Creak.
Creak.
With the repetition of each tiny sound, I felt my heart shrink.
The sound came from the tip of my still-unnamed black sword,
which was just barely sticking into the gap between Central
Cathedral's roughly one-inch-thick white marble blocks.
My right hand was damp with sweat where it clung to the
sword's hilt, and my elbow and shoulder joints were screaming
with pain, ready to disconnect at any moment. Which made sense
—my assuredly not-beefy arm was supporting the weight of two
people, one ultra-high-priority longsword, and a full set of armor.
There wasn't a single handhold in the mirrorlike smoothness
of the wall, so there was no way for me to wedge the sword farther into the surface. There was nothing below me but an endless
expanse. And in addition to the pain in my right hand, my left
was also reaching its limit as it clung to the lady knight in her
heavy suit of golden armor.
Physical fatigue in the Underworld was slightly different from
in the real world. In terms of long-distance walking, sprinting,
fierce training, and lifting heavy objects, it was the same sensation. The difference was that fatigue acted like injury in the way
that it reduced one's "life," the numerical value of vitality in the
Underworld—i.e., your hit points.
In the real world, hardly anyone ever literally died of fatigue.
Before the body could reach a state of serious, permanent injury,
fatigue rendered you unable to move. But here, it was possible at
times for strength of will to override physical possibility. In other
words, it was theoretically possible that you could run, resisting
pain and exhaustion, until the moment your life reached zero and
you instantly died.
At the moment, I was supporting an unbelievable amount of
weight with my body. My life value was slowly but surely decreasing as long as this state continued. I could keep both hands
clenched out of sheer determination, but eventually my life would
reach zero, and I would die. In that instant, my hand would probably let go of the sword, and the knight with me would plunge to
the ground hundreds of feet below and die as well.
I wasn't the only one suffering damage. My beloved sword was
supporting more weight than it could handle, with only its very
tip for leverage. And I'd already used the immensely taxing Perfect Weapon Control twice in the day's battles. I couldn't open its
Stacia Window to check numbers, but I wouldn't be surprised if
its life reached zero within a few minutes. When that happened,
the sword would shatter and no longer recover its strength by
merely returning to its sheath.
It would be a terrible shame to break my sword before I could
even give it a name, not that it would matter for long once I
plunged to my death. I needed to do something and fast, but just
holding on took all my strength, plus…
"That's enough! Let go of me!" shrieked the woman dangling
from me—Alice Synthesis Thirty, the golden Integrity Knight with
the Osmanthus Blade. "I would rather die than live with the
shame of having been saved by a criminal sinner like you!"
She struggled and rocked, trying to break herself loose from
my grip. Her gauntlet slipped a little bit in my sweaty palm.
"Arghk…stahppit…" I tried to control the shaking while uttering nonsense. But the vibration of her thrashing worked the
blade's tip a tiny millimeter out of the wall. When all was still
again, I glanced down and yelled, "Stop moving, idiot! You're an
Integrity Knight; you should know that getting suicidal here isn't
going to solve anything! Idiot!"
"Wha…?" The pale face visible between my feet turned red. "Yyou…you dare insult me, you rogue? Take that back!"
"Shut up! I'm calling you an idiot because you arean idiot, you
idiot! Idiot!" I yelled, uncertain whether I was doing this to engage her in negotiating for help, or whether I was just working
out my frustration. "Do you understand the situation? If you fall
off and die here, Eugeo's going to keep climbing up to Administrator's chamber all by himself! It's supposed to be your job to
stop that from happening! Shouldn't your top priority as an Integrity Knight be to sacrifice anything you can to stop him?! If
you're too stupid to see the logic there, then you're an idiot!!"
"Th-that's eighttimes you have insulted me now…," Alice said,
glaring up at me with her cheeks reddening; I doubted she'd ever
been called an idiot since she became an Integrity Knight. She
raised her Osmanthus Blade, eliciting chills as I pictured an attack that would send us both to our doom. But it seemed that her
sense of reason won out, because the sword soon dangled at her
side again.
"I see. There is a logic to what you say," she admitted, her
pearly teeth gritted. "But why don't you let go?! Can you prove
that your reason is not pity, a fate more painful than death?!"
It certainly wasn't pity. Saving Alice from this fate was half the
reason Eugeo and I were here at Central Cathedral in the first
place. But there wasn't enough time to explain all that. And besides, it wasn't Alice Synthesis Thirty that Eugeo wanted to rescue
from the tower, but his childhood friend Alice Zuberg, who had
been abducted from Rulid Village eight years ago.
I tried to come up with an argument that would convince Alice
as I fought against the screaming pain. But no such rationale
manifested. I could offer up only a partial truth.
"I…Eugeo and I didn't come charging up the cathedral for the
purpose of destroying the Axiom Church."
I stared down at Alice's fierce blue eyes, searching for the right
words. "We want to protect the realm from a Dark Territory invasion, just like you. We fought a goblin band in the mountains two
years ago…not that I expect you to believe me. So I don't want
you to die, if you're one of the most powerful Integrity Knights.
You're a valuable source of power."
She drew her brows together, taken aback by this comment,
but regained her poise to snap, "Then why do you turn your
sword upon your fellow man and commit the greatest taboo of
bloodshed?!"
The question came from a place of pure righteousness—implanted by Administrator for her own ends or not. Alice's eyes
burned. "Why did you harm Eldrie Synthesis Thirty-One and all
those subsequent knights?!"
Sadly, I didn't have a convincing reply. My desire to save the
human realm was both honest intent and an act of hypocrisy. If I
reached the top of the cathedral and defeated Administrator, Cardinal would regain all system privileges. In order to prevent the
coming catastrophe, she would attempt to reinitialize the entire
Underworld. And as of that moment, I couldn't think of a way to
avoid this outcome: salvation through utter oblivion.
But if Alice and I plunged to our deaths, that would only make
the coming tragedy worse. If the "final stress test"—an invasion
from the Dark Territory—happened without Cardinal having con-
trol, the Integrity Knights and Administrator would fall in battle,
and every last human being would be agonizingly slaughtered.
The worst part of all was knowing that if I died here, I would
simply wake up in a Soul Translator somewhere in the real world.
The Underworldians would perish in a hell of suffering, and I
would be perfectly fine back in reality. An unthinkable conclusion.
"I'm…"
With the little time I had left, what could I possibly say that
would convince the protector of the church and its dedication to
order? But no matter how futile, there was nothing else I could do
in this situation.
"Eugeo and I attacked Raios Antinous and Humbert Zizek at
the academy because the Axiom Church and Taboo Index are
wrong. Deep down, you know that's true, don't you? Just because
the Taboo Index doesn't outlaw it, should higher nobles be allowed to torment and defile completely innocent girls like Ronie
and Tiese…? Is that what you believe?!"
My body shook as my mind flashed back to the scene I witnessed two years ago in the student dorm—the girls mercilessly
trussed up with tears in their eyes. The tip of the sword creaked
in the wall again, but I barely noticed it.
"Well?! Answer me, Integrity Knight!!"
My raging emotions manifested in a hot droplet that spilled
from my eye to Alice's forehead below. The golden knight sucked
in a sharp breath, her eyes gaping. When her trembling lips
opened again, it seemed as though the harshness of her attitude
had given way to something else.
"The law…is the law. Sin…is sin. If the people are allowed to
define the law by their own needs, then how are we to uphold
order in the world?"
"And who decides if Administrator was right to create the law
that way? The god of the celestial realm? Why aren't I being fried
by a bolt of lightning from above, then?!"
"Because Stacia's will is made clear through the actions of us,
her servants!"
"And Eugeo and I came up all this way hoping to clear that up!
We want to defeat Administrator and prove that it's a mistake!
And for the exact same reason…"
I glanced up briefly at the sword wedged into the wall and saw
that it was nearly out. One move from Alice, one tiny little gust of
wind, and the tip would either break or fall out, sending us plunging below.
"…I refuse to let you die right now!!"
I sucked in the biggest breath I could, tensed my stomach, and
summoned all my remaining willpower.
"Yaaaah!!" I bellowed, yanking my left arm up to lift Alice.
Both arms and shoulders screamed with pain, but I managed to
bring her up to my level and use the last bits of my strength to
shout, "Stick your sword in that seam! I can't hold out…please!"
Up close, her features were twisted with emotion. A moment
later, she lifted her arm and loudly, deeply thrust her Osmanthus
Blade into the seam between marble blocks. At nearly the same
second, my black sword slipped out of the stone, and my other
hand lost the grip holding Alice.
In a single, vivid instant of panic from head to toe, I envisioned my long, long fall to the ground, and the oblivion that
awaited.
But all I actually felt was a split second of floating, then a
fierce tugging shock. Alice's hand had shot out and grabbed the
back of my shirt collar. Once I was sure she was supporting all my
weight with her sword and arms, I let out a deep breath. My
pounding heart gradually eased to a state less than sheer panic.
"…"
I looked up at her. In the span of a single second, we had
switched positions both physically and mentally. The golden Integrity Knight clenched her jaw, as if grappling with every possible kind of conflicting emotion. I felt her fingers loosen and
tighten over and over, shifting pressure on the back of my collar.
Eugeo was the only Underworldian I knew who could be uncertain under such extreme circumstances. The other artificial
fluctlights, for better or for worse, were blindly faithful to a certain set of behaviors, and did not need to grapple with huge, difficult choices. Put another way, all the truly important decisions
were always handed down to them by something or someone else.
In other words, Alice the Integrity Knight's mind had a more
"human" quality than many of her fellow Underworldians—even
after her soul had been altered by Administrator.
I had no way of knowing what sort of inner debate she housed.
But after several seconds that felt like an unfathomable eternity,
she easily lifted my body up to its former level.
Unlike her, I had no reason to hesitate. I instantly thrust my
sword into the seam once more, exhaling. Once I was stable
again, Alice withdrew her hand from my collar and turned her
face away. Despite the sternness of her words, her voice itself was
weak and small.
"…I did not save you, only repaid what you did for me. Besides…we have not finished our duel."
"Ah, I see…In that case, we're even now," I said, choosing my
words carefully. "Here's a suggestion. Both of us need to find a
way to get back into the tower. So why don't we call a truce until
then?"
"…A truce?" she asked, turning to throw me a truly mistrustful
glance.
"Yes. I doubt we can manage to destroy the cathedral's wall
again, and it won't be easy to climb it. If we work together, it will
raise our chances of survival. Of course, if you've got any easy
ways back inside, I'm all ears."
"…"
She bit her lip in frustration. "If such a method existed, I
would have done it already."
"Yeah. Obviously. So may I assume we're in agreement on a
truce and cooperation?"
"Before I say yes…what exactly do you mean by cooperation?"
"If one of us seems likely to fall, the other helps. If we had a
rope, it would make it easier for us to maintain our position, but I
suppose that's asking too much."
The knight did not answer or look at me for a long time, then
bobbed her head almost imperceptibly. "It is a logical suggestion…I must admit. I suppose I have no better choice," she said,
turning to glare at me. "But the instant we return to the tower interior, I will cut you down. Do not forget this inevitable outcome."
"I'll…keep it in mind."
She nodded with satisfaction, then cleared her throat, signaling a topic change. "So…you mentioned needing a rope? Do you
have any extra fabric?"
"Fabric…?"
I looked down at my outfit, realizing I didn't have so much as a
handkerchief in my pockets. If this were good old Alfheim, I
could produce a veritable ton of extra clothes, capes, and so on
from my virtual item storage, but the Underworld was not blessed
with such convenience.
"…Well, all I've got is this shirt and these pants. If need be, I'll
take them off, though," I offered with a one-shouldered shrug.
Alice made the bitterest face I'd ever seen and yelled, "That
will not be necessary! You must be joking. I cannot believe you
would head into battle with nothing but a sword."
"Hey, you dragged me and Eugeo here from the academy with
nothing but the clothes on our backs, right?"
"But you snuck into the tower's armory, didn't you? There
were plenty of very fine ropes in there that…oh, forget it. This is a
waste of time," she snorted, turning away. She lifted her right
hand in its golden gauntlet, then grimaced when she realized she
couldn't take her other hand off the sword hilt.
She thrust her arm toward me and commanded, "Undo the
fastener on my gauntlet with your free hand."
"Huh?"
"And do not touch my skin under any circumstances. Quickly
now!"
"…"
From what Eugeo told me, back in Rulid, Alice had been a
bright, friendly, and kind girl to all. So where was this totally opposite personality coming from?
At last, the feeling was back in my left hand. I lifted it up to the
fastener on her gauntlet. I held the metal device so she could pull
her hand free. Her pale, slender fingers made a gesture, and she
shouted, "System Call!"
This was followed by some complex, unfamiliar commands.
The gauntlet in my hand flashed and began to change shape.
Within a few seconds, I had a beautiful, coiled golden chain in my
hand.
"Whoa…a matter-transformation spell…?"
"Weren't you listening? Are those ears on the sides of your
head, or carnivorous holes for devouring insects? That was just a
shape-changing art. Only the pontifex herself can perform the art
of altering the very material."
I apologized to Alice, who clearly didn't view our truce as a
chance to soften her tone, then tested the strength of the chain. I
stuck the end into my mouth and tugged; it felt like my teeth were
going to pop out. The metal was thinner than my pinkie finger,
but it was clearly tough enough, and the chain was bookended
with sturdy-looking fasteners.
I stuck one of the fasteners onto my belt and held out the other
end, which Alice took and attached to the metal clasp of her
sword belt. The length of hanging chain between us ran about fifteen feet long. As long as we didn't both fall at the same time, this
gave us some measure of security.
"All right…"
I glanced around to survey our situation. Based on the placement of the sun, we were hanging from the western wall of Central Cathedral. The sky overhead was turning from blue to purple,
while the sunlight hitting the white stone painted it a soft orange
hue. I estimated it was about half past three.
After a very careful glance past my feet and the thin wisps of
cloud beyond them, I could make out the stone walls that surrounded the cathedral garden like a miniature play set, then the
rest of Centoria, split into four by the Everlasting Walls. The sight
was a reminder of the impossible height of the tower.
Counting the thickness of the stone partitions, I estimated
each floor of the tower to be about twenty feet high, so the height
of the eightieth floor, where I fought Alice, would be over fifteen
hundred feet off the ground—perhaps more like sixteen or seventeen, given the high ceiling on the fiftieth floor. If I fell from here,
there was no chance of survival. My body would be so pulverized
by the impact that I'd be reduced to dust. The air around us was
gentle for now, but there was no guarantee it wouldn't blow
harder.
I shivered and clenched the hilt of my sword tighter, then
wiped the sweat from my free palm on my pants.
"So, uh…just so I'm clear on this…," I started to say.
Alice's face shot up to look at me; she'd been gazing down as
well. I thought she looked a bit paler than before, but her tone of
voice was just as blunt as ever. "What?"
"I was just wondering…if you know the high-level sacred arts
to change the shape of items, maybe you'd also be privy to an art
to…fly? Okay, sorry, forget I asked," I stammered at the sight of
her arched eyebrow.
"Did you learn anythingin school?" she snapped. "The only
person in the entire world who can fly in midair is the pontifex
herself. Even the youngest apprentice monk knows that!"
"Hey, I said I was just checking! You don't have to get so mad
at me."
"I did not appreciate your insinuation!"
It was becoming more clear by the moment that Alice the Integrity Knight and I were simply not designed to get along on a
personal level. Still, I stifled my urge to snap back and asked,
"Fine…so in that case…is it possible to call that enormous dragon
you flew me here on?"
"It's just one stupid question after another. Dragons are only
allowed to approach the thirtieth-floor landing. Even Uncle…er,
the knights' commander himself isn't allowed to take his dragon
higher than that."
"H-how would I know those rules?!"
"You ought to have realized the implication, since the landing
was placed only on the thirtieth floor!" she said, glaring at me yet
again for a good three seconds before we both turned away in a
huff. I spent the next three seconds calming my rage over her totally unfair accusations before I was ready to resume.
"So…there's no way for us to escape this predicament through
the air…"
It took Alice another couple of seconds to regain her cool. Her
blue eyes caught mine. "Not even birds can approach the upper
reaches of the cathedral. The pontifex cast some kind of special
art unknown to me that prevents them from coming closer."
"I see…Very thorough."
Off in the far distance, I saw a birdlike shape, but it didn't
seem to be getting any closer. I supposed it was some combination of Administrator's magical power and a pathological sense of
caution. In a sense, the abnormal height of this structure was
both a symbol of power and an indication of fear toward some
unseen foe.
"So that leaves three options…climb down, climb up, or break
through the wall again."
"The third will be difficult. Central Cathedral's walls possess a
nearly infinite life and regenerative ability, just like the Everlasting Walls. The same can be said of the glass windows on the lower
levels."
"So we can't even climb down to where the windows are," I
murmured. She nodded.
"In fact, that hole punctured in the wall is even difficult for me
to believe…I suppose I must accept it as some freakishly unlucky
outcome from melding our Perfect Weapon Control arts, so it
produced a huge burst of power. You have really been a thorn in
my side."
"…"
I merely breathed through my nostrils, certain that arguing my
case would only lead us into another downward spiral. "In that
case…couldn't we repeat the phenomenon if we attempted the
same thing again?"
"I can't rule out the possibility…but it would be difficult to
make our way through the wall in the few seconds before it repairs itself again, and more importantly…I've already used the
Perfect Weapon Control of my Osmanthus Blade twice. It needs
either a good helping of sunlight or a long rest in my sheath before I can use it again."
"True, the same goes for mine. It needs a few hours of sheath
time…and I'm sure that just hanging from it like this is doing
plenty of damage on its own. Whether we go up or down, we
should probably start moving soon."
I brushed the marble stone with my free hand. It was devastatingly smooth. The blocks were nearly six feet to a side, stacked
upon one another infinitely, with not even a window to break the
totality of the west face. And even those were indestructible, according to Alice.
Our only means of traversing the tower side was to utilize
something like rock-climbing hooks that we could jam into the
seams of the marble stone to use as handholds. The amount of
energy required to go up or down seemed about the same, so I
figured we might as well go up, but that led to another major
problem.
I gave Alice my most serious face, preparing for another
nonanswer, and asked, "If we go up from here…will there be a
spot we could use to get back inside the tower?"
As expected, Alice looked hesitant at first. She bit her lip. If
there was a place farther up to reenter the building, it would have
to be very close to the top floor, where Administrator lived. It
would be tantamount to taboo for an Integrity Knight tasked with
protecting the Church to escort an enemy to such a vital place.
But Alice drew a deep breath and said firmly, "There will be.
On the ninety-fifth floor, in a place called the Morning Star Lookout, the tower is open to the air, with only pillars for support. If
we can climb up that far, it will be easy to get back in. However…"
Her crystal-blue eyes got even harder. "If we actually make it
up to the ninety-fifth floor, I will have to kill you."
There was enough force in her gaze to make the back of my
neck tingle. I nodded. "That was the deal, I believe. So shall we
climb the wall, then?"
"…Very well. It's more practical than going all the way down to
the ground from here…But you make it sound so simple. How will
we climb such a sheer wall?"
"Why, we'll just run vertically right up it…I'm kidding," I
added hastily, seeing the temperature in her eyes rapidly dropping to subzero numbers. I cleared my throat, switched hands on
the sword, and motioned with my free hand. "System Call! Generate Metallic Element!"
A shining metal-gray light appeared, which took further shape
as my command continued. It grew out to a good foot and a half
with a pointed end—a brand-new climbing hook.
I gripped it tight, looked up at the seam in the stone where my
sword was stuck, and pulled my arm back.
"Hmph!"
With all the strength I could muster, I drove the hook into the
wall. To my relief, it didn't break. The blade stuck right in the
narrow crack. I gave it a few firm yanks up and down as a test,
and it appeared wedged tightly enough to support my weight.
Objects generated by sacred arts had very little life and would
disappear in a matter of hours if just left around. So it wasn't suitable to be a lifeline between Alice and me, but it would at least be
sturdy enough to act as a decent foothold when climbing the wall.
I could feel the doubt in Alice's gaze as I held the hook tight
with my right hand and pried loose my poor abused sword with
my left. Once it was safely back in its sheath, I hung from the fifteen-inch support with both hands and kicked up like mounting a
bar.
My physical abilities in the Underworld weren't exactly like in
the later days of SAO, where I had agility that would make a Bmovie ninja jealous, but I was still much nimbler and stronger
than in the real world. I put my right foot on the bar and rose up
to a standing position, with my left hand pressed firmly against
the wall.
"A-are you all right?" came a hoarse voice. I saw Alice looking
up at me with a pale face and her free hand clutching the golden
chain. She looked surprisingly young and innocent. For a moment, I was tempted to pretend to fall, just to see what she'd do,
but then thought better of it.
"I think…I am."
I gave her a little wave with my right hand, then chanted another sacred art to summon a fresh climbing hook. I drove it into
the next seam overhead and climbed up as before. It was only six
feet of progress, but I felt a small measure of accomplishment at
the success.
I called down to Alice, "I think this will work! Just follow me
and climb up on the first bar below."
The Integrity Knight stared at me without budging. Eventually
her lips moved, and I just barely heard the sound, "…an't."
"Huh? What'd you say?"
"I said… I can't!"
"Uh…sure you can. With your strength, it should be easy to
pull yourself up to—"
"That's not what I mean!" she insisted, cutting off my awkward
attempt at a pep talk. "I have never experienced a situation like
this before…and at the risk of exposing myself to shame, it is all I
can do just to hang here. I simply can't climb up on such a slender
step…"
Her voice trailed off into nothing again.
I was shocked. As a general rule, Underworldians were uncomfortable with situations outside their personal experience or
expectations. So they had a poor ability to react to impossible circumstances, to the extent that when I cut off his arms, Raios's
fluctlight actually collapsed before his life ran out—or so I assumed.
Even an Integrity Knight had to be struggling with the experience of breaking a hole through a supposedly indestructible wall,
getting sucked into the void outside, and dangling from a height
that even dragons couldn't reach. Perhaps though, deep down,
the superlative sword-wielding Alice Synthesis Thirty was just another girl.
In any case, given her abundance of pride, I had to assume
that the Integrity Knight's admission of weakness meant she was
at her wits' end.
"Okay!" I shouted. "Then I'll pull you up to the bar with the
chain!"
Alice bit her lip, apparently weighing fear against pride, and
ultimately decided that she'd cast her lot already and wasn't going
to change her mind. She tugged on the chain.
"Th-thank you for the assistance," she squeaked. I gripped the
chain, resisting the urge to tease her.
"All right, I'll lift you slowly. Here goes."
I carefully pulled it up. The hook under my feet creaked, but it
seemed to be able to withstand two people for a bit of time. I
lifted the golden knight a few feet, careful not to rock the foothold
too much, then held the chain in midair.
"There. You can pull out your sword now."
Alice nodded, slowly removing the point of the Osmanthus
Blade from the white stone. A large amount of fresh weight
yanked on the chain, and I gritted my teeth as I held it still. Once
her sword was back in its sheath, I resumed lifting.
When Alice's boots were resting on the first hook below, I instructed her, "Now place both your hands against the wall to
steady yourself…good. I'm releasing the chain now."
I couldn't see her face due to the angle, but she did subtly tip
her head as she clung to the wall. Imagining her desperate expression below that windswept blond hair, I lowered my right
arm. She momentarily wobbled, then regained her balance.
"Phew…"
I let out a long breath I didn't realize I'd been holding.
How many more feet until this so-called Morning Star Lookout on the ninety-fifth floor? As long as I could successfully repeat this process, we would make it eventually. The problem
boiled down to the time it took to make it up one block. Night
would fall eventually, and if we needed to sleep while hanging off
the wall.
"Okay, I'm going to go one step higher again," I warned her.
She turned her panicked face toward me and replied, barely
audible through the breeze, "Please be careful."
"Sure thing."
I gave her a bracing thumbs-up—a gesture I was certain no
one in the Underworld understood—then chanted the system
command for a third climbing hook.
Despite Centoria getting ready for its summer solstice festival in
the lands below us, when the sun began sinking, its progress was
mercilessly swift. Against the white stone, the orange light of the
setting sun quickly progressed from a burning red to violet to
deep navy blue, until only fragments of the End Mountains were
visible in the last red light of the day, far, far to the west.
Overhead, the stars were twinkling, but they did not bless our
progress. An hour earlier, we had come across an unexpected limitation of the system that was proving rather difficult.
The process of our climb was simple: I created a hook with sacred arts, stuck it in the gap between the marble blocks, and
climbed on top of it. Then I would lift Alice with the chain so that
she stood on the hook below me. Once we did this about ten
times, we'd gotten a single repetition down to under three minutes.
The problem was with generating the hooks themselves. There
was no statistic in this world that corresponded to what we'd call
mana pointsin ALO. The magic they called sacred artscould be
repeated as often as you wanted, as long as the spell was within
your system access level.
That did not mean they were usable anywhere and everywhere, however. This world's rules dictated that all production
required magical resources, a fact that applied to sacred arts as
much as anything else. In order to execute an art, you needed to
expend spatial resources, either in the vicinity of the user or
through consuming the life of valuable catalysts or living things—
even humans.
Spatial resources were tricky because they couldn't be measured in numbers. For the most part, this value came from sunlight or the earth. Wherever the ground was fertile and open to
the sun, resources would be rich, enough to support continued
casting of high-level arts. On the other end, a windowless room in
a stone building would run out of resources very quickly and take
a long time to recharge.
By those rules, our current situation—stuck at a height of fifteen hundred feet off the ground with the sun sinking over the
horizon—was about as bad as it could possibly get. Before long,
my hook-generating sacred arts had dried up all of the twilight's
resources, leaving us unable to continue upward.
"System Call! Generate Metallic Element!"
Over my palm, outstretched to catch some last bit of light in
vain, a few little motes of silver light floated, then snuffed out
with tiny wisps of smoke.
I sighed, and below me, I heard Alice murmur, "Generating
containers like that uses much spiritual power. Now that Solus is
gone, you'll be lucky to manage one per hour. How far have we
climbed?"
"Err…I think we're past the eighty-fifth floor now."
"So there's a long way to go until ninety-five."
I gazed longingly at the traces of purple in the sky. "Yeah…and
in any case, once it's dark, it'll be too dangerous to keep climbing.
And if we try to camp out here, getting any rest will be difficult…"
At worst, someone would need to dangle from the chain, but
not only could we not create more hooks, they would also disappear after a few dozen minutes, so we'd have no choice but to use
our swords as supports again. And I wasn't sure they could withstand the pressure all night.
I looked up the wall face, stubbornly hoping that there'd be
somekind of outcropping we could connect the chain to, using its
fastener. And then…
"Oh…"
There was a series of evenly spaced shadows with complex
shapes against the wall not much more than twenty feet above us.
When the sun went down, the mist around the tower dissipated,
revealing these hidden decorations.
"Hey…does that look like something to you?" I asked, pointing. Alice looked up and narrowed her blue eyes.
"You're right…Statues, perhaps? But why would they be here,
so high up, where no one will see them?"
"I don't care why, as long as we can sit and rest on them. But
they're a good…eight mels above us. We'll need another three
bars in order to climb up there."
"Three bars…," she repeated, deep in thought. "All right. I was
planning to save this for an emergency…and it looks like the time
has come."
She pushed her back against the wall and removed the gauntlet on her left hand. She stared at the faintly glowing piece of
armor and began to chant the command for a sacred art. When
she finished her execution (many times smoother than mine),
there was a flash, and the gauntlet had turned into three more
climbing hooks. Alice's matter-transforming arts must've had
better energy efficiency than generating from thin air, given my
inability to summon any myself.
"Here, use these," she said, stretching upward with the hooks
in her hand. I crouched down and carefully took the tools.
"Thank you—this is a huge help."
"If it's truly necessary, I have more armor…"
I glanced at the fine breastplate that covered her upper half
and shook my head. "No…we'll leave that one to the very end. You
never know what we might need…"
I carefully got to my feet, stuck two of the hooks into my belt,
and lifted the third.
"Uraa!"
Sure enough, the golden hook was much sturdier than the
metallic elements I'd created; it sank deep into the rock's seam. I
did the now-familiar climbing routine and used the chain to pull
Alice up. After another repetition, the mysterious objects were
half as far away, and much clearer in the darkness.
They were stone statues, as it turned out; large and ornate, a
significant number surrounded the cathedral walls on narrow terraces. But these were not the holy statues of goddesses and angels
that I'd seen inside the tower. They were human-shaped, true, but
bent at the knees into a crouch, with their arms folded menacingly over their legs. Gnarled muscles bulged, and wings as sharp
as knives extended from their backs.
Worst of all, the heads of the statues were utterly alien, curved
and elongated at the front and ending in a conical mouth. They
looked like the heads of some kind of grotesque giant weevils.
"Ugh…that's such a creepy design," I groaned.
"Huh…? W-wait…that's from the Dark Territory…!" Alice exclaimed.
Just then, the head of the statue right above me craned back
and forth, its lamprey mouth opening and closing. That was not
some decorative statue carved out of stone. It was… alive.
If this were a quest in some ordinary VRMMO back in the real
world, a statue attack would be inevitable after a demonstration
like that. But in this case, the person writing the scenario was either a total sadist or a green beginner. We were stuck on these
foot-long hooks jammed into a sheer wall, with nowhere else to
go.
The term certain-defeat eventcrossed my mind, but I dismissed it just as quick. This wouldn't be one of those thrill-ride
incidents where someone would swoop in and save us if we fell.
We had to use our brains to evade danger on our own, or we
would die.
While I prepared myself for danger, the winged statue shook
itself and began to change color. Its white skin, the same hue as
the tower stone, began turning a slick charcoal black, starting
from the extremities.
I drew my sword in anticipation of the black wings snapping
out into full extension. Without taking my eyes off the former
statue, I shouted down to Alice, "Looks like we'll have to fight
here. Not falling off should be the top priority!"
But I didn't hear the Integrity Knight respond right away. I
glanced down and saw her face, pale in the night, a perfect picture of shock. On the updraft of wind I heard the whisper: "No,
how is this possible?"
An Integrity Knight should know everything about the Axiom
Church. Why would she be so surprised? From what I knew
through my secondhand reports about Administrator, she was
abnormally cautious. Surely, it wasn't so unthinkable that she
would not only prevent flight to the tower's upper sections, but
also place stone guardians along the walls in case any challengers
were persistent and mad enough to climb all the way.
The guardian—which, aside from the head, looked similar to a
typical video game gargoyle—gripped the terrace ledge with
clawed hands and emitted a whoosh of air from its mouth.
A shiver went down my back as I realized the gargoyles on either side of the animated one were also changing color. If they
were placed equally around all four walls of the cathedral, there
could be at least a hundred.
"Oh, damn," I hissed, turning to press my back to the wall and
hefting up my sword. Just that was enough to unbalance me,
given the tiny bar I was standing on. Even in SAO, I had never
tried to fight like this.
But before I could even start planning, I heard the wings flapping overhead. The gargoyle was hovering against the dark-blue
sky, the round eyes on either side of its elongated head fixed on
me. The monster was bigger than I'd expected, probably more
than six feet. Even its dangling tail looked about as long as I was
tall.
"Bshaaa!!"
It let out a hiss like steam escaping a valve, then plunged
headfirst toward me.
It didn't seem to have any ranged attacks, fortunately, so I anticipated claws on one of its limbs to appear next. Right or left,
top or bottom—
"…Whoa!!"
With a whiplike crack, its tail shot out. I jerked my head away
and yelped in surprise; the tip grazed my cheek, as sharp and
pointed as a knife.
I'd managed to dodge, but my balance was now a problem. I
wobbled atop the hook, attempting to stay upright. Mercilessly,
the gargoyle's tail shot at me again.
With my left hand against the wall to steady myself, I blocked
the tail attack with the sword in my right. It was all I could do to
hold it up like a shield. There was no way I could actually swing it
around to sever the spike.
"Urgh…"
Sensing that this wasn't the time to be thrifty, I took my left
hand off the wall and pulled out one of the two golden hooks in
my belt. Envisioning the movements of the Throwing Weapons
skill I'd practiced so much in SAO, I hurled the spear at the center
of the gargoyle's body.
I didn't put that much effort into the throw, but the short
spear lived up to its nature as Alice's gauntlet, shining bright
through the gloom to sink deep into the gargoyle's lower stomach.
" Bshhi!" it hissed, its circular mouth spurting black blood. The
monster flapped its wings irregularly, trying to regain altitude. I'd
inflicted some good damage, but not enough to vanquish it. The
black, insectoid eyes glared at me with rage.
Even knowing there were more important things at hand, I
couldn't help but wonder, Was it just a program controlling that
freakish monster? Or, like the people from the Dark Territory,
was it an artificial fluctlight…?
"Bshhhuuu!!"
A second cry jolted me out of that thought. Two more gargoyles
had descended from the terrace and were circling around, waiting
for their opportunity to strike.
"Alice, draw your sword! The monsters are coming for you!"
I glanced below and saw that the Integrity Knight was not yet
over her unexplained shock. If they attacked now, she'd be either
skewered by a tail or knocked off the hook.
Should I try to climb the remaining dozen or so feet to the terrace while the gargoyles are still hanging back?I had only one
hook left in my belt—and I suspected the furious beast with the
hook stuck in its stomach would not be kind enough to give it
back.
If the current high-pitched screech was any indication, the
three hissing monsters were getting ready to attack again. I could
potentially be forced to let go of the lifeline chain and jump down
onto a gargoyle if it swooped on Alice. I felt my belt for the chain's
clasp. Then my eyes went wide.
The length of the chain was over fifteen feet. And there were
only about twelve feet between me and the ledge.
"Alice…Alice!!" I bellowed as I slid my sword back into its
sheath. The Integrity Knight twitched and turned her blue eyes to
me at last.
"Hold tight to the chain!"
She frowned, looking confused. I used both hands to grip the
chain connected to her sword sheath and pulled, lifting her off the
hook. She belatedly grabbed the chain and gasped, "Wait…are
you…?"
"If we both survive, I'll give you all the apologies you want
later!!"
I sucked in a deep breath, then yanked—no, hurled—the
knight hanging on the chain upward. Her long golden hair and
white skirt billowed through the air as Alice swung in a semicircle.
"Eyaaaa!!" she shrieked, a surprisingly amateur reaction, as
she passed between the gargoyles on her way to landing on the
ledge above. Landingnot in the active sense, but the passive. I decided to ignore the very unladylike Murgk!that ended her scream.
The exertion of my wild throw hurtled me off the hook I had
been balancing on. If Alice didn't hold firm up on the ledge to
support my weight, we'd both plunge off the side of the building.
Thankfully, the Integrity Knight sensed what needed to be
done: She grabbed the chain with both hands and dug in her feet,
although the first brief moment of weightlessness sent a shiver
down my back.
"Why…youuuuuu!!" she raged, pulling as hard as she could.
Just as Alice had, I flew through the air, and though the impact of
my back slamming against the marble wall knocked the breath
from my lungs, I'd never been as relieved as when I felt the terrace floor under my feet. I could've lain there on the flat surface
forever, until Alice kicked me in the ribs.
"Wh-what in the world were you thinking, you madman?!"
"I didn't have a better choice to…We can talk later! Here they
come!"
I drew my weapon again and pointed the tip at the gargoyle
trio rising toward us. With what little time we had before combat
resumed, I looked left and right to get a grasp of the arena.
The high-wire circus act we'd executed to get up there granted
us a ledge about three feet wide around the building. There was
no decoration, just flat, simple marble jutting horizontally out of
the tower wall. In fact, it literally served as a shelf, and it occurred
to me that this was just meant to be a resting place for the gargoyles.
Since Alice hadn't known about the terrace, I maintained hope
that there might be some special door or window along the wall
nearby, but sadly, there was nothing. The only features in sight
were the other monstrous statues that hadn't come to life yet,
lined up all the way down to the corners of the building. It was a
horrifying thing to see, but fortunately the only ones currently active were the three flying up toward us.
With her confidence returned from being on solid ground,
Alice slid her Osmanthus Blade from its sheath. But that hadn't
solved all her questions. "Yes, I'm sure of it," she rasped. "But
why…would they be here…?"
The gargoyles were back on our level again, but they were
keeping their distance, wary of our weapons. Without taking my
eyes off the hovering creatures, I asked Alice, "What has been
bothering you? Do you know something about those monsters?"
"…Yes…I do," she replied, to my surprise. "They're wicked
beasts that serve the evil sorcerers of the Dark Territory that created them. We know them to be called minions. It is a word in the
sacred tongue that means followeror subordinate."
"Minions…Well, I can tell they're from the Dark Territory
based on their looks—but why would they be lined up on the walls
of the holiest place in the world?"
"That's what I want to know!" Alice grunted. She bit her lip.
"Obviously, they should not be here. It's inconceivable that these
minions would cross the End Mountains without attracting notice, converge on Centoria, only to fly this high and land on Central Cathedral itself. And…"
"And it's completelyimpossible that someone powerful within
the Church might have intentionally placed them there…?" I
asked, filling in the blank. Alice shot me a nasty look but did not
offer a rebuttal.
I looked at the gargoyles hovering close by and asked, "Just
tell me one thing. Are those minions intelligent? Do they understand human words?"
Alice shook her head. "That would truly be impossible. Minions are not living things like goblins or orcs. They are agents
without souls, created by sorcerers who worship the god of darkness, Vecta. The only things they understand are a few simple
commands from their master."
"…Ah," I said, breathing a secret sigh of relief. I knew that I
was overlooking the present danger, but I still couldn't help but
feel resistance at the thought of killing a being with the same kind
of fluctlight as a human.
Cardinal had told me that babies were born only to men and
women whose marriages had been ratified by the Axiom Church
—probably because they had the particular system command that
executed it. The denizens of the Dark Territory had to work the
same way. Therefore, the minions generated by dark arts would
run on the same program code as wild animals, rather than artificial fluctlights.
With that in mind, the hostility I sensed from those insectoid
eyes had the same kind of digital fakeness that I'd experienced
with so many monsters in the SAOdays. Something in their routine switched from hang backto attack, and they beat their wings
and rose in unison.
"Here they come!" I shouted, holding up my sword. The minion with the golden rod stuck in its chest swooped toward me
first, thanks to the accumulated hate value.
This time, it started by swiping at me with its claws rather
than its tail. It wasn't particularly fast, but it'd been so long since
I'd fought a monster that it was hard to judge the distances involved. I was focused on blocking the claws, waiting for a good
opening to strike, when, out of the corner of my eye, I caught
sight of the other two descending on Alice.
"Watch out—the other two are going for you!" I warned.
"Who in the world do you think I am?" she snapped, holding
the Osmanthus Blade at her left side.
With a tremendous slice, the golden blade flashed outward,
practically lighting up the night. It wasn't a feint or a combination
attack, just a single, medium-height slash: In the Aincrad style, it
would be known as Horizontal. But it was so fast and devastating
that I could feel a subconscious cold sweat break out on my skin
from standing next to it. The utter perfection of this single attack
had me entirely overmatched, with no room for defense or evasion, in our battle on the eightieth floor. My years of VRMMO life
had turned me into a permanent proponent of combination attacks, but her single attack had absolutely crushed that conviction.
Alice paused at the end of her swing, and the four arms of the
minions toppled off. Even their trunks, which were well out of her
sword range, silently separated across the chest.
The monsters toppled without even a death scream, filthy
black blood spurting from the clean-cut stumps. Not a single drop
so much as touched Alice, of course. She straightened up, quite
matter-of-fact, and looked over at me as I stood there struggling
with defense.
"Do you need any help?"
"…N-no, I'll manage," I protested. I'd seen all of the minions'
attacks now and sidestepped a claw-and-tail combination attack.
Before the monster could pull away to a safe distance, I executed
a familiar combo of my own.
For a long time, I found it mysterious that the Underworld had
the same sword-skills concept as SAO. After two years of internal
debate, I still hadn't arrived at a completely satisfying answer.
Perhaps the Rath engineers utilized SAO's Seed platform to build
the foundation of their virtual world, but as far as I knew, The
Seed didn't actually have the sword-skills function built in. If it
did, I would've been able to use sword skills when I converted to
Gun Gale Online.
Perhaps wise Cardinal in her hidden library knew the truth,
but I didn't ask her when I had the chance. Cardinal knew that
she and all other Underworldians were living in an experiment
designed by Rath, a reality she grappled with deeply. I couldn't
bring myself to make her confront the fact that everything she
knew was a kind of artifice. And at this point, the reason that
sword skills existed here wasn't that important. As long as they
worked properly and were tools I could use, that was all that mattered.
The sword in my hand glowed blue and engaged in the fourpart attack Horizontal Square.
"Rrraaaahh!" I bellowed. My sword lopped off the minion's
arms and tail, then severed it clean across the chest with the final
swipe, not that I was trying to compete with Alice. The momentum of the attack nearly took me off the ledge, but I managed to
hold still in time, watching the pieces of the monster fall separately through the clouds below.
I figured that if the pieces didn't evaporate into thin air during
the fall, some monk wandering the cathedral grounds below
would eventually get a real scare.
"Ooooh," Alice murmured with the approval of a teacher observing her pupil's exhibition. I swiped my blade left and right be-
fore returning it to the sheath at my side—I'd have preferred to
stash it over my back, but there were no shoulder harnesses in the
armory—and looked at her sidelong. "What?"
"Nothing. It was a rather odd skill—that is all. I daresay you
could attract quite a crowd if you exhibited it on a stage during
the summer solstice festival."
"Gee, thanks."
I had to chuckle to myself from being with such a sardonic
knight. Then a thought manifested, and I asked, "Have you ever
even seen Centoria's solstice festival? If anything, it's a holiday
for the common people. At Swordcraft Academy, hardly any of
the upper noble children went to it…"
There were exceptions to the rule, of course; Sortiliena was a
noble, and she looked forward to the festival every year, I recalled
fondly.
Alice snorted. "Do not take me for one of those nobles with
their airs. Of course…I…have…," she protested, before trailing off
prematurely.
Her mouth was hanging open, her brow knitted in confusion,
searching for some answer. She lifted her bare left hand and
pressed her fingertips to her smooth forehead. Then she shook
her head several times and mumbled, "No…One of the monks
told me…there was such a festival. Integrity Knights are forbidden…from mingling with the common folk…outside of duty…"
"…"
That made sense. The Integrity Knights believed they were
summoned from Heaven by their pontifex, but that wasn't true.
Administrator brought human beings who excelled in wisdom or
strength to the cathedral and performed a Synthesis Ritual that
locked their memories away and turned them into knights.
Therefore, if any knights wandered around the cities below, they
might run across their former family, leading to chaos.
Alice was number thirty, making her the second-newest knight
after Eldrie Synthesis Thirty-One, who'd been converted this
spring. Logic dictated that she'd probably been synthesized
within the past year as well, and yet she'd been taken from Rulid
eight years ago—leaving a blank period of seven years.
What kind of life had Alice lived here during that time? Was
she learning sacred arts as an apprentice sister? Did Administrator have her frozen as a prisoner the whole time?
Perhaps she had actually visited Centoria's summer solstice
festival before being turned into a knight. Maybe that little scrap
of conversation was peeling away at an old memory hidden behind her memory block…
If I kept asking her little questions about the solstice festival,
perhaps I could cause her Piety Module to eject, the way it had
with Eldrie. I opened my mouth to speak, only to quickly clamp it
shut.
Cardinal had said it would take more than just removing the
Piety Module from Alice the Knight to turn her back into Eugeo's
friend Alice Zuberg. I needed the fragment of her "most precious
memory," which Administrator had removed entirely. So if I removed Alice's module now, it would cause her to go entirely unconscious. I didn't want to do that, especially when there was no
saying when the next enemy might attack.
And for one thing, Alice hadn't even blinked when she ran into
Eugeo, her childhood friend for years back in Rulid. That indicated the comprehensiveness of her memory block. It was unlikely that a minor topic like the festival would dislodge the module, and it would probably backfire by making her more suspicious of me.
She watched me mulling this over, a questioning look on her
face, then switched gears and said, "Minion blood brings disease
with it. We must clean it off."
"Hmm? Oh…"
Alice pointed at me, and for the first time, I realized that a few
drops of the monster's blood had landed on my left cheek. I was
going to wipe off the foul-smelling liquid with my sleeve when she
snapped, "Don't do that!"
Stunned, I had to wonder how many years it had been since
someone scolded me that way.
"Ugh, why must all men be this way?" she lamented. "Don't
you at least have a hand towel of some kind?"
I stuffed my hands into my trouser pockets. The right one was
empty, and the left was stuffed with things that weren't a handkerchief. I had to sheepishly admit, "I don't have one…"
"…Forget it. Use this," she said, producing a white handkerchief from somewhere in her skirt and handing it to me with a
look of disgust.
If she was going to treat me like a little boy, I might as well lift
up her skirt and rub my cheeks on it, but I realized she could easily kill me for that. Instead, I gratefully accepted the lace-edged
kerchief and carefully wiped my cheek. It took the minion's blood
clean off, as if the fabric had some sacred art of cleansing cast
upon it.
"Thank you very much," I said, resisting the urge to call her
teacher. I tried to hand back the cloth, but she turned her head
away and said, "You will clean that before you return it, or I will
cut you in two."
Dark days ahead. What could I possibly say to someone like
this to avoid combat once we're back inside the tower, so that I
can reunite with Eugeo?I looked around, imagining my partner
climbing the stairs inside. By then, the light was totally gone from
the sky, replaced by twinkling stars. We'd defeated the minions,
but there was no way to generate new climbing hooks until the
moon rose and gave us its meager resources.
I stuck Alice's handkerchief in my pocket and examined the
terrace. As long as we didn't get any closer to them, it seemed
that the minion statues would remain in stone form along the
wall. If I rushed up to it and swung my sword at a vital spot before it could fully transform into flesh, I could probably beat it,
but there was nothing to be gained by exposing myself to that
danger.
We'd just have to wait here for the next few hours while the
moon rose. I was perfectly happy to sit down and rest for a while,
but I wasn't sure that I could avoid angering Alice for that entire
time. I decided to hold my tongue until I could think of a way to
improve the mood of the testy Integrity Knight.