Dusk.
The low-hanging clouds were painted yellow by the tilt of the
setting sun.
The shadows of the ruined high-rise buildings, remnants of
the former age, steadily grew across the wasteland of rock and
sand. If she was going to be on standby for another hour, she'd
have to think about switching to her nighttime loadout.
Sinon didn't like fighting with night-vision goggles, because it
diminished the tension of that kill-or-be-killed mentality. She
sighed atop the shadowed concrete, wishing the party that was
her target would show up before the sunlight disappeared. The
other five people in the depressing ambush with Sinon had to be
thinking the same thing.
As if to give voice to the entire party, an attacker, with his
small-caliber submachine gun at his waist, grumbled, "Damn,
how long are we gonna be waiting here…? Hey, Dyne, you sure
they're coming? The lead wasn't a bust, was it?"
Dyne, the craggy, burly leader of the squadron, shook his
head. The large assault rifle hanging from his shoulder clattered.
"They've been hunting the same route, same time, nearly every
day for three weeks. I've confirmed it all myself. They're a little
late on the return today, but it's probably just because the mob
spawn rate's a little higher than usual, and they're cleaning up
more of 'em. We'll get better rewards for it, so don't complain."
"Yeah, but," the man in front pouted, "today's target is the
same group we attacked last week, right? Won't be they be on
guard and change their route…?"
"It's been six days since our last ambush. And they've been visiting the exact same hunting ground every time. Their squadron's
built for mob hunting…"
Dyne's lips curled into a mocking smile.
"No matter how many times they get attacked and lose their
earnings, they'll just keep trying to make it up by hunting more.
The perfect prey for a manhunting squadron like us. We can pull
this off another two or three times; you'll see."
"I dunno if I can believe that. Anyone's going to put together a
plan after they get attacked the first time."
"Maybe they'd be on the lookout the day after, but they'll forget soon enough. Field mob algorithms are the same every day.
After a while, they get to be just as robotic and automatic as the
monsters they kill. Weak losers—no pride at all."
Sinon buried her face deeper into her muffler, disgusted by the
conversation. The presence of emotions only dulled one's trigger
finger, yet she couldn't prevent her irritation at Dyne's boastful
gloating.
Apparently Dyne felt that parties who hunted mobs on a routine were lower than him, a PvPer, yet lying in wait to ambush the
same party over and over had no effect whatsoever on his pride.
If they were going to spend hours in wait here on neutral ground,
they could have earned a lot more fighting another high-level
squadron in the underground ruins.
Naturally, that increased the chance that they'd die and
respawn in town without their equipment. But that was battle.
Only trial by fire truly disciplined the soul.
She'd been working with Dyne's squadron for the last two
weeks. She regretted the decision to join almost immediately. Despite their proud claims of fighting only other players, they were a
safety-first party, only setting their sights on inferior opponents
and disengaging at the very first sign of danger.
But Sinon raised no complaints about the focus of the
squadron. She followed Dyne's orders and pulled the trigger
when she was supposed to. She wasn't trying to make a name for
herself through loyalty. She wanted to be sure that when she
faced off against Dyne as an enemy, she had as much data and
knowledge as possible to land the perfect head shot.
While she had nothing good to say about his personality,
Dyne's eighteenth-place finish in the last Bullet of Bullets and the
rare SIG SG 550 assault rifle that sprayed 5.56 mm rounds were
the real deal. So she shut her mouth, kept her eyes bright, and absorbed all of the information he carelessly dispersed.
Dyne blathered on.
"…The thing is, they've all got optical guns for hunting mobs,
so they can't arrange for live-ammo guns for the entire group on a
whim. At best, they might have one for covering fire, but no more.
And Sinon's got her sniper rifle to help take out whoever uses that
one. There's absolutely no flaw in our plan. Right, Sinon?"
Sinon barely nodded with her face still stuffed in the muffler,
suddenly the unwanted focus of the conversation. She did not
speak up, hoping that would indicate she didn't want any part of
it.
Dyne snorted in annoyance, while the attacker grinned at her
and said, "Yeah, that makes sense. With Sinon's long-distance
fire, we've still got the advantage. By the way, Sinocchi…"
He crawled over toward her, never leaving the shade of their
cover, the lazy smile still plastered on his face.
"You got any time later? I was hoping to raise my Sniping skill
and I could use a few pointers. Feel like getting a cup of tea?"
Sinon glanced quickly at the weapon on his waist. His main
weapon was an H&K UMP, a live-ammo submachine gun. He
played an Agility-first build, so his evasion in a head-on battle
was notable, but level-wise and equipment-wise, he was not
worth remembering. She wracked her brains to recall his name
and dipped her head.
"I'm sorry, Ginrou. I've got something to do IRL later…"
Her voice was high-pitched, clear and adorable, not at all like
her real voice. Sinon felt sick to her stomach; this was why she
hated talking. Despite the fact that she'd just turned him down,
Ginrou's leering smile did not vanish from his lips. A subsection
of the male players in the game seemed to feel some kind of pleasure from hearing her voice. The skin of her back crawled at the
thought.
The first time she dove into the VRMMORPG Gun Gale Online, she chose a bland, crude male body for her avatar. When the
game made it immediately known that switching genders from
player to character was not allowed, she wanted to pick as tall,
muscular, and soldierlike a body as possible.
Instead, the randomly generated body was that of a petite,
fragile, doll-like little girl. When she made to delete her account
and build a new character, the friend who had invited her to try
the game said it would be "such a waste" to get rid of it right
away, and eventually she leveled the character up to the point
that it really would have been a waste to start over.
Because of that, she had to deal with the occasional unwanted
offer like this. Sinon played to fight, not to deal with this nonsense.
"Oh, right, you're a student in real life, aren't you, Sinocchi?
College? Got a report to write?"
"…Yeah, sure…"
It felt like after she'd accidentally admitted something about
school when logging off one day, the come-ons had gotten much
more insistent. She could never admit that she was actually in
high school.
The other two front-line players, who had been fiddling with
their menus through all of this, finally approached to keep Ginrou
away. One of them, a man with green bangs that hung over his
smoke-styled goggles, said, "Ginrou, can't you see you're bothering her? Don't bring up RL."
"Yeah. Just because you've been playing solo here and in real
life for years doesn't mean you have to bug her," said the other
man, who had a camouflage helmet tilted at a rakish angle. Ginrou knuckled both of their heads.
"Like either of you have had a girlfriend in years!"
The three of them cackled and Sinon scrunched up even
smaller in disbelief.
If you played GGO to battle against other players, there were
much better ways to spend your downtime—maintaining focus,
checking equipment, and the like. If you were trying to earn
enough in-game money to cash out, you were better off in a mobhunting squadron. And if you wanted to meet people, even
among the gender-fixed games, there were much more fantastical
worlds with a better gender ratio than this miserable, blasted ruin
of a landscape. What did these people think they were doing
here?
She buried her face back in the muffler and traced her fingers
along the massive rifle barrel, propped up on its bipod.
Someday, I will destroy your avatars with this gun. Will you
still be laughing and bothering me then?
Her foul mood was absorbed by the chill of the barrel, and
slowly subsided.
"Here they come."
The last member of the party, spying with binoculars through
a hole in the collapsed concrete wall, announced the presence of
their target a full twenty minutes later.
The three attackers and Dyne stopped chatting at once, and
the mood in the air turned serious.
Sinon glanced up at the sky. The yellow clouds were taking on
a tiny bit of red, but there was plenty of light left.
"Finally decided to show up," Dyne growled softly. He leaned
forward and took the binoculars from the scout at the wall. He
peered through the same hole, checking the status of the enemy
for himself.
"…Yep, that's them. Seven…that's one more than last week.
Four in front with optical blasters. One with a large-bore laser
rifle. Plus…ooh, one with a Minimi. That one had an optic last
week, so they must've switched over to live ammo in response. If
you're gonna snipe anyone, that's the one. Last one's…wearing a
cloak, so I can't see a weapon…"
Sinon lay flat and pressed her face to her rifle's high-power
scope. Their group of six was lying in wait in a ruined building
from the old civilization; the building sat on a hill with some vantage over the surrounding terrain. The ragged concrete walls and
steel rebar skeletons made for good cover, and the view made it
perfect for surveying the wasteland ahead.
She looked up to the sky again to ensure that the virtual sun
would not reflect in her lens, then flipped up the scope covers,
front and rear.
With her right eye pressed to the lens and the scope set to the
lowest magnification, she could see small dots moving across the
landscape. She tweaked the magnification dial with her fingertips. With each click of the dial, the little black sesame-seed dots
grew until she saw seven players.
As Dyne said, four of them had optical assault guns, two of
which were constantly checking their surroundings with binoculars of their own. But unless the group had nearly mastered the
Search skill, they would not find Sinon's squadron lying in wait.
In the middle of the pack were two players with large guns on
their shoulders. One had a semiautomatic optical laser rifle, while
the other had a live-ammo light machine gun, the FN Minimi. In
real life, that was an excellent squad infantry support weapon—
even the Japanese Self-Defense Force used it. Indeed, because
over half the power of the optical gun attacks would be neutralized by their defensive field, it was the Minimi that posed the
most threat by far.
There were two main types of weapons in Gun Gale Online:
live-ammo guns and optical guns. Live ammo delivered plenty of
damage per round and could penetrate defensive fields. But they
also required the user to lug around heavy ammo clips, and bullet
trajectories were susceptible to the effects of wind and humidity.
Meanwhile, optical guns were much lighter to carry, and fea-
tured longer range and higher precision. The energy packs that
served as clips were much more compact as well, but the strength
of the guns was diminished by the defensive fields that players
wore as armor.
Therefore, it was common wisdom that optical guns were better against monsters, while live-ammo guns were better suited for
human players. But there was another feature that distinguished
the two categories.
All the optical guns were designed from scratch with fictional
names, but the live-ammo guns were based directly on actual, existing firearms. Therefore all the gun fanatics—such as Dyne and
Ginrou—who made up a significant portion of the GGO player
base happily preferred to carry around live-ammunition guns,
only switching to optics when hunting monsters.
The rifle Sinon had her cheek pressed against was also a liveammo gun. But before she'd come to this game, Sinon couldn't
have told you a single gun manufacturer. She learned their names
as items within the game, but she had not developed even the
slightest bit of interest in learning more about their real-life
counterparts. To her, the unlimited number of guns in the world
of GGO were nothing more than 3D-modeled objects, and she
didn't even like the thought of seeing a real gun in the regular
world.
All she did was destroy her virtual enemies with virtual bullets
in this land of slaughter—until her heart turned hard as stone,
and her blood cold as ice.
Sinon would pull the trigger again today to keep that process
in motion.
She swept aside any unnecessary thoughts and budged the
rifle slightly. At the back of the enemy formation was a player
wearing enormous face-covering goggles and a large camouflage
cloak. As Dyne had said, the player's equipment was hidden.
He was extremely large. There must have been a hefty backpack slung over his shoulders, because the cloak bulged alarmingly over his back. The hands peeking out of his sleeves were
empty. Whatever weapon hung from his waist, it couldn't be any
larger than a submachine gun.
"Can't see his face because of the cloak?" Ginrou's voice
floated up from behind. He spoke in a joking tone, but there was
no hiding the note of tension. "Think it's him? You know…Death
Gun."
"Hah! Like he exists," Dyne snorted. "Besides, didn't they say
that guy was short, and wearing a ghillie suit? This one's huge.
Six feet at a minimum. I'm thinking he must be a Strength-build
hauler. He's carrying their loot haul, ammo, and energy packs in
that bag. Probably doesn't have anything decent to shoot with. Ignore him in combat."
Sinon watched the man through her scope.
The heavy goggles hid his expression. Only his mouth was exposed. The lips were tightly shut and absolutely still. The other
members, though on guard, seemed to be chatting—she caught
the occasional flash of white teeth—but the large man in the back
was completely silent. There was no wavering in his silent march.
Half a year of experience in GGO taught Sinon's instincts that
this man was the true threat, much more than the one with the
Minimi. But aside from the backpack, there were no other obvious bulges in his cloak. Perhaps he was hiding a small but highpowered elite weapon. But anything that good and that small
would have to be an optical gun, and not powerful enough to
make the difference in PvP. Perhaps the pressure she felt emanat-
ing from him was her imagination…
After some hesitation, Sinon spoke up in a soft voice.
"I get a bad feeling from him. I want to snipe the guy in the
cloak first."
Dyne pulled the binoculars away and looked at her, eyebrow
cocked.
"Why? He's barely got any gear on."
"…I have no proof. I just don't like him being such an uncertain variable."
"If that's the case, shouldn't the Minimi be the obvious variable to worry about? If the blasters sneak up on us while you're
still getting rid of that one, we'll have trouble on our hands."
While protection fields were effective against optical guns,
their benefit lessened as the distance between gun and target
shrank. At very close range, it was quite possible for a laser
blaster with its much larger magazine to overpower the alternative. Sinon had no leg to stand on, so she withdrew her opinion.
"…All right. First target is the Minimi. If possible, I'll take the
cloak with my next shot."
The problem was that when it came to sniping, the only truly
effective shot came before the target knew it was under attack.
Once the enemy knew where she was firing from, evasion was as
simple as staying out of her line of fire.
"Hey, no more time to talk. Distance of 2,500," said the recon
man, who had taken the binoculars back from Dyne. The leader
nodded and turned to the three attackers behind him.
"All right. We're going to follow the plan, move up to the
shadow of the building ahead, and wait for them. Sinon, once
we're on the move, we won't be able to see them, so you need to
alert us if anything changes. I'll give you the signal to snipe."
"Roger."
Sinon put her eye back to the rifle scope. Nothing had changed
in the party. They still marched across the wasteland, their pace
slow and easy.
As the scout had said, two and a half kilometers separated
Sinon's squadron from the enemy. Just slightly closer than
halfway in between, an even larger ruined building loomed over
the landscape. Dyne and the rest were going to use that as cover
and ambush their prey as they approached.
"All right, move out," Dyne commanded. Aside from Sinon,
the others muttered quick acknowledgments. Their boots scraped
on the gravelly sand as they slid down the backside of the sloping
hill. Sinon waited for the whistling evening wind to drown out
their footsteps, then pulled out a small headset from below her
muffler and affixed it to her left ear.
For the next few minutes, Sinon would be fighting the sniper's
lonely battle against pressure. The next bullet she fired would
have an enormous influence on the fight that ensued. The only
things she could rely on were her trigger finger and the silent gun.
She rubbed the massive barrel with her left hand. The black metal
answered her with chilly silence.
More than anything else, it was this gun that had cemented
Sinon's infamy in this world as a very rare type of sniper. It was
called a PGM Ultima Ratio Hecate II. At four and a half feet long
and just over thirty pounds, it fired enormous .50-caliber (12.7
mm) rounds.
In the real world, from what she'd heard, it was categorized as
an antimateriel sniper rifle, meant for piercing military vehicles
or structures. It was so powerful that some fancy-named treaty
prohibited it from being used against human targets. There was
no such law here.
She'd earned it three months ago, around the time she was experienced enough to be considered a veteran of GGO. On a whim,
she'd been playing solo in a massive ruined dungeon beneath the
capital city SBC Glocken when she fell into a chute trap.
Gun Gale Online took place after a massive war in the distant
past caused civilization to collapse, and the players were the descendants of space colonies who had returned to Earth. Glocken
itself was the giant ship they'd used to reach the planet, and beneath the ship was the ruin of one of the giant cities that had been
wiped out in the war. The city's ruins were crawling with automatic fighter drones and genetically modified creatures that
greeted the adventurers, who dreamed of unearthing ancient
treasures. Sinon fell right into the bottom level of that dungeon,
its most deadly region.
It was not the kind of place a solo player should be able to
handle. Soon she had resigned herself to dying in the very first
encounter and spawning back at the save point in town. Eventually, she ended up in a huge, stadiumlike round space, which featured an extremely grotesque creature.
Based on the size and name, it appeared to be a boss monster,
but she had never seen it on any of the news sites or wikis. Upon
this realization, what little of a gamer's soul Sinon had was stimulated into action. If she was going to die, she'd die fighting this
thing. She hid in the exhaust vents over the stadium and trained
her rifle on the beast.
The battle did not turn out as she expected. The boss had a
number of attack styles—heat ray, claws, poisonous gas—but the
range of all these attacks was just short enough to miss her position. Meanwhile, Sinon's rifle did paltry amounts of damage to a
target that was barely within its effective range. Based on the
stock of ammo she was carrying, it would be impossible for her to
beat the creature unless she hit its weak forehead with essentially
every bullet she had remaining.
With ice-cold calculation and concentration, Sinon pulled it
off. The boss collapsed and exploded into vanishing shards three
hours after the battle began.
What it dropped was an enormous rifle she'd never seen before. By design, both NPC and player craftsmen could not forge
powerful live-ammo guns, and the only ones for sale in town were
low-power models. If you wanted anything midlevel or higher,
the only option was excavating them from ruins. The Ultima
Ratio Hecate II that Sinon found was in the very rarest tier of excavated weapons.
It was said that there were only ten antimaterial rifles on the
server, including Sinon's Hecate II. They commanded an extraordinary price on the market, of course—the last one to be auctioned off went for twenty mega-credits, or twenty million credits.
The exchange rate of credits to yen was a hundred to one, meaning the player had earned about 200,000 yen for the sale.
Sinon was a high school student living alone and stretching
her monthly budget as far as it could humanly go, so she was
sorely tempted by that number. Recently she'd been earning
enough to pay 1,500 yen, half the cost of her monthly subscription, but that was still half of her allowance. And if she dove any
more often than she already did, she couldn't maintain her
grades. But 200,000 yen was enough to cover all the money she'd
sunk into the game with a majority to spare.
Yet Sinon did not sell the gun. Making money wasn't the reason she played GGO; it was to defeat her enemies—every player
stronger than her—so she could conquer her own weakness. And
on top of that, for the first time ever, she felt a soul within that
simple item.
Because of the Hecate II's massive bulk, it required a considerable amount of strength to carry. Fortunately for Sinon, she'd
spent more of her stat points on Strength than Agility, and she
just barely met the required value. The first time she brought it
into battle and caught an enemy in its scope, she felt strength and
will within the heavy, cold pile of metal. It was a cruel soul that
desired slaughter and demanded death. It was every bit the unflinching, unyielding, unsentimental being that Sinon wished herself to be.
Much later, she learned that the name Hecate came from the
Greek goddess of the underworld. That was the moment she decided this gun would be her first, and last, partner.
The party continued to move through her scope finder.
Sinon lifted her head and looked down on the wasteland directly to see that Dyne's group of five was approaching the large
building that separated her and the target. The distance between
the two was already down to 700 meters—under half a mile. She
put her eye back to the scope and waited for Dyne's order.
Less than a minute later, a crackling voice came through the
earpiece.
"We're in position."
"Roger that. Target hasn't changed course or speed. Distance
to you, 400. Distance to me, 1,500."
"They're still a ways off. Are you ready?" he asked.
She gave him a bland affirmative.
"…Okay. Begin sniping."
"Roger."
Their conversation over, Sinon held her mouth shut and
placed her right index finger against the trigger guard.
Through the scope, she saw her first target, the man with the
Minimi on his shoulder, saying something as he walked. In last
week's battle, Sinon had not been on sniping duty, but had
charged into battle with an assault rifle. She surely would have
seen him at such a close range, but she didn't remember his face.
Based on his support weapon, however, he must have been at a
considerable level.
She moved the reticle delicately, trying to stifle the increased
pulse of her heart. Correcting for distance, wind direction, and
the target's movement speed, she placed her aim over a yard in
the air to the upper left of the man. Her finger traced the trigger.
In that instant, a translucent, light green sphere appeared in
her field of vision.
The sphere, shifting and wavering periodically, covered from
the center of the man's chest to around his knees. It was called a
"bullet circle," an offensive assistance system that only Sinon
could see. When the bullet left the gun, it would land at a random
point within the circle. At its current size, the amount of the circle
occupied by the man's body was about a third, meaning she had a
30 percent chance of hitting the target. On top of that, even with
the power of the Hecate II, it was impossible to get an instant kill
by hitting the limbs alone, which dropped her chances of a onehit kill even lower.
The size of the bullet circle was affected by distance, the gun's
stats, the weather, the amount of light, and the player's skill and
stat values, but the most important parameter of all of them was
the shooter's pulse.
The AmuSphere monitored her real-life heart rate as she lay
on the bed, sending that information to the game engine. The instant her heart thumped, the circle expanded to its maximum
size. Then it would shrink and shrink until the next heartbeat
pushed it out again. If a sniper wanted to raise her accuracy, she
had to pull the trigger in the space between heartbeats.
The problem was that a relaxed, resting heart rate might be
sixty BPM, one per second, but under the stress of sniping, that
could rise to twice the speed, causing the circle to expand and
contract wildly. Under those circumstances, it was impossible to
time the shot between pulses.
This was the main reason there were so few snipers in GGO.
You couldn't land a hit. There was no way to eliminate tension
when sniping. The heart rate had an effect in close combat as
well, of course, but at that distance even an affected shot could
land at times—especially with fully automatic SMGs and assault
rifles. But when sniping a target over half a mile away, the bullet
circle expanded to several times the size of a person. The fact that
Sinon had gotten this one to a 30 percent accuracy size was nothing short of a miracle.
But, Sinon thought to herself, how bad is that pressure, that
anxiety, that fear, when you really get down to it? Fifteen hundred meters? That's like making a basket with a wadded-up
piece of paper. It's not that bad—
Not compared to what happened back then.
Her head went ice-cold. Her heart was as still as if it never
beat.
Ice. I am a machine of coldest ice.
The pitch of the bullet circle's shifting dropped precipitously.
Her sense of time slowed until she could easily, clearly, identify
the moment the circle was at its smallest size.
One…two…three times the circle shrank, and when it covered
only the heart of the man lugging the Minimi on his shoulder,
Sinon pulled the trigger.
The world shook with a blast like thunder.
A gout of fire erupted from the muzzle brake on the end of the
Hecate II's barrel, and the projectile burst forward faster than the
sound of the blast. The recoil pushed the rifle and Sinon herself
backward, but she held firm with both feet.
Beneath her reticle, the man looked up, perhaps noticing the
muzzle flash in the distance. His gaze met hers through the scope.
And in that very instant, the man's chest, shoulder and head
exploded into tiny shards and disappeared. Just a moment later,
the rest of his body crumbled into nothing, like a broken glass
statue. Unfortunately for him, the extremely expensive-looking
Minimi on his shoulder was selected as a random drop and fell
into the sand. When he rematerialized back in town, he'd be hit
by the double shock of a one-hit fatality and the loss of his gear.
Sinon observed all of the above without emotion. Her right
hand moved automatically, pulling the Hecate II's bolt handle. It
spit out an impressively sized cartridge, which hit a nearby rock
with a heavy clang and vanished.
Even as she loaded the next round, Sinon adjusted the rifle to
the right, catching her secondary target, the large cloaked man, in
the sight. His goggled face was pointed straight at her. She placed
the sight just above his body and brushed the trigger. The green
projection circle appeared again and instantly shrank to a point.
Three seconds had passed since the first bullet left the gun. A
semiautomatic rifle could continue firing, but the bolt-action
Hecate II was not that convenient. However, your average player,
upon the shock and momentary petrification of seeing his partner's body exploding, needed at least five seconds to mentally recover, identify the firing direction, and begin taking evasive maneuvers. She figured that with the ensuing chaos, she'd have time
to succeed at a second shot.
But the cloaked man showed not a single sign of panic. He
stared straight at Sinon through his large goggles. He had to be a
serious veteran, probably a player whose name others would recognize. She pulled the trigger.
At this point, the man would be seeing a pale, translucent red
"bullet line" that indicated the arc of incoming enemy fire. This
defensive aid was implemented to increase the fun of the
gunfights, augmenting the guessing game of when and where an
attack would come from. Bold players with excellent reflexes and
high Agility could evade more than half the bullets from an automatic assault rifle at a distance of fifty yards.
The greatest benefit to playing the sniper class was that the
very first shot did not cause the bullet line to appear to the target.
Since Sinon had already taken her first shot and revealed her location, that advantage was now lost.
There was another roar. The Hecate II's bullet, a missile of
pure death launched by her unfeeling finger, ripped through the
pale yellow atmosphere.
As Sinon feared, the man calmly took one wide step to the
right. The next instant, the 12.7 mm round tore through the space
several feet away. A large circular mass disappeared from a concrete wall jutting up out of the wasteland far behind him.
Sinon's hand moved automatically to the bolt to load the next
bullet, but she did not return her finger to the trigger.
Any further sniping would be pointless. If she wanted to hit
her target, she needed to move locations, hide from his line of
sight, and wait out the sixty seconds for the recognition system to
reset and allow her that first sneak attack again. But by then, the
battle would essentially be decided. She whispered into the com
next to her mouth, eye still pressed to the scope.
"First target clear. Second target failed."
Dyne's response was immediate.
"Roger that. Begin attack…Go, go, go!!"
Sinon heard the faint scrape of boots hitting ground through
the com. She hissed the breath she'd been holding in.
Her duty was over. The Hecate II was an extremely valuable
gun, so charging into close battle with it could be disastrous if she
died and it was dropped for the enemy to claim. Dyne told her
that she could wait on standby after her job was done. She wasn't
happy that her second shot missed, but all she could do now was
pray that the bad feeling she had was an illusion.
Despite knowing her role was done, Sinon moved the rifle
again and bumped down the magnification on the scope to get a
view of the entire enemy squadron. The four lead gunners were
scrambling toward rocks and concrete walls for cover, while in
the back, the man with the large laser and the cloaked—
"Ah!"
She gasped. The large man had just thrown his arms up and
ripped away the camouflage cloak. There were no weapons in his
hands. Or at his waist.
The bulky object on his back, which she'd taken to be a backpack for hauling items, was exposed at last.
A metal rail curved from shoulder to broad shoulder. Hanging
from it was a delicately framed metallic object.
It was a spherical machine cradled in a Y-shaped frame. At the
top was a thick carrying handle, and below that, a bundle of six
gun barrels. It was easily over three feet long. There was a belt
feeder affixed to the machine, which was connected to a high-capacity ammo belt that also hung from the frame.
This dreadful thing, too enormous and menacing to be called a
"gun," itched at Sinon's memory. She had seen this weapon once
in an index on a GGO fansite.
It was called a GE M134 minigun, and belonged to the Heavy
Machine Gun category—the largest type of weapons found in Gun
Gale Online. Those six barrels rotated at high speed, loading, firing, and expelling cartridges nearly instantly. It could fire a hundred 7.62 mm bullets in a single second, making it more than
worthy of its demonic reputation. This was not just a gun—it was
a war machine.
Naturally, such a thing was tremendously heavy. From what
she recalled, the body alone weighed forty pounds, and with that
much ammo, the whole thing had to be pushing ninety. Even the
most extreme STR-heavy build couldn't fit all of that under the
personal weight limit. He had to be suffering a movement penalty
for overencumbrance.
The squadron wasn't moving slowly because their hunt went
long. They were going at the maximum speed that man could
move.
Stunned, Sinon watched through the scope as the large man
reached around his back to grab the handle of the minigun. The
massive machine slid smoothly across the rail and rotated ninety
degrees to point forward when it reached his right side. He
planted his legs wide, pointed the six-barreled gun forward, and
for the first time, the mouth below his goggles curved into a triumphant smile.
She hurriedly spun the scope's dial to the minimum magnification. In the bottom left of her view, Ginrou and the two other
attackers were charging in with submachine guns. The enemy
party's front-line shooters were firing back with laser blasters,
but the pale blue lasers all fizzled out and vanished into a rippling
waterlike surface about three feet in front of her teammates. The
anti-optical defense fields were doing their job.
Their live-ammo SMGs spit return fire, and one of the targets,
caught a little too far out from his rock cover, flailed with a few
red hit blips and collapsed. Ginrou's group charged farther, up to
the closest concrete wall between them and their targets.
The large man squatted. His minigun spun into life, spraying a
brilliant curtain of bullets for just a third of a second.
That was all it took to obliterate both the concrete cover and
Ginrou's avatar. He was as helpless as a sand sculpture hit by a
tidal wave.
"…"
Sinon bit her lip and stood up. She lifted the Hecate II off the
ground, folded its bipod, and wrapped the ammo belt around her
body.
At four and a half feet, the gun was nearly as long as Sinon was
tall, since she was at just over five feet herself. It bit hard into her
shoulder, but was still within her carrying capacity. The only reasons she could manage to keep the tiny H&K MP7 as a sidearm
without going over the limit were her considerable Strength stat
and the fact that the only Hecate ammo she had were the seven
bullets in the magazine.
Even by the naked eye, she could see the muzzle flashes of the
gunfight happening nearly a mile away. Sinon silently sprinted as
fast as she could go.
At present, Dyne's team was at a severe disadvantage. Against
just the one man with the minigun, they could win by maintaining medium distance and keeping light on their feet. But with the
others and their laser blasters at close enough proximity to negate
their protective fields, they had no choice but to tackle the nearer
enemy.
Though she was part of the squadron, they would not complain if Sinon simply retreated to safety. She had a duty in their
mission, and she did her part.
And yet she ran straight for the battle. Not because she wanted
to save her companions—it was that confident grin on the minigunner's face that drove her forward.
He had the strength and ability to laugh on the battlefield.
He'd played long enough to earn himself a minigun, which was at
least as rare as the Hecate, if not moreso. He had the patience to
build up the frightful amount of strength necessary to wield it.
And he had the willpower to react to Sinon's sniping calmly and
precisely.
Only by fighting and killing such a foe could Sinon eliminate
the other, weaker her—the young Shino Asada, who was always
crying in a heap inside her mind.
That was the only reason she continued to challenge this world
of madness. If she ran away for safety now, she would be ruining
everything she'd built so far.
Sinon raced on through the dusty air, her feet carrying her as
quickly across the dried earth as her stats allowed.
She avoided the rocks and ruined walls that stuck out of the
gravelly sand here and there, launching herself over obstacles if
necessary, and in barely a minute, she was within proximity of
the battle.
It was a mad, direct dash, using every ounce of her Agility. She
didn't spare a single thought to hiding herself. The enemy probably knew she was approaching already.
The area of trading fire had moved quite a bit since the battle
began. Naturally, it was Dyne's group that was being pushed.
With the minigun's commanding fire pinning the group, the
enemy's front troopers were able to close the distance. In order to
stay out of the effective range of their lasers, Dyne and the others
had to keep darting from cover to cover.
She was close enough now that her direct sprint would no
longer work. If she traveled in the open, the minigun would pulverize her with a hail of bullets. Worse, there were almost no
more of the concrete walls the team had been using as cover in
the direction they were fleeing. The only thing left was the halfcollapsed building they'd used to approach as they staged the ambush. Once they ran in there, they'd be trapped like rats.
Noticing all of these details at once, Sinon leaped straight for
the shadow of the wall behind which Dyne and the others were
hiding. As soon as she got closer, three pale, translucent red lines
popped into being right in front of her.
"Ugh!"
She gritted her teeth and entered an evasive maneuver. Those
were the bullet lines that showed the trajectories of the enemy attackers' laser blasters.
First she crouched as low as she could go to duck the first of
the bullet lines. The next instant, a pale blue laser burned the air
over her head. The second line was just before her eyes. She immediately launched off her right foot as hard as she could, floating through the air. The laser passed just below her stomach,
leaving her vision pure white for an instant.
The third bullet line intersected her airborne trajectory at a
slightly higher point. She shrunk her head down as much as she
could and avoided the hit, but the beam caught her light blue hair
right at the tip, sending little sparking bits of light flying.
Having successfully dodged all three laser blasts, Sinon landed
back on the ground to see—
—a terrifyingly thick red line the color of blood and over a foot
across. It had to be the bullet line of the minigun. That deluge of
bullets would be upon her in less than a second.
Lashing her terrified body into action, she tensed the foot that
just hit the ground and launched herself airborne again. Twisting
in midair, she tilted herself backward like a high-jumper.
The next moment, she felt a ferocious flow of energy storm
just past the skin of her back. The white, gleaming swarm of bullets passed through her field of vision and tore huge chunks out
of the already pockmarked ruined building behind them.
Just before she could land flat on her back onto the sand,
Sinon flipped over and stopped herself with hands and feet. At
the same time, she tossed her body forward. After a few somersaults, she reached the shadow of the wall where Dyne and the
others hid.
The squadron leader stared at the sudden appearance of Sinon
with open shock. No matter how charitably she interpreted the
look, it was clearly not the shine of appreciation for unexpected
reinforcement, but disbelief that anyone would rush to their
death like this.
Dyne quickly broke his gaze and looked down at the assault
rifle in his hands. When he spoke, his voice was ragged and quiet.
"…They hired a bodyguard."
"Bodyguard?"
"Don't you know him? That muscle-bound freak with the
minigun is Behemoth. He makes his base on the north continent.
Works as a so-called bodyguard for squadrons with more money
than balls."
That's a much more respectable play style than what you do,
Sinon thought, but she didn't share that opinion with him. She
glanced over at the three other attackers, who were occasionally
popping their heads out from cover and mounting weak attempts
at counterfire, and spoke just loud enough for all of them to hear.
"If we stay hidden here, we'll be wiped out in no time. The
minigun should be running out of ammo soon, and if we all attack
at once, he might rethink that strafing fire. That's the only chance
we'll have to get rid of him. You two with the SMGs from the left,
Dyne and me from the right, and the M4 back here to cover us…"
Dyne interrupted her hoarsely.
"It won't work. They've still got three blasters left. If we charge
in, our fields won't last…"
"Automatic blaster fire isn't as fast as live rounds. We can
dodge half of them."
"We can't!" he repeated, shaking his head. "The minigun will
just tear us to shreds. I hate to say it, but we should give up. Better to log out now and give them the satisfaction of victory than
suffer the consequences…"
In a neutral zone, logging out didn't happen immediately. The
soulless avatar would sit in place for several minutes, open to any
kind of attack. There was even the low possibility that weapons or
armor would drop randomly once the avatar was dead.
She'd always thought that Dyne's orders to pull back came too
soon, but she never expected this kind of cowardly capitulation.
He was like a sulking child throwing a tantrum. Sinon stared
straight at his face, the picture of a hardened soldier. He gritted
his teeth and wailed.
"What? Don't get all serious about a stupid game! It's the same
thing, we're either going to die here or die charging them…"
"Then die!" she spit back at him. "Show me you at least have
the guts to look down the barrel of a gun and die, even if it's 'just
a stupid game'!"
What was she doing yelling at this man who was nothing more
than a mark, a future target to be eliminated? Her time with this
squadron was obviously at its end.
But despite all of that, she grabbed the lapel of Dyne's camo
jacket and yanked him up. At the same time, she hissed orders at
the three wide-eyed members beside them.
"Just distract the minigun for three seconds and I'll pick him
off with the Hecate."
"…Y-you got it," stammered the attacker with the goggles and
green hair. The other two nodded after his lead.
"Good. We'll split in two and charge from both directions at
the same time."
Sinon shoved the sulking Dyne's waist over to the far edge of
their cover. She drew her MP7 sidearm and held out her fingers
to count down.
Three, two, one.
"Go!!"
They leaped as one into the sandy battlefield, where death
waited a second away with automatic fire.
Multiple bullet lines immediately crossed her path. She doubled over and slid to avoid them, looking up to catch sight of the
enemy squadron.
About sixty feet ahead and to the right, two laser blasters
waited on the other side of a wall. Farther to the left was another.
Behemoth, the minigunner, was in the middle and another ten
yards behind, trying to get a bead on the two allies who'd darted
left.
Sinon ran to her right, pointing the MP7 at the blasters. A bullet circle appeared when she squeezed the trigger, but her heart
rate was too high to control, and it pulsed and bounced over the
attackers' bodies.
She fired anyway. The recoil on the SMG was almost nothing
compared to the Hecate II. In no time at all, the twenty-round
magazine of 4.6 mm bullets was empty.
The two men with blasters panicked despite her wild firing
and ducked back behind the wall. A few of the bullets hit them,
not enough to take their HP down, but enough to buy her a few
seconds of time.
"Cover me, Dyne!" she shouted, crumpling to the ground and
pulling the Hecate II off her back and into her arms. There was
no time to set up the bipod. She had to balance its tremendous
weight as she found the scope.
The magnification was still set low, but Behemoth's upper half
filled the viewfinder. He was looking straight at her. Sinon didn't
have time to wait for the trajectory circle to shrink—she pulled
the trigger.
With a blast, her desperate shot ripped through the air right
next to Behemoth's head. He stumbled with the shock of its
passing, the goggles flying off his face and crumbling into nothing.
Missed!
She bit her lip and tried to stand, but her gaze caught Behemoth's through the scope. His face exposed, Behemoth's gray
eyes flashed threateningly. His lips still had that confident grin.
An enormous red light swallowed Sinon's entire body.
Instantly she knew there was no way to avoid it. There was no
time to stand out of her firing crouch and leap to either side.
But she could at least face the gun head-on.
Sinon got up and stared straight at Behemoth, intending to
honor her challenge. Abruptly, a few lights sparkled on his giant
frame.
It was Dyne. He had his assault rifle in firing position with one
knee on the ground, carefully taking his shot. Getting anything to
hit him at this range and in this situation was an admirable display of skill, even if she didn't think much of his personality.
Sinon jumped hard to her right. Several dozen bullets passed
through the space where her body had just been.
"Dyne! Move to the ri—"
Before she could finish that sentence, the two behind the wall
opened fire on Dyne as he got back to his feet.
They were too close. The beams burned through his protective
field and then his body.
He looked at Sinon for an instant, then turned to face forward.
"Raaah!!"
And charged straight ahead.
A storm of lasers fired back at him. He dodged, weaved, and
tore onward. But he couldn't evade all of them.
With his last few seconds, Dyne pulled a plasma grenade that
hung from his belt like a good-luck charm and heaved it over the
wall. With his HP down to zero, the avatar exploded into virtual
shards, his back to Sinon.
The next moment, a flash turned the entire world white.
There was a tremendous shock, like some Norse god's hammer
striking the earth. Pale energy coursed through the ground,
throwing up waves of sand. One of the attackers flew into the air,
disintegrating before he even hit the ground.
Nice one!
With a silent cheer for the departed Dyne, Sinon squinted her
eyes against the wave of sand and scanned the scene.
One of the two allies who'd charged the minigunner on the left
was already gone, but so was the other enemy blaster on that
side. On the right flank, Dyne had engaged in a virtual suicide attack, taking one of the two enemies down with him and leaving
the other stunned for a time.
And there, hazy through the thick clouds of airborne dust, was
a large silhouette making its way straight for her.
At this point, it was essentially a one-on-one fight between Behemoth and Sinon. But a heavy machine gun vs. sniper rifle fight
at this distance was completely one-sided.
She had to find cover to protect herself from the minigun
while she prepared to fire. But with a simple head-to-head situation, there was no way to hide or take it by surprise…
No, wait.
She held her breath. While the sand still hung heavy in the air
from Dyne's grenade, Behemoth wouldn't be able to pinpoint her
exact location. She couldn't snipe him, either, of course, but she
might able to move to the one spot in this area where his gun's
hail of fire couldn't reach her.
As soon as the idea occurred to her, she was off and running.
The tattered remains of the large building loomed just behind the
area where they were fighting.
Once Sinon was through the entrance, the yellow sky could be
seen clearly through the collapsed rear half of the building. She
found what she wanted on the right-hand wall—stairs upward.
She moved as quickly as she could without kicking over any of the
detritus littering the ground and making noise.
The metal staircase was missing the occasional step, but it
wasn't enough to stop her quick ascent. She practically kicked the
wall of the landing to shift directions and continue upward.
In less than twenty seconds she had reached the fifth floor,
where the stairs stopped. There was a large window to her left.
Here she could buy the few seconds necessary to take sniping
position without drawing Behemoth's attention. She pressed the
stock of the Hecate against her shoulder and looked out the window.
Immediately, her vision went red.
On the ground over a dozen yards below, Behemoth already
had the minigun pointed up as far as it could go, trained perfectly
on Sinon. He read her like a book—her plan, her execution, everything.
She didn't have time to retreat or hide.
He was too good. A real GGO player—a soldier.
But that was the exact kind of opponent Sinon wanted. She
would kill him. She had to.
There was no hesitation. She put her right foot on the windowsill, not bothering to take firing position, and launched herself upward.
A burning, brilliant stream of energy tore upward from the
ground. A tremendous shock smashed through Sinon's left knee.
Her leg tore away, taking a massive chunk of her HP bar with it.
But she was still alive. Sinon floated through the air over the
minigun's trajectory of fire. Straight over the head of Behemoth.
He tilted backward, trying to catch up to the angle of her flight
before his clip ran out. But he couldn't get to her. The minigun
was connected to the frame on his back and couldn't point directly upward.
As her body began to descend, Sinon pressed the Hecate's
stock to her shoulder and looked through the scope. All she saw
was Behemoth's burly features. At last, the smile was gone from
his lips. His teeth were bared, and his eyes burned on the fuel of
shock and anger.
Sinon was barely conscious of the movement of her own
mouth.
As if taking over from him, she smiled. A fierce, cruel, cold
smile.
Falling a great height was hardly the ideal position for steady
sniping, but she was too close to miss. When the tip of the barrel
was just three feet from his head, the green bullet circle shrank
into place in the center of his face.
"The End," she muttered, and pulled the trigger.
A spear of light shot out of the fingertip of the goddess of the
underworld, bearing the maximum amount of energy of any bullet in this world.
It ripped a hole from his face through his trunk and buried itself deep in the gravelly earth.
The next instant, an explosive shock wave erupted outward,
and Behemoth's body blew apart from the inside.