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Home > simkin452 > Gun Princess Royale - Book 3 - The Thousand Yard Princess - Intro. > Gun Princess Royale - Book 3 - Ch14. (Part I)

Gun Princess Royale - Book 3 - Ch14. (Part I)

Author: 

  • simkin452

Audience Rating: 

  • General Audience (pg)

Publication: 

  • Novel Chapter

Genre: 

  • Science Fiction

Character Age: 

  • Teenage or High School

TG Themes: 

  • Physically Forced

TG Elements: 

  • Identity Theft

Other Keywords: 

  • Gun Princess Royale

Permission: 

  • Posted by author(s)

Chapter 14.

– I –

I almost shot him.

My right arm moved, and the Punisher scythed through the air as my body reacted – as I reacted – to Arnval’s announcement in the blink of an eye.

But at the last moment before my index finger depressed the trigger, I held myself back.

The urge to fire the linear rifle was tremendous.

The rifle trembled in my grasp as I was caught between opposing tidal forces raging within me.

The need to vent crashed with the need for prudence.

Haste makes waste, and I was in an unknown situation where every bullet counted.

But I couldn’t bring my arm back down – I just couldn’t – even though I knew there was no point shooting at Arnval…because he wasn’t there.

That’s what the Argus System and Mirai’s senses told me.

Through the Argus, I was aware that Arnval was a holo-projection manifested by a dozen emitters spread throughout the rooftop terrace. The ballooning sensation I experienced before after emerging from the Sarcophagus was absent. Instead, the system made me ‘aware’ of the presence of the holographic emitters. If I concentrated on any one of them, the Argus focused on the device and supplied me with tactile sensory data. Shape, size, estimated weight, even texture was all fed into me as though I’d reached out with an invisible hand and touched the emitter.

However, when I reached out for Arnval using the Argus System, it was akin to waving my hand through a mist, disturbing it gently, and his projection flickered ever so faintly as though subjected to the observer effect.

In contrast, Mirai was aware that Arnval wasn’t real because she couldn’t sense his presence.

During my conflict – I mean training exercise – with the maids, Mirai had sensed when she was being watched, or rather, she had sensed the emotions and intentions of the observer. When a maid had closed in on Mirai with strong feelings, Mirai had picked up on those intense emotions as if they’d been radiated out to her. It wasn’t an infallible system – I’d been sniped from afar before I knew what was happening – but it had saved her on a couple of occasions. Yet in this situation, Mirai hadn’t sensed Arnval watching her from the opposite rooftop terrace.

There was one more reason why I knew that the Arnval facing me wasn’t real.

Arnval may have been part machine, but there was enough of his organic body to emanate a lifeforce that Mirai could see.

The young man wearing a faintly remorseful smile had no golden aura surrounding him.

“You’re not going to shoot?” he asked me with a hint of regret.

I shook my head subtly.

There’s no point.

And yet I couldn’t bring myself to lower the rifle down to my side.

It was like a compromise between the two opposing currents of desire racing within me.

I wouldn’t shoot, but I wouldn’t completely abandon the intention to do so.

Arnval nodded weakly and glanced down at the gun in his right hand. “Aren’t you going to ask me why?”

The Punisher continued to tremble as I swallowed and cleared my throat. “Why…?”

His gaze met mine. “Because your sister betrayed House Novis and the Sanreal Family.”

I felt myself frown slightly as his words triggered an uneasy tide of emotions inside my chest, one that washed over the warring desires of shoot and don’t shoot.

Arnval’s eyes had narrowed. Whether voluntary or not, it was a clear sign that he was watching me intently.

The question of ‘where are you?’ briefly crossed my mind before my thoughts turned to a realization that was surprisingly painful.

Rather than a realization, it was more a confirmation of what I’d already suspected.

“She told the Empress about Mirai…didn’t she?”

Arnval inhaled deeply, then reply with a single nod.

The Punisher trembled violently in my hand before I lowered it down to my side. “Why…?”

“She negotiated an agreement with the Empress. She would take her research to House Aventisse if they would guarantee her complete control over how the research was conducted. And that included you.”

I shook my head slowly. “No, I mean why approach Kateopia?”

“Because once Clarisol was imprinted into Mirai, she would assume the identity of Isabel Allegrando and disappear to the far reaches of colonized space.”

Disappear….

Hearing it from Arnval triggered another tide of uncomfortable feelings.

Despite everything I’d been told about the plan to give Clarisol, or at least a copy of her, a way out of the virtual space imprisoning her consciousness, it bothered me because it felt too contrived. It clashed with the notion that surely there was a better way to secure her freedom. But then I considered how long Clarisol had been imprisoned within that virtual space, and I wondered if the Sanreal Family had simply exhausted all options to reason with Kateopia.

The more I considered the various sides to the situation, the more confused and uncertain it grew.

Yet I couldn’t shake off the impression that it was a lie.

Isabel Allegrando. Clarisol’s freedom. They both seemed like a lie that begged the question of why lie to me.

Why not tell me the truth? What are they afraid of telling me? Do they believe I won’t be able to handle the truth?

Arnval pressed on. “Your sister couldn’t afford to let Mirai slip away. It took her countless attempts to create a Simulacrum that could host the Angel Fibers. She couldn’t tolerate spending months or another year trying to create another copy of Mirai.” He paused for a long moment and assumed a troubled frown. “If it was up to her, Mirai would never have left the maturation tank. Keeping her contained for the sole purpose of cultivating the Angel Fibers was her purpose after all. Having her prized project walking about put her research at great risk.”

“So she tried to strike a deal with the Empress,” I said. “But what went wrong?”

“The Empress didn’t agree to Erina’s terms and conditions.” Arnval shook his head and snorted. “No deal. To make matters worse, Kateopia demanded Erina and House Novis hand Mirai and all the research over to her. Your sister dug in her heels and preferred to go down in flames rather than hand Mirai over. Kateopia retaliated, and Ronin Kassius paid the price. Adding insult to injury, for House Novis to avoid being expelled from the Imperial Court, they had to commit Mirai into the Gun Princess Royale. Erina’s attempts to keep her research subject safe had backfired on her completely. Mirai had now been tossed out of the frying pan and into the fire…along with you.”

This I could believe.

Erina was single minded in her passions so I found it plausible that she would undertake an extreme venture if it ensured she would keep Mirai under her control.

The question of stealing Mirai from House Novis and the Sanreal Family on her own was inconceivable. She would never be able to flee safely with Mirai. But if she could garner the support of someone important – of someone who wielded great authority and power – then it might be possible to keep Mirai under her control.

Unfortunately, Erina’s plans had fallen into disarray, and that brought us – namely me – to a rooftop courtyard in a city habit constructed within an immense Citadel.

“I don’t get it.” I shook my head slowly. “Why do this at all?”

“Because your sister caused all this to happen. This is her punishment.”

“So you’re going to shoot her in the head?” I gave Arnval a confused shrug. “What the Hell does that solve? You need her—Sanreal needs her—to continue her research into the Angel Fibers, and into me. What good does it do having her killed?” Again, I shook my head slowly at him. “There’s no point to this.”

Arnval cocked his head slightly. “You paid a visit to Clarisol in her virtual prison, didn’t you?”

I felt a flicker of annoyance at the question. “You know that I did, so don’t ask.”

“Visiting hours were strictly regulated. Your little incursion gave the Empress more ammunition to use against House Novis. She really tightened the screws on Sanreal.”

Did she now? Tough luck.

I shrugged dismissively. “So what?”

“That virtual environment is more than a just a simulation. It’s more than a prison for Clarisol’s neural map. It’s a place where her mind can develop, grow, mature. Otherwise, how could the consciousness of a ten-year old girl grow into that of a twenty-year old woman if the environment didn’t allow for it.”

My innards clenched weakly as I began joining the proverbial dots together. But I chose not to get ahead of myself, and instead waited for Arnval to say his piece.

He continued smoothly. “Erina Kassius robbed Clarisol val Sanreal of an opportunity at freedom. Now she’ll face the same fate.”

“…meaning…?”

“Her mind has already been mapped down to the finest detail.”

I was certainly seeing where this was headed, and my gut clenched tighter.

Arnval glanced down at the large gun in his right hand. “A bullet to the head?” His shoulders rose and fell. “No. A bullet through the heart. Her body dies, but her mind lives on in a virtual environment.”

My throat abruptly felt like an icy fist was squeezing it.

I found it very hard swallow.

But Arnval wasn’t finished. “Erina Kassius will continue to serve House Novis, and the Sanreal Family. But she’ll be doing it from inside a box for her mind. She won’t have any more opportunities to betray House Novis. Her hold on you will be tempered. You’ll be free to live as Isabel val Sanreal and compete as Mirai with minimal interaction with her outside of what’s necessary for her to continue conducting her research.”

I succeeded in clearing my throat, but it still felt constricted.

My chest and heart also felt squeezed by conflicted emotions, the latter pounding audibly.

And in my mind, a multitude of thoughts swirled about in turmoil.

I had read once that the human brain holds parallel trains of thought. After all, it’s a common saying. However, we are only consciously aware of one train of thought. As I stood on the rooftop terrace, I found myself wondering what those other thoughts entailed. What were Mirai’s parallel consciousnesses thinking? Were they all in agreement or were they floundering about?

Arnval had fallen silent but he was watching me carefully.

I had no doubt he wasn’t the only one.

With that in mind, I stepped closer to the rooftop’s parapet. “Who decided this?”

“Phelan Sanreal.”

Yes, of course he did.

However, it was a question that needed be asked though it was more a confirmation of what I suspected, but it led me to the next question.

“If it’s already been decided…then why am I here?”

“Because you get an opportunity to decide her fate.”

My chest twinged in trepidation. “Me? Why me?”

“Because she wronged the Sanreal Family, and she wronged you. This is her punishment. However, you can save her.”

I was silent for a long moment, the wheels turning furiously in my head of a sudden as various emotions surged through me, and again multiple trains of thought steamed headlong through my mind. Eventually, after considering various points of view and inwardly debating a handful of arguments, I arrived at a single question.

“Why the Hell would I do that?”

Arnval’s eyebrows rose as his eyes widened before he burst into laughter.

I narrowed my eyes at him and glowered. “What’s so damn funny?”

Arnval took measured breaths and recovered his composure.

“Well?” I pressed him. “What’s so damn funny?”

“Your sister said the same thing.”

I stiffened and lost a grip on my glower. “What…?”

Arnval continued after another breath. “It’s exactly what your sister said—well, not exactly. But her response was pretty much the same.”

My feelings mushed together into a dark sludge, and my thoughts crashed to a halt…all but one. “She’s not expecting me to save her.”

Arnval nodded. “That’s right. She knows that you won’t. When we told her that her fate was in your hands, she laughed. She told us to finish her off and forget about this farce.”

“…is that so….”

“She’s pretty much resigned to her fate.”

“…ah huh….”

“Yes, she even requested a last meal before her execution.”

“…did she now….”

Arnval grinned sadly at me. “Would you like to see her?”

Before I could reply, the mimetic sky-field changed into a giant screen segmented into dozens upon dozens of rectangular panels, all neatly joined up border to border, top to bottom. Each of them displayed a different view of a young woman with shoulder length auburn hair, sitting at a restaurant table, dining on a meal with several bottles of wine standing open in a wine cart beside the table. She was dressed in a white outfit consisting of a sleeveless, off-the-shoulder blouse, slender slacks, and stylish kitten sling backs.

Erina gesticulated drunkenly between stabbing the food on her plate and shoveling it into her mouth. She appeared to be in conversation either with herself or with someone out of sight, and though I couldn’t hear her, I had little doubt she was vociferously complaining about her fate.
As she was waving a hand about, she knocked over a tall glass of white wine on the table. For a long while she stopped moving and simply stared at the wine soiling the table cloth. Then she reached out with her left hand and righted the glass. At that moment she froze again, this time her attention was focused on her hand.

It took me a second or more to understand why: the engagement ring once prominently displayed on her wedding finger wasn’t there anymore.
Erina sat rigidly at the table for a considerable length of time, her gaze locked on her ring finger, before resuming to eat her meal. However, she no longer waved her hands about, and she ate in subdued silence.

I pressed my lips together into a very thin and bloodless line as I regarded Erina’s forlorn visage. After a while, they began to hurt so I released them.

Taking a deep breath, I dropped my weight onto a hip. I continued staring up at Erina as I asked Arnval, “What if I decided to save her sorry ass…hypothetically?”

Arnval too had been looking up at Erina.

In my peripheral vision, I watched him focus on me. “Hypothetically?”

“That’s right. Hypothetically.” I refrained from glaring at Erina’s face plastered across the sky. “What would I need to do?”

Arnval grew noticeably pensive, and I could imagine the thoughts running through his head, such as wondering why I was broaching the problem under the guise of a hypothetical question. He was probably thinking I should be more honest with myself, but this was the best I could manage since I hadn’t decided to save Erina’s bacon.

Arnval shook his head. “That’s not a hypothetical question. Don’t you know what hypothetical means?”

I shrugged a shoulder. “Humor me.”

I heard him sigh, and in the corner of my eye, I watched his shoulders rise and fall.

“You’ll need to find me within a thirty-minute time limit,” Arnval replied. “Arrive at my location before the deadline, and Erina Kassius gets to keep her body. Fall short and she’ll be a disembodied mind for the rest of her life.”

Again, I wet my lips and began sorting through my thoughts and feelings, needing to take both into context and consideration as I pondered my next question. “Where do I find you?”

“Look up at the center of the sky. Do you see the structure there?”

I glanced at the turtle shell with dark panels. “I see it….”

“It’s called the Promenade. It’s a floating observation deck that sails above the habitat’s skyline. That’s where you’ll find me and your sister.”

I gave it another glance. “It sails above the habitat? But it’s not moving—”

At that moment, the Promenade descended noticeably and began to gently drift below the artificial sky.

Arnval shrugged a shoulder. “It is now.”

I scowled faintly at the Promenade as I mulled the obvious. “And how the Hell am I supposed to get up there?”

“It’s an observation deck, therefore there has to be means of climbing aboard.”

I turned my scowl upon Arnval. “Just tell me.”

He sighed in exaggerated disappointment. “Come on, ma chérie. Not everything in life is free.”

I clenched my jaw, then quickly turned in a full circle.

Overclocking for a few seconds gave me the extra time I needed to study the buildings and the interior of the habitat.

I found myself paying closer attention to the skyline than ever before.

The Promenade had to dock somewhere. The question was where.

On impulse, I searched for the tall tower that resembled a thin, leafless tree.

Sighting it in the distance, I pointed at it as I faced Arnval. “Is that it?”

“You see? You can figure it out if you try. Now that wasn’t too hard, was it?”

Restraining the urge to scowl anew, I turned my body toward Arnval. “So all I have to do is get aboard the Promenade, and Erina is spared?”

Arnval smiled sadly. “Well…there’s a little more too it.”

For the first time since arriving at the Habitat, the Argus System sensed movement within a twenty-meter radius – directly behind me.

Overclocking in a heartbeat, I spun round in the direction of the glass enclosed lounge.

Arnval’s warning drawl out in my ears as time around me slowed to a crawl.

“You have to get there in one piece.”

In the corner of the lounge – the same corner where I’d seen the spiral stairs – stood the tall slender silhouette of a woman…with a weapon in hand.

Despite Mirai’s physical speed and my accelerated consciousness, I aimed the Punisher too late.

The reinforced glass between her and I was perforated in the instant she fired, and a burst of bullets streamed through the inch-wide holes.

The Punisher’s double-shot of ten-millimeter rounds fired at hypersonic speed hurtled past the bullets and struck the woman’s silhouette, knocking her into the glass behind her.

But her aim was also true, and I felt her gunfire slam into my sternum.

The Princess Regalia that I’d maligned minutes ago hardened where the bullets struck it.

Then the material relaxed before quickly rippling over my torso to distribute the kinetic energy away from the points of impact.

Incredibly, none of the bullets broke through the Regalia, but an agonized scream was trapped in my chest as my lungs refused to function.

The blows I received from the dozen odd bullets sent my chest muscles and diaphragm into a seizure.

Unable to breathe and unable to scream, I struggled to maintain my balance and footing.

If not for the Argus System feeding me with sensory data, I would have lost track of the woman inside the glass enclosure.

Overclocked, my vision swam for a dangerous second before righting itself.

The Punisher in my right hand was aimed in the general direction of the woman’s silhouette so I needed only a half second to correct my aim.

Her bullets had addled me, but the two rounds I sent into her had staggered her as well.

This time I succeeded in firing a fraction of a second before she did.

It might not seem like much, but that was all the time I needed for the Punisher’s armor-piercing rounds to rip into her firearm, knocking it aside while tearing through its innards.

That’s right. I wasn’t aiming at her.

I was aiming at the weapon in her right hand.

If I disarmed her, I could pick her apart at leisure.

Unfortunately for me, I didn’t notice the second firearm in her left hand.

I could blame the Argus System for not warning me, but I was also reeling from being shot in the sternum. Adding to the distraction was the fact that my chest was still experiencing a seizure, and Mirai had yet to draw another breath since being shot. So even if the Argus System had told me about the weapon in her left hand, my mind may not have listened to it.

Had I remained standing, the bullets she fired would have torn into the Punisher and wrecked it. The only reason the bullets missed the Punisher and struck my shoulder instead was because I’d subconsciously reacted to the sight of the second rifle by breaking into a mad sprint along the edge of the terrace courtyard. Thus, I was already in motion, firing back at the woman in the glass enclosed lounge, when multiple bullets struck my shoulder.

The impact this time felt heavier.
It also felt like a handful of slugs punched headlong into the Regalia’s puffy bag protecting my right shoulder.

Once again, the Princess Regalia that I’d criticized spared me from injury, but the shots numbed my arm from the shoulder to the elbow, and half my chest felt like it was on fire.

A cry that sounded more like an agonized gasp escaped past my lips.

Then kinetic energy absorbed by my body sent me into a bodily spin.

Overclocked, I watched the fake sky and terrace spin crazily for a distended second, before I rolled over the top of the parapet and then down the side of the building.



Dear Readers,

Firstly, I'd like to apologise for disappearing for so long.

2019 was a piss-poor year for me, and 2020 hasn't been any better with an ongoing health issue that's plagued me since the beginning of the year.

Secondly, why am I posting this now?
Well, this turned out to be a web version of Book Three.
The eBook version was completed about 3 months ago, and my editor friend gave it a 90% mark.
So I've been working on cleaning it up and preparing it for its release.
The only problem has been that my health concern has made writing rather difficult and that's slowed down progress on the book.
Also, it took me a year to rewrite book three into what will be known as the eBook version.
I just had a lot of work to do on it.

That said, I hope you have enjoyed the web version, and I hope you can look forward to the eBook version which is longer, and I strongly believe now to be a far superior version of the story.
However, a lot of what is in the web version is in the eBook version.

For now, I am hoping to get the eBook out by July.
It's a long, long book that needs to be carefully polished and that's what's taking time.

If you are new to the series, and are interested in reading of purchasing Books 1 and 2 of the Gun Princess Royale, the links are provided below:

Book One - Awakening the Princess

Book Two - The Measure of a Princess

Thank you for taking the time to read this.

I wish you all well.

Please, stay safe.

Gun Princess Royale - Book 3 - Ch14. (Part II)

Author: 

  • simkin452

Audience Rating: 

  • General Audience (pg)

Publication: 

  • Novel Chapter

Genre: 

  • Science Fiction

Character Age: 

  • Teenage or High School

TG Themes: 

  • Physically Forced

TG Elements: 

  • Identity Theft

Other Keywords: 

  • Gun Princess Royale

Permission: 

  • Posted by author(s)

– II –

“This is where you’ll face your opponent.”

Arnval’s words came back to bite me as I fell off the rooftop terrace.

I reached out with my left hand to catch the edge of the parapet, but my gloved fingertips only brushed it.

Unable to arrest my fall, an overwhelming panic swamped me and I heard myself cry out in fear. But with my overclocked awareness running at full steam, everything was happening in slow motion, and my cry drawled out for an incredibly long time that quickly annoyed me.

So I cut myself off, and then watched in welcome silence as the top of the building slowly receded into the distance above me.

Crap! I missed it by that much….

I started to laugh inside my head.

The fear and anger I’d experience had faded away like smoke in the wind, leaving me cold, empty, and unexpectedly clear head. But the sight of my outstretched left hand, having come so close to grabbing onto the parapet, now appearing to be reach for the sky well beyond it, filled me with amusement.

Why? Because I wasn’t reaching for thin wispy clouds painted across a canvas of blue sky.

I was unwittingly reaching for Erina, whose face was plastered in various angles across the curved ceiling high overhead.

Her giant visage looked so close, yet she was drawing farther away by the millisecond.

I bitterly laughed inwardly since I couldn’t laugh outwardly at how ridiculous my situation had become.

Me? Reaching for Erina? Get real!

The part of me that wasn’t laughing caustically was instead surprised at how clinically I was observing myself fall down the side of the building.

Another part of me laughed at how close I’d come to saving myself.

And yet another part of me was puzzled then amazed at how slowly the world moved around me.

One second had become four. Then five. Then six. And then ten….

As impossible as it sounded, time seemed to be slowing down even further, until eventually I didn’t appear to be falling at all.

This had never happened before, and I felt a slightly uneasy.

Yet for the most part, once I stopped laughing at myself, I grew calm and collected as I began contemplating my situation.

How had it come to this?

Before I could even declare my intention to save Erina’s hide, I’d been attacked by an unknown assailant. If not for the Argus System, my back would have been riddled with bullets.

I quietly gave Ghost my thanks as I then turned my thoughts to my opponent – the unknown bitch who’d ambushed me.

Not once had I seen her clearly, but as I dropped to my demise in extreme slow motion, I grabbed at a memory that I then freeze framed in my mind. It was nothing more than a glimpse of her silhouette as I’d rolled over the parapet, but it revealed an important detail I hadn’t noticed during our brief exchange of gunfire.

My opponent had a long, swaying, ponytail!

The possibility that it was her subsequently crossed my mind, but there was something else to consider – she had no discernible lifeforce radiating from her body.

In short, she was probably a mechanical avatar – a Gun Princess – made in the image of the young woman who was quickly rising up the ranks of people on my short but memorable Black List. Based on these observations, I jumped to the conclusion that my assailant was Miss Blue Tinted Ponytail operating a Gun Princess avatar made in her likeness.

Why? To stop me from saving Erina’s ass.

However, the problem was that I hadn’t declared I was going to save Erina.

I’d only gotten as far as asking how to save her.

Yet I’d been shot at before coming to a decision.

So what was my decision? Was it yay or nay? Should I save Erina? What were the pros and cons?

I mulled the matter over while watching the top of the building slowly back away from me as I continued to fall in extra slow motion.

When I couldn’t think of a reason to save her from spending the rest of her life as a disembodied mind, I searched my emotions.

Believe me, I had to dig real deep, but in the end, even if I couldn’t justify saving her, I couldn’t stand back and do nothing about it. It wasn’t that I felt sorry for her. Perish the thought. Rather, it was a gut feeling that I wouldn’t be able to live with myself if I didn’t save her.

In other words, I didn’t want to be haunted by the guilt of not saving her.

Now let’s be clear.

I’m not talking about trying to save her.

There’s no point in trying and falling short, unless you learn something from it.

No, sir. I’m talking about actually getting the job done.

As a wise green fellow once said, ‘There is no try, only do or do not do’.

And so I decided the answer was, Yay.

I would save my former sister from life as a virtual ghost.

However, having made my decision, I suddenly and inexplicably felt hollow inside.

I would have sighed away ten years of my life, but it was only my mind that was chugging along while Mirai’s body was falling at a thousand frames a second, subjecting me to the illusion that I was gently drifting to the ground. But that’s all it was – an illusion – and before saving Erina’s backside, I needed to save mine first.

With self-preservation the focus of the moment, I decided to scope out my surroundings.

I had failed to catch the edge of the parapet, or the ledge running along the base of the rooftop, but perhaps there was something else I could grab onto before I went ‘splat’ on the ground far below.

For that matter, just how far above the ground was I?

The Argus System provided me with a dire answer.

My consciousness didn’t balloon out but the within milliseconds my situational awareness was flooded with a clear image – an impression – of my surroundings within a sphere of twenty-meter radius. My first realization was that the Argus System couldn’t detect the ground below. That meant I was falling from a height that exceeded twenty meters. However, I next noticed a multi-level bridgeway between the two terraced buildings, and the top level had no roof. If I twisted my body around by 180 degrees, and then reached out with my left hand over my head – since I was falling horizontally – I should be able to catch a hold of the bridgeway’s guardrail, or the edge of its low sidewall.

Time began to speed up within my awareness.

One second was no longer a hundred.

One second became ten, then five, and then four.

In the blink of an eye, I’d gone from gently drifting to the ground, to falling at a slow but troubling pace.

Throwing my body into a spin was no easy feat, and it relied in part on Mirai’s body dragging against the air as she fell to the ground. But by the grace of the merciful gods watching me from above, I was able to roll over, and the outstretched fingers of my left hand grabbed hold of the bridgeway’s guardrail without a moment to spare.

A half second later, my body swung downwards like a pendulum, and I slammed my face into the bridgeway’s hard bodywork.

Actually, it was Mirai’s enormous boobs that hit the sidewall first.

Pain lance through my chest an instant before fireworks exploded in my head.

The agony made my hand lose its grip on the railing, and I fell again, only to catch onto the edge of the bridgeway level below.

This time I was somewhat better prepared, and though I struck the sidewall bodily, I succeeded in hanging on.

I will tell you that holovid action flicks make it look easy – jumping from buildings, catching onto walls, and so forth. They also make it look relatively painless.

Well…it’s not.

My face hurt, my boobs felt like they’d been pummeled, and I honestly believed my left arm was hanging onto my shoulder by mere threads.

Mirai was abnormally strong – far stronger than the average Simulacra – but she wasn’t a machine. She hurt. She bled. And she damn well cried in pain when it became too much to bear. However, she had an anomalous ability to heal her injuries at preternatural rate, and if not that for that ability I’d be in tears by now.

Putting Mirai’s strength to work, I hauled myself up and over the guardrail and into the enclosed bridgeway level, landing on my feet but quickly falling to my hands and knees.

I wasn’t exhausted. Rather, my body appeared to be in shock.

Trembling faintly all over, I tasted blood on my lips. When I reached up to touch my face, my gloved fingertips came away moist.

The Regalia was a bodysuit that covered most of my body, but the degree of tactile sense it possessed at times made me feel naked.

This is why my fingertips felt wet with blood from face.

My nose felt sore, my forehead stung madly, but as on previous occasions the pain was quickly fading away, and after a few moments prostrate on hands and knees, my body soon calmed down. But both my arms were numb from the shoulder down to my wrists. Not being able to feel them properly made me anxious, but I couldn’t afford to wait here until I regained sensation in my arms. The clock was ticking, and though there was no guarantee I’d be able to board the Promenade from the tree-like tower, I felt it was my best bet.

Taking a deep breath, I started to rise to my feet when I heard a dull whump-whump from the bridgeway level above me.

The top most level had no roof, but I’d fallen to the next level below it, thus the ceiling overhead was the floor of the uppermost bridgeway that spanned the thirty-foot gap between the two terraced buildings…and something had just landed on it.

I scrambled quickly to my feet, then backed away toward the building Arnval had been standing on.

I had no allusions as to who it was.

The Argus System told me that someone was standing on the bridgeway above me, and I wholeheartedly believed it wasn’t Arnval.

Then a muted boom rocked the air, and a fist-sized hole opened up in the ceiling.

I flinched sharply and darted back a few feet, biting down on a startled yelp.

Because of Mirai’s wide field-of-vision, I didn’t need to look down to see the crater in the floor over which I’d been kneeling a short while ago.
Summoning the second Punisher, I waited with both weapons in hand for them to report ready. In the half second it took the rifles to prime their accelerators, two more booms sounded and two more holes appeared in the ceiling.

I skipped back another couple of feet, then aimed the Punishers at the ceiling.

The Argus System was aware of objects within a sphere twenty-meters in radius, so I knew the exact location of my opponent. I also knew the stance they were holding as they aimed a large firearm down at the floor, but I couldn’t discern the type of weapon. In short, the Argus was telling me where things were and what they looked like but the image lacked details. It was like seeing the world around me in outline with very little rendering.

I didn’t know if the system was deliberately lowering its resolution of the surroundings to avoid overwhelming me, but while it was enough to give me a heads-up on my situation, I would have preferred a little more detail to go along with it.

But for now, I was able to aim the Punishers at a spot on the ceiling and fire a double-shot of armor piercing rounds that tunneled through the material and into my opponent.

My overclocked Awareness acknowledged the sensory data the Argus fed into my mind, telling me that all four rounds had hit the mechanical avatar standing on the top level of the bridgeway. The first two had tunneled through the ceiling, so they hadn’t done nearly as much damage as the two rounds that followed in their wake, but it all adds up in the end.

She – I was fairly certain it was her – leapt back a couple of meters, then stepped to my left.

I fired again while tracking her position via the Argus, punching two more holes an inch across through the ceiling, and landing another couple of hits that made her stumble backwards.

Unlike the cannon like shots she’d fired at me, the Punishers’ rounds weren’t wasting their energy on making big holes. This was telling, as each time I landed a hit, I could sense through the Argus System that pieces were being blown off her.

For now, I was keeping her busy so she wasn’t returning fire.

I was also taking her apart, a couple of pieces at a time.

So the question was when would she change her strategy?

Adjusting my aim, I followed her for a few of steps as I discharged salvo after salvo of ten-millimeter heavy grain bullets through ceiling at her.

Calling cheating. Call it unfair. I didn’t care, but the Argus System was making it easy to aim since I had a spatial awareness of her position.

Again, as time stretched out in my overclocked state, I wondered for how she would endure being chipped away by the Punishers heavy rounds.

I decided to change the game.

Tracked her via the Argus System, I pumped a double pair of bullets through the bridgeway…and into her left thigh.

Damn it—I missed.

Then I noticed that she went down onto her left knee.

What? But I didn’t—?

It was a faint because within the blink of an eye she returned fire, and I had to scramble to avoid the worst of it.

However, that didn’t mean I had stopped shooting back at her.

Even while jumping left, right, forward, and back like a teenage girl maximizing her points on Dance Sensation – the arcade game where you jump on colored spots in time with the music – I was triggering both Punishers simultaneously.

Seriously, my footwork was par excellence.

However, I had no idea why I was moving so well.

After all my struggles getting through the obstacle course in a reasonable time, was all that training coming into play?

Were some mysterious latent talents beginning to stir?

I frowned as I jumped diagonally backwards a few feet.

Feels like I’ve done this before….

I fired a double salvo, then bounded to my right, kicked off the guardrail, and closed the distance between her and I by leaping toward the middle of the bridgeway.

Feels like…I’m remembering how to move….

Between her shots and mine, the floor – or ceiling – was rapidly turning into Swiss cheese, and I was running out of places to step safely.

The bridgeway floor was peppered with craters as though a meteor storm had passed through.

The ceiling above me was more or less the same.

As a result, I was jumping onto the low walls of the bridgeway more often than not. Careful not to slip on the rounded metal railings, I would then leap from wall to wall, shooting each time my feet landed. To trade shots with my opponent in mid-leap was a mistake as the double recoil would affect my jump.

Unfortunately, she was beginning to catch on, and her last couple of cannon shots had blown away large chunks of the sidewall copings mere moments after I’d jumped off them.

In short, her shots were beginning to catch up to me, so I took one last shot at her before jumping back down onto the bridgeway floor, and then retreated at a sprint toward the building Arnval’s projection had been standing on.

Why?

Two reasons.

Firstly, that building was in the direction of the tall, tree-like tower where I hoped to find a way aboard the Promenade.

Secondly, I was out of ammo.

The magazines in both Punishers were dry.

Close to a hundred and twenty bullets had ripped the bridgeway ceiling apart, and about a third of them had either struck or grazed Miss Ponytail.

The Argus System failed to give me a clear image of her, but if she’d taken that many hits, I doubted she cut a pretty picture.

As I ran toward the tinted glass doors at the end of the bridgeway, I debated whether to reload at least one of the Punishers.

But that would mean slowing down, and it wasn’t long before I heard a loud crash, and the bridgeway trembled violently.

I didn’t need to look behind me to know that a large section of the topmost level had finally given way and collapsed to the level below it.

I could sense the collapse through the Argus System, and I could see it reflected in the tinted translucent doors ahead of me.

But I could also see my opponent jump down through the large gap in the ceiling, and land nimbly on the rubble.

As she straightened and aimed a miniature Howitzer in my direction, my heart jumped in abject panic. Yet my consciousness remained calm and my overclocked awareness accelerated even further as it had when I was falling off the building.

It gave me time to consider my options.

It also gave me an opportunity to sense out my surroundings through the Argus System.

But it wasn’t all good news.

To start with the doors ahead of me were locked.

If I wanted entry into the building through the bridgeway exit, I was going to have to unlock the doors – not possible without Ghost’s intervention – crash through them – unlikely since Mirai wasn’t a tank – or shoot myself an opening with the Punishers – risky since it required that I slow down or stop to reload them, exposing me to the prospect of being shot in the back by Miss Ponytail.

Thus, I chose option D.

I would jump off the bridgeway.

The Argus System sensed narrow balconies running along the steeply slanted wall perpendicular to the bridgeway.

My intention was to jump off the bridgeway and onto one of those balconies, then descend to the next balcony and the next until I arrived at street level some four stories below me.

However, as I leapt onto the coping of the bridgeway’s low sidewall, I felt the entire structure tremble as a series of cracking and groaning noises broke into the air.

I turned to look up the length of the bridgeway, toward the middle of the structure.
Miss Ponytail was in the process of aiming her howitzer at me when the floor beneath her gave way, and I watched her fall, rubble and all, to the level beneath her.

The whole thing happened in slow motion, and thus I was able to see the moment she triggered one last shot before disappearing from view.

The explosive shell – what else could it be – struck the ceiling a few feet away from my head. The detonation sent chunks of material rocketing through the air, and I was forced to dive off the coping and back into the bridgeway to avoid the worst of it. But the concussive blast made my ears ring, and it took a few moments for my head to clear.

When I looked up the bridgeway again, there was a ten or twelve-foot section of it missing.

In other words, there was a bloody big hole in the ground.

It took me only a moment to understand why.

The floor and ceiling had been riddled with holes that weakened the structure. When the large section of the topmost level had crashed down into the bridgeway floor below it, that section had weakened further. Add in the weight of a mechanical avatar, and the overly burdened floor had given way…just in the nick of time.

It seemed that Lady Fate had granted me a reprieve.

After all the trouble she’d put me through, the bitch had shown me a fleeting moment of kindness.

Now I needed to make the most of it.

Going down wasn’t an option as I’d be shot at by Miss Ponytail who’d fallen to the level below me.

That left me with two alternatives: break through the glass doors into the building at this floor…or climb up to the rooftop.

I chose to go up, thinking I’d make better progress over the building rather than through it.

I holstered both Punishers, and once the armatures attached to my back collected the weapons, I once again leapt onto one of the bridgeway’s sidewalls. Peeking down, I spotted niches cut into the exterior face of the wall, running the length of the bridge. They were no more than foot wide and a few inches across, but they offered me a foothold as I reached up for the sidewall above me.

I was also fortunate that the open-air level of the bridgeway was narrower than the one below. This allowed me to jump upwards without having to lean dangerously backwards, and within seconds I’d hauled myself onto the top floor, a feat made possible by Mirai’s ability to leap more than ten feet straight up into the air. Seconds later, I had run to the end of the structure where I faced a couple of darkly tinted glass doors. They were closed shut across the entrance into the building, and rather than force my way through them, I leapt up and climbed over the building’s parapet onto the terrace rooftop.

There was no sign of Arnval’s holo-projection, but Erina’s last meal continued to play out from horizon to horizon across the artificial sky.

The sight of my drunk former sister was a tempting target to shoot at, but bullets were precious and not to be wasted, so I turned my attention to immediate matters.

My consciousness was in an overclocked state, thus giving me the impression that the world was moving at a crawl. But outside of my head the clock was still ticking, and I had twenty minutes to climb aboard the Promenade and save my treacherous former sister.

The giant upside-down turtle shell was floating gently toward the tree-like tower standing tall about a kilometer in the distance.

Glancing back toward the bridgeway, I used the Argus System to scan for movement or a sign of Miss Ponytail.

There wasn’t any within twenty-meters, and that made my gut clench worriedly as I knew that girl wasn’t above sniping me from a distance.

While sweeping my gaze over the rooftops around me, I walked fast across the terrace in the direction of the tree-like tower.

It wasn’t until after I’d reloaded both Punishers that I broke into a run across the skyline.


Thank you for following the webversion of Book Three.

If you are new to the series, and are interested in reading of purchasing Books 1 and 2 of the Gun Princess Royale, the links are provided below:

Book One - Awakening the Princess

Book Two - The Measure of a Princess

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Thank you for taking the time to read this.

I wish you all well.

Please, stay safe.

Gun Princess Royale - Book 3 - Ch14. (Part III)

Author: 

  • simkin452

Audience Rating: 

  • General Audience (pg)

Publication: 

  • Novel Chapter

Genre: 

  • Science Fiction

Character Age: 

  • Teenage or High School

TG Themes: 

  • Physically Forced

TG Elements: 

  • Identity Theft

Other Keywords: 

  • Gun Princess Royale

Permission: 

  • Posted by author(s)

– III –

Swapping the magazines on both Punishers turned out to be easier than I’d expected.

The armatures held the rifles under my arms, allowing me to eject the spent magazines and then replace them with fully loaded ones without the need to hold the Punishers in my hands. Then the armatures retracted against my back, tucking the linear rifles snuggly against my shoulder blades.

It was a similar arrangement to what I’d experienced with the Viper railguns, except that the armatures swung the Punishers under my arms rather than over my shoulders. All I had to do was raise my arms a little and the linear rifles would slide under them. Then I would slip my hands through the circular grips, at which point the armatures would release the Punishers, then return to their standby position at my back.

I’ll admit I was surprised by how strong the armatures were.

The metal arms were thin and frail in appearance, yet when I tested their strength at one point, I quickly realized they were incredible sturdy.

Mind you, I wasn’t intent on bending them since that would harm their function, but that little test reassured me that if I was to fall and tumble, then the armatures would survive the beating. However, it was likely that the Punishers in their grip would not, so I decided to avoid rolling along the ground as much as possible.

That brings me to my present course of action.

I had decided to take the high ground to the tree-like tower for a couple of reasons.

By running atop the rooftops, I could keep myself on track toward the tower, but I could also keep an eye out for Miss Ponytail.

The Argus System was still maintaining a sensor-sphere of twenty-meter radius active around me. It might not seem like much, but the sensory data it was feeding into me was acting like a look-ahead radar – mapping out the terrain in front of me. Combined with my overclocked consciousness, this was allowing me to choose my direction of travel with considerable forewarning, but I’ll return to this shortly.

The Argus System was also keeping an eye on my surroundings. But this, I mean that it was watching the skyline around me. I didn’t know how it was doing it, but I suspected that the Argus was seeing my environment via the two wedge shaped fins attached to my head. Somewhere they were fitted with cameras that stared out at the world. Regardless of how it was done, the Argus System had activated this extra feature and was using it to search for any sign of Miss Ponytail while I ran to the tower.

How did I know this? Because it told me.

The Argus System informed me via short thought pulse that it was engaging visual scanning, and that included a brief explanation, the gist of which I’ve just recounted. So I was feeling fairly confident that the Miss Ponytail wasn’t going to sneak up on me like she had during the paint bullet training exercise. By leaving things to the Argus System, I could focus on choosing the most efficient path to the tall tree-like tower.

As I was explaining earlier, the Argus was mapping the ground ahead of me using its sensor-sphere. It wasn’t a detailed map but more like an outline of what lay in my path such as ledges, parapets, balconies, bridgeways, entrances, the walls of buildings, and so forth. Thus, it was like having a game map of the terrain within twenty-meters, and this helped me find ways across from building to building.

But I needed a faster route.

A more direct route.

The tower looked to be a kilometer away, and knowing that Mirai could run a hundred meters in around seven seconds meant that she should be able to arrive at the tower in a little over a minute. However, that was only if she could sprint that far, and if the terrain was favorable to her. Running along the rooftops prevented me from capitalizing on Mirai’s leopard-like speed, though I was using her ability to leap far – as much as forty feet on a couple of occasions – to traverse from one rooftop to the next. When the distance was too great for her, or I felt I couldn’t make the jump, I’d search for a bridgeway between buildings and make use of it. Yet while I was travelling across the skyline at inhuman pace, I wasn’t moving nearly as quickly as if I was running along the ground far below.

However, I couldn’t risk losing the high ground to Miss Ponytail because I had no idea where she was. On the lookout, the Argus System had yet to locate her, so not knowing where she was put me at a disadvantage and restricted me to staying on the rooftops.

Thus, all I could do was focus on making the best possible time to the tower.

Erina was no longer on display across the habitat’s ceiling.

The blue sky with wispy clouds air brushed across it had returned.

But across the skyline, holo-projection billboards advertising various products commonly found in Ar Telica also included a countdown.

As I ran from building to building, rooftop to rooftop, there was no escaping that countdown.

I glanced at a giant holo-vision sign with a pretty girl modelling suntan lotion. Normally I would have found myself drawn to her bikini body, but not on this occasion.

24:13…24:12….

That’s what the countdown displayed.

I winced inwardly as I continued running.

Why I hadn’t I retreated from Miss Ponytail on the bridgeway? Why had I engaged her in furious gunfire that only served to delay me?

Arnval had given me thirty minutes to get to Erina, so had he known that I would waste several of those minutes in a shootout with Miss Ponytail?

Had he known that I wouldn’t run away?

As I continued to run from terrace courtyard to courtyard, grateful that the buildings of the habitat weren’t built too far apart, I ruminated the question.

Why hadn’t I run away?

I could only think of one answer: I’d wanted to beat her – to blow her apart and finish her off. But in the end, I’d been forced to run away, and if Fate hadn’t helped me when I had my back to Miss Ponytail, I probably wouldn’t be where I was now, making tracks over the rooftops.

Heading for the tower was the right thing to do, and yet I was nagged by the suspicion that losing track of Miss Ponytail was a mistake. That feeling turned into one of unease, and it wormed around in my chest, bringing me to a hard stop at the edge of a building.

It was then that I realized what had been truly bothering me.

“…much too quiet….”

In other words, why wasn’t she shooting at me?

I had my answer seconds later when the Argus System sensed something moving swiftly below me – something bipedal and human sized.

Damn it!

Miss Ponytail hadn’t been running over the rooftops like me.

She’d been running through the buildings.

Within the habitat, she had the home advantage. She didn’t need to shoot her way from building to building. Doors that were closed to me were open to her, allowing her to pursue me from inside the buildings.

I suddenly experienced a horrid premonition.

I would arrive at the tree-like tower and find her right behind me.

Worse still, if I stumbled, fell, or lost ground to her, I could find her waiting for me at the tower.

Despite being overclocked, time slowed down even further, and my surroundings grew eerily tranquil.

I felt as though I was encased in a bubble, able to perceive what lay around me, yet unable to interact with it.

The aforementioned tranquility flowed into me, as in the corner of my eye, I watched the countdown in a holo-projection tick over a tenth of a second at a time.

23:13:10…09…08…07….

Slow as it was, time waits for no one, and I needed to decide on my next move.

I could either stop Miss Ponytail here or attempt to outrun her to the tower.

As I considered both options, I suddenly realized that perhaps I was going about this the wrong way.

In my hyper-accelerated state of mind, my body moved rather quickly as I looked up at the Promenade off to my ten o’clock and some distance ahead of me

To my chagrin, I acknowledged there was a third option.

Why the Hell didn’t I think of it before?

Making my choice, my overclocked awareness sped up in response, and within my mind one second became four rather than ten.

Summoning both Punishers, I slipped my hands through their hand grips a moment before the armatures released them.

Aware of Miss Ponytail running toward me within the building underfoot, I aimed the linear rifles at the Promenade sailing high over the habitat’s buildings.

Arnval had said I needed to board the Promenade and face him to successfully save Erina, so my intention had been to board the floating observation deck when it docked at the tower.

However, Arnval had never said I couldn’t shoot it down.

The Punishers used their range finding ability to report the Promenade was over two hundred meters away, but it was a trivial distance to a rifle that could strike targets almost two kilometers away.

Aiming at the tail end of the oblate vessel, I watched it for a fraction of a second through the Punishers’ optical system—

Please, don’t let me hit Erina by mistake.

—then I squeezed both triggers simultaneously.

A twin double-shot erupted from the Punishers, and nearly instantly the bullets penetrated the Promenade’s rounded stern.

To tell the truth, being an ovoid, the front and back ends were the same, but I chose to think of the region I’d targeted as the stern simply because it was closest to me.

Watching through the Punishers’ proverbial eyes, I saw the holes the bullets made but could only picture them tearing through the Promenade’s innards.

Not expecting them to bring the flying structure down, I fired a dozen more rounds into the Promenade’s butt, then waited a second for something to happen.

When nothing did, I clamped down on my disappointment, and shot off another ten rounds, before taking off at a run for the edge of the building off to my left.

Why? Because I sensed Miss Ponytail drawing dangerously close beneath me.

To prove just how dangerous, the area I’d been standing on exploded into a greyish mist as it was pulverized by a fusillade of bullets fired from the floor below.

Dozens of rounds ripped through the rooftop.

Then another fusillade chased me as I ran toward the edge of the building.

However, I wasn’t running in the direction of the tower, but perpendicular to it.

If we consider the tower as standing at the northern end of the habitat, then we could say I was fleeing west atop the building's rooftop.

I’d said it before, I needed a faster route, and the Argus System had found it for me.

It had glimpsed an elevated structure resembling a mag-lev track running between buildings in a northerly direction. In other words, running toward the tower.

With bullets chasing my heels, I glanced once more at the Promenade sailing serenely – albeit more slowly – toward the tower after weathering the twenty odd rounds I shot into its stern. The Argus System also spared it a long look and estimated it would dock with the tower in 131 seconds. But knowing that the tower was still some seven hundred meters away made my stomach clench unpleasantly. A second later, and I took a running leap to the building ahead of me. However, the distance was farther than Mirai could manage, and I fell short of the building’s rooftop terrace.

To be fair, I didn’t have much choice but to attempt the sixty-foot jump.

A stream of bullets from Miss Ponytail was ripping up the ground inches behind me, so there was no safe place on the rooftop.

And the bridgeway connecting the two buildings was a handful of floors below and to the south, requiring me to descend the sloped wall of the building by making use of the numerous long balconies there. That would take time, so I honestly felt I had no choice but to jump. It was simply unfortunate that the distance was beyond Mirai’s ability to cover in a single bound.

Fortunately, while I was going to fall short of the rooftop, this building also had long balconies running along its east face, thus I was guaranteed to land in one of them. But as I was falling toward a balcony on the fifth floor – three floors short of the rooftop – I felt my parabolic descent level out by several degrees.

In an overclocked state, I glanced down and was surprised to see Mirai’s split skirt had fanned out to either side of me, and was acting like a parachute—

Or a pair of wings.

I was no longer falling for a balcony on the sixth floor. Instead, I was headed for a landing on a balcony balustrade on the seventh floor. And because the side of the building was sloped at a sixty or seventy-degree angle, I could use the balconies like footholds and jump my way up to the rooftop.

My heart twinged with renewed hope as my booted feet touched down on the metal coping of the balcony’s balustrade, quickly dropping into a crouch to cushion the impact of my landing.

Maybe I can still make this work!

Then from behind me, I heard the sound of glass shattering.

Don’t tell me!

Still crouched on the balustrade, I looked at the wall ahead of me.

It was a floor-to-ceiling patio window, more than a dozen meters wide, and the building behind me was reflected on its tinted surface.

In that reflection, I could see that Miss Ponytail had crashed through a similar window-wall and out onto a balcony with enough momentum to carry her into the glass balustrade. The metal frame warped, and the glass panes shattered under the impact. Miss Ponytail had to catch herself on the balustrade or she would have fallen nine floors to her demise.

Then I realized she wasn’t simply arresting her momentum.

She was bracing herself as the took aim at me.

I jumped down onto the balcony, and held the Punishers in wide, outstretched arms – one pointing at Miss Ponytail, the other pointing at the window-wall.

Now that she was out in the open, I caught my first good look at her.

It really is her.

She looked every bit like the tall girl with the blue tinted ponytail I’d first encountered in the villa’s garden courtyard. But there was no lifeforce aura surrounding her body, so she was clearly a mechanical avatar. She also looked like she’d been dragged through Hell and back. Her black and crimson outfit was punctuated with numerous holes.

Then there was the condition of her features.

Skin and tissue was missing from the left side of her skull, right above her left ear. It looked as though her head had been raked by a chainsaw, but that damage was done by a couple of ten-millimeter AP rounds that scored a lucky hit.

In short, she didn’t look so pretty anymore.

She was a sight that would terrorize young children whether it be day or night.

However, seeing her in that dismal state made me wonder why her outfit was in an equally sorry condition.

My Princess Regalia had taken hits to the arms and shoulders, yet not a single bullet had penetrated the material. That wasn’t to say each shot hadn’t hurt, and no doubt I was sporting large bruises because of them, but my point was that my clothes were relatively unharmed.

In contrast, Miss Ponytail’s outfit was fit for the dumpster – and I’m not referring to a donation bin.

So why the big difference?

Was my Regalia truly unique to me and therefore abnormally tough and resilient?

Was it because I had something to lose if I was shot, and Miss Ponytail didn’t?

The difference was something to note, but it didn’t stop me from shooting at her with the Punisher in my right hand, while perforating the window-wall to my left with shots from the second rifle. Therefore, while one Punisher weakened the glass wall in preparation for my escape into the building, the second one was pummeling Miss Ponytail’s chest with a handful of heavy grain bullets.

She gyrated wildly when struck by each AP round, but held onto the metal guardrail of the warped glass balustrade. Using it to steady herself, she was able to return fired despite the damage I was inflicting upon her.

I had no idea what kind of weapon she was wielding – it didn’t strike a bell with Mirai – but it was fitted with two ammo drums, one on either side of the receiver. That meant she had a lot of bullets at her disposal, and that was bad news for me.

I ducked on impulse as she shot back a lengthy volley from her balcony across the street.

Through the Argus System, I sensed the bullets zip over the top of my head and stitch a tight pattern on the window-wall behind me. Surprisingly, the glass didn’t shatter and break away.

That was disappointing since it would have made my escape a little easier.

Clearly, the glass wall was demanding my undivided attention, but first I had to something about Miss Ponytail, because turning my back on her while trying to break the window was simply too dangerous.

There was also the fact that Mirai was terrified of exposing her back to Miss Ponytail.

Well, describing her as terrified might be going too far, but she was quite determined not to turn and run.

Her Fight or Flight switch was very much set on fighting back.

Thus, I had no choice but to swing around and aim both Punishers at my opponent across the street.

Now I was unleashing double the trouble on Miss Ponytail, but the problem with remaining on the balcony was that it offered me no protection – not that there was much that could protect me from the heavy rounds she was shooting at me.

The point is that I was vulnerable to her gunfire, and unlike the mechanical body she was operating, Mirai couldn’t stand out in the open taking bullet hit after hit like Miss Ponytail was enduring. The only reason I hadn’t been stitched with bullet holes was because I was hitting her over and over, and that was throwing off her aim.

However, it was only a matter of time before she got lucky with her return fire, and that happened sooner rather than later.

The Punisher in my right hand was caught in a stream of gunfire.

Its muzzle and about a quarter of its barrel length fractured then broke apart as dozens of small rounds smashed into it.

My hand and wrist cried out in pain and I released the mangled weapon as I fled northward along the balcony.

Her counterattack chased me away from the window I’d been softening up to break through, but having changed direction by 180 degrees, I was now aiming the left Punisher at Miss Ponytail.

Arnval had been surprised by the high accuracy of my marksmanship, and so had I. When I checked the scores later, I discovered that I hit on target 99.3 percent of the time. According to the Assisting Intelligence, that was utterly unnatural. But what truly shocked both Arnval and the A.I. – if you can imagine the latter being capable of surprise – was that I achieved similarly high marks when shooting as I ran.

A solid score of 98.8 percent.

When I explained that I could see where I was pointing through the weapon interface to Mirai’s wetware, the A.I. pointed out that rarely did I make a correction. It seemed the training facility’s Assisting Intelligence had been watching me very closely, and I had to admit that its observation was true. Despite engaging holo-targets while overclocked and on the move, it was rare for me to make corrections to my aim, especially as I grew increasingly accustomed to the Punishers’ weight and limited recoil.

With that said, it was times like these that my high scores came into play.

Aiming at the weapon in Miss Ponytail’s right hand – the firearm that was busy ripping up with balcony around me with a hail of bullets – I switched the Punisher to single shot mode, then fired one round into the ammo drums attached to her gun. One of those bullets passed through the drum and slammed its pointy head into her right shoulder. The drums fed a few more bullets into the gun before they jammed, but the impact against her shoulder had thrown her aim, so she missed me by a couple of inches.

Grateful for the close call, I kept a low profile as I ran along the wide balcony.

Switching back to double-shot mode, I fired through the glass balustrade of both our balconies. The AP rounds shattered the glass, then slammed into her knees, fragmenting the armor that protected them.

Miss Ponytail’s legs wobbled in a rubbery fashion and then she went down. But before she could collapse, she dropped the gun in her hand, and grabbed onto the balcony guardrail. Using it to keep herself upright on her knees, she reached behind her back with her left hand. What she whipped out was a handgun best described as the bastard child of a shotgun and an assault rifle.

During all this, I skidded to a hasty stop, and continued shooting AP rounds into her body.

The Punisher’s stopping power was some thirty to forty percent higher than a Viper Vanquish’s, and every bullet that struck her was punching right into her.

Yet Miss Ponytail refused to go down.

She gyrated and rocked wildly on her knees, but her right hand held onto the guardrail with a dead man’s grip.

It infuriated me that she continued to make no attempt to avoid the bullets I was shooting at her.

Instead of crawling back into the apartment, she clung to the balcony, and endured hit after hit.

Small chunks of her outfit, skin, and even metal would spray into the air as the Punisher’s bullets took her apart.

To be honest it was horrible to witness, but I had no choice but to continue shooting…until I decided it was time to end this.

Thus far I’d been targeting her arms, chest, and torso.

Now I paused for a half second to take aim at her head.

In that brief moment, she took advantage of the lull in gunfire, and shot me with the heavy gun she’d pulled out from behind her back.

Large caliber bullets struck my exposed left flank, spinning me around on impact.

I lost my footing and landed heavily on my back.

Pain lanced through my torso, locking my diaphragm, making it impossible to breathe.

I didn’t know if the Princess Regalia had been breached, but I was in too much agony to check. Yet somehow Mirai’s body moved on its own, succumbing to her intense desire for self-preservation. Through sheer willpower, she first rolled me over onto my belly, then forced me up onto my hands and knees.

Because of the pain, I’d broken into a cold sweat that bathed my face, and I struggled to balance myself on one hand as I knelt on the balcony floor.

However, like Miss Ponytail, I was down but not out.

I’d been shot, but I’d held onto the Punisher.

Pointing the linear rifle at Miss Ponytail’s head, I was aided by the feed from the rifle’s targeting system.

When I was certain my aim was true, I squeezed the trigger.

But once again I was a little too late.

The agony from my injuries had slowed me down, and Miss Ponytail got the jump on me for a second time.

Her gun’s muzzle flashed brightly, and her shot struck my left thigh.

I screamed in torment. What else could I do? The pain was excruciating and I honestly believed she’d blown my leg away.

I collapsed onto my belly, unable to move, and barely able to breathe.

My overclocked awareness wavered, and time inside my head sped up and down repeatedly in a nauseating manner.

Yet despite all this, I refused to drop the Punisher. Held in my left hand, it pointed in Miss Ponytail’s general direction.

It seemed that my left arm was the only part of my body that didn’t hurt, and the only limb that I could still control.

Desperately, I tried to maintain my accelerated mental state as I made one of those rare corrections the A.I. had talked about.

With time moving at a snail’s pace, I raised the Punisher a few inches off the balcony floor, aimed once more at Miss Ponytail’s forehead, and then squeezed the trigger.

This time I shot at her before she could shoot at me.

Unfortunately, my shot fell into the 0.7 percent margin where I missed my intended target.

I failed to center punch that metal bitch’s head.

Instead, the double-shot punched a sizeable hole into her throat.

I didn’t see any blood, flesh, or metal fragments spurt into the air, but I did see Miss Ponytail jerk back sharply under the impact.

Then she stiffened for a moment before breaking into a wild seizure.

Losing her grip on the balcony guardrail, she slumped back on her knees, then toppled over onto her side where upon she continued to spasm vigorously on the balcony floor. Those spasms caused her fingers to flex, and the gun in her left hand belched fleeting flames as it discharged numerous rounds into the air.

Some of those rounds ripped into the balcony.

Some of them blew large chunks out of the window-wall to my right.

I lay flat on the balcony floor, unable to move, praying that she ran out of ammo soon.

But she continued jerking about madly, and the supersized handgun continued firing wildly.

If I didn’t do something, I was going to be hit by a stray bullet.

I had no choice but to take matters into my own hands.

Holding onto my overclocked awareness, I pointed the Punisher as best I could in the direction of Miss Ponytail’s head that was bobbing and rocking loosely at the end of her neck.

I wasn’t hoping for a clean hit.

I was hoping to do enough damage to break the connection between the operator and the mechanical body.

And I was also hoping that by blowing her head apart, her body would stop moving.

So when Miss Ponytail’s cranium passed through the Punisher’s targeting reticule that projected into my vision, I squeezed the trigger and held it down until the magazine emptied.

AP bullet after bullet slammed into her mechanical body.

The first few holed her skull, and violently kicked her head back.

The remaining rounds ripped into her throat, neck, and chest.

By the time the Punisher clicked empty, Miss Ponytail had been knocked into the foot of her balcony’s window-wall where she twitched for a handful of seconds before she finally grew still.

I waited a few more seconds before relaxing my grip on my overclocked awareness.

As time resumed moving normally inside my head, I took a pained breath and sucked precious air into my lungs. But breathing too deeply was more than my lungs could to handle, and I broke into a wracking cough that exacerbated the fire blazing through my left flank. It burned for another ten to fifteen seconds until the Angel Fibers within my body began to extinguish it with extreme prejudice.

Yet each short, shallow breath that I took sent fresh waves of agony racing through my torso.

Lying still helped mitigate how much it hurt to breathe, but soon my breasts began to complain about the weight upon them.

Rolling over onto my back proved to be as painful as I feared it would be.

Afterwards, I lay gasping for air.

Incapacitated by injury, all I could do was stare up at the fake sky overhead and wait for the Angel Fibers to patch me up from the inside.

It felt like an eternity before I could breathe without feeling as though my left flank was being stabbed with a hot poker.

In truth though, only a minute had gone by.

Yet I really couldn’t afford to be lying down.

I needed to get back up and chase after the Promenade.

Who knew how many obstacles I would encounter between here and the tower.

However, I was too exhausted to move until I recalled Miss Ponytail lying on the wrecked balcony across the street.

Abruptly anxious, I turned my head and cast a long look her way.

She was right where I left her – or rather shot her – slumped against the foot of the balcony wall.

Several seconds ticked by, yet she showed no signs of reviving.

Eventually, I sighed loudly in relief, but it turned into a short, strained chuckle.

I knew that by laughing I risked raising a bad flag, but I couldn’t help myself.

That said, I kept a watchful eye on Miss Ponytail as I swapped the Punisher to my right hand, and then cautiously checked on my injuries by tracing my fingertips over my wounded left flank.

At one point I pushed too hard and triggered a fresh wave of pain that left me gasping for air.

Miss Ponytail’s gunshot had sent me spinning to the ground, and it had probably broken a rib or two judging from how much it initially hurt to breathe, so I expected to touch an open wound. Instead, I was shocked to discover the Princess Regalia felt pitted and rough over my flank but was otherwise intact.

Well, I’ll be the Devil’s uncle….

Gasping a little, I then reached down to run my fingertips over my left thigh.

Again, there was no open wound.

The Regalia felt ragged, and my thigh burned hotly where my fingers touched it, but the material had survived the blast.

Relief flooded my chest and I exhaled loudly before breaking into a soft laugh that soon trailed off into silence. But my heart felt lighter, and it wasn’t long before my body began to relax. My injuries still caused me discomfort, but they no longer incapacitated me, and my breathing grew longer and deeper. Able to think clearly again, I turned my thoughts to my next move, yet I found myself confronting a familiar conundrum.

Why was I enduring so much punishment to save Erina’s ass?

Was it truly because I didn’t want to feel guilty afterwards if I sat on my hands and did nothing? Or was I lying to myself? Did I care about what happened to my former sister?

I shook my head wearily.

Me? Care about Erina? You must be joking.

However, if that was true then I was back to square one.

If it wasn’t the fear of guilt or family affection driving me onwards, then why the Hell was I trying to save her? Was it because I believed that I still needed her? Or was it because I wanted to hurt her with my own hands? Was I doing this to make my revenge on Erina that much sweeter?

I didn’t have an answer and lying on the balcony wasn’t going to help me find it either.

The countdown was still ticking, and I needed to get to the tower.

With that in mind, I pushed myself up onto my elbows, then readied myself to rise to my feet.

At that moment, and without warning, the habitat’s blue sky turned a Hellish red.

At the same time, the countdown that was displayed across every holo-projection now flashed up onto that burning sky, and I watched in growing horror as the numbers rapidly dwindled.

The countdown arrived at 10:00:00, stopped for a few anxious heartbeats, then quietly resumed ticking down toward zero.

In disbelief, confusion, and despair, I stared up at the red sky and wondered why I’d been robbed of ten minutes on the clock.


Thank you for following the webversion of Book Three.

Dear Readers, I have an important announcement to make.

For since the beginning of this year, I have suffered from Tinnitus in my left ear.
Recently, I started experiencing soft Tinnitus in my right ear.
I believe both started from ear infections.
The Tinnitus has greatly affected my life.
It has affected my work and my writing.
And last week, I seriously thought about suicide on many occasions.
I have experienced a breakdown in front of my family, too.

I have been fortunate to have their support, and I was able to see a highly regarded specialist in Australia.
I am on medication that helps me sleep and calms the Tinnitus down.
For this past week, I have been doing well. On one day, I had total quiet in both my ears.
I treasure those quiet days.
For now, with the treatment, I am not thinking of ending my life.
In 3 weeks I see the specialist again and this week I have an MRI scan booked to check if I have a problem with my audio cortical nerve as the Tinnitus started in one ear.
I am also taking magnesium supplements.
I truly hope that I can get treatment to manage this condition long term until a cure is found.

The reason I say all this is because the Tinnitus is the main reason Gun Princess Royale book 3 has not been released. I have trouble working on the novel when the hissing in my ear is too loud. But lately with the medication and proper sleep, I have been able to concentrate a fair bit on the novel. I recently edited about 40 pages of the book in 2 days.
My goal is to stay sane and to manage the Tinnitus while still being able to work effectively at my day job and my novel.
My girlfriend is extremely rich and she has been extremely supportive of me, to the point where she wants me to retire and focus on my writing.
She and I have much to discuss on that front, but I am seriously thinking of her offer.
In any case, our plans to get married have been put on hold while the virus pandemic is ongoing.

All I can say for now is that I will do my best to get the ebook version of GPR Book 3 out in the next few months.
I will do as the doctor says and undertake whatever treatments are necessary to get through this.

I thank you for reading this, and for not giving up on my beloved series.

If you are new to the series, and are interested in reading of purchasing Books 1 and 2 of the Gun Princess Royale, the links are provided below:

Book One - Awakening the Princess

Book Two - The Measure of a Princess

A percentage of the purchases made through the links will go toward supporting the website.

Thank you for taking the time to read this.

I wish you all well.

Please, stay safe.

Gun Princess Royale - Book 3 - Ch. 14 (Part IV)

Author: 

  • simkin452

Audience Rating: 

  • General Audience (pg)

Publication: 

  • Novel Chapter

Genre: 

  • Science Fiction

Character Age: 

  • Teenage or High School

TG Themes: 

  • Physically Forced

TG Elements: 

  • Identity Theft

Other Keywords: 

  • Gun Princess Royale

Permission: 

  • Posted by author(s)
- IV -

Clenching my jaw against the pain, I stifled an anguished gasp but couldn’t help wheezing a little as I stood up on the wrecked balcony.

I could only think of one reason why the countdown had been trimmed by ten minutes.

Looking northward in the direction of the Promenade, I saw smoke trailing out of its stern as it drifted leisurely toward the tall tower with thin branch-like arms reaching up for the sky.

Ah…so that’s why.

The time penalty was probably for shooting at the Promenade.

Shaking my head slowly, I softly cursed Arnval under my breath.

That bastard didn’t tell me.

However, there was a possible silver lining to all this. If the time penalty had been imposed, then perhaps the floating observation platform had suffered significant damage and docking at the tower was its only option now. And that meant—

It’s not going anywhere. I won’t have to chase it down!

I glanced down at the Punisher in my right hand.

Time to reload.

Swapping out the empty magazine for a fully loaded one, I remembered the mangled Punisher. It lay several feet away, with about a third of its barrel missing.

However, I suspected the magazine was only half empty, a fact proven when I retrieved the weapon and then queried its A.I.

To my surprise, the Assisting Intelligence was functional, but I was shocked to hear it report the rifle was ready for combat.

Its capacity was compromised and aiming was for naught, but it could still prove lethal at point blank range.

I admired the rifle’s willingness to fight, though I wondered if it was telling me this so that I wouldn’t leave it behind.

Was I anthropomorphizing the Punisher?

Truth be told, even if crippled, I wasn’t going to abandon it, and it still had over forty rounds in its magazine. That had to be worth something.

Handing the weapon over to an armature that tucked it snug against my right shoulder blade, I gave Miss Ponytail a final cursory look, verified she was as dead as a door nail, yet reluctantly turned my back to her. And as I kicked at the balcony’s window-wall where multiple bullet hits had softened it, I couldn’t lay my troubled feelings to rest.

Miss Ponytail had endured more than sixty hits from bullets travelling at hyper-sonic speed. Granted, some of those had only grazed her, but many more had penetrated deep into her body. Both the Argus System and I were certain of that. So why was she brought down by a couple of perfectly placed shots through her neck? Had I disrupted the connection between the Meister and the avatar’s body?

I needed to know more about their weaknesses, something Arnval had conveniently avoided teaching me. All that useless shooting around, the pointless paint-bullet training with the maids, was nothing more than a distraction.

And thinking back on it all was distracting me right now.

Abruptly angry at Arnval and the Sanreals, I delivered an all mighty kick into the window-wall, and shattered a section large enough for me to step through with room to spare. However, before jumping into the room beyond the smashed windows, I was gripped by a sudden thought that made my heart jump in fright, and the tiny hairs on the nape of my neck stiffen.

What if she’s not the only one?

Half turning around to look behind me, I stared at Miss Ponytail’s dead mechanical body, then fearfully then swept my gaze over the building across the street.

What if there are more of her?

I searched the roofline, and then sensed the Argus System focus its ‘eyes’ on the vista in front of me. Without warning, my field-of-vision expanded so dramatically that I could see everything with perfect clarity, as though my peripheral vision and field-of-vision had become one.

Oh gods—

It was overwhelming, more than Mirai’s mind could handle, and I quickly squeezed my eyes shut.

*No—too much! It’s too much!

I heard the Argus System reply. Rather than with words, it seemed to transmit its understanding through emotions.

I risked opening my eyes and saw that my field-of-vision, already wider than humanly possible, had been restored to what was normal for Mirai. Yet I also sensed that my peripheral vision was marginally clearer. Despite this, I wasn’t overwhelmed by what I was seeing, and my chest and shoulders heaved as I exhaled loudly in relief.

*That’s better. Much better.

Again, I sensed that the Argus System understood me, but I was baffled by why it was communicating with me this way. Previously, it had spoken into my mind, so why was it sending its understanding as a stream of emotions. Was it trialing different means of interacting with me? Was it searching for the most efficient way to talk to me? Or was it trying to integrate with me, intending to make the bond between us seamless?

As the questions crossed my mind, I sensed a sheepish response from the Argus System, almost as though it was sorry for its actions.

I shook my head sharply in response.

“No. It’s fine. We both have a lot learn about each other.”

Yes, that seemed to be true.

All of this was more or less a trial run for the Argus System and I.

Ghost hadn’t known what I would face, but he’d anticipated it would be a challenge involving combat – something fit for a Gun Princess – and so he’d gifted me with the Argus System.

I promised to thank him for it later, while resolving to master his gift.

Before then I needed to finish what I’d started, and to do that I had to get to the tower, then board the Promenade before the countdown reached zero.

I’d gone through this much pain for Erina.

I wasn’t about to let it go to waste.

After all, I was going to take it out on her when the time was right.



Thank you for following the webversion of Book Three.
I sincerely apologise for the late posting.
I have been learning how to manage my Tinnitus with a combination of drugs and sound therapy.
Most days are good, allowing me to work on my day job and write my novels after hours.

I thank you for reading this, and for not giving up on my beloved series.
I would like to say that I have been working on GPR and the sequel series, "The Remnant Fiestas" in tandem.
The reason is that it's allowed me to plan out Gun Princess Royale for the next several books, with an eye on the sequel that features a new cast of characters.
However, GPR is far from over.
Very, very far from over.

Very soon, I will be posting "The Remnant Fiestas" here on TG Big Closet.
I may post it on Wattpad, however, the lack of forums on Wattpad make it virtually impossible to promote anything on that site.

If you are new to the series, and are interested in reading of purchasing Books 1 and 2 of the Gun Princess Royale, the links are provided below:

Book One - Awakening the Princess

Book Two - The Measure of a Princess

A percentage of the purchases made through the links will go toward supporting the website.

Thank you for taking the time to read this.

I wish you all well.

Please, stay safe.


Source URL:https://bigclosetr.us/topshelf/fiction/84658/gun-princess-royale-book-3-ch14-part-i