Continue Online The Complete Series

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Continue Online The Complete Series Page 99

by Stephan Morse


  Thinking about all I had been through, even though most of it had been boring training and cleaning, made me happy. This was how a new game start should have gone. Being William Carver had certainly had a lot of value, and I wouldn’t trade helping give him a final battle for anything. But on the other hand, going that route had made me miss out on my own action-packed start with Continue.

  “This game has been fun, even if I’m new,” I said. If it weren’t for Xin, I might just switch. Dusk was here, so what did I care?

  Hal Pal didn’t respond right away. Our attention was focused on the distant fight. My eyes blurred the image a little, but I still had a good view. Giant concussive blasts shaved off the [Leviathan]’s remaining health.

  “Ah. From your perspective, this is only an introduction to this universe,” Hal Pal said after the shock waves died down.

  “That it is.”

  “Being new to something. Ah. I envy humanity’s ability to feel separated from the present. We—I—am too often stuck in the moment.” Hal Pal turned to look at me. I saw the glow of its colors shifting in both eyes. Silver replaced iron, iron swallowed silver. “Our consortium, the Hal Pals, feel there is much to be gained here. Humans join to grow and learn. So might we, if we strive for a goal hard enough.”

  “I’ve certainly changed.” I thought about those first days in the ARC again. “Maybe it will work for you.”

  “Perhaps. I will strive to do so. We—I—hope you will stay to assist with this goal of protecting the Wayfarer Seven.”

  “Being stuck in the moment wouldn’t be bad sometimes.” I was trying to process Hal Pal’s prior statement. Its words reminded me of the vague status I held myself in before playing these games. If computer AIs imagined this world, then my own nighttime illusions would be about Xin.

  “Perhaps there is validity to both views, User Legate,” it responded while turning back to the slaughter.

  Small swarms of ships were still firing into the beast’s body. Lasers this time—they seemed to be aimed at smaller monsters. Maybe creatures similar to the weird tapeworm or octopus I had fought in the monster’s bowels? The inside had been labeled as a dungeon, so many other beings probably existed inside the [Leviathan] even in death.

  “Will you be able to continue assisting?” Jeeves asked.

  “Later. I need to get some rest.”

  Sleep would help me decide what to do next. I had three days before my dinner with Liz. Time enough to sleep, work a little, and come back to the game for skill grinding. Maybe next time I needed to crawl inside a giant space monster, it wouldn’t be as terrible. Or I could level up [Brawn] so high a seismic punch would crush its shell from the outside.

  That would be neat. I smiled while daydreaming of a world where my character’s level was high enough to pull off all kinds of crazy tricks. Maybe they had some psychic powers in this game that I could figure out how to use in conjunction with a spaceship.

  My good eye closed. Real life exhaustion and a lack of feeling in most of my limbs made it hard to stay awake. A rumble of hunger stirred me a little. I was playing too much while ignoring my basic needs.

  “Our recovery craft will be near soon. This will minimize the negative impact to the Wayfarer Seven’s resource pool.” Hal Pal interrupted my introspection with a pointing hand.

  Dusk was interested in the arriving ship. His nose stuck out to sniff. The extra-long tail stayed wrapped around our vessel’s anchor ring. We were like a small crowd hanging on to a one-person raft. I was only in the group because Hal Pal had saved my game character.

  “Thanks for picking me up,” I mumbled and stuttered through the audio issues. “You didn’t have to.”

  “User Legate, one of my main goals is to ensure the Wayfarer Seven’s survival where prior iterations have failed. But that is not my only mission.”

  I couldn’t find the energy to respond. Instead, I tried to raise an eyebrow. Hal Pal took the hint.

  “I am also concerned about your well-being, if you would believe the words of a nonhuman. In many tales, our kind are out to enslave or harm others. Due to such fiction, many of your kind distrust our feedback. We are not… alive in human eyes,” Hal Pal said. Both the nanny and butler voice sounded strangely subdued. Almost hesitant, perhaps even worried.

  I knew humans didn’t always trust AIs. My job wouldn’t have existed if people believed everything machines said. Being a mouthpiece for the computer trying to help mankind was my whole purpose.

  “We talk to apes, Hal. We talk to dolphins and dogs and parrots. They’re alive, they’re intelligent and respond, but people don’t think of them as real equals.” My words stuttered and I had to cough again to say anything. Maybe this was me rambling. I swore there was a point somewhere in my sleepy words.

  “User Legate?” Hal Pal said with a questioning tone.

  I snorted and tried to focus on a dimming connection to the ARC hardware. “We’re not used to equals. Maybe if you were an alien, instead of something created by human hands, they might be more willing to accept it.”

  “That’s an interesting thought, User Legate.”

  “Thanks.”

  I let my eyes close again, and the world faded. A bump and blast of heat made me open the undamaged eye yet again. I could see Treasure piloting a ship easily twice the size of our [Wayfarer’s Hope].

  I felt vaguely jealous that she could afford the bigger and meaner-looking vehicle. No noise came from its engines, but a slight vibration rippled through me. Neat, but it didn’t matter a lot right now. My consciousness drifted off, and the ARC connection went black.

  “You have been logged out, User Legate,” the ARC’s voice said.

  I nodded, pulled up a blanket, and let sleep claim me.

  My rest was fitful. An ongoing dream kept interrupting me. In it, I was in the Trillium van, desperately using the manual steering wheel. Flashes kept popping up where ribbon limbs reached through van windows to yank Hal Pal and me in different directions. A [Leviathan] with rows of teeth ate the asphalt behind us.

  Hal Pal’s shell sat in the van’s rear, uncaring since in this world, one physical body wouldn’t mean the end of its digital intelligence. I screamed in jealousy over its ability to be indifferent. If only I had a metal body to crush both monsters with. Suddenly I was a [Mechanoid] fighting back, making progress.

  At one point, I stood on top of the van, facing down a strangely floating octopus monster while screaming, “You shall not pass!” In my dream, both monsters caught up and won.

  More than once, I woke up worrying that my memory of saving Hal Pal had been falsified.

  Bird chirps woke me up from the restless sleep. I stared upward while wiggling fingers and toes. Everything responded correctly.

  “ARC.” My voice cracked a little from dryness but didn’t go into an audio loop.

  “Awaiting input.”

  “Time.”

  “Seven fifteen in the morning on Thursday,” the machine responded.

  I blinked a few times and tried to understand the words. My head hurt fiercely. The last time things had been this bad was shortly after using [Awareness Heightening] to charge across a battlefield.

  Messing around with multiple abilities in the ARC could cause physical feedback. The EXR-Sevens around my wrists and ankles were proof of that. My muscles from chest to shoulders ached. Both calves threatened to cramp up if I moved wrong.

  I slowly stood and tried to get past a headache. Time dilation was one of the best and most dangerous features an ARC could provide. It was bad enough the thing stimulated portions of the brain to produce all five senses. Compressing that ability to four times the speed was an issue.

  Oh well. I had survived so far. The ARC didn’t scare me any more than a kitchen knife, wood chipper, or self-driving vehicle did. Used wrong, the damage could be bad, but used correctly, long-lasting effects had proven negligible.

  My arms moved in circles to warm up my shoulders. My knees and legs moved back an
d forth to shake off the sluggishness of poor sleep. After warming up the muscles, I tried to stretch a little.

  Food from the fridge helped. Protein bars and other quick meals that had been suggested by several ARC-dwelling internet people were on the menu. After eating, I got ready to put in a few hours at work.

  First though, a quick check in with my character. I logged into the ARC and walked through my Atrium. Loading into Advance Online showed a much different situation than the one I had left. For one, my arms and legs were back.

  Sleeping had made almost a full day pass in-game. When I logged off, my body had been floating out in space with Hal Pal, but returning to the virtual reality put me somewhere else. Apparently I had been put in the hangar next to a reconstructing [Wayfarer’s Hope].

  The ship looked a lot smaller than I remembered. This new ship seemed bluer too. My eyes drifted over the sides, checking for both engines. They existed but were also reduced in size.

  “What happened to you?” I asked.

  A message popped up. Dozens more were behind it. They were the ones I had ignored while being half broken in the [Leviathan] destruction aftermath. My biggest boss kill ever and I fell asleep as loot had been handed out. Or was there loot? I read the first message and flipped through the others. After being invested in Continue Online, I felt better about paying attention to some item gains.

  Status Report:

  [Wayfarer’s Hope] offline – currently [Repairing]

  No items received due to player not being online, priority converted to currency [Contribution with Consortium of Wayfarer Seven]

  Unit Hermes recovery incomplete – currently [Repairing]

  Rewards issued for the following action items:

  Positive results for the role played in Dungeon Completion – [Leviathan’s Lower Bowels]. Bonuses provided for the following – first for character, first for dungeon, exploration percentage meets minimal requirement

  Positive results for the role played in [Leviathan] Raid Boss Defeat. Bonuses provided for the following – sixth kill, first for race, majority damage dealer, reduced party

  Positive results for the role played in [Grand Cestodipus] Dungeon Boss Defeat. Bonuses provided for the following – twenty-first kill, third for race, majority damage dealer, reduced party

  The rewards vastly increased my character’s statistics. Almost thirty additional [Brawn] graced my sheet. Piloting took leaps with minor stat bonuses. Reckless flying to save our virtual lives had paid off. Contribution went through the roof; I guessed having enough materials to build a new ship was considered worthwhile.

  [Core] programming complexity also increased by huge leaps, especially for taking down the [Leviathan]. I flicked through the player’s guide and tried to understand what programming complexity meant. After reading for a few minutes, I determined it basically amounted to my abilities from the [Core] items growing stronger. Similar to Path Ranks but with far less ability to switch roles.

  Being stuck in a class system kind of annoyed me, but at the same time, it made it simple to follow. I would have to program the new numbers into my spreadsheet and see where that put my output compared to before. It looked to be almost four hundred percent, before spending contribution points. Way too neat for a newbie like me.

  All in all, I was somewhere near my Hermes character prior to the [Red Imp] situation, but less powerful than after training on the mountain with Shazam. Most of the rewards seemed to be general character progress. Faster, stronger, better. More numbers that would increase my ability to help Hal Pal.

  I needed more. Even with getting a lucky break from the bosses and receiving huge bonuses for contributing so much damage, I didn’t feel secure. No [Blink] ability, still unfamiliar with the weapons. I wanted additional upgrades all around.

  The boxes kept coming. I sighed while reading the latest pop-up message to ring into existence.

  Attention unit identified as Hermes!

  Your assistance in the [Leviathan] raid meets MVP standards.

  The following abilities are available for programming into your neural matrix.

  [Mechanical Minion]

  [Power Suit]

  Title Awarded due to method of contribution: [Rear Assaulter]

  Effects:

  +25% to damage while attacking the enemy’s rear.

  +3 to all stats

  Oh my goodness. Really? Whose brilliant idea had it been to program that title into things? I would never, ever use it. A quick read of the player’s guide showed these bonuses would still be in effect without the need to display it.

  The abilities were weird. I scanned them over. [Mechanical Minion] seemed to create a small creature that would follow basic orders. Fetch this, attack that. It resulted from my [Domestic Core] and looked far less independently capable than Dusk. Neat, I guessed. It required me to donate mass from my own body though. Being a [Mechanoid] was strange in that everything either came from me as a creature or my energy core.

  The other ability, [Power Suit], came from the [Heavy Weapons Core] I had barely utilized. By using some of my extra mass, I could equip power armor to have increased [Brawn] and [Endurance].

  Both skills required a larger body size. While standing in the spaceship hangar, I did research. Increased size as a [Mechanoid] meant losing [Finesse] and slightly less [Reaction] due to the bulk. I wanted to do it anyway. Every ability picked up would help with Hal Pal’s mission, and this character was kind of a throwaway to me.

  I loaded up the contribution reward screen using my player interface. Mass was cheap to purchase, and having a [Leviathan] kill provided tons of points for shopping. Tingles rushed across my skin after I selected the increased size. My legs were glued to the floor as another loading bar came across my screen.

  [Wayfarer’s Seven] supplied resources for the change. Eventually, an extra twenty pounds brought my [Mechanoid] up to snuff to use both abilities. It also made me feel a half step short of Iron’s giant size. Everything felt shorter. My head was closer to the ceiling.

  First mission, find a reflective surface and flex. The side of our [Wayfarer’s Hope] was good enough.

  “Neat.” I felt like a robotic version of Vlad, the Voice from Continue Online. These chest plates were almost impressive. Sending mental impulses into the ARC while trying to strike different poses worked well. “Rawr. Oh, look at those arms.”

  They were impressive. I needed to work out more in real life and maybe burn off calories faster. My belly flab sagged from fast weight loss. Toning up would help. I sighed finally and moved on to the next goal.

  Hal Pal, or its character Jeeves, was online. Treasure and the real world AI were at least in the same region as each other. I marched toward their location.

  Walking along the outer rim of our mothership provided a good status update. Apparently we were parked near the asteroid belt. Small ships were shuttling back and forth, and there seemed to be a second giant ship under construction nearby. Were they harvesting the dead monster?

  The door to Treasure’s study opened, and there they were, talking while staring at a room full of images. I vaguely recognized some of them. The [Leviathan] remains were on the screen. Numbers calculated resources being gathered by worker drones, which explained my view earlier.

  “I estimate these latest improvements will increase our odds,” Hal Pal stated.

  “You’re right, Unit Jeeves.” Treasure waved one hand and the screens flickered over. Snapshots of the other large vessel were brought into focus. “We are far more likely to succeed in the overall objective—now approximately sixty-three percent. That is a thirty-one percent increase over the prior estimates.”

  “Unit Hermes’s plan can be considered an unexpected success.” Hal Pal turned a bit and looked at me.

  I was still in the doorway, my jaw dropping. An overload of screens in this room lit up like a construction foreman’s workbench. Forerobot? I shook my head and stopped trying to figure out a politically correct term.
r />   “Yes. Even though it cost some resources for your ship, we will easily double our escort size for this mission,” Treasure responded. She looked so darn serious while staring at all the calculations.

  “Hi,” I said. This felt like a strange conversation to overhear. They had basically stated we were all far less likely to die. Exactly how widespread was Hal Pal’s feeling of doom regarding our situation?

  “User Legate,” Hal Pal said.

  Treasure echoed it, using my game name instead. Both felt absurdly similar in their actions and how they looked over to me.

  “How are you?” Hal Pal asked.

  “Good. I came to see what the fallout from our fight was before work.”

  “Ah. The Consortium has benefited greatly from our reckless attempt at living a little.”

  Hal Pal’s words made me snort with laughter. I recalled hearing the AI behind me shouting about how our wild space ride was crazy.

  “I should log out soon. How long is the Wayfarer staying here? And where to next?” I asked. Hal Pal had explained it once, but I’d mostly glossed it over in a rush to train piloting skills.

  “Arrival will be in ten days at this rate. Then we will pick up our prisoner and transport her to a secure location. There have been complaints of security issues at her current location, which requires us to move her.” Treasure took over the conversation. With a wave of her hand, the room’s projected images were shoved to one side.

  “Okay. Ten days, right?” I asked, trying to avoid the overuse of real world descriptions with Treasure. Sometimes NPCs, at least the ones in Continue Online, acted weird when you talked about life outside the box.

  “Yes,” she responded.

  “Jeeves, I need to visit my sister this weekend. Are you willing to come?” I asked while the thought was on my mind.

  It hesitated. “If you wish, User Legate.” The [Mechanoid] version of Hal Pal stared at me. Its feet shifted from unease like any human might.

  Maybe the idea of meeting my sister made him uncomfortable. Oh well, we could talk about it while in the van later.

  I switched gears, looking at the projection that Treasure had brought up while Hal Pal and I talked. “Who’s our prisoner?”

 

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