Start the Game (Galactogon: Book #1) (39 page)

Read Start the Game (Galactogon: Book #1) Online

Authors: Vasily Mahanenko

Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Genre Fiction, #TV; Movie; Video Game Adaptations, #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Science Fiction, #Space Opera, #Movie Tie-Ins

BOOK: Start the Game (Galactogon: Book #1)
2.57Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“The Uldans are a legend,” the emperor cut me off.

“My ship is a legend then too. She is a klamir.”

“You are the owner of a klamir?” the emperor said slowly, as if spelling out each word. “Very well, I gave you my word that you shall have your ship back. All your requests will be granted. You have an emperor’s word!”

 

Your Rapport with the Precian Emperor has increased. Current Rapport: 10.

Mission Unlocked: “Ancient History.” Description: For all of
Galactogon
, the Uldans are nothing but a legend—without any basis in fact. You can begin the search for this vanished civilization. Do you wish to accept this mission?

 

YES! Regardless of how my search for the billion-pound check turned out, I really wanted to have a hand in solving one of the great mysteries of this game. The Precian Emperor seemed to know something about the Uldans; therefore, my search would begin with him. If this was just an in-game legend, then there had to be a way to prove this legend real. The devs wouldn’t have done it any other way.

“I will grant you audience in my palace,” the emperor continued. “We would like to hear how you managed to obtain this ship. Remain in your place. My soldiers will come for you.”

“But the general said…”

“Forget about that poor creature. On behalf of the Precian Empire, I officially beg your pardon. You will be awarded any material damages upon your visit to Zalva. End transmission.”

In a shocked daze, I stepped out of the calling circle and sat down on the floor. I wondered how often players in
Galactogon
had the chance to speak with an emperor. What would one normally have to do to make this happen? As far as I could recall, this persona was like some unreachable goal for an enormous number of people. The emperor really did provide imperial gifts but as I mentioned above, he also dispensed imperial punishments. No doubt, that general who had trapped me on this planet had already been destroyed—quickly and to the point without any superfluous ceremonies.

What a cool game this was.

“Please follow us, Surgeon.” Twenty minutes later, as I was dozing off, the wall containing the comm mic slid aside. I saw three Precian marines in a large cargo lift, clearly built to the best safety specifications. Well, well. So the Precians had access to every level of the Labyrinth? Why didn’t they come on down earlier then? It didn’t much befit a general to allow a criminal to wander around on the lam—and with a blaster too boot. Well, the ex-general, I guess. The only excuse I could see was that he’d been unaware of the lift. How that was possible, I had no idea—it was simply the only possible explanation. Of course, there was also the possibility that I was in a game and the locals were only playing out their role in it, but for whatever reason I didn’t really want to think about it this way.

The second exit (or entrance—everything depends on how you look at it) to the Labyrinth was located a few hundred yards beyond the premises of the Training Sector. I was stunned by the huge stone walls that towered high above us, marking the limits to where the recruits could go. During my time in the Sector, I had never considered what lay beyond them. I never got much of a chance to. Now that I was outside the system so to speak, I began to appreciate the scale of
Galactogon
’s worlds. The developers had even designed this nursery—the place where all newbies would start—to include multiple levels, multiple components and all kinds of options for developing and leveling one’s character. What could you say about the world that lay beyond these walls after that? It was not so surprising that less ambitious games like
Runlustia
had gone extinct. Who could compete with a giant of
Galactogon
’s magnitude?

“Surgeon, as the acting commander of the Training Sector, I wish to apologize for any inconvenience you have experienced.” As soon as we entered the walls, I was met by a squad of soldiers. One of them addressed me in Qualian. “By way of preliminary compensation we have taken the liberty of filling
Yalrock
’s cargo holds with forty tons of Raq. We have also fully repaired your ship. The external shell of metallic debris has been stripped. The crew’s Functionality has been restored to 100%. All confiscated items have been returned to your holds.”

“What about my armor?” I couldn’t help but ask. I just didn’t feel normal in
Galactogon
without this second skin. In fact, I felt naked. You couldn’t just buy an A-class marine armor in
Galactogon
. You needed connections like Marina. Losing an item like that was the last thing I wanted.

“Pardon?” the Precian asked uncertainly. “What armor?”

“I was sent to my resurrection in the general’s office,” I explained calmly. “Everything that I was wearing remained in that office. I’d like it back please.”

“Erm…” stammered the Precian. “You see, we have a situation at the moment…Erm…The general’s office is inaccessible. No one can get into it at the moment. If your armor suit is still there, then…”

“The general is still alive?” I asked with surprise and watched fear flicker across the acting commander’s eyes.

“A temporary misunderstanding. The emperor has no need to know about this,” he began yammering. “The office of the Training Sector’s commander is located in a place where heavy weapons simply cannot be employed and we do not have any specialized cutting equipment on this planet at the moment. We have requested it, but it will take another three hours before this misunderstanding can be resolved. It goes without saying that all of the emperor’s orders will be followed to a T.”

“It doesn’t matter to me,” I shrugged my shoulders, calculating how I could turn this situation to my advantage. “But when the emperor inquires why a mighty pirate like myself would walk around without any armor, I will be forced to tell him the truth. I would never lie to an emperor, you see.”

“You could consider waiting a little…” the Precian began.

“Emperor’s orders!” interrupted one of the marines who’d escorted me from the Labyrinth. “We are to deliver him immediately!”

“So my favorite item in the whole universe is lost to me,” I sighed bitterly. “What can I say…”

“Nothing is lost! We will send it to you on the next flight out. You will have your wonderful, mighty item before you can blink twice.”

“I don’t even know how I’ll be able to go on without it…”

“We are prepared to make it up to you, oh mighty pirate. What is your wish?”

Finally!

“There is a recruit in this Training Sector. Her name is Nurse,” I said, using Eunice’s in-game name. I’d lost it when she had told me—the betting masters obviously had some kind of fixation with medical occupations. “By way of compensation, I would like to invite her to my meeting with the emperor—if she agrees, of course.”

“You wish to remove a recruit from the Training Sector?” the Precian asked surprised. “That’s impossible.”

“Lying to the emperor—that’s what’s impossible. Temporarily taking a recruit on a trip is extremely possible.”

“But she has no clearance to go to Zalva.”

“Yes, but I do—isn’t that right?” I turned to my escorts who were waiting with us for the shuttle to land.

“The emperor has granted a sentient named Surgeon permission to land on Zalva,” the marines confirmed.

“You must understand…” the Precian began.

“I request once more that you give Nurse permission to travel with me.” I cut him off. “I have an additional access key to Zalva, which I will be happy to transfer to her. Is this key valid? Can a recruit use it?”

I opened my PDA and showed the access key that Rrgord had given me to the marine standing beside me.

“That key grants one sentient access to Zalva. There are no limitations on what type of sentient the sentient is,” came the laconic reply. “The key may be used by a recruit to make landfall on Zalva.”

“My friend,” I turned back to the Precian, “I am seeing several options here. Either I’m flying to Zalva with Nurse and not saying a word to the emperor about your little situation with the general, or I’m flying there on my own and hanging you out to dry.  Let the emperor decide whether or not you could smoke the general out of his lair or not. In the end, this is just not my problem to deal with.”

“Alright!” the acting commander almost yelled. “She will be given permission to leave the planet—but only if she agrees to do so. I won’t force her to go against her will!”

“Call her,” I replied, barely containing my smile. “We’ll see shortly what she wants…”

 

“Welcome back, Captain,” said Braniac as soon as I entered
Yalrock
. “The ship’s status…”

“Braniac, why did you ignore my direct order?” I cut off the computer.

“The number that you called from did not correspond to the authorized ship command numbers. The number that was authorized had been blocked due to…”

“Leave off the malarkey!” I interrupted again, raising my voice a bit. “I will repeat my question—why did you ignore my direct order?”

“Because he didn’t feel like getting respawned,” said the engineer, popping her head out of the wall. “Not so fun to lose a whole class.”

“More fun to get a new captain, eh?”

“No one was going to change captains! If we didn’t hear from you, we were going to blow ourselves to kingdom come and that’s all. A few minutes before we lost the ship. We had a whole think session here—and here you are flaming Braniac.”

“Where’d you learn all these words?” I asked the snake. “‘Not so fun,’ ‘think session,’ ‘flaming.’ You didn’t speak that way earlier.”

“I didn’t get out much earlier either. I have no idea what it means, but that’s the way people talk on the web I’ve been reading. So don’t get all butthurt about Braniac—no one wanted to self-destruct. It’s no pleasure to blow yourself up.”

“Braniac?” I asked the computer.

“Ignoring the official side of this question…It is true—I really did not want to lose a hundred levels—a whole class…”

“Lex, are all your AIs like this?” Eunice asked me quietly. “Stan, Braniac, the snake…All of them have personality matrices, but you talk to them as if they’re real people…I mean, I understand them—but, I swear, they seem to be arguing with you.”

“You know, everyone you just listed is much dearer to me than most of the Earth’s population. What difference does it make
who
created sentience—whether it was us humans or some almighty? If a consciousness is subtle enough, why not treat it on equal terms?”

“What are our plans, Cap?” asked the snake. “Where we off to now? Are we going to go troll some Zatrathi?”

“No. And look up how to use ‘troll’ properly. The Precians are about to load us into a cruiser and then we’ll be off to their capital, Zalva.”


Yalrock
,” the dispatcher’s voice came over the comm. “You will now be transferred to a transport ship. Please do not engage your engines. We will arrive in Zalva in thirty minutes.”

“Braniac…”

“Understood, engaging sleep mode. Captain, I really did my best to follow your orders…”

“Alright, forget it. Actually, I should say thank you for not self-destructing immediately. I really don’t feel like traveling around
Galactogon
without
Yalrock
,” I said and turned to Eunice. “Listen, we have thirty minutes of flight time ahead of us. Want to pop back IRL? I don’t see any point in staying in-game. What do you say?”

“I’m all for it! I was going to mention it myself. My head feels like it’s about to explode. I’m exhausted. Want to race to see who can get out of the cocoon faster? Loser has to order dinner.”

“Roger that. Ready, set, go!”

Sign out.

I had never opened the cocoon’s lid so quickly. It was silly of course, but Eunice had gotten me into it. Could a girl really beat me out of a game? Never!

“Look at that,” I heard an oddly familiar voice as soon as I jumped down to the floor and threw up my arms in triumph. Eunice had only just begun to descend from the platform. “Why, you popped out of that cocoon like a cork out of a bottle. It’s like some kind of race or something. Oh no, no—keep those arms up. You should raise them too, little darling. Oh and it’s not a good idea to make any sudden movements right now. It’s really not. Who knows, my trigger finger could slip…”

Without putting down my hands I turned around and saw Constantine, smiling spitefully. The very same Constantine I met on the first day of the bet. The very same one I thought was dead. Sprawling in an armchair with a blasé air, he was sipping some kind of beverage through a straw and holding a gun in his other hand. The gun was aimed in our direction. Perhaps the strangest thing however was the absence of Stan’s voice.

“Since we are all together again and at last, I propose we have a conversation. We will begin with the most important thing—which of you two will bring me that billion?”

 

 

 

 

Chapter 15

 

The Decision

 

 

 

“You two look like
your mom just caught you smoking and you have no idea what you’re gonna tell her,” laughed Constantine, lowering the gun. “Reminds me of a famous painting by Goya called
The Third of May
.”

“What is the meaning of this?” Eunice asked angrily, dropping her hands. “We were told that you’d been killed.”

“Hands up,” our guest barked, raising his gun again. “Let’s all be real clear about what’s going on here. I’d rather you not get any brilliant ideas. Eeny, meeny, miny, moe,” Constantine moved his gun between me and Eunice as he read out the counting rhyme. He ended on the girl and said, “Perfect. This way we’ll be even for that first day too. You didn’t give me any…”

A silenced gunshot sounded. Eunice jerked and looked at Constantine with astonishment. A red spot appeared on the girl’s shoulder—my wife collapsed to the floor.

“Are you completely nuts?” I yelled and darted over to the girl. That idiot had shot Eunice! “She’s pregnant!”

“Shut your hole,” our visitor said tersely, tossing me a small white object. “Press it to the wound. It’ll stanch the blood. Only the fact that she is pregnant saved her life just now. Hey! Princess! Can you hear me? Can you talk?”

“You piece of…! Go to hell!” Eunice whispered.

“I’ll assume that’s a yes. Excellent! We understand each other clearly now. I am here neither for your edification nor your entertainment. As soon as either one of you gives me a reason, I’ll be shooting to kill. Are we clear?”

“If you do that, you won’t see that check any more than you can see your ears!” the girl growled through her teeth. The bullet had passed clean through her shoulder, so the wound did not seem too serious. The object that Constantine had tossed me turned out to be a miniature first aid kit. As soon as I pressed it to the wound, some kind of mechanism whirred up inside, Eunice received several shots and the blood ceased to flow from either end of the wound.

“And that is precisely why I’m here. We are now going to negotiate an agreement,” smiled Constantine, lowering the gun again. “Isn’t that right, guys? Guys…?”

“About what?” I replied, standing up.

“Well, here’s the deal. I want the coordinates to the prize planet. Yeah, yeah—I know that you’ve basically got them in the bag by now. I’ll admit that I didn’t expect you to pop out before your meeting with the emperor, but…well, since you’re out, you’re out. You could have died peacefully and painlessly.”

“Died?”

“Yup,” laughed Constantine. “Died! Did you really think I was going to let you live? So naïve…What’re you getting all tense for? Want to try and tackle me? Well, well…You know, you can use the capsule just as well without your legs. You don’t actually need them in there.”

Another silenced gunshot followed. My right leg was pierced with a sharp and fiery pain. Or did the pain come first—before the gunshot? I can’t remember anymore.

“Press the kit to your wound. We wouldn’t want you to bleed out.” I heard Constantine say through a layer of fog.

A moment passed and I felt a cold numbness pour over my leg, extinguishing the blazing wound.

“There you are. Now that no one is in a hurry to go anywhere, we have twenty minutes before you two sign back into the game. I suppose we should use this time to chat. I will begin—let me reiterate: You will die. That’s a fact. But! There are some details.”

Without looking away from Constantine, Eunice gripped my hand anxiously. Judging by her evident trembling, the girl was on the edge of complete panic.

“It turns out,” went on our tormentor, frowning a little, “that one of you is pregnant. Now, I don’t kill kids. So instead of killing you two right away, I can give you one small chance. We can help each other.”

A pause followed. Constantine was looking at us and we were looking at him, neither of us saying anything.

“Eh…it’s not very interesting this way,” our visitor spoke up first. “Where are the inevitable questions? ‘How?’ ‘Why?’ “What?’ Where are the lamentations and the begging? The others were more talkative. Alright, let me tell you the whole story. Allow me to reiterate again—you’re both dead meat. You may as well come to terms with this fact. However! I can simply destroy this lovely girl’s mind and leave her body whole and healthy. Then, it will be able to carry the child to term and give birth. That would be quite kind of me, wouldn’t it?”

“Constantine, why are you doing this?” I asked. In my view, the important thing at that moment was to stall for time. Stan wasn’t saying anything and neither was Eunice’s smart home—so most likely that jerk had turned them off somehow. And yet we were under surveillance! The old man said that we couldn’t even expect privacy in the bathroom. If that was so, the SWAT team should be arriving at any moment. All we had to do was waste time.

“You trying to waste time?” came the cutting answer. “I don’t want to disappoint you,” said Constantine glancing at his phone beside him in the chair, “but at the moment the surveillance team thinks that you two are sixty-nining. Look at that! Why Eunice, how masterful you are with the…”

“Shut up!” hissed the girl, blushing deeply.

“That’s right. The entire surveillance team—mouths agape and hands in their zippers—is watching you two do the deed. No one will disturb us for at least thirty minutes—so we can continue our negotiations in peace. Now, what do you say to my offer?”

“Kill both of us—or kill just me and turn Eunice into a vegetable?” I answered his question with mine.

“And, importantly, save your child’s life in the process. Or—if you prefer—all three of you can die here. Then, I’ll miraculously come back to life, convince the old fogeys that I was simply in hiding, undergo all the necessary checks (got my alibi ready and everything), return to the game and begin grinding my Rapport with the Precians. I’ll meet the emperor and find out the planets’ coordinates…You get it. Basically, I’ll return and peacefully play on my merry way since I’ll have no competitors left.”

“WHAT?!” I exclaimed. “No more competitors?! You killed Lucille?”

“Lucille?” Constantine furrowed his brow. “Oh! The cute uppity girl? Yesterday. Her and her retarded husband. I’ll admit that I couldn’t help myself and just had to see what those titties looked like…But—let me be crystal clear—I did not touch the little boy. So, believe me when I say that you really
do
have the opportunity to leave the fruit of your perverted tryst to this world.”

“You bitch,” I hissed like Eunice. Alonso and Lucille were dead! If he had simply said “yes,” there’d still remain a doubt in my mind, but in mentioning their son, Constantine had shown that he was not bluffing—you couldn’t make that up. My best and only friend in this reality was dead!

“We don’t have much time,” the killer smiled again. “We’ve only ten minutes left, so I will repeat my terms—you will return to the game, meet the emperor, find out the coordinates from him and then die a painless and peaceful death. In the process, you make no unnecessary movements or notifications. If you do—if you try to play the hero—you will become the reason that your unborn child dies.”

“You never answered me—why are you doing this?”

“Can you not think of a dumber question to ask? We all know the answer—a billion pounds. They’ll be all mine. You two are all that stands in my way. Accordingly, you must cease to be…”

“How about an option in which we remain alive,” I began to improvise. My thoughts were darting in my head faster than a flyer gone supersonic. I needed to think of a way to survive—but all the while I kept stumbling over the idea that this was all just some kind of dream. Eunice’s wounded shoulder and my wounded leg said otherwise. That kind of pain didn’t happen in dreams. “We made a new contract with the old guys, under which instead of the original prize of one billion, we would get two billion pounds. A billion apiece. They’re yours if you let us live.”

“Yes, I already considered this,” Constantine scratched his head with his gun pensively. “That’s why I left you two until the very end—I wanted to see the bettors’ reaction to you guys almost reaching the finish line. I can confidently say that I didn’t like this reaction one bit. Specifically, I have seen an internal document stating that you will not be given the two billion. In the organizers’ view, only Alexis found the planet, whereas Eunice joined him only at the very end. So, thank you—but no thank you. This option is just too risky for me. Plus, it’s much easier to kill you now than worry about you two paying up later on down the road.”

The room grew quiet again. I tried to wiggle the toes on my numbed leg but nothing seemed to happen—either the anesthesia was too strong or the bullet had hit some nerve. A video game would normally use debuffs to simulate such injuries. In reality, everything was much more complicated.

“Okay. I agree,” Eunice whispered in a deathly voice, “But I need a guarantee that my child will survive.”

“I repeat: I don’t kill kids. Have you heard of a thing called a lobotomy? I’ll admit—I am very skilled when it comes to this little procedure. You will cease to exist as an individual—but remain a fully functional vessel for your child. Alexis, what do you say? Are you with us, or are we sending Eunice back on her own? Though, as I understand it, all the missions are yours—so there’s no point in sending her without you. Without you, this deal won’t work.”

“Lex, please…” Eunice screamed wordlessly. “He will live…”

Goddamn! What the hell was going on?! When agreeing to participate in the wager, I never imagined I’d be faced with the choice of either helping some bastard and dying but saving a child in the process—or helping no one at all and dying with my head held high. But dying either way! That
bitch
!

“But you repeat yourself,” smirked Constantine—it seemed that I had said that last word aloud.

“Let’s say we agree and give you the planets’ coordinates,” I went on stalling for time. “Then you’ll be the last one left—you’ll reappear in the world and instantly become the main suspect. The betting masters will pick you apart molecule by molecule—and they’ll find out everything. On the other hand, we are ready to give you our money. It’ll be much less of a headache for you.”

“Well, look. Officially, it is the fourth week now that I am bedridden in a comma in my city’s hospital. After the failed attempt on my priceless life, I suddenly didn’t feel right—and my mind suffered some kind of breakdown. The contest organizers visited me several times and checked my DNA to make sure that it was really me. So my alibi really is ironclad. But thank you for your concern,” Constantine quipped. “I find it touching. You have seven minutes before you have to sign in again. Are we choosing the long way or the short way?”

“The short one,” I barked once I realized that he was talking about himself. “Before we get back into the capsules—tell me—how did you do all of this?”

“Do you want me to play the movie villain and tell you all my plans?”

“You already told me about your alibi,” I shrugged, “why not explain how it all started as well?”

Time—I needed time to think of something. Surely Eunice and I wouldn’t make love eternally on the screens of the surveillance agents. At some point they would have to notice that the video was looped.

“Well…I guess, you’re right. I told you the first part, so I may as well tell you the second too. Everything started that first day when they brought us to the palace with the old men. I did a good job of playing dead drunk that night. You think I don’t remember how you two left me alone on the floor? In the middle of the hallway? You two went off to make your baby—while I remained lying there. Even the servants refused to touch me, since I had vomited and pissed all over. All they did was cover me with a sheet to keep me out of sight and left me lying there until morning.”

“You hacked into their system?” Eunice spoke up.

“Yup! Carefully, delicately and—most importantly—stealthily. I dug around their network and discovered many interesting things about who the bettors were, about the rules and about the prize. For example, did you know that you don’t actually have to find the check? It’s enough to simply step on the correct planet! That’s why I showed up today—victory must be mine. I uploaded a Trojan of my own concoction onto their network and then spent several days planning how I would acquire my billion pounds. All I had to do was ‘dispose’ of myself and then dispose of any competitors. We three are the last of the twelve. Sabotaging a personal flyer and then a transport flyer, changing the temperature in a sauna—I did my best to be creative in my methods. Alright, there are only three minutes left. Please take your places in the capsules. Any last wishes?”

“Die,” hissed Eunice getting to her feet.

“You’re a mean one,” smirked Constantine and raised his gun. A series of gunshots followed and Eunice collapsed to the floor with wounds in her legs and arms. Four shots—four limbs.

“You have half an hour to get me those coordinates,” the lunatic said spitefully. “After that, I tear up our contract. As for this bitch,” he looked over at Eunice who was lying unconscious on the floor with a puddle of blood spreading beneath her, “she’s got no business in
Galactogon
anymore. While you work for me, I’ll have some fun with her. I prefer them when they don’t resist.”

Other books

Black Wings by Christina Henry
Bite Me if You Can by Lynsay Sands
Gimme Something Better by Jack Boulware
Where the Memories Lie by Sibel Hodge
Master Of Paradise by Henley, Virginia