C'mon, Kirito. Wake up.
The sound of someone whispering near my ear caused my eyes to slide open.
There was immediately a full curtain of stars before my eyes. Did I fall asleep
outside? I wondered groggily, until I noticed the gentle vibration running
through my body.
I wasn't indoors or outdoors. I was inside the cockpit of the dragoncraft
X'rphan Mk. 13.
Ahead of me was Commander Eolyne's helmet, visible in the pilot seat. He
was totally still, not because he was sleeping, but out of concentration. I didn't
want to bother him, so I leaned my head back against the headrest.
I closed my eyes and tried to recall the dream I was having before I woke up,
but my memory was as delicate as a snowflake in the hot sun and melted clean
away. I exhaled in frustration, and right on cue, a gentle voice said, "Did you
wake up, Kirito?"
"Y-yeah. How could you tell?" I asked, bolting upright.
"I wouldn't make a very good commander if I didn't notice small details like
that," he said. I couldn't tell if he was serious or joking. Eolyne pointed to the
left of the craft's nose. "Look, we're nearly there."
I raised the seat back to its upright position and looked where he was pointing
through the canopy. Immediately, I grunted, "Whoa…"
Down below the craft on the left was a massive spherical body. It was difficult
to grasp size and distance in space, but there was no doubt this was Admina,
our destination.
It glowed a soft yellow where the sunlight hit it, and the opposite side was
utterly dark, which told me this was indeed the same body, Lunaria, that I had
seen from the human realm two hundred years ago. I had a vague memory of
talking to someone about the possibility of there being people living in cities on
the moon, but I couldn't remember who it was.
"…How many people live on that planet…?" I asked softly.
Eolyne whispered back, "About five thousand, between five races."
"Whoa…that's it? Just five thousand on an entire planet…?"
"The human realm and dark realm have more than enough space for
everyone, and there's also the Outer Continent beyond the Wall at the End of
the World. It's almost entirely undeveloped. With the greenification of the Dark
Territory proceeding well, very few people would actually desire to move to
Admina."
"But if the settlers there have children…," I protested.
Enigmatically, Eolyne replied, "Having children won't change the overall
population."
"Huh…?"
"The number of those who leave the world and enter the world is always the
same…Isn't that the way it works in the real world, too?"
His meaning eluded me at first, and I spent several long moments blinking in
confusion before I finally understood.
The Underworld had a hard population limit.
The souls of the people here, their fluctlights, were all stored within the
Lightcube Cluster on the Ocean Turtle. The total number of cubes in the cluster
was around two hundred thousand, as I recalled, so there couldn't be more
fluctlights than that.
Two hundred years ago, the population of the human realm was eighty
thousand, so if the Dark Territory's was around the same, it would leave only
forty thousand unused cubes. With no more war plaguing the world, that
leftover slack would be filled up in no time—and that was indeed what had
happened, it seemed. The population of the Underworld had reached two
hundred thousand, its physical limit, so unless someone died so their cube
could be reinitialized, there would be no new souls to load in. That was what
Eolyne meant by "the number of those who leave the world and enter the
world is always the same."
"…No, there's no limitation of that sort in the real world," I replied, drawing a
suspicious look from the pilot commander.
"Huh…? Then your population will simply grow and grow without end?"
"Yes, that's right," I confirmed. He would just have to take my word on this
one. "In the real world, the total population is over eight billion."
"Eight..."
Even coolheaded Eolyne was frozen for a good three seconds after that one.
He turned as far to the left as he could, until his shocked face was visible over
the side of the pilot's chair, which sat slightly lower than mine.
"D-did you say eight billion? As in, ten thousand times eight hundred
thousand?"
"Ummm, hang on," I said, trying to count up the zeroes in my head. "Yeah.
Ten thousand times eight hundred thousand."
"...Goodness gracious," he murmured, shaking his head and turning forward
again. "It is written that during the Otherworld War, an army of tens of
thousands of real-worlders came here, so I had a feeling you must have a higher
population…but in the billions? Which means that if…"
He caught himself there and muttered, "Er, never mind."
I was on the denser side, but even I could guess at what Eolyne was about to
say: If a new Otherworld War broke out, and the Underworld and real world
had a conflict far greater than the one from two centuries ago, it would be two
hundred thousand versus eight billion.
Lieutenant Colonel Kikuoka, Dr. Koujiro, Alice, Asuna, and I and all of our
friends were working hard not to let that happen, but I couldn't be irresponsible
enough to guarantee that we could prevent a war. So I inhaled, let it out slowly,
then changed the topic: "Is a day on Admina the same length as on Cardina?"
"Yes, it is. But the position of Ori, the capital of Admina, is the polar opposite
of Centoria's, so it's the middle of the night there."
"Ori…"
I pondered what the source of the name might be but had no idea. If Yui were
here, she'd be able to list a whole load of potential sources from different
languages, but she was busy monitoring the network while Asuna, Alice, and I
were in this dive. Plus, she couldn't log in to the Underworld anyway.
Upon a closer examination of the night side of Admina, I could see flickers of
what looked like man-made light. But the dragoncraft was not heading straight
for them; it seemed to be pointed at a spot far to the east of there.
"Ummm…I'm guessing we can't just go and land right on the pad in town?" I
asked.
Naturally, Eolyne replied, "Of course not. Even with our deceptive measures,
there's no hiding the light of the craft's exhaust."
"So if we land a long distance away, how are we getting to the city?"
"What are those big, long legs for, Kirito?"
Are you serious? Also, they're not that long.
He chuckled, seemingly reading my mind, and pushed the control stick
forward.
The silvery dragoncraft began a smooth descent toward the boundary line
between day and night.
The reason for Admina's yellow color turned out to be a surprising one.
I had assumed it was the color of the atmosphere, but on the ground, the sky
was the same clear blue as on Cardina. It was the majority of the surface that
was colored pale yellow—it was covered in yellow flowers, to be precise.
As the craft descended to three thousand feet, I stared at the flower fields
stretching all the way to the horizon in absolute wonder.
"Did…did people plant these flowers?"
"No, it was already this way the first time the Star King landed here," Eolyne
explained, as though he'd been expecting this question. "It's hard to tell from
this height, but there is actually a mixture of several kinds of yellow flowers
growing there. The particular species change depending on the season, so
Admina appears yellow all year round."
"Huh…"
It was tempting to say that if someone at Rath had designed Admina's terrain,
they were slacking off, but I had a feeling that was not the case. Most likely, as
soon as someone from the Underworld—the Star King, as the story went—
approached Admina, the heavenly body previously called Lunaria, the Cardinal
System generated its own detailed map for the planet. If so, then only Cardinal,
the sage from the library, could possibly say why it chose this particular design
—but she no longer existed. The only remaining traces of her and
Administrator, her offshoot, were the names of the two planets.
I took my eyes off the endless flowers to look at the sky ahead of us. The
spectrum spanned from red to navy blue, not as a sunset but as a sunrise. Our
backs were to the rising sun, and we were flying toward the night. There was no
artificial light visible ahead of us yet.
"…Hey, if we're sneaking up on the capital, wouldn't it be better to do it from
the night side, rather than the day side?" I asked.
"Well, yes, but in order to do so, we'd have to spin all the way around the
planet," Eolyne explained, tracing the path with his finger, "which would take
twice as long. But we've come on a course that ensures the curvature of the
planet blocks the city from seeing us, so the chances of being detected are
almost infinitesimally small…I think."
True, at the spot where the dragoncraft entered the atmosphere, there was
absolutely no way to see the light of the city. And there was no radar or
satellites in this world. The only means of long-distance observation were
massive telescopes, which meant detecting dragoncraft that were just tiny dots
in the vast sky would be incredibly difficult.
The X'rphan Mk. 13 glided over the yellow fields of flowers, sounding so
smooth, you'd never guess it had just been dusted off from a decades-long
slumber. Even the occasional tree we passed had all-yellow leaves. I wished I
could show this to Asuna and Alice, but the dragoncraft seated only two. If we
completed our mission on Admina and managed to wake Selka, Ronie, and
Tiese, we should eventually have the chance to visit this planet as a group.
As the craft traveled onward, the red in the sky moved behind us, and the
dark of night grew larger. That meant we were flying faster than Admina's
rotational speed. Yet there was almost no sensation of air resistance. Either
because it was just a virtual world or because of some special property of the
dragoncraft.
I did seem to recall that when I tried flying at maximum speed with
Incarnation during the Otherworld War, I'd had to make a wind-element barrier
to keep from being absolutely buffeted. So even without the existence of air
molecules, the system still simulated the concept of wind resistance. That
meant this dragoncraft had to have some kind of mechanism similar to a windelement barrier. In fact, when we had plunged into the atmosphere from space,
there weren't any of those usual signs of atmospheric entry you saw in movies
and anime, like the ship glowing red or shaking itself to pieces.
"Hey, Eolyne…," I said, about to ask the illustrious pilot commander how the
craft was canceling out the wind resistance, when an urgent alarm filled the
cockpit without warning, and red lights turned on here and there on the
instrument board.
"Wh-what's that?!" I yelped in a panic.
His response was tense but controlled. "An Incarnation reading. Did you do
something, Kirito?"
"N-no, I didn't do anything!"
"Then it's an attack. I'll look above us. You keep an eye on what's below."
"G-got it!"
I had so many questions—Who's attacking? Why? How?—but the situation
was too urgent to bother him with them. I just kept my eyes peeled, alternating
between left and right below the craft.
On the left side ahead, right around the boundary between night and evening,
I saw a number of red lights approaching our position.
"I've got lights at ten o'clock!" I shouted, then worried he might not
understand clock positions.
Fortunately, Eolyne replied, "Yes, I have visual! Those are…Incarnate-guided
missiles. It's gonna get bumpy!"
A high-pitched whine arose around us. The X'rphan shuddered like a living
thing, then shot upward and to the right, as though it had been struck. I was
pressed so hard into the seat that I could feel my body creaking. I'd thought our
acceleration when leaving Cardina was the craft's maximum, but the Star King's
personal vehicle was capable of more. We moved so fast that I could barely
breathe, but I was still able to turn my head and look through the clear canopy
behind us.
The red lights were still clearly visible. In fact, they seemed to be creeping
closer.
"We're not pulling away, Eolyne!"
"I didn't think so! Let me know if they get within five hundred mels!"
How do I tell? I thought. But despite the blank canvas of the sky, with no other
indicators of depth, I found that I could accurately perceive the distance
between us and the lights. Seven hundred mels…six hundred…
"Five hundred!" I shouted, and the engine roared once again. The craft did a
backflip at an extreme angle, practically launching itself off of thin air. I was
momentarily terrified that the delicate X'rphan might break apart, but the force
pressing me against the seat made it clear that the frame beneath us was
indomitably firm.
Gritting my teeth against the pressure, I stared at the gloom overhead. I could
catch a red gleam out of the corner of my eye. There were at least twelve or
thirteen of these Incarnate-guided missiles. About a third of them seemed to
have lost sight of us and went veering off in other directions, but the other twothirds made the turn like living things and continued pursuit.
"Is…is someone controlling them?!" I cried.
Even in this dire situation, Eolyne made sure to answer my question. "No,
they're Incarnate weapons that automatically track their target! Somewhere
there's a mechamobile or dragoncraft that fired…them!"
He rolled the craft to the right and banked into another sharp turn. Another
few guided missiles lost their bead on us and fell away, but five or six still stayed
on us. They were less than three hundred mels away now. At this distance, I
could see that they were tubelike objects made of gray metal—exactly like
regular missiles. The red light was because of a lenslike part on the tip of each
projectile.
They were each over three feet long, which seemed very small in comparison
to real-life air-to-air missiles. But if an object that size exploded close enough,
even the X'rphan was bound to take some damage. I kept an eye on our rear
and warned Eolyne, "If it looks like it's going to hit us, I'm using Incarnation!"
"I suppose you won't have a choice. Just keep the effect to a minimum!"
It seemed, based on the reaction, that our assailants already knew we were
here, but it wasn't clear if they knew we were the Integrity Pilot commander
and the former Star King or just thought we were unidentified trespassers. If
the latter, using my Incarnation at full power would essentially be announcing
my identity for all to see.
The X'rphan did a third loop, dropping the number of missiles in pursuit down
to three. But they were now less than two hundred mels away. If we kept trying
to loop and lost enough speed, they would make up all that distance, and we'd
be unable to get away.
There were two ways I could stop them with Incarnation: I could generate a
ton of heat elements through the canopy and attack with them, or I could set
up a simple defensive wall in the same way. It would feel good to shoot them
out of the sky, but if it caused a huge explosion, the blast range might reach us.
Best to just rely on a barrier, I decided, and told Eolyne, "I'm defending us!"
Then I generated an Incarnate wall that surrounded the craft, only a tenth as
strong as when I'd blocked the Abyssal Horror's light beam.
Half a second later, the three guided missiles made contact with the wall in
quick succession.
There was an explosion. Then another.
A yellow flash filled the evening sky. The blast spread out along a ball-shaped
surface, the contour of the Incarnate wall I'd made. There was some level of
feedback on me from the shock wave of the explosion, but the force was only
as much as five or six heat elements bursting at once—a far cry from the
spacebeast's attacks.
Three guided missiles made contact with the wall, but there were only two
explosions. The third one was either destroyed before it could detonate or got
tossed far, far away, I guessed. Just in case, I kept the wall deployed as I
informed Eolyne, "All guided projectiles remo—"
Before I could finish, something with an alien texture, chilly or perhaps slimy,
licked my conscious mind.
Something was trying to wriggle through the Incarnate wall. It felt like
something eroding the firm, hard wall I created in my imagination, gouging a
tiny hole and infiltrating through it. Like some kind of parasite sheathed in a
viscous lubricant.
I twisted around and stared over my right shoulder. In a corner of the sky,
now that the blast had almost entirely faded, writhed a very bizarre object. A
long, black, tubelike object about three feet long and two inches wide. It was
not a weapon made of metal, but a living thing, like a snake or a worm, but at
the same time, not exactly either.
Its eyeless, mouthless tip was glowing red from the inside. The other guided
missiles were definitely just made of gray metal, so this happened to be the one
living-type weapon out of the bunch, as far as I could tell.
The black earthworm had already wriggled about half its body through the
Incarnate wall. I reached out with my left hand and tried to close the hole, but
no matter how much pressure I added, the secretion coating the earthworm's
body seemed to just melt the Incarnation. I had no idea it was possible to do
such a thing, but Incarnation was basically just a manipulation of matter
through the power of imagination. Eolyne mentioned Incarnation-Hiding
Incarnation earlier; if Incarnation-Eroding Incarnation also existed, then I could
make my wall as strong as I could, and it would have no effect on that
bioweapon.
Eolyne seemed to have noticed the writhing black worm in empty space, too.
He couldn't conceal the disgust in his voice. "Wh-what is that thing?"
"Don't ask me. Also…it's going to get inside our defensive wall soon!"
"Got it. Hold out just a bit longer," he said, and pressed his left hand against
the canopy shield.
Ten glowing blue frost elements appeared on the outside of the thick glass. It
was an ultra-high-level technique, not only eschewing the spoken command but
also ignoring the basic rule of sacred arts that one must generate a single
element with each finger.
He waved his hand, and the frost elements shot toward the black earthworm,
leaving behind blue trails. The instant they made contact, it created huge
masses of ice.
In just seconds, the front half of the earthworm that had infiltrated the
defensive wall was trapped inside a floating iceberg. Eolyne's Incarnation was
controlling the elements, but the ice itself was solid, so a substance that
invaded Incarnation shouldn't be able to melt it. Sure enough, while the back
half of the worm was still struggling and writhing, the front half was completely
still. The warnings in the cockpit continued blaring; they probably wouldn't turn
off as long as the worm was alive.
"Okay…I'm going to land the X'rphan now. Keep that defensive wall up,"
Eolyne instructed.
I nodded nervously. "G-got it."
Having the black earthworm violating my Incarnation felt horrible, but I'd
have to put up with it for now. Just in case, I imagined the defensive wall
around the earthworm being even stronger.
But right on cue, just as I did that, I felt another slithering, slippery feeling
from directly below.
By the time I realized what was happening, a long, soft body had penetrated
the Incarnate wall.
"Eolyne! It came from below—!" I shouted, but before I could finish my
thought, a massive explosion drowned me out.