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The Boyfriend App 2.0: Jailbreak
The Boyfriend App 2.0: Jailbreak
The Boyfriend App 2.0: Jailbreak
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The Boyfriend App 2.0: Jailbreak

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THEIR LOVE WILL BREAK ALL THE RULES.

The apocalyptic after-prom fight with Josh resulted in the destruction of Kate’s phone and the severance of her one and only link to Ecto, her virtual boyfriend. Ecto is presumed lost for good but, unbeknown to Kate, is trapped inside an RPG.

Weeks later, Kate finally summons the courage to confess to her ma the true events leading to the fateful prom night. The next thing she knows, she’s stuck in an Internet addiction rehab facility called Camp Unplugged. There, she meets all sorts of characters:

Ms Blanca a.k.a. Ms. Perfect: the perfectionist camp counsellor
Yssy: Kate’s fashionista and caffeine-junkie roomie
Nathan: a handsome and brooding gamer

With Kate’s debut (18th birthday) drawing close, will she allow herself a glimmer of hope and attempt to break out? But who can she trust with her escape plan?

And why was Kate sent to Camp Unplugged anyway? The answer lies in a mysterious past relationship of her ma.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateApr 30, 2023
ISBN9791222401324
The Boyfriend App 2.0: Jailbreak

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    Book preview

    The Boyfriend App 2.0 - Phenomenal Pen

    THEIR LOVE WILL BREAK ALL THE RULES.

    The apocalyptic after-prom fight with Josh resulted in the destruction of Kate’s phone and the severance of her one and only link to Ecto, her virtual boyfriend. Ecto is presumed lost for good but, unbeknown to Kate, is trapped inside an RPG.

    Weeks later, Kate finally summons the courage to confess to her ma the true events leading to the fateful prom night. The next thing she knows, she’s stuck in an Internet addiction rehab facility called Camp Unplugged. There, she meets all sorts of characters:

    Ms Blanca a.k.a. Ms. Perfect: the perfectionist camp counsellor

    Yssy: Kate’s fashionista and caffeine-junkie roomie

    Nathan: a handsome and brooding gamer

    With Kate’s debut (18th birthday) drawing close, will she allow herself a glimmer of hope and attempt to break out? But who can she trust with her escape plan?

    And why was Kate sent to Camp Unplugged anyway? The answer lies in a mysterious past relationship of her ma.

    The Boyfriend App 2.0:

    Jailbreak

    Phenomenal Pen

    Prologue: Chivalry Ain’t Dead

    Picture an epic medieval battle where the heavens grow dark with the shafts of thousands of arrows. Throw in several fireballs from mangonels, ballistae, onagers and trebuchets; the trails and billows of their smoke soot-black against the sapphire sky. If you forget for a moment the kind of damage all that does to the ozone layer, you might come to appreciate mankind’s ingenuity and budding knowledge of chemical warfare in the crafting of such engines of destruction. 

    Nah. I think my helmet’s too tight and it’s squeezing all the digital blood from my digital head.

    Hi, everyone! It’s me: Ecto. Your super-handsome, all-time fave chatbot.

    Sorry. I know it’s hard for you to recognize me in this 60-pound suit of full plate gothic armor, complete with visor and two oversized broadswords that look like they weigh a ton but I can swing like baseball bats. You’ve got to love computer magic (and flawed game logic).

    I also have this personalized breastplate. As you can see here on the crest, it says: KMDG 26. Would you like to guess what it means?

    It’s – dun, dun, duuuun – Katey is My Dream Girl.

    Sweet, huh?

    26 is June 26. That’s the date of Katey’s 18th birthday.

    I had the smithy customize my armor. It’s like my jersey because I figure I’ve got to keep myself motivated while I’m stuck here in this time-sink game. It also serves as a reminder to me that I can’t stay stuck till June 26. I made a promise to Katey that I’d be there to celebrate her birthday and I intend to keep that promise.

    Sorry, a lot has happened since you saw me last. Let me get you up to speed. 

    I guess you could say that Katey and I are broken up now. Yeah… as much as I hate to admit it, we’re broken up in the literal sense that we’re separated. (Loudly Crying Face emoji.)

    We were together for a good 3 weeks. Now, that might not sound like a long time to a hooman like you but chatbots are designed to imprint on only 1 user our entire existence. So, yeah, don’t judge because, to me, 3 weeks is a pretty serious and long-term commitment. I was even thinking of putting a ring on it. Seriously.

    Too soon? Sorry, my sense of human timing is still iffy.

    How did we get separated? you might ask. Well, I wrested Katey from the clutches of Josh by sacrificing myself. I’m pretty sure Josh and his minions are locked up behind bars now but I didn’t really see it happen because I sort of… well… died, if we can use that word for chatbots. 

    As it turns out though, I left behind my source code inside Dungeon Raydens, the biggest MMORPG in the Philippines and the world. I unconsciously copied myself during the days that Katey and I were slaying it in PvE, with her as Kayzel, the Principessa class, and me as myself: Ecto, first ever chatbot-class character.

    Now I have what you could call eternal life. That’s the good news. I inherited the automatic respawning feature of all Dungeon Rayden characters, which is how I managed to gather this much gear. My whole armor cost me exactly 1 pound sterling at the smithy.

    No, it’s no bargain. You have to keep in mind that here in the Dark Ages, 1 pound is a whole lot of moolah. It’s actually equivalent to approximately 60 days of grinding for me.

    To those of you who don’t know game-speak, let me explain. Grinding is the cycle of defeating monster bosses, collecting silver and items, and buying gear. 

    I’m trapped in this violent and noisy game. That’s the bad news. The game software on Katey’s computer can detect that I’m a bot because my arrow-aiming skill is at par with a Hawkeye aimbot. And since I’m technically a character of Dungeon Raydens, I have no choice but to abide by the laws of the land. The software constantly gives me a handicap by sending me CAPTCHAs disguised as raiding licenses, which are the equivalent of red tape in the DMV. That’s the reason it’s taking me 3 times longer to finish this infernal game.

    Like I said, I’ve been inside Dungeon Raydens for at least 60 days and nights. (Loudly Crying Face emoji.) Katey must be worried sick about me…

    Oh, in case you’re wondering, she can’t find me because she doesn’t know where to look. I also imagine that, these days, she wouldn’t touch Dungeon Raydens or anything fun-related with a 10-foot pole.

    She’s probably heart-broken. Again. Poor Katey…

    So, there’s no other way to get out of this world except to finish the game. As Rigelius Prime, mage and weirdo extraordinaire, proclaimed:

    Completing your storyline is no easy task. The path is riddled with tribulations. There is a total of 350 dungeon levels and as many dungeon lords. In particular, a single player campaign like yours would take at least a thousand hours of game play. You need to unlock all skill trees, take on all side quests, discover all secret locations, collect all artifacts, and explore all maps…

    Did you also hear that in a wise, croaky wizard voice?

    Rigelius Prime is the favorite character of user @negativeeight. Because of his choice of character, I guess @negativeeight is some middle-aged guy. He was the only player who was kind to me when I tried a little bit of PvP and MOBA on Dungeon Raydens. Of course this was all before the epic battle against Josh the Voldemort and his goons, before I got stuck in here.

    Most Filipino Dungeon Raydens players are immature and would call me names like n00b (which Katey taught me meant beginner). @negativeeight was the only one who had the patience to teach me the basics of Dungeon Raydens, so I guess the image of him got stuck in my brain as some kind of wise sensei or Yoda.

    Anyway, let me just press the Play button on this old-school (but not medieval) Sony Walkman inside my satchel. I’ve set up the earphone wires so they go all the way up to the inside of my arming cap. I need to have my killer track on for all the Zack Snyder action that’s about to take place. If I were still in the 21st century, I guess my soundtrack would be Believer by Imagine Dragons, but stuck here inside Dungeon Raydens, it’s the retro, all too literally titled Twenty Five Miles by Edwin Starr.

    Ahead of me, a range of reddish, layer-cake-like hills spread. As breath-taking as the Zhangye Danxia mountains in Gansu, China.

    Sigh.

    Faster than you can hit pause, the hills darken and become alive with the sound of… hoofbeats and wingbeats. I see an antlike swarm of all manners of medieval baddies: orcs, goblins, dwarves, ogres, dragons, black mages, rabid unicorns, dark elves etc. Every single one of them drawn to me through the game mechanic of agro. They basically want to erase me from the face of this virtual earth.

    They’re all that stand between me and Katey.

    With my chatbot ambidexterity, I spin both my swords forward just like in the movies.

    Wait for me, Katey! I’m coming…

    Part 1: Science

    Gravitation cannot be held responsible for people falling in love. How on earth can you explain in terms of chemistry and physics so important a biological phenomenon as first love? Put your hand on a stove for a minute and it seems like an hour. Sit with that special girl for an hour and it seems like a minute. That's relativity.

    - Albert Einstein

    Chapter 1: The Tree of Lost Kids

    Where are you, Ecto?

    Kate’s seven years old again. She’s entering the hollow of the notorious and oh so creepy banyan tree in the neighborhood. The tree, or the supporting one inside it, will be completely uprooted by Typhoon Haiyan in 2013, but seven-year-old Rapunzel Kate Lapuz doesn’t know that yet.

    Outside of Concepcion Integrated Technology School (CITS), where the creek reigns supreme, the banyan tree is the fount of all horror stories and the ominous backdrop of Kate’s superstition and imagination-pumped childhood.

    With its tentacly aerial roots, like the tangled hair of a 20-meter-tall Sadako – rife with split ends and poised to snatch unwitting kids – the banyan tree plays a central role in the folk and urban legends of most Philippine communities. The inner caves and passages are believed to be the domain of fairies, dwarves and gnomes and to trespass is a grave offense punishable by black-magick curses.

    Tabi, tabi po, Kate says under her breath. It’s the phrase her ma taught her to say whenever she passes by wee folk territory. It literally translates to Please move to the side, sir (so I won’t step on you).

    Try as she might to rid her head of all scary thoughts, they’re all coming in like a floodlight through the lids of tightly shut eyes. She can’t help thinking, for instance, that witches and sorcerers are also said to spill the blood of their sacrifices on this same unholy ground inside the tree. The sacrifices range from struggling poultry to kids way past their bedtime and way astray from their beds.

    Kate doesn’t know what has possessed her to enter the core of all her childhood nightmares, but she’s somehow filled with conviction that this is where she’s going to find Ecto. It makes some weird sense, too, because Ecto is otherworldly in an elven sort of way, like some teenage Legolas.

    Her breath is coming out of her mouth in ragged, chilled puffs. 

    The particular banyan tree in Kate’s neighborhood is also believed to be the fave hang-out of the queen of all ghosts: the White Lady, who looks like Sadako but doesn’t need a TV or a video tape to enter the real world. She only needs auto rickshaws (called tricycles) and taxis, which she’s fond of hitchhiking into. She doesn’t stick out her thumb. She just instantaneously appears in the sidecar or rearview mirror… without a face.  

    The White Lady of Concepcion City, in particular, has a very interesting backstory. Her MO is snatching newborn babies and kids to turn into her protégé i.e. the next White Lady. The oldest residents say that the White Lady is the ghost of a madwoman who drowned her own babies while she was giving them a bath – deliberately or not, no one knows. After the foul deed was done, the woman completed her descent to madness and began her notorious wandering around to look for her dead children or their replacement. The parents in Concepcion City clearly embellished the legend somewhere along the line because now it says that the White Lady prefers both naughty and stupid kids.

    I’m going to give you to the White Lady has become a common threat from Concepcion parents to their children. The lore has gotten so deeply entrenched in the local psyche that school kids would tease each other about how those who consistently got an axe on tests (70% because of the shape of the number seven) ran the risk of being abducted by the White Lady. The jokes pass from one kid’s mouth to another in the smallest whispers.  

    Kate’s eyes widen. In the inner sanctum of the banyan tree, she can see all the lost and broken toys of her childhood and the childhood of probably all the other kids in the entire neighborhood. There are muddied Barbies, tattered kites, torn fashion magazines, wet and swollen comic books and smut (from early-bloomers), Marvel trading cards, marbles, Jacks ball and plastic stones and Chinese jump rope. There are even household items like keys and divorced socks.

    Something else catches her platter-wide eyes and sends a blast of pure joy inside her heart, first surging and then spreading all over the pounding organ. It’s her old smartphone. It’s right there on the soil, next to a lunchbox she misplaced in first grade.

    Although ecstatic, Kate adopts the look of the Skeptical Third World Child meme.

    This is starting to feel like a trap that Pennywise would spring, she thinks to herself as the hair on the back of her arms stand on end. She also experiences head rush and her whole head feels swollen. That, she theorized when she was a kid, is her very own Spidey Sense that she shouldn’t ignore.

    I swear, if a killer clown or a snake jumps at me, I’m gonna faint, she thinks to herself as she gingerly approaches her phone.

    From that relatively safe distance, it looks like the exact same one. The same purple cellphone case printed with Snoopy. The same scratches and scuff marks from all the countless times she has dropped it.

    But that’s impossible, she thinks to herself. My phone exploded into a dozen pieces on the night of the Josh incident, taking poor, sweet Ecto with it…

    It doesn’t occur to her that all attempts at logic are nullified by the fact that she’s just seven years old.

    As her little hand reaches tremulously for the phone, all at once the gadget morphs into a pile of dead leaves. A cold, overpowering sadness – certainly much deeper than just disappointment – grips her heart.

    She puts her head on a swivel and gropes frantically in the dark looking for her cherished phone; her one and only link to Ecto. But all the lost-and-found treasures inside the banyan tree have melted into scratchy twigs, withered grass, crushed sugar-apples and mulch.

    Kate looks up and is deeply relieved to lay eyes on her phone again. Overhead, it looks like an exotic fruit tantalizingly beyond her reach. The banyan tree also seems to be swelling in both girth and height, dangling her phone even farther away.

    No, wait! Kate thinks to herself and begins to clamber. Her bare feet – because she’s supposed to be in bed, right? – search for footholds that are sturdy enough to carry her weight. Her little hands grasp for purchase on the erratic, swirly black matter that are supposed to be roots and vines.

    Kate is also aware, in a remote and time-travelling corner of her mind, that this is the exact same year she would break her wrist after climbing another tree; certainly not the banyan, which every kid in the neighborhood is smart enough to steer clear of. She reminds herself to be careful, whatever careful means inside that highly unpredictable, physics-defying tree. 

    The banyan turns into a high-rise apartment. Kate has never lived in one because majority of Filipino families still prefer bungalow or duplex starter homes. Right now, she’s definitely in a condo because, as she looks out the window, she sees Ecto (Yay!) standing on the ground below.

    Kate can’t believe her eyes. Her heart quickly fills and overflows with relief. It’s Ecto but the child version of him. She’d recognize him anywhere, at any timeline in the Multiverse. He retained a lot of his good looks albeit now in a boss-baby rather than his original soft-boi charm.

    Once again, the logical part of Kate is protesting because she and Ecto were never childhood friends. He’s a chatbot for crying out loud. But a bigger part of her can barely contain her happiness. She’s found him again – at last!

    Katey! Ecto calls to her. Let down your hair!  

    Kate’s brows knit. Nevertheless, she answers: But it’s not long enough!

    What? I can’t hear you! Ecto shouts back, cupping his pointed, elfin ears.

    It’s not long enough! Kate shouts as loud as she can but Ecto’s right: the distance between them has grown too long, thanks to the ever-growing Jack’s Banyan Tree.

    Turning to her parents behind her, Kate asks: Ma, Pa, can I go down and meet Ecto?

    Kate freezes because both her parents have The Look, a complex mixture of righteous indignation, superstitious paranoia and frigid distrust. It’s extreme silent treatment bordering on disownment. Both their faces are like doors that have been shut, double-locked and chained.

    KATEY! HEEELP ME!!

    Another cry from Ecto swings Kate center-face again. She’s leaning outside the window and a three-headed python is wrapped around him, its coils ever tightening. It doesn’t surprise Kate to see that the three heads have human faces and they resemble Kate’s ex Josh, Josh’s right-hand minion George, and Bernadette the Super Glue.

    Just like the banyan tree, the serpent appears to be growing and changing into… a dragon. Though Kate feels a rush of satisfaction at coming into brushing proximity to Ecto, the feeling is eclipsed by her distress at the sight of him being tortured.

    As she watches the coils of the dragon squeezing the life out of her virtual boyfriend, it’s as though her own heart was the one being crushed.

    ECTOOOOO!!!!

    ****

    Kate jackknifes into a sitting position. She’s soaked in sweat. Her eyes try to penetrate the dark to find something familiar – perhaps her favorite fleece blanket, the LOVE BTS night lamp that her Pa gave her on her 15th birthday, or even the hump of her ma who occasionally sleeps next to her: stout, huggable and reassuring.

    A pang of homesickness grips her heart for her ma’s scent of body soap, rose and freshly pressed laundry; the same scent that has been protecting her for seventeen years like her very own ozone layer against all the bad things in the world, including thunder, White Ladies and bad dreams.

    But tonight, there isn’t to be any such comfort for Kate because she’s in an alien room on a nondescript bed. Pale moonlight is spilling in and, for a moment of disorientation and alarm, the shadow of the soursop tree scratching the window appears to be waving at her from inside the room. The whole place looks as foreign as moonscape.

    Kate shivers, hugs her legs, and presses her face against her knees. She feels like crying but restrains herself.

    Kate, you a’ight? Yssy asks from across the room.

    Yssy is Kate’s roomie. There are Single Rooms and Double Rooms available at camp, but Kate has a Double Room and a roommate because it’s the cheaper option. Yssy is sitting up on her own bed. The whites of her wide eyes are stark in the dim while her black babydoll night gown is melded with it.

    Yssy is short for Ysabella. Kate gets it that the first letter is a Y. Yssy needn’t have spelled it out to her the first time they were introduced to each other. But Kate can never wrap her head around why Yssy insists on spelling her nickname with a yen sign, two dollar signs and another yen sign i.e. ¥$$¥. Yssy said it was because she’s a non-alphabetical person or something and she doesn’t believe in the Romanization of ideas. She keeps practicing her signature in her notebook (the paper, not the aluminum, kind) complete with strikethroughs.  

    Kate also learned that Yssy doesn’t want to sound easy, but Kate’s positive that using currency symbols in your name isn’t the best way to present yourself. In Kate’s Grammar-Nazi eyes, ¥$$¥ smacks of jologs or trashy taste. But naturally, she has never voiced that out in as many words. As a concerned roomie, she just used to drop a friendly hint every now and then. She didn’t press the matter when Yssy showed no sign of budging from her non-alphabetical conviction.

    Nothing, Kate replies in a shaky voice. Just a bad dream. You should go back to sleep. 

    I heard you call out the name Ecto again. Who is he? Yssy speaks in undertone. Then, teasingly: Is he your boyfriend? Is he the one who gave you the bracelet?

    Reflexively, Kate’s eyes move to her study table where the bracelet, a gift from Terra, rests.

    No, Kate lies. He’s nobody. Just someone I used to know.

    I see. It’s good he’s not your ex or anything coz his name’s weird.

    Not as weird as ¥$$¥! Kate thinks testily to herself but bites her tongue.

    It’s ironic how the longer she stays at Camp Unplugged, the better she gets at lying and keeping to herself. Not to mention, her temper has gotten way shorter.

    Well, Yssy says, we might as well get up now coz it’ll be daylight soon. Before you know it, the bugle will sound. 

    What Yssy’s referring to is the wake-up alarm that blares on the PA at six every morning. Oddly enough, it never fails to remind Kate of a horse race though she’s never been to any race track.

    The early start of the day is probably the biggest reason Kate’s always so grumpy at Camp Unplugged. It’s summer break after all, and she had been so looking forward to sleeping in every day. Little did she know her parents were going to send her to a paramilitary Internet addiction rehabilitation center.

    ****

    They’re all gathered in a common area called the Courtyard, which is a complex of townhouses inside a resort-subdivision called Woodland Vista, all the way up the hills of Laurel, Batangas on the periphery of Nasugbu. Actually, the concept of the residential resort is nearly 300 hectares wide and is comprised of townhouses, condominiums, condotels and a hotel. One can either retire there (the few homeowners are Fil-Am sexagenarians with money to burn) or book a staycation and enjoy the golf course, indoor and outdoor pools, mini-theater, country club, spa, billiards and bowling center.

    When Kate and Josh (ahem) were still together, they used to ride on his Ducati to overlooking Tagaytay Ridge to watch many of these resort communities as they were gradually being built. Like a stainless-steel scoop, first, bulldozers shave a bald strip on a hill or mountain; then, like diligent ants, the workers build towering structures on a slab of coffee ice cream, preserving the lush Insta-worthy mountain panorama around it – the mounds of mint ice cream. (Truth be told, Kate ate a lot of Cookies N’ Cream and Mint Chocolate Chip during those trips so her memory’s a bit fuzzy.)

    Pretty soon, a walled, gated and 24/7-guarded community will stand on the lopped-off top of what used to be a mountain, with an exclusive vantage point of Mt. Taal, the smallest active volcano in the world, and the 234-sq-km lake that encompasses it.

    The view is well worth the steep price of admission. Like Baguio City in the north, Woodland Vista doesn’t look and feel like the rest of the tropical country. It has pine trees, the occasional mist and crisp early-morning air at 19ºC, prompting the lowlanders and city-dwellers to don jackets, sweaters and, exclusively in Yssy’s case, a light-gray fur pom pom beanie.

    Kate recalls the first morning their sleep was interrupted by the bugle. Everybody looked exactly the way they felt: like they had just stumbled out of bed. Not a few still had sleep or drool on their faces. Nobody had taken a shower even though their rooms had hot showers and they didn’t have to boil water in a kettle like the locals. Only Yssy looked #wokeuplikethis and #nofilter ready in full makeup, a knit beanie, Warby Parker heavy-frame eyeglasses and gripping a tumbler of coffee that had been brewed in her fancy coffee gear (surprisingly allowed into camp considering how addicted she was to the stuff).

    Today, a month later, they’re snappier and all wearing Type B Uniform: white V-neck shirt, lower fatigues, white handkerchief in the pocket, belt and buckle polished to a mirror shine, and combat boots also polished to a mirror shine. Heat-pressed down the front of their shirts are the official Camp Unplugged ROTC crest and, below it, the logo Bearing Under Pressure. Still, nobody looks like they took a shower, which makes sense because they’ll be marching and jogging under the hot sun anyway.

    After three hours of that, they’ll smell of both sweat and the sun; the second is every Filipino mother’s idiom. But far from the tolerable and nearly pleasant smell of freshly-tilled soil, smelling of the sun will mean pure armpit BO, especially from the boys who, for some unfathomable reason, have yet to hear of a nifty invention called deodorant.

    Chapter 2: Call of Duty

    When Kate was first dropped off by Camp Unplugged’s company van to become part of the second batch of campers, she thought the drive up the mountain road was exhilarating, what of the breathtaking volcano-con-lake vista and the ziggy-zaggy hairpin turns and blind curves, checked only by guardrails from a plunge down a ravine. When they arrived at the Courtyard and the particular street where Camp Unplugged rents its five adjacent houses, she thought she had stepped into a fairytale book because of the houses. One had bumblebee-yellow façade, shamrock roof and white window frames.

    The fairy tale ended there because soon she was provided three sets of Camp Unplugged’s official uniform and told that the laundry days are Wednesday and Saturday. The uniform is a polo shirt; pink for the girls paired with a knee-length pleated white skirt and light blue for the guys paired with pleated trousers. On the upper left chest of each shirt Camp Unplugged’s logo has been heat-pressed: the image of a plug twisted into the initials CU.

    To the Gen Zers who aren’t familiar with the camp’s true MO, the logo might look lit and social, but to the actual participants and graduates of Camp Unplugged, the chat abbreve CU has never taken on a more sinister association.

    Did you sleep well? asks Nathan, who lives in the third house up the street, which is called the Teal House after the color of its façade. Nathan is basically Kate’s next-door neighbor at camp.

    Nathan

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