Chapter Forty-Four: The Detour
I couldn't sleep that night. My body yearned for rest, but my mind was relentless. I kept looking out across the lake at the mountain Arthur had mentioned. I really wished it had been overcast so I could see the light reflected in the clouds. Just some sign of a way out of here would have made me feel sane.
I tried talking to Camden about dying, but he wasn't ready to talk about it and I didn't have much to say either. I was still numb. It was strange, I kept having these miniature moments of panic where I would forget that I wasn't dying. Right as I was about to sleep I would suddenly jolt awake and pat my body down looking for the gashes and cuts that I remember receiving.
They were never there, of course.
When I had taken a shower, the hot water running over my skin was uncomfortable. That skin had been burned earlier. It's like my mind hadn't really gone back to normal.
As I lay there, I considered saying all of this to Camden. I could only imagine that he was going through the same thing. But I've never been good at talking about things like this and after having been inducted into the small group of people keeping Carousel’s enforcer a secret, it almost felt hypocritical to try and be open about my feelings. Like I didn't deserve to.
I contemplated exactly how much I could tell my friends about the axe murderer. As I saw it, there were two possibilities. Possibility One: I can't talk about the axe murderer himself but I am unrestricted otherwise. If that was the case, it would be pretty easy to tell my friends things. I would just have to leave out a few details. Possibility Two: I can't even acknowledge that I know what happened at all. That one was trickier.
Arthur and Roxie appeared to have gone with the second choice. They acted like they didn't even know what happened to people who disappeared. They didn't hint much at all. They didn't try to get clever about it.
All of the other players had been able to connect the dots over time. You had to play the game. They knew why players disappeared more or less. They just didn't know how.
A further question: did I need to tell them? Most players followed the rules pretty closely without being told there was a literal axe hanging over their heads. They knew there were consequences. Why risk it if there was nothing to gain? What was the difference between an axe murderer and spontaneous combustion as far as the other players were concerned? Missing is missing. Dead is dead.
A final question: how long would I wait before I tried to get clever and ended up saying too much? The problem solver in me wanted to outsmart this restriction. I only hoped that desire would fade with time. I thought about how I might hint things to them, how I might test the boundaries.
I guess I'm not good at keeping secrets.
I don't think I ever fell asleep that night. I just remember eventually it started to get lighter outside and the birds started to chirp and the little campers came out and started chasing each other around playing tag and daring each other to go into the abandoned cabin.
Morning at Camp Dyer, as always, came without my permission.
The next morning was breakfast as usual. The veteran players treated me normally. The ones that I didn't know that well glanced at me for an extra few seconds, but they seemed more curious than unwelcoming.
Grace had planned for us to eat tacos that morning. Some of the senior players had just done a run to Eternal Savers Club, Carousel’s version of Costco, where you can get huge savings on bulk items. Of course, I'm pretty sure they just cleared a storyline there and then looted it for everything that was on our shopping list, but either way, we saved a lot of money.
Every time someone made a run to E.S.C., it was like Christmas came to Camp Dyer. They would bring back bags full of candy, microwave snacks, and whatever other goodies were on sale.
I sat with my friends. I don't know if they got over me not telling them what had happened to Janette, but I think that they were developing the understanding, however begrudgingly. They would get it with time. I hoped they would never learn about it the hard way.
With what had happened to Janette, Adeline had told us that we had to go on storylines more often than before. Just until they knew how long of a break we had before Carousel would come knocking. I didn't have to go anywhere but I made it clear that I wanted to go with them if they went on a storyline.
Truth be told, I don't think they wanted to go.
Luckily, Chris, Antoine's older brother, had a compromise for us.
He told us about a very easy storyline that was more of a brain teaser and was actually kind of fun. He couldn't tell us details, or at least he wouldn't tell us details, but he said that our chance of dying was lower than it had been at the Astralist. I guess we should have told him how close we came to dying to the Astralist.
“Can I come?” Someone asked from behind us.
I turned to look and, to my surprise, it was Dina, the Outsider who had arrived at Carousel at the same time we had. She had latched on to a few different teams since we got there. I couldn't see her plot armor level or any of her tropes because she had that Outsider ability that made it hard to get any insight into her. Guarded Personality, I think it was called.
She wore her brown leather jacket and distressed blue jeans, the same as she had when she got here.
That must have meant that her grit was higher than my Savvy. I still hadn't used my stat tickets. I was contemplating sharing them with my friends in order to buy back favor. That wasn't a smart idea, but I kept it in my back pocket.
“Sure,” Anna said. She gave us all a quick glance as if to say We are letting her come!
Dina smiled. She moved over to the table that we were sitting at right across from me.
“Do you think I can get you to do a detour for me first? I mean before we go on the storyline that you were talking about.”
It was like she was asking me personally, not the group.
“What kind of detour?” I asked.
Dina leaned in close. “I need to go see a psychic in town. Lara said that it can be a little bit troublesome to get there unless you have someone with a scouting trope. The trouble is, she told me that person had to be about the same level as me so I can't ask any of the veterans. I asked Janette but I'm sure you could guess how that went.”
I was taken aback. I didn't know what to say. The trope that I had gotten from Janette, (I don’t like it here...), was a scouting trope. It wasn't the best one. The information it gave was based on a vague feeling of unease and fear, but it would probably keep us alive.
“You mean like a real psychic?” Kimberly asked. Truthfully, she sounded like she was excited. I think Kimberly had been into astrology back before Carousel. Astrology probably didn't have the appeal anymore. After all, Carousel had different stars.
Dina nodded.
“Are you sure it's safe?” Anna asked.
Dina shrugged. “I don't think that Lara would have told me about her if it wasn't safe.”
“Do you mean Madam Celia?” I asked.
Dina looked surprised. “Yeah, you heard of her?”
“I met her yesterday,” I said.
I coughed. I didn’t want to invite questions about the Grotesque storyline.This chapter was first shared on the Ñøv€lß1n platform.
Before we could ask any more questions like “Why do you need to go see a psychic?” Dina was up and gone.
“Meet you out front in an hour?” She asked as she left.
“And you came here hoping that I would give you the answers. But that isn't my role here. We all have a role here, in Carousel. You’ll learn that soon enough. You came to this place as Orpheus, but will you leave with your prize? I cannot tell you the way, but a darker power might be able to.”
“A... darker power?” Dina asked. She sounded hesitant.
“I think it would be very strange for you to turn your nose up at this point,” Celia said with the ghost of a smirk.
Dina looked down.
“I don't know what it will take for you to get to the end of your story. But I do know the next step.”
She reached a hand into her pocket and pulled out a ticket. She handed it to Dina.
“You will need your friends’ help for this,” she said. “To get to the end and back again you will need many things, to accomplish many feats. Don’t worry, there is a path that will lead you there. You need... a guide who knows the way.”
“Where?”
“One step after another,” Madam Celia said. She pointed to the ticket that she had just handed Dina. “This is your next step. If only you have the bravery to take it. Now go. Never make the mistake of thinking you have time to waste.”
Madam Celia herded us out of the store and back out into the parking lot. There were still animal noises coming from somewhere in the strip mall.
“Are you going to tell us about that?” Antoine asked.
Dina didn’t say anything. She took out the ticket and showed it to us.
We examined it. It was different than the tickets we'd seen before, slightly smaller than a trope ticket. It had no imagery on it but instead, read:
Now Playing
Antemortem
Beneath that were directions to a place called Berryman’s Dive. It ended with "A Private Showing Just For You!"
“What is this?” Kimberly asked.
I'd been trying to figure that out myself. It presented itself like an actual movie ticket, but the address was to what I assumed was a dive bar. And then it hit me.
“Madam Celia is a quest-giver,” I said. Most of the others looked at me, puzzled.
“That makes sense,” Camden said. He would know.
“A quest-giver?” Anna asked.
“In a video game, a quest-giver is an NPC whose job is to give you a quest to do. A mission. I think that's what Madam Celia is. You go talk to her, and she gives you directions to a storyline.”
The others took turns staring at the ticket. They all seemed interested. Up until that point, we had only gone on storylines that the more senior players had vetted. We had never actually tried to let Carousel guide us, but it clearly had the ability to. After all, Roxie had said that there was a tutorial. There had to be quest-givers.
“You don't think that what she said was true?” Dina asked. I think from the look on her face she really didn't want me to be right. I think that she wanted Madam Celia’s words to be real and not just an NPC playing a part.
I shrugged my shoulders. “Has anything actually been real here? Everything's just a performance stacked on another performance.”
Dina didn't say anything. She almost looked sad but within a few seconds, she had wiped away any trace of emotion.
Anna must have sensed the same thing I did. She put her hand on Dina’s shoulder and said, “We can go check it out. It doesn't hurt to look. Riley can get us out of there if there's anything dangerous.”
Anna was putting an awful lot of trust in my new trope. She was putting a lot of trust in me. Hopefully, it wasn’t misplaced.
Berryman’s Dive was to the north, a mile or so out of town. In fact, it wasn't too far from Halle Castle. Avoiding omens felt so much more possible now that I could actually see them before we got to them.
On one of the streets, there was an Open House, where a beautiful colonial home was being sold. We had to literally go around the neighborhood in order not to trigger whatever omen was involved with that house. I assume it had something to do with the fact that the door was left wide open.
Eventually, we ended up on a dusty road with not much else around. As we walked down this road, dusk started to fall. It never got any darker or lighter. It was just perpetual dusk. Against the falling darkness, we saw it: Berryman’s Dive.
It was just a small country bar out in the middle of nowhere. A few cars were parked outside. It had a large neon sign with its name on it as well as neon signs with the names of a few of Carousel’s off-brand beers.
“Are we good to go in?” Anna asked.
I nodded my head. I couldn't see any omens involved in just entering the establishment.
“I hope you kids brought your fake IDs,” Dina joked. She took the lead as we moved closer to the building.
I noticed that Camden was hanging back. I turned back to see what was wrong. It was a terrible time to risk ending up in a difficult storyline. I don't think either of us was in a good mental place to be fighting for our lives again.
“What's up?” I asked.
“Nothing,” he said.
“Okay.” If he said it was nothing I wasn’t going to press the issue.
“It’s just... Look at where we are,” he said.
I looked around unsure of what he meant. He pointed his finger along the road that we had traveled and then along another road that intersected that one. The bar was in the middle of nowhere at the corner of those two roads.
I figured out what he was trying to point out.
We were at a crossroads.