The floating science facility Ocean Turtle, a mammoth structure
nearly a quarter mile long and over an eighth of a mile wide, consisted of twelve decks, also known as levels.
By comparison, the world's largest cruise ship, Oasis of the
Seas, was smaller and had eighteen decks—so there was an air of
even greater luxury on the Ocean Turtle. However, given that its
purpose was not leisure but oceanic scientific research, it made
sense that the various observational and analytical devices would
need extra room. Asuna certainly wasn't going to complain about
having more space overhead.
The first deck under the waterline was the float deck; the second, just above it, was the mechanical deck; and decks three
through eight were dedicated to various types of research: marine
biology, deep-sea resources, plate structure, and so on. The ninth
and tenth decks were for cabins; the eleventh was for recreation:
sporting lounges, gyms, and a pool; and the twelfth and top deck
contained radars, antennas, and observation points.
Officially, the Ocean Turtlebelonged to JAMSTEC, the Japan
Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology, but that was
only half the truth. As the craft was propelled by a domestically
produced nuclear power reactor, it had to be constructed with the
help of the Self-Defense Force, and it continued to be manned by
SDF soldiers at all times for security now that it was operational.
Beyond that, the composite titanium-alloy pillar that ran
through the center of the ship—the Main Shaft—was completely
under SDF jurisdiction, where they conducted top-secret research
that had nothing to do with marine science. They were replicating
newborn souls and growing them within a virtual environment in
an attempt to build the world's first true bottom-up artificial intelligence: Project Alicization.
7:45 AM, Monday, July 6th, 2026.
After paying a visit to Kazuto Kirigaya (Kirito) in the medical
area of the Upper Shaft, where he was still recuperating, Asuna
Yuuki took breakfast in the eleventh-deck lounge with Dr. Rinko
Koujiro, an expert researcher on full-dive technology.
It wasn't a luxury cruise liner, but the buffet-style food was actually pretty good—not that Asuna was going to complain about
that or her cabin, given that Lieutenant Colonel Seijirou Kikuoka
could snap his fingers and have her sent to the brig, if the facility
indeed had such a thing.
Across from her, Rinko stuck her knife through a white fish
fritter and held it up to examine the meat. "Do you suppose they
caught this fish here?"
"I…I don't know…," Asuna said, looking at the same thing on
her plate. She brought a piece up to her mouth. The pale fish was
soft and crumbly, yet had a juicy texture. It was obviously very
fresh, but she didn't know whether you could simply toss a reel
out in the open ocean like this and catch something.
Asuna put down her knife and picked up her glass of iced tea
as she turned her gaze to the window on her left. The calm ocean
surface was dark and flat, revealing no fishing craft, much less
any actual fish.
Thinking about it, all she knew was that the Ocean Turtlewas
located somewhere in the Izu Islands, which were widely spaced
across a large expanse of ocean, north to south. Hachijojima was
in the center of the archipelago, and that island itself was nearly
two hundred miles from Tokyo.
If she could freely use her phone, she could have just pulled up
a map program to pinpoint their location, but for various security
reasons, she wasn't allowed to connect to the megafloat's Wi-Fi.
She could still listen to her saved music files, which was better
than having the phone confiscated entirely, but there was definitely something frustrating about having a smartphone and
being unable to use it to instantly look up information. She hadn't
even been this frustrated during SAO, when she had neither Internet-searching capabilities nor any news from the real world
whatsoever.
Asuna swallowed the lump of annoyance along with her iced
tea and tried to change her mood. Being this angry about lacking
Internet access was simply a reflection of her overall deficit of
necessary information.
Was what Seijirou Kikuoka and Takeru Higa told her about
their project yesterday the whole truth? Were there more secrets
about their test universe, the Underworld, that they hadn't explained yet? And was Nurse Natsuki Aki being honest when she
claimed that Kazuto would wake up from Soul Translator Unit
Four tomorrow…?
The first two were one thing, but she had to cast aside her
doubts about the third. Now was the time for her to have faith.
On July 7th, Kazuto's damaged neural network would finish its
repair, and he would awaken. Asuna had to leave on a helicopter
for Tokyo that evening, but she would at least have time to speak
with him. She'd have time to hold the body that had sacrificed itself to protect her.
The thought of this moment brought some strength to her
mind. She resumed eating and asked Rinko, "Do you know where
exactly this ship is located? All I heard was that it's in the Izu Is-
lands."
"…You know, that might be the extent of my knowledge, too…"
Rinko had already finished her fish. She put her hand into her
coat pocket to take out her phone, then remembered she wouldn't
be able to connect to the Internet anyway and scowled.
"Well, I'm pretty sure that Higa said we were a hundred miles
or so west of Mikurajima…or was it Miyakejima?" she wondered,
then turned her eyes to the window, which was large for a ship.
Asuna followed her lead and looked out at the blue-black surface
of the water again.
The morning sun was coming up through the windows behind
them, meaning that they were looking to the west now. If it was
true that the Ocean Turtlewas on the western side of the Izu Islands, they wouldn't see eitherMikurajima or Miyakejima, and
certainly not the Japanese mainland of Honshu…
As her gaze swept from right to left, Asuna couldn't help but
gasp. There was something out there she hadn't seen the last
time, shining in the morning sun. Something artificial and narrow in the distant sea—a ship. It was hard to grasp its scale without knowing how close it was, but it seemed very large.
"Rinko, look there," she said, putting down the knife and
pointing.
The other woman squinted and muttered, "That's a ship. It's…
probably not the fishing boat that caught our breakfast…"
"It's not? How can you tell?"
"It's too big for that and too plainly colored. Plus…it's got a
whole load of antennas on it."
Rinko got up and walked over to the window, so Asuna joined
her. Asuna's eyesight was perfectly fine, but the water vapor coming off the surface made the distant ship vague and wavering.
And she was right that the mast in the center of the boat seemed
to be sporting a number of round satellite dishes. It resembled
the massive antenna mast that rose from the top deck not far
above this lounge. The design of the ship seemed pointed, angular. Not like a fishing boat but like a transport ship or…
"A warship…?" Asuna murmured.
Behind her, an officious voice stated, "That is a Japanese ship.
The country does not possess any battleships."
The two women turned around and saw a man in a pure-white
short-sleeved uniform, carrying his breakfast tray—Lieutenant
Nakanishi.
"Good morning, Mr. Nakanishi."
"Good morning."
The tall man set down his tray on a nearby table and crisply
gave them a bowed salute. "Good morning, Dr. Koujiro, Miss
Yuuki."
"Would you like to sit with us?" Rinko offered. He appeared to
think it over, then accepted. Asuna and Rinko waited for him to
bring his tray over before they sat down again. The officer's
breakfast was a hearty military one, the plate piled high with
eggs, bacon, and salad.
"How does it compare to the breakfast in the SDF?" Rinko
asked, a rather sensitive question.
Nakanishi grimaced and lifted his fork. "To be honest, it's
slightly better here. The tomatoes and cucumbers are grown on
the ship, for example."
"Whoa, there's a garden here?" Asuna exclaimed.
The officer beamed with pride. "That's right, on the rear eighth
deck. It's an experiment in large-scale marine farming."
"So that's why the tomatoes tasted a bit salty," Rinko joked.
"Really?" he said, popping the slice into his mouth. Asuna
couldn't help but giggle. She picked up her fork and knife to continue eating, then recalled the first thing Nakanishi had mentioned.
He had said that Japan had no battleships, but that couldn't be
true. He was an SDF naval officer, so he worked on a battleship…
right? Or was the logic that the SDF wasn't a proper military,
which meant that their ships weren't "battle" ships? So the ship
out there must have been…
Asuna looked out the window again, staring at the large, angled silhouette. "Then if it's not a warship, it's…a self-defense
ship?"
"Close. SDF naval vessels are called escort ships," Nakanishi
replied with a grin. He turned his head to look at it, too. "That
ship is our latest general-purpose craft, the DD-127 Nagato. Unfortunately, I can't reveal the reason why it's traveling this stretch
of…hmm?"
His concise explanation trailed off, drawing her interest back
to the ship. The gray battle—er, escort—ship was beginning to
change direction. In less than ten seconds, it turned so its stern
was facing the Ocean Turtle, and it began to chug away.
Nakanishi abruptly stood up and turned away from the
women so he could remove a thin device from his pocket. He
pressed a few buttons and brought it to his ear to murmur, "This
is Nakanishi. I'm sorry to bother you on your break, Lieutenant
Colonel Kikuoka. I believe the Nagatowas scheduled to accompany us until twelve hundred hours two days hence, but it just
turned to move westward…Yes, sir, I'll be right there."
He turned back to them, phone still in his hand. His face was
suddenly stern and pensive. "Doctor, Miss Yuuki, I'm afraid I
have to leave you now."
"That's all right. We'll clean up the meal for you."
"I appreciate that. Good-bye," he said with a nod, then practically sped out of the lounge.
"…I wonder what that was about."
"No idea…," Asuna said, turning to the window again.
Something about the sight of the escort ship gradually fading
through the morning mist made her uneasy. Quietly, Asuna
clenched her left hand