Mason woke in a cold sweat. The strange, realistic dream clung to him like frost, and he hugged his arms around his chest until the trembling stopped.
âYou alright?â
Mason flinched and opened his eyes to see Carl was watching him with a bit of panicky concern. He wondered what heâd been doing in his sleep exactly, and hoped it was just moaning.
âIâm fine.â He wiped spit from his face and glanced around at the dawn. Apparently it had rained and possibly stormed in the night, and they were all soaked to the bone. Very strange that this hadnât woken him.
Concerning
, and strange.
Carl had come close, apparently, and put up a little shelter of leaves above them. Mason had slept through all of it.
âI tried to wake you,â Carl explained. âFigure out the shelter. But, uh, you were out like the dead.â
Mason nodded. âSorry. Guess I was tired.â
Streak was under the leaves as well, equally soaked and looking miserable. Mason dug through his bag for some venison and fed the wolf by hand.
Then he looked back to Carl to find the man still pretending not to stare.
âWhat? Did I curse in my sleep or something?â
âUh, no, itâs justâŠâ the older man trailed off and shrugged. âYour eyes. TheyâreâŠwell, theyâreâŠsort of glowing green. Is that normal?â
Masonâs eyes were, in fact, brown. Also,
glowing
? He blinked and looked around, not noticing any different in his vision or the feel of his eyes. He shrugged, not wanting to seem taken aback.
âIâm a druid,â he said, as if that explained everything.
âRight. Course,â Carl said, then shouldered his pack. âWell, I donât think any more sleeping in the cold and wet will do us much good, Iâm ready to move when you are.â
Mason stood and moved instantly, stretching aching, sore muscles but otherwise feeling fine.
They walked in silence for maybe an hour before the world seemed to quiet and still, and a voice filled the sky and the trees and probably Masonâs mind.
[Greetings, players and civilians. Congratulations on your ongoing survival. Your progress continues to impress and inspire us. Today is the thirtieth day of the Great Game and marks the end of Phase One. Tomorrow, biological imperatives will increase in both speed and intensity. Please prepare accordingly.
Helpful Tip: avoid wilderness and dungeon areas without suitable strength or protection. All risks and rewards have increased.
Good luck. And as always, we are rooting for you.]
Mason glanced at Carl, who very clearly heard the voice as well.
âThat didnât sound good,â he said.
âIt certainly didnât,â Carl agreed. âWhat exactly do you think it meant by âbiological imperatives?ââ
Mason sighed, pretty sure he knew very well. âSurvival and procreation,â he said.
âSoâŠâ Carl squinted. âThings are about to get more violent, and uh, horny?â
Mason nodded, not sure what else to say. He was a little surprised when Carl grinned.
âWell hurry up, then. Iâd best get back to my woman.â
Mason matched the expression, thinking
yeah, me too.
They picked up their pace, not wanting to waste what sounded like their last day of current circumstance. The terrain continued to change, growing ever less like forest and more like mountainous plain.
As they crossed a particularly high rise, Mason looked out over clear ground for miles ahead, and stopped to stare.
âSomething wrong?â Carl stopped beside him and looked across the horizon.
âNo.â Mason shook his head. âI just havenât seen anything but forest since this all started.â He frowned and blinked, squinting as he tried to understand what he was looking at. âIs thatâŠa castle?â
âOh. That.â Carl smiled somewhat sheepishly. âThatâs some kind ofâŠâ he cleared his throat, âmonster fortress? Orcs, mostly. You know, green men with tusks. That sort of thing.â
Mason stared until the man had the good grace to look away.
âYou failed to mention that, Carl.â
âWell.â The older man shrugged and kicked at the ground like a lying teenager. âThey havenât bothered us so far. We just keep well clear.â
âMaybe theyâre just waiting for phase 2,â Mason muttered with a sigh. There wasnât much to be done about it, so he started down the hill.
It wasnât long after that they saw the walls of âSanctuaryâ.
They were impressive, just as Carl said, with clear turrets in an organized ring on the ramparts.
Mason and Carl made their way down to the gate, and just as they were about to reach for the stone, two large looking crossbows from the wall above turned and pointed straight at Mason.
âUh.â He glanced at his new friend and tried not to get concerned. âYour settlement is pointing at my face.â
âSorry.â Carl looked genuinely confused, and a little flustered. âIâve never seen that happen before.â He tried and failed to open the gate. âSuzanne?â he shouted. âKiko? Is someone there?â
âCarl?â A young woman poked her head over the edge of the wall.
âYeah, itâs me. Damn gate wonât open. Can you click the thing?â
âOne sec.â
Carl glanced somewhat sheepishly at Mason again, then a mechanical latch seemed to open, and the several feet of stone slid inward with greased precision.
âThere we are.â Carl grinned and wiped a bead of sweat from his brow. âNo trouble.â
Mason detected continued embarrassment rather than deception. Though you just could never know with great liars. Mason would knowâheâd lived with one his whole life.
In any case he wasnât afraid, and walked into the settlement beside Carl and Streak without much concern.
He saw no reason in the world for some kind of ambush of a random player, especially a man, and especially a random player who wouldnât die easy. But then this
was
the robopocalypseâŠ
Sanctuary seemed very similar to Nassau. Broad streets, a few larger buildings that were likely to do with crafting or a central gathering place, otherwise neat rows of something like condominiums.
He assumed they were going to the main gathering hall, and started moving that direction until people started flooding from practically every direction.
Instinct took his hand to his bow, his eye back to the gate to ensure it was open and he could still flee.
âEasy there, friend, theyâre just, uh, curious I guess,â Carl muttered at his side. âI
told
you they didnât have much to do.â
Young women in various states of dress ranging from pajamas to maybe blacksmith apron wandered out to stare like tourists. Some looked excited, others wide-eyed with something likeâŠfear? A few ran off towards the main hall.
âIs it the, uh, wolf?â Mason said, and Carl continued to look genuinely perplexed.
âNot sure, being honest. Letâs go. Silvie is this way.â
They walked on through what became an eerie silence as the girls continued to stare. The main doors of the hall opened before theyâd manage to arrive, and a woman maybe in her late 30s emerged with her messengers.
She approached and stopped at the bottom of the slight rise that led to the hall, eyes moving back and forth between Mason and Carl.
âYou alright?â she asked, then held the eyes of her fellow townsman.
âIâm fine, what the hell is wrong with everyone?â
Silvie flicked her gaze to Mason and back. âYour friend here is a tier 1 player.â
âOh. Well, I guess that doesnât surprise me much, Sil, he alreadyâŠâ
âAnd heâs practically glowing red with violence and player kills.â
Carlâs words caught in his throat, and Mason winced. Heâd honestly forgotten about that, and supposed he should have said something...
âI, uhâŠâ Carlâs face went slightly pale as he took a half step away.
âWhat have you brought inside our gates, Carl?â Silvie whispered.
âAlright, letâs all stay calm.â Mason raised his hands, which unfortunately held his bow.
Carl was still taking little steps away, and his hands were getting pretty stupidly close to the now obvious knife on his belt.
âWe both know whatâs going to happen if you pull that blade,â Mason said with slightly less patience. âI could have killed you long before the gates if Iâd wanted to.â
âBut then you couldnât have got in,â Carl said with a neutral tone.
âI sure as hell bloody could have,â Mason said back. âThe old owners of Nassau were raiders and murderers. I had to kill them to stop them, including their patron. I didnât take any pleasure in it. Well, not
much
pleasure.â
Carl and Silvie exchanged a look.
âSo it wasâŠself defence?â Carl asked.
âUhh.â Mason pursed his lips. âIsh? Look, I found a pile of corpses theyâd left by the sea. Then they took my brother. I donât let people like that live.â
Several long seconds passed in silence.
âYouâll understand,â Silvie broke it. âSince we donât know you, your presence is stillâŠfrightening. And we canât know if youâre lying.â
Mason shrugged. âIâd assume I was. Carl here asked me to come, so I did. If you want me to leave, Iâll go. Nothing personal, but honestly I donât really care.â
He heard Blake shouting articulate profanities at him in his mind, but whatever. Carl gave a rather meaningful nod to Silvie, and the woman seemed to deflate, aging five years as she shrunk like the weight of the world was crushing her.
âThank you for being reasonable. Whatâs your name?â
âMason.â He sighed. âFrom Nassau. I guess.â
Yet again Silvie and Carl exchanged a look, but this time Carl spoke first.
âHe was hunting worms to the North, near the river. Saved me from some wolves. Or at least saved me a hell of a lot of trouble.â
Silvie looked at Streak. âThen I suppose I should be thanking you. But tell me, why are you hunting worms so far this way?â
âJust following the trail,â Mason said. âI think they have some kind of nest near your settlement.â
Silvie frowned. âWonderful. Well. Itâs nice to meet you, Mason.â
âYou too.â
It was clear everyone was still uncomfortable, which matched Masonâs general feeling around people. But he reminded himself this was the new world and he didnât have to play by old rules.
So now that the pleasantries were over, and it seemed the good folk of Sanctuary had decided at least not to start a fight to the death, Mason was feeling a little more natural. And also impatient.
While the others seemed at a bit of a loss on what to say or do next, he glanced around at the settlement with fresh eyesâthe eyes of someone violent and entirely without scruples.
He saw a lot of benefit and not very much risk. Carl and the civilians obviously thought their walls and defences would keep them safe from players.
But Mason knew they were very wrong. You wouldnât need someone of Masonâs power. A few mid-tier players could break the towers and scale the walls easy enough. Kill the valiant defender Carl, and boom, Bobâs your uncle. A town full of young, attractive women.
âSo, uh,â Mason met Silvieâs eyes, âno offense, but, how exactly is a civilian like you in charge of this place? And, how do you even
get
it with two players?â
A little fear returned to Silvieâs grey eyes. âWhat makes you think we only have two players?â
Mason snorted. âCarl told me. Even if he hadnât, I know anxiety when I see it.â He spoke up, so all the girls watching could hear him, too. âBut itâs not me you need to be afraid of. Youâre weak, and surrounded by danger. And Iâm assuming you heard the same message today I didâthings are about to get worse.â
Silvie stared with obvious annoyance, but her face crumpled with something like resignation as she turned towards the hall.
âMaybe we should go talk in my office.â