Mason followed his hosts up the hill and tried to ignore the stares. The inside was nearly the exact same layout as the one in Nassau, and Silvie had chosen the same office.
She led him inside and closed the door, then took a glass bottle from her desk.
âThe settlement gives us a little of this every week. Itâs not whiskey, but itâs better than nothing.â She poured two glasses, handed him one and waited.
âYou should know,â Mason swallowed it, taking a moment to enjoy the burn. âIf thatâs poison, itâs not likely to kill me. But I still wonât be very happy.â
Silvie snorted and drank hers, then poured them another round.
âWe were all in the same tutorial,â she said as she sat. âIt was almost like a school with a bunch of tests, except failure meant terrible punishments or death. The civilians out there, the ones who passed and escaped, theyâre mostly all college girls.â
Mason said nothing, just waiting. Silvieâs eyes lost focus into a thousand yard stare.
âWeâd had such a hard time of it, and our little group had done 'so wellâ,â she shook her head, as if this were a joke, âit rewarded us, you see. The system. Or whatever the fuck it is. It gave us this town. Said our tutorial âwasnât intended to be so difficultâ, like it made some kind of fuck up.â
Mason frowned. âI thought people didnât actually die in tutorials. They justâŠrespawn, or whatever.â
He hadnât actually seen it, since he hadnât died, but Blake had told him all about his.
Silvieâs eyes went far away, her jaw clenched as she looked out the window. âThe respawn point got trapped. Somebody fucked up a test and theseâŠgates closed down, and water came up, and in the place where people came back got filled with water, and they couldnât get out. They just drowned, over and over, every two hours until the tutorial ended. Then they drowned for the last time.â
Mason was somewhat speechless, but he realized it was very likely the exact same thing that happened to all the other people in his tutorial. Killed on cooldown by monsters until they didnât respawn.
âAnd your tutorial?â Silvie snapped out of it and grinned a little as she asked. âI imagine it was all sunshine and rainbows?â
âSomething like that.â Mason said without expression, and Silvie dropped the grin.
âI donât suppose you get to be a tier 1 player without a considerable amount of blood.â
âNo. I donât suppose.â
Finally Silvie turned to her man. âWell, Carl, you brought him here. Maybe you should tell me why.â
âYou know why, doll,â Carl said quietly. âHeâs from a settlement.
The
rumored settlement to the North. They have players, a patron, lots of people.â
Silvie took a deep breath.
âHow can you know for sure? And even if itâs true, how do you know theyâll really help us?â
Now it was time for Mason and Carl to exchange a look.
âYou canât stay here,â Mason said matter of factly. âNot by yourselves. And sure as hell not anywhere near that fortress I saw East of here. Thatâs a time bomb.â
âThey havenât bothered us.â
âThey could be breeding those worms, for all you know. And if itâs not them, itâll be some hungry players waiting to kill Carl here and turn your girls into slaves. Trust me. I met some of them.â
âThis place was a
miracle
for us.â Silvie clenched her jaw. âWe canât just leave it.â
Mason shook his head, trying to think what Blake would do. Why the hell wasnât he the one doing this? Then it occurred to him.
âYou get patron points, Silvie?â
The woman did her best to hide her confusion, and Mason knew he had her.
âDidnât think so. Our patron gets some kind of currency with the system. He can
buy
buildings that just sprout up like magic. More people, more points. I suspect with a little time, weâll turn our town into a fortress. With your people adding to our numbers, itâll make the place better, stronger.â
Silvie stared at him for quite some time, then finished her drink. She flicked her eyes at Carl. âI could let him become âPatronâ and then weâd get access to those points, too.â
Mason shrugged. âNo doubt you could. But you wouldnât have many, and you couldnât get more. You need more people. To actually accomplish things and level up. Only players are going to win this âgameâ, and you donât have any.â
Silvie clenched her teeth, then relaxed. âYou make it sound like Nassau is the answer to all our problems. I feel like asking what the catch is.â
âNo catch.â Mason shrugged. âExcept you have to stay in our town. You have to tolerate my brother.â Here she raised a brow and Mason waved it away. âHeâs fine, itâs justâŠyouâll see. Weâve got a crafters hall with all kinds of things, and a big hall full of games and whatnot where I guess folk mingle. Frankly I havenât stepped inside. We havenât got a lot of single men, but a lot more than you have here.â
She looked at her glass again, turning it slightly as she considered. Masonâs patience was doing that thing again.
âI donât mean to be rude, maâam, but I donât see that youâve got much choice.â
Her eyes flared in a quick glance, and he supposed he should be gentler. âI can see your tier 1,â she said. âAre all your players like that? Your brother, too?â
âNo,â he said. âJust me. My brotherâs more suited to things likeâŠtalking to settlement mayors with manners, and leading towns.â
Silvie at least smiled a little at that. âAnd what are you suited for?â
âSolving problems.â
âWell,â Silvie sighed, âwe have a lot of problems. Most of which will be solved if we live in Nassau. So, how do we get there?â
âWe walk.â Mason winced. âOr run, preferably. Iâd rather we made it one day and night but I doubt itâs possible.â
Silvieâs face scrunched like sheâd aged another year. âI was hoping youâd have some kind ofâŠmagic teleporter, or vehicles.â She looked to Carl, who gave her a tight-lipped smile. âWe can try, but Iâd sure love to wipe those worms out first. Have you figured out where they are?â
Mason shook his head. âI suspect your dead player did. Weâll try going East. If you want, I can go deal with it now. Gives you time to prepare. When Iâm back we can leave.â
âWe havenât technically agreed,â Silvie said.
âWe both know you have. Either way Iâm going back to Nassau after I wipe out those worms. You can come along, or you can stay here.â
âYouâre very confident youâll succeed,â Silvie said, tone showing she was still a little indignant about the whole situation.
Mason cracked his neck and shut the images from his mind. âIâve seen worse than giant earthworms.â
Carl cleared his throat. âI think Iâll go with him, Doll.â
Silvie twisted like sheâd been struck. âWe need you
here
. Going out on patrols is bad enough. Weâre practically defenseless without you.â
âYeah. And I need to get stronger,â Carl said in a tone that didnât leave much room for discussion. âThat is,â he cleared his throat again and spoke more tentatively, âif Mason here doesnât mind me tagging along.â
âNot at all.â Mason shrugged. âThough I canât promise thereâs not any wolves.â
Carl narrowed his eyes and squared his shoulders a little, and Mason fought back the grin.
âIâll be fine, thank you. You havenât seen half my tricks.â
âI look forward to seeing the rest.â
Mason and Carl exchanged a good natured grin, and Silvie watched them and sighed.
âMen. Well. Hurry back.â She fidgeted with a piece of paper on her desk, opening her mouth once or twice before she found the words. âBut should youâŠrest, a little, first? Iâm sure youâre tired from the road.â
Carl blinked and gave Mason a âplease say yesâ sort of expression. He sighed and supposed he finally understood a little how Blake sometimes felt.
âDaylightâs wasting. Twenty minutes. Then Iâm going.â
Silvie and Carl both smiled in relief, not hiding their excitement very well.
âWhy donât you head on over to the cantina, Mason? We have an excellent chef. Sheâll whip something up for you, then we can go hunt your monsters with a full belly.â
Mason wasnât exactly a foodie, but talk of eating made his gut rumble, and something other than dried rations sounded pretty damn good.
He turned and walked out without another word.