《Monroe》Chapter Three Hundred and Fifty-Seven. Executive decisions.
Advertisement
"Fuck," Bob muttered.
Growing up in Watts, Bob hadn't ever bought into the whole 'California Paradise' idea. It wasn't until he'd gone to UCLA and moved closer to the campus that he'd had any idea how people could ever equate those two words.
Somehow, even though he'd known that hundred foot tall monsters were going to be roaming about, he hadn't made the mental leap to understanding just how much destruction they would cause.
It appeared that no one had deemed the UCLA campus as essential, leaving the ruined buildings in place.
Bob slowly rose into the sky on the unseen wings of his flight spell, allowing him to see more of the city he'd once called home.
Looking around, he could see a pattern. Apartment buildings and houses had been repaired or reconstructed, while most commercial buildings had been left alone. As he turned, he spotted a crowd, hundreds, or even a thousand strong surrounding a short, squat stone building that had a lot more in common with medieval architecture than it did modern.
He considered flying over, but didn't want to draw that much attention to himself. Walking over carried the same problem, as there was no mistaking him for anything besides a tier seven or eight being. It did present him with an opportunity to practice a spell he'd been working on for a while.
Shape change, from the Animal School, was a spell Bob had become quite familiar with, as it allowed him to become a cat, which Monroe absolutely loved. The spell wasn't limited to allowing you to experience a touch of divinity, though.
Bob dropped into his inventory and began to build the pattern for the spell. It was something he'd been meaning to try for a while, but hadn't had the need to do so.
After an hour and four tries, he finally managed to complete the pattern, and he felt the spell take hold.
Looking up at the mirror, he smiled.
Without the System to do the heavy lifting, you had to know exactly what you were shifting into. That was less of a problem when you were turning into your self.
Bob moved through the crowd, head ever so slightly down, eyes up, shoulders hunched. He had perfected the art of moving through groups of people without being noticed while still being aware of likely threats.
There wasn't any apparent organization to the mass of people, but some of them were clearly prepared to be here for a while. Folding camp chairs and coolers were prevalent, with people lounging in them. The atmosphere was one of surprising patience.
In Bob's experience, when a hundred or more people gathered together without any apparent entertainment, it was normally for a protest of some sort. This was different. The people here were gathered in small groups of four to eight, talking to one another, but not interacting with anyone else.
As he drew closer to the stone building, he could tell that there was a perimeter of sorts, an invisible line where the groups were clustered closer together, but didn't move any nearer to the center.
He was surprised when a man wearing a suit and tie while carrying a clipboard approached him.
"Are you looking for a group, or a place on the list?" The man asked.
"What list?" Bob asked carefully.
"The list for LAD7?" The man replied slowly, looking down at his clipboard and then back up at Bob. "You don't have a token," he frowned. "Is this your first time here?"
"It is," Bob admitted, hunching his shoulders a touch more.
Advertisement
"Ah, my apologies," the man said, squaring his shoulders. "My name is Aaron Chastfield, and I'm one of the administrators assigned to Los Angeles Dungeon number Seven. Have you ever been in a Dungeon?"
"I have," Bob said.
"Excellent," Aaron smiled. "We can skip the explanation of what Dungeons are and how they work. Have you ever registered for a Dungeon before?"
"No," Bob shook his head.
"You must be one of the folks who went over to Thayland then," Aaron noted. "So, as you probably know, we have a lot more people than we have Dungeons. There are twelve million people in the Los Angeles Metro area, or there were during the last census. We think there are still about ten million here, but it's difficult to be sure. We're lucky in that we're on the coast, so there are more Dungeons, but we still only have ten of them, which means each Dungeon is serving one million people. If you have a team, you can register with me, and we will schedule your trip into the Dungeon, but please be aware that without any special considerations, you'll be waiting for," he checked his clipboard, which Bob could now see was actually tablet with some sort of flexible overlay. "Forty-six days. Special considerations can accelerate that. If you or a member of your group have the Plant School and are willing to contract to grow food with the Early Harvest ritual, or if you have someone with the Dimension School and the Portal Ritual, and are willing to contract to transport people, we could get you in more quickly and more frequently."
"I'm not in a team," Bob replied.
Aaron winced. "I won't ask, but I'm sorry to hear that. Going it alone is rough. If you're looking for a team, I can check the official requests, but I'll need to see your status."
Bob shook his head.
"I know," Aaron sighed, "it's voluntary, but almost no one wants to do it. You can check the official message boards at lad7.ca.gov, there are always people either looking to fill a slot or form a new group."
"Is everyone here waiting for their turn?" Bob asked.
"No," Aaron shook his head, "they're hoping that a group misses their turn. It happens often enough that we have a separate list for groups waiting at the Dungeon. They get a token and I go down the list, buzzing the token at the top. They have three minutes to get up front before I buzz the next group."
"That makes sense, I suppose," Bob said.
"It's an imperfect world, as the System would say," Aaron said ruefully. "We're all just trying to work in it."
"How many groups go through the Dungeon each day?" Bob asked curiously.
"On average, about ten thousand," Aaron replied. "There's actually a lot of variance, because higher-level people cost the Dungeon more energy. The state instituted a policy that without a special dispensation, you aren't permitted to enter the Dungeon if you're higher than level ten in order to ensure that more people are able to go through it."
Bob frowned. "They aren't even letting people hit the tier cap?"
"Not unless you have a dispensation, which for people like us means not unless you want to apply for law enforcement, and they have more applicants than they could possibly need, so they've become pretty selective," Aaron sighed.
"Honestly, I'd like to get out of here, but part of my deal with the federal government was going where I was told, so I'm stuck," Aaron said. "Anyway, if you have any questions or decide to register, I'm here every day from seven am to seven pm."
Advertisement
"Thanks," Bob nodded as Aaron moved away.
He started making his way back out of the crowd.
Intellectually, he'd known that LA wouldn't have enough Dungeon capacity to handle everyone. Even taking into consideration minors and the elderly, although the elderly wouldn't be elderly for long, given the ability to reincarnate, there were just too many people.
The King's proposal suddenly started to look like it might be more attractive than he'd originally thought.
He was nearly out of the crowd when a hand fell on his shoulder. "Hey, you're leaving, right? Do you think you could give us a hand with my grandpa?"
Bob turned and found himself facing a young man, flanked by an even younger woman. He would be the first to admit he wasn't the greatest judge of people, which was why he used Monroe as a sort of litmus test, but he was pretty sure neither of them were old enough to drink. Or possibly even vote.
An elderly couple were dozing in a pair of cheap camp chairs behind them.
"I can carry one of them, but we can't carry them both, and yesterday someone knocked granddad out of his chair and left him on the ground while we were moving grandma," the man admitted.
"It's not that far, about fifteen blocks," the young woman added hopefully.
"Sure," Bob said, holding back a sigh. It would have been easier to kick a puppy than to tell the kids no, and he had a while before he was due to take Mike to Chicago.
"I'm Alejandro and this is my sister, Maria," the young man introduced himself.
"I'm Bob," he reached out and shook their hands in turn.
"They probably won't wake up," Alejandro said as he carefully lifted his grandmother up and out of her chair, which Maria then folded and slung over her shoulder.
"Yeah, they cycled a couple of minutes ago," Maria added, unable to suppress a giggle as Bob awkwardly lifted the frail old man in a princess carry. If he had to guess, he'd put the man in his eighties, maybe even his nineties, and while he was a large framed man, likely over six feet in his youth, he couldn't have weighted more than a hundred and forty pounds.
"What do you mean, 'cycled?'" Bob asked as Maria packed up the second chair, and Alejandro began leading them away from the crowd.
"Well, when we all came out of stasis, the hospitals were pretty much closed. You can get emergency treatment there, but they ran out of medication really quickly. Grandpa has a heart condition and kidney problems, and grandma has liver disease and emphysema," Maria explained.
"We didn't really want to fight monsters, but when everything costs mana crystals, we didn't have a choice," Alejandro said. "We were just a little too late in figuring everything out," his voice was bitter. "Too late to get enough runs in the Dungeon, too late to realize that if we took druid paths, we'd be able to make enough crystals."
"We didn't know how bad it would get, and we used the crystals we fought for to level up and take the skills we thought we'd need," Maria continued. "It took us four days to finish the Dungeon the first time, and we both got hurt pretty badly. I used my crystals to level up twice and take the Animancy School and Anima blast, so we were able to recover, which ended up helping grandma and grandpa because they started to get worse, but if I pumped enough healing into them it helped."
"I used my two levels to get melee and spears," Alejandro added. "Lot's of trees in the Dungeon, easy to make a spear."
"But we ran out of food, and we had to go into debt to keep ourselves fed," Maria said. "The government runs the food programs, so there wasn't any interest or anything, but it costs one mana crystal per day, per person, and with forty-five days between delves, that means the hundred crystals we each make from the Dungeon are almost all spent on food."
"They kept getting worse, and it took us almost a year to get out of debt," Alejandro explained. "That's when Maria here had the bright idea to bring them into the Dungeon with us."
Bob looked at the unconscious man in his arms.
"Yeah, they were awake more then, but they couldn't really help. But they were part of the group, so they got the quest reward. We showed them how to level up and got them to level two, and they put all their points into endurance, but it wasn't enough," Maria said angrily. "They kept getting worse."
"We were going through our menus, looking for anything that could help," Alejandro said. "But there wasn't anything."
"That's when we heard about a new divine blessing you could get from worshipping some guy's cat," Maria laughed. "I thought it was a joke, some new kind of meme, you know?"
"But it isn't," Alejandro said. "It's called 'Naptime' and it regenerates a lot of health every minute."
"Fifty-eight health every minute," Maria agreed. "Which is amazing, and if I wasn't a healer, we'd both be aiming for it."
"More importantly, if you sleep for seven minutes, it has a regeneration effect that restores you back to however you were when you took the blessing," Alejandro added, shaking his head. "If we could have gotten them leveled up sooner, it would be an even bigger help."
"Anyway, they are usually up for half an hour or so before they need a nap," Maria continued, "but they can't walk very well or very quickly, so we've been carrying them to the Dungeon to get on the wait list."
"Have you gotten into the Dungeon when you were on the wait list?" Bob asked.
"Twice," Alejandro said. "It was before we started bringing them, though."
"We're due for our run in a few weeks," Maria said, as they turned and began walking up to an apartment complex. "I'll take level three and four, and get ritual magic and reincarnation. Then I'll be able to reincarnate them the run after that."
"Just two more months," Alejandro agreed fervently.
Bob looked at the apartment complex as they approached. The sign was an oval, with two pine trees painted on either end, and 'Whispering Pines' written in the middle. Those were the only two pine trees in sight. Beneath the weathered sign, there was a smaller one that said 'Hospice Care.'
"You two live here with them?" Bob asked.
"Yeah," Alejandro said as they entered the complex and headed toward the leftmost of three buildings. "Most of the staff bailed right away, and eventually they all had to. No one was paying them, and they have to live too."
"So we had to move in and take care of them, not that it was a hardship, considering our apartment was destroyed, and we were in the camps," Maria said as she darted up a stairwell.
"Camps?" Bob asked warily.
"The monsters fucked up the city pretty badly, and it costs crystals to rebuild, so a lot of people are homeless," Alejandro said. "World turned to shit on us, you know?"
They navigated four flights of stairs, careful to not bang around their unconscious cargo, before turning down a hallway, where Maria waited by an open door.
"We're in the back," Alejandro said helpfully as he walked down the short entryway that opened up into a kitchen and a living room. The living room had been converted to living space, two sets of bunk beds constructed of rough lumber, making it clear that it wasn't a lounging area.
Bob followed Alejandro past two sets of doors before they turned into the last door on the right.
It probably would have been a cozy room for someone in hospice. It had an attached bathroom, and had probably had a bed with a few chairs back when it had fulfilled its intended purpose. Now, it boasted another pair of bunk beds and a set of shelves, all constructed of untreated lumber.
Alejandro carefully lay his grandmother on the bottom bunk and motioned for Bob to deposit his burden on the bottom bunk on the opposite side of the room.
"Thanks man, I really appreciate it," Alejandro said, offering his hand, which Bob shook.
"We really do," Maria said as she stowed the chairs on the bottom shelf and started tucking a blanket around her grandmother.
Bob looked around the tiny room, and then at the thin, but determined faces of the kids in front of him.
He pulled out his phone and tapped the screen.
Advertisement
- In Serial57 Chapters
God Of The Arts
Vote For GOTA on TopWebFiction Tags: World Building, Third Person Omniscent POV, Bits of Humor and much more to come. Blurb For The Series The plagued young noble of the Aurum bloodline is tossed into the politics of his homeland. What starts as a path to revenge grows ever brighter, ever vivid into a path to the peak. Through time and Fate's interweaving fingers he experiences all life has to offer as he reaches for beyond the skies, the enigma known as life unraveling at every stroke of his brush. The vastness of the cosmos is unparalleled, but every treasure has misfortune within. Can Mona Aurum make use of his personal twist of fate to become much more than anyone ever envisioned and become a God? Watch as this piece of art is created, one dab of paint, one change of brush, one coating at a time. Current Book Summary Book 2: ?With their new statuses as noble servants Mona, Reithar, and the Varlier brothers are assured a life with little difficulty and excellent opportunities. Word spreads of the young master of the Faulkner family and how he had taken Mona Aurum for his own, bringing envy and suspicion on Eric Faulkner. Gryfor, on the other hand, is forgotten by the public, charged with crimes Parsmir works to erase. But when the accused committed such an act as Lifeblood refining, evading a sentence is difficult indeed. ??Unsure of which method to take, the Merister royal family finds itself desiring the last Aurum descendant without offending the future head of Faulkner. To do so, the Duke of Wessor joins in the fray, hoping to profit in turn. Meanwhile, between the two generations of Faulkner, the rift between father and son only continues to grow. Just what did Rigor do to his wife, only few can tell. ??His Lunar Mark beginning to show its true worth, Mona makes use of this chance to fully explore this treasure. His skill in Aura rising and his stability in Alberdos assured, Mona remains alert of the ever nearing grasp of the Merister Emperor. His desire for vengeance only continues to grow. Author's Note I am currently writing GOTA Book 2: Royal Deception. For all my fans and followers, here is the update of the story. Anywho, do rate this story, comment. I have a Patreon to those willing to contribute to support me as a writer. The God Of The Arts Website will have each book's summary posted there, among other things. I hope you enjoy this story of mine. Thanks again for reading this everchanging story line. Signed, OmegaAlphaTau Friday, December 21, 2016 Licensing This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.
8 129 - In Serial10 Chapters
Transdimensional Apprentice
when a conjuration Archmagis apprentices continue to disappoint him with deadly results. he decides to craft a spell. a spell to summon to him a apprentice that shall be worthy of his teachings and that should not disappoint him. Little does he know that the one who is the best fit is a Dungeon Master extraordinaire . . . . at least when it comes to pen and paper. when Jax Dammerung gets summoned, he learns quite a few things, more then half of them painful. Will this college going Super Geek who has constantly been fascinated with the unknown and fantasy rise to the top? or will he succumb as so many other hopefuls before him have?
8 144 - In Serial20 Chapters
The Only Dungeon
After one of Dungian's creations destroys a powerful human nation the gods destroy all her dungeons and her mother is now in charge of reintroducing them back into the world. Now the Goddess of Dungeons must make do with only one and not everybody is happy about it.
8 697 - In Serial9 Chapters
The Crew: Gathering the Lads
A half dozen demonkin, three heists, and a criminal shortage of tea. Elizabel is competing for promotion to head of the infamous Equalizers group. All she needs to do is beat out her two competitors. The catch? In order to ensure they are qualified to lead, all three are taken out of their comfort zones and expected to lead a motley crew in a few high-stakes heists. The first to three wins the grand prize. Not an easy task in the best of circumstances, and this is far from it. After arriving to her new hideout, Elizabel finds one of her underlings in jail, and the other two to be overconfident and under-competent. With the jobs rushing in, can Elizabel rein herd over her undisciplined mob? Or will the chaos drive her to exasperation and out of the competition? Either way, there's going to be a whole lot of mayhem. And it's going to look absolutely aesthetic.
8 97 - In Serial26 Chapters
The Swarm
Anthony had been looking forward to playing the hottest new virtual reality game. When he put the VR helmet on he was met with a prompt asking him if he wanted to take a test to become a swarm knight. Thinking that this was one of the classes in the game he accepted. Instead of finding himself in the game, Anthony found that he was transported to a different planet. A planet where he would learn the greater truth of the universe. Everything was based on magic in the universe. Except that magic was based on nanorobots, called the swarm, that had been created through highly advanced technology. Genetics determined the access level and the amount of control that someone could wield over the swarm, and therefore their status in this society. Long ago Earth had been cutoff from the swarm. Now that it had been rediscovered, Earth would be reintegrated into the swarm. Unfortunately when that happened all the current technology on Earth would fail and be replaced with the ability to use magic. In effect, it would be the system apocalypse. As someone able to control the swarm, Anthony found himself in the unique position to influence how Earth was reintegrated into the swarm. Perhaps he could change things enough to save most of the people on Earth. But first he would have to learn how to control the swarm and become one of the leaders in the society he found himself in. Warning: If this fiction was a movie I'd rate it somewhere between PG-13 and R for occasional scenes of violence, gore, and nudity.
8 190 - In Serial40 Chapters
A Melissa x Midoriya Fic
For people who ship these 2, here's a fic for ya. It starts out Izuocha, but it will become a Melissa x Midoriya thing. (Give me a ship name for these 2) Will be a lemon chapter later on.I don't own any characters by the way! You know who they belong to.I also don't own the picture, I found them on Bing so find them yourselves!Spanish Version: https://www.wattpad.com/story/253338802-un-fic-de-izuku-x-melissa
8 107

