Continue Online (Part 4, Crash) (7 page)

“Bet they try you and place you in one of the chain gangs, and make you fodder for the dungeons no player in their right mind wants to risk!” That man way down on the far end sounded far too excited. “Then I bet they kill you once you come out just to prevent your stats from going up! NPCs don’t screw around!”

“That sounds bad.” I tried to feel calm but couldn’t Months of in-game work was going to be battered apart. Overall, it had been worth it when trying for Xin in Advance Online. From what little I could infer, my Continue Online counterpart had succeed in stopping Commander Strongarm, where my Advance version didn’t win in time against Commander Queenshand.

“Ain’t all bad-” the closer guy said, “-they got rules. Rewards for things like most loot, most contribution, or kill the most players, sometimes winning means no axe at the end.”

“You’re screwed, brother,” a deeper voice said. There were lots of jailbirds down here, and part of me couldn’t figure out why. Were they all waiting for judgment? Or did the rules for Travelers require a certain amount of actual time spent in prison? If so, Continue Online had a neat sort of discouragement.

I simply didn’t have enough experience in major cities to care. Most of my time was spent wandering around and delivering letters. These weird politics were very new to me despite playing for months in-game.

“Nobody knows, the troubles you’ll see!” The unsteady man laughed as the rest of these players down below took up the mournful words, adding a nasty tone of mocking humor. “Nobody knows your sorrows!”

Worst of all, they were off key. I didn’t know what else to do but hum along and test everything in the room three more times. Travelers didn’t get toilets, there was nothing on or behind the polished metal mirroring. The whole framing came off the wall with barely a whimper of noise. I briefly considered trying to break it down and form some space liquid metal key to break out, but that was just a fever dream brought about by suffering this cell’s dank atmosphere.

The presence of someone new was announced by loud clinks of armor being jostled. Two suits came in rapidly behind the first and all three arrived at my cell as I backed away from the bars. They wore short swords at their waists, one had it drawn and ready to stab if I tried to dodge through. Maybe with halberds, I could have broken through.

It was just a virtual reality, but those guys also looked kind of scary. Men in large shiny bits of metal had an imposing aura that naked and slimy me couldn’t possibly hope to match. They must have
[Knight]
paths far higher than my own. Was there a
[Mindless Jailer NPC]
type class available?

“Arms out, scum!” one of the trio yelled. I could hear the other Travelers in the background making noises as if we were in grade school. We were stuck somewhere between the depths of prison hell and being ten years old, and goofy people made the difference.

I thought about it for a moment while chewing one lip.

“Don’t even try! We’ll just cut you down again like we did your soulless husk,” the guard said and snarled at me. My face blanched for a moment at being compared to a zombie, but maybe autopilots weren’t that far off. Mine had been getting better before being blocked from Continue Online.

Now I had a clean bill of health, my own admin rights, and my sister was now only an emergency contact in case something happened. It made Liz mad, but I agreed that there should be someone on file, especially after Lia passed, and now with dad…

My head shook and I held my arms out while the guards strapped a pair of crude looking handcuffs on me.

“Don’t even think about trying to escape, you’re marked. There’s no prisoner that can escape after being marked,” one the trio said.

A single guard ended up in the front. The two behind me pulled out swords and prodded me into following the leader. My feet felt sluggish and the newest set of chains sent a small trickle of pain through the ARC’s feedback. They had managed to lock me down somehow. At least my
[Brawn]
and other stats, once unrestricted, would be where I left them at.

“Good-bye, mister king killer! Good luck!” a prisoner shouted at me. Seconds later a sword jabbed me in the back.

“Knock ‘em dead!”

“Thank god, maybe it will be quiet again.”

“Nobody knows!” Several voices chanted as I clanked up the stairway at sword-point. Their words echoed down the brick hallway to a top floor, that seemed to be a bit more general population. There were tons of people in this prison. Males, females, humans, and other slightly weirder looking creatures.

Continue Online forced nearly everyone to start as human, but by following the right quest lines, it was possible to transform into different races. Most people ended up going for slightly more classic archetypes, elves and such. My niece was half-demoness though she never explained exactly how that came about.

I didn’t really want to know myself. My own path through the game hadn’t allowed any kind of modifications or stumbled across secret methodology. We walked through a top floor of the prison and out into a yard. The guards poked and prodded me the entire way, past people with oddly shaped irises, ears, and scaled skin or bald heads.

Maybe one day I would get a chance to pursue my own racial benefits. What would Xin think if I lost all my hair and had slightly scaly skin? Could we even play this game together? Hopefully, it wouldn’t be a weird in-between existence like Hal Pal and Jeeves had been. I should be fine since Xin already lived within the Continue Online realm. Sort of.

AIs were crazily powerful inside this virtual reality and insanely restricted. Each one of the Voices had limitations, I remembered the Voice of Balance stomping on Leeroy months ago, during my William Carver era.

“Pay attention!” The guards behind me poked away small slivers of health with their mean swords. “Get in the cart! No funny business!”

“I wouldn’t dream of it,” I muttered while trying to figure out when these items would be accessible again. Being proked and prodded without any of my gear felt as if I was naked. And where was Dusk? There were a number of weird issues with my situation, and if I ran away with this
[Convict Brand]
my issues would probably increase.

“Stop staring. The nobles don’t need to see your smug face.” The guard was dissatisfied with everything I did. The cart was open, and a fancy looking metal cage sat in the back. They shoved me inside as if I were a circus animal for everyone to see. All three guards took up positions around me with swords lain across their knees.

My only goal was to see what the punishment was. If I got put on
[The Wheel]
, whatever cycle of dungeon hell that involved, then an escape could be planned at that point. I would bide my time and watch for a weak spot. Maybe a bunch of other Travelers could help organize some complex jailbreak scheme.

Except one of the prisoners in that brick hall had said people who got put on
[The Wheel]
were literal scum. I got the impression that these were people that tried to do less humane actions in a digital world because it involved less jail time than the real world. It made no sense to me though, if they really wanted extremely deviant sources of entertainment, why come here? Why not unlock their ARC and download an illegal operating system?

“Stop looking so mean. You’ll scare the ladies.” A guard once again objected to my actions.

My eyebrow went up and forehead wrinkled. What exactly did this guy expect me to do? Stop existing? I shook my head and closed my eyes while trying not to dwell on the other players. They had to be a special sort of degenerate. I had seen those terrible programs and done my job of factory resetting people’s accounts when Hal Pal turned up an illegal program. Most of the questionable material ended up on secondary drives or offline modified units. What I couldn’t see, I didn’t want to know about. Yet, people did that sort of stuff here as well?

Fighting other players didn’t bother me as much, especially not after the carnage of Advance Online’s space warfare. Jitters remained, but with Hermes, I felt confident in holding my own. Hopefully.
[Blink]
and
[Morrigu’s Gift]
could do wonders. Most standard NPC monsters posed no problems during my travels though I still hadn’t fought a dragon. That would be impressive. The more I played this game, the more I envied William Carver for his endless travels and challenges.

I spent the rest of the twenty-minute horse ride thinking of exactly what sort of people might be on this Wheel thing, and my own ability to fight players. Hopefully, I wouldn’t try to pull out a Gatling gun here in the fantasy world.
[Mechanical Minion]
and
[Power Armor]
were also out. It felt weird to long for Advance Online abilities here, yet long for Continue Online skills while in the other game.

Guards escorted me inside. I looked around and marveled at how dull everything looked. Grays and dusty browns ruled the color scheme. The same patterning of a Griffin being skewered was repeated all over. There had been dungeons with higher quality backdrops than this place. Maybe it was a matter of taste, did the king prefer a more militaristic approach?

“Stop gawking and move on!” The guard stabbed at me again.

 

Simon says stop giving me lip
Total Health Remaining: 75%

I tried to exist in a positive daze while being marched forth into a grand looking room. Compared to the rest of the castle this place felt opulent. Carvings flowed along the walls all toward the center throne. The heads of two great beasts loomed near the doorway glaring down. One was a medium sized dragon, and the other an ogre. Both were preserved through magic or virtual reality rule bending.

There was something about traveling that made me zone out. I wasn’t like those heroes in great novels who would take in all the possible escape routes. That being said, my best bet was probably through the roof and across the gardens I had seen on the eastern side. They looked far less populated. Maybe I was getting better. How many monsters had I escaped from now? Part of me had been well-trained by Shazam to look for escape routes. Though thinking of the tall Amazon made me sad. Lia Kingsley was dead, along with my father.

One of the metal suited guards jerked me back by my shirt and pushed me to the ground. The first thought to occur was one of a child trying desperately not to dirty the thick carpet. That brief horror at making a mess confused me. I didn’t want to get the one nice room in this place dirty with my grody clothes.

“Kneel, prisoner,” the man said, which I only heard part of. After being pushed down rudely a third time I gained some perspective and took care to look around. “Stay down!”

“Lord, perhaps it would have been best to at least hose the prisoner down prior to transportation.” There was a person standing off to one side wearing immaculate clothing. The suit was clearly high fashion, well-made, and not some wholesale poorly cut length. His sleeves fit well and white gloves finished off the suit’s image.

“No, we need to get this filth moved on toward punishment as soon as possible. We are tired of housing his simpleton self in the dungeon with those lesser criminals.” The king somehow seemed to grow taller. It might have been my face getting closer to the ground. The guards were intent upon shoving me far into the now dirtied carpeting.

“Of course, your lordship is wise to move him on quickly, but only a moment more might have saved a fine carpet. It was a gift I believe, as part of your reinstatement.”

“We will simply tack the loss on to his debt.” The king waved dismissively. Next to him a thin looking fellow with a ledger nodded and put quill to paper.

“How wise,” the man wearing a dovetailed jacket said. He looked very clean and professional.

“Don’t pay such hollow lip service in front of us, counsel. Were it not for the Voice of Balance requiring all Travelers to have representation, we would have thrown you out.”

The man bowed at the waist but chose not to say anything. He reminded me of the player Frankenstein mixed with a butler. There was also far less over the top silliness involved with this other person.

“We are King Nero, and you have been dragged here today so that we could see your face, in person. By this, we might judge if you held a shred of remorse for your crimes.” There was a man standing maybe twenty feet away. He looked familiar, but there had been so many people in the last few months. It could have been a client with their broken ARC, but this person was clearly an NPC.

Was his face the same as my
[King’s Taste Tester]
event? Maybe Continue Online allowed for the right to remain silent. The guards behind me had made it pretty clear all actions were not allowed. They were more than happy to interrupt me with no provocation.

“Do you? Traveler? Do you have any remorse for the death of a good woman?” King Nero's voice didn’t precisely sound condescending but came close. There was a vibration that combined attention demanding with assertiveness. A set of scars drug down the left end of his neck.

“She fought hard for her beliefs, and I for mine,” I said carefully from the ground. There was no good answer to the conflict which had happened between us. Senseless waste existed on both sides. Part of me wondered if the Continue Online version of Auntie Backstab existed somewhere here, hating my Hermes autopilot with all the rage a giant half-ogre or mountain giant could manage.

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