The last few notes of a Roxy Rocket song echoed through Vellâs dorm, and while scrappy and dissonant, they were at least coherent. An improvement from early lessons, especially.
âWell, that didnât hurt to listen to,â Skye said. âYouâre making progress.â
âYou have such a way with words,â Vell said.
âOkay, fine,â Skye said. âYouâre actually making good progress for a guy who only finds time to practice every couple weeks.â
The ever-encroaching responsibilities of being a senior, the leader of the loopers, and the focus of a godly game of fate had whittled Vellâs free time down to almost nothing. The occasional guitar lessons were some of his only islands amid the storm, and a welcome excuse to spend more time with Skye.
âYou want to try a few more chords?â
âMy hands are starting to hurt, actually,â Vell said. He pulled away from the guitar strings and shook tense fingers loose, revealing fingertips rubbed red and raw by practice. Skye stepped forward and took him by the wrist to examine his hands.
âI do not understand how a guy like you doesnât have thicker skin,â Skye said. âWerenât you an actual cowboy for a while? You did rodeos and everything.â
âI wore gloves,â Vell said.
âAnd for the rest of the weird shit youâve done in your life?â
Vell took a long pause.
âYeah, I donât know,â Vell said. âGood genes, I guess.â
âIâm not complaining, mind you, I just think-â
A loud dinging sound from Skyeâs purse interrupted the conversation, and she released her grip on Vell to go answer her phone. Vell recognized those familiar chimes as the Dad Ringtone. While most contacts were set to vibrate, Skyeâs father and a few other lucky high-priority contacts got their own ringtones. Vell was lucky enough to have his ringtone set to the theme song of a cartoon Skye had loved as a kid, but played at a much lower volume than the Dad Ringtone. Skyeâs father didnât call often, and when he did it was usually about something important, so she wanted to be sure to never miss a call.
âHey dad,â Skye began. âNo, nowâs fine. Whatâs up?â
Vell set his guitar back on the shelf and relaxed while Skye continued the call.
âNo, no, thatâd be fine, great, even,â Skye said. âHe might be a little busy, but- What?â
Skyeâs delight and talking to her father shifted to mild concern.
âDad we kind of need to- no, not tomorrow, dad,â Skye said. âDad!â
A long silence followed as Skye held the phone frozen by her ear for a short time. She tucked it back into her purse, took a deep breath, and clapped her hands together as she spun to face Vell.
âSo, good news, youâre going to get to meet my dad,â Skye squeaked.
âAnd the bad news?â
âWell, part one of the bad news is that itâs going to happen tomorrow,â Skye said. Vell wouldâve like a little more notice, but that was far from disastrous. Part two was still waiting, though. âAnd part two is that I kind of maybe didnât do a very good job describing the nature of our relationship, and he sort of a little bit thinks youâre...a hero.â
Vell waited for a part three, and there was none.
âIs that the bad news?â Vell scoffed. âI might let him down a little, but thereâs worse things my girlfriendâs dad could think of me.â
âYeah thereâs definitely a few upsides, be sure to hold on to those,â Skye said. âBut also, you know how I flunked out of mad scientist school?â
âYeah?â
âWell my dad...didnât.â
----------------------------------------
âYour girlfriendâs dad is a supervillain?â
âFormer supervillain,â Vell corrected. He adjusted the suit coat heâd just put on. âHe left the game after she was born and went white hat, now he only builds death rays and robot armies so relevant authorities can observe, learn, and prepare for the real deal.â
Having a genuine mad scientist to train with helped keep secret agents and spies ready for actual threats, and Skyeâs father got to keep doing what he loved: threatening to blow up the world.
âAre you still really a supervillain if you donât actually do any villain shit?â Hawke wondered aloud. âIsnât he just sort a supertrainer? What would you call that?â
âIâd call it asinine,â Alex said. âWe shouldnât be condoning this behavior, much less inviting him to build a death ray on our campus.â
The Einstein-Odinson had been selected as the faux-mad scientistâs next testing ground, and due to a misunderstanding of his role on campus, Vell had been selected as his testing partner. He had to put on a tuxedo and everything, to better fit the classic secret agent trope Skyeâs father was envisioning.
âMad scientists are an important part of the scientific ecosystem,â Helena said.
âYouâd know,â Samson muttered under his breath.
âConflict breeds innovation,â Helena continued, either heedless to or deliberately ignoring his snide comment. âThe arc of history requires both heroes and villains.â
âYeah, well, as far as villains go, I prefer mine to be weird old dads with fake death rays,â Kim said. âStill, Vell, doesnât it feel kind of weird that he doesnât actually know youâre dating his daughter?â
âItâs fine,â Vell insisted. âItâs always awkward trying to talk to your parents about your relationship, and she just over-focused on me saving the day and helping people. Simple miscommunication.â
âAnd when are you resolving that miscommunication?â
âLater,â Vell said. âSkye and her dad donât get to spend much time together anymore. Theyâll take the day, and weâll get this all sorted out later.â
A life of volcano lairs, alpine bases, and remote tropical islands did not exactly make it easy for Skye to keep up with her dad, so having him concoct a scheme right on her home turf was a good way for the two of them to spend time together. Right now, Vellâs only priority was allowing for some healthy father-daughter bonding time. And also preventing the apocalypse.
Stolen content warning: this tale belongs on Royal Road. Report any occurrences elsewhere.
âOkay, Iâm good to go,â Vell said, as he finished up the knot in his bow-tie. âHawke, ready on comms?â
âMission control good to go, Agent Harlan,â Hawke said. He enjoyed any apocalyptic arrangement that allowed him to stay safely behind a chair, but playing mission control was especially fun.
âGood. Samson, youâre on tech duty,â Vell said. âThe rest of you, keep an eye on the island. Thereâs no guarantee our supervillain will actually end the world. Which feels like a weird thing to say.â
Big events usually invited big catastrophes, and a literal supervillain seemed like a prime spark for some apocalyptic fire, but Vell was not so sure. He couldnât think of anything less likely to actually end the world than a deliberate attempt to do so. All the loopers agreed having some backup eyes on other potential disasters might be warranted.
âLetâs just get this over with,â Alex said. She was the first to leave, everyone else filtered into their respective roles to play soon enough. Samson walked alongside Vell as he left the lair.
âHey, do I have to put up the whole mission control act like Hawke was doing?â
âNot if you donât want to,â Vell said. âPlay it up a little if Skyeâs dad is around, maybe, but like, right now we can just talk normally.â
âOkay, cool. Got your shit right here,â Samson said, as he hefted a large bag of gadget. âStandard spy bullshit. Gizmo watch, secret cufflink radios, pen with a concealed laser cutter, got it all right here.â
âThanks,â Vell said. âWhereâd you find all this stuff?â
âI just asked,â Samson said with a shrug. âIsland full of supergenius weirdos, most of them had this kind of stuff just lying around.â
âConvenient. Did you make a list of everyone you got this stuff from?â
âSo we can keep an eye on them? Yeah.â
âSo I can give it back later,â Vell corrected. âBut yeah, actually, knowing about the laser pen guy might be a good idea.â
âWeâll know where to start with any laser-based apocalypses,â Samson said.
âGood instinct,â Vell said. The two of them walked out of the building and towards the docks. âAm I walking weird? Iâve never worn a tux before.â
âLittle stiff, but I think itâs working in your favor. You look more serious.â
âGreat, thanks,â Vell said. He stepped up to the edge of the docks and strapped on his gadget watch before checking the time on it. âShould be here soon.â
âYou need me to stick around?â
âNo, youâre good,â Vell said. âThanks for the help.â
Samson excused himself before the chaos started in full. Vell felt like an idiot standing around in a tux for a minute or two, until he was joined by someone in an equally odd outfit. Skye joined him in waiting on the docks, wearing a dress with long sleeves and a short skirt over sparkling tights and some very high-heeled boots.
âVery gogo dancer,â Vell said.
âYeah, dadâs really into that whole Cold War era 60âs style,â Skye said. âApparently this is what a âproper villainessâ looks like to him.â
âCould be worse, could be the catsuit kind of female villain.â
âUgh, donât get me started,â Skye said. âEvery time he took me to work conferences I had to watch grown women try to waddle around in pleather bodysuits.â
âSupervillains have conferences?â
âOh yeah, surprisingly good ones,â Skye said. âEspecially if youâre a little girl who likes genetically engineered sharks.â
âOh, so thatâs where you got your start.â
Skye nodded. Her penchant for genetic engineering had struck at an early age. Her father had initially been excited for her to get into the family business, but it turned out Skye just liked fucking with fish DNA, and didnât have much skill in all the non-genetic engineering parts of mad science. He was proud of her anyway.
After shifting on uncomfortably high heels for the umpteenth time, Skye checked her phone and texted her father.
âHe says heâs pulling up right now,â Skye said. Vell scanned the horizon and saw nothing coming across the ocean.
âIs he at the right-â
Vell was cut off, and forced to step back, as the ocean started to churn. The waves parted to reveal a jet-black submarine with a towering, jagged skull carved into the prow.
âOh, right, supervillain,â Vell said.
The imposing submersible drifted to a halt, and a hatched on the side hissed open. Red lights beamed out from the darkness within, and a few seconds later, an armored killbot marched down a boarding ramp, flanked by a towering man in a long white labcoat. He had a jagged streak of black through his otherwise gray hair, and wore heavy glasses with thick black lenses that obscured his gaze and shadowed his face.
âHi dad,â Skye said.
âHello dear,â said the man behind the murder machine. He stepped off the boarding ramp onto the dock, as another killbot exited to flank him, and fixed his dark glasses on Vell. âAnd as for you...I am Doc-â
âDocâ stopped his imposing introduction to have a coughing fit. Skye stepped up and put a hand on his shoulder.
âDad, did you take your meds today?â
âI did, I did,â the Doc said, between coughs. âJust a climate thing. I got on the damn submarine in Seattle, now weâre in the tropics, thereâs pressure differentials, humidity.â
He let out a few more coughs and then cleared his throat loudly, before regaining his previous composure.
âNow, as I was saying,â he continued. âI am Doc Ragnarok!â
His boisterous shout failed to echo in the open air of the docks.
âOh, good lord, that was terrible,â Doc Ragnarok said. âCan I try again?â
âI wouldnât bother,â Vell said. âWeâre by the beach, open air, the acoustics are terrible.â
âOh, yes, youâre right,â Doc Ragnarok agreed. âFinally, someone who appreciates the details. You must be Vell, then, or is it Agent Harlan? Do you have a codename I should be using?â
âItâs just Harlan. Vell Harlan.â
âYes, Skye has told me quite a bit about you,â Doc said. âYouâve escaped kidnapping attempts, outwitted undead thieves, stolen secret treasures.â
âOh, heâs, uh, also a really nice guy, very helpful, top student,â Skye said, laying groundwork for the eventual boyfriend reveal.
âI expect nothing less,â Doc Ragnarok said. âI canât begin to tell you how excited I am to face off against someone with real credentials again, Mr. Harlan. For the past few decades itâs been nothing but greenhorns using me as a test run, well-trained but no experience, no sense of style.â
âWell, I am nothing if not experienced,â Vell said. âStylish, however...well, this tuxedo is a rental.â
âI can tell,â Doc Ragnarok said. He let out a single boisterous bark of delighted laughter. âAh, look at us, already bantering. I missed this.â
Doc cleared his throat again and regained his ominous supervillain demeanor, as he snapped his fingers to make the killbots flank him.
âI must begin my preparations,â he said, in a voice shockingly distinct from his earlier conversational tone. âChallenge me if you dare.â
âExcuse me a moment,â said a voice somewhere behind the killbots. Doc snapped his fingers, ordering the crowd to part again, and Helena hopped forward on her crutches. Skye glanced at Vell curiously, and he shrugged in confusion. She wasnât supposed to be here, for multiple reasons.
âCan I help you?â
âYes, I was just reading your book earlier, âPractically Evil: A Guide to Classic Villainyâ,â Helena said. âItâs a great read, but what really stood out to me is the section on classic henchman archetypes, specifically âThe Igorâ?â
She held up the book in question, which Vell noted had a picture of Doc Ragnarok holding a skull on the cover, and opened it to the section in question.
âOh yes, I understand, completely,â Doc Ragnarok said. âAs I said in the section opener, that information is presented for historical context, and I strongly condemn the typecasting of differently-abled persons like yourself into such roles. Regardless of my intent, Iâm sorry if I caused any offense, and if you have feedback-â
âOh, no, you misunderstand, Iâm not offended, Iâm actually intrigued,â Helena said. She turned the book around to quote a specific passage. ââAn outcast, often hunchbacked or otherwise misshapen in such a way to make them a pariah, physically handicapped but mentally gifted, driven to evil by the harsh treatment of judgmental peersâ. I think itâs a very fitting role for me, and Iâd love to give it a try.â
Vell had several very strong opinions about that, but kept all of them to himself.
âWell, itâs a bit short notice, but Iâll never discourage anyone from following the path of evil,â Doc Ragnarok said. âAnd this is a training exercise, after all, perfect time for you to train. Come along, minion! The more the merrier!â
Doc Ragnarok snapped his fingers again, and the killbots fell in line, this time with Helena in tow. A procession of smaller robots followed, carrying a worrying number of power cores, ray guns, and mutagens. Not for the first time, Vell began to wonder if this was a good idea. The recurring doubts got obliterated as Skye looked over her shoulder and winked. She was worth a lot more trouble than this.