chance, actually.
Deep dark fog
roiled in the path in front of me, turning into the vague, yet very familiar
image of Gromana.
“Enough playing
already. You will come with me. The master wants to see you!”
“Master? I don’t
have one, witch. You are the one who prefers a leash and collar to freedom.” Another
arrow shot in my direction. I rolled over and ducked out of its trajectory. The
building behind me lost a chunk of wall.
“No fear at all,
eh?” Gromana was obviously contradicting herself. How do you attack a player
with battle lightning bolts and at the same time invite him to have a
conversation? Even if you shoot without aiming, you have a high chance of
sending your interlocutor for respawn anyway.
“What, truth burns
if you are not the one spouting it?” As I was aggravating the witch I had a
hard time avoiding more arrows. She was not aiming well, just with all her
might, old bitch. Trying to scare me and show off. But she was good, damn her,
she really thrived under Lumpen’s wing. Seventieth level Darkness splashed
around her like a pet. The Energy flows pulsed with red streaks along her
entire figure, which was barely visible under her black cape. Or was it simply
more fog? Gromana even freed her hair, releasing it from a tight arrangement.
It would be stupid
to take this risk any further; it was time to escape. Fighting Gromana one on
one I considered stupid, following her to Lumpen was not a great idea either. I
made a somersault and hid behind the nearest car, hoping to gain a few seconds
to activate a portal. But once I extracted the scroll from my inventory, I
heard displeased, but unalarmed tsking:
“Portals won’t work,
Paladin. I told you, the master wants to talk to you and you will come with me.
Get out of there now!”
Another arrow sank
into the ground next to my foot. Instead of surrendering, I whapped Gromana with
three bunches at once of the Templar’s Blow scrolls, my weapon of choice. For a
couple of seconds the witch was shaking her head, trying to regain her
composure. The shields of the Dark witch held – I did not really count on
breaching it with just three scrolls – but it gave a clear indication of what I
thought about her proposition. It angered the witch, and in another few seconds
I was yanked into the air. Gromana was tired of toying with me, so a band of
dark fog shot out of her hand and dashed to me, swaddling me like a baby.
“What the…” I heard
her exclaim in surprise as the force that was holding me up dissipated. The fog
dispersed into patches, and I, released, crashed to the ground. Not wasting any
time, I quickly crawled aside and activated all my defenses.
“Fine. That’s even
more interesting,” Gromana scowled, flying about a yard into the air. I
swallowed: A three-thousand-year old witch in flight looked scary. Nothing good
was in store for me; I found that out a moment later for sure. She pointed her
right hand at me, and her left flew over her head, fist tight. Everything went
dark as if the witch had turned the Sun off for old debts. But it was not
pitch-dark: I could easily see vague shadows and hear their blood-curdling
howls. The ghosts circled in an enthralling dance. I was paralyzed, unable to
draw my eyes away, unable to move. The acclaimed Daro set was starting to give.
A passing thought flashed through my mind that after the rust eats through the
armor it will start on my body; but that was not what bothered me. I was
choking on my own screams as I fell into a huge rotating funnel of my worst fears
and nightmares. Gromana was not beneath combining business with pleasure and
pumping Energy out of me in the process.
“Show yourself!”
The witch shouted menacingly, and as if by magic, the Sun returned to the
skies. Air filled my lungs with a wheeze, helping me snap back to reality, but
I still was unable to move. The witch was distracted by something or someone;
that gave me a respite. I felt totally drained. As if all my strength had been
pumped out of me. My body was reluctant to recall who was its rightful master.
I gave myself a few seconds, then forced myself to open my eyes and lifted my
head. I really wanted to know where my tormentor was and who had rescued me.
“Durich? Largus? Vort?”
Gromana was hanging in the air in the same place, turning her head back and
forth frantically, not knowing where the next attack would come from. The
visitors were in no hurry to show themselves, using the same tricks the witch
had used a minute ago. Enjoying the sight, I leaned against the nearest bench and
also took a look around. There was no one. The same perfect silence still hung
in the air, and the damn swing was still creaking!
Grimacing with
displeasure, Gromana interlinked her fingers and then pulled them apart
sharply; this generated several red spheres. For a second they hung in front of
the witch’s face, then dashed off in different directions, looking for the
enemy. Meanwhile, as my strength was returning, I attempted to get back on my
feet. That attracted Gromana’s attention. An arrow flashed, and I shut my eyes
tiredly, cursing at the damn witch silently, bracing for a blow, but my
invisible protector saved me again. The arrow exploded in a burst of festive
fireworks just a couple of inches away from me, and blue Energy snakes twisted
along the dome around me. Steve examined this protective sphere set by someone,
and told me joyfully that it was the absolute protection dome. Gromana inhaled
deeply, sniffing at the product of someone else’s work.
“You are a right
bitch, Gromana, but you can’t smell worth shit.” The space around took pity on
the witch and started talking. That immediately ruined the suspense, since
there was only one creature that possessed such a deep and purry voice in all
epochs past and present. Being a true connoisseur of theater, Archibald was not
above putting up a small but stunning performance now and then. It was that way
now, too: the air around sparkled silver, and parts of the body of my teacher
started appearing around Gromana, each one separately. The wide grin of the Cheshire
Cat I had known since childhood appeared in front of her face. Archibald was a
gentleman to the last, as his enemy was female. In his place I would have shown
my ass in front of the dark bitch’s face. Clicking his claws right under the witch’s
ear, the catorian’s image became complete, and he stood between her and me. “You
keep making mistakes in selecting your allies and enemies: Soluna, Bernard, Lumpen.
Now you are stretching your dirty hands to my student. Are you out of your sick
mind?”
“He is not your
student anymore!” Gromana obviously had not expected to see my teacher here.
“You have been demoted!”
“Yeah, yeah, and
stripped of all privileges, rank, class, abilities, and so on and so forth,” Archibald
grinned. “Right, right, I remember. But I never disowned my student. And no one
can take him away from me until I want it. And I don’t want! He is dear to me.
As a monument to boundless stupidity. Get that?”
Gromana took
advantage of the long monologue to attack the catorian. A child of the previous
era, she was certain of her strength, but even more so of Lumpen’s strength.
Together with his protection, the necromancer granted significant strength to
his slaves. This played a bad joke on Gromana, as it made her overconfident to
an unforgiveable extent.
She dumped a whole
lot of Energy into her attack; she wiped a streak of sweat from her brow and waited
for the result with a triumphant smile, particularly since Archibald was not
even bothering to block her blow. The Dark force of the spells rushed towards
the catorian, swirled around him a couple of times and dissipated at his feet
without inflicting any harm at all. The witch realized that she had just lost
that battle, while the former Paladin had not even started fighting. Losing her
control, she showered him with spells even as she was retreating hastily. Archibald
did not bother to respond to this outburst either. His new silvery Daro armor easily
absorbed all that barrage without much ado. The amazing part was that Archibald
was wearing a Paladin’s armor. As if the public spanking and expulsion from the
class never mattered to my teacher.
Concurrently with
the attack that was supposed to distract him, first and foremost, Gromana waved
her hand in the air and a portal activated next to her. However, it collapsed
almost immediately. Archibald whipped his tail in glee.
“Come on, Gromana. You
said yourself that portals would not work. And now. You are so… mmm…
inconsistent. Like all women… First they argue that they only want good old
traditional sex, and then they throw tantrums demanding that their sex life be
more varied,” Archibald purred, coming practically all the way up to Gromana. “Why
does Lumpen want my student? No, I am not releasing you. You will only poison
yourself when I let you.”
Gromana was bound
tight with semitransparent silvery ropes that looked like they were live
snakes. A capsule fell out of the witch’s mouth, but did not hit the ground: Archibald
deftly caught it in the air. Another thin silver rope easily slid into the witch’s
mouth and disappeared inside. Archibald pretty much completely prevented the
possibility that Gromana could commit suicide.
“That will get you nowhere,”
the witch growled. Sooner or later the bonds will weaken. I will return to my
master!”
“You will indeed. I
totally share your confidence.” Archibald responded gallantly while thoroughly
searching Gromana for more unpleasant surprises. The witch twitched, trying to
resist, but Archibald deftly took a couple of hairpins out of her hair and took
a thread with a flat metal plate off her wrist. He examined the latter with
distaste. Closed his fist. When he opened his fingers, the plate had crumbled
to dust.
“And for little
things like that I will even put a hand to your return, as a minimum, to
non-existence,” Archibald added, and the ability to move returned to Gromana. The
bonds slackened some, but did not disappear.
“I recall you
promised me something similar in the previous era as well, but my senses did
not let me down in looking for my protector,” Gromana croaked. The rope that had
entered her mouth caused her discomfort, and made it hard for her to talk.
“I agree, you used
to have a capital one. While now it’s a far cry from that. I asked you why Lumpen
needs Yaropolk,” Archibald repeated. “This information is not critical, yet
curious. Are you going to talk?”
“About that? No,” the
witch snorted. “But we could agree. Wiping me out won’t do you any good, Archibald.
We both know that. But you won’t be able to guard me forever, either. The
moment you become distracted I will find a way to respawn. Why all this circus?
Give me this dunce of yours, hunter! Lumpen will thank you ̶ I
know your price rate. You will get a good deal.”
“You might be right,”
the catorian nodded, his face turning sad for a moment. The game that had
seemed so much fun suddenly ended. “Moreover, you are totally right. One should
get rid of dunces. They are boring and predictable. Too bad there is only one
dunce here, and that’s you, witch. Chill out!”
Gromana wanted to
shout something, but was enveloped by silver fog which turned into a huge piece
of ice. Frozen into it, the witch remained alive, since she did not disappear
for respawn.
“Once more that
demonstrates to me that women are infinitely inconsistent twits. You are a Dark
witch. You have betrayed your own many times; you don’t have even a remote idea
of what is loyalty or self-sacrifice. Nastiness is your middle name. And then
out of the blue! She remembered what loyalty means. And why?” Archibald,
annoyed, shot that rhetorical question at the world, then turned towards me: “I
am asking you – why?”
I had no ready answer
and simply shrugged, puzzled.
“Because the witch met
her idol. You get that, student? They do not use their mind like normal people.
They follow their feelings. Everything is silent inside – damn them all to hell,
I’ll betray them at the first opportunity. And if he makes my soul sing – it’s
all completely different; I’ll fight to the death for him. Stupid, in other
words!”
I nodded sagely.
“Are you alive
there, you small mishap of a creature? When will you grow a brain, my hapless
student? I had thought you were not a woman…” Archibald started towards me.
“No, I am not a
woman. I can easily show that to you, my ever doubtful teacher.” I parried.
I was gradually
regaining my strength. I scraped myself off the bench and took a few steps
towards the catorian. He shook his head in displeasure and suddenly made a
sharp move with his hand, sending a silver lightning bolt through the air. I
heard a short scream from the right, and a necromancer fell out of thin air
right under my bench. A silvery blade was sticking out of his throat. A few
moments, and the necromancer choked on his own blood. His body shimmered and disappeared
as the player respawned.
“Are you sure you
are not a woman? Are you a corpse then? You are so popular with necromancers. That
was number seventy seven if I am counting right.” Archibald picked up the blade
and examined me. His whiskers twitched in displeasure; he poured some burning hot
liquid down my throat. The heat died down almost immediately, but my body felt
freshly strong and energetic again. It made me want to run, jump, create. With
all that Energy swirling in me I even jumped in place several times, amazed by
this new ability: I pushed off lightly, but soared at least a meter in the air.
Dizzy with delight, I jumped again and realized I had just broken the height of
three meters or so!
“Quit playing a
goat, and mucking around the fountain!” the catorian grumbled. Noting my offended
look the teacher steered me back to reality:
“Why do you think Lumpen
sent Gromana herself after you, and not some gopher?”
“She is familiar
with this world.” I was not sure I understood the question, since it seemed to
have such an obvious answer.
“She’d been on Earth
less than a month.” Archibald responded. “If that had been the criterion, he
should have sent… well, he actually did send that one as well.”
“As well?” It
suddenly dawned on me what the number seventy-seven meant dropped by the catorian,
in the context of my quiet stay in Moscow. For almost a week I had hung around
with Helen without encountering a single opponent in my way; now as I was
looking at the catorian’s face I was starting to realize the extent of my debt
to the teacher.
“Since the very
first day?” All the euphoria induced by the infusion evaporated immediately.
“Right. There were
attempts every day, and today is day six.” Archibald nodded in the direction
where the dead necromancer had dropped. “Of course, I could use the experience
and one has to hone skills, but student of mine! How can you be so careless?!”
“I don’t know, it
just happened that way.” Acknowledging my incompetence was painful. As I was
trying to justify myself I was puzzled why the hell Archibald had spent his
time and effort to protect me? No! There was something fishy about that! His
mug was far too pleased as he was looking at Gromana.
“So, you were
clearing out all the small fry so that Lumpen would send not some second-rate
guy after me, but Gromana?” I clarified, looking at Archibald closely. He
nodded condescendingly, not sensing the trap.
“Go to hell, you, ‘caring
teacher’! You were not protecting me, you were baiting the trap for the witch! I
owe you exactly nothing!” My breath caught in indignation.
“Indeed, you are
not a woman! It seems like this one has a brain and he is even trying to use
it!” the catorian snorted, unimpressed. “What difference do my motives make if
that’s what kept you alive?”
It was useless to
say anything in response. Archibald got out his comm and quickly dialed
someone. A few seconds of tedious waiting, and then the patronizing and
slightly arrogant voice of Bernard floated through the loudspeaker:
“I hope you are not
calling me to offer your services, hunter? A connection with you may prove
expensive now, even if I don’t take into account your rates.”
“Look who’s
talking, oh the nastiest of the lowly Coordinators.” Archibald’s every word was
simply dripping with self-content.
“Has exile affected
your brain, or have you caught distemper from your fleas? Get to the point,
sickhead.” The Coordinator ignored the catorian’s insults, and his voice was
full of mirth.
“As you wish, lowliest
one. I decided to change my specialty the other day, so now I am into network
marketing. Are you interested?” the former Paladin kept insisting.
“Another statement
like that from you, Archibald, and I am dropping the line.” Bernard’s patience
ran out.
“Being close to
those in power really did ruin you, Kalran. But whatever. There is one common
acquaintance of ours, visiting with me now, whom you swore by the Game to
protect. But we won’t state her name out loud due to recent events. I have
several options for selling this rare and valuable commodity, but only for the
sake of our friendship I am calling you first. Just think: a vassal who
betrayed his master. It would be an ugly stain on the pristine reputation of
the highly esteemed Coordinator! Do you agree?” Archibald obviously underscored
“pristine” by his tone of voice.
“Really? I am
indeed grateful. What are your terms?” Arrogance and condescension were replaced
by metal notes. The catorian’s hints had hit home.
“That’s the way.” Archibald’s
eyes sparkled as he anticipated an interesting conversation. For such ancient
beings the greatest pleasure was something to dispel their no less ancient
boredom. “Here are the coordinates. I am expecting just you, alone. We’ll
bargain. As far as I recall from the Lecleur estate, you were very effective at
it.”
As far as I
thought, the last sentence was like a finishing shot in the head. Now I just
needed to find out in whose: Archibald’s or Bernard’s. Kalran was not going to
risk leaving alive a player who knew about the contract between himself and Lumpen.
On the other hand, Archibald had never been known as an idiot. If he had
decided to trot out this trump now, there must have been a reason for it. Or at
least so I hoped…
Bernard showed up a
minute later, surrounded by a multilayered complex protection. Meanwhile Archibald
hastily created an illusion of himself and set it next to Gromana, with its
back turned to us. The teacher himself meanwhile set invisibility over us and assumed
the pose of an innocent girl sitting on the bench with a book in his paws.
Bernard destroyed
the illusion right away with a mighty shot, using his surprise advantage. In
response Archibald dispelled the invisibility and said in the smooth voice of a
trained reciter:
“Gardish, a world
with twenty billion inhabitants, in exchange for Earth and knowledge. Restart
is coming. You know very well that Coordinators are not included in the lists…”
“Enough.” Bernard
said curtly, cutting the catorian off. But my teacher continued to read with
gusto the record of the conversation that had taken place between the
Coordinator and the “Enemy of all life” Lumpen, demonstrating the proof that
had been lacking.
“I said that’s
enough!” The Coordinator was losing his cool visibly, and the catorian enjoyed
it just as visibly.
“Your nerves are oh
so frayed… You just barely showed up and have already tried to send me to
respawn. You must have a hard time sleeping, right? Your guilty conscience is
bothering you. Right, Coordinator?” The book disappeared. Archibald rose from
the bench, his tail whipping his boots.
“You called me for
idle banter?” After a brief silence Bernard was an example of calm and self-possession.
“I apologize for my flare. You are right, I have more responsibilities lately. Tired
as a dog.”
Since the catorian
had called him rather than disclose the information to other interested parties,
he would be willing to bargain.
“You want to make
me an offer? I am all ears.”
“For a start, you release
Yaropolk from being your vassal.” Archibald finally started on the goal for the
sake of which the whole setup had been arranged, and now it was my turn to be
surprised. “Believe me, it’s nothing personal, but my student must belong to me
alone. My other condition also has to do with his rather immodest person. You
are now Lumpen’s ally. Use your position to make sure that he does not bother
Yari again. I already have my plate full without having to constantly kill necromancer
brown-nosers.”
“I need
guarantees.” Bernard raised his eyebrows quizzically.
“Bernard, everyone
needs them. What guarantees can you provide to me that Lumpen will call off his
curs? None. So my guarantee is a contract sealed by the Game. While Yari plays without
trouble, the record of your treason will not be made public. As a proof of my
loyalty and good will you may take Gromana with you for free, as a souvenir.
It’s up to you what to do with her, but I would recommend you wipe her out.
She’s gone completely barking mad with her Lumpen.”
“I don’t need any
recommendations from you.” Bernard made a token response and fell to thinking.
“Come on, Bernard. Restart
is inevitable. All you need to do is make sure that Yaropolk is safe from Lumpen,
and then no one will care with whom Kalran made an alliance in whatever
previous era. You don’t stand to lose anything!” Archibald was persuading him
calmly and smoothly. Despite obvious advantages the deal offered to the Coordinator,
he was in no hurry to agree, thoroughly thinking the proposal over. Perhaps he
was looking for a catch. Finding none, he said:
“Gromana and the
agreement in exchange for Yaropolk. Do you confirm?” While the bosses were
bargaining, I was trying to figure out why the catorian was expending so much
effort to ensure my safety. It was clear why the Coordinator agreed. Indeed, he
would lose nothing, as he was interested in the Restart happening as soon as
possible. Why not release a vassal, particularly since in seeming fact he would
still remain your mental slave? Archibald’s motives were completely obscure.
“I confirm, and call
the Game to witness that until and unless there are difficulties and
assassination attempts initiated by Lumpen or Bernard Kalran against Yaropolk
and his ability to engage in the Game, the record of the agreement made between
Kalran and the necromancer Lumpen at the Lecleur estate will not be disclosed
on my initiative.” Archibald stated in one smooth sentence, and the Game confirmed
his intent.
“I acknowledge that
Paladin Yaropolk is free from the vassalage oath to me.” It was now Bernard’s turn
to fulfill his obligations. Blue light washed over me, and Bernard’s symbol
disappeared from my shoulder as if simply erased. The Game acknowledged my
freedom.
“I hope it will be
pleasant to deal with you. Archibald grinned and his little book crumbled into
dust. “Want some advice?”
“No, but when did
that stop you?” Bernard countered with a chuckle.
“True. So, you made
a wrong choice with Lumpen. The price of taking him to the new era is too high.
You will definitely not like it.”
“Let me be the
judge of that.” Bernard cut him off curtly. “Is that it for you?”
“It is for today.”
The smile never left the catorian’s face, as if someone had poured him a ton of
cream which he ate all by himself.
“Yaropolk, return
the anti-grav to me.” Bernard finally indicated that he noticed my presence and
stretched out his hand demandingly. The only thing was, I was not going to part
with the useful device. It was time to show my cards and notify the Coordinator
that a minute ago he lost not only a vassal. I decided to do it without getting
into an argument. I was simply demonstrating my disobedience. With each second Bernard
grew glummer, and his eyes grew darker.
“I am waiting for
my anti-grav!” The Coordinator repeated insistently.
“No.” I said
shortly. “It’s mine now.”
“I order you!” Bernard
raised his voice, astonished by my refusal.
“You have no right
to order me.” Archibald’s proximity inspired confidence in me. He did care a
great deal about my safety. And I was tired of groveling. A fire jet shot at me
after my second refusal and broke harmlessly against the protective dome. Archibald
did not let me down.
“Bernard, settle
down. I already told you that I prefer giving orders to my students myself. You
released him from the oath, so now Yaropolk is free from obligations. Or did I
miss something?” Archibald waited for Bernard to stop pouring fire over me and regain
the ability to perceive normal speech.
“No, you did not
miss anything,” said the Coordinator, staring daggers at me, and unwilling to
reveal to the catorian the true reason for his anger. “I detest thieves. I took
care of him, and now when I request the return of my property, your student
argues with me!”
Two pairs of eyes
stared at me demanding an explanation:
“I just can’t
return the anti-grav now. It’s a Light world, how am I going to play?” The
simplest explanation seemed the most logical one. Archibald’s whiskers twitched,
and Bernard continued:
“By the way, Archibald,
we missed one point. I want you to convince me that Yari will not disclose the information
instead of you.” After my open disobedience the Coordinator decided to ensure
some extra protection for himself.
“Yari, Madonna take
you, we lost such an opportunity and because of your anti-grav. The catorian
grumbled in displeasure. “Deal. You let him have the anti-grav, since it is so
dear to him. Don’t generate assignments for hunting us, and don’t pull our
accreditation…”
“Of course. Don’t
treat me like an idiot.” the Coordinator’s eyebrow twitched when he heard such
an obvious statement.
“Not in the least.
But it would not hurt to state those things. Yari, your turn. Bernard kindly
presents you anti-grav to you as a memorable gift for the days you spent under
his protection. The catorian whipped me with his tail and twitched his ear
impatiently. I obediently called the Game to witness, and promised to stay tight
as a clam, but only if Bernard would answer a question of mine.
The Coordinator was
a pleasure to behold. He was not at all deceived by my behavior, and I would be
willing to bet just about anything that soon he would show up to find out
one-on-one why I had not obeyed him. And both he and my teacher were even more
intrigued by my added condition.
“Even so?” Archibald’s
eyes measured me top to bottom, yet he did not restrain me. “Surprise me,
student.”
Bernard said
nothing, and I considered this to be a silent invitation. I needed to go
forward with my case of the strange sacrifice, so I asked:
“Who among the players
that arrived to the Game world Earth has a Higher Demon for a pet?”
Archibald stared at
me so intently that I felt uncomfortable.
“I don’t remember
anyone like that offhand. I would have to look.” Bernard thought for a few moments
before answering. “You will have this information first-hand as soon as I find
out myself.”
The last sentence
sounded ambiguous and only we knew what he meant. At least, Archibald pretended
not to notice anything.
“So, to recap: the
parties have reached an understanding, and are satisfied with the outcome of
the talks.”
“I consider the
agreement valid. I call the Game to witness.”
The light washed
over the Coordinator, Archibald and me, confirming the treaty we made. Archibald
exhaled loudly. He was again unhappy about something. I suspected that the
‘something’ was me.
“When you two
decide to leave my sector, I will personally petition the commission for a
positive decision,” Bernard added in a businesslike manner, hinting that we
would do well to disappear from Earth. “All the best to you. I hope this is the
last time we see each other in this era.”
Bernard came up to Gromana,
activated a portal, and instantly disappeared there together with her, leaving
me alone with the disgruntled cat. His anger manifested itself in his tail
swishing madly from side to side. The catorian asked in a deceptively sweet
voice:
“What player with a
Higher demon? Whatever for do you need a Higher one?”
Something in that
voice indicated that the catorian was truly outraged and was barely restraining
himself from sending me to respawn. Perhaps my initiative spoiled his game. Not
wanting to end up at Bernard’s mercy
earlier than I had to, since I had not yet changed my anchor point, I started
my explanations:
“Yesterday in
Moscow an unknown player performed a ritual sacrifice. You were there hanging
around with me; you should have seen it.”
“You mean in
Tsaritsyno Park? While you were entertaining NPCs, I was busy clearing the area
of Lumpen’s sidekicks!” Archibald retorted. “I had no time to stare at the
bodies.”
“Ok, so then I’ll
be brief. Four NPCs were killed, and their souls drained. Next to the seal, NPCs
faint. I called a necromancer, and after performing his ritual and before
respawning he told me that they were drained by a Higher demon. Demonologist Erhaville
assured me that no one had called up Higher demons in our world for the last
fifty years, and that he was ready to repeat his words in front of Madonna.
Also, he supposed that perhaps some strong player had that demon on a leash, so
to speak. A traveling player. Bernard would know who that player was. That’s it.”
“So Erhaville: then?”
Archibald said slowly and pulled out his comm.
“I will have
problems if someone finds out about your call.” The demonologist’s voice
replied from the comm in lieu of greeting.
The catorian put it on the loudspeaker again.
“I know, so I’ll do
it quickly. Did a Higher demon appear on Earth?”
“Yes, I checked the
bodies myself. It was definitely not brought in through the seal. The astral
plane is clear. You know that, or else we would have hired you already. Safety
above all. So that means someone brought in a demon as a pet. I don’t know who.
I’ve been trying to get information all day through my channels, but nothing so
far. It’s an outsider, too ̶ there is no one like that among our people. So
we have a dark horse here.”
“Thanks. If you get
info, call me right away.” The catorian finished the conversation and turned
his attention to me. “Show me the video.”
Steve had prepared the
video back when we talked to Erhaville. Archibald tensed and stilled, quickly
receiving the file. Grunted something incoherent about the appearance of the
victims, for a few moments he was lost to the world, watching the video again
and again. Something was bothering him, so he started thinking aloud.
“Suppose this
really is a demon. Suppose you are right in thinking that Bernard would know
the owner. But then, where are the tracks?” The catorian scratched himself
behind his ear in contemplation. “Higher demons are large and clumsy beasts,
they always leave behind some kind of tracks. But there is nothing here. That’s
number one. Number two – why is there an NPC standing right next to the seal and
talking as calmly as can be? You babbled something about them fainting!”
“This is the
investigator on serious crimes. He is immune.” I ventured my earlier guess. The
catorian only snorted:
“Immune ones are
few and far between in the Game. We ended up having to drag Monstrichello in from
another world. Anyway, it’s not important. We’ll figure that out later.”
“Teacher, I am
starting to worry.” The catorian looked bothered by this whole story, and this
scared me.
“Never mind. I hate
Higher ones.” The catorian nodded, watching the video once more. “No, that’s
not going to work. I will have to see it for myself. Activate the portal; we are going to Moscow.”
All the way to
Tsaritsyno Park the catorian was glum and reserved. I was left to guessing what
all of that meant.
Even though it was
not a workday and the park was crowded, we reached the crime site quickly and without
trouble. In the crush at the gate no one paid any attention to two FSB officers
who turned off into the thicket on the left. Vesnin and his bunch had already
removed the bodies and the tape, and only crushed grass served as a reminder
that someone had been killed here last night. There were neither NPCs nor players
in the clearing, the same as it was at night. Until the completion of the
investigation the Game would not allow strangers access to the crime scene.
It was funny to
watch Archibald, who did not care about conventions, appearances or me, settle
down on all fours and started sniffing around the ground just like a common
alley cat looking for a place to piss. The catorian didn’t miss, it seemed, a
single stone in the clearing and in its vicinity trying to discover signs of
the presence of a Higher demon. After circling the area about three times he
sat on the ground and stared at me in bewilderment.
“There was no
Higher demon here.” Archibald stated unexpectedly. “Either as a pet, or from
the seal.”
But what about the video
of the necromancer and his dead body?” I reminded him just in case, even though
I was certain that the catorian recalled it all very well.
“You see, my lazy
student, I have been hunting Higher demons for a very long time. So long that I
can literally feel them. It’s a true gut feeling. Now I am certain that there
were none here. Someone else drained the souls.” Archibald seemed puzzled
despite all his extensive experience.
“Who can do such a
thing other than demons?” The investigation was proving even more complex than
I had initially thought.
“There are a couple
of creatures…” The catorian said vaguely. “But a park on Earth is not really a
place for a chance encounter with them… Did the Game assign this investigation
to you?”
“No.” It was my
turn to snort.” Personal directive from the Great One. She dumped this great
joy on the Judge Supervisor in the middle of the night You did see it for
yourself – I was just enjoying my last days. Madonna allocated me just ten days
to find Merlin.”
“Why does it not
surprise me that you didn’t bother to mention the most critical thing!” Archibald
suddenly perked up and mumbled under his breath: “How could I forget about you,
my dearie!”
The catorian
extracted a curved knife made of a whole piece of obsidian crystal, and sliced
his wrist. A few drops of dark thick blood fell on the ground and were absorbed
with a hiss by the soil in the seal area. A symbol appeared in its place, a
bloody outline resembling the letter M.
The catorian
uttered an elaborate curse as he healed his wound with an elixir. However,
grave concern melted away from his face like snow in the spring. I looked from
the flaming letter to Archibald, waiting for some explanations.
“If you tell a soul
that I performed a ritual with my own blood, I will tie you up and ship you off
to Madonna in a gift box in a sexy rabbit suit. Even though no one would believe you anyway.”
Having warned me, the teacher extracted a flame thrower from his inventory and calmly
turned the area where his blood had sunk into a small piece of flaming inferno.
“Can you guess who the ‘higher demon’ was, Guide?”
“Madonna? Merlin?” I
groped, as there were only two options after Archibald said it.
“Much as I would
like to ascribe whatever atrocities to the lady we both know, it is not so this
time.” My teacher shook his head and pointed his finger at the flaming symbol.
“This is Merlin’s sign. Whenever he does something, he always leaves his mark.
Don’t try to find it on your own; it only reveals itself in response to the
blood of a few. It’s somewhat of a privilege not granted to many.
“Did you know him?”
I blurted out.
“Yes. In the
previous era. I can’t say anything good about him though,” the catorian replied
dryly.
“So then Merlin did
not only respawn secretly, but set up a sacrifice in the middle of Moscow.” My
indignation knew no limits.
“Why do you think
he did it secretly? The Game announced it about six hundred years ago. But you
should not confuse respawn with incarnation. That has not happened yet. Merlin has
gained awareness of himself, but opted against building strength, choosing to
play in the shadows. Oh well, like always. He does not wish for Restart; he is
too attracted to the easy unencumbered life of a simple influential creature.
It’s funny that every time he lives as a jerkoff; he wastes his strength in
parties, orgies and such; he likes luxury and women. As for the sacrifice… Merlin
needs Energy, and he can’t get it from open Sources because he is like a vacuum
cleaner. He’d suck any Source dry and not even burp. So he entertains himself
by taking souls. He learnt that trick in the era before the previous one, he
learnt that from demons. You saw the bodies: they were prepared in advance. Merlin
has an estate somewhere and he set up a human farm there. And it’s somewhere in
Russia.”
“So then, that is not
the first sacrifice?”
“We’ll need to look
at the data. I’m sure it’s not. Madonna must know something, since she sent you
here. Stupid as she is, she senses Merlin. He is her teacher after all. She can’t
stand him.”
“Maybe the enemy of
my enemy…” I started, but Archibald interrupted me:
“No, that won’t
work for us. Merlin is a true Light one. Do you know about Atlantis?”
“It’s an island
described by Plato that sank because of a natural disaster.” I was glad to show
off my education.
“Rather, a separate
Game world from a previous era: a sister world of Earth. For some experiment or
other Merlin needed a lot of Energy; so he devised nothing better than becoming
the god of Atlantis and demanding that the entire population of it sacrifice
themselves. Everyone. Women, children, old people. That was the end of the
Atlantians, but Merlin’s experiment failed anyway. There was a factor he failed
to take into account. You think that stopped him? Not at all. His next
sacrifices were the Aztecs, then Mayans, then someone else… All in all he sank
seven worlds before the next Restart put an end to his passion for experiments.
In his prime Merlin is bloodthirsty and inventive. It’s a truly horrendous
sight.”
“But why?” I asked in
surprise.
“Because he is a
creature of absolute power. Madonna with all her peccadilloes is merely a child
compared to him. Well, not even that – rather like a sickly sperm without much
hope to ever reach an egg. Merlin is not yet bored with this world, since he
confined himself to merely a respawn. We do need to find him urgently. We
cannot allow him to gain strength and reincarnate.
“Where and most
importantly, how do we find him?” I asked. “There are no tracks, no souls and
no witnesses. Nothing is known!”
“There is one thing that is known for sure. If we
need Merlin, then, as it was with Madonna, we need his diary. That is why I’m
still here, my silly student! Because without you we will not be able to enter
the Citadel of the Paladins, and without me we will not be able to enter into
the classified section of the library. Is that not the area the access to which
you were requesting from my former Head?” my teacher asked me testily, and he
winked.
Release - March 6, 2018
Preorder here - https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0791J9CHW
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