As of seven o'clock in the evening on September 29th, the general character
data for me and my trusty companions was as follows:
KIRITO
1H Swords Blacksmithing Carpentry Woodworking Stoneworking / BeastTaming, Level-16 (Brawn)
SINON
Guns / Thief / Stoneworking, Level-16 (Swiftness)
ALICE
Bastard Swords / Pottery Weaving Tailoring, Level-15 (Brawn)
LEAFA
Bastard Swords Woodworking Pottery, Level-12 (Brawn)
LISBETH
Maces Blacksmithing Carpentry / Weaving, Level-11 (Toughness)
SILICA
Short Swords / Beast-Taming / Weaving, Level-10 (Swiftness)
YUI
Daggers / Fire Magic Cooking Weaving, Level-10 (Sagacity)
ASUNA
Rapiers Herbalist Cooking Woodworking Pottery Weaving Tailoring / BeastTaming, Level-9 (Sagacity)
KLEIN
Curved Swords Woodworking Stoneworking, Level-8 (Brawn)
AGIL
Axes Woodworking Stoneworking, Level-8 (Toughness)
MISHA
Thornspike cave bear, Level-6
AGA
Long-billed giant agamid, Level-5
KURO
Lapispine dark panther, Level-5
PINA
Feathery Dragon, Level-2
Klein's and Agil's levels were low because they'd converted only yesterday.
Asuna had been logged in when Unital Ring started, but she was on the lower
side because she'd been guarding the base more often, I figured. On the other
hand, she had also acquired the most skills. But when it came to survival RPGs,
the biggest lifeline was life itself: HP.
Sinon and I had the highest levels because we'd defeated boss monsters. I'd
taken out the thornspike cave bear that spawned before Misha and defeated
the Goliath Rana, while Sinon had beaten the sterocephalus. Next time, I'd have
to take Asuna with me on a big hunt, so she could lift her level. Then again, the
cat-eared knight at my side had been doing just as much base defense as Asuna.
I closed my friends list, which I'd been perusing while we ran along the river,
and asked my companion, "Alice, when did you get your level so high?"
"During the day yesterday and today, of course. I do not attend school, after
all."
It sounded like there was a hint of petulance in her answer, and I felt guilty
about that. Alice had been petitioning Rath to allow her to attend returnee
school, but it was easy to imagine they weren't going to let her do anything of
the sort. All I could do was pray they'd at least allow her to pay a visit to the
school before Asuna graduated next March.
"Were there good monsters for leveling-up around the house…er, town? All
the ones I've run into are quick little critters like foxes and bats…"
"Within the forest, yes. But quick and little or not, you should know well
enough that I am not enamored with the idea of killing a great number of
animals for the sake of experience."
"Oh…right, right. So what did you do?"
Alice glanced at the dark river on our right and murmured, "I'm not sure if
they appear near this part of the river…but directly west of the town, there is a
very deep ravine, and there are monsters within called four-eyed giant
flatworms."
"Four-eyed…? What kind of monsters are they?"
"It is more or less a giant leech, about fifteen cens wide and over two mels
long," Alice said, spreading her hands to demonstrate. She had grown
accustomed to real-world measurements recently, but when we were alone,
she often reverted to the cens and mels of the Underworld. She probably didn't
even realize she was doing it.
"They are a translucent gray all over, which makes it hard to see them unless
it is midday, when the sunlight hits the river directly at the bottom of the
ravine. As the name states, they have four eyes, and you must accurately slash
the center of them to defeat them. If you slice them in the middle of the body,
the second piece will grow a head of its own, then extend itself so that you face
two full-grown members."
"Eugh, sounds like a planarian…" I grimaced. Then I recalled from a middle
school biology class that planarians and hammerhead worms and the like were
simply different kinds of flatworms.
"Of course, a four-eyed giant flatworm is also a living creature, but I find it
much easier mentally to eliminate them than foxes and rabbits. I suppose this is
human…What do you call it…?"
"Ego?"
"Yes. That word is one of your strange sacred real-world words…er, English,
do you call it? I find it difficult to learn them all," Alice lamented. On her other
side, bounding along in the sand, Kuro growled demonstrably. I was sure that it
wasn't arguing the fact that I regularly gave it orders to attack in both Japanese
and English…probably.
"Well, I agree with you there. It's hard to learn them…but also, it's dangerous
to hunt monsters that multiply like that on your own. If you die here, that's it
for you."
"How is that any different from the Underworld and real world?" she shot
back, which was a good point. Alice placed equal weight in every world she
visited. Places where you could come back no matter how many times you died,
like ALO and GGO, were the exception for her.
When you got into a casual cycle of dying and resurrecting in a VRMMO,
perhaps it started to change your outlook on what life was, I started to wonder,
an uncharacteristically deep bit of philosophy. Alice's voice brought me back to
reality.
"Also, because cutting the four-eyed giant flatworms makes them multiply,
they're even better for leveling-up."
"Huh…? Ohhh, I see. So if you intentionally keep doubling it and then killing
the other one, you can keep farming them without having to wait for them to
respawn," I remarked, impressed. "Huh…? The deep ravine means it's in the
water, right? You can swim, Alice?"
Instantly, she jabbed her fingers into the part of my upper arm that wasn't
protected with armor. "You have a habit of making casual statements that
betray your low opinion of me. Few people in the human realm are very good at
swimming, I'll admit, but I am one of them."
"Where'd you learn how, then? You weren't swimming in the Rul River or
Lake Norkia, were you?" I asked, referring to bodies of water in the area outside
North Centoria.
Alice narrowed her eyes briefly in reminiscence, then she shook her head.
"No, of course not. I'm sure you haven't forgotten that Central Cathedral's
ninetieth floor has a forty-mel-long…"
She stopped awkwardly there. Failing to notice the Oops! expression on her
face, I shouted, "Wait, you were swimming in the Great Bath?! That had to have
been after you became an Integrity Knight. So the whole time that you acted so
cool and composed in front of me and Eugeo, you were secretly the type of
person who swims laps in the ba—Yeow!"
She jabbed me harder than before.
After that, the proud knight was too upset to speak with me, but at the very
least, I'd learned how Alice had leveled-up so quickly. In my mental notebook, I
jotted down the idea to take everyone there to test it out later.
There were tons of rocks all along the riverside, but along the water itself,
they turned to fine, compact sand that was much easier to run on. Although
monsters appeared there, the only actively aggressive types were speedy crabs
called purple scuttling crabs and gross flying bugs called saw snake flies, but
neither kind had any nasty special attacks; instead, they had fairly high stats. If
we were in single-digit levels, they would have been tough, but at level-16 and
level-15, we handled them fine, especially with Kuro, who had reached level-5
at some point. Mocri's party two nights ago and Schulz's raiding group last night
must have both passed this riverbank.
That meant if any new enemies were heading for our town, there was the
possibility that we'd run directly into them while we were here. Therefore, we
couldn't use any torches for a while, choosing to follow the faint light of the
stars instead. Thankfully, the moon was out and bright here, unlike in the real
world, where it was dark and raining.
We spent thirty-something minutes rushing through darkness, earning
proficiency in the Night Vision skill, until the exit from the forest appeared up
ahead, and I slowed down.
The dense thickets of trees along the river began to thin out, transitioning to
low-lying brush that eventually gave way, too. All that was beyond was vast
empty grassland, just as reminiscent of the African savanna as the name
suggested. We were on the eastern end of the Giyoru Savanna. The river
continued to travel south, but the compact sand was gone, replaced by
elevated bluffs on either side. We would have to proceed through the grassland
from here.
"If only we had a boat…," I murmured, feeding Kuro some bison jerky.
Alice gave me a curious look. "Can't you build one?"
"Huh? A boat?"
"Not some majestic sailboat, but surely you could manage a canoe…"
"...Good point," I admitted.
According to what the others had said, the Stiss Ruins were along this river far
to the south. A canoe wouldn't do us much good going upriver, but if we were
just coasting downstream to get there…
I opened my ring menu and checked out the crafting options for the Beginner
Carpentry skill. I scrolled down past the housing-related items like Crude Wood
Hut and Crude Stone Wall.
"Ah…there it is."
Almost at the very bottom of the list, I found Crude Large Dugout Canoe, and I
snapped my fingers. Even better, the icon to the right of the name was a
double-square mark. If it was a hammer symbol, we'd need to carve the log
manually, but a double-square was something you could make with the press of
a single menu button, as long as you had the materials. There was a Crude Small
Dugout Canoe just under it, but it seated only two. Kuro needed to come with
us, so we'd need to make the larger version.
"Let's see. Materials for the large dugout canoe…one sawed thick log, two
sawed logs, ten thin ropes, twenty iron nails, and two bottles of linseed oil."
"That is quite an assortment, isn't it…?"
"Yeah, well, it can't just be a hollowed-out tree log," I replied, tapping each of
the items in turn. The Unital Ring UI was quite excellent; if you tapped an item,
it would bring up a description and tell you how many you had.
"We don't have the logs," I noted, "but we can just cut down some trees for
that. Only got half the narrow ropes, but we can make them from grass…Ugh,
three nails short. And we won't be able to make those here."
To make iron nails from scratch, we needed to melt iron ore into ingots in a
furnace, then place them on an anvil and hit them with a hammer. Our furnace
and anvil were back in the yard outside the log cabin, and there was no way we
could go all the way back now.
"Urgh, and we already have three bottles of linseed oil…Alice, you wouldn't
happen to have any extra nails on you, by any chance, would you…?"
"Don't expect too much from me," she replied, opening her menu. She went
to her item storage and quickly sorted it. "It seems…I do not…"
"I didn't think so…"
Alice's crafting skills were Tailoring, Pottery, and Weaving; none of them had
any relation to nails. And iron nails were a precious commodity at the moment
—we'd only made them to repair the cabin and build a well.
"Darn. We'll just have to run across the plain. That was the original idea
anyway."
"Indeed," Alice said, moving her finger to close the menu—but she stopped.
"No…wait. I'm fairly certain that among the items those attackers dropped
yesterday was…"
She flipped through the list, then hit the button hard. Above her window
appeared…
"A chair?"
It was a small round chair. The design was very simple, with four legs fixed to
the sides of the seat, and the coloring looked ancient.
"Why would the guys who came to kill us be carrying around a chair…?"
"I don't know…Perhaps they used it for resting during a break?"
"…I mean, I guess it's more comfortable than sitting on the ground. So…what
about this chair?"
"We dismantle it, of course."
I smacked my fist into my palm with understanding. Yes, the legs of the chair
were attached to the base with metal nails. If we could recover the nails, we'd
have the materials the dugout canoe needed.
"But the chances of recovering the nails without damaging them are low."
"That's why we need you to dismantle it, since you have the Carpentry skill.
That should lift the chances of success a bit."
"…True."
Alice was correct, but while my numerical probability of success according to
the game system might rise with my skill, I didn't have nearly as much
confidence in my actual luck. I secretly believed that all the good luck I'd been
born with got expended with my survival of SAO at Asuna's side.
I was just about to ask her to go ahead and dismantle it, when Kuro rubbed its
head against my left side.
"Growr!" it grunted, and an epiphany hit my brain. It was a once-in-a-lifetime
stroke of luck that I managed to tame Kuro yesterday, when we were moments
from freezing to death. Based on power and frequency of appearance, lapispine
dark panthers were very rare monsters. The chances of success at capturing
such a creature without even having the Beast-Taming skill had to be close to
zero.
"…Actually, you're right…I guess I am pretty lucky."
I scratched Kuro's neck, then lifted the round chair. Surprised by the weight of
it, I gave it a tap with my free hand, bringing up the item name of Fine
Evergreen Oak Round Chair. The attackers from last night couldn't have crafted
this. They'd found it somewhere.
For an instant, I felt hesitation about destroying an item with the Fine
descriptor, but the chair's durability was almost completely gone. If I worked
very hard on the Carpentry skill, I might be able to make my own Fine
equipment, I told myself, and I pressed the DISMANTLE button in the menu.
It made a crunch! sound, and the round chair crumbled into pieces and
vanished. The resources I recovered were set to go straight into my inventory,
so I fearfully checked my window. Right at the top of the list when sorted by
new items was…three Fine Iron Nails.
"Yesss!"
"You did it!" shouted Alice, who was peering over my shoulder with a rare,
beaming smile. I lifted my hands toward her. She looked baffled by the gesture
and eventually copied me. I gave her a double high five, then sprinted into the
forest before she could get mad. Once I determined it was safe, I lit a torch.
Using the light, I inspected the trees for a suitable specimen. The main
ingredient the recipe needed was a sawed thick log, so that meant cutting down
a tree bigger than a spiral pine.
Fortunately, in the time I had before Alice caught up, I managed to find a
majestic broad-leaved tree five feet across. I tapped its smooth bark, bringing
up a pop-up with a shwamm sound. It was called Aged Zelle Teak. I felt like I'd
heard of trees called teak in the real world, but what could Zelle mean? It took a
few moments, but I figured it out.
"Ohhh…Zelle, as in Zelletelio Forest…"
"It's a tremendous tree," remarked Alice, who wasn't going to protest my
forced high five after all.
"Yeah, maybe it's a rare species. We should remember this spot."
"Why don't you just mark it down on your map?"
"Huh?"
You can do that? I wondered. I opened the map window and tried holding
down on the spot where our marker stood. A little sub-window appeared with a
variety of small icons on it. I selected one that looked like a tree. It made a little
pop, and a three-dimensional icon appeared on the map.
"Oooh. That's handy. Wish you'd told me about it earlier."
"I think you're the only person who didn't figure it out already," she noted.
"…Sorry," I mumbled. I closed my window and reached across my body for my
sword.
But Alice said, "I will do it. My sword is heavier, after all. Please hold up the
light."
"Really? There's a particular knack to cutting down a tree with a sword."
"I told you, I earned a living cutting down trees much larger than this one in
Rulid."
"…Oh. Yeah," I murmured.
Alice flashed me a quick smile, then motioned for me to step back. Kuro and I
retreated a few steps, and I held up the torch to light her way.
The knight pulled back her hood, looked up at the huge Zelle teak, then
positioned her legs in a front-to-back stance. She gripped the hilt of her bastard
sword with her right hand and drew it smoothly, lowering her center of gravity
just a touch. Then she activated the sword skill Horizontal.
For just a moment, the image of Alice in her cloth white skirt and simple iron
armor became Alice the Integrity Knight. Her longsword drew a blue line in the
darkness, catching the trunk of the Zelle teak at the perfect angle and producing
a loud, satisfying thwak! When the splash of light faded, the blade of the sword
had sunk over eight inches into the heavy trunk.
"Oh…I suppose one swing wasn't enough," she noted.
"It's unbelievable that you could cut that deep with a single swing to begin
with," I said with admiration. A bit louder, I called out, "Alice, I'll make the ropes
while you work on the tree!"
She gave me a thumbs-up while I stuck the torch into a nearby branch to
stabilize it, then I crouched over the grass at my feet.
Five minutes later, all the materials in hand, we headed back to the river.
I opened the Beginning Carpentry skill menu again and pressed the button to
create a crude large dugout canoe. Promptly, a translucent purple boat
appeared on the black surface of the water. It was a ghost object, the same
thing that appeared when deciding where to place a stone wall, for example.
With my right hand, I controlled the placement of the ghost. As soon as it
lifted above the water, the outline turned gray; apparently, it had to be
touching the water for me to create the canoe. Once the ghost was almost next
to the shore, I clenched my hand shut.
The canoe parts tumbled out of thin air with pleasant sound effects and fell
perfectly into place within the ghost object. It splashed down and rose again—a
perfect example of a dugout canoe, over sixteen feet long and three feet wide.
But this was not simply a boat carved out of a single tree trunk. There were two
arms extending from the right side that ended in a long, narrow float—an
outrigger. With that taken into account, the total breadth of the boat was more
like six feet wide. There were also long oars resting atop the canoe and an
anchor rope submerged off the stern.
"Well, well. This is rather impressive."
"All thanks to the excellent lumber you provided for us, Alice," I replied,
hopping into the boat. It was more stable than I expected, probably due to the
outrigger. I stuck the torch into a socket along the side of the vessel, then
reached out to pull Alice in after me. Kuro leaped nimbly onto the fore. It was a
"large" canoe for good reason; with two people and one animal, there was still
plenty of room left in its sixteen-foot span.
It was currently eight o'clock at night. We'd taken about half an hour to make
the canoe, but this should have allowed us to cut down on the movement time
by quite a lot, compared to walking over land and fighting with monsters.
"Okay, let's go!" I announced, pulling up the anchor. At the fore, Kuro
growled magnificently.
"Grurrrr!"
Within two or three minutes of practice, I had the gist of rowing the canoe—
largely because it controlled exactly the same way the gondolas on the fourth
floor of Aincrad did. If you tilted the oar forward to row, it would go forward,
and if you stood it upright, you would brake. Tilt it back and row, and it would
pull you back. Tilt to the right to turn left, and tilt left to turn right. We were
following the flow of the river, so even light rowing would send the canoe
slipping forward faster and faster. After a while, I saw a message that said Ship
Handling skill gained. Proficiency has risen to 1. I checked it to see the effect,
and it said that it would make turning faster and decrease the chances of
capsizing.
Steering the ship was fun on its own, but unfortunately, due to the
overhanging cliff sides, the views were nothing to write home about, compared
to the fourth floor of Aincrad, even if you accounted for the fact that it was
night. As I steered, I thought back fondly on my time gliding through the
waterways with Asuna in our white-painted gondola, the Tilnel. Up front, Alice
turned her head and pulled me out of my memories.
"So…what is it that Dr. Koujiro wanted with you?"
"Huh…?"
My mind blanked for a moment, and then I realized she was talking about the
message regarding the "expensive cake shop."
"Ah, right…Dr. Koujiro was just sending along a message from someone else,
actually."
"Aha…I had a feeling that was the case," Alice murmured. She turned to face
me directly. "It was Kikuoka who summoned you, wasn't it?"
Based on her tone of voice and expression, I could tell that she did not have a
high opinion of Seijirou Kikuoka. I couldn't blame her—she'd hardly ever had a
real conversation with him.
He's very fishy, I'll admit, but he has his good sides, too. Like when he pays for
fancy pieces of cake.
"Did you come with me just because you wanted to ask about that?" I
prompted.
"That's not the only reason. So…what did Kikuoka say?"
I hesitated, then remembered that I was probably going to explain it all
tonight anyway. I slowed the speed of the dugout canoe and put it briefly:
"Someone from somewhere infiltrated the Underworld."
"...!"
Her blue eyes went wide, and she rose slightly from her seat.
"An intruder…?! Who was it?!"
"Total mystery. He said there's no way to investigate from the real world."
She froze in her half-standing position, then sighed and sat back down.
"…I wonder why Dr. Koujiro did not tell me."
"Because she knew you'd dive-bomb right in at the first chance."
"It is only recently that I learned your slang term dive-bomb does not
necessarily refer to an aerial bombardment technique," she remarked, which I
took as a sign that she'd calmed down a bit. "Yes, I cannot deny it. I suppose I
might have a tendency to bristle and lose myself in anger faster than others."
You mean you never noticed that before?! I thought, wisely keeping it to
myself.
"Look, I know how it feels to not be able to sit still in an emergency. But it's
completely impossible to find a single individual hiding in the Underworld if you
don't have a plan for it. You know that…"
"So they're just going to be left on their own?"
"Not at all. Kikuoka called me up to ask me to dive into the Underworld,
actually."
"…! If you are going, then I would also—," she started, rising from her seat
again, until I held out a hand to stop her.
"Of course you're coming with me. I only agreed to it on that condition. Don't
blame Dr. Koujiro for not telling you about the intruder. She's thinking of our
safety above all else."
"…I understand. She is one of the people in the real world whom I trust the
most."
"Uh…am I one of them, too?"
"Questions like that are what lowers one's trust in you," she said, looking
supremely annoyed. But she did add another question of her own. "Was I the
only person you asked to take along?"
"No, I…uh…also asked for Asuna."
"I had a feeling."
I attempted to read her profile, but I did not have the required skill to
decipher the emotions held there.
As we conversed, the canoe bobbed down the dark river until the distance
we'd traveled beyond our forest town surpassed ten miles. The route to our
destination, the Stiss Ruins, was close to twenty miles, so if nothing else
delayed us, we should arrive in another thirty minutes.
Before leaving, I drank plenty of water and ate, too, but now that I looked at
it, my TP bar was nearly down to half. But as long as we were in the boat, I
didn't need to worry about running out of water. I pulled a clay cup out of my
inventory and scooped it into the river, then took turns with Alice drinking. I
was a bit nervous sourcing in the dark, when I couldn't actually see how clear
the water was, but it didn't taste bad, and Kuro drank from it, too, so I figured I
wouldn't get sick from it.
The river was getting wider and wider, but the sheer cliffs on either side
continued endlessly. The repetitive nature of the landscape was making me
sleepy. But it seemed like that moment of nodding off was exactly when
monsters that looked like dragonfly nymphs and pond snails chose to leap into
the canoe and start fighting, so I didn't end up sleep-steering us into any
accidents.
I kept the map open the whole time. All around us was the gray color that
indicated undiscovered terrain, except for one thin line of blue for the river. My
Ship Handling skill had risen to 5 already, which was making me wonder if I
should change my class to sailor.
Then Alice said, "Kirito…do you hear something?" and Kuro lifted its long tail
and growled, staring forward.
Enemies? Is there a field boss up ahead?
I watched and listened, my hackles raised. There seemed to be a faint but
deep sound in the distance. Something like an enormous beast roaring—except
the sound wasn't changing. It was just a constant roar. And getting steadily
louder.
"Kirito, stop the boat!" Alice shouted, and then I understood. It wasn't easy to
see by the light of the torch and moon, but the surface of the river up ahead
was simply gone.
"…W-waterfall!" I shouted and pushed the oar backward as far as I could. But
a dugout canoe moving at full speed was difficult to slow down. The sound was
already deafening, drowning out our voices.
Then a floating sensation came over my body.
In fact, I was floating. The canoe had gone over the top of the falls, and I was
flying through the air.
"Waaaaaah!!"
"Eeeeeeek!!"
Our screams were matched only by the sound of Kuro yowling, "Arooooo!