The Place Where Promises Aren’t Kept [Chapter 19]
Did I mention before that sleepovers planned ahead of time are the best? Not long after waking up, Kyle and I started smelling breakfast being cooked in the kitchen. It was the smell of bacon, something that we rarely had in my house.
When we came out to eat, we also found pancakes, eggs, and orange juice to wash it all down. We ate like kings that morning. I mean, since we had defeated the Goblin King, we were kind of taking his place. Not that my parents knew that.
We returned to the den after breakfast.
“There’s something we should download now that you have fast internet,” Kyle said.
“Another game?” I asked.
“Nah, it’s called I-M. Short for instant messenger.”
I hadn’t heard of it. “What does it do?”
“You know how you talk to people on Rune Quest?” Kyle said.
“Yeah.”
“Well, it’s like that. But you don’t have to be on a game. You can just talk to people.”
“Random people?” I said, confused. I rarely talked to other people on Rune Quest outside of Jakey.
“No, like you can add friends. Like I chat with Max sometimes. Here, this is the site.”
I let Kyle do his thing. I thought that I could just remove anything that he installed after he left. After downloading the strange program, he set it up. It was just a little window where you could type in someone’s name.
“My name on here is the same as I use in Rune Quest,” Kyle said. “FirePlay3r. You can see when I’m on the computer. That way we can let each other know when we’ll be on Rune Quest.”
I suddenly understood. “So I don’t have to call your phone? That’s kind of cool. We should get Jakey on this, too.”
“Yeah, why not?” Kyle said, nodding. He typed in his username so we could be connected right from the start. “When I’m back at home later I’ll send you a message so you can trade me some of the gold.”
“Sure thing.”
The End of it All
Kyle went home just before noon. I wanted to spend more time with him, but obviously, he had to leave at some point. That’s the worst part about a sleepover, the part where you have to go your separate ways. No, wait— the worst part of the end of a sleepover is when your mom makes you clean up.
“Alright, Mike, it’s time to get off the computer,” my mom said to me from the den doorway. “You two were on that all night. Ice cream bowls need to go in the sink. Get the sleeping bags rolled up. And you know where the DVDs and board games need to go.”
That was far from the last chore I had to do that day. Between that stuff, homework, and being made to do ‘other’ stuff, I didn’t get any more time on the computer.
I kind of wanted to try out that instant messenger thing with Kyle, but I knew he would understand if I wasn’t able to get on. I wondered if his mom would make him do boring, busy stuff after a sleepover too.
It was Sunday night before I was able to finally sneak off back to the den. I knew I was sitting on a pile of Rune Quest money from defeating the Goblin King. I thought about how much I had in total. There were so many possibilities for what I could buy. I might have been able to get a new set of armor and be almost as strong as Jakey. But he also had gotten money too, so he might have bought better stuff, too.
My character was in a strange place when I logged in. I remembered that Kyle had been on my character last. The location still seemed off. On top of that, none of the armor or gear I had been wearing was in my inventory. I wondered if Kyle had let my character die before he logged off.
I ran to the nearest town storage. That would be where all my other stuff was. All of that, including the piles of money, should have been safe. It was not.
My storage boxes had been cleared out. All that remained were some piles of junk that pretty much had no use. It was like I was a level one character again. My hands were shaking. My eyes filled up with tears. I wanted to slam on my keyboard with my fists. I wanted to punch the screen and push it off the desk. I almost screamed.
I flung myself onto the den’s couch and pounded my head into the cushion. I punched at the armrest. Everything that I had worked for was gone. I hoped that if I logged off and logged back on, it would all be suddenly back. Maybe it was just a game bug. Maybe it was just a bad dream. It was none of that, of course.
I opened up the instant messenger program. Kyle had accepted my friend request, but he wasn’t online then. If he was online, I would have been typing every bad word I knew at him. It was definitely Kyle. Somehow, he had figured out my password and logged in to my character, and stole everything.
I wanted to say something to my parents, but I knew it wouldn’t make sense to them. I thought about how they might say that it was stupid, that I was upset over just a game. All of those things I earned and made took real time and real effort. There was no getting that back.
I barely slept that night. I couldn’t help but think about what I was going to do to Kyle the next day. The things I was going to yell at him. When my mom woke me up the next morning, I was more tired and more mad.
I managed to hide my mood from my mom and my sister. But Jakey would be at the bus stop, and he had to know. When I saw him, he raised his hand in the air for a high five.
“Dude, Friday was awesome! We took down the king!”
I kicked at the ground and shook my head. I wanted to cry, but I couldn’t let Jakey see me crying. “It doesn’t matter! It’s all gone. Kyle hacked me, bro!”
Jakey lowered his hand. “What? How did that happen?”
“He must have seen me type in my password or something! I don’t know! But when I logged in last night, everything was gone!”
“Even from your storage boxes?” Jakey asked.
“Everything!” I said. I cried a little bit.
“What a little thief,” Jakey said with a grumble. “And after he helped guide us through the stronghold.”
On the bus ride to school, Jakey kept talking about how to get back at Kyle. All I could think about was seeing Kyle’s stupid, smiling face in first period.
“Don’t do anything I wouldn’t do,” Jakey said as we were parting ways at school. “Maybe we can ask Mr. Tate at lunch about what we can do.”
That would have been too late, I said to myself. The bell rang. I marched myself through the quad and to Mrs. Carpenter’s class. My feet were nearly worn out by the time I got there. Kids were already heading inside the classroom. Kyle was among them.
He looked up at me with a smile as I came up to our shared desk. I flung my backpack off my shoulders and tossed it at him. It bounced off his shoulder and fell with a clunk to the ground.
“What the heck, dude,” he hissed at me.
I glanced up at the front of the room to make sure Mrs. Carpenter wasn’t watching. “I hate you,” I whined at him, kicking at the leg of his chair.
“Chill, dude,” he said back, pulling away. “Why are you mad?”
“You know what you did,” I said, shaking my finger at him. “You stole everything from me.”
“Mike, take a seat for me,” the teacher said from the front of the room. “I’m going to take roll.”
I flung my chair back and slumped myself down. I didn’t want to look at Kyle in the eye.
“Seriously, what happened, dude?” He tried to say lowly. The teacher was distracted by the attendance paper.
I knew he was playing dumb. “Quit lying!” I shouted. Everyone, and I mean everyone, in the class, looked back my way. “You hacked my account!”
“Mike, save it for later,” Mrs. Carpenter called back.
A few people laughed. The laughter made the hairs stand up all over my arms and body.
“Yeah, Mike,” Kyle scoffed lowly at my side. It was low enough that only I could hear.
I felt my teeth squeezing against each other. I swung back and sent my hand into Kyle’s shoulder, nearly pushing him off his chair.
Mrs. Carpenter stomped around to the side of the class and jutted a finger at the door. “Mike, office, now! This is ridiculous!”
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