Mom's dinner was a brown stew chock-full of mushrooms and chicken. Since
it was the first thing I'd asked for after coming home from SAO, I considered it
my favorite ever since.
I did love it, of course, and sometimes I tried my hand at making it. But I
couldn't bring myself to be honest and admit to my mom that the reason I
loved it was deeply tied to memories within Aincrad, and that it was originally a
rabbit stew, rather than chicken.
In fact, all my favorite dishes—teri-mayo burgers, salt-flavored ramen, and
honey pies—came from virtual-world memories. If those memories from the
past faded, I might no longer want to eat those foods, but for the moment, that
didn't seem likely.
I sent one e-mail before eating, then took off my Augma so I could enjoy my
meal—despite working with tech as the editor in chief of an IT magazine, Mom
was very picky about device manners at the table. When I had put all the dishes
away, the living room clock said it was 7:22. Only three minutes until I was
supposed to meet back up with Asuna. Mom was enjoying her post-dinner
coffee on the sofa; I thanked her for the meal and headed back upstairs. Suguha
followed behind me and said "I'm going to take a bath, okay?" before heading
toward her room. I yanked on the back of her collar.
"Gweh…Wh-what was that for?!"
"We need to talk. It's important. Bring your AmuSphere over to my room right
now."
"H…huh?"
I can't say I didn't deserve the suspicious look she gave me. Regardless, I
grabbed my sister's shoulders, spun her around, and pushed her forward. "On
the double!" Suguha went into her room grumbling, but she came back out with
her AmuSphere in one hand and her phone in the other. I beckoned her in.
Once she was inside my room, I shut the door and asked her as quickly as I
could, "Sugu, where's your resurrect point right now?!"
"Huh…? It's in your house…on the twenty-second floor of New Aincrad."
"Good. And that's the last place where you logged out?"
"That's right. What is this all about?"
"I'll explain inside. Get ready to dive."
"Dive…from here?!" she said, her eyes wide as she looked around my room.
"But you don't even have any cushions in here. Am I supposed to just lie on the
floor?"
"We can each take half the bed. C'mon, hurry!"
I pushed her shoulders again and sat her on the bed. She looked up at me, her
mouth working silently. I plucked the AmuSphere from her hands and plopped
it onto her head.
"Ah, h-hey, wait…"
Just then, the phone in Suguha's hand beeped with a notification. She looked
at the screen reflexively, and her thick eyebrows lowered. "Oh, it's from
Nagata…Yikes! Look at all the e-mails and calls!"
"Ignore them. I know what he wants," I said mercilessly, causing Suguha's
mouth to drop open again.
"H…huh…?"
"There's something more important to deal with now. C'mon, take the other
side."
"Sheesh…" Suguha pouted but placed her phone on the headboard, then
went to lie down on the back side of the bed. I positioned myself next to her
and put on my AmuSphere, lowered the visor, and glanced at the clock in the
lower left of the interior monitor as I waited for it to boot up. It was 7:24:47.
There wasn't really a need to hit the timing on the exact second, but I took a
deep breath anyway and said, "We'll dive on a countdown of five, four, three,
two, one…"
"Link Start!"
When gravity kicked in and sank the soles of my shoes against hard floor
again, I opened my eyes to see that the undine in the white knight uniform and
the cait sith wearing golden armor were already waiting in the log cabin's living
room. It was dark inside, lit only by the weak handmade torch stuck into the
crack in the wall.
Asuna and Alice were about to say something when they saw me, but then
their eyes moved to my right. Two seconds later, a fourth figure appeared
beside me, and they cried out.
"It's Leafa!"
"Leafa!"
They rushed over and clutched the arms of the sylph magic warrior.
"You're all right! I'm so glad…"
"We were really worried!"
Suguha, now in character as Leafa, looked absolutely perplexed. She stared at
the two of them.
"Um, Asuna, Alice…what do you mean, all right…? Why is it so dark in here?"
Then she looked at me, and her jaw dropped once again.
"B-Big Brother…why are you dressed like that?!"
"I'm going to need you to overlook my state of dress for now," I said, glancing
down at my underwear-clad avatar briefly before looking up at my sister. The
lightweight green armor and long katana she kept at her left hip belonged to
her usual battle outfit. She didn't seem encumbered by it. That meant the grace
period for carrying equipment weight was still active. Leafa's ears had become
more human-shaped, but it was such a subtle change that even she hadn't
noticed yet.
Relieved, I asked her, "Sugu…I mean, Leafa, was anything different about the
ALO login sequence?"
"Huh? Oh…yeah, I was a bit confused during the falling sequence…I passed
straight through some patterned wheel thing. That was different than usual.
What was it?"
"…I knew it…," I murmured. I'd seen that image once before. It was when I
had converted my spriggan avatar into the shooting-centric world of Gun Gale
Online.
"That's the converting ring. When you logged in, your avatar was forcibly
converted into this world's style."
"H-huh?! Converted…? But this is your usual home, Big Br…I mean, it's Kirito
and Asuna's home…," Leafa said, looking around the darkened living room.
Then she pressed her hands to her mouth and uttered hoarsely, "Wh…what
the…? Asuna, what happened?!"
I couldn't blame her for being shocked. All the interior objects, the furniture
and decorations that Asuna had put so much work into selecting and arranging,
were gone from the spacious living room.
And that wasn't all. The back wall where there had once been a large fireplace
was utterly shattered, exposing the outdoors. The center of the floor was
severely dented. There were holes in the ceiling here and there. I'd seen the
damage many times by now, but it still made my heart hurt.
Asuna moved her hand from Leafa's arm to her back and said, "Leafa, we're
not in Alfheim anymore. We were teleported into this world with our cabin…
well, no, I suppose with all of New Aincrad."
We sat in a circle in the spot where the big, puffy couch had once been and
imparted our current knowledge to Leafa.
She listened, hugging her knees, and nodded when we were done, her long
golden ponytail swaying. She glanced sidelong at me.
"I see…Now I get why you're dressed like that."
"Your understanding means the world to me. Asuna and Alice still have their
armor, but they can't equip their swords anymore…so yours is all we can count
on right now, Leafa."
"…So you brought me here to be your bodyguard?"
"Well, uh, not only that," I said hastily.
My sister glared at me, then looked out at the forest through the collapsed
wall. "What kind of monsters show up around here?"
"We still haven't seen any creatures yet," answered Alice. She reached for her
empty sword belt on instinct. It was a lonely gesture. "But when we went into
the forest to look for kindling earlier, there were multiple howls in the distance.
It seems certain that something is living in this forest."
"Ugh…and if I'm level-1, then I can't use magic…"
"Yes, the sacred arts…er, the spells used in Alfheim did not have any effect
here. If Yui were here, she might be able to explain things to us. Were you able
to communicate with her on the other side, Kirito?"
Even in the dark, Alice's blue eyes shone as bright as sapphires. I stared back
into them and said, "No, she didn't respond. I think she's probably still here
somewhere with Liz and Silica."
"Hmm…I hope we can regroup with them. If they were inside New Aincrad,
then they can't be too far away…"
"Oh, about that!" Leafa said, leaning forward. "I get that New Aincrad fell
down to earth, but what happened after that? Did you see everything, Kirito?"
"We were so desperate to give this cabin a softer landing that I didn't have
time to watch it…"
"Besides, Leafa," said Asuna, putting her hands in the air to explain, "the
piece of rock that split off kind of rode across the air with us on it, at a thirtydegree angle or so…If New Aincrad fell from a height of six miles, then our
landing point would be about ten and a half miles away. There were some rocky
mountains below us at points, so the truth is, we didn't even hear the sound of
New Aincrad crashing to the ground."
"Ten miles…That would be an easy trip if we had wings," Leafa lamented,
wriggling her back, but of course, no fairy wings appeared. She was so
enamored with flying that she had the nickname Speedaholic. Losing them had
to be an even bigger shock than having her character stats reset.
But true to her nature, my sister put on a brave smile and took it in stride.
"All right, I have a grasp of the situation. So your goal for now is to repair this
house, right? Then I'll help, of course! This is my home, too!"
"…Thank you, Leafa," Asuna said, momentarily surprised. She squeezed my
sister's hands kindly and turned her gaze to the damaged living room.
"Calculating from the rate of durability decrease, we've got a bit over ten hours
until the building is destroyed…and we still have a bunch of materials to gather
by then. What we need are…"
Asuna tapped the floor to bring up the properties window of the house and
showed Leafa the screen of items needed to conduct the repair process. While
they talked this over, I opened my ring menu and chose the SKILLS icon.
The window that appeared contained a list of skills I'd gained. At the top was
the One-Handed Sword skill that was a holdover from ALO, but it was useless at
the moment, since I couldn't use my actual sword.
Below that was a list of crafting and support skills I'd learned since we landed
here. Stoneworking, Woodworking, Weaving, and Physique. All of them were
barely more than zero, but they were my lifeline for the moment.
I tapped the Stoneworking skill, and a new window appeared displaying my
current proficiency and the items I could craft with it. Among the primitive
weapons like stone knife, stone ax, and stone spear was a stone sword. If it
came to it, that was going to have to be my weapon, but it was all too easy to
imagine Suguha rolling around and crying with laughter when she saw me
holding a stone sword in my undies, so I was hoping to make my first weapon a
metal one.
Next to the names of the stone weapons was a hammer symbol. Curious, I
tapped it, and a smaller pop-up that said Tips materialized with a little jingle.
Items displayed with this icon must be created manually, by hand or with a
tool.
That would suggest that some items didn't need to be created that way, so I
scrolled farther through the list. After the weapons were tools like stone plates,
stone hammers, and whetstones, followed by building materials like stone
blocks and stone foundations. All the items so far had the manual symbol next
to them.
At the very bottom were names like stone hut and stone hearth and stone
furnace, and they had a symbol that looked like two overlapping rectangles next
to them. I tapped that icon, and the pop-up jingled again.
Items displayed with this icon can be produced from the skill window. All the
necessary materials must be in your inventory already.
"I see…"
I tapped the stone hut to bring up the list of needed materials. There was a
PRODUCE button at the bottom of the window. Out of sheer momentum, I pressed
it, but of course, it said You do not have the necessary materials.
"Ooh, there's a furnace for smelting iron!" exclaimed Alice, who came over to
look at my window. "Couldn't we use that to create the iron sheets and nails
and such to repair the log cabin? As well as make new weapons?"
"Well, I suppose that's right," I said, unable to commit to a positive or
negative answer. "But we'll need iron ore to make iron, of course, and it's not
that easy to find in games like this. I doubt we'll find it just growing out of the
ground in the middle of the plains."
"Where do you acquire it, then?"
"The orthodox way is on a mountain or in a cave. But there aren't any
mountains around here…"
"Which leaves a cave," said the cat-eared knight. She did not sound enthused.
Something I learned since we started adventuring together in ALO was that
the bold and seemingly flawless knight I met in the Underworld actually did
have a natural weakness to some things. One was natural caves; while she was
perfectly comfortable in human-constructed dungeons and catacombs, she did
not like to go into caves and grottoes formed by natural forces. I suspected it
had to do with some distant childhood memories that were supposedly deleted,
but I'd never considered it important enough to ask her about.
"Well, I doubt we'll just happen across caves wherever we wander…so let's
focus on wrapping up all the materials we can make with wood first. Especially
now that we have our helpful lumberjack with us."
Leafa spun around, incensed. "Excuse me, Kirito! Are you referring to me?! All
I have is this sword!"
"And it'll do. When I was in the Underworld, I cut down a tree that couldn't be
cut down for a thousand years, and that was with a single longswo—"
"Okay, okay, I'll do it," she interrupted so that she wouldn't have to listen to
me brag. "But based on what you said, my ability to use this sword will only last
during the…what did you call it? Grace period? How many more hours is that?"
"Um, to find that out, we'd have to ask the person behind this whole state of
affai—," I said, until Alice jabbed me in the side. "Gah! Wh…what was that for?"
"Here, Kirito, look at this," she said, ignoring my protest and opening her ring
menu. I stared at them, but the eight purple icons seemed no different from my
own.
"…What am I looking at?"
"The color of the icons. Does it seem like the coloring shifts as they rotate
right?"
"Oh…that's true!" shouted Asuna. She'd opened her own menu and was
nodding as she examined it. "Yes, the icon at the very top is more reddish, but
as you go clockwise, they get bluer and bluer, until the eighth one is like a
bluish-purple. But…what is it about that, Alice?"
"When I looked at this right after landing, I recall that nearly all the icons were
tinted blue. It imprinted in my mind because I thought they looked like the
shade of zephilia flowers. But right now, their colors are changing, up to about
the fifth icon…Could this be depicting the amount of time left in the grace
period?"
"Ohhh…I see what you mean…"
I closed all the crafting windows and stared at the base menu. If they
represented a kind of timer, like Alice said…then about five icons had changed
color in two and a half hours. Thirty minutes for each one.
"…If there are only three icons left, that gives an hour and a half until they all
have changed color…"
"What…? That's it?!" exclaimed Leafa, looking around the room as if
searching for a wall clock.
Alice closed her ring menu and said tersely, "Let's hurry. We should at least
cut down all the trees we need while we can still use Leafa's sword."
Leafa didn't complain this time. She gripped the sheath of her long katana and
said seriously, "All right. I'll chop down the trees. You strip off the bark."
"We know what to do. So let's get busy, Leafa," said Asuna. With that, we
rushed out of the open doorway.
But we stopped before we even got off the brutalized porch. The
overwhelming darkness of the forest at night seemed to consume us. Even
outside, we couldn't see more than a dozen feet or so ahead of us.
"…I think we're going to need light…," I murmured, and the surroundings
grew a tiny bit brighter. Not because the game itself was being helpful, but
because Alice brought out the impromptu torch we were using to light the
cabin.
"How did you make the sparks to light that, by the way?" I asked belatedly.
Alice pulled two egg-sized rocks from the pouch she had on her belt to show
me. "I returned a bit before you two did, so I looked for flint rocks at the river. I
thought we'd need them when it got dark."
"N-nice one…"
I should have figured that someone actually from another world would have
her head on straight!
"So how do you use them?"
"It's actually easier here than it is in the Underworld. You just bunch up the
dead grass into tinder, then strike the sparks about ten times until it catches.
Then you transfer the fire to the branch."
"Hmm…"
I prefer the magic way! I moaned inwardly but managed to hold my silence. In
SAO, where there was no magic, we usually had lanterns, but given that you lit
those by simply tapping them, that was essentially magic, too. The world of
Unital Ring was not going to make things easy for us.
"Well, I'll go look for more…"
But before I could even finish my sentence, Alice hopped down to the ground,
took a few steps, then crouched. There was a large selection of dead branches
there that I hadn't seen before. She extended the torch into its midst, and they
soon began to snap and pop with great force.
"Oh wow! The fire effects are so realistic!" Leafa exclaimed. I couldn't blame
her. The dancing red flames and soaring sparks were so fine in their detail that I
couldn't tell the difference from a real campfire. As I thought when I first saw
the trees in the forest, the graphical quality of this world was far beyond that of
ALO…and even SAO. In terms of the visual impact, it was like upgrading a flatpanel display from HD quality to 4K.
But it was also something that didn't add up with the information I'd collected
when I logged out.
It wasn't just us ALO players who'd gotten converted here against our will. It
was the majority of the major VRMMOs that made up The Seed Nexus.
Probably hundreds of thousands of players from over a hundred virtual worlds
in all. Did the system capacity exist in 2026 to have a world large enough to hold
so many players and yet contain so much incredible detail…?
"Kirito, wake up and help out!"
A hand slapped my bare back, and I jumped. "Yeow!"
"You're the one who said we didn't have time. Let's get moving!"
"R-right…"
Like Leafa said, this was the time for action, not reflection. Alice's campfire
was burning vigorously now, casting reddish light on the forest surrounding the
clearing. We could do plenty of work like this without needing to carry torches.
"Okay, let's do this…," I started to say.
But Leafa already had her blade out, swinging it fiercely at the nearest spiral
pine. Shwack! It made a nice, pleasing sound. Meanwhile, I was standing there
with my fist raised at an awkward height, earning me mixed glances from Asuna
and Alice.
After we save our house, I'm going to get myself some new gear, I swore to
myself. Even if it means going to school after an all-nighter.
True to its nature as an Ancient weapon in ALO, Leafa's sword sliced up the
spiral pines like they were nothing, despite not being a proper woodcutting ax.
It took no more than thirty seconds for her to cut down a tree, so even with
three people working on skinning and hauling it off, any delay would cause our
side of the process to get backed up.
After fifteen minutes of high-focus teamwork with Asuna and Alice, we had
another tremendous stack of spiral-patterned logs in the clearing. There were
three piles of ten logs each. That should be more than enough to make the
seventy-five sawed planks we needed for the repair.
But as I stood there satisfied, hands on my hips, a question occurred to me.
"Um…how do we make the planks…?"
There were plenty of planks available for purchase at the local home
improvement store in the real world, but I didn't know exactly how they made
them. I guessed they probably just sliced the logs into thinner pieces…but you'd
probably need some heavy-duty equipment to process logs of this width.
Asuna had the knowledge to back up my guess. "Of course, we don't have a
large band saw here, so we'll at least need a frame saw…"
"F-frame saw?"
"Yes, it's a huge saw they used back in the Meiji era."
"Ohhh…I think maybe I've seen that in a Japanese history textbook once…"
I'd never heard of a band saw, either, but I could guess that it was the name
of another kind of wood-processing tool. "So we need a saw…We might be able
to craft one with iron and the Blacksmithing skill, but both of those will
probably take a lot of time. But then again…they didn't have saws all the way
back in the earliest periods of Japanese history, right? So how did those people
make planks of wood?"
"Well, let's see…"
Even brilliant Asuna had to pause and make a face like she was searching her
memory, but as always, she found the answer there. That's how I could tell her
brain was simply different from mine.
"A saw that can cut a log vertically, like the frame saw I mentioned…came to
Japan from the Asian mainland in the fourteenth or fifteenth century. Before
that, they would hammer wedges into the logs to split them, then use hand
axes and planes to finish the surfaces. Splitting wood with a wedge is basically
just hoping the grain will split in your favor, so it was inefficient and susceptible
to failure. Longer planks were a real extravagance back in those days."
"Huh…With wedges, eh?" I murmured, gazing at the stacks of logs.
I'd been examining them as we stripped the bark off. The name spiral pine
definitely referred to the way the tree rotated like a drill as it grew. The fibers
were twisted into a spiral pattern inside the trunk. If this game could even
factor in grain direction to individual trees, then striking them with wedges was
almost certainly going to shatter them without a straight split. And we couldn't
get a wedge either until our little civilization in the forest clearing reached the
Iron Age.
"Rrrmmm…wood planks really are a product of humanity's wisdom," I said,
impressed.
Asuna said, "That's true, but that's not all. You can only get a proper plank
from the center of a log, so it's really the life and history of a tree that's lived for
decades. I feel like if you consider it from that angle, it only makes sense that
it's difficult to create planks from trees."
"That's true. And yet, somehow, we have to make this into a plank, or we
can't repair our cabin…," I said, slapping the end of the log.
Just then, Leafa came back from her task with Alice and smacked me hard on
the back.
"Yeow!"
"Now, now, Kirito. You'd better not be discounting my skill and the power of
Lysavindr here."
"Ouch…why does everyone keep slapping me on the back…?"
"Ha-ha-ha! When you look like that, it's impossible to resist. Wanna give him
a whack, Asuna?"
"You could pick a better way of saying that!" I protested, leaping away from
them. I thought Asuna looked momentarily disappointed, but I hoped it was a
trick of the light. Either way, I had to be more careful to keep my back pointed
away from these women.
"A-anyway," I said to Leafa, "what was that about your skill?"
"Just move out of the way."
She gestured for the rest of us to back away, then stood in front of the pile of
logs. Her silver blade was perfectly still in her hands, resting in an orthodox
forward stance.
"Um, Sugu, you aren't going to chop those logs with your sword, are you—?" I
asked, accidentally using her real name.
Without turning away, the sylph warrior said, "I've cut down thirty of them,
so I think I've got the hang of it now. Just watch."
At that point, I had no choice. The flat of Lysavindr gleamed red with the
reflected light of the campfire.
Categorically speaking, Leafa's long katana was considered a bastard sword,
meaning that when wielded in one hand, she could use One-Handed Sword
skills, and when held with both, she could use Two-Handed Sword skills. There
was a downside that came with that convenience, though; it was heavy and
difficult to use with one hand but lighter and less powerful than a proper twohanded sword. But as a kendo athlete, she claimed that it was just the right
length and weight.
As the rest of us watched, Leafa lifted her blade as smoothly as though drawn
by invisible strings. Then she paused and held it for just a moment so that a
green glow infused it—the visual effect that indicated an imminent sword skill. I
was already certain because weapon skills still existed, but this was further
confirmation that the numerous special attacks from the original SAO were still
carried over into this game.
"…Haah!" Leafa barked, swinging her sword. Two slices split the night air: the
two-part Two-Handed Sword skill Cataract.
Normally, it was consecutive high swings that went wham, wham! But Leafa's
version was so fast that they both seemed to happen in a single breath. The
slashes entered the edge of the log on top of the pile, the green light passing all
the way through to the other end before vanishing.
After a second's pause, the log silently split into two, then tumbled to the
ground. In the center, between the spot where the two slashes had gone, was a
single, thin plank of wood. It, too, toppled over to the right and would have
fallen to the ground if I hadn't leaped forward to snatch it first.
It was about three-quarters of an inch thick. The surface was as smooth as if it
had been lovingly planed, and the grain was vivid and diagonal. I tapped it with
my left hand to bring up the properties window. It was called a sawed aged
spiral pine plank.
"What do you think, Kirito? Will that work for repairing the cabin?" asked my
sister as she lowered her sword. I gave her a thumbs-up.
"It's perfect. But…"
I put the freshly cut plank into my inventory, then glanced at the two parts of
the vertically split log on the ground.
"…This method can only make one plank per log…We need to create some
means of supporting the logs first…"
"Huh? Just use your hands," she said breezily. Then she pointed at one of the
log's split halves and said, "Put that back up on the pile, then hold it up
vertically."
"..."
I had a bad feeling about this, but I did as she said, picking it up and placing it
back where it was before—but standing on the point of its severed edge. Once
it was balanced just right, I used both hands to hold it up.
"Now hold it right there. Here goes…"
Leafa raised her sword again and easily activated a sword skill. This was the
simple one-hit Two-Handed Sword skill Cascade. The blade hit three-quarters of
an inch from the previous cut, the green light flashing through the bottom of
my hand.
"Yikes!" I yelped. There was a light shock from the effect, but no damage. I
would have let go, except that Leafa instructed, "Hold it right there!"
This time, she used Cataract again, which had just finished its cooldown. Then
Cascade once more, followed by Cataract.
After six slashes in total, the object itself must have run out of durability,
because the end of the log shattered like glass. I was left with six long slabs of
wood, perfectly parallel, if slightly varied in size—this was unavoidable, because
a log is a round cylinder. Added to the initial plank, this meant we'd gotten
seven planks of wood from the half-split log.
"Brilliant work, Leafa!" marveled Alice, who gave her a little round of
applause. "When I was living in seclusion near Rulid, I made a living by felling
trees, but I was never able to carve them into planks so skillfully."
"Teh-heh-heh-heh, aw, it's nothing." Leafa chuckled rather creepily.
"No, it really is amazing," added Asuna. "Two-Handed Sword skills are tough
to control, but you landed them with perfect accuracy. I don't even think Kirito
can do that."
What?! I balked. But I had no way of demonstrating my incredible skill at this
moment. Instead, I silently put the six planks in my inventory, circled around the
other side of the stack, and lifted the other half of the log into place.
"Let's keep this up and get through the rest of the logs, dear sister," I
instructed.
Leafa happily cried "You got it!" and raised her sword again.
When she was done slicing through the ten logs, it was after eight o'clock.
There was a little less than an hour until the grace period on our equipment
weight ended.
Because Leafa's log-splitting exhibition almost never missed, we'd gained 130
planks, but overall, we'd still only filled out two of the six types of materials
needed to repair our log cabin. And the other four would be difficult to acquire.
We didn't even know how to get them.
"Now we have to do something about iron," muttered Asuna, staring into the
weakening light of the campfire.
I folded my arms and said, "Yes…I should be able to make a furnace with
stones from the riverbed, but that doesn't solve the matter of the ore to put
inside it. I'm sure we'll find some in a cave, like we talked about earlier, but
there are bound to be monsters…and tougher ones than what we'll find
outside…"
"I know…If we could just use our swords…," Asuna lamented, looking at her
hand. I felt the same way—in fact, I was doubly frustrated because I couldn't
wear armor, either. Giving us four hours of time to ignore that rule was fine and
dandy, but converting everyone's characters by force and telling them too bad
if you weren't equipping your gear, or took it off for a moment, was just plain
cruel. It was common for people to unequip weapons in town or indoors, and
there had to be a high percentage of the hundreds of thousands of players
dragged into this like Asuna and me, who weren't built to play the tank role and
could no longer hold their weapons.
By this point, MMO Today's message boards and various social networks
would be bustling with discussion of this incident. I wanted to log out and
gather as much information as I could, but the materials to repair the log cabin
took precedence. Leafa was our lifeline of hope, and she could only use
Lysavindr for a bit longer.
"I have to wonder," Asuna suddenly murmured, "how did you know that my
brother had that online connection, Kirito?"
"Er, w-well…"
The very person I sent an e-mail to with my Augma after logging out earlier
was Asuna's brother, Kouichirou Yuuki. I knew that he'd installed a secret
dedicated line that didn't run through the home server, and I asked him to let
Asuna use it. But I didn't have time to explain how I knew about that, so I had to
keep it as brief as possible.
"I made Kouichirou a promise to show him around New Aincrad, and that's
when I heard about the independent line."
Asuna made a weird kind of gasping noise.
"Wh-what was that?"
"Sorry…it's just that I can't get used to you calling my big brother by his first
name. You know how informal that is…"
"Hey, he insisted. At any rate, it means you can dive as late as you want
without worrying about being yelled at."
"I feel a bit guilty, but Mama likes this cabin, too, so I feel like I should explain
it to him someday," Asuna said, sighing a little bit. Then the moment passed,
and she said, "Well, we should head off to find that iron o—"
She didn't finish. There was another wild animal call from the forest. This
time, it wasn't distant howling, but clear, hostile growling. It was accompanied
by the crackling of twigs and bushes.
"Kirito!" "Big Brother!"
Alice and Leafa rushed over into formation. All four of us readied our
weapons, but only Leafa had a proper sword. The three indigenous members of
the party had only sad, crude stone knives. Still, it was better than nothing, I
told myself, squeezing the grip wrapped in grass rope.
Something growled again, closer this time. It was deep and guttural, brrrrr,
like the idling sound of a large motorcycle. Obviously, there wouldn't be
anything like that in this world. I squinted into the dark woods, but the
brightness of our campfire left me unable to see anything beyond the first few
rows of trees.
Perhaps we should put out the fire…But if these were animal-type monsters,
they might be afraid of flames. I had to assume that if we put it out, there
would be no way to relight the kindling with the inefficient method of striking
up sparks once we were in the midst of battle.
As if to punctuate my hesitation, a third short growl sounded. The cracking
sound of twigs being stepped on approached slowly from the north of the
clearing toward the west. The owner of that voice was just beyond the tree line.
"We'll be fine," I said in a voice hoarse enough to indicate that we were not
fine. "It might be a monster, but I'm sure it's just a wimpy starter monster.
Stone knives should be more than enough to kill it."
"…You mean like the blue boars in SAO?" Asuna asked.
I nodded. "Yes, something even lower than a boar, like a wolf or a fox or a
nutria…"
"Kirito, what is a nutria?" asked Alice. I was about to tell her that it was like a
capybara, but then I realized she wouldn't know what a capybara was, either.
What were those big rats with the long ears from the Underworld called
again…? Before I could recall the answer, an especially ferocious howl came
from the woods on the other side of the campfire.
"Grroarrroooo!"
With a tremendous cracking, an entire clump of bushes was flattened, and a
huge shadow leaped into the clearing. It charged toward us, shaking the earth,
and stood up just before the fire.
It was enormous. Its head was well over six feet off the ground. Its limbs were
thick, its head was round, and its claws and fangs were abnormally long and
sharp. Its blackish-brown fur was long and shaggy. It was clearly not a wolf or a
fox—and definitely not a nutria…
"A b-b-beaaaar!" screamed Leafa, pointing at the creature. Then she swiveled
to point at me. "You said it was going to be a wimpy one!"
"Huh? That's weird…," I muttered. Then it hit me.
We split off from New Aincrad with the log cabin. Thanks to the air resistance,
and possibly the rotational power of the floating castle, we landed over ten
miles away. In real-life terms, that was only the distance from my hometown of
Kawagoe to the nearby city of Wakoshi, but in RPG terms, it was an endless
trek. On top of that, there was no guarantee that New Aincrad's landing point
was the "starting zone" for this game. The whole area around us could be full of
mid-level monsters instead.
"Grrrlg…," growled the bear, standing on its back legs. The light of the fire
clearly illuminated the jagged lightning bolts of white fur under its neck. I
supposed that rather than being a moon bear, this was a lightning bear. I
wanted to know its official name, but even though it was clearly hostile, the
game was not displaying a cursor over the bear's head yet.
Fight or run?
My brain ran on overdrive as I stared at the bear's baleful red eyes. We were
all level-1. If the bear was level-10 or so, we stood no chance. But if we ran, our
only options were inside the cabin or toward the river to the southwest. There
was a huge hole in the cabin wall, and there could be other monsters at the
river. Plus, if we ran in the dark without a light, I was sure I'd trip on something
and fall in no time.
Just then, there was a loud crunch, and the logs in the fire collapsed, sending
up a huge curtain of sparks. On that signal, the bear lowered its front legs to the
ground, scratched the dirt with its fierce claws several times, and started to
charge.
"We have to fight, Kirito!" yelled Leafa, brandishing her sword. There was no
time to think anymore. I shouted "Take the front!" and leaped to the right of
the bear, readying my knife. Asuna jumped to the left, while Alice rushed to
help Leafa.
"Gwoaaah!" bellowed the bear as it ran. It leaped over the fire, totally
unafraid, and landed in front of Leafa. Then it stood on its rear legs again,
raising its paws high. Leafa was not a small target by any means, but because
the dark pelt of the bear melted into the darkness, it seemed three times bigger
than her.
The sylph warrior was not afraid, however.
"Haah!" she cried, charging, her long blade flashing right for the bear's
exposed left flank. Bright-red damage effects spilled forth, and at last, a red
cursor and HP bar appeared over the bear's head.
This was my first glance at a cursor in this game. It took the form of a rotating
ring intersected by sharp spindles. The ring featured an HP bar and the
monster's name on the top and bottom. It displayed the bear's name in
Japanese, rather than the English alphabet, reading Thornspike Cave Bear.
I barely had time to process this visual information when four huge claws
slashed through my vision. The bear's massive right paw did not connect,
however. The loss of Leafa's wings had done nothing to diminish her agility; she
nimbly dodged out of the way of the creature's claws and jabbed with her
sword again. It was another clean hit…but the bear's HP bar was only down
about 10 percent so far.
Lysavindr was one of the greatest of the Ancient weapons in ALO, and if its
specs carried over to this game, then, even in the hands of a level-1 player, it
ought to destroy a starter monster in a single hit. If it was this difficult to do any
real damage to it, then the bear had to be an extremely high-ranked monster.
"Groaaaah!" it howled with fury, stretching out its arms and trying to block
Leafa from escaping. Once it caught her, it likely intended to bite her. She had
to be very careful with how she approached it.
But this was the moment that Asuna, who had circled around the bear's rear,
bravely made a charge.
"Yaaaa!" she shrieked, and immediately after came a heavy thud. The stone
knife in her hand sank deep into the bear's fur, and it spilled red light when she
promptly pulled it back out.
The damage was minuscule, but it succeeded at drawing the bear's attention.
It turned to chase after Asuna, but the rotation was slow, and its feet weren't
made for nimble pivoting.
As soon as I sensed the bear's attention was broken, I made eye contact with
Alice, and we leaped into motion together. Without a word, we drove our
knives into the beast's flank and back.
"Goaaah!" it roared, throwing its head back in pain.
As soon as we leaped out of the way, Leafa activated the One-Handed Sword
skill Vertical Arc. It carved a blue V into the bear's massive back. This time, it
had a visible effect on the HP bar. Now it was down to 70 percent.
We can do this!
With the three knives darting in and out to confuse the bear while Leafa
struck it with major attacks, we could finish this in another four—no, three
rounds, I felt sure. I breathed in to instruct the group to keep repeating this
pattern. Except…
"Grraaagh!!" the bear howled, returning its front legs to the ground and
jumping toward the forest. Was it going to run away—?
Sadly, that was not the case. It used all four legs to quickly distance itself from
us, then whipped around with a cloud of dust and stood up again. It stretched
out its arms, pointed its head to the heavens, and arched its huge back as far as
it could go.
The very clear lightning-shaped outlines of white fur on its chest suddenly
trembled, like they were completely different and distinct animals from the
bear.
Something's coming.
I felt a cold shiver down my back and tried to shout "Get out of the…"
But it was too late. The white bristled hair in the lightning patterns stood up
like porcupine quills and shot whistling from its chest. There were dozens…
hundreds of them.
"Kirito!" Alice shouted. She leaped in front of me and crossed her arms.
We were enveloped in a storm of quills. Ta-ta-ta-tang! Metal armor deflected
the barbs, while they sank through leather and cloth—and flesh.
In my right shoulder and left leg, I felt not pain, but something very close to it
—a mixture of intense heat and cold mixed together.
The HP bar in the upper left corner of my vision lost over 70 percent of its
value at once, turning deep orange. The HP of the other three went down, too. I
looked at my shoulder and saw a milky-white quill with a metallic sheen stuck in
deep, about six inches long and a fraction of an inch wide.
Just two of these took out nearly three-quarters of my health?! I fumed. But I
was a level-1 player with no armor, and this monster had to be at least level-10,
so I supposed it was a miracle I'd survived at all. And without Alice's protection,
I absolutely would have died.
Having just demonstrated why it was called a thornspike cave bear, the beast
lowered its front paws to the ground and growled in satisfaction, certain of its
victory. The fur quills had shot out in quite a spray; there were at least a dozen
in Leafa's and Asuna's armor, too. We'd get wiped out if it attacked like that
again.
"Let's back away!" I suggested.
But with her stone knife pointed at the bear, Asuna shouted back, "Where will
we go?!"
"It has to be inside the cabin!"
"There's no wall!"
Yes, the left wall of the log cabin was damaged to the point that there was a
huge, gaping hole there. If the bear got inside…
"We'll just have to deal with it!" I replied. Asuna, Alice, and Leafa all gave me
a look that said I should have known, but they went along with the plan anyway.
The bear resumed its approach. Its glowing-red eyes were full of menace,
warning that if its prey were to turn around and run, it was ready to leap on our
backs.
I waved at the other three to back away, while moving steadily away to the
right. My destination was the other side of the pile of logs we didn't use for
planks. Retreating carefully, so as not to expose an opening to attack, I waited
until the logs blocked the bear's line of sight, then shouted, "Run!"
We sprinted for the entrance to the log cabin, right as the bear roared behind
us.
"Gwaoooh!!"
I could feel the vibration of its tremendous weight galloping for us, followed
by a cacophonous clattering.
I spun around to see that the bear had charged headfirst through the mound
of logs and gotten stuck beneath them when they collapsed. In vain, I hoped it
would simply die from the pressure, but of course, we weren't that lucky. The
bear easily kicked the tree trunks off and resumed its charge. Its HP bar had
gone down a tiny bit, but it still wasn't even halfway done.
"Hurry, Kirito!" Asuna urged. I turned back to see that the women had
reached the entryway at the porch. I raced for all I was worth, leaping up the
collapsed stairs and into the cabin, grabbing the doorknob and smashing it
closed behind me out of sheer momentum.
Thwaaam! A tremendous shock slammed into the door two seconds later,
rattling the entire cabin. Bits of dust and wood sprinkled down from the cracked
beams and punctured roof.
"H-help prop up the door!" I shouted, but the others were already there,
pressing against it. There was another shock. The door twisted more, to the
point where I was afraid it would soon pop out of the frame.
After two body blows against the door, I sensed the bear walking away.
Please, let it return to the forest, I prayed as the footsteps continued to the
right.
I moved about on tiptoe, peering outside through the windowsill of broken
glass. Instantly, as though waiting for me, the bear bellowed "Grrfh!" and
charged at us. I panicked and pulled my head back. The bear head-butted the
wall anyway. The log wall, which was much stronger than the door, creaked and
cracked, and more wood chips fell throughout the living room.
Asuna tapped the nearby wall to take a glance at the properties window and
let out a little shriek. "Kirito, the house's durability is going down!"
"Damn…"
I gnashed my teeth, but it was no surprise, after taking three hits from such a
huge and powerful body. If we stayed in here, and the bear continued, it would
completely knock down the cabin at some point.
There had to be something—some other way to drive the beast off.
I glanced around the room in a desperate haze. If I had that bottle of dried
chili peppers in the pantry, I could attack the bear's nose with it, but everything
from furniture to food ingredients had been spirited away when we teleported
into this world. The only thing left behind was our home storage box, but that
was also…
Not empty.
Inspiration struck. I glanced at the box, then at the huge hole in the ceiling,
then at the box again. It was very close…but if the range for a trade request
here was the same as in SAO and ALO, it should be just enough.
"Alice, kneel down right there!" I said. The cat-eared knight looked very
confused. Then a fourth impact shook the cabin. We didn't have a moment to
waste.
Looking grave, Alice did as she was told and knelt down at the spot indicated.
"Sorry about this!" I shouted, placing my bare foot on the right shoulder plate
of her armor. Alice squawked in surprise, but I launched myself off of her,
stretching as far as my arms could reach.
Even with my reset character stats, I was just barely able to catch the beam
with my fingertips. Struggling and rocking my body, I managed to pull myself up,
then gave a new order.
"Asuna, pull all the logs out of the home's storage menu and trade them to
Leafa!"
After years of working with me, Asuna was used to my baffling and
unexplained ideas. Without asking why, she immediately tapped the storage
box. After hitting a few buttons on the window, she promptly put her hand
down against the floor, as if resisting some terrible invisible weight. But with
great determination, she called up the ring menu and sent a trade request to
Leafa, who was waiting about six feet away.
Once the source of all that encumbrance moved, it was Leafa's turn to fall to
her knees. "It's so heavyyy!" she groaned. Before I could even tell her what to
do, she was busy getting it done; she sent a trade window to Alice, who
accepted the items, then sent the final trade request up to me.
It was quite a distance, but I did see a small window pop up. This part was
where keen knowledge and experience from years of playing VRMMOs came in
handy.
The range of a trade window was a little over eight feet. But once you
received the window, you could move another three before finalizing or
refusing the offer. Faced with a small message that said Alice has sent a trade
request. Do you accept? I stood up on the ceiling beam.
There was a hole easily large enough for a human to pass through in the roof
just over my head. I grabbed the lip and did a pull-up. Just before I crossed that
three-foot threshold, I let go of one hand and hit the ACCEPT button on the
window before resuming my grip and pushing with all my power until I was fully
out of the hole.
I knelt on the roof as a window appeared, saying You have accepted 150
sawed aged spiral pine logs. At that moment, a tremendous weight jolted me
downward. I fell flat on my face on the sloped roof and tried desperately to
keep from falling off.
The bear below noticed me up on the roof and growled deep and loud. The
campfire was about to go out, but the light was just enough to see the large
black form backing away to get a proper running start. It was lined up about
three feet to the right of me.
Technique and knowledge were done. What I needed now was pure guts.
"Nwaaaaa!" I bellowed, just as loud as the bear, and extended my folded
arms. I ignored the system message that said Physique skill proficiency has risen
to 3 and used all the willpower I possessed to shift my body to the right. Six
inches…one foot…two feet…three feet.
"Graoooorg!!" it howled monstrously. The bear began a fifth charge at the
cabin. From my precarious spot on the gabled roof, I could easily imagine being
shaken and tumbling off, but I fended off that fear to bring up my menu. From
there, I tapped the log icon in my inventory menu, selected the button to
materialize, and jabbed OK with my index finger.
A number of logs suddenly appeared before my eyes, each one over a foot
thick, and tumbled down the slope of the roof. They appeared in a continual
stream, completely blocking my view. But I definitely heard the initial log
slamming into the ground very clearly—as well as the scream of a trapped bear.
The spiral pine logs continued to burst to life before me, hurtling down the
roof and leaping into thin air as they fell. And it was no wonder—there were
150 logs in our home storage space. Even the strongest strongman would be
unable to so much as stand if he had all of that weight in his personal inventory.
Making use of the trade window's range, however, allowed us to ferry them up
to the rooftop like a bucket brigade.
The thudding continued unabated below, and eventually the bear stopped
roaring. The modest-sized clearing was probably a mess of logs by now, but
compared to the pain of losing our cabin, it wasn't a big deal at all to recover
150 logs…or a thousand, or ten thousand.
At last, the final log popped out of my inventory, rolled off the roof, and
clattered to the pile below.
Suddenly, there was an unfamiliar musical fanfare in the air, grand and stately
but somehow lonely, and a blue ring of light surrounded my body. It rotated
rapidly and rose up above my head, then vanished, leaving behind a new
message window.
Kirito's level has risen to 13.
From 1 straight to 13?! It boggled my mind. Why so much?! Just for rolling a
bunch of logs down a roof?!
But a moment later, I realized the huge influx of experience points was not
from the rolling of the logs, of course, but the death of the cave bear beneath
them. I only wanted it to get hurt enough to run away, but the log fall was
massive enough that it completely obliterated the bear's remaining hit points
instead.
In that case, why didn't I get an item-acquisition message before the level-up
fanfare? Even a wild animal monster should drop some kind of natural material,
if not cold, hard coin.
Very carefully, I crawled down the slope of the roof so I could peer down at
the clearing below. Then it became instantly clear why no items had dropped. I
could see the bear's body, limbs splayed, beneath a chaotic sea of logs.
Apparently, in this world, monsters did not disintegrate like in SAO when they
died, but they remained as carcasses. In other words, if you wanted their raw
materials, you had to get them yourself.
Assuming it wouldn't disappear for a while, I crawled back to the hole in the
roof. Falling through it now would be the height of embarrassment, so I gingerly
lowered my legs through, making my way safely back into the room with the
help of the ceiling beams.
"You did it, Kirito!" cheered Asuna, hurtling toward me like a cannonball and
throwing her arms around my neck. I patted her slender back and was going to
tell her that it was thanks to her hard work, when I noticed the very meaningful
glances that Alice and Leafa were throwing in our direction. With some on-thespot recalculation, I said, "It was thanks to…e-everyone's hard work."
Alice nodded with a smug smile that said Of course it was.
The bear attack was the biggest disaster—well, second biggest, after crashing
to earth with New Aincrad—since we'd teleported into this new world. But
we'd managed to survive it, split up to recover all the logs in the mess outside,
and returned them to the home storage. That left only the giant bear's corpse
behind.
"So…what are we supposed to do with this?" Leafa asked uncertainly. Asuna
and Alice looked at me. I thought Alice would have had experience making use
of the wild animals she'd hunted in the Underworld…but I didn't want to rely on
that. I readied my stone knife.
The graphics in Unital Ring were remarkable, but surely they wouldn't recreate dead bodies to a realistic degree. Surely they would make it as simple as
a quick action or two to complete the process. Surely, I prayed as I pressed the
knife to the bear's jaw. I swiped a clean cut from chest to stomach, and the
huge bear flashed, then vanished, leaving behind many items.
As expected, a message appeared: Dismantling skill gained. Proficiency has
risen to 1. I dismissed it and looked at the pile of materials on the ground. The
soft, furry stuff had to be bear pelt, and the big pink globs were probably bear
meat, but there were plenty of other little things scattered around.
"So they don't automatically go into your inventory," Asuna noted, scooping
something up from the ground. It was a claw, large and curved, about four
inches long.
Alice took notice and frowned. "But how do they determine who gets looting
privileges?"
"Anyone can pick anything up…I'm assuming," I said, mulling this over. "But
while bear pelts and bear meat are one thing, it seems like rare weapons and
items dropping in a full-size raid battle would be utter chaos. Even if you
decided on your rules ahead of time, there's nothing in the game itself that
stops someone from ignoring them…"
It was a troubling idea to me, but not something we'd have to deal with for
quite some time. Asuna tossed the bear claw to me and clapped her hands.
"Well! We're the only ones here for now. Let's put Mr. Bear's guts into storage
and get back to collecting the repair materials."
"Good idea," I agreed, opening the ring menu. Only one of the icons was its
original color now. We had thirty minutes until the grace period ended.
Leafa looked rather gravely at the colors. "But, Kirito, we need to get iron
next, right? Do you have any leads on where to get it?"
"I may have an idea."
"Oh really? Where were you thinking?"
The three women stared eagerly at me. I pinched the claw Asuna gave me
between two fingers and spun it around.
"This guy's place."