| Generated by Google Flow text-to-video AI software, powered by Veo 3.1 |
They’re here. They’re in Loegria, specifically just outside the walls of
Camelot’s lower town. It was a fine walk all the way out here, which is part
of the immersive experience. There were no trains in the middle ages, so the
castle is a full forty-two kilometers from the entrance. For a normal person
in those days, that might have taken a couple of days, or more, including
rest. Many come to this dome with intentionally low-grade substrates to
really feel the antiquity of it all. Team Ravensgate doesn’t care about that
experience. They just need to get the job done. It takes them four hours of
sustained powerwalking. The clothing was the most difficult part. In order
to be let through the gates, they decided to travel as nobles, and people
like that dressed for attention, not comfort or practicality. Reagan has it
the worst. He’s portraying a knight.
“I speak the language, so let me do the talking,” Mandica encourages. “This
dome is not a hundred percent accurate. Women and people of color are not
treated as second-class citizens. The NPCs are programmed to ignore it.”
They draw nearer. “Good morrow, kind sir!” she calls up to one of the
guards. “We are travelers to Glastonbury, and require one night of rest. Is
there room at the inn for three ladies and their knight?”
The guard stares daggers before reaching behind his back and taking out a
parchment. He unrolls it, and leans over to the side to show the other
guard. It appears they are comparing something on it to the team. He clears
his throat. “You have been expected, Lady Raven of Dakota, The Hollow Red
Woman, and the Shadow of Doubt.”
“Please enter,” the other guard adds as the gates are opening for them.
“Make your way to the tiltyard for your challenge.” He chortles. “I do not
like your odds.”
“We did not sign up to joust,” Mandica informs them.
“You are on the list, you are fighting in the grand mêlée,” he replies with
a shrug.
“Morgana knows we’re here,” Reagan guesses as they’re walking through.
The lower town is exactly how you would think. The first thing they see is
the market, where locals, neighboring farmers, and travelers are selling
their wares. The road leads up the mountain, towards the castle. They don’t
know precisely where the tiltyard is, but it’s the biggest tourist
attraction in the land, so it will be obvious enough. Mandica did not look
too much into how it works when you legitimately sign up to visit this dome.
Do you start as a serf, and try to work your way up, or is it like
Ravensgate, where you get to write your full character sheet? Malika made
herself rich in Underbelly, and that was fine since not everyone finds that
to be the best gaming experience. They may have rules against that here,
however. Perhaps all other nobles are NPCs. Anyone they come across could be
a visitor, and if they are, will be a lot less likely to break character
than people in Underbelly. They’re not just playing cops and robbers, but
living an ancestral life 24-7. Being truly immersed is the entire purpose.
They continue up the mountain. The townspeople scowl until they think
they’ve been caught, then turn away to avoid punishment. They knew they
wouldn’t have a lot of fans, dressed like this. It was necessary to get
through that gate without issue. Though, they didn’t expect to be let in
quite that easily, or be expected. But it’s fine. If Morgana wants to fight,
they can fight. That’s why they came here prepared.
They make it to the tiltyard, which is full of people. A runner apparently
beat them here so he could warn the Marshal of their arrival. The stands are
completely full. The audience begins to cheer uproariously when the four of
them enter the grounds. Morgana didn’t only send word to her guardsmen. She
prepared the whole town. She wants to make a show of it. She probably wants
to humiliate them.
The Knight Marshal stands on his platform, and begins to bellow his
announcement. He tells false tales of where the four of them come from,
making up annoyingly elaborate backstories, which the governing AI must have
developed for them since they didn’t take the time to write their own.
They’re expected to stand there and look confident or scared. They don’t
have time. “Excuse me?” Jaidia interrupts.
The Knight Marshal glares at her before turning back to the crowd so all can
hear. “You will have your chance to speak when I am finished!”
“Right, but is Morgana here?” Jaidia continues.
“Or Morgan le Fay?” Mandica adds, not sure which name they use for her here.
“Lady Morgana is in Avalon, where she—hey! Hey!” He’s getting mad because
the four of them are simply leaving. “Hey, I have this whole introduction
planned! I’ve been working on this all day! It’s not easy to speak in this
weird Chaucerian shit!”
“Save your complaint for your review!” Malika argues back.
A wiry little man skitters up to them as they’re leaving. “Seek ye the road
to Avalon? I know the way. Lady Morgana, she lays traps for those who would
do her harm. If you are not pure of heart, or sharp as steel, you may wander
for days in a circle that looks straight. I can shine a light upon the true
path. I am a humble man. All I ask—”
Mandica strikes him in the chest with her open palm, sending him crashing
into the brush in the ditch. Her friends are neither bothered, nor confused.
“That’s enough, shapeshifter! We’re taking you to Castledome, where you will
face judgment!”
The impostor smirks as he’s standing back up. His skin mutates into nanites,
and begin to crawl all over his body, changing shape, changing color, and
changing her size. A dark mist swarms her for effect. The statuesque Morgana
stands before them. She breathes with an unsettlingly bright smile, as if
this form is more comfortable, though if she is made entirely of nanobots,
it doesn’t feel like anything, and any preference for form would be merely
psychological. She’s not even breathing at all. “Do you really want to have
this anachronistic fight here?” she asks with a cackle. “Steward wants to
bring me in for breaking the rules. You would break them in service to your
fool’s quest?”
“Sure.” Reagan takes out his decoherence gun, and shoots Morgana in the
chest without hesitation. He has been working on it in secret for decades.
Once it’s perfected, he will be able to use it on the man who oppressed him,
and is still oppressing his people back home. It will kill every single
back-up of anyone streaming their consciousness outside of their body. For
now, it is only capable of destroying this one copy, but Azad is standing
guard outside of Vanore’s substrate storage chamber. After she returns to
her regular body, he won’t let her reinsert herself into the simulation.
With no time to react, Morgana falls to pieces. It’s powerful enough to
disrupt the brain’s electrical signals, which means it’s also capable of
breaking your average, everyday electromagnetic bonds. If she were more
solid, it would not have been so dramatic. More people witnessed it than
they realized. They begin to crowd around. “You...you killed her,” a child
says. “You killed the witch. Will you save the queen now?”
“The queen?” Malika asks. “Who is the queen? Why does she need saving?”
“Why, ‘tis Guinevere, of course. She withers in the high tower.” The child
points. “The King will give you anything if you kill the Bane of Loegria,
and set his heart free.”






