Somnia Online K.T. Hanna (best ereader for students txt) đ
- Author: K.T. Hanna
Book online «Somnia Online K.T. Hanna (best ereader for students txt) đ». Author K.T. Hanna
She gestured to Telvar, Emilarth, and Belius. Nothing she said was an outright lie, just also not completely the truth. At least not yet.
Risk shook his head. âWait. Are you saying that if the headgear was tampered with, the programming of it has been infected with a virus?â
Sinister hesitated for a moment, and Havoc took over. âTechnically. Itâs more like a glitch being passed on, allowing for the areas of the mind that shouldnât have been accessed being adversely affected by the headgearâs adjustments. Theyâre lasers. Screwing around with lasers near your brain was never going to be a good idea.â
âIs that why Jirald seemed to affect them?â Karn piped up.
This time Murmur stepped in. âSort of. We think he might have tampered with his own headset more than most others.â
âSo what are we facing? Can you tell us that at least?â Masha sounded oddly disappointed. Like he didnât understand why theyâd been kept in the dark.
Murmur felt bad, but there were just things they couldnât say, because believing she could log in without a headset wasnât something sheâd have believed herself if she didnât, you know, do it.
âThis monster has been mutated by the virus released into the system by the original creator of the headsets. Which means, weâre facing a monster thatâs been so mutated by the virus, weâll probably need lots of help to kill it.â Sinister almost sounded joyful. âItâs why some NPCs have come with us. And for all we know, maybe backup will arrive via helicopter.â
She laughed at her own joke, elbowing Merlin who rolled his eyes.
âThatâs it?â Risk raised an eyebrow. âWhy not just tell us this to begin with? It seems relatively trivial, all things considered.â
This time Merlin laughed and clapped the large dread knight on the shoulder. âTell me, if you hadnât witnessed James and Jirald, would you have believed us?â
Risk laughed softly as Merlin moved everyone along the wide cobble stone path again. âMaybe not, but I would have thought about it. Glitchy things have been happening since we first logged in. Weâre playing in a virtual world, steps away from a dystopian future that would have been in books a decade ago. Isnât almost anything possible?â
âI guess you have a point then. We should have told you earlier.â Murmur smiled as she stood watching them, Snowy, Havoc, and Sinister by her side. âI pre-judged. Sorry.â
âItâs all good. Iâm glad weâve had this chance to work together.â And this time Risk smiled, and it was the first genuine smile sheâd seen on his face. He turned, following Mellow and Masha as Havoc joined them and sped up to catch up with the rest of the group.
âThere. That wasnât so hard, was it?â Sinister hugged her waist, and Murmur absent-mindedly kissed the top of the dark elfâs head.
âNo, but this fight is going to be a pain in my butt.â Murmur sighed as Sinister chuckled.
âWe got through Jirald. Weâll get through this.â
Murmur just wished she could believe her, but the feeling of foreboding followed them along the path as the black stone walls grew more ornate, now decorated with statues and artwork, the roof still open to the sky.
âMur. Stop it.â Sinister pouted and stopped walking, pulling back the enchanter with her. âYouâre doing that âwhole weight of the virtual world on your shouldersâ thing again. Talk to me. Share?â
Murmur blinked at the blood mage, at the seriousness in that expression, and sighed. She couldnât keep a smile from her face. The feelings she had, at least now that sheâd realized them, were obvious and ridiculously jealous. But like this, even if they were only stopped in the middle of a passageway, time spent only with Sinister was precious.
âSorry. I donât mean to worry you.â She stepped into Sinisterâs embrace, and even though Sin rested her head on Murâs chest, it felt more like the blood mage was doing the comforting. The warmth and assurance, the steadfast support. Everything about it made Murmur appreciate being on this journey together.
Sheâd never realized how much SinisterâHarlowâmeant to her until the possibility existed that she might lose everything.
âFeel better?â Sinister asked, her voice soothing.
Murmur considered the question seriously. âYes. I donât like seeing you die, even if you can come back. It almost broke me back there.â
âNot getting rid of me that easily,â Sinister joked before smiling softly and raising herself up on her tiptoes to reach Murmurâs height.
The kiss held warmth and love, understanding and strength, and the promise that everything would turn out for the best. Murmur didnât want it to stop, but thereâd be so much time for that after this fight was completed.
âOkay.â Reluctantly, the enchanter pulled away. âWe should hurry up. They can probably do without me, but if I short them a healer, theyâll get mad.â
Sinister laughed, and they half-jogged the rest of the way.
Murmur looked up at the looming walls again. She was fairly certain that if someone tried to scale the walls they couldnât simply escape, otherwise how would the prison work? The walkway they traversed was wide. Even the walls failed to make it feel restricted. Up ahead, she could see that it widened, like a river pouring into the sea. The closer they got, she realized the others had already stopped and were waiting for them to catch up.
The tension in Devlishâs shoulders worried her. Devlish rarely got tense about something, and as they joined up with their raid mates, Murmur saw why.
This was a massive circular area. The cobblestones in the middle displayed a picture she couldnât discern from where she stood and then spiraled outwards from the image. Instead of walls, the circle was surrounded on its far edges by huge rock formations with jagged peaks and slick surfaces.
Directly across from them, sitting on a massive black throne that appeared to be hewn out of some of the rocky cliff face behind him, sat Michael.
The smile on
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