âIbrahim!â
The way Samson slammed the door open already let Ibrahim know he was in trouble. Doors only got slammed like that when snacks had been stolen, or worse. He put his controller down to face off with his twin.
âHave you been telling that fucking centaur what weâre up to?â
âNo.â
The intense stare of brotherly skepticism failed to crack Ibrahimâs poker face. Ibrahim was telling the truth. Technically.
âHave you been telling that weird business guy Shareef what weâre up to?â
âNo.â
This time, the intense stare of brotherly skepticism found its mark. Ibrahimâs ears twitched, a clear tell that he was not being truthful.
âIbrahim!â
âOkay, okay, Iâve been talking to the guy,â Ibrahim admitted. âWhat about it?â
âThose idiots have nearly gotten me killed like three times!â
âI think if youâre doing things where itâs that easy to almost die, that whole job is the problem,â Ibrahim said. âMaybe you should just let Shareef and his buddies take over. Itâd save you a lot of trouble.â
âThose idiots can barely take care of themselves, much less unstable nuclear cores,â Samson snapped. âYouâre going to get themâand meâkilled!â
âSounds like a great time to retire, then,â Ibrahim said. âJust sit back and let Shareef and his buddies put those idiots out of business.â
âThatâs not even how it works!â
Ibrahim shrugged and returned his attention to the video game heâd been playing. Samson fumed at his twinâs all-too-familiar stubbornness and left the room. There was no talking to Ibrahim when he was in this kind of mood. Better to head back to the lair and regroup with the other loopers. Absolutely none of them were surprised when they heard Ibrahim was the root of their problems.
âAt least itâs an easy fix,â Hawke said. âYou just have to stop texting your brother about what weâre doing.â
âThat may absorb the brunt of Orn and his friends efforts, but I donât think it will bring them to a complete stop,â Lee said. âIt would stop them from showing up every time, but itâd almost be worse having them appear randomly rather than consistently.â
âAgreed. The last thing I need is an Orn jumpscare,â Vell said. He was already edging very close to his breaking point when it came to that centaur. âAny ideas for a more permanent solution?â
âWe could shoot Orn,â Harley said. Vellâs hands actually moved towards the rune that summoned his pistols, but he stopped himself.
âI could just punch them,â Kim said. âDean likes me. I can get away with it.â
âIf shooting is Plan Z, I think we can safely put punching somewhere aroundâ¦letâs say Plan S,â Lee said. Not quite last resort, but definitely towards the end. âSomething of a more pacifistic persuasion might be better.â
âI donât know, can we move punching to Plan D?â Vell asked. He really didnât like Orn.
âPlan H at most,â Lee insisted.
âI actually might have something else in mind,â Samson said. âIbrahim mentioned a few things that got me thinkingâ¦â
----------------------------------------
âThis feels stupider than punching,â Harley said. She didnât mind being tied up if there were other activities going on, but being tied up just for the sake of being tied up felt silly.
âJust roll with it,â Vell said. âAt least you donât have to play the victim.â
The role of the hostage had been a matter of much debate. After roughly thirty minutes of back and forth on the subject of whether having one of their female teammates play the damsel in distress would be misogynistic, and another thirty minutes of whether intentionally playing into misogyny might be helpful for their cause, the loopers had settled on having Vell play the victim. Mostly due to the fact that he sucked at improvising in conversation. Having nothing to do but scream and groan with pain would help him act under pressure. Vell agreed with the logic, but not necessarily the execution. The dragonâs teeth were fake, but still somewhat sharp.
Following up on Samsonâs theory, the loopers had staged an entire fake daily disaster for Orn and his terribly-acronymed teammates to stop. A combination of robotics and illusion magic made for a very convincing dragon, and a very convincing dragon battlefield. Lee had conjured up scorch marks, fake blood, and shed scales to create a believable facsimile of a fight with a dragon. Not that she felt like Orn and his fellows in EOTIART would notice the attention to detail, but Lee took pride in her own work.
âEveryone ready and in position? Harley?â
âIâve already faked lethal danger once this year, Lee, I know what Iâm doing,â Harley said. Sheâd even recycled some parts from Crushbot to make the dragon.
Every confirmed they were ready. Kim was pinned beneath one of the âdragonâsâ hands, Hawke and Harley were covered in illusory burns, and Lee herself was ready to go on a fake spell to fight the dragon with. Samson stuck a hand out from below the desk he was pretending to cower behind and gave a quick thumbs up.
âReady to text my brother whenever,â he said.
âFire when ready,â Lee said. Samson started texting right away. âThe rest of you, stay in place and stay ready.â
The loopers stayed in place and stayed ready. For a few minutes. Vell tried to get a little more comfortable, a difficult task when caught in a robotic dragonâs mouth.
âOf course the one time we want them to show up theyâre dragging their feet,â Vell said.
âProbably takes a while to fetch the matching jackets,â Kim noted.
âYouâd think theyâd just wear them,â Hawke added. âThey look pretty comfortable.â
Hawke tapped his fingers against the floor as they waited.
âShould we get matching jackets?â
âIâm all for coordinating outfits, but I feel as though uniforms are a bridge too far,â Lee said. âPeople already think of us as strange. Color-coded uniforms would tip us over the edge into cult territory, I think.â
âMaybe for special occasions,â Harley said.
âThatâd almost be worse,â Lee said.
âIbrahim already definitely thinks you guys are a cult, I donât think you need to get any weirder.â
âPin this talk for later, I think theyâre coming,â Kim said. She could hear hoofbeats, and there were only a few dozen hooved students on campus. The loopers took their places and got their game faces on.
Orn entered the room with his usual aplomb, only to immediately jump backwards through the door with a loud, frightened yelp. A few seconds later, he re-entered the room and took a closer look at the dragon. The loopers played up terrified screaming or pained groaning as appropriate.
Taken from Royal Road, this narrative should be reported if found on Amazon.
âOrn, thank god you and EOTIART are here,â Lee said. She was pretending to keep the dragon at bay with a shielding spell, giving Orn and his teammates time to examine the scene. It was only Orn, Anishka, and Shareef now. Presumably theyâd been unable to recruit new hangers-on after the last ones had gotten frozen solid and nearly irradiated.
âActually, weâve rebranded,â Shareef clarified. He pointed to his red jacket, which had a brand new emblem silkscreened on. âItâs the Disaster Operational Relief Coalition now.â
âDORC?â
Harley was supposed to be acting hurt, but she couldnât help but break character hearing their new, terrible name. She had no idea how theyâd done a full rebrand and come up with a worse name.
âThatâs right,â Orn insisted, oblivious to the mockery in Harleyâs voice. âAnd, as usual, we are here to fix the problems you cannot.â
âThank goodness,â Lee said. She laid on the drama a little thick. âThe dragonâs about to eat Vell!â
âRight. Carry on then.â
Orn set all four of his hooves firmly on the ground and went nowhere. Shareef did a quick double take and pointed at Vell.
âAre we going toâ¦?â
âOh, no, itâs fine,â Orn said. âItâs just Vell.â
Vellâs next scream of pain sounded a lot more genuine. The newly dubbed DORCâs continued to do nothing and let Vell be slowly devoured while Lee scanned the room for an improv prompt.
âPlease, help,â Lee said, a little less convincingly than before. âVell has the...dragon slayer rune, that we need, to kill the dragon. By placing the rune on its forehead.â
Seizing on Leeâs inititative, Vell grabbed his phone with his spare hand and summoned a rune to play the role of the dragon-killer. It was a very basic âmoveâ rune, but he knew that Orn and his friends were not rune students, so they wouldnât know that. He let the rune slip out of the dragons mouth for a moment and then pulled it back in as the fake dragon gnawed on him. The acting on displaying would never win an Oscar, but it was convincing enough for the DORCâs.
âUgh, fine,â Orn said. âAnishka, handle the dragon.â
âIâm not fighting a dragon,â Aniska protested. âShareef, you fight the dragon.â
âIâm not fighting a dragon, Iâm just the hype man!â
In retrospect, a slightly lower stakes disaster mightâve been a better fit for the DORCâs, but the loopers had already gone to all the trouble of building a dragon. Kim worked with what they had: one giant dragon and one giant ego.
âI guess we were right,â Kim said. She injected her voice with a few crackles of static to really make it seem like she was damaged. âIf even Vell canât beat the dragon, no one can.â
The mocking comparison to Vell struck the exact nerves Kim had been hoping for. Ornâs tail started to swish from side to side, and he trotted in place as he worked himself up.
âOh, absolutely not,â Orn said. âThere is absolutely no circumstance in which I will be upstaged by Vell Harlan!â
Spurred into action by the most powerful motivation (spite), Orn took off in a full gallop towards the dragon. Towards its wings, to be specific. He landed several kicks that wouldâve been commendable had they not been aimed at a completely meaningless portion of the dragonâs anatomy.
âOrn!â
Vell shouted as loud as he could and freed the hand that held the âdragon-killer runeâ to wave it in Ornâs direction.
Despite presenting the solution so obviously, Orn ignored it in favor of randomly kicking parts of the dragonâs wing. It took all of Vellâs willpower not to start swearing at Orn. He had to play the victim a little while longer.
âHold on, Vell,â Harley shouted.
âI am holding on,â Vell said.
âYeah, âhold onâ,â Harley repeated. Vell took a look at her and saw that she had subtly pulled her phone out to access the robot dragonâs controls. Harley winked in his direction.
âOh shit.â
By mashing a few buttons on her phone, Harley made the dragons head thrash. Vell took the hint and let go. The thrashing motions tossed him free from the dragons jaws, and he slid across the floor, coming to a halt in front of Shareef.
âUh. Canât go on,â he mumbled. âToo weak.â
Vell clutched at his abdomen and then remembered the fake dragon hadnât actually made any puncture wounds.
âToo weak. From dizziness,â Vell said. To avoid having to improvise any more, he pretended to pass out and let the rune slip free from his hands, subtly sliding it across the floor in the direction of Shareef and Anishka. The two looked down at the supposed dragon-slaying rune and then locked eyes with each other.
âYou do it!â
âYou do it!â
âNo, you do it!â
âOh, just fucking play rock paper scissors for it or something,â Harley snapped. Shareef and Anishka reluctantly held up their hands and went for the classic one-two-three shoot. Shareef came out on top, with scissors beating paper.
âFine,â Anishka sighed. âFuck me, I guess.â
She snatched the rune off the ground and clutched it tight in her hand. It took a few seconds of psyching herself up, but Anishka finally broke into a dead sprint towards the dragon. Harley manipulated the controls again, to give her a clear shot at the head, and made sure to move anything pointy and threatening a little further away. She didnât want Anishka getting cold feet.
With only the slightest hesitation, Anishka managed to dash up to the dragon and open palm slap the rune on to its head. Lee had been planning on making them do more work to officially kill the dragon, but figured this was the best they were going to get. She dropped her fake shielding spell and started manipulating the illusions surrounding the fake dragon, while Harley worked the controls to make it appear to writhe in pain. Orn and Anishka retreated from the flailing dragon and started cowering behind the same desk as Samson.
With a final mournful roar, Lee and Harley worked together to make the dragon collapse and lie still. It was a very convincing death for a creature that had never actually been alive. It took roughly thirty seconds of the dragon being dead for the DORCâs to stop cowering. Luckily, that was also enough time for Dean Lichman to respond to Leeâs text and show up on the scene. He thundered through the doors just moments before Orn could start monologuing.
âWhat is going on in here?â
âOnly the usual,â Orn said. âMe displaying my complete and utter superiority to Vell Harlan.â
âUs displaying our complete superiority,â Anishka corrected.
The Dean scanned the room and took in the damage to Vell and the other loopers. Given what he knew of the loopers skills in handling odd situations, he had a hard time believing anything he saw. Lee winked in his direction, confirming a few suspicions he already had.
âI see. I suppose I have you and the-â
Dean Lichman turned his head sideways to read the logo on the red jackets they wore.
âDORCs? To thank for preventing thisâ¦âdisasterâ?â
âIndeed you do,â Orn said. âI understand that the outstanding services we have provided go above and beyond what youâve come to expect from these layabouts, but fear not! We ask only the usual rate.â
Dean Lichman raised an eyebrow so high that some of his mummified skin cracked.
âRate?â
âAbsolutely,â Shareef said. He moved in on business talk like a shark swimming to blood. âThe Disaster Operational Relief Coalition is all about providing heroic service at every day prices. Weâll outperform our competitors at every turn for the same low price you get with those other guys.â
Shareef pointed a finger, and a look of disdain, towards Vell and the loopers. Dean Lichman aimed a look of disdain as well, but in Shareefâs direction.
âIâm afraid I donât understand,â Dean Lichman said. âI have never paid any of those students for anything theyâve done. Well, except for that time the landscapers were indisposed and I had Hawke trim the hedges outside my window.â
Hawke waved, and Dean Lichman waved back. He enjoyed the view of the ocean from his window too much to let the hedges get overgrown. The DORCâs had no appreciation for ocean views or properly trimmed hedges, and focused on a much earlier subject.
âYou donât pay them?â
âNope. While I appreciate their consistent safeguarding of the campus and its students, they are entirely pro bono.â
âIâve always considered myself a pro bono,â Harley said. Lee elbowed her in the side. The DORCâs ignored the innuendo and immediately turned on each other.
âYou said this was a business opportunity,â Shareef snapped at Orn.
âWhat kind of psychopaths would do these things for free?â
âThese kinds of psychopaths, baby!â
All three of the DORCâs glared in Harleyâs direction for a moment before turning their disdain back on each other.
âI spent sixty dollars on a matching team jacket,â Anishka said. She pointed to the new logo on her red jacket. âTwice! How am I making that money back, Shareef?â
âHow is that my fault, this was Ornâs idea!â
âYouâre the one who said we needed strong branding,â Orn said. âThe jackets were your idea!â
âBecause I thought weâd recoup our costs, but you led us into all this without even checking what the return on investment was!â
The argument continued to escalate, with fingers pointed in every direction. Lee cleared her throat loudly and looked towards the door. Everyone except the DORCâs caught on and quietly shuffled out of the room while the three âteammatesâ argued.
âI believe that will be the end of that,â Lee said, satisfied. âExcellent idea, Samson.â
Shareefâs skeevy salesman attitude, and the number of times Ibrahim had mentioned thing like âjobâ and âretireâ had made Samson suspect the DORCâs were only in it for the entirely hypothetical profit, and his hunch had proven correct. It was a commendable plan -and one that had required Samson lying to his brother. Samson gave Lee a weak thumbs up. It was hard to feel proud, in spite of the fact that his idea had worked.
âWell, whatever was going on with those three, I hope whatever problems have plagued you are now over,â Dean Lichman said. âReally though. Profit?â
âNot everyoneâs as charitable as us, Dean,â Harley said. âThough, entirely hypothetical, could we be getting paid for this?â
âIf I offered you a single cent it would be a tacit endorsement of your activities, and that would be the most illegal thing Iâve ever done,â Dean Lichman said. âAs always, you may continue to handle mutant students and nuclear incidents, and I will continue to not ask questions about how and why you are handling mutant students and nuclear incidents.â
âSounds like a deal. Have a nice day, Dean.â
âGood day to you as well, students.â
The Dean nodded at them all and walked away.
âI kind of would like to get paid for this,â Hawke said.
âIâll buy us all a nice dinner,â Lee suggested. That was good enough for Hawke.