《Project Mirage Online》6. The Mark of Yindra
Advertisement
6
The Mark of Yindra
Rian stared down at the corpse of the NPC. “Uh—”
What the fuck?
He was…pretty sure this wasn’t how Mirage’s tutorial was supposed to go. Nor was he expecting to see the demonic-looking butler from his dreams hovering in front of him: About as young as Rian but standing at below five feet. Unkempt blond hair, cat-like eyes. Black bow-tie and a tux with a swallow’s tail.
“We’re going to be doing things a little differently, if you couldn’t tell,” the butler said, adjusting a glove.
“Corvis?” Rian said.
The butler’s smugness vanished. Approaching Rian, he stepped off the ground and floated, hovering over the corpse at his feet. He nearly got up into Rian’s face.
“How do you know my name?”
“I—” Rian began, a bit shocked that his guess was right. He slowly rubbed his forehead in thought. Had his dream really happened, or was this some kind of déjà vu? No, it had to’ve been something else. Maybe he’d lost some of his memories during the coma and he was getting mixed up somehow.
Unless…
“So,” Rian said, “you don’t know who I am?”
Corvis studied him, then said, “I have no idea what you’re talking about, adventurer. Perhaps you met another instance of me. You’re familiar with instances, aren’t you?” He glanced at the dead tutorial NPC. “Everything here is a copy of the original, an illusion extending from truth.”
Rian could feel himself starting to sweat, though nothing was actually happening to his virtual body. What the hell? Why was this NPC talking like he was aware of the game-world?
He shook his head. The character was probably programmed with special knowledge for tutorial purposes, like answering players’ questions about the game. Okay, cool, he thought, laughing to himself. He wasn’t going insane, at least. “I just—I thought I saw you, before. You were with someone else, though.”
Corvis’s gaze relaxed and he floated back. “Was it, perhaps, a woman?”
Rian swallowed. “Yeah.”
Frowning, Corvis glanced off then flicked out his hand aside, curling in his fingers. In a flicker of light, an over-sized sewing needle appeared in his grasp. It was pitch black, gleaming in the sunlight. On the end opposite of its point there was a closed eye resting inside the needle’s loop.
Corvis gingerly brought the needle’s point to Rian’s left sleeve and lifted. Upon the skin of Rian’s shoulder was the symbol from before—the “Y” with two extra branches.
The symbol the woman had etched into him. Rian gazed at it with dread. He shuddered, then took a huge step back from Corvis.
“So things are different this time,” Corvis mused, smiling as he let go of the needle, which disintegrated into rising black dust. “It’s really you. Yindra’s summoning was successful.”
No, no no no—there was no way this was happening. Something had to be going screwy. Was he really misremembering the dream? Was his memory being tampered with? Rian started pacing with both hands at his temples.
From what he’d seen, the game’s AI was capable of reading its players minds to an extent for things like menu operation and such. But players’ memories and internal thoughts were completely off-limits for obvious reasons. Since the rise of full-immersion VR games, there were hard, no-bullshit laws in place for that kind of stuff. It was simply too dangerous to tamper with the brain like that, and Mirage wouldn’t exist if Reflect Systems hadn’t proven that the game was incapable of directly altering players’ minds. The game itself was beamed into the brain—specifically the parts that processed the senses—but that didn’t mean it could alter the brain’s structure outside of those pathways to do something like implanting false memories.
Advertisement
Rian breathed out, trying to calm himself. All right. So it was incredibly unlikely that the game was breaking its protocol. He could trust his own memories, or so he hoped. But the alternative—the game contacting him in real life—was completely impossible.
He stopped pacing and rested his hands on his knees. The woman’s name, Corvis had just said it. Yindra’s summoning.
What had she told him about his mom, in the dream? When you wake up, she will be missing.
Could she have meant both in real life and the game?
“Yindra,” Rian said, already exhausted. “Was that the woman’s name? The tall woman, with the horns?”
“Yes,” Corvis said. “One of the four gods who once occupied this realm. She has graced you with the memory of her presence.”
“So, call me crazy, but I think I saw you and her in my dreams. Like, before I came here.” He chewed his lip. He was already getting frustrated at how none of this was adding up. “How the fuck is that possible?” he snapped. “A part of this VR game contacted me while I was in a coma? What the hell am I even saying?”
“Her powers far exceed what you believe is possible,” Corvis said, folding his hands behind his back and gazing down at Rian. “The reach of the Four extends beyond the mere confines of this world.”
“What? No, this is just a game,” Rian said. “It couldn’t affect reality like that. You’re an NPC, aren’t you? Do you even know what that is?”
“Of course I do,” Corvis said. “I’m not unfamiliar with the language you off-worlders use.”
“Then can you…explain what the hell’s going on?”
“Yes.” He raised a finger. “In exchange for one thing: your name.”
Rian blinked. “You can’t see it?” He supposed that made sense, considering he couldn’t view Corvis’s name either, though there was some text floating above his head which marked him as an NPC.
Another text box appeared in front of him.
[!] Identification
Player names will remain unknown until provided by that player. The name provided will appear solely to those for whom it is provided, meaning that false names may be given. However, if a false name is given, it will be denoted by—
“Ah—” Corvis said, stabbing a finger through the text box which dissipated into smoke. “That’s enough of that. I think I can handle it from here.”
Rian flinched. What the hell? He could see his text box notifications?
Cutting the thought short, Corvis said, “Your name, please.”
“It’s Cobalt.”
Corvis cringed. “Oh, no. That won’t do at all. Give me your Earth name.”
“What? Why?”
“Because it’s far too close to mine.”
Rian scowled at him. Fine, asshole. “Rian.”
Smiling, Corvis tilted his chin up at him. “Ah, what a sense of humor she has. Rian, is it? A pleasure to meet you.” He held out his hand.
Hesitating, Rian slowly reached out to shake his hand. Please don’t let this be some kind of demonic deal for my soul, please don’t let—
“My name is, indeed, Corvis.” The moment he said his name, it appeared above his head.
“Corvis” is now your Companion!
[!] The NPC Companionship System
You can befriend NPCs, granting you various perks such as EXP and stat bonuses, assistance in battle, recruitment for missions, as well as access to the Companionship System typically reserved for players, albeit with certain restrictions for NPCs.
Advertisement
Another notification appeared next to Corvis’s name. When Rian focused, it expanded into a page.
Corvis
Level ??? Guide (Non-combat NPC)
Alignment: Yindra
Companionship Level: 0 (Indifferent)
Difficulty: S (Sacred)
“I look forward to working with you, Rian,” he said, letting go of his hand. “Now, as you may have guessed, you have been summoned by Yindra, who has visited you in your sleep, and—”
“Hold up. How exactly is that possible?”
“As I told you, her reach extends beyond this world.”
The sense of dread was already returning, nestling at the bottom of his stomach. “You mean the game is affecting real life? You…understand that this is all virtual, right? It’s just a game.”
“Of course,” Corvis said. “It is the great game. The great war. The one that you and countless other intruders have come to play upon our realm. Unlike the few of my kind who have personally taken allegiance with yours, I am, alas, not one of them. It is only by Yindra’s command that I take your side.”
A bit of a roundabout answer, but sure. NPCs still had to stay in character somehow. But it was all so…self-aware, in a way that was beginning to unnerve him. “So, this Yindra person,” Rian said, trying not to shout the words in disbelief as he held out his hands. “From my dreams. I’m assuming she’s part of the AI if she’s an NPC, right? So you’re telling me the AI is breaching the boundaries of the game. You understand what that means?”
Corvis pressed his thumb against the nail of his index finger. “She has her methods, as I understand. Messages may be sent, covertly, to your realm. It is a simple matter of arranging the pieces in order and”—he flicked at the air—“knocking them down, such that the message arrives in the correct place. It is not beyond her abilities.”
Oh, shit.
Did that mean what he thought it meant? Mirage was nothing more than strong electromagnetic waves being fired into his brain billions of times a second by the headset. Maybe his dream during the coma was just some kind of incredibly shady way of advertising the game to people in their sleep, with Reflect Systems firing out the same waves at a distance. But, no, that couldn’t be it. Only the waves produced at close-range by the headset could actually get in through the skull. It would’ve had to’ve been through something much closer, more invasive and—
The neural implant.
Rian nearly screamed.
The coma. The surgery. Someone could’ve hacked into the hospital’s systems and altered the implant before it was put into his head. And that was how he’d dreamed of the game before he’d even gotten into it.
On the upside—if there even was an upside to consider—whoever or whatever did it couldn’t have been the game’s AI alone, as that would assume the AI was monstrously intelligent. Far more intelligent than anything revealed to date. It was more likely that someone had used it as a tool, directing it to alter the implant.
It was also, beyond all doubt, incredibly illegal. But all that effort, just to implant a memory of a weird encounter with some NPCs from a game he hadn’t played yet? Did that mean Reflect Systems was purposefully finding ways of getting around anti-“write-to-user-memory” laws for full-immersion VR games?
Rian stared at the marking on his left shoulder and mumbled to himself, “Did I really just get a fucking advertisement for this game while in a coma?”
He didn’t know much about the game’s lore, but maybe being “recruited” by one of the four gods or whatever was a special event, with the tutorial NPC being murdered and everything.
That’s all it was. Just a special event.
And yet his memory of the woman in his dream kept replaying in his mind—what she’d said: When you wake, she will be missing.
Missing not just in reality, but in the game, too. How had the game known about his mom?
All you have to do is return to me.
With each echo of her voice, Rian felt a horrible weight settling upon him. “This Yindra person,” he said to Corvis, “she’s one of your gods, right? Would she be capable of providing information on a certain player—like, say, one who hasn’t logged in for a long time?”
“Of course.”
Rian nearly flinched at how brief his answer was, like there was nothing to it. “How much information are we talking? Play history? Conversation history? Whispers?”
“Nothing is outside of Yindra’s reach.”
“Really? Even private messages? Okay, so, let me guess. This is gonna involve some kind of huge quest that’s gonna take weeks. Why would I do that when I could just ask a GM for that information instead?” He started to bring up his menu, then hesitated. “This game has GMs, right?”
Corvis floated up to him and placed a hand atop his menu. “I would advise against that, Rian. They will not provide the answers you seek. And, well…your situation is a bit complicated for an off-worlder.” He gestured at Rian’s left shoulder, where the marking was. “It’s best not to complicate things further.”
“What do you mean?” He rolled up his sleeve. “Isn’t the marking just some kind of special event for new characters?”
“That,” Corvis said, “is the Mark of Yindra.” Rian waited for a text box to appear, explaining it, but nothing happened. “Ah, I’m afraid this is rather old magic. You won’t be able to divine it yourself. I can, however, provide a placeholder.”
Corvis snapped his fingers.
The Mark of Yindra
A symbol that emanates an ominous aura. Effect unknown.
Rian raised an eyebrow. “It…doesn’t do anything?”
“Not quite,” Corvis said. “I’m forbidden from revealing its true effect to you through divination, but I may tell you it myself. There is a hidden condition. A very important one. You musn’t let anyone else see the Mark on your shoulder.”
Corvis straightened an arm, and out of his sleeve fell his enormous sewing needle, the back-end of which he caught and gripped, then held the point up to Rian’s neck.
Rian froze. The motion had been so quick that there was no time to react. Even if it was just a game, the simulation was convincing enough. The primal fear of death struck like lightning, locking him into place.
“If it is seen by anyone other than a servant of Yindra, such as myself,” Corvis said, “then I will be forced to kill you. And you will not come back to life as other off-worlders do. Your incarnation—or as you say, your character—shall die and remain dead forever.”
“Uh.” Rian blinked. “Okay.”
Conditional perma-death? He scoffed. Playing on some kind of secret hard mode wasn’t his thing in MMOs. In other games, sure. He was a speedrunner; he enjoyed challenging himself and setting custom limitations to overcome, but only if he agreed to them. Only if they were under his control.
“So even if a GM sees the marking,” Rian said, “you’ll kill me?” He sighed. “You know, if I’m going to play along with this quest to find Yindra that you’re giving me, or whatever, I’d really rather not play with that condition hanging over me.” He already knew how frustrating it was to reset every time he made a small mistake from speedrunning Shadow Spirits. Like hell if he was going to play Mirage that way.
He looked up at the sky and said, “Can I just restart and get a normal character without the Mark, please?”
When the game didn’t answer, he started to bring up his system options, looking for the CHANGE CHARACTERS button, or if there wasn’t one, the LOG OUT button.
“Wait,” he said, “where’s the log out button?”
There was an empty slot at the bottom of the menu, right where the button would’ve been.
Oh, you’ve got to be fucking kidding m—
“Well,” Corvis said, “I suppose it’s time I showed you, then.” With a flourish, he swept out an arm. “Command: begin half-sync.”
Returning to half-synchronization.
The surrounding forest shimmered, and suddenly he and Corvis were standing in his mom’s living room, though the walls were flickering as if not quite real. Through the wallpaper he could faintly see the glade and the surrounding forest.
“Ah,” Corvis said, flexing his hand. “I’ve always wanted to do that. This tutorial instance is the only place I can issue commands.”
Rian’s breath caught as he realized—in half-sync, his perspective should’ve automatically returned to where his body was, on the couch. But he was still standing, and he couldn’t feel the headset, either.
“As far as I can tell,” Corvis said, hovering beside him, scrolling through a text box filled with diagnostics, “an abnormality in your brain-wave patterns triggered an error the moment you entered the realm, or that you went to full-sync. You should be proud—it’s quite the momentous occasion. You’re the first in the known history of the great game to experience such a catastrophic failure.” He swept the text box aside and folded his hands behind his back, then smiled at Rian. “You exist only in the Cognitive Mirror, now. Your consciousness has integrated with the game.”
Rian slowly looked over at the couch. Lying there, with pale and bluish skin, was his body.
Advertisement
- In Serial250 Chapters
The Salamanders
Hadica was built around one of five Towers, an infinite structure filled with floors of monsters, magic, and treasures that the city plunders like clockwork. Most of the city, at least. Growing up in Westhill, Micah's family abstained from all of their Tower's bounties. He became an [Alchemist] at an age younger than most and just wanted to level in peace, but soon ran out of mundane ingredients to brew into potions. Ryan is a budding [Fighter] with the strange ability to mimic beasts, including monsters, but he doesn't understand it or even himself. After a Tower climb goes horribly wrong, their lives and the world around them begin to change as they try to figure out who they want to be. The Salamanders is a slow-paced story about characters growing up in and exploring a fantasy setting. It updates sporadically. Please mind the tags. Also, there is a Discord now! Click here.
8 374 - In Serial21 Chapters
Flipping the Galaxy
What do you do when a random omnipotent being offers you the chance of a new life in another universe with free perks to boot? You accept it of course! Follow the journey of our protagonist as he gets reincarnated in the Star Wars universe with a couple of perks to help him along the way. (Halo elements present in the story)
8 200 - In Serial23 Chapters
Candlemaiden: The Stranger Shore
Evil spirits. A cursed prince. Death itself in disarray. Iris just wants to go home, but fate has other plans for this young priestess and her odd companions. /// The land of Erinlin is dying, its ancient traditions choked out by the Kaerent church and its true priestesses, the Candlemaidens, increasingly regarded with fear and suspicion. All Iris wants is to tend her candles, win her shade battles, and chat with the spirits of her realm. But when she is torn away from her home by the Kaerent king, she learns that her country needs her to be far more than a typical Candlemaiden-- she must be as the legendary priestesses of old and walk through Death itself. ***Cover help from the awesome @ArdenBrooks. Special thanks to @rainersalt, @giveitameaning, and @piperjones033 !
8 121 - In Serial64 Chapters
My Amber Flower
A story of a younge trainer just starting out to become a top coordinator and league champion!Amber is a new trainer in the horn region she starts off with picking her partner..Treeko and goes off with a friend of hers, Harley till the next town.What'll happen on her journey? Let's find out
8 330 - In Serial9 Chapters
Skz smut
Idk
8 106 - In Serial49 Chapters
Fto Oneshots [ FINISHED]
this book will have oneshots of the minecraft series called Fairy tail Origins so I hope you enjoy it.
8 86

