Hiya folks! I've decided to bring this project to this site. The reason this story was made is simple enough, I enjoy both Danganronpa and Digimon and I figured why not combine the both of them together? Plus I decided to include two OCs into this story but they're kinda like self-insert characters. Also I won't deny it, the opening is similar to one of my other stories, sue me, I'm lazy. Anyways, enough of that and here's the story!
Daniel opened his eyes and saw the stars dance. Floating flecks of white light swayed and curled lazily towards an inky black oblivion before him. He felt calm, relaxed, on that dreamy cusp between waking and sleeping.
He breathed in, filling his lungs with cool air that spread throughout his limbs, lifting him into wakefulness. Only then did he notice he was on his back. With care, Daniel pushed himself up to a seat. The ground beneath him was made of light, white and blinding, and nothing more, but it was firm under his hand. Stars in the form of tiny fuzzy orbs emerged from the solid light and drifted upwards. Daniel frowned and looked around. The light didn't extend to the edges of this void world; this platform was the only tangible space.
The dreamy wonder wore off quickly at the realization. Void. Alone. He was alone in a potentially endless world of dark. How did he get here? This felt too real to be a dream; his imagination wasn't
that good. Daniel started breathing hard, but he fought down the panic. He stood up with noticeably more effort than before and looked around. The platform was a lot smaller than it seemed sitting down, but to his immense relief, he saw a darker shape in between the floating lights laying sprawled out on the platform. He knew that shape better than his own.
Daniel rushed over and gave the figure's shoulder a firm shake.
"Mateo!" he urged. "Mateo, wake up!"
Daniel's older brother groaned. "Figh mer miniz," he grumbled and rolled away from Daniel.
"Mateo!"
"Whaaat?!" Mateo sat up fast and slammed his head into Daniel's jaw. The boys yelped out and cradled their injuries.
"What'd you wake me for?" Mateo griped. "I was having a nice…dream…" His dark brown eyes went wide as he surveyed their surroundings, quicker on the uptake than Daniel had been.
"Dan," he said carefully, "where the hell are we?"
"I dunno," Daniel replied as he helped his brother to his feet. "I just woke up a few minutes ago." He frowned. "Or at least I think it was a few minutes ago. It's kinda hard to get a sense of time…"
"And you're not hurt, are you?" Mateo asked, giving his brother a serious look over. "Not nauseous or dizzy or anything?"
Daniel shook his head. "No, I'm ok."
Mateo's face relaxed somewhat, then he turned his attention to the void. "Do you remember anything from before you woke up?"
Daniel thought hard. "I…don't. I think I was…" Scowling hard, he took off his green beanie and ran a hand through his black curls. "I don't remember anything." He dropped his hand with a huff and looked up at Mateo. "You? You said you were having a dream?"
"Yeah, I remember dreaming, but not what it was about."
"Sounded like it was pretty good." Daniel put his beanie back on and grinned mischievously up at his brother. "I bet it was about—"
"Hey," warned Mateo, but he was grinning when he punched Daniel in the arm.
"Ow! I should've let you sleep. All you've done since waking up is hit me." Daniel joked as he rubbed the arm that got hit.
Mateo smirked as he pointed his thumb towards him. "And I'll do it again! Assert my older sibling dominance."
Daniel snorted and rolled his eyes, but he was smiling along with him. A few moments pause as the gravity of the situation sobered them again.
"Maybe we died," Daniel said abruptly.
Mateo groaned. "Don't say that."
"I'm serious!" Daniel moved to the edge of the platform. "Maybe we had an accident or something, and this is the afterlife."
"Shitty afterlife." Mateo joined him by the edge and peered down. Nothing but darkness farther than the eye could see, and none of the floating lights were there to help illuminate things. The depth made Mateo's head spin, and he placed a hand on Daniel's chest to gently push him back from the edge.
"Well, if we're not dead," Daniel said, "maybe we're asleep? Or I'm asleep and you're just a figment of my imagination, and the real you is somewhere else."
Mateo raised his fist. "Want me to hit you again and find out?"
"No thank you." Daniel replied with a deadpanned tone.
Mateo straightened and moved back towards the center of the platform. Daniel followed.
"I could be wrong," Mateo said and rubbed the top of his head, "but I feel pretty real, and I'm guessing you feel real too, so I don't think either of us are dreaming. Doesn't explain how we got here, but considering the circumstances, we really only have one option."
"What's that?"
Mateo cupped his hands over his mouth and shouted, "HEY! Is anyone out there? Hello?!"
His own words replied, but that was it.
Daniel cupped his hands too and shouted, "Can anybody hear us? Hey! Hello?!"
The boys kept shouting and screaming into the nothing, but their echoes were their only answer. They screamed until their voices broke, but still the nothing only yawned back at them.
As the last "Hello?" bounced around and faded, dread settled in Mateo's chest. "We really are alone," he murmured. He looked at Daniel, whose eyes looked at him with growing panic. Mateo squared his shoulders and hardened his resolve. "It's going to be ok," he said with conviction. "We'll get out of this, don't worry. We just need to think—"
The void exploded. That's the first thought that the boys registered as an overwhelming white light flooded their vision. Daniel let out a cry of shock. On reflex, Mateo grabbed his brother's shoulder.
The light assailed them for an eternal second before shrinking into three faceless forms. They seemed to jut out of the platform like lumpy stalagmites, but they swayed gently. Mateo wasn't sure if it was a trick of the light or not.
Mateo and Daniel were rooted in the spot, possibly by fear, possibly by the force of these three figures. Daniel tried to gulp, but his mouth was dry. Mateo kept his firm grip on Daniel's shoulder, but it took a lot of effort to bark out,
"Who are you?" The figures didn't move or speak.
Mateo ground his teeth. "Who are you?" he demanded, louder.
"Why are we here?" Daniel said, suddenly feeling bold.
Again, the figures didn't answer. However, one began to shift. An appendage—a hand?—reached out and from it emerged an orb of the same light as the figures. The orb drifted straight for the two brothers. Mateo's grip tightened, but they didn't move.
As the orb drew near, it separated in two. The two halves started to shrink and take a more rectangular form.
Mateo and Daniel reached out a hand as if in a trance. The light broke off the rectangles like a shell, floating away to reveal twin black devices that dropped right into their waiting hands.
Daniel turned his over curiously. "Cell phones?" he said. They were about the same size and thickness of a normal cell phone, only with raised, thick plastic on both sides, possibly to protect the device in lieu of a case. However, a difference between them was the thick plastic's color. Mateo's was the color dark blue while Daniel's was white.
"How do you turn them on?" Mateo asked, looking for a button.
"I think it's—"
Suddenly the screens flicked to life. There was no brand or anything on startup like they're used to, and it loaded the home screen much faster than their devices in the real. The wallpaper was a solid black. Eight apps lined the bottom, six of which were obscured by chains and a lock. At the top, no signal.
"Of course," Mateo muttered.
The time was visible, but the internal clock was clearly broken—the digits flickered past, and a few times Daniel thought he saw symbols mixed in with the numbers.
"What is this?" Mateo asked the figures, holding up his device. Again, they did not respond.
"Hey look!" Daniel said. "I got a signal!"
Mateo checked his phone. Sure enough, all bars.
Just then, both of their devices chimed in unison. A text message.
Mateo and Daniel glanced at each other. Mateo shrugged. Daniel furrowed his brow slightly and nodded once. The two tapped their phones together.
Daniel took a deep breath and hesitantly, but hopefully, looked down. The breath rushed out, and his shoulders dropped.
"It just says, 'SURVIVE,'" he said with a slight tremor in his voce. "What the heck does that mean?"
"I don't know," Mateo said dazedly. He looked up and for the first time, Daniel saw that his brother was afraid. "But mine says, 'FIGHT.'"
As soon as the word left his mouth, both devices blazed with a white-hot light that consumed their surroundings. Daniel cried out and fell back. Mateo shouted for his brother and lunged towards him before the light swallowed them both, but it was too late. The ground fell out from their feet, and they lost consciousness.
---
Daniel opened his eyes again. There were no dancing stars to greet him.
He sat up and groaned. Every muscle in his body protested at the movement, and his head throbbed.
"Matt?" he mumbled and turned as much as his splitting headache would allow. Something
crrrrunch'd under his hand, startling him. "What the hell?" he murmured as he lifted his hand and a dried, broken vine fell away from it. There were more; an entire tangle of vines snaking over and through what looked like stout wooden bookshelves.
Daniel's head spun, and his heart drummed painfully in his chest.
"Don't panic," he whispered to himself, slowly rising to his feet. "Don't panic. It's fine. Everything is going to be fine. Ok. First step: what do we know? World of darkness, weird light people…" He patted himself down and felt the familiar shape of a cellphone in his back pocket, and he didn't need to pull it out to know it wasn't his. "Strange device thing with a message from an unknown number. And now I'm here…." Daniel turned in place. "Where is here?"
"Here" appeared to be a very, very rundown library. Daniel ventured to guess this was a school library; there weren't any signs or posters or any other written indication, but there were several sitting spaces and desks for studying, and more of the squat shelves than the tall ones like he remembered from his school's library. The few windows were broken with massive vines and tree branches growing through and stretching up to the ceiling, giving the impression that most of the roof was held up by foliage. Vines broke through sections of the wall and spilled out onto the floor, snaking around, over, and through the furniture. Many of the shelves closest to the walls were toppled, spilling books and magazines all over the place. The parts of the floor that weren't covered in vines, grime, and debris revealed aged and chipped hardwood.
Occasionally Daniel would see sparkles of rainbow light out of the corner of his eye, but he chalked those up to a concussion because they disappeared whenever he tried to look at them directly.
Most of the standing shelves were bare except for a thick layer of dust; the books that didn't have a home were strewn about the library, abused, and forgotten. their pages flung about like trash. Daniel picked up one of the discarded tomes near his feet and ran a hand over the stained buckram cover. There was no title on the front, no text along the spine either.
He thumbed through the pages; they were all blank. All of the nearby loose pages and open books were blank, too.
Swallowing hard, Daniel gently put the book on a shelf.
"Conclusion," Daniel said mournfully. "I have no idea where I am." A shock ran through his body. "Oh God. I have no idea where I am." He started pacing. "Crazy dream. Beings of light. Mysterious object. Waking up in a place that I don't know."
Daniel clapped his hands on his forehead. "Oh God," he said. "This is an Isekai."
That's it. That had to be it. It's just like any other Isekai anime he's ever seen. The dream he had, it had to be real: he could still feel where Mateo's head slammed into his jaw, and there's the device in his pocket. And now he's in a world unlike his own…
The prospect of adventuring in a new world of wonder and magic thrilled him for all of thirty seconds before the horror set in.
New world meant new dangers, and he'd seen enough anime to know that nothing in his life could've prepared him for anything from the realm of fiction. Monsters, psycho killers, zombies, demons—Oh God, what if he turned into a slime?!
"Stay calm," Daniel said to himself, definitely not calm. "Stay calm." But how could he? He didn't know how to fight. And then there's the message from the phone: SURVIVE. Survive what? Visions of massive creatures and their many rows of teeth and their devil horns and their daggers for claws and oh God oh God oh God—
Daniel put his hands on his knees and fought to catch his breath. His heartbeat hammered in his ears, and a prickling sensation washed over his scalp and fingers. "It's ok," he gasped. "It's ok. You're fine. Everything's fine. We're not going to die. We're not going to—"
Something grabbed his shoulder. Daniel yelped, grabbed the book closest to his hand, and swung at his attacker.
"Woah WOAH!" Mateo jumped back and grabbed Daniel's wrist. "Chill out, it's just me!"
"Mateo!" Daniel almost collapsed with relief. "You're here!" His face fell. "We're in trouble. This world—we need to find a way out. There could be monsters, o-or demons or—"
"Easy," Mateo said soothingly, rubbing Daniel's back while he tried to compose himself and not hyperventilate.
"You're gonna make yourself sick. Now, take a deeeep breath." Daniel gulped in air and caught it in ballooned cheeks. "Now let it out slooooow." Daniel pursed his lips and let the air escape.
"Feel better?"
"Uh-huh…"
"Good." He smiled. "I haven't seen any monsters around yet, so at least for now, we're safe. In fact," Mateo surveyed the room, "I don't think anything's been around here for ages."
"Yeah…" Daniel shakily put the book back on the shelf. "Matt, I don't think this is a dream."
"I don't think so either." Mateo agreed.
"I think we've been Isekai'd."
Mateo rose a brow. "We've been what now?"
"
Isekai. It's a genre of anime or manga where someone is transported from the real world to some fantasy or sci-fi world. Or sometimes it looks like the real world, but there's something a little different about it. Either way, this isn't the world we know." Daniel explained.
"Hm. So how screwed are we? You're the weeb here."
"Depends on the kind of world we landed in." Daniel scratched the back of his head and looked around. "I don't recognize this place from any anime I've seen. The books are all blank, so those aren't going to be much help."
"Gotcha." Mateo scratched at jaw. "Well so far it's just looking like the world's worst library." He grinned. "Maybe we'll just have to fight some giant bookworms or aggressive old ladies. Nothing too scary."
"This isn't funny!" But Daniel couldn't help a smirk. "This looks like a pretty typical school library, probably high school—"
"I take it back. This is a nightmare."
"—but I don't get why it's overrun with plants. It looks like it's been around for a hundred years or something, but that doesn't make sense since the architecture is so modern…" Daniel sighed. "I have no idea where this place is, why it's abandoned, or who abandoned it."
His face fell further. "I'm sorry I couldn't be more helpful."
"Nah, don't worry about it." Mateo ruffled Daniel's hair, messing up his beanie. "We'll figure it out eventually."
Daniel readjusted his beanie. He wasn't convinced, but he wasn't up for arguing. "Either way," he said finally, "there's probably more to the building than just this library. We can find a way out, maybe even find some students or teachers."
"Sure," Mateo said as he started walking, "though to be quite honest, I hope we find the cafeteria first."
"How can you think of food at a time like this?" Daniel said in exasperation, trailing behind.
Mateo shrugged. "What? Just because we've been itchy-guy'ed—"
"Isekai'd."
"Whatever. Doesn't mean I can't get hungry. Besides," Mateo held up a finger, "isn't that rule number one of survival? First find food, water, and shelter. We sorta got the shelter part, so now we just need to find food and water. Then we can come up with a game plan for getting back home."
Daniel thought for a moment. "...That sounds reasonable," he said hesitantly.
"Of course it does! I'm the picture of reason. Have I ever steered you wrong? Don't answer that," Mateo finished quickly. Daniel barked a laugh anyway.
"Wait a minute!" Daniel halted and slapped his forehead. "I'm so stupid! Why didn't I think of this sooner?" Mateo watched in confusion as Daniel reached into his back pocket.
"Do you still have this?" he asked, holding up the strange device from their "dream."
The older boy's eyes widened, and he started searching his clothes. "Uhh…yeah! Here it is!" Mateo found his in his own back pocket and tapped on the screen. "You think these will tell us where we are?"
"Hope so and better yet, they'll tell us why we're here."
Daniel clicked the front facing button, and the screen lit up. The home screen was the same as before—black with the eight app buttons—only this time the clock read 5:00. Daniel wasn't sure if that was morning or evening, but it was something.
Daniel jumped when out of nowhere, his phone rang. The Caller ID said "MATEO ORTIZ."
Daniel looked up at his brother incredulously.
Mateo pressed a button on his phone and the ringing stopped.
"Looks like we can call each other," he said. He tapped a few times on the screen, and Daniel's phone went
pling! "Oh good, texting works, too. I tried responding to that message from before, but it keeps telling me that there's a connection problem and I need to try again later."
Daniel opened the notification and responded to Mateo's grimacing face emoji with a skull and crossbones. As he pressed the back button, the message from the dream glared out at him.
SURVIVE.
What did that mean? Is he just supposed to survive the school for a certain amount of time? Or was something after them? But why did he get "SURVIVE" while Mateo got "FIGHT?" Mateo was strong, for sure, and he never shied from beating up the older kids who bullied Daniel growing up, but if this world threw something at him that he couldn't handle…Daniel's mouth went dry.
Mateo eyed his brother knowingly. "Just as well," he said breezily, pocketing his phone. "Getting info spoon-fed to use would've been too easy, I guess. We'll just have to find another way to get answers."
"Y-yeah," Daniel said, smiling weakly. "We'll find something else….You know what? Let's go find that cafeteria. I'm starting to get hungry, too."
Mateo clapped. "Yes! Great idea. This place is really giving me the creeps."
With that, the two set off again. The library was a lot bigger than they initially thought, made more mazelike by the dense network of vines, toppled bookshelves, and collapsed parts of the building. Mateo pressed on without much trouble, only stopping to give Daniel a hand when he needed it, but a few times Daniel lingered to study the ruin. Once Mateo stopped at the top of some rubble to check on Daniel only to find him staring at a large hole in the wall, face looking a little pale.
"What is it?" Mateo asked.
"This hole," Daniel replied, almost absently. "It looks different from the others. And look at how the shelves are wrecked." Daniel turned his fearful gaze to Mateo. "I think something broke through here."
Mateo shifted uneasily. His brother's tone chilled him almost as much as his words. But he couldn't show that.
"You think?" Mateo said offhandedly. "It's possible, but I doubt it. I think we would've seen something that big already." Mateo flashed a reassuring smile and continued down the rubble pile. "This place is just really old. Don't think too much about it or you'll freak yourself out again."
"I didn't freak myself out that time," Daniel grumbled. He followed but not without casting one more worried glance at the wall.
Mateo surveyed his surroundings. The only way forward was through a section of tall bookshelves that were almost obliterated by a section of collapsed ceiling. Mateo hesitated. The space was narrow, but still big enough for them
both, and he figured the places where wood held up concrete wouldn't fall on them if it had lasted this long. If not this route, then they'd have to double back a good ways and find a different one.
Mateo glanced back to make sure Daniel was faring ok without him before ducking under a couple bookshelves resting against each other. Daniel watched him go with no small amount of trepidation, but his attention quickly turned back to not slipping and breaking his neck on slabs of concrete.
"Hey look!" Daniel heard Mateo call. "I think I see the exit."
"Really?" Daniel quickened his awkward clambering over the rubble to join him. Mateo pointed. Through the shelves, Daniel could barely make out two wooden doors that were largely splintered and barely hanging on by their hinges. A pit settled in his stomach, but he kept it to himself. The two started for the exit—then froze.
It was soft at first, a low moan that made the hairs on the back of their necks stand on end.
"Get down!" Mateo hissed and dragged his brother into a crouch. They didn't move, didn't dare to breathe.
The sound came again. This time it was louder, followed by a whimper of pain.
Daniel and Mateo looked at each other. It sounded human.
Over there, Daniel mouthed, pointing to the line of wrecked shelves to their left. Mateo nodded. The brothers slowly rose to their feet. There were gaps in the bookshelves, some just enough to see through. Daniel and Mateo bobbed and dipped to look through each one until:
"Dan!" Mateo hissed.
Daniel rushed over. Mateo moved so he could look.
Daniel's heart skipped a beat.
On the other side of the ruin were two teenagers in student uniforms. Both rested with their backs against the shelves, heads lolled forward. One was a girl with a curtain of red hair cascading over her face and shoulders. The other was a boy in a baseball cap that obscured his features, but Daniel could tell by his hands that he was very pale.
The boy's fingers twitched and he let out another moan.
"Mateo," Daniel said in a shaky voice.
"Wait here." Mateo rushed over to a lower part of the wreck and climbed over. Daniel was frozen in place, staring in horrified disbelief through the gap at these two people who should not be here, who
could not be here.
Daniel knew them, oh yes, and their presence alone turned his blood to ice.
Mateo hopped down from the wreck and rushed to the students' sides. They looked sixteen, about Daniel's age. He immediately checked their pulses, sighing with relief at the faint beat in their wrists.
He gently shook their shoulders.
"Hey," he said. "Wake up."
The boy responded first. He lolled his head around, groaning, then looked up at Mateo. Mateo saw just a glimpse of his blue eyes before the kid dipped his head to hide behind his baseball cap.
"Where…where am I?" he murmured.
"Not sure," Mateo said gently. "My brother and I woke up here a little while ago, same as you. Are you hurt?"
The boy swallowed and, wincing, shifted uncomfortably in his seat. "My…my head kind of hurts…and I feel sore…but I…I think I'm ok."
Just then, the girl made a small noise. Mateo took her shoulder again and gave it a gentle shake. The girl was a little harder to rouse than the boy, but when she came to, she gazed at her surroundings with dazed, uncomprehending eyes.
"Where am I?" she asked, voice almost too soft to hear.
"I'm not sure," Mateo said. "It's some kind of library, maybe in a school or something. How are you feeling?"
"Mmm," the girl said absently. Mateo was worried. He wasn't sure if she sounded like that because of head trauma or if that's just the way she is.
"Do you two remember your names?"
"Yeah," the boy said. "My name is Shuichi Saihara. Do you know how we got here?" Shuichi asked as he looked around, seemly troubled.
"Sorry, unfortunately we just woke up here ourselves." Mateo replied, clearing his throat and turned to the girl. "What about you? Do remember your name?"
For some reason that got the girl's attention. She blinked furiously, as if to clear the mist in her eyes, and looked directly at Mateo for the first time since waking.
"I don't know," she said calmly. "I don't know who I am or why I'm here." Mateo's worry deepened. She could have a concussion, or worse.
"That's not good," he said but still kept his voice calm and light. "Do you have your wallet on you? Maybe some ID?"
"Ask if she has a notebook," Daniel's voice came weakly from behind. Mateo turned to give his brother a questioning look and froze. What little of Daniel's face that could be seen through the gap in the bookshelves was deathly pale, his brown eyes wide and lined with fear.
Never had he seen his brother look like that.
"Daniel," he said, trying to keep the waver out of his voice. "How do you know—"
"The notebook," Daniel repeated, more urgently. "Does she have a notebook?"
Mateo hesitated. He turned back to the girl. "Well?"
The girl felt around her clothes. "I don't think I—Oh! Here's this." She picked up a thin white notebook from beside her. On the cover were some symbols written in black marker and a pen clipped on the edge of the cover.
"'Ryoko Otonashi's Memory Notebook,'" she read. She held up the book for Mateo to see and smiled. "Ryoko Otonashi! That must be my name."
Mateo's eyes slid uncomprehendingly over the symbols. It looked like Japanese. "I'll take your word for it," he said finally. "This book's the only one with any text on it, so it must be yours."
Ryoko eagerly flipped through the pages then pouted. "It's blank," she complained.
"You know who we are," Shuichi said, "but we still don't know your name."
"Oh, right. My name is Mateo Ortiz. Over there is my younger brother Daniel. Say hi, Daniel." Mateo turned to give his brother a smile. Daniel didn't move. Mateo turned his smile to the students. "Excuse me a moment."
Mateo stood and moved to the gap. "What's going on, Dan?" he said. "You look like you saw these guys kill a man."
"I know them," Daniel replied in a hushed tone. "I know them, and I know where we are. Mat, we gotta get outta here right no—"
SCREE!!
"Attention all students!"
The group jumped at the sudden sound. A voice, a low distorted voice that almost sounded like a kid pitching his voice down in a poor imitation of an adult, echoed over a scratchy PA. The sound bounced over the desolate library, giving the illusion that the voice came from every surface.
"The mandatory entrance exam is about to begin. Please report to the gymnasium for further instructions. Failure to do so will result in an immediate failure!"
"Entrance exam?" Shuichi said, helping Ryoko to her feet. "What entrance exam?"
"Maybe we should head to the gym?" Mateo suggested.
SCREE!!
"
Hehehehe! Gotcha!" A high pitched voiced cackled maniacally. "
There is no entrance exam, sillies! That was a prank! And you fell for it! Ha!"
"What the hell is with this guy?" Shuichi grumbled.
"But that's ok!" Everyone's attention snapped up to a tall bookshelf behind Shuichi.
"Because what I have in store is going to be a lot more fun!" The group watched in horror as a cluster of books slowly slid out on their own until they tumbled to the floor. Mateo muttered a curse under his breath and stepped aside to avoid being hit.
In the books' place now sat a small TV filled with static.
"But I'm getting ahead of myself…" the voice continued.
The static cleared.
'Oh no,' Daniel mentally moaned.
"I…am…Monokuma!" declared the horrific monochromatic bear face on screen. One half was white with a cute round eye and the snout of a normal teddy bear. The other half was black with a twisted grin splitting the face in two and a bloody red slash for an eye. "
I'm the headmaster of this school. Nice to meet you all!"
"Mono…kuma?" Ryoko said confused, but Mateo thought this time she sounded a little nervous. Shuichi paled at the sight of the bear.
"'All?' you might be thinking," Monokuma continued.
"That's right! All! There are more students in this school than just you—each of you so full of potential, so laden with the hopes of this world." He sighed.
"You'll have plenty of time to get to know each other later. For now, just BEAR with me as I explain the rules of the game."
"This is bad," Daniel muttered. "Really bad."
"Now you're probably wondering, 'Game? What game?' This is a fun one, I promise! You and your fellow students will be participating iiiiiiin…." Drums rolled as red curtains enveloped the screen and then pulled back to reveal big golden letters that read—
"A SURVIVAL GAME!" Monokuma cried joyously while canned applause cheered in the background.
Daniel's heart plummeted to his stomach. SURVIVE burned at the forefront of his mind.
This is what the message meant.
Monokuma's face reappeared on the screen.
"I was originally planning a Killing Game," he continued with a small twinge of regret, like he's thinking about reconsidering, "
but then I had the best
idea for a Survival Game! Oooo, I'm so excited for what's in store. You all are going to be divided into groups of four students. I'm not gonna tell you how many groups—that's a secret surprise for later. You will then compete against the other groups in a series of challenges. Last group standing will get to go home! Yay! How exciting."
"Daniel," Mateo said evenly, placing his hand on the edge of the gap but not turning his eyes from the TV. "Get over here now."
"One more thing!" Monokuma declared.
"The first challenge is to find the rest of your group and get to the safe zone. Challenge begins now!"
"Safe zone?" Ryoko said. "Where is—"
"Good luck, kiddos!" Monokuma said gleefully.
"And try not to get BLOWN AWAY!" The screen blacked out. The group stood in stricken silence, breathing hard.
Then they heard it.
A dull rumble in the far distance.
Another, closer.
BANG!!!
An explosion ripped through the center of the library. Books and wood and pieces of vine and concrete were sent flying.
The teens screamed as the world crashed around them. The blast knocked Mateo, Shuichi, and Ryoko off their feet. They slammed into bookshelves before crashing to the floor.
Daniel cried out. Mateo looked up just in time to see the precariously balanced rubble buckle and collapse on his brother.
"
DANIEL!" Mateo screamed. He scrambled to his feet and flung himself on the rubble, tearing into it as fast as he can.
"I'm alright!" he heard and almost wept with relief. Shuichi and Ryoko hurried over and helped push one of the shelves away, revealing Daniel crouched underneath. He coughed then yelped as Mateo yanked him by the arm and crushed him to his chest.
"I'm fine!" Daniel protested, muffled by his brother's shirt. "Matt, I can't breathe!"
Mateo held him out at arm's length and looked him over. "Are you sure you're ok?" he demanded.
"Yeah, just some scratches." Daniel winced as he picked a splinter out of his arm. "The shelves absorbed most of the impact."
"We need to leave," Shuichi coughed. Ryoko stood behind him with her hand on her head. Dust and smoke from the explosion billowed over to them, reducing visibility to almost zero and making it hard to breathe.
"Hopefully the explosion cleared a path to the exit," Ryoko said. "I don't hear any more bombs, so we should be able to—"
RROOOOOOOAAAAARRRR!!!!!
Everyone blanched.
It wasn't a bomb.
They turned slowly towards the source of the explosion.
Thud.
Thud.
Footsteps, and they were heavy enough for the group to feel through the floor. Through the thick rolling smoke emerged two glowing purple eyes, impossibly high up and impossibly large. And they were getting closer.
Thud.
Thud.
A primitive part of their brains seized up in fear; like a mouse caught under a hunter's gaze, they were paralyzed.
Thud.
Thud.
The smoke cleared.
Ryoko covered her mouth. Shuichi's mouth stretched in a soundless scream. Mateo trembled.
"Oh God," Daniel whispered.
Massive body.
Rows of teeth.
Devil horns.
Sharp claws for tearing.
It was everything he feared and worse.
Worse for the reality of it, yes, but so much worse for knowing exactly
what it was and how
impossible it is to exist here, in this place already filled with impossibility.
The creature was T-Rex in shape and size but with long spikes down its green and pinkstriped hide and two thick dark horns with red bands jutting out of its back and towards its face.
Its shoulder was emblazoned with a skull and crossbones. Its eyes glowed an unearthly purple.
"A….A Digimon?!" said Daniel.
The beast raised its massive head and pulled its lips over its glistening white teeth. It breathed in, nostrils flaring, then—
RROOOOOOOAAAAARRRR!!!!!
The horns on its back began to glow a hellish red. It charged.
"HORN," the beast growled, "
DRIVER!"
"
GET OUT OF THE WAY!" Mateo screamed as he grabbed Daniel by the shirt and yanked him through the only opening in the wreckage. Ryoko grabbed Shuichi's arm and pulled him along with her.
By a hair's breadth did they avoid the rampaging monster as it plowed through everything in its path. Concrete and wood flew up like dandelion fluff.
The teens watched as it crashed headlong into wall and ripped a hole in it like it was made of Styrofoam. On the other side, they could see hallways and what might be classrooms— the Digimon's horns gauged deep lines into the sides of the walls as it went.
The four fought to catch their breath.
"That was a Digimon," Daniel explained between gasps. "Tuskmon. But it doesn't make sense—the only way Tuskmon is here is if we're in the Digital World."
'Which shouldn't be possible if characters from a completely different series are here too!' Daniel thought to himself.
"What do you mean?" Shuichi asked.
"There's no time," Mateo interjected. "There's our exit, but how do we get around the monster?"
"We need to let it charge at us again," Ryoko said. The boys looked at her incredulously, but she stared at the hole. "If we can dodge at the right time, it'll keep going while we make a break for the hole and get out. But we have to time
it just right." She leveled a steely look at them. "Can you do that?"
The boys nodded, Daniel a beat slower than the rest. Mateo leaned over to look.
"It stopped," he informed. His eyes widened. "It's turning around!"
"Get into position!" Ryoko shouted.
The group scrambled to their feet and stood in the middle of the wide path Tuskmon carved out. The monster turned awkwardly in the cramped hallway, cracking the walls in places. "On my signal," Ryoko said. They readied themselves.
Its eyes locked on them, and it growled.
"HORN," it lowered its head and the horns once again glowed red, "
DRIVER!" It charged.
Daniel's knees shook violently, but he held his ground.
Tuskmon thundered towards them. The light from its horns colored the room a fiery red. Mateo ground his teeth. Daniel balled fists.
"NOW!" Ryoko yelled.
They dove in different directions just as Tuskmon barreled past. The monster destroyed the other side of the library, but the teens didn't focus too long on it.
"Come on!" Mateo shouted as they scrambled to their feet and rushed towards the hole.
Daniel pumped his legs as hard as he could. His chest burned but he kept going.
Suddenly he heard a cry behind him. Daniel ground to a halt and spun around.
It was Shuichi, on the floor and hunched in pain. Daniel glanced up past him and saw Tuskmon slow to a stop, beginning to turn. Daniel flinched and rushed over to Shuichi. "Shuichi!" he said, kneeling next to him. "What happened?"
"My ankle," the boy said through gritted teeth. "I twisted it on something." A roar shook the room. Shuichi paled.
"What are you doing?!" Mateo demanded. He and Ryoko were almost to the hole, but stopped when they realized the other two weren't following.
"Shuichi's hurt!" Daniel shouted back.
Mateo cursed. Tuskmon was facing them again, and with a jolt Mateo realized that it was lowering its head again.
"We don't have time!" Mateo shouted, hating the words but already resolved. "We need to go, now!"
"I'm not leaving him behind!" Daniel bellowed. Shuichi's eyes widened. For the first time in a very long time, he didn't notice that his eyes weren't hidden under the hat—he looked up at Daniel full in the face. Daniel leveled his gaze at Shuichi, fear given way to determination.
"I'm not leaving anyone behind," he said firmly.
Daniel helped the boy to his feet and wrapped one of Shuichi's arms around his shoulders. Mateo cursed again and ran to them.
Ryoko followed, making a noise of impatience. "We don't have time," she said under her breath. Mateo agreed, and he didn't care if that meant he was a bad person.
Much later, when they look back on this moment, they'll realize that Daniel's actions saved their lives.
SCREEEAAAAAAAHHHH!!!
Mateo clapped his hands over his ears. The screech tore through the air with such force, it felt like his insides were being stabbed. Ryoko fell to her knees, covering her ears, and screamed.
Mateo whirled around and felt the blood drain from his face as another Digimon stalked though the hole. It was a mix of shark, airplane, and pterodactyl. Its body was plated in dark steel armor; its piercing eyes, glowing purple like Tuskmon's, glared out from slits in its angled steel face mask. Its wings were like a fighter jet's. The underside of its face, its neck, and its three toed talons were leathery and lavender-colored—only exposed parts of the creature.
"That's Pteramon!" Daniel shouted.
The monsters leveled its wings at the group. The whir of plane engines hummed through the air.
"MISSLE STORM!" it screeched. The ballistic missiles under its wings fired, aiming straight for the teens.
Mateo grabbed Ryoko's arm. Daniel opened his mouth to scream, but choked as Mateo grabbed his arm and hurdled the three of them both out of the way.
Daniel's grip slipped from Shuichi's body, and Shuichi's arm ripped from Daniel's shoulder.
"NO!" Daniel shouted.
Shuichi shouted in pain as he landed on his bad ankle and collapsed to one knee.
Time slowed.
Daniel watched in horror as Shuichi slowly looked up, moving as though in water, face contorting in terror and pain. He threw up his hands, opened his mouth—
BOOM-BOOM-BOOM-BOOOOOOM!!!
Hell's fury rained down in the library, obliterating everything it touched. Daniel, Ryoko, and Mateo screamed. The whole room shook. What remained of the ceiling shattered and plummeted towards them.
Tuskmon roared in anger and staggered backwards.
Mateo was already moving. He threw Daniel and Ryoko over his shoulders in a fit of superhuman strength and ran.
"SHUICHI!" Daniel shouted. But when Pteramon took flight, clearing the smoke, all he could see were splintered wood and deep craters where the boy used to be…and a blackened baseball cap drifting to the floor before it became nothing more than pixels floating in the air.
Daniel choked down the lump in his throat.
Shuichi's gone. But he can't be. Shuichi was one of the main protagonist of the Danganronpa series. Daniel knew it so well. How can he be dead?
It's impossible, but it's true.
Just like everything else in this world.
Panic seized Daniel's chest. If the main character isn't safe from death, then none of them were.
They were going to die here.
"No no no no no," Daniel moaned under his breath.
Mateo jostled him. "Hey, stop that," Mateo barked. "I know it's hard, but we're still alive, and that means we still have a chance. We can cry when we don't have a bunch of dinosaurs after our asses!"
"Look out!" Ryoko shouted.
A slab of concrete slammed into the ground a few feet from Mateo, knocking the three sideways into a broken desk.
"Everyone ok?" Mateo rasped, fighting for air. The other two groaned but were largely unharmed.
Daniel peeled his eyes open. His vision swam, but there was no mistaking the two massive forms that lumbered towards them. To his left, Ryoko looked around wildly, no doubt searching for a way to escape, but from the look on her face, there was none.
"We're going to die," he whimpered quietly. "We can't win."
Mateo gritted his teeth and pushed himself up. They couldn't die here. They wouldn't, not while he still had some fight in him.
He glanced at his brother's face, dirty, pale, on the verge of panic.
A flame sparked in his chest.
"Mateo," Daniel said, watching in disbelief as his brother staggered from the rubble out into the open, facing the two Digimon. "Stop. What are you doing?!"
Mateo's body shook, but his resolve was iron. He jerked the phone out of his pocket. The screen came on immediately.
Mateo gripped the device in his fist and glared down at the monsters.
Tuskmon snarled and lowered its head.
Pteramon's mouth seemed to twist into a sneer and its engines whirred.
Mateo held the device up to his mouth.
"I don't know if you sons of bitches can hear me," he growled to himself, "but you better listen up. You brought me and my brother into this hellscape and caused us a whole mess of trouble, so the least you can do is help us out!"
The screen brightened. The device warmed in his fist, warming until it grew hot, but Mateo only tightened his grip.
"I don't care what happens to me," he snarled, louder than before. "I don't care what it costs. Right now, all I need—" He pointed the device at the monsters "—is the power to protect MY BROTHER!"
The device burst into radiant light. Beams shot out in every direction, flooding the room.
The Digimon roared in surprise and staggered back.
Mateo clasped the device in both hands. The device burned and vibrated, but he hung on. Energy wracked his arms, shot through his body, but he hung on. Power built and churned and grew and crashed over and through him, but he hung on.
Just when it almost grew to be too much, Mateo roared in defiance—and a new roar joined his.
A dark purple beam of light exploded from between his hands towards the Digimon and created a shape in the center of the library. It grew and grew and grew into a new shape—two legs, claws, a tail, and a massive maw topped with three piercing horns.
The light faded but its brilliance took the form of a new Digimon: blue skin with black stripes, claws and teeth that shone like polished pearls, head covered in a black colored skull-mask with bull horns and a snout spike.
Ryoko and Daniel gaped at the sight.
"Another one?!" Ryoko despaired. "How do we fight that?!"
"No," Daniel breathed. Tears started welling in his eyes. "We don't. That's…That's…"
The new Digimon turned to look at the trio. Its one visible eye was gold—not glowing— intelligent, and—most importantly—protective.
The monster nodded once, then turned back to its foes.
Mateo and Ryoko could only stare in shock, but Daniel broke into a wide grin and jumped to his feet.
"That's—! That's—!"
The Digimon stamped one foot in defiance of its adversaries and roared.
"GREYMON!!"