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Sword Art Online – Progressive - Volume 1 - Chapter 3.09




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“HMMM,” SAID ARGO. 
“It’s not like that,” I replied. 
If the unspoken parts of those statements were to be filled in, they would look like this: 
Hmmm. Kirito the former tester and Asuna the solo player are working as a team. How much can I sell that nugget for? 
It’s not like that. We’re only temporarily traveling together, and not as a team or whatever. 
Of course, denying the intent or definition did not change the fact that we were indeed working together. And that activity had begun when we met at the east plaza of Urbus the previous afternoon—twenty-seven continuous hours of companionship. 
I couldn’t blame her for assuming there was something deeper going on, but in my personal dictionary, a “party of two” and a “team” were very different things. 
A party could come together spontaneously for the sake of a battle or two, then be disbanded and never return, but a proper team was designed to work together, each player fine-tuning their skills based on the presence of the other. This translated to choosing a particular equipment loadout and skillset that made up for the weaknesses of the other player so as to create attack combos that could take down difficult mobs—not so we could each attack our own targets (as Asuna and I did against the wasps). 
It was only once you reached that step that I considered it to be a team, and by that definition, Asuna and I would probably never be a team. Even ignoring all of the beater baggage, Asuna put an incredible amount of craft and pride into her fencing skills, and I couldn’t see her abandoning that fine-honed technique to prioritize her teamwork with me. 
I had no idea how much of that explanation—more like excuse—got through, so I sat down across from Argo with an innocent look on my face, waited for my temporary party companion to sit down, then ordered a black ale. Asuna ordered a fruit cocktail cut with soda water, and the NPC waiter left for ten seconds before returning with the drinks. With that kind of speed, it felt as though they should dispense with the employee altogether and have the glasses just appear on the table, but I supposed the game’s creator felt it was a necessary touch. NPC employees didn’t cost real money, anyway. 
We lifted our drinks, as did Argo, who shot me an encouraging look. I cleared my throat and announced, “Erm… to reaching the second-floor labyrinth!” 
“Cheers!” 
“… Cheers.” 
The enthusiasm was not quite shared by all, but at least we were on the same page. I drained half of my mug of beer—they called it ale in the game, but I didn’t understand the difference. It was the same sour, bitter carbonated drink I remember tasting at my mother’s permission in real life, but it was strangely satisfying after a long day of racing around the wilderness and dungeons. Though from what I understood, the adult players of SAO thought there was no reason for alcohol that didn’t get you drunk. 
In that sense, it seemed obvious that Argo, who gulped down her entire mug of foamy yellow liquid and exhaled with satisfaction, was probably another teenager who wasn’t fixated on the alcohol part of the drink. But there was no way to be sure. In fact, it was nearly impossible to guess her age, even if there were no familiar whisker stripes painted on those cheeks. 
Argo slammed her empty cup onto the table and immediately ordered another. 
“Five days from the opening of the gate to reaching the labyrinth. That was quick.” 
“Compared to the first floor, sure. Plus, we had lots of players over level 10 because it took so long the first time. The original level required to beat the second floor was more like 7 or 8, right?” 
“Well … maybe from a numerical standpoint. But that’s just the point at which it becomes beatable.” She lifted the second mug of ale to her lips, and Asuna filled the silence. 
“How many attempts did it take to defeat the second-floor boss in the beta?” 
“Hmm. We got wiped out at least ten times, and that was only the attempts that I participated in… But the first time was pure recklessness. I was only level 5.” 
I didn’t mention that I did it hoping to score the LA bonus. 
“I think when we actually did succeed, the raid’s average level was over 7.” 
“Ahh… But this time, it’ll be at least 10.” 
I checked the party HP gauge. I’d earned a level-up thanks to our hunting of the minos—er, tauruses—in the labyrinth, so I was up to fourteen. Asuna claimed to be twelve. Most likely Lind and Kibaou’s teams, the main muscle of the raid party, would be about the same. 
“Yeah … I bet it’ll be over 10. Statistically, that’s a high enough level … but floor-boss battles don’t follow the same rules as wimpy mobs.” 
The battle against Illfang the Kobold Lord seemed like it had happened ages ago by now. Our average level was far higher than it had been during the beta test. Our leader, Diavel the knight, was level 12, just like me. 
That did not stop the kobold king’s katana skills from draining all of Diavel’s HP. The sheer firepower of a boss’s attacks rendered the “safe range” of levels meaningless. 
Asuna and I thought in silence as Argo emptied three quarters of her second mug and said, “Plus, this boss is more about having good equipment than a high level.” 
“Yeah, that’s the thing,” I agreed with a sigh. The second-floor boss had a special sword skill called Numbing Detonation that wasn’t primarily about dealing damage. But because of that, increasing the player’s HP wasn’t an adequate defense. Careful raising of debuff prevention via equipment upgrades was crucial. 
That would all be covered in the next edition of the info dealer’s strategy guide series, no doubt. All the front-line players would eagerly delve into the upgrading system, and Nezha would do a booming business here in this town. 
“… Ugh…” I grunted without realizing it. 
What if Nezha hadn’t moved from Urbus to Taran in order to wait out the storm… but because he foresaw that there would be high demand for his services here? He might bilk players out of their hard-earned rare gear without a care for his reputation, making the Legend Braves the top guild in the game, surpassing even Lind and Kibaou’s teams. And what would happen to Nezha the blacksmith? 
“… Argo.” I brushed off the crawling sensation going up my arms and opened my window over the table. “Here’s the map data for the first and second level of the labyrinth.” 
I turned it into a scroll and plopped it down before her. She picked it up and made it disappear faster than a parlor magician. 
“Thanks again, Kii-boy. Like I always say, if you want the proper value of this information…” 
“No… I’m not trying to make a business out of map data. I couldn’t sleep at night if I knew players were dying because they couldn’t afford maps. However, I do have a job with a condition I want you to do for me in return.” 
“Ohh? Why don’t you tell Big Sister what you want?” 
She cast a sidelong glance at me. I could feel some kind of waves radiating off of Asuna, but I was too afraid to look, so I focused my eyes on Argo. 
“I’m sure you’re aware of them already …” I lowered my voice and looked around the bar. The entrance was at the end of a narrow alleyway, and no other players had come in. “I want info on a team called Legend Braves that took part in this morning’s fight against the Bullbous Bow. All their names and how they got together.” 
“Ahh. And … your condition?” 
“I don’t want anyone to know that I’m looking for information about them. Especially the people in question.” 
The scariest thing about Argo the Rat is that not only did she not practice client confidentiality, she actually made it her motto that every buyer’s name was another product to sell. So normally, there was no way I could buy information on the Legend Braves in total secrecy. Argo would follow her own rules and go straight to the Braves, asking if they wanted to buy the name of the person snooping into their business. Of course, I could pay her more than what they offered in order to keep my name out of it, but it would still let them know that someone was asking about them. That was what I wanted to avoid. 
My condition was that I wanted her to collect information on the Braves without making any kind of contact. It was in direct conflict with Argo’s motto and principles. 
“Ahh…Hmmmm.” 
She twisted her curly hair with a finger as she mulled it over, then shrugged and said okay with surprising ease. But my relief only lasted a split second. 
“Just remember this: Big Sister prioritized her feelings for Kii-boy over her rules of business.” 
Again, I felt a burning sensation emanating from the right, and froze solid. Argo never let the smile leave her face. 
“Now, what did you want with me, A-chan?” 
Ten minutes later, Asuna and I were back at the eastern plaza of Taran. 
As a village, the scale of Taran was much smaller than the main town of Urbus. However, it shared the same basic construction in being carved down out of a flat mountaintop, with only the outer walls left standing. Therefore, it had at least twice the vertical space of any village built on flat plains. 
The circular plaza was no exception, surrounded by tall buildings in every direction. But most of them were not NPC shops like inns or item stores, and there were no player-owned homes yet, so anyone could walk in or out. 
More than a few players used these empty houses as squats instead of paying for an inn. The biggest difference was that an NPC-run inn offered full system protection on its rooms. 
Of course, while it was impossible to hurt anyone in one of these places, there was always that uncertainty about sleeping without a lock, and the beds were painfully hard. I’d tried them out a few times when trying to skimp on expenses, and barely got a wink of sleep—I bolted to my feet every time I heard a noise inside the room or outside in the street. It was truly unfair; my real body was probably in some safe, sanitized hospital, with all of my senses disconnected from their external organs, but I was still terrorized by awful beds and outside noise in this virtual world. 
After I’d suffered enough, I finally swore off of such frugality, and had been staying in proper inns or NPC homes ever since. 
But there were other uses for an empty home than just sleeping. You could have a meeting in private, divvy up loot—or spy on someone. 
“This is a good angle,” Asuna said from the chair in front of the window, looking down at the plaza below, but careful not to get too close. 
“It’s probably the best spot you can get. Straight behind him, the angle would be too extreme to have a good idea of what’s happening. I’m gonna set the dinner down here.” 
I placed four steamed buns of uncertain filling I’d bought from a street vendor on top of the round table. Their skin was the usual milky white, and nothing seemed out of order with the scent of the rising steam. In fact, they looked good. The official item name was “Taran Steamed Bun.” 
Asuna turned away from the source of the clanging outside and cast a doubtful look at the steamed buns. 
“What’s … inside of those?” 
“Dunno. But it’s a cow-themed floor, so I’d guess it’s probably beef? By the by, in western Japan, when they talk about steamed meat buns, they mean beef. It’s in eastern Japan that the generic term means pork.” 
“And is this town western or eastern?” she asked exasperatedly. I apologized for my pointless trivia and pushed the pile toward Asuna. 
“Go on while they’re hot.” 
“… Very well.” 
She removed the leather glove from her hand and took the bun from the top of the pile. I hurriedly grabbed one of my own. 
We’d been in the dungeon since this morning, and hadn’t had time to stop for a snack, so I was nearly starving. If our avatars exhibited biological processes other than emotion, my stomach would have gurgled all through our meeting with Argo. I opened my mouth wide and was about to stuff the steaming treat into my mouth, when— 
“Nyaak!” 
A strangled shriek hit my ears and I looked over in surprise. Asuna was sitting frozen in her chair, the steam bun held in both hands. The large, five-inch bun was missing one small bite—and the opening had squirted a thick cream-colored liquid across her face and neck. 
She stayed dead still, properly chewing the bite she already took while resisting the impulse to cry, then finally spoke in a soft voice. 
“… So the filling is warm custard cream… and some kind of sweet-sour fruit …” 
“…” 
I slowly lowered the Taran steamed bun from its position an inch away from my face, down to the table. The moment I let go, her voice struck again, sharp as a rapier. 
“If … if it turns out you ate this during the beta test and knew what was inside, and intentionally didn’t tell me what it was … then I may not be able to stop myself from what comes next …” 
“I swear to you that I did not know. Absolutely, positively, categorically.” 
I took a small handkerchief out of my belt pouch and handed it to her. Fortunately, “mess” effects here would disappear in only a few moments, even if left alone, and wiping them with any item categorized as cloth made them disappear entirely. With each mess, the durability of the cloth would fall, but I’d heard rumors of a magic handkerchief that could be used forever. Mess effects caused by mobs or special terrain often contained their own debuff effects, so an unlimited handkerchief would be really handy to have. If only it weren’t such a rare piece of loot … 
“Mm.” 
I was shaken from my reverie by the return of my handkerchief. After a few seconds of wiping, Asuna’s face was free of cream. 
She gave me one last glare, turned back to the window, and announced, “I’ll cook my own food the next time we have a stakeout. I’d rather not have to eat something terrible like this again.” 
I felt tempted to point out that with a Cooking skill of zero, she couldn’t make anything that wasn’t terrible. But even as a fourteen-year-old, I was smart enough to know I shouldn’t. Instead I gave her a forced smile and opined, “Th-that sounds great.” 
Two arrows shot forward and wiped the smile off my face. “When did I say, ‘I’ll cook my own food… for both of us’?” 
“You didn’t,” I admitted sheepishly. When I actually tried the cooled-off Taran steamed bun, it wasn’t bad … It was pretty good, actually. But only as a dessert. 
The outer skin was soft and chewy, and the cream inside was smooth and firm and not too sweet, the perfect match for the sour, strawberry-like fruit inside. I suspected that the preset flavor values for the bun were meant to resemble a strawberry cream pastry, but through developer error or some whim of the system, it was sold heated. Asuna’s mood improved eventually—she even ate two of the buns. 
That was all well and good, but unlike the buns, the actual purpose of our stakeout was turning out to be fruitless. The entire point of doing this, of course, was to monitor Nezha the blacksmith and attempt to discover the means of his weapon-switching trick. 
His business was thriving, but nearly all of the requests were maintenance repairs, and only two players in the hour that we watched asked him to upgrade their weapons. Both of those attempts were successful. I suspected that it was because they were only mid-rank weapons, but it was starting to make me doubt the possibility that there was any deception at all. What if Asuna’s sword breaking and then reappearing thanks to the Materialize All Items button were just freakish errors, bugs in the system…? 
“No, that can’t be it,” I muttered to myself, trying to shake aside my self-doubt. 
The means of the weapon-switching trick were still a mystery, but we knew how it was that the Wind Fleuret was destroyed on the first attempt—it was the very piece of information that Asuna bought from Argo. 
When Argo had asked Asuna what her business was, the answer surprised me. She said, “I want you to find out if destruction is one of the possible penalties for an unsuccessful attempt at upgrading a weapon.” 
Argo’s answer was just as unexpected as the question. “I don’t need to look it up. I already know the answer.” 
We were stunned. Argo said up-front that she’d give it to us for the cost of her drinks, and explained. 
“Strictly as a failure penalty, weapon-breaking will never happen. However, there is one way to ensure that a weapon will break with absolute certainty: when you attempt to upgrade a weapon that is out of upgrade attempts.” 
Meaning this. Last night, the Wind Fleuret that crumbled to pieces before our eyes was in fact switched in at some point … and it had already used all of its allotted upgrade attempts. It was a “spent” weapon. But the Wind Fleuret +4 hanging from Asuna’s waist still had two chances left. So even if the attempt had failed, it could not have caused the sword to crack. 
Now that the spent-weapon concept had entered the picture, I thought back to Rufiol, the fellow who tried out Nezha before Asuna did. 
I couldn’t determine if Nezha had indeed switched out his Anneal Blade with a different one. But the result was three straight failures, not destruction. Perhaps he couldn’t do his normal trick because there were so many people around, or perhaps he just didn’t have a spent Anneal Blade to switch it with. 
If that was the case, it explained why Nezha offered the crestfallen Rufiol a sum of money much higher than the going rate for that spent +0 Anneal Blade. He wasn’t compensating the man for his loss, but stocking up for the next attempt … 
“Kirito.” 
I blinked, snapped out of my speculation. My eyes focused and saw that the plaza below was shrouded in night, and few players were still going to and fro. 
One player walked directly across the circular plaza. He wore metal armor that reflected the light of the lampposts, and a dark blue shirt—clearly the uniform of Lind’s group, the top team among the front-line players. 
Asuna and I watched with bated breath as he approached Nezha’s smith shop and removed his sword from his waist attachment. Its length and shape identified it as a one-handed longsword. 
But it was slightly shorter and wider than my Anneal Blade. I couldn’t be sure because of the distance and darkness, but the large knuckle guard appeared to be that of a Stout Brand. That was a broadsword, a sub-category of one-handed swords that prioritized attack strength over speed. It was about as rare as a Wind Fleuret, if not slightly higher. 
“Certainly good enough to be a target for his switcheroo,” Asuna whispered. I was surprised that she’d identified it at a glance, but I didn’t let it show. 
“Yeah. Now, whether he asks for maintenance or an upgrade …” 
There was at least fifty feet in between us at the southwestern side of the plaza, and the outdoor blacksmith shop at the northwest edge. The Search skill’s parameter adjustment brought several details into focus, but it was much too far to hear a conversation at normal volume. 
“Do you know that guy’s name from the Lind team?” I asked. Asuna thought it over. 
“I think his name is Shivata.” 
“With a V? Not Shibata?” 

“It was spelled ‘S-h-i-v-a-t-a.’ Seems pretty clear to me.” 
“… All right, then.” 
We both practiced the foreign sound of the letter V by biting our lower lips. Meanwhile, Nezha and Shivata had finished their negotiation, and the Stout Brand changed hands, sheath and all. 
This was the important point. We craned as close as possible to the window without being visible from the plaza and focused on the blacksmith’s hands. Inevitably, our shoulders and even hair brushed up against each other, but the proud fencer would certainly understand, given the circumstances. 
If it was a maintenance request, Nezha would remove the sword and place it against the small grindstone affixed to the side of his anvil. But he turned away from his client and reached out with his right hand to one of the many leather sacks on the carpet. Those sacks presumably contained different types of crafting materials. Meaning … 
“An upgrade!” I hissed. 
Asuna nodded vigorously and whispered, “The left hand! Keep your eyes on his left hand!” 
She didn’t have to tell me. I kept my eyes fixed on that left hand, fighting the natural urge to follow the movement of his right. 
Shivata’s broadsword hung from Nezha’s hand, still in the sheath. There was nothing unnatural about the position or angle of his arm. 
Very close to the sword was a display of premade weapons for sale, but there was no way he could switch them. All of the display weapons were common iron weapons; there was not a single rare weapon among them, and certainly not another Stout Brand. Besides, dropping the sword onto the carpet and lifting a nearby weapon would draw too much attention. I couldn’t imagine that we’d have missed such an action when the Wind Fleuret was nearly stolen … 
Nezha’s left hand was completely still, holding the broadsword, while the right hand did all the work. He picked out all of his materials from the leather sacks and tossed them into the forge next to the anvil. The dozen or so items burst into flame and eventually melted into one big lump—I assumed. I wasn’t actually watching. At any rate, it was the highlight of the upgrading process. For an instant, the deep red light that signified a Heaviness upgrade shone from the forge, then subsided into the waiting state. 
“… !” 
Every muscle in my body twitched. 
At the same moment the red light flared, Nezha’s left hand did something. Asuna must have sensed it as well, because our shoulders jumped. 
“Did he …?” 
“The sword …” 
We kept staring but couldn’t finish our sentences. That brief flash of light, barely half a second, was enough to blind us from the exact sight we needed to witness. 
As I watched, teeth grinding, the blacksmith gingerly raised the Stout Brand. If he had indeed done something to it, the sword looked absolutely identical to the one Shivata gave him. 
He grabbed the hilt with his right hand and slowly pulled the sword out, then placed the thick blade into the red flames of the forge. After a few seconds, all of the light transferred to the weapon. He placed it on the anvil, picked up his smithing hammer with his right hand, and began striking the sword. Five. Eight … Ten. 
Just as we feared, the dark gray blade of the Stout Brand shattered into pieces. This time, neither of us missed it. 
“…What now?” Asuna asked, watching the quiet plaza from the windowsill. 
It was clear what she was referring to. Shivata showed remarkable restraint in bottling up his anger and disappointment, and left with minimal complaint to Nezha. Asuna was wondering if we should track him down and reveal the existence of the deception. 
From a sympathy standpoint, I wanted to tell him, because within an hour, he could use the Materialize All Items button to retrieve his sword. But from a more practical standpoint, Shivata would not be happy just to get his sword back. He would surely return to the plaza and confront Nezha with this evidence, and I could not predict what would happen after that. 
Nezha’s actions were evil—of that there was no doubt. He ought to suffer proper punishment for his misdeeds. But without a GM holding court in this virtual world, who would determine what was “proper”? 
Even a crafter could not just hang out in town all the time. What if, when he left the safety of the village limits, some player attempted to punish him through means within their control? What if they took it to the ultimate conclusion? 
If we told Shivata now, it could ultimately lead to the very first PK in Aincrad. That concern was the driving force behind Asuna’s question, and I did not have an easy answer in mind. 
As I sat wracked by indecision and unease, I heard the calming ringing of bells. It was eight o’clock. At the same moment, the hammering outside stopped. I moved next to Asuna and looked to see that Nezha was closing up his shop. He extinguished the forge, put away the tools and materials, folded the sign, and began laying them all on top of the carpet. His back looked so very small and unassuming. 
“Why did Nezha and the Legend Braves decide to start doing this fraud, anyway…? And how?” I murmured to myself. Asuna shrugged. “I mean, even if they came up with the idea to switch the weapons, there’s a huge hurdle between something that is theoretically possible within the system, and actually doing it. SAO’s not just a normal VRMMO. Our lives are on the line now. Surely they have to realize what might happen if they steal other people’s weapons …” 
“Maybe they do realize … and decided to kick over the hurdles anyway.” 
“Huh?” 
“Ignoring the ethical side of it, the actual hurdle is just knowing that you could risk your life if you get exposed, right? So they can eliminate that issue if they just get far stronger than anyone else before anyone finds out what they’re doing. That way they can fight off any attempts to take their lives in the wilderness. The six—er, five members of the Legend Braves probably aren’t that far off from their goal.” 
When Asuna’s words sank in, I felt my virtual skin crawl. 
“C-come on, don’t tell me that. A team of guys that doesn’t shy away from wicked acts, strong enough to destroy any front-line players? I mean …” 
My throat became so constricted that even I could barely make out the next words I said. 
“…They’d rule the world.” 
While I wasn’t inclined to think that this weapon scam wasn’t my problem in any way, I also assumed that I wouldn’t have to suffer from it. I just had to make sure I didn’t ever give Nezha my sword. 
But that was a terribly shortsighted view of the situation. 
Thirty-three days before, the moment we were trapped in this game permanently, I left behind my first and only friend in the game, Klein, and abandoned him back in the Town of Beginnings. I avoided the wilderness zones, which I expected to be bled dry in no time, and headed straight for Horunka, the next town. In other words, I prioritized the quickest and most efficient way to upgrade my equipment and stats so that I could maximize my chance of survival. 
Using all the knowledge from my beta experience, I tore through countless quests and mobs, racing onward and onward. From the moment I chose to sprint out of the gates, I’d never slowed in my progress. 
But the speed of my advancement was always based purely on the rules of the game (if not personal morals). If I were to ignore those rules, there were far more efficient ways to advance than what I did now—for example, monopolizing the best hunting grounds, or stealing rare loot from other players. 
Of course, swindling weapons only earned them col and the item itself, not experience or skill points. But as Asuna had said, with enough money, there was no limit on how much you could power up your gear. 
I had bumped my main weapon up to +6, but my armor was currently averaging around +3. Against a player with fully upgraded armor, even at a lower level, there was no way I could win. 
In other words, allowing the Legend Braves to continue in their weapon fraud would be tantamount to allowing the creation of a group of players stronger than me and unbound by rules or morals. 
“… I’m sorry. It took me until just now to realize how serious this is,” I murmured. The fencer looked at me suspiciously. 
“Why would you say sorry?” 
“Well, you almost had your sword stolen, right? And this whole time, I’ve only been half-concerned, as if it was someone else’s problem…” 
The words emerged naturally, without thinking, but for some reason, Asuna scowled even harder, blinked a few times, then yanked her head in the other direction, angrily. 
“There’s no need to apologize. It’s not as though you and I are total strangers … I mean, um, we know each other and we’re party members, but there’s nothing more than… arrgh! Look what you did! You’re acting so weird, I’m all confused!” 
I thought I was more confused than she was, but before I could respond, she looked out the window and her eyes narrowed. 
“That carpet …” 
“Huh…?” 
“So keeping your items from wasting away isn’t its only function.” 
I turned to look at the east plaza of Taran. In the northwest corner, Nezha had finished packing away all his tools and was now fiddling with the pop-up menu on his Vendor’s Carpet. It started rolling itself up, and the assortment of objects on top of it was automatically sucked into storage. 
“Hey … Do you suppose he’s using that function to switch the weapons?” 
I shook my head instantly. “No, that’s not possible. The carpet’s absorption ability has to be activated via the menu, like he’s doing now, plus it swallows up everything on top of the carpet. You couldn’t have it take just one sword and spit another one out … in … exchange …” 
I trailed to a stop. 
The Vendor’s Carpet’s ability to store items could not be used to exchange them. 
However, what if he used his own storage… meaning, the inventory tab of his main menu? I rolled away from the window and slumped to my knees. 
“Wh-what are you doing?” Asuna asked. I didn’t reply. I brought up the menu with my right hand and switched to the item list. As I had done the last night when I showed Asuna the equipment mannequin, I tapped the top and bottom edges of the window to make it adjustable, then lowered it down until it was almost stuck to the floor—right below where my left hand would dangle if I let it hang. 
Lastly, I pulled the Anneal Blade, sheath and all, off my back and held it in my dangling left hand. I didn’t have a folding chair, but I was about the same distance off the ground as Nezha was when he accepted the weapon from his customer. 
Asuna held a deep breath, understanding what I was about to try. I looked up at her face and said, “Watch close and count the time.” 
“Okay.” 
“Here goes…Three, two, one, zero!” 
I dropped the sword directly onto the window. Just as it touched the surface, the sword vanished in a puff of light and turned into text in the menu. I promptly touched the item name. When the sub-menu appeared, I selected “materialize.” With another splash of light, the sword reappeared and I picked it up again. 
“… How was that?” 
I looked up and met the fencer’s wide-eyed gaze. Her hazel eyes blinked slowly, moved to my left hand… and she shook her head. 
“It was a similar sight. But much too slow to be the same thing. It took well over a second for the sword to disappear and reappear.” 
“Maybe if I practice, I can do it faster …” 
“There were other differences. There are big fancy effects when you put it in and take it out of the menu. Even timed to happen at the same time the upgrading materials flash in the forge, you can’t hide that kind of effect. Plus, it shines twice.” 
“… I see …” I sighed, and tapped the window on the floor to make it disappear. I stood up and slung the sword back into position. 
“I thought I was onto something. I figured all the stuff stacked on the carpet could hide his menu…” 
“Wouldn’t that be impossible, too? I mean, if you put something on top of a window set to the inventory tab, wouldn’t it all sink into it?” 
“… Urgh.” 
She was right. I nodded and looked out the window again. Nezha was just leaving the plaza, rolled-up carpet balanced on his shoulder. His head was down, as though feeling the weight on his shoulder, and plodded heavily away. It was not the image of a man who had just scored himself a rare and valuable Stout Brand. 
“If we can’t expose the trick he’s using, I suppose we’ll just have to go reveal the truth to Shivata,” she said. 
“If the sword returns to him, that will prove that there was a deceptive attempt to steal it. But if that happens, all the blame will fall on Nezha’s shoulders, and the other five Braves could get away scot-free. Obviously, what he’s doing is wrong. But … I just get this feeling …” 
I trailed off. Asuna fixed me with a direct stare. For a moment, it seemed as if the powerful light in her eyes softened just a bit. 
“You can’t imagine that Nezha is doing all of this entirely of his own volition…Am I right?” 
“Huh …?” 
My eyes widened. She’d hit the nail on the head. Asuna turned away and leaned against the wall, looked up at the dark ceiling and spoke in a slow cadence. 
“Do you remember what he said yesterday, when I went to ask him to upgrade my Wind Fleuret? He asked if I wanted a new weapon or to repair my old one. It was as though he left out the option of upgrading, hoping he didn’t have to do it …” 
“I see … Good point. That would explain why he made such a sour face when you asked him to upgrade.” 
“Honestly, if Shivata was able to expose his fraud and all the Legend Braves stood up for Nezha and said they were false charges, I wouldn’t mind that much. But … if they abandoned him and tried to pin all of the responsibility on his shoulders …” 
In a worst-case scenario, all the rage of the player population would be focused on Nezha, and he might be executed. In fact, the probability was fairly high. After all … 
“The five warriors all took the names of legendary soldiers and heroes, and they didn’t include Nezha the crafter in that pattern …” 
“Oh, about that.” Asuna held up a finger as though just remembering something. 
“What?” 
“Something’s been bugging me ever since you told me he was a member of the Legend Braves. His name … Nezha. So I asked Argo …” 
At that precise moment, a purple icon started blinking on the right side of my vision, and I held up a hand to cut her off. I clicked the icon and it opened a long private message. Speak of the devil—it was from Argo. 
FIRST REPORT 
Beneath that header was all the information I’d requested about the Legend Braves: names, levels, rough character builds. It was an impressive amount of info to compile in such a short time. 
I set my window to visible mode and beckoned Asuna over to look at the message. At the top was Orlando, their leader. Level 11, used a longsword and shield, heavy armor. 
Along with these data was a simple sentence explaining the source of his name. That part was requested by Asuna. As my uncertain memory recalled, he was indeed based on one of the Twelve Peers of Charlemagne, his paladin knights. But Orlando was the Italian styling of his name, while in the original French, he was Roland. 
“Where do you suppose Argo got this information?” I noted wryly. Asuna giggled. 
“She must know someone who’s a major history buff… So Beowulf was Danish, not English. Cuchulainn was from Celtic mythology, like we guessed.” 
We went down the list, ignoring the character info and reading the sources of their names. When we reached Nezha’s name at the bottom, I let out a long breath. 
His level was 10, a fairly high number thanks to the fact that crafting gave experience points on its own. But it didn’t help his combat skill proficiency, which would make fighting on the front line difficult for him. Naturally, his player build was tuned to be a blacksmith. And at the end, the source of his name … 
“Huh?!” 
“What…?” 
We yelped together. The answer was totally unexpected. 
“Does this mean… we were pronouncing it wrong?” 
“B-but I remember the other Braves were calling him Nezuo…” 
We looked at each other, then back to the message. If what was written in his lengthy name background was true, I had terribly misunderstood him. 
A moment later, several pieces of information stored in my brain as separate clumps suddenly began to rearrange themselves, linking together and shining bright. 
“Oh … !” 
I lifted my left hand and squeezed it, watching closely. Opened again, and closed. 
In that instant, I knew that I had finally grasped the secret of Nezha’s weapon-switching trick for good. 
“Of course … That’s what it was!!” 
 



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