After they recovered the two discarded swords, Kirito and Leafa
flew back to the landing before the guardian statues at the tree
gate. To Leafa's surprise, Recon had been obediently waiting
there. His face ran through a blinding series of emotions upon
seeing the black-clad spriggan next to her until, finally, he inquired, "So…how did it go?"
Leafa beamed and said, "We're going to conquer the World
Tree. Me, you, and him."
"Oh…Wait—what?!"
He faltered backward, face pale. She patted him on the shoulder, wished him luck, and turned to look at the massive stone
doors. They seemed to be emitting a freezing chill to intimidate
all comers.
However, after having seen a warrior as great as Kirito mercilessly crushed by those guardian knights not long ago, Leafa
didn't think that adding two more to the party would make a difference. She looked over and saw that Kirito was biting his lip, his
face tense.
But suddenly he looked up, as though pondering a sudden
idea.
"You there, Yui?"
Before the words had finished coming out of his mouth, a light
coalesced in midair and the familiar pixie was there. She put her
hands on her hips and pouted, clearly furious.
"What took you so long? I can't appear until you call me,
Papa!"
"Sorry, sorry. Things were busy."
He grinned apologetically and offered his palm to the pixie,
who sat down on it. In a flash, Recon craned his neck over to examine her with rabid curiosity.
"W-wow, is this a Private Pixie?! I've never seen one before!
Holy cow, she's so cute!!"
Yui pulled back in concern, eyes wide. "Wh-who is this person?!"
"Come on, you're scaring her," Leafa scolded Recon, pulling
him away by the ear. "You don't have to worry about him, he's not
dangerous."
"Um…okay," Kirito said, blinking in surprise. He turned back
to Yui. "So, did you learn anything from that battle?"
"Yes," she replied, an adorably serious look on her little face.
"Those guardian monsters aren't all that impressive in terms of
stats—it's their appearance patterns that are dangerous. The
closer to the gate you got, the faster they spawned. At the closest
point, they were appearing twelve per second. I can only assume
it was designed to be impossible…"
"Hmm." Kirito nodded, his face severe. "You wouldn't notice
because each individual guardian goes down in a hit or two, but
as a total, they add up to an unbeatable, titanic boss. They're
going to tantalize the player base and make it virtually impossible, but just easy enough to keep them interested. That'll make
this very tough…"
"But, Papa, your skill levels are also off the charts. With your
instantaneous bursts of strength, it might be possible."
". . ."
Kirito lapsed into silence again, then looked at last to Leafa.
"I'm sorry. Can I ask you to indulge me one last time? I know
it would be easier to find more people or search for another way,
rather than attempting this madness again. But…I just have a bad
feeling. Like we're running out of time…"
His suggestion gave Leafa the momentary idea to send a message to the Lord's Mansion in Swilvane. Lady Sakuya might be
able to send the highest-level sylphs to assist their battle.
But she bit her lip and quickly abandoned the idea. The image
of the undine party down in Jotunheim early that morning
flooded into her mind. They'd tried to hunt an unresisting Deviant God against Leafa's pleas, prioritizing efficiency and safety.
Her friend Sakuya would not think the same way as the
undines, of course. But she was the leader of their people and
bore great responsibility. Her position demanded commonsense
decisions for the sake of the entire race. Even if they did eventually make an attempt on the World Tree, it would only be after
ample preparations. They would not fly out en masse, prepped for
the slaughter, on Leafa's request alone.
After a brief silence, she looked up and stated clearly, "All
right. Let's try it one more time. I'll do anything I can to help…
and so will he."
"Awww…"
She elbowed Recon in the ribs and he exhibited his very best
droopy-eyebrowed whimper. But he grudgingly admitted that he
and Leafa were of one body and mind, nodding in resignation.
The stone doors opened with a rumbling that seemed to issue
from the very center of the earth. Leafa's wings trembled slightly
at the eerie aura that seemed to flow from the space beyond.
She'd been in a blind haste when racing after Kirito earlier, but
standing in front of it now, she had to admit there was a palpable
feeling of pressure exuding from the place.
But on the inside, she was surprisingly calm.
She was in the eye of the storm. Both here and in the real
world, everything was loudly and alarmingly changing around
her. She had no idea where it was all taking her. All she could do
was fly, to the best of her ability, toward the light on the horizon.
Kirito, Leafa, and Recon drew their blades. Along with Yui,
four pairs of eyes examined one another. Wings were spread.
"…Let's go!!"
Kirito signaled the charge, and they rose as one, flying into the
dome.
Their plan called for Kirito to begin racing upward as fast as he
could toward the gate in the center of the dome. Leafa and Recon
would remain near the floor and ready their healing spells.
She could see the glowing surfaces on the ceiling begin to drip
downward into gigantic white shapes. They bore down on Kirito,
screeching in that horrible way. When the first wave of knights
met the now-tiny spriggan in midair, a rumbling blast of light
shook the dome.
Upon seeing several of the giants fall to pieces, split through
the torso, Recon murmured, "…Wow."
The force of his blade was indeed formidable. But the sight of
what was happening beyond Kirito's mad dash sent chills
throughout Leafa's body.
There were just too many of them. The sheer density of the
forces pouring out of the latticed ceiling was beyond any scale of
game balance. Even the dungeons in Jotunheim, the most diabolical zone in all of ALO, wouldn't feature spawn rates anywhere
near this pace.
The guardian knights bunched up into packs and dashed
themselves against Kirito in roiling waves. Each collision resulted
in a bright flash, after which the large white bodies would fall to
pieces like snow. But for every one vanquished, three more appeared.
When he was halfway to the gate, Kirito had lost about 10 percent of his hit points. Leafa and Recon didn't miss a beat in unleashing the healing magic they'd kept stored for that moment.
Blue light surrounded Kirito's body, and his gauge began to refill.
But when the spell reached him, something terrible happened.
The lowest-flying pack of guardian knights screeched in unison and turned toward them.
"Aaah…" Recon gasped in panic.
Leafa could feel the gaze behind their mirror masks directed at
her. She clenched her teeth.
Leafa and Recon agreed not to target Kirito with anything
other than healing spells to minimize the notice they might draw.
Normally, monsters didn't pounce unless a player moved into
their response zone, or attacked them with ranged weapons or
spells.
But these guardians ran on a different algorithm than the
monsters outside, one more dangerous and pernicious. If they
could target even players casting support spells, then the orthodox system—attackers in the front, healers in the back—meant
nothing.
The half-dozen knights ignored Leafa's silent plea to buzz off
and descended on multiple pairs of wings. They carried enormous
swords, each easily taller than her, that glinted with a hungry
light.
She turned to Recon and shouted, "I'll draw them away—just
keep healing!"
And without waiting for an answer, she made to rise. But
Recon, who had always obeyed her commands in battle, grabbed
her hand. When she turned around in shock, his voice was trembling, but his eyes were hard.
"Leafa…I don't understand everything that's going on here,
but it's important to you, right?"
"That's right. This time, it's not just a game."
"I don't think I can match up to that spriggan…but I'll find a
way to deal with those guardians."
Recon leaped into the air, controller stick in his hand. And as
Leafa watched, dumbfounded, he flew off, charging directly into
the swarm of knights.
"Y-you idiot…"
They were far beyond his ability, but it was too late for her to
make up the distance by now. Meanwhile, across the dome, Kirito's HP bar was inching back down from its formerly full position. Leafa had no choice but to start chanting a healing spell.
Even as she spoke the familiar words, she couldn't help but keep
a nervous eye on Recon.
Recon unleashed the area-effect wind spell he'd been saving
directly into the cloud of guardian knights. Multiple green blades
fanned out and sliced through the onrushing knights. Their HP
bars hardly took a dent, but it did have the effect of drawing all of
their attention to him.
The white giants roared with distorted voices and closed in on
the tiny green speck that dared to challenge them. Recon swished
and darted like a leaf blown in a gale, just barely retreating out of
the range of their swings. They raced after him.
Leafa finished casting and hurled her spell at Kirito, who was
fighting far above. Again, it drew the notice of several guardians,
who descended after her. This fresh group merged with the
swarm following Recon, growing the white cloud to twice its size.
Recon had never been an expert at air battles, but he showed
considerable concentration in evading the onslaught of swords.
The occasional sword tip clipped his body, but no critical blows
had swallowed up his HP yet.
"…Recon…"
Leafa was struck by the desperate effort of his flight, but it
clearly would not last forever. Each time she cast a healing spell
on Kirito, the number of knights descending on them grew.
Eventually, the pursuing guardians split into two groups and
prepared to execute a pincer attack on Recon. One among the
rain of blows caught him square in the back, smashing him
through the air.
"That's enough, Recon! Flee to the outside!" she screamed, unable to watch anymore. As long as the battle still raged inside,
anyone who left the arena could not return. She'd just have to do
her best to hold them off. Leafa took to the air, preparing another
healing spell.
But at that moment, Recon turned back to her. Leafa's wings
stopped when she saw the purposeful smile on his face.
Despite the many sword blows, Recon began casting a new
spell. His body glowed with a deep purple light.
"…?!"
Leafa held her breath, realizing that it was the shine of dark
magic. A complex magical sigil began to form in midair, and
based on its size, it must have been a high-level spell. Dark magic
was so rare around sylph lands that she had no idea what effect
this one might have.
The sigil unfolded again and again, growing ever larger, until it
finally engulfed all of the attacking knights. For an instant, the
complex runes and figures contracted— then shone with an overwhelming light.
"Ah—!!"
Leafa had to turn her face from the blinding glow. An explosion so great it sounded like the earth splitting apart shot through
the entire dome.
It took a full second for her eyesight to recover from pure
white. Leafa looked toward the center of the explosion with her
hands up for shielding, and what she saw left her speechless. The
entire pack of tightly clustered knights was gone without a trace.
Only a few wisps of purple light remained.
It was an unbelievable blast. There were no wind-magic area
spells that powerful—not even any fire spells. Leafa cheered even
as she wondered how Recon had acquired this incredible ace up
his sleeve. A few more of those, and they might just be able to
reach the gate after all. She prepared to cast a healing spell on
him—and froze again.
Recon was nowhere to be seen in the last remnants of the explosion. There was only a tiny green Remain Light floating in the
air.
"A…self-destruct spell…?" she wondered aloud. But then she
remembered once hearing about such a dark magic spell long
ago. It was practically a forbidden art—in exchange for its power,
the ordinary death penalty was several times worse.
After a few moments of silence, Leafa shut her eyes tight. It
was just a game, just experience points, but the effort and intent
Recon had expended for their sake was true sacrifice. They could
not retreat now. She opened her eyes again and looked up.
What she saw turned her legs to jelly.
The ceiling of the dome was now one entire mass of squirming, teeming white shapes.
The tiny black dot that was Kirito was close, so close to the
top. With each flash of his sword, more knights fell to pieces, but
it was like trying to dig a hole in a massive sand dune with but a
needle. The wall of white flesh would give way for a brief moment, only to be filled just as quickly.
"Raaahhh!!"
Leafa could just barely hear Kirito's bloodcurdling roar. She
raised her hands to cast a healing spell, but let them drop almost
immediately.
"We can't, Big Brother…It's just too much…"
To be honest, she'd never taken Kirito's story about Asuna's
soul being trapped in this game at face value. This was a game, a
world to be enjoyed. Her brain couldn't help but reject the idea
that this wonderful place shared anything in common with the
nightmare of SAO.
But now, for the first time, Leafa began to sense a kind of malice within the system. Some unseen force, which was supposedly
keeping everything in a fair balance, was wickedly, cruelly swinging a bloody scythe at the players' necks within this arena. There
was no way to overcome this trap.
A low, twisted sound echoed throughout the dome like a
chanted curse. Some of the guardian knights fell still, incanting a
spell with their left arms extended. It was the Rain of Arrows
spell that had stopped Kirito in his tracks the first time. The arrows caused enough of a stun effect for the sword blows to land
next.
Leafa tensed up, imagining the sight of Kirito's body skewered
by countless blades.
Suddenly, a roil of voices swept up from behind Leafa, over
her vapid wings.
"Huh…?!"
She turned to see a party of sylph warriors, clad in gleaming
new-green metal, pouring through the door in tight formation.
They were outfitted with full sets of what appeared to be ancient weapons, or something similar. Like a storm gust in the
spring, they rushed past Leafa and headed straight for the dome's
ceiling. There must have been at least fifty of them.
Stunned into silence, Leafa could only watch closely enough to
call up their cursors as they passed. She couldn't see faces behind
the heavy visors, but all the names that appeared on the cursors
were the best of the best in sylph territory. Upon hearing their
roar, the guardian knights preparing their spells stopped and
began to shift tactics.
Leafa's back crawled with chills somewhere between excitement and overwhelming awe. But they were not the only ones
coming to tackle the dome.
A few seconds after the last members of the sylph raid party
came through the door, more shouts echoed through, accompanied by the thunderbolt roars of great beasts.
This new group was of much smaller number than the sylphs,
perhaps ten in all. Individually, however, they were much larger.
"Dragons!" Leafa exclaimed.
It was a pack of dragons with gray scales, each the size of several players lined up head to foot. As proof that these creatures
were not wild, the dragons were outfitted with gleaming golden
armor on their foreheads, chests, and the fronts of their wings.
Pairs of silver chains extended from the head armor as reins,
which the riders on the beasts's saddles gripped. These dragon
knights had brand-new armor of their own, but there was no
missing the triangular ears or the long, sinewy tails extending out
the backs of their leggings.
These were dragoons, the ultimate fighting force of the cait
siths. The legendary warriors were kept hidden from the public—
there wasn't even a screenshot floating about on the Internet. But
here they were, in the flesh.
Leafa's wings were at full extension, the very blood in her
veins seeming to dance with elation. Suddenly, she heard someone call out from behind her.
"Sorry it took so long."
She turned around to see Lady Sakuya, leader of the sylphs, in
her wooden geta sandals and kimono. Next to her was Lady Alicia
Rue of the cait siths, whose ears flapped as she said, "So sorry. It
took every member of the leprechaun blacksmith's guild until just
now to finish up all the equipment and dragon armor. We spent
all the money the spriggan gave us, plus all of our vault savings!"
"Meaning that if this fails, both of our races are bankrupt,"
Sakuya noted coolly, arms crossed.
They came. And so fast, knowing that both of them risked los-
ing their prestigious positions. This joint force between two races
so transcended the typical MMORPG battle over resources and
risk management that surely even the game developers had never
expected it to happen.
"Thank you…thank you both," Leafa said, her voice trembling.
There really are things in this world more important than rules
and manners, she told herself, heart soaring. There was nothing
more to say.
Both leaders told her the time for thanks was later. They
turned to survey the ceiling of the dome with severe skepticism.
Sakuya loudly snapped her fan shut.
"Let us join the fray!"
All three nodded in agreement and leaped into the air. Above
them, several groups of white guardians were dripping down
from the ceiling to meet the charging sylph platoon. High in the
center, Kirito was still locked in fierce battle, but he seemed to
have noticed the cavalry's arrival, because he stopped attempting
to rise for a moment, keeping his distance from the ceiling.
Alicia Rue flew directly to the center of the chamber and raised
her hand, shouting in a clear (but precious) voice:
"Dragoons! Prepare breath attack!"
The ten dragon knights formed a wide, hovering circle around
the three of them. The dragons spread their wings wide and
curved their necks into S shapes, orange flickers of fire visible behind their deadly fangs.
Next, Sakuya raised her lacquered fan.
"Sylphs, prepare your extra attacks!"
The tight pack of warriors held their swords overhead as they
charged. The blades were enveloped by a lattice pattern of emerald-green light.
A large congregation of the guardian knights, so dense they resembled white maggots, descended upon them with hideous
screeches. Alicia Rue waited for the creatures to get as close as
possible, biting her lip with a long canine, then finally raised her
hand and barked another order.
"Unleash fire breath!"
All ten dragons exhaled gouts of hellfire at once. Ten crimson
pillars shot through the air, fanned out around the sylph warriors
and Kirito, and blasted into the cloud of guardians.
A bright flash illuminated the dome. In the next moment,
bulging fireballs exploded one after another, linking together into
a tremendous wall of flame. The world was rocked with a massive
roar. Guardian knights were blown to shreds by the force of the
blast, adding their own little white flames as they burned away.
But the seemingly infinite wall of white simply formed another
swarm that recklessly pushed its way through the flames. It
fanned out wide like a spreading liquid, threatening to swallow
Kirito whole.
Just before the blob of white could attack, Sakuya swung her
fan down and shouted, "Unleash Fenrir Storm!!"
With perfect precision, the sylph platoon thrust their swords
as one. Green lightning pulsed through fifty blades and then shot
through the air to pierce the cloud of knights.
Everything was again awash in white light. There was no explosion this time, but instead thick bolts of ravenous lightning
racing through the enemy, churning them to bits.
Twice decimated, the center part of the wall of guardian
knights did indeed seem to be hollowing out. But like a liquid
flowing back into shape, that depression was filling in from the
sides.
This was their only chance, Leafa knew. She drew her long
katana and darted forward. The two leaders had come to the
same conclusion. Sakuya's voice cracked through the clearing like
a whip.
"All units, charge!!"
It was undoubtedly the largest battle ever fought in Alfheim. The
periodic bursts of fire breath from the rear set the guardians
aflame and falling to the earth. The sylph party worked in perfect
formation like a single projectile, gouging great holes in the wall
of flesh with their wave of deadly swords.
Standing at the front of that projectile was the tiny black form
of the spriggan. His equipment was clearly inferior to the sylphs',
but the holy speed with which he whipped his giant sword around
meant that anything coming into contact with him burst into
smithereens.
Leafa raced through a small aperture in the center of the sylph
formation to take position directly behind Kirito. She used her
katana to deflect an attack bearing down on his back, plunging
the long blade into the glowing white guardian beneath its mirrored mask. With a vigorous flip of her wrists, she knocked the
head clean off. Its body burned with white flames.
Kirito took a look behind him and mouthed, Sugu—watch my
back!
I've got you covered! she indicated with a glance, turning to
stand back-to-back with him. They stayed that way, spinning
round and round, slashing and hacking at the oncoming knights.
The giant guardians would not be so easy in a one-on-one
fight. But standing next to Kirito and matching his speed, Leafa
felt the enemy moving slower and slower. Or was her mind just
working faster? It felt as though all of the stimuli from all of her
senses were focused at one single point in the center of her brain.
This was a sensation she'd only noticed a few times before, during
kendo competitions.
It was as though she and Kirito were one. All of her nerves and
brain cells were connected and racing with pale electronic pulses.
She knew where Kirito was moving behind her without seeing
him. As they spun together, Leafa struck the head off the
guardian knight Kirito had been sparring with, while he sank his
sword directly into the wound she'd made in the enemy she'd just
left.
Kirito, Leafa, the sylphs, and the dragoons all formed one
being of pure energy that melted, gouged, and burst through the
limitless flood of knights. Though the enemy might be endless,
the spatial limits of the dome were fixed. As long as they kept
proceeding forward, their moment of victory would come.
"Seyaaa!" Leafa cried, splitting a guardian's body straight
down the middle. For an instant, through its crumbling corpse,
she saw the ceiling.
"Raah!"
Kirito broke away from Leafa's back and plunged through the
gap in the wall of flesh like a bolt of black lightning. The last line
of guardian knight defense roared with hatred and closed in on
all sides. There were at least thirty of them.
"Kirito!!"
On pure instinct, Leafa pulled back her sword and hurled it
with all her might at Kirito's left hand. The light green hilt of the
spinning katana fit right into his palm, as though it were being
pulled to it.
"Rraaaahh!!"
With a bellow that seemed to shake the entire dome, he alternated swipes of the blades, greatsword in his right hand and
katana in his left.
A slash down from the right. A slice up from the left. The two
shining swords traced slightly different angles each time, until
they formed a glowing circle of white like that of the corona
around a solar eclipse. The guardian knights were torn to ribbons
by dozens of light-speed slashes, their remains littering the air.
Beyond the quivering ring of End Flames, she could see it
clearly now. Right in the center of the vine-crossed ceiling of the
dome was the round door, split into four sections. The final gate
of Alfheim, leading through the trunk of the World Tree to the
palace seated at its crown.
The black figure left a trail of light as he raced for the gate. He
was through at last.
Before Leafa's eyes, countless layers of guardian knights
surged forward and buried the hole that had been there just an
instant before. Sakuya had seen Kirito break through the line of
defense and shouted an order:
"All units, turn back and disengage!"
Leafa joined the sylph squad and headed into a dive as the
dragons' fire breath protected their backs. For an instant, she
looked back at the ceiling. She couldn't see Kirito for the wall of
guardians, but in her mind's eye, he flew higher, ever higher, toward the heights that no one had yet reached.
Fly—fly—fly as far as you can! Through the tree, through the
sky, to the center of the world!
I closed the final distance so fast, I thought my brain cells
would fry.
Before my eyes was the final round gate. Four stone slabs met
in the center to form a cross shape. And beyond them—Asuna.
Along with the half of my soul that had been left behind in that
fateful realm.
From behind me came a scream of hatred from the guardian
knights. I looked back, sensing their pursuit. There were fresh
knights being born without end from the glowing apertures
around the gate, and they flew down to intercept me.
But I was faster. I could reach out and touch the gate now.
And yet…
"It won't open!" I exclaimed with shock.
The gate would not open. I'd assumed the heavy, evil-looking
door would simply slide open once I got close enough, but the intersecting cracks showed no signs of budging.
It was too late to slow down. I held my right sword at my side,
preparing to smash my way through the stone wall if it came to
that.
The next instant, I slammed into the gate with astonishing
force. The tip of the sword sent sparks flying with the impact, but
there wasn't the slightest sign of a scratch on the stone surface.
"Yui, what's going on?!" I screamed in the chaos. Was it not
enough just to break through the guardian knights? Did I need a
special item or some other condition?
I prepared to swing again out of instinct, until Yui popped out
of my shirt pocket with a jingle. She touched the stone door of the
gate with her tiny hand.
"Papa," she turned to me, speaking quickly, "this door isn't
locked with a quest-related conditional! It's controlled by a system admin switch, nothing more."
"Wh-what does that mean?!"
"It means…nothing a player can do will open this door!"
"Wha…"
I was at a loss for words.
The grand quest at the center of the game—to reach the city
atop the World Tree and be reborn as true fairies—was nothing
more than a giant carrot, endlessly dangled out of reach of the
game's player base? So not only was this battle's difficulty set to
the extreme, the door was locked by nothing more than the will of
the game manager…?
I felt my body go limp. The roars of the guardian knights bearing down washed over me, but I didn't even have the will to swing
my sword anymore.
I was so close, Asuna, so close…I almost reached you…Will
that little sliver of warmth you dropped to me be the last time we
ever touch?
No, wait. Wasn't that…?
My eyes flew open. I stuck a hand in my waist pocket. Yes! The
little card. Yui had called it a system access code…
"Yui, use this!"
I stuck the silver card in her face. Her eyes went wide and she
nodded.
Yui brushed the card with one of her little hands. A few lines of
light ran across the card and into her.
"I'm copying the code!" she shouted and slapped the surface of
the gate with both hands.
I had to squint at the flash. Blue lines of light spread out from
the spots Yui touched, and in moments, the entire gate glowed
blindingly bright.
"It's copying! Grab hold, Papa!"
I touched her little hand with my fingertips. The lines of light
passed through Yui and flowed into me.
Suddenly, I heard the scream of the guardian knights right behind me. I had barely even time to flinch before several of their
massive swords bore down. But they passed right through me, as
though the swords had no physical form. But in truth, it was I
who was dematerializing. My body was fading away, blending
with the light.
"—!!"
I felt a sudden tug pulling me forward. Yui and I became a
flow of data, melting into the glowing white screen that had been
the gate.
My mind was blank for only an instant.
I shook my head and blinked a few times, fighting off the aftereffects of teleportation. This was similar to the symptoms of a
teleport crystal back in Aincrad, but unlike the ever-present bustle of any city's teleport square, I had landed in the midst of absolute silence.
I slowly rose from a kneeling crouch. Yui greeted me, looking
nervous. She was not a pixie anymore, but her original ten-yearold form.
"Are you all right, Papa?"
"Yeah. Where are we…?"
I looked around. It was a very…strange place. Unlike the detailed and beautiful environs of Swilvane and Alne, which fit into
the expectations of what a modern game looked like, this location
was nothing but flat white surfaces with no details or textures
whatsoever.
We seemed to be in the middle of a long hallway. It was not
straight, but curved gently to the right. I looked behind me and
saw a mirrored bend in the other direction. We were in a very
long curve, or perhaps even a circle.
"I don't know. This place doesn't fall within the map info Nav
Pixies have access to," Yui said, troubled.
"Can you tell where Asuna is?" I asked. She shut her eyes, and
then almost instantly nodded.
"Yes, she's close—very close. Above us…this way."
She ran off silently, her bare legs flashing out of the familiar
white dress. I put my greatsword over my back and hurried after
her. The katana I'd been holding in my left hand was gone. When
I teleported, it must have been automatically returned to Leafa,
its proper owner. If she hadn't thrown it to me when she did, I
would never have made it to the gate. I shut my eyes and said a
silent word of thanks to the physical memory of its hilt in the
palm of my hand.
After most of a minute running after Yui, a square door came
into view on the left, the outer side of the curve. It, too, had no visual features whatsoever.
"We can go up from here."
I stopped next to Yui and took a glance at the side of the door
—and froze.
There were two triangular buttons on the wall, one pointing up
and one pointing down. I'd never seen their like in the game, but
they were a familiar sight in the real world: elevator buttons.
I grimaced, suddenly feeling as though my battle armor and
massive sword were completely out of place here. Except…it was
this place that was strange. If these buttons meant what they appeared to signify, we were not within the game world. In that
case, where were we?
That question left my mind as quickly as it formed. It didn't
matter. Asuna was here.
I reached out and hit the upper arrow button without hesitation. The door binged and slid open, revealing a small, boxshaped chamber. Yui and I walked inside and turned around to
find that there was indeed a panel of control buttons on the wall.
Assuming the glowing one marked our current location, there
were two floors above us. After a brief moment of indecision, I
pushed the top button.
The chime sounded again and the door closed. I felt the unmistakable rising sensation of an elevator.
It stopped just as quickly. The door opened to reveal another
curved hallway, identical to the one before. I turned to Yui, who
was squeezing my hand.
"Is this the right level?"
"Yes. We're very close…She's just over there," Yui replied,
pulling me onward.
We raced down the hallway for another minute, my heart beating faster and faster. Eventually we came to a door on the inner
wall of the hallway, but Yui ran right past it without a glance.
After a few more moments, she stopped at a nondescript point in
the middle of the hall.
"…What is it?"
"There's a passage…through here," she murmured, rubbing
the featureless outer wall. Her hand stopped still, and just as with
the stone gate, blue lines of light began to run through the wall
where she touched, wriggling away at right angles.
Thicker lines suddenly cut out a square piece of the wall, and
with a brief buzz, it disappeared completely. Just as Yui had said,
there was another plain white hallway extending out from the intersection.
The little girl headed down the new hallway silently, then sped
up and broke into a run. Her young face was dark with desperation and haste. Asuna had to be near.
Faster, faster. It was the only thing on my mind as we raced
down the corridor. Eventually it came to an end, a square door
blocking our progress. Yui didn't bother to slow down, extending
a hand to shove the door open.
" !!"
We were greeted by a massive setting sun.
The world was surrounded by endless sunset. I had trouble
processing what I was seeing at first, until I realized that I was
standing at an unfathomably high altitude. The horizon was
clearly curved from this vantage point. The wind howled in my
ears.
I couldn't help but remember a similar moment, another view
of infinite sunset as I sat side by side with Asuna, watching the
end of Aincrad. Her voice echoed in my ears.
We'll always be together.
"Yeah—that's right. I'm back," I muttered, looking at my feet.
It wasn't a platform of crystal, but a frightfully thick tree branch.
Finally my vision regained its proper sense of scale against the
endless field of deep red. Overhead, leafy branches stretched out
in all directions, as though supporting the very heavens above.
Below were more and more branches, and past them was a thin
layer of clouds. Far, far beyond that, I could see the faint reflection of a river surface as it wound through rolling fields.
I was on top of the World Tree. The peak of the world. The
place that Leafa…that Suguha had dreamed of for so long.
But…
I slowly turned back. The giant wall that was the trunk of the
tree stretched up and far away until it finally separated into more
branches.
"There's no city in the sky…" I murmured. There was only
those bland white corridors. They were not meant to be the city
atop the tree, obviously. And if the setup for the main quest was
correct, there would have been an in-game event after breaching
the dome. But I didn't even get a musical fanfare, much less any
explanation.
It was all an empty gift box. Past the enticing wrapping paper
and ribbon, it was empty lies. How could I explain this to Leafa,
after all of her dreams of being reborn as a high fairy?
"This is unforgivable…" I muttered at the unseen force or person overseeing this world. Something pulled at my right arm. Yui
was looking up at me with concern.
"Oh, right. Let's go."
We could settle this once Asuna was safe. It was the only reason I was here, after all.
The large branch stretched ahead toward the sunset. An artificial path was carved into the center of the wood. What lay ahead
was obscured by the growth of leaves, but through them I could
see something gleaming and golden catching the light of the sun.
We took off running toward it.
Several minutes of incendiary haste and desperation passed,
driven by the thought that my long-awaited moment would arrive
in just a matter of seconds. It seemed as though my sense of time
was lengthening, each tick of the clock an eternity.
We pushed through the colorful, oddly shaped leaves and on-
ward down the path. Little staircases went up and down each vertical undulation of the branch; I impatiently fluttered my wings
and leaped them in a single bound.
Eventually the source of the golden light became clear. It was a
grid of golden bars—no, a birdcage.
It was the classic round birdcage shape, tapering up to connect
to a different branch overhead that ran parallel to ours. The only
difference was its massive size. This was much too large to hold
even a bird of prey, much less little songbirds. No, the cage was
meant for something else.
I thought back to what Agil had said in his café, in a scene that
felt like years ago at this point. Five players rode on each other's
shoulders in an attempt to scale the World Tree, and they took a
screenshot at the height of their flight. The picture showed a mysterious giant birdcage with a girl inside. There's no doubt. Asuna
—Asuna's in that thing.
There was a strength and an urgency of certainty in Yui's tugging. We practically ran on the air, leaping down the final staircase.
The branch grew much thinner as it approached the cage,
coming to a tapered end where it reached the floor level. The interior of the golden birdcage was clearly visible now. The tiled floor
was decorated with one large tree planter, along with a number of
small pots with flowers of various types. In the center was a large
canopy bed. To its side, a white table with a tall-backed chair.
And seated on that chair, her hands folded and head lowered to
the table in apparent prayer, was a girl.
Long, straight hair. A thin dress much like Yui's. Elegant, slender wings growing from her back. All shining red with the light of
the sinking sun.
Her face was shrouded in shadows, but I knew who it was. I'd
never mistake her. The magnetism of our souls was so strong it
was practically visible, sparking with light in the space that separated us.
In that moment, that girl—Asuna—raised her head.
My deep, unending love had turned that familiar image into
one beaming with sublime radiance. Her face was sometimes as
finely beautiful as a sharpened blade, sometimes friendly with a
mischievous warmth, but always at my side during the tragically
short days we spent together. A look of shock ran through that familiar face, and her hands rose to her mouth. Her large hazel eyes
rippled with a light that quickly turned into tears sitting upon her
eyelashes.
I bounded forward the last several steps and whispered with a
voice so weak it could not be heard.
"…Asuna."
At the same time, Yui cried, "Mama…Mama!!"
The very end of the branch intersected the cage, and there
stood a door made of a tighter pattern of golden bars than the
rest, complete with a small metal plate that appeared to be the
lock. The door was closed, but Yui did not bother to slow down as
she pulled me forward, swinging her right hand across her body.
It was soon infused with a blue glow.
She swung her glowing hand back to the right, and the entire
metal door and its plate blew off, vanishing in a flash of light.
Yui let go of my hand and threw her arms wide. "Mama!!"
She raced into the open cage.
Asuna leaped up so fast she knocked the chair backward. She
had opened her arms as well, and the words came clearly from
her trembling lips.
"Yui!!"
The little girl leaped and buried her face in Asuna's chest.
Their long hair entwined, brown and black, glittering in the setting sun.
Yui and Asuna shared a fierce embrace, rubbing cheek to
cheek, calling each other's name just to be certain it was truly the
other.
"Mama…"
"Yui…Yui…"
The tears spilled from their eyes, sparkling like fire with the
light of the sun before disappearing into the air.
I eased out of my run and walked over, stopping several steps
away from Asuna. She raised her head, blinked a few tears away,
and looked right at me.
Just like the other time, I couldn't move. If I approached any
closer, reached out to touch her, she might vanish into thin air.
And I didn't look anything like I did back then. My tanned spriggan skin and spiky hair were not at all like the old Kirito. All I
could do was stare at her, trying to hold in my tears.
But just as she did before, Asuna spoke, calling my name.
"Kirito."
After a moment of silence, I called her name in return.
"…Asuna."
I took the last two steps forward, opening my arms and surrounding her fragile body, squeezing Yui between the two of us.
My nostrils were full of her familiar scent, and my body was met
with her familiar warmth.
"…I'm sorry it took so long," I moaned in a trembling voice,
but Asuna just stared directly into my eyes.
"No, I knew you'd find me. I knew you'd come to save me…"
No other words were needed. Asuna and I closed our eyes and
each buried our face in the other's shoulder. Asuna's arms encircled my back and clung tight. Yui panted happily in between us.
It's all better now, I thought.
If this was to be my final moment, I would gladly burn away
into nothing without a single regret. My life was meant to end
with that world. I'd kept it going just so I could reach this instant
and be complete…
No, that's not right. This is where it starts. Now the world of
swords and battle is finally over, and we can start a journey together in a new world—reality.
I raised my head.
"C'mon. Let's go back to the real world."
After our embrace, Asuna and I still held hands, and Yui clung to
Asuna's other arm. I looked down at her.
"Yui, can you manage to log Asuna out from here?"
She squinted and frowned for a moment, then shook her head.
"Mama's current status is tied down by some complicated
code. I'll need a system console to undo it."
"A console," I repeated doubtfully.
Asuna's voice was tense. "I'm pretty sure I saw something like
that on the bottom floor of the laboratory. Oh, the lab is the—"
"The white empty corridor?"
"Yes. You came here through there?"
"Yeah," I nodded. Asuna looked pensive.
"Were there any…weird things?"
"No, I didn't see anything on the way…"
"Well…there might be some of Sugou's henchmen lurking
around. I just hope your sword will work on them!"
"Wait—Sugou?!" Shock, and then understanding, flooded
through me. "This is…Sugou's doing? He locked you in here?"
"Yes, but that's not all. He's doing terrible things here…"
Asuna's face was dark with a deep rage, but she shook her
head and stopped there.
"I'll tell you the rest when we get back to reality. Sugou's not at
the office right now, as I understand it. We have to use this opportunity to crack the server and free everyone…Let's go."
I had plenty of questions to ask, but bringing Asuna back took
priority over anything else. I nodded and spun around.
Asuna picked up Yui and I grabbed her hand, jogging back toward the blasted-out door frame. After a few steps I was stooping
over to fit through the frame, and that was when it happened.
Someone was watching.
I felt a nasty tingling in the back of my neck. It was the exact
same feeling I got in SAO when I was targeted, not by a monster
but by another player with the orange cursor of a murderer.
Instantly, I let go of Asuna and put my hand on my sword.
Just as I was pulling the hilt, the birdcage was doused in liquid.
Then, with a deep-pitched splash, a dark, sticky substance completely covered us.
But that wasn't quite it; I could breathe, but the act was laborious. When I tried to move, there was an incredible pressure, like
being stuck in a thick, viscous fluid. My body was crushingly
heavy. It was agony just to stand.
At the same time, the color was draining from the world. The
deep red of the sunset that had filled the cage was turning into
blackness before my eyes.
"Wh-what is this?" Asuna shouted. Her voice was warped as
though compressed by incredible water pressure.
Deeply disturbed by this phenomenon, I tried to spin around
and hold Asuna and Yui safely at my side—but my body would
not cooperate. The sheer adhesion of the air clung to me as
though of its own malevolent will.
In time, the entire world was total darkness. But…that also
wasn't entirely true. I could clearly see Asuna's and Yui's white
dresses. It was as though every other surface of the world had
been painted a perfect black.
I gritted my teeth and focused on moving my right hand. The
bars of the cage were right next to me. I tried to grab one and pull
myself free of the immobilizing space, but my outstretched hand
touched nothing at all.
It wasn't just an illusion. We had been plunged into an unknown world of darkness.
"Yui—"
I was going to ask her for an explanation, but she suddenly
writhed in agony within Asuna's arms and screamed.
"Aaah! Papa, Mama…Be careful! Something…bad is—"
But before she could finish, purple light crawled across her
small body. She flashed brightly—and then Asuna's arms were
empty.