《Double-Blind: A Modern LITRPG》Chapter 33
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Imagine, for a moment, the feeling of a seat belt locking during an emergency stop. Now layer on another point of restraint, and another, constricting and growing tighter. And then by some miracle loophole of gravity, you slip free, plunging through the windshield, the shattered glass tearing at your body still somehow a reprieve from that horrible, terrible pressure that for a moment, you believed would never stop, enjoying the second's long reprieve before you hit cracked asphalt.
Or, in my case, the snow.
I’m not certain how the wolf managed to twist in the air and grab me. But as I collided with the ground, the impact was enough to knock me out.
/////
A memory came to me, rising out of the darkness and the pain. There was an out-of-season fake poinsettia placed atop a glass, gold trimmed coffee table. I remember thinking how odd it was, for a room this calculated. The beige recliner and matching couch were exactly the same height. Childrens toys took up a small corner, stuffed animals, shape sorting, and a disproportionate number of dolls, the entire trove likely doubling as a means of entertainment and a manner of testing cognitive ability.
I didn’t like tests back then, before I understood how to beat them, how they worked. And this entire room felt like a test. The receptionist guided you in first, and the therapist was never on time. So, it was—really, entirely up to you. Did you go to the comfortable looking armchair or the couch? What would that say about you? And if you picked a magazine from the table, I shuddered to imagine what they would extrapolate from that.
So, I did the least offensive thing. Took a seat on the far end of the couch, where one was expected to sit, and stared blankly, into the plastic greenery of the hideous, off-season poinsettia.
The door clicked open. Doctor Svelt let himself in. He was a big man, rotund as he was tall, living in a perpetual loop of business casual Fridays—thin plaid shirts with a hardworking belt and jackets that, if I propped one up with a pole, likely had some practical application as a tent.
He peered at me confused, as if it hadn’t taken Dad making the appointment weeks in advance to see him.
“Hm. Matthias? This can’t be right. We finished our mandated sessions, didn’t we?” The big man’s face scrunched in faux puzzlement.
“You didn’t fix me,” I said, straight and to the point. The man made going out into the weeds a career choice, so I needed to be direct or this would never get resolved.
“And when I floated the idea of check-in sessions with your father, he said that decision was entirely up to you.” The side of his mouth pulled up in the beginnings of his signature, vulpine like smirk.
“Yes, I’m in distress. Yes, I’m here of my own accord. Partially because I didn’t know gloating would be a part of the process.” I kept my voice terse, firm.
The smirk disappeared. He tracked to his armchair, grabbed a clipboard from the side-table and sat down. Good, he was taking me seriously now.
“We’ve discussed the efficacy of referring to people, especially ourselves, with terms like broken.”
I blew air out through my teeth. “And I didn’t call myself broken. Because I knew you would say that. However, a person generally isn’t assigned mandated therapy because they’re normal, would you agree?”
“By normal, you mean neurotypical?” Dr. Svelt asked.
I chuckled. “See, that’s a trap. I wouldn’t have recognized it six months ago, but I recognize it now. If I say yes, we get into an hour plus conversation on the general definition of normal, and a retread of what it means to be on the spectrum. If I say no, you make me spend an hour defining it and warp my explanation until I self-realize that I do fit in some atypical loosely defined interpretation of normal.”
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Svelt set his pen down. “Normally, I’d maintain the value of having either of those conversations. But I can see you’re unsettled, so why don’t you start with telling me what happened?”
“I thought about hurting someone again.” I said.
“And I thought about slapping the smug smile off my last patient’s face when he made the same joke about my running late for the hundredth time.”
I rolled my eyes. “I know the difference between ideation and an intrusive thought.”
“So. You planned it?” Svelt asked. His tone didn’t give anything away, but I knew this was bait. And if I somehow ousted myself as an ongoing danger to someone else.
“No. Yes. I saw someone who’s been giving Ellison a hard time at school. Like no one’s told this kid it’s not the 90s anymore. He was sitting on the railing of an overpass off I-20. Legs dangling over traffic, listening to music. I passed him on my walk home on the sidewalk. He was inches from me. There were no cars, no witnesses. It would have been easy to just…”
“Give him a push?” The therapist prompted me.
“I listened to your advice. Thought about the disproportionality of it. Took precautions after that. Been taking the long way around, in case he does that often. But I didn’t feel guilty. At all. If anything, it felt like a missed opportunity.”
“And that’s why you’re here. Because you don’t feel guilty?”
“I feel alarmed. Because I don’t feel guilty. Because you cleared me. Said I didn’t have the markers. And I’m afraid that…”
“It was a mistake?” Svelt asked. He went behind his desk to the miniature water cooler and poured himself a cup of water, handing me one as well. The man did this often when he needed to think. He tapped his cup. “How much of the evaluation did you answer honestly?”
I blinked in confusion, even as my heart raced in my throat. “All of it.”
Svelt cleared his throat. “Look, I’ll make you a promise. You remember what I said about promises?
“That you don’t make them frequently. Because they’re iron-clad.”
“Yes. Here’s my promise to you: No matter how you answer, I’m not going to report it to your parents or make you take the evaluation again. It won’t change how I see or treat you. Just be honest.”
I hesitated. It was almost a reflex to lie about something like that, but Svelt had always kept his word, even when it was probably far more convenient to do otherwise.
“Maybe half,” I said quietly.
“Damn. I was guessing sixty percent.” Svelt said. When I stared at him, shocked, he laughed. “You’re hardly the first person to try to beat a psych eval by trying to pick out the correct answers. They’re specifically designed to root that out.”
“You knew.” My voice took on a tinge of accusation. “And you cleared me anyway.”
“For good reason. For one thing, you’re a child, still too young for a definitive ruling. But even when you’re older, it’s even less likely. ‘I had therefore to remove knowledge, in order to make room for belief.’” Svelt sipped his water.
“Are you really quoting Kant, to tell me you believe in me?” I snorted in derision.
“Most people with ASPD have an over-inflated sense of self. They tend to think themselves superior to the average person, elevated.”
“I don’t think I’m better than anyone,” I said immediately.
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“See,” he pointed at me. “Too quick to be a lie. Almost reflexive. You genuinely believe that. That lack of exaggerated ego, coupled with frequent anxiety, is a big mark against.”
“You’re overlooking a hell of a lot. I have poor impulse control, can be manipulative, have a lack of empathy, and generally don’t feel guilty for anything. Those are all clear markers.”
“Yes.” Svelt leaned forward. “But where you differ, Matthias, is how painfully aware of that you are. You’ve formed a regimen of checks and balances on yourself, done research, delved into philosophy to the point you can pick a half-assed quote out of the air.”
“None of that matters if I don’t have a conscience.” I said.
“I’d contend you do.” Svelt pointed a meaty finger to his head. “An external conscience, rather than internal. Formed from knowledge and self-awareness. It’s what stopped you from pushing that boy off the bridge.”
“That seems vastly inferior.”
Svelt mused quietly. “It’s inconvenient. And could easily lead you wrong, if you over-attach to problematic ideals. But not inferior.”
“Why?” I asked, curious to hear the answer.
“There’s a reason why Antisocial Personality Disorder trends in high-powered jobs. The reality is, ruthlessness can be a desirable trait in some aspects of life. But many people with ASPD can’t just turn that off. Use a hammer enough, and eventually, everything looks like a nail.
“So, what, I just go through life pretending like I don’t have a hammer?” I asked.
“Not at all. But only rely on your ruthlessness when you know, beyond a shadow of a doubt that you need it. And have the self-control to stop when the time is over.”
/////
I woke with a wet gasp, and immediately coughed out blood. A wave of pain seized me, so strongly I fought the urge to vomit. I could feel my pulse in my neck, in every laceration and wound on my chest.
The entire top section of my armor was hanging off in tatters.
There was a yelping growl a few feet away from me. Audrey was tangled up with the wolf. It was trying to disengage, and she wasn’t having any of it. Her vines were lashed around its mouth, keeping its jaw pried open painfully, thorns digging in all around the wolf’s muzzle.
It saw me stir and tried to rush me down. A single vine lashed around a nearby stone, whipping the wolf’s head to the side.
It stared at me with its remaining eye, roiling with hate.
I forced my way to my feet, fighting through the pain, grabbing a health potion from my inventory and chugging it—and finding it tasted suspiciously similar to cough medicine—while I took several staggering steps back, looking everywhere for my crossbow.
No dice.
My bleeding was slowing down but not stopping. The entire left side of my body was numb from either trauma or blood loss.
I pulled the from my inventory.
Eventually, the wolf dislodged Audrey with an explosive head shake, sending my summon flying into the snow.
Why are you so angry at me?
Her litter of pups froze in the frost. Why? She’s a winter wolf, you’d think they’d know how to care for their young in a storm, only…
The dungeon put her in the elevator when I first came here.
I gave her an insane smile. Then used I was still met by the same teeth-rattling resistance from the first time, but the image cut through like a superheated blade. It was the image of three wolf pups, alive and shivering in the cold.
The Flowerfangs were idiots compared to this thing, and they could understand spoken speech.
“How long did they wait for you, I wonder, before the cold took them.” My tone was cruel, mocking.
The reaction was immediate. With a heart-broken howl, the wolf flung itself straight at me, gracelessly, it’s mouth open, waiting to snap. made dodging the clumsy movement child’s play. I rolled forward, feeling a rush of air pass over me. I struck upwards blindly, my dagger cutting deep into its stomach. It landed in a heap, still pushing itself up, but slower than before.
“If only I could have gotten here sooner,” I cocked my head in mock sympathy.
It threw itself at me again. This time, I was ready, and leapt on top of the wolf when it landed prone, one arm looping around its neck and holding on tight for leverage. effect lit the wolf’s organs up. I drove my knife into it, over and over again, aiming for its massive lungs.
It rolled over, trying to flatten me. If there was less snow to serve as cushion, it might have worked, but as it was, all the motion succeeded in doing was breaking a few of my ribs and tightening my grip. Somehow, I managed to hold on to my knife, and drove it down twice more.
But it wasn’t working. The wolf had regained enough awareness to realize she was in a bind, and began to run towards the trees, likely intending to scrape me off.
Not wanting to risk it, but out of ideas, I tried again, and sent her another image. A lone wolf pup, the one in the middle, most likely to survive, letting out a sad little howl.
The wolf’s sprint slowed to a stop, and she turned her head to look.
I dropped and subconsciously spun, channeling the movement of the unsparing fang, and shoved the dagger directly into her heart.
The albino wolf stared down at me, her muzzle slack, and then collapsed to the side, sending up a spray of snow.
All at once, the last vestiges of adrenaline and fight went out of me. I collapsed against her blood-soaked chest. Shallow breaths moved me slowly in a rocking motion. Slowly, a paw extended out, reaching out towards the fallen pups. A low whine emitted from her throat.
Have the self-control to stop when the time is over.
Through the haze of pain, I considered everything I knew about Suggestion. It could transmit images and directions, though it generally couldn’t make a person do anything they didn’t want. But what if I sent an image the target wanted to believe more than anything? Would they still believe it, even if they knew that, logically, it couldn’t be true?
Unsure of how to do what I intended, I reached out one more time with Normally, I had a limited window to do anything with it before the connection tightened, and then closed. Now it was wide-open, resistance lessened from the wolf’s weakened state.
The wolf emerged from the elevator, panicked, and found her pups huddled together in the blizzard. They were shivering and whining but still alive. She picked them up, one by one, transporting them to the shelter of a cave. Then, she warmed them with her body and fell asleep slowly, feeling the asymmetrical beats of three tiny hearts.
I coughed blood again, and paused to drink another health potion. But then I noticed that the wolf’s whining had ceased, and I paused to watch her scarlet eye slowly close.
“You saved them all. Rest, now.”
The blizzard was picking up steam. Thorns prickled me everywhere as Audrey slithered back in my shirt. “Coo-oo-oold.”
“Me too.”
I wasn’t certain how much time I had. My plan was to get down to the lobby to warm up, keep chugging health potions, then gather whatever I could find.
The notifications pinged as I struggled to my feet.
I fell to my knees, my skin drawing tighter around me as if my flesh was trying to force its way out.
“Didn’t miss that,” I said through gritted teeth.
My eyebrow raised. That was my first title since the initial two. But before I could pull it up to inspect what I unlocked, I noticed a strange glow behind me, coming from the direction of the Arctic Wolf.
Is that a monster core?
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Traveling the Dungeon
Dale wanted to do more than survive as a dungeon core. His experience with the gods made it clear that with power, he could do as he pleased, and without it, he was simply a toy of the powerful. Unfortunately, it isn't just the gods who have plans for the Traveling Dungeon. From an [Arch Mage] to a random miner, each will have a chance to play a part in the fate of the Dungeon of Challenges. Completed and available on Amazon.
8 120Tim the Engineer
Summoned against his will to a world of swords and magic, an engineering student struggles to find a way home under the shadow of a world devouring threat. ***************************** Updates: 5/13/19: Revisions to several chapters for clarity, grammar, and style. 4/29/19: A short side story and artwork has been added to the blog. 4/8/19: A Side Story has been updated on my new blog (every writer is required to have one). https://talesfromliahar.wordpress.com/ ***************************** “The summoning scenarios are broken down into groups of ten.” Emi Ito stated. “Don’t, don’t you dare say another word.” Muttered Genzo Uchida. His eyes had turned bloodshot and his hands shook with rage. “The first thirty…” “Shut up!” Genzo bellowed “How dare you help these disrespectful gaijin?” Flecks of spit and madness flew from his face, his fist raised ready to strike. But Emi did not flinch, instead she was about ready to continue when Yuma Takeuchi interrupted her. “Uchida, please,” her sweet sounding words could melt ice. “I think we will have a better chance of getting home if we all work together.” When she glanced up with her sleepy looking eyes at Genzo Uchida he deflated visibly. “Were not getting home.” Uchida said coolly. “Group summoning, large, that puts us in the 60 series. No one came to greet us after five minutes of arrival. That leaves scenarios 68 and 69. In scenario 68 there is something that binds the large group together; they are all classmates or a single family. But thanks to the gaijin” he spit out the word “I think we are scenario 69 with no way home.” Ikko Inoue’s eyes went wide, while Katsukno and Hayata started muttering to themselves. Tim took on a serious look and rubbed his scruffy chin. Emi maintained her stoic expression while trying to find something to refute. McKenzie glanced at Randall and giggled. Randall took the prompting of his teammate and followed up by approaching Genzo. “Uh, so we are in a sixty-nine?” “Yes.” Replied Genzo with the seriousness of someone who’s life was about to end. McKenzie covered her mouth and snickered. “You and me, were stuck in a sixty-nine situation?” Randall pushed with a grin. “Yes, we are all stuck in a sixty-nine scenario together!” Genzo retorted in anger. McKenzie fell on her butt laughing. “What the hell is so funny?” Demanded Genzo, whose face had turned red. “It’s a problem with the automatic translation.” Retorted Tim. Randall, who seemed unable to quit started in again “So, about this sixty-ni…” Genzo interrupted Randall with a swift punch to the face. But, because of their height difference it was a bit of an uppercut that left Randall rattled. Tim and Ikko moved to step in between the two, but Genzo showed no further hostility. Instead he just stared at his clenched fist with such intensity it grabbed the attention of the room. “I unlocked a skill.” He said bluntly. ***************************** This is not a light novel, but people who like light novels should enjoy the themes of this book. ***************************** A Map of the Region
8 164The Archaic Elements
A fantasy world, its own unique power-up system, some mystery aspects to make it look interesting and an MC that should make sense but well messes up, cause plot. Flashy fights. Characters will use their brain, unless it is an arrogant young master that needs to be taught a lesson. The starting is slow and maybe boring. The main MC does not desire great strength or harbor any great ambition. He starts out as a naive, lazy and a boring person. But the story does hold one aspect which will fuel the growth of our MC, which is his boundless curiosity for adventure and his will to explore. The second MC is a reincarnation/transmigration and he has a clear cut aim that he needs to achieve. His past life experiences also becomes a pillar that will help guide the main MC, while his friend also supports him. The writing is slow and steady. I will provide reasonings behind most happenings and keep it a logical story. It's a WIP as I edit the previous chapters even as I release more, so while the content doesn't change, the style and smoothness improve. The current release rate is 3 chapter/week. There is no specific date as I can get sidetracked or forgetful., but I will try to stick to Tues, Thurs and Sunday releases.
8 146The Shade of the Sun
Ren always knew that Penny had a thing for mystical creatures and artifacts. In fact, she loved them, but all the dribs and drabs that Mrs Russell sells never works. Ren thought the onyx ring would turn out to be the same as all the rest, but it soon takes them to another world with the power of the Sun's Blessing. Now, trapped in another, apocalyptic-looking world with absolutely no sun in sight, how can the duo ever hope to get home? [participant in the Royal Road Writathon challenge]
8 148Freshman
Jisung is a freshman at university. His friend Chan introduces him to his friends, among whom there is an intriguing boy, Minho.___This is my first story and English isn't my native language, so I'd be really happy to have your feedback. Thanks for reading ^^
8 82Uchiha dragon ( Naruto fanfiction)
follow the mc in his adventure in Naruto world and watch how he will become the strongest creature in the universe.
8 113