Vell scratched away at a rune in silence. The daily apocalypse had been dealt with in swift order, giving Vell plenty of time to work on some personal projects. He put his carving tool down just long enough to check his notes, then took it in hand again to continue carving the rune. Each line had to be carved delicately, and in a very specific order. Even small flaws could completely ruin the rune.
âVell!â
Harley slammed the door open with her usual gusto. To Vellâs eternal credit, he kept his hands steady and didnât scratch his rune. He didnât know if it was cute or sad that heâd already accustomed himself to Harley exploding into his life unannounced. He put his half-carved rune down and turned to her.
âYes, Harley?â
âCome take a walk around the dorms with me,â Harley said. âItâs picture day!â
âPicture day?â
âVell, you really got to get involved in school culture. Come with me!â
When Harley said âcome with meâ, it was a statement, not a request. She latched on to Vellâs arm and forcibly dragged him out into the hallway, to the door of the neighboring dorm. For some reason, it had a blurry photo of planet earth attached to it.
âOh, real fucking original, a satellite photo,â Harley said.
âIâd complain with you, but, uh, I have no idea what Iâm complaining about,â Vell said.
âOh right,â Harley said. Sheâd skipped the exposition. âPicture day is an Einstein-Odinson tradition where freshman compete to take the worst possible pictures of themselves and their roommates.â
Vell looked up and down the hall. Every door was similarly decorated with an incredibly bad photograph, with humans only even vaguely recognizable in about a third of them. Vell looked back at the blurry satellite photo.
âI take it this is a bit low-brow, as far as intentionally bad pictures go?â
âI guess it mustâve been clever the first time, but now itâs just overdone,â Harley said. âCome on, I want to see what Joan and Freddy did!â
Harley led the way a few doors down, to their friends neighboring dorms. Joan, being the only occupant of her dorm, had taken a selfie -using an image capture with one of her own prosthetic eyeballs, if the empty socket on her face was anything to go by.
âWell, thatâs definitely a bad picture, though maybe not for the right reasons,â Harley said.
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âWe just talked about the eyeballs thing,â Vell sighed.
âGuess you better talk again,â Harley said. âLetâs go see what Freddy did.â
The duo stepped one door to the left and took a look at the picture on Freddyâs door. It depicted Freddy and his three roommates. Or at least they were pretty sure it did.
âIt looks Freddy...adjacent,â Vell said. All the parts were there, but everything seemed slightly off. The eyes were almost but not quite the right shade of green, the freckles were all slightly out of place, and the hair had an oddly synthetic texture. A thousand minor errors worked together to create something unsettlingly almost-Freddy.
âThis vexes and confuses me,â Harley said. She immediately slammed a fist against the dorm room door. âFrizzle! Explain your witchcraft!â
Since it was Harley doing the knocking, Freddy appeared all but instantly. Harley grabbed him by the shoulders and set him facing his disconcerting photo, demanding an explanation.
âOh, yeah, thatâs just an ordinary photo of us, but we fed it through a slightly flawed machine-learning algorithm to disassemble and reassemble our faces eight-thousand times,â Freddy explained. âThis is actually one of the better iterations. You...you really donât want to see iteration five-thousand and twenty-eight.â
âIâll take your word for it,â Harley said. Her morbid curiosity had limits. âCome on Vell, letâs take a quick look around and see what ideas are already taken.â
Vell followed along as Harley led him up and down the halls, voicing her opinion on every photo they saw. When they had finished their tour, Harley dismissed him with orders to win the competition, or else. Or else what, Harley did not specify. Vell felt threatened regardless.
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This time, Vell burst into his own dorm. His roommates had returned during his guided tour, and were gathered in the living room.
âGuys! We need a plan for the bad picture contest.â
âWe already have one,â Luke said. He gestured to a tiny glass case containing an insect and some wiring.
âYeah, I got this computer hooked up to a cockroachâs brain,â Cane explained. âIâm going to capture a mental image of how the cockroach sees us.â
âOh,â Vell said. âThatâs, uh, a pretty good plan.â
âSurprisingly, people can accomplish things without you and Harley around,â Cane said. âNow get over here and say âPeriplaneta americanaâ!â
Vell didnât say that, though he did smile for the camera-roach. Cane checked the output to make sure it was shitty enough while his roommates waited around.
âWhatâs the prize for this contest anyway?â Luke asked.
âA gold star,â Renard said.
âYou mean the borderline meaningless school âincentiveâ?â
âYes.â
âWhy do people put this much effort into it?â
âBragging rights, presumably,â Cane said.
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Exactly two days later, Lee texted Vell to let him know a winner had been chosen, though she did not say who. Vell inquired to that point with his roommates.
âI donât know. Some chick on the third floor, I think,â Luke said with a shrug.
âNo one we know?â
âOur social circle is like ten people, Vell, we canât be involved in everything,â Luke said.
âWeâre already involved in way more than we should be, statistically,â Cane added. Vell couldnât argue with that.