GAMELAND Episodes 1-2: Deep Into the Game + Failsafe (S. W. Tanpepper's GAMELAND)
Contents
“Dear Friend”
(a quick note before entering)
Prologue to Gameland
Episode 1: Deep Into the Game
(chapter index)
Episode 2: Failsafe
(chapter index)
Author’s Note
Tanpepper Tidings Subscription Link
Get notified of updates, releases, & other news
Copyright & License notice
Acknowledgements & About the Author
Other titles by Saul Tanpepper
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S.W. TANPEPPER’S GAMELAND
Episodes 1 and 2
Deep Into the Game
Failsafe
by Saul Tanpepper ©2012
http://www.tanpepperwrites.com/gameland
Subscribe: https://tinyletter.com/SWTanpepper
Before you enter Gameland
Dear Friend, a quick word about your purchase:
First off, a heartfelt thanks for taking that leap of faith when you purchased this book. A new story isn’t like a can of Coke or a McDonald’s hamburger, but rather more like a Forrest Gump box of chocolates: You never know what you’re going to get. Nevertheless, you have my pledge that I will always strive to write the most entertaining stories in the best way I know how and to render them to you as free of errors as possible. If you find any, I invite you to tell me about them so that they may be redressed. I hope they will be minor and few.
If this is your first introduction to my work, I hope you’ll find the experience worthy of your continued patronage. If you’ve enjoyed my other titles, I’m thrilled you’re back for more. It’s my fervent wish that this new effort exceeds your every expectation.
I must also thank you for placing your trust in this grand new experiment of mine: the serialized publication in eight ‘episodes’ of a ‘made-for-TV’ novel.
Which means what exactly?
GAMELAND was the brainchild of discussions between myself and my publisher, Brinestone Press, back in 2011. Together, we fleshed out an overarching storyline to be told over the course of several books. Each action-packed ‘episode’ features a group of recurring characters, tells its own self-contained story, has its own theme, and works out its own particular issues. Structurally, the series is modeled after popular television shows (think Fringe, Bones, The Walking Dead), with each episode roughly the equivalent of a one or two-hour commercial-free program. Conceptually, however, GAMELAND is wholly unique.
What you have purchased is a package containing the first two episodes: Episode One: Deep Into The Game, and Episode Two: Failsafe. This particular package was first published Jun 1, 2012, with subsequent episodes published monthly through December 2012 (bimonthly for two-episode packages). It’s my hope that you’ll choose to stay with me through all eight episodes. The entire series (‘season one’) was recently revised and updated on 5 February 2013.
If you haven’t already and you’d like to be notified of future releases and other news, just shoot me an email to authorsaultanpepper@gmail.com and ask me to add you to the GAMELAND mailing list. Or subscribe to my newsletter, Tanpepper Tidings, at https://tinyletter.com/SWTanpepper.
I also invite you to join the discussion on Facebook, where I am hosting a growing community of GAMELAND fans. In addition to update notifications, I’ll also answer questions, post news, hints, contests, and other items of interest.
Lastly, I value your opinion and so encourage you to offer your thoughts on this work, positive or negative, publicly or privately. I want to know what you think and always give any feedback serious consideration. Note that I do not engage reviewers or their posted comments in public. I want my readers to feel comfortable expressing their honest and thoughtful views in an open forum without fear of being stalked by me. You can find a handy link to Goodreads at the end of this book, but feel free to post your comments at your favorite ebookstore site, too.
Now, sit back and enjoy the first two episodes of GAMELAND.
You have my deepest gratitude for your support.
Saul
San Francisco, CA
February 5, 2013
GAMELAND
Episode 1: Deep Into The Game
Prologue
Part One: The Plan. Or, Rather, the Pathetic Lack of One
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Part Two: Breaking In
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
† † †
Gameland
Fifteen years after Golgotha
It wasn’t Reggie’s idea to break into Gameland, not initially, though of course he took all the credit. He liked being the go-to guy whenever it was something the five of us could all get behind. He was funny that way—a big brute of a kid with all kinds of brains and good looks and a huge gaping insecurity complex that needed constant attention. But whenever something turned out to be not so good after all, he was usually the first to distance himself from it, claiming he always knew it was a bad idea, right from the beginning. That’s just the way he was.
He had a way of picking the bad ideas, which is why we should’ve just said no.
We were in Micah’s basement. He and Kelly were team-playing Zpocalypto, which is supposed to be something like The Game. Except it turned out to be nothing like it at all. First of all, it was nowhere near as real. There’s no VR and the action’s totally lame. Plus, the holographics are just so-so. You don’t get a good feel for what it’s like to be in the actual Gameland, fighting actual zombies, trying not to get eaten. Now I know.
I also know this: Not even those lucky rich pricks have any idea what it’s like, the ones who are connected enough to pay for a state-of-the-art cybernetic setup and a Player, plus weasel the necessary invite into The Game. Arc Entertainment didn’t just let anyone play. They only wanted the best.
Like us.
Reg and I were bookending the couch. Ashley was sprawled out between us, her feet on his lap and her head on mine. She was drinking a Red Bull through a straw, the can wedged between two cushions to keep it upright. Reg had chugged his and had tossed the empty at the old milk crate in the corner. He missed, of course, and blamed it on the lighting, which admittedly was piss-poor. Micah’s HG setup was old and glitchy, so he had to keep the lights dimmed.
Reg was antsy. He was always antsy, but probably more so then because of the caffeine. He kept asking us if we were finished with our drinks. I’m sure he thought the first miss was just a fluke and wanted to redeem himself. That’s how self-deluded he could be. But I’d barely even touched my RB. I like the taste of it, but the stuff gives me a headache if I drink it too quickly. And Ash was purposefully nursing hers just to be a pissant.
I was messing with her coppery hair, twining it between my fingers, trying to straighten the curls and watching them spring back. For some reason it struck me as comical and I kept giggling, even though I wasn’t even the slightest bit drunk or stoned. Not like Micah. He was the druggie in the group.
&nbs
p; The rest of us got our highs playing games or hacking them. That was our escape from the misfortune of being born into families that couldn’t afford to buy a decent entertainment system. My family was once so lucky, but after my dad died and Grandpa was fired from his prestigious command post in the Marines, that all went away. Of course, that all happened fifteen or so years ago, so as far as I could remember we’d always been as poor and out-of-the-loop as anyone else in that room.
I caught Reg glancing over at us—probably envisioning me and Ash acting out one of his perverted girl-on-girl fantasies. I obliged him. Sort of. I reached over and pinched Ash’s nose until she slapped my hand away with an inviting shriek. The movement caused her to dig her heels into Reggie’s crotch, which was precisely what I was going for. I saw him jerk in pain. He tried to hide it, but I saw.
“What’s so funny, Jess?” Ash asked me, gazing up at me with those brilliant green eyes of hers. They were so innocent looking, but I’d always known how manipulative they could be.
“Nothing,” I answered. Then I coughed, trying to hide another snort of laughter.
Reggie groaned out loud. Then, trying to hide his discomfort, he started complaining about how bored he was: “This scene blows, guys,” he whined. “You know what we should do? We should break into Gameland.”
“We already tried, Reg. Remember?” Kelly replied. He was referring to Ash’s and Micah’s attempt to hack The Game a couple weeks earlier. But I sensed that Reggie was talking about something else altogether, something a hell of lot more illegal and a shit-load more dangerous.
I watched as Kel’s and Micah’s zombie hunters searched through a dark warehouse looking for food. I’d never played this level before, but I could guess what was going to happen. There were certain patterns to how Zpocalypto was constructed. Once you recognized them, it was a lot easier to survive and advance to the next level. If my guess was correct, they were about to be jumped by a bunch of the Undead at any moment.
“Not The Game, dweeb,” Reggie barked. “I’m talking about breaking into Long Island itself. We should actually physically go there ourselves.”
Kelly didn’t look up. “Yeah, man. We’ll just hop onto the next transit over there right now.” He exhaled with disgust when a zombie slipped out of a shipping crate and chomped down on his ankle, immediately crippling him. If he didn’t make it back to his antivenin kit within the next few minutes, his character would be dead and return to undo everything he’d accomplished to get this far.
The “antivenin kit” was one of those things that irritated me the most about Zpocalypto. First of all, the bite causes an infection; it’s not a poison, like a snake bite. They should’ve called it an anti-infective. Secondly, in real life, if you’re bitten, there is no cure. What’s the saying? Once bitten, twice dead? That professor who tried fifteen years ago proved that. The one who everyone says killed my father.
“I’m not talking right this minute, brah,” Reggie answered.
“I’m up for it!” Micah said, as he lopped the virtual head off a virtual zombie with a virtual light saber, something the game was obviously not programmed to provide.
Ash raised her head and looked at me in disgust after seeing this. I just shrugged. It didn’t surprise me anymore. Micah was always reprogramming the game in his favor.
“But we should try soon,” he added, throwing the severed head into his virtual backpack. “Like, this weekend.”
“Where’d you get the light saber?” Kelly asked. He sounded jealous.
Micah smiled his shit-eating grin. “I did a little creative recoding yesterday.”
“Cheater.”
“Well…yeah.”
“Why this weekend?” I asked, only because I was curious to see how far the boys were willing to take this conversation. Theorizing something as blatantly illegal as breaking into LI was much more entertaining than watching the boys play a game they’d hacked. It was also more entertaining than seeing how springy Ashley’s hair could be. Or causing Reggie bodily harm and insult.
“Because in two and a half short weeks, our lives are totally going to be over, girl. That’s why.”
Micah was referring to the start of our senior year in high school. Well, Ash would technically be only a junior, but she had enough credits to graduate with the rest of us, and probably would.
Just three more weekends before our last year of incarceration. Nineteen more days of parole before we were all swallowed up in that mess of a penal system that masqueraded as a social welfare program. It was ostensibly there to prepare us for the harsh realities of an even harsher world, but it failed to do so on so many levels that it was almost ridiculous.
As far as the majority of kids my age were concerned, school was just another relic of the past. How was studying mid-sixteenth century literature supposed to help us deal with rising sea levels in the mid-twenty first century? How was knowing the sum of the angles of a triangle going to help us in the event of another outbreak? If it wasn’t for the fact that getting caught skipping school was pretty much a death sentence, signing years of our afterlife away into conscription, we wouldn’t even bother going.
I exhaled, trying to quell the sense of panic and anticipation rising up inside of me. I didn’t like to be reminded of time slipping away, of what awaited us on the other side of August. I reminded myself that I had to suffer only one more year of that institutionalized prison, then I’d be free to do whatever I wanted to do. We all would.
Most of us were planning on skipping college and going straight into one of those high-paying jobs as a coder with ArcWare. Kelly was the only one of us giving college any serious thought. He was always the one who had to be different from the rest of us. That’s what first attracted me to him, his long view, and it’s what I so dearly loved about him.
Out of all the guys I’d ever known, he was the kindest, the most caring. Anyone who knew the Corben family—who knew Kyle, Kelly’s little brother—could see that.
On the outside, Kelly wasn’t much to talk about: brown hair and eyes, an average build, average looks. A girlfriend probably shouldn’t say this about her boyfriend, but he was…forgettable. Nevertheless, he more than made up for it with his earnestness. I’d rather be with a guy who was honest with me than one who was easy on the eyes.
Lately, though, he’d been acting all strange. He was moody, inattentive, distracted. Just once in a while I wished he’d lighten up and relax.
“Wait,” he said. “You’re not serious, are you?” He jerked his body to the left, then twisted it as he tried to get his player to respond faster in the game, but the cheap sensors were low-res and iffy and it made his hunter look more like one of the hunted, all lurchy and uncoordinated. “You mean, like, actually break into Long Island?”
“Dead serious, brah,” Reggie replied. He laughed, probably realizing he’d inadvertently made a funny.
Reggie was Kel’s opposite. In fact, he was pretty much the opposite of any of us. “Big, bald and brash,” Micah always said about him, a stark contrast to his own blond, blue-eyed, befreckled boyish good looks and charm. “A brute with a heart the size of Texas.”
And Micah would certainly know about Texas. He was once a Republic good old boy before his parents defected to Connecticut. He always had a smile on his face and a reputation for never hurting a soul. A living soul, that is. When it came to zombies, on the other hand, he was a stone-cold killer. The Undead rarely stood a chance against him. He was the best game player I’d ever seen. Probably the best hacker, too.
Kelly wasn’t nearly as good as Micah in the gaming department—or me, for that matter—but still a hell of a lot better than most. Better than Reggie, anyway. And while he could hack, he didn’t like doing it. He was too uptight for any of that action, though not enough to not hang out with us.
Yet, as different as the three boys were, they were all brilliant, and they all shared the same passion for gaming. We all did, which is what brought us together in the first place. I
t’s what kept us together despite the immense differences in our personalities.
“Why would we even want to go to the Wastes?” Kelly asked without looking away. The Wastes were the places that had been decimated over the past thirty years by rising sea levels. Pretty much every coastal city had such areas, variably referred to as the Wastes or Wastelands. They were urban ghost towns, and LI was just one of many. Perfect breeding grounds for outbreaks.
Reggie shrugged. “Uh, no reason, brah, other than to see if we actually can. To say that we did.”
“Sure, why not,” Ashley chimed in. “I’ll try anything once. We haven’t done a damn thing exciting all summer and it’s almost over!”
I wanted to pinch her nose again just for reminding me of that.
The more I thought about it, the more I realized how breaking into Long Island—even just planning something like it—would liven things up, take our minds off of school and the inevitable dreariness of those long winter days ahead, hunched over a desk in sub-zero classrooms, suffering the slings and arrows of outrageous Shakespeare-inflicted misfortune.
This time Ashley didn’t ask why I was giggling.
“Doing something just so you can brag about it isn’t a reason,” Kelly argued.
“Oh, don’t be such a weenie,” Reggie retorted. It was his typical comeback whenever any of us disagreed with something he said. We usually let him get away with it because he was so damn big. That, and he actually relished a good argument.
But Kelly wasn’t giving in so easily. They got into a heated discussion, mostly focusing on the actual logistics of breaking into what had once been a militarized zone and was now blockaded by physical and electromagnetic barriers.