As far as Karim Williams remembered, he always dreamed of becoming a guard.
Some children wanted to become astronauts, or scientists, or prime ministers. But not Karim. Not terribly bright even from a young age, he knew he would never amount to much. He still remembered what his father told him in his childhood when Karim showed him his terrible school grades:
Karim always knew who he wanted to carry on his back:
So he worked very hard to serve his country. He enlisted in the British army, passed his exams by the skin of his teeth, and asked to join the Grenadier Guards of the Household Division. Until one day, after countless drills and push-ups, the officers gave him his uniform of the Queenâs Guard. Him! The dirt-poor grandson of a Pakistani immigrant!
The royal family would never know Karimâs name, and neither would the public. He would forever remain one of the faceless guards keeping up the gates of Buckingham Palace, fending off would-be assassins and Chinese tourists alike. But Karim was happy. His life had purpose.
Nights were cold in London. Karimâs uniform warmed him up somewhat, as did his black fur hat, although it was a tad too heavy for him and always threatened to fall over his eyes. His rifle felt heavy in his hands but not as much as the weight of duty. Mist came out of his mouth when he breathed.
Karimâs first shift ever took place in the early morning. Big Ben would strike four oâclock soon. The sky was pitch black, but London never slept. There were always drunkards beyond the fences of Buckingham Palace, shouting and rambling in the shadow of the Victoria Memorial.
The night was quiet all the same. Karim had been granted the ultimate honor of guarding the gates of Buckingham Palace on his first shift, to act as the Royal Familyâs first line of defense against their sworn enemies: the tourists, the paparazzi, and the stalkers. His only company on his lone vigil was a fellow guard. The two guards stood alone before the palaceâs main entrance, separated from the city by steel fences.
Karim knew the higher-ups put his shift at this hour to test his resolve. He struggled against the urge to close his eyes and fall asleep from the monotony. Even the customary fifteen-paces march every ten minutes became terribly monotonous after a while.
But Karim resisted the temptation. His first shift was all the more important for who he shared it with.
Bill McMalone. The Legend. The Rock of Buckingham.
Karim dared to peek at his teammate. Bill was an older man in his sixties, with a tough Irish face, beardless jawline, icy blue eyes, and a bodybuilderâs abs. He looked like the bear whose fur his black hat had been made from.
Some said that Bill was too old for service and should retire, but the higher-ups kept renewing his contract year after year. Maybe out of gratitude. Maybe out of respect. For if half the stories Karim had heard about Bill McMalone were true, then he was more than a man. No human could be as still and silent as him.
Karim hadnât seen Bill blink once in the last hour and a half they spent together. He wondered if the man even . Bill McMalone only moved from his spot for the customary walking routine, and then returned to his post without a word.
Karim hadnât dared to speak to the man for the length of his shift. Too intimidating. But as his two hours of service would soon reach their end, he mustered the courage to break the ice.
âIs it true what they say? In the regiment?â Karim cleared his throat. âYou spent six shifts back-to-back to cover for sick colleagues?â
If Bill McMalone had heard, he didnât show it. Karim gulped as the tense silence stretched on. Did he mess up somehow?
âNo,â Bill finally replied with a deep voice. âI lasted twelve shifts.â
Karimâs eyes widened in shock. âTwenty-four hours?â
âWithout eating. Without drinking. Without sleeping.â Bill McMalone marked a short pause, as if particularly proud of the last part. âWithout peeing.â
Impossible. No man could hold that long. Yet the unshakable certainty in the manâs voice convinced Karim of his honesty. âHow did you do it, sir?â
âItâsâ¦â Bill grunted. âAuthoritah.â
âAuthority?â Karim asked naïvely.
âAuthoritah,â Bill replied. âItâs authority beyond composure. Authority over yourself and the world.â
âAndâ¦how do you obtainâ¦â Karim coughed. âAuthoritah?â
âGive it time.â Billâs tone reminded Karim of his father handing out wisdom to his young son. âYou do not learn authoritah. Authoritah comes to you when you need it most.â
Karim listened to the lesson in silence. He would have time to meditate on it in his bed. Their replacements should arrive sometime soon.
Big Ben struck four oâclock, signaling the end of Karimâs shift and the end of the world.
First came the frost. A strange chill spread through the air like a wave, cold and biting. A pulse of invisible energy followed. Karim felt the wave going through his body without understanding its nature. He briefly wondered if the wind had suddenly changed course, until the skies changed colors.
A bright blue aurora borealis spread from the distant Big Ben, so bright Karim squinted at the sudden change in luminosity. The northern lights expanded to cover all of London in the blink of an eye. As for Big Ben itself, the tower grew taller and taller. Karim watched on, mesmerized, as the monumentâs infamous clock pierced the clouds. Giant gears and pipes materialized on Big Benâs surface until it took on a strange, steampunk appearance.
âWhat the ?â Karim muttered, unable to believe what his eyes showed him. Had sleeplessness dulled his senses? Was he dreaming? âWhatâs happening?â
Big Ben wasnât the only monument to transform. The Tower of London, which normally could hardly be seen from the guardsâ position, shot up to the skies. Its walls took on a sinister black tone, and a ring of fire surrounded the castleâs top. The Tower didnât grow as tall as Big Ben, but it now more than rivaled the Eiffel Tower in size. A flock of winged, shadowy forms flew away from the building and under the aurorasâ light.
When Karim thought they had reached the height of strangeness, a message appeared before his eyes as if he were reading from a computer screen.
Whoever will reach level 100 first shall become Earthâs new Overgod.
âOverwhat?â Karim made a quick prayer to Allah, just in case.
As the only class available to you, you automatically took a level in [
]: a mediocre class focused on policing cities and enforcing order. Growths: Strength (C); Agility (C); Vitality (C); Skill (C); Magic (C); Intelligence (C); Charisma (C); Luck (C).
: +1 STR, +1 VIT, +1 AGI, +1 CHA, +1 LCK. Your Health Points were raised by 30 and your Special Points by 10.
You are but a faceless drone in a big machine. You can telepathically communicate with other members of your Party, Guild, or Faction, no matter the distance.
You automatically formed a party with: Bill McMalone.
A rush of pleasure traveled down Karimâs spine, though it did little to alleviate his nervousness. A white fog fell upon the city at an alarming rate, clouding Londonâs buildings and skyscrapers in a dense layer of mist.
âWhatâs happening?â Karim asked his teammate. âDid you see that message too? What does it mean? Whatâs happening?â
Bill glanced at Big Ben with indifferent eyes. âUgh.â
âUgh?â Karim repeated.
âUgh,â Bill grunted back.
He didnât look concerned in the slightest.
Karim waited a few seconds before his nervousness got the better of him. He activated the earpiece hidden beneath his hat and attempted to control the rest of his regiment. âChief? Chief? Gate to officers, whatâs happening?â
Only a static noise answered his questions.
âWhat do we do?â Karim asked his senior partner. âDo we check up on the royal family?â
âWe wait for the next shift to arrive.â Bill shrugged his shoulders. âI assume they will be a bit late.â
Somehow, Karim had the feeling that this would prove to be an understatement.
Screams came out of the mist, and to Karimâs horror, they didnât sound human at all. Although he couldnât see much past the fog, he glimpsed flashes of light in the distance followed by the sound of explosions.
âWhat if somebody needs help?â Karim asked weakly. He had a terrible feeling aboutâ¦whatever was happening. Was it a holographic show of some kind? Why hadnât he been informed?
âUntil new guards come, youâll stand your ground.â Bill stared at the incoming fog with the utter indifference of an unimpressed veteran. âThe job of the Queenâs Guard is like making love to a woman, young man.â
Karim looked at his fellow guard with confused eyes. He had nothing but respect for McMalone, but that comparison was almost scandalous. âI-I donât follow, sir.â
âYou struggle against the urge to unload your essence,â Bill explained. âBut to maximize your partnerâs pleasure, you must wait for the right moment. Even if you feel like the plumbery will burst out, that the pressure is too much, you have to hold on to it until you are in the perfect position. Like how you must wait for your next shift before climax.â
Karim listened in silence, but the metaphor was too much for him. âSir, Iâm sorry, but that makes no sensââ
âYou donât want to pleasure your wife, Karim?â Bill snarled at his teammate without moving an inch. Karim tensed up like an iron pole. âYou think sheâs too good for you? You think you can blow your load when she isnât ready, or cheat on her? Is that what you think?â
âI-I donât have a wife, Sir!â
âNot with that attitude! How can you hope to hold a woman if you canât hold your position?! You will respect the Queenâs Guard the same way you would respect your future wife! You donât cheat on the Duchess of Windsor, Karim! You donât cheat on Kate and William!â
Karim trembled in place, overwhelmed by his fellow guardâs vehemence. He stared into the distance, ignoring the screams, ignoring the noise of explosions, ignoring the small â+â symbol at the edge of his vision.
Itâ¦it had to be all right. Bill was much older than Karim, an experienced watchman with decades of service to the Crown. He knew better. If he felt all of this was nothing to be worried about, then Karimâs worries were misplaced. He breathed in and out, telling himself everything was fine.
Yes, yes, the skies were falling apart, but it didnât matter. Everything would turn out well. Nothing to worry about.
âAre you married, Sir?â Karim asked.
âNo.â Bill McMaloneâs face remained an unblinking mask. âIâm divorced.â
Karim wondered why but wisely did not push the subject further.
Nobody came to relieve them for the next hour.
Karim vaguely heard shouts and movement behind the palaceâs doors, but nobody came to give him and Bill directions. The fog made it nigh-impossible to see beyond the palaceâs fence, except for the Victoria Memorial. The golden, winged statue atop the monument shone brightly under the faint light of the aurora. The mists swirled under it like a raging sea unable to topple a lighthouse.
Karim thought. His bladder was a dam holding back a flood. Worse, his hat was starting to slide onto his forehead, making it harder for him to see.
It was the voice of Bill McMalone, but it echoed in Karimâs head rather than in Buckinghamâs courtyard. The younger guard glanced at his elder, who hadnât moved from his post.
Karim thought.
the older guard repeated through telepathy.
Karim would rather think of Meghan Markle right now, but his fear of Bill eavesdropping on his fantasies cowed him. He imagined the face of Boris Johnson looking down on him, much like his father scolding him for speaking out of turn. Karimâs bladder stopped distracting him immediately.
âTheyâre coming,â Bill said out of the blue.
âWhat?â Karim asked. âWho?â
âThe plebeians are at the gates,â the older guard replied evasively.
Karim didnât have to ponder long. The fenced steel gates collapsed in a terrible bang, and a shadowy shape emerged from the mist.
Karim screamed.
A festering horror lumbered out of the mist. Thrice the size of the average man, the creature was made of body parts crudely stitched together in a humanoid shape. Skin spots of different colors, from green to gray, formed a nightmarish patchwork that made Karimâs stomach turn. Bolts struck out of the creatureâs head, sparks of lightning bursting from them. And the eyesâ¦two white lights glowed from within black, empty sockets.
A notification appeared above the creatureâs head.
Level 10 [Artificial/Undead]
Karim thought, prayed, that it was only a very convincing costume. But as the creature came closer in unnerving silence, its hands so large they could probably seize a horse, he realized that theâ¦the was all too inhuman.
âB-Back off!â Karim raised his rifle at the lumbering brute. âBack off!â
The creature rushed at him, its steps making the ground shake beneath his feet. Karim opened fire as training demanded, only for his bullets to bounce off the monsterâs skin. It closed the gap between the metal fence and the guards in an instant.
Karim prepared to join his makerâ¦but the lethal blow never came.
Instead, the Frankenstein creature froze one meter away from the guards. Its body was tense, its eyes were wide open, but they ignored Karim entirely.
Bill McMalone had engaged in a staring contest with the monster.
The older guard did not move an inch. He hadnât even lowered his rifle to threaten the monster. No, he simply gazed at the monster with his cold, soulless blue eyes. Somehow, that was enough to stop it dead in its tracks.
The scene reminded Karim of two gorillas threatening one another. Neither made a move to attack the other, yet the pressure grew between them. Karim held his breath, anticipating the deadly fight he knew would come.
He was mistaken.
After a tense standoff, the stitched monster took a few steps back away from the guards. It moved closer to the fence, its grim expression one of wariness. At no point did it break eye contact with Bill McMalone, and the guard did not move an inch.
The creature turned around without warning and fled in the mist. Bill watched it vanish with a look of utter contempt.
âWimp,â was all he said.
It took Karim a full five minutes of breathing, in and out, to recover his composure. âWhat was that?â he asked, his lungs cold within his chest. âWhat happened?â
âAuthoritah,â Bill replied calmly. âThat was authoritah at work, Karim.â
âNo, I meanâ¦â Karim pointed his rifle at the destroyed metal fence. âThat thing! What was that?!â
âProbably a Welsh tourist. I think.â Bill let out a shrug. âTheyâre the worst.â
âTourists donât grow that big!â His partnerâs utter nonchalance both shocked and infuriated Karim. âW-Why arenât you more concerned?â
Bill McMalone turned his eyes and met his juniorâs gaze.
âAfter two years in the Queenâs Guard, Karim,â he said very calmly, ânothing on the job will surprise you anymore.â
He looked back at the gates, and Karim knew the matter was closed.
Karim calmly returned to his post, rifle pointed at the skies. Somehow, his partnerâs sheer serenity in the face of strangeness calmed him.
âDid it happen before?â he asked Bill.
âNot since they tried to raise Lady Di from the dead,â the older guard replied with a shrug. âNow was a shitshow.â
Karim stared at his colleague in uncomfortable silence, searching for any hint that that was a joke. He didnât find any.
âLondon Bridge is falling downâ¦â A sinister voice echoed out of the mist. âFalling down, falling down, Lond Bridgeâs falling downâ¦â
Karim glanced at the metal fence, half expecting the monstrous creature to return for a new round. Instead, a new dark figure stepped out of the fog.
âMy fair lady built it up with iron bars, iron bars, iron barsâ¦â A gaunt man in a dark trench coat walked into view, his fingers playing with knives. His face was hidden behind a gas mask, and his hair under a black hat. âBuilt it up with iron barsâ¦â
Only when the figure came closer did Karim realize that the mysterious man wasnât playing with knives.
His fingers knives.
Level 6 [Humanoid]
âMy fair lady, iron bars will bend and breakâ¦â The dark man stared at Bill McMalone with empty glass eyes. Since the older guard wouldnât even look at the intruder, he instead turned his gaze at Karim. âBend and break, bend and breakâ¦â
Was that Jack the Ripper? Karim did his best not to show fear and unease, but his body betrayed him. His fingers clenched around his rifle, which the monster noticed. The creature sharpened his knives against each other.
âBend and breakâ¦â he sang to himself, ready to disembowel Karim. âLike corpsesâ¦â
McMaloneâs voice echoed in his colleagueâs skull. He sounded calm but firm.
Karim thought back.
Karim held his breath and faced the knife monster. Their gazes locked in a silent contest of will. Slitted reptilian eyes behind the gas maskâs glass lenses stared back at Karim. He knew that if he ever faltered, that if he even blinked, the monster would strike him dead. It was pure agony to keep his eyes open. They felt as dry as a desert.
So Karim raised his eyebrows to break the deadlock.
The monster was taken aback. It lifted his chin a little bit, trying to keep up, but it couldnât match Karimâs speed.
Karimâs eyebrows reached as high as the human bodyâand his fur hatâwould allow it. He felt the blood flow into his pupils, the pressure growing, the sweat falling down his forehead.
Something snapped in the Ripperâs heart like a bowstring. The monster flinched. He looked between Karim and Bill, his posture was that of a scared animal, and he fled without a word into the night.
When the creature was gone, Karim gasped for air and blinked to hydrate his eyes. Bill McMalone simply gave him a sharp nod of approval.
Big Ben struck six, and Buckingham Palaceâs doors opened at long last. Two members of the Queenâs Guard came out in uniform, fresh and confident.
âHi, guys,â the oldest of them said. âSorry for the delay. We had a few corpses to bury in the garden. How was your shift?â
âEventful,â Bill replied with a sigh. âClass-X disaster scenario.â
âI know, right?â The youngest of the new guardsâKarim thought his name was Mickey or somethingâlooked at the skies. âWe still donât understand what caused the phenomenon.â
âWell, we trained for emergencies like this one.â Bill frowned at his colleagues. âWhich of you dumbasses let Jack the Ripper out of his cell again?â
âWe didnât,â Mickey protested. âHeâs in the basement.â
Bill McMalone did a thing Karim had yet to see him do: blink. The old guard looked at the shadow of Big Ben and the auroras in the skies. âWait, this has nothing to do with the celebrity sacrifices?â
âNo, theyâre right on schedule, and Queen Elizabeth is still immortal.â
Karim opened his mouth, words dying on the tip of his tongue, and then closed it. Instead, he listened in silence.
âThis mess,â Bill McMalone pointed at the aurora, âhas nothing to do with us?â
âNope,â Mickey replied. He looked calm but concerned. âAnd from what we can tell, itâs worldwide. Itâs chaos out there. Apparently life is a video game now, thereâs monsters running around, riots in the streets⦠We even lost contact with Agent Markle, so the plan to take back the USA for England is dead in the waters.â
âItâs worse than the night when Prince Charles came out as a vampire,â Bill said with an angry frown. âIs he still in his coffin, at least?â
âYes, although the Duchess of Cornwall is starting to suspect the body double.â The new guards glanced at Karim with a conspiratorial look. âWait, is heâ¦
?â
âItâs okay, heâs ready for the initiation. Iâll vouch for him.â Bill locked eyes with his colleague. âKarim.â
Karim straightened up.
âWhat you see and hear as a Queenâs Guard stays in the Guard,â Bill said. âDo you understand?â
By now, Karim had stopped asking himself questions and just went with the flow. âYes, Sir.â
âThere are things about the Royal Familyâvery dark stuff, borderline Satanicâthat the public is never allowed to know. Part of your job as a member of the Household Division will be to keep it that way. Do you understand?â
âYes, Sir.â
âGood.â Bill McMalone patted Karim on the shoulder. âHappy first day on the job.â