âThe not-so-good Doctor is all set up,â Hawke said. âYou are cleared to infiltrate.â
âGood. You been reading Ragnarokâs book?â
âYeah, except Helena took our only physical copy,â Hawke said. âI had to spend seven dollars on the ebook.â
âOh. I can, uh, get you back for that, if you want.â
âNah, itâs fine, this is actually an interesting read,â Hawke said. âYou remember that Agent Fleming jerk who showed up two years ago? Apparently Skyeâs dad almost dropped him in lava once.â
âFascinating,â Vell said. âWhatâs it say about starting one of these things?â
âOh right, yeah,â Hawke said. âOkay, apparently step one is the âinformation gathering and infiltrationâ. I think youâre supposed to like, interrogate his minions to find out where his base is and then break into it.â
âMakes sense.â
âI can tell you right now thereâs a suspiciously death-ray shaped cloaking field on the roof of the senior dorms,â Hawke said.
âYeah, I noticed,â Vell said. Doc Ragnarokâs cloaking tech was advanced, but the loopers had some pretty advanced observation equipment as well. âI think thatâs too easy though, right? Iâm trying to give Skye some bonding time with her dad here, we need to do things the long way.â
âIf you insist,â Hawke said. âSamson, any ideas on how to do things the old fashioned way?â
âYou might start with the generic eastern european goons lurking around the dining hall,â Samson said. He forwarded a picture to Vell, showing off a table of middle-aged men sitting around one of the tables, smoking cigars and playing poker.
âThose definitely look like henchmen,â Vell said. âIâll go check it out.â
Even if they werenât related to the apocalypse, a random group of middle-aged men hanging around a college campus was suspicious. Vell headed for the dining hall, stepped through the doors, and adjusted his tux as he approached the table.
âGentlemen,â he began. âThis is a non-smoking campus.â
âVe are not stoodents,â one of the smooking goons grunted, in one of the deepest pseudo-slavic accents Vell had ever heard. He briefly considered asking if the accent was genuine, or part of the role, but thought that might be offensive.
âThe rules apply all the same,â Vell said. âIf youâre not students, then why are you here?â
âVork.â
âWhat kind of v- work?â
âDe none of yor beeznees kind,â another mook toned.
âOn this campus, everythingâs my business,â Vell said. He didnât want it to be, most of the time, but it ended up that way anyway.
âMebbe you lurn noddo steeck nose where idon belon.â
âOkay, Iâve been trying not to bring it up, but thatâs beyond the pale,â Vell said. âThat accent is fake, right? Youâre all just playing up the fake mook role?â
The smoking henchmen shared a nervous glance, and one of them pulled a walkie talkie out of their track suit jacket.
âHeâs on to us! Accelerate the plan!â
âHa! I knew the accents were fake,â Vell said. His good mood was short-lived, as all the of goons at the table stood up, fists clenched, and squared their shoulders towards him.
âShouldâve minded your own âbeezneesâ, stretch,â one of them grunted.
âIâve never been...I, ah, screw it, pretend I said something witty,â Vell said. âSo what are the rules on this part, is it like, pin-based, or is there a flag football type of thing-â
One of the goons dove into Vell for a full-body tackle, and then punched him in the face while he was on the ground.
âOkay, full contact,â Vell grunted. âSeems a little harsh for a-â
Another punch to the face shut him up, and made Vell realize this was not the time to be talking. He covered his face to block another punch and rolled out from underneath the thug who had him pinned, before spinning around to kick him in the gut.
âHawke, this got a little bit loud,â Vell said. âCould you call Kim and tell her-â
Vell got grabbed by the shoulders, lifted off the ground, and then slammed into a table hard enough to snap it in two. Though he never finished his sentence, Hawke assumed Vellâs intent from the context clues, and from the faint sound of punching in the background.
Kim had been scouting out potential disasters close by, so it did not take her long to arrive on the scene and pry Vell out from underneath a mountain of track-suits. A robot with flaming fists was more than any of the hired goons had signed on for, so they dispersed after a few of their own were knocked unconscious burning punches. Once she was sure they were all scared off, Kim helped a heavily-bruised Vell off the ground and wiped some blood off his chin.
âDamn. Youâre lucky I saw the other twelve guys or Iâd think you got your ass beat,â Kim said.
âYeah, I think I did alright,â Vell groaned. âChrist, though, what was with that? I thought the goons were supposed to rush me one at a time, at least.â
âYouâd think so,â Kim said. That was the usual henchmen approach. âMaybe Doc Ragnarok actually does know youâre dating his daughter. Wanted some guys to beat your ass about it.â
âHe just doesnât seem like the kind of guy,â Vell said. âIf only because heâs weirdly obsessed with being an old-school supervillain.â
Vell popped an illusion rune that would disguise the bruises, and the damage to his tuxedo, and got back on track.
âSpeaking of his weird obsession,â Vell said. He popped his runic scanning glasses out of a pocket and did a quick scan of the unconscious guards. âThere we go.â
Vell plucked a keycard from the coat pocket of one of the unconscious guards.
âIn retrospect, I probably shouldâve just scanned first and tried to pickpocket this,â Vell said. âSomething to keep in mind for next loop.â
âI think weâd all prefer you not get your ass beat,â Kim said. âAre you really sure youâre still on board with this, after aforementioned ass-beating?â
âI have to see this through,â Vell said. âIâm sure it was all some mix-up on Docâs part.â
âI sure hope so,â Kim said. âThat dudeâs probably going to be your father-in-law someday.â
The illusion that hid the bruises on Vellâs face was not quite powerful enough to disguise the redness in his cheeks. He set off without a word and headed for the senior dorms, and the invisible death ray atop them.
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âWe did try to make the relationship work, but ultimately we just didnât work out in the long-term,â Doc Ragnarok said. âWe set up a very amicable co-parenting arrangement, and Skye is an absolute delight, so it all worked out in the long run. But still, donât ever try to mix dating and mad science. Itâs a field that requires absolute commitment.â
The tale has been taken without authorization; if you see it on Amazon, report the incident.
âFascinating,â Helena said. She had no idea how Doc Ragnarok had managed to segue âmad science adviceâ into a discussion about Skyeâs mother, but somehow he had pulled it off. âNow, about the death ray...â
âOh, yes, that,â Doc began. He gestured to the massive laser beam currently being constructed in the core of their makeshift lair. âNow, obviously, the retrofuturist look is borrowed from old pulp sci-fi, but I did personalize it with the addition of those dorsal ridges, and the ventilation gaps near the beam emitters, all to resemble the fins and gills of a shark. It lends a certain menace to the design, and Skye absolutely adores sharks, which is a nice bonus.â
âYes, very adorable,â Helena said. âBut how does it function? What puts the âdeathâ in âdeath rayâ?â
Doc Ragnarok did a quick double take between the death ray and Helena.
âThis one? Nothing,â Doc said. âThis is a practice exercise, Ms. Marsh, that âdeath rayâ is just a light emitter, essentially a very powerful laser pointer. I suppose you could blind somebody with it if they started right into the beam, but otherwise harmless.â
âOf course it is,â Helena said. She didnât bother to hide her disappointment.
âHey dad, you still in the death ray room?â
âYes, Skye, what do you need?â
âJust thought you should know Vellâs on his way,â Skye shouted. âComing by the main entrance.â
âOh a frontal assault, very bold,â Doc Ragnarok said, as he hustled towards the center of his lair. âIt is a shame he wonât see all the work we put into the ventilation system or underground entrance routes, though.â
âIâll let him know about the laser grid later,â Skye said. âHe and I, uh, talk. Sometimes. We hang out on occasion.â
âWell letâs give you something to really talk about,â Doc said. âHeâs nearly at the main entrance.â
Doc Ragnarok got into position in his big fancy villain chair, crossed his legs, and waited as the lock on the door clicked. Then clicked again. And again. The handle jiggled slightly as Vell tried it out, but it was still locked, and the lock clicked once more as he tried it again. After a momentary pause, the door was torn off its hinges by a sudden burst of force, and Vell stepped through, standing atop the fallen door.
âYour doorâs broken,â Vell said. âAnd not just because I broke it. Like, the lock didnât work.â
âA momentary delay that makes you too late, Vell Harlan,â Doc Ragnarok shouted, hamming it up with full force. âNow, fall!â
A trap door beneath Vellâs feet opened up, which might have worked were it not for the fallen door acting as a bridge across the pit. Vell looked down and shrugged.
âNote to self, put pitfall traps further away from doors,â Doc Ragnarok mumbled. âNo matter! Deploy the contingencies!â
Two hatches on the wall opened up and revealed cannons aimed at Vell, and he dodged out of the way of two nets fired at him. Next up, two robotic drones came rushing at him, grasping claws at the ready, and Vell grabbed one to swing it at the other, shattering both. The quick swing saved him from the robots, but made him easy prey for a forcefield that descended from the ceiling. He bumped an elbow into the glowing field surrounding him, and found it impenetrable.
âThat should keep you contained,â Doc Ragnarok said. âMs. Marsh! Escort him to the viewing chamber. I want him to watch my plan unfold.â
âAs you wish,â Helena said. She tapped one of her crutches into the forcefield, and it started moving out of the central lab and down a side hallway. Doctor Ragnarok watched it move with a smug smile on his face. Once Vell was out of sight, he dropped the smile, and his supervillain persona, entirely.
âWell that was quite good,â Doc noted. âDodging the first trap was a bit of an accident, yes, but the next two, very skillful.â
âI feel like he should have said something, though,â Skye said. âAsked you what you were planning, made a quip about escaping, that kind of thing.â
âOh, that wouldâve been nice, yes,â Doc Ragnarok said. âBut frankly those exchanges can get a little trite, once youâve done a few dozen thereâs really no benefit to the banter. We both know why heâs here.â
âI thought you liked the banter.â
âI like good banter,â Doc said. âIf the manâs heart isnât in it, I donât want him to force it. Thatâs how you get cliches.â
----------------------------------------
âI feel like I shouldâve said something,â Vell said. âAt least like, âyouâll never get away with thisâ, or something like that.â
âOh no,â Helena said. âHavenât you read this book?â
Helena held up her copy of Doc Ragnarokâs supervillain guide.
âThatâs one of the biggest cliches to avoid,â Helena said. âYouâre the one who should know these things, youâre the hero.â
âI skimmed, I have a lot going on,â Vell said. He kicked the side of the forcefield again, and found it impermeable as ever. âSo. Are you enjoying yourself?â
âBarring Doc Ragnarokâs fatherly streak, yes, actually,â Helena said. âI could see myself doing this for a living. If I live.â
Vell bit his tongue. Helena had a way of making even the most casual chats a matter of life and death -though he supposed everything actually was a matter of life and death when a person was dying.
âThereâs entire schools for this, you know, death ray workshops, speech classes focused on evil monologuing, the whole deal.â
Vell did know. Skye had given him some basic details on the courses now and then. Kraid had even attended some of them for a year or two, before getting expelled for being too evil for evil school.
âSo, uh...on a related note,â Vell said. âAll that stuff you said about being âdriven to evilâ.â
âOh. I was just telling Doc Ragnarok what he needed to hear, obviously.â
Helena opened the door to a rooftop chamber with a view of Doc Ragnarokâs death ray, and shuttled the forcefield containing Vell into the center of the room. She tapped one of her crutches against the forcefield to remind Vell of his captive state.
âIf I were really evil, Iâd be using this opportunity to, say, experiment on your rune without your permission and accidentally kill you,â Helena said. âIâm not my sister, Vell.â
Vell nodded. He already knew that well enough -and it was exactly what worried him.
âYou did blow me up that one time,â Vell said.
âFor impersonal reasons. That was science,â Helena said. âSure, reckless, maybe. Stupid, maybe a little. But not evil.â
âWhen you refuse to learn from them, recklessness and stupidity can be evil.â
âActually, according to this great book Iâm reading,â Helena said, holding aloft the supervillain handbook again. âEvil is just a word used by entrenched powers to derogate anything that challenges their hegemony.â
âThatâs...an interpretation, I guess.â
âDocâs a smart guy,â Helena said. âSpeaking of, I need to ask him about his forcefield tech, that seems pretty sturdy.â
Helena walked away, leaving Vell alone in the viewing room, surrounded by the forcefield. He took a seat, poked the walls once more, and decided to leave it for a bit. âPlanning his escapeâ was probably the best excuse to sit and catch his breath heâd get any time soon, and he desperately needed a bit of rest. His ribs still hurt from getting tackled by those goons earlier.
The respite, while much needed, was brief, as Vell soon found himself with another visitor. Thankfully, this one was of the more pleasant variety.
âVell, hey,â Skye said. âJust checking in, youâre doing great so far.â
âAm I doing great? Iâm in a forcefield.â
Vell tapped the translucent wall of energy.
âGetting captured doesnât feel great.â
âOh, everybody gets captured,â Skye assured him. âItâs part of the bit. Gives you a chance to pull off a cool escape.â
âAlright. Makes sense, I guess,â Vell said. He looked around his forcefield cage. âAre there any risks I should know about? Like, is any part of this going to electrocute me?â
âWhat? No, thatâd be ridiculously unsafe,â Skye said.
âYeah, well, those thugs of yours werenât particularly safe either.â
Skye tilted her head like a confused puppy.
âThugs?â
âYeah, those slavic guys with fake accents,â Vell said. âThe ones with the keycard, which, by the way, didnât even work.â
âVell, what are you talking about,â Skye said. âWe donât have any human minions -except Helena, I guess. You were supposed to find some drones in the robotics lab.â
âWell if they werenât...hold on,â Vell said. âIf thereâs another bunch of thugs, and another key, doesnât that mean thereâs another-â
For the second time today, Vell was cut off by a thunderous crashing of waves. Thanks to the viewing chamberâs strategic vantage, he could see the waves part just offshore, revealing another towering skull-shaped structure rising from the water, but this time much larger, much darker, and much skullier. The massive structure was nearly as tall as the dorms they were on top of, and much like Doc Ragnarokâs lair, the peak had a very large raygun on top, aimed directly at them.
âThere you are, you layabout traitor,â boomed a voice from within the skull-shaped fortress. âCease your playacting and come witness true villainy!â
âWhat the fuck,â Skye said. âDad!â
Dad was already on his way, and barreled through the door momentarily. He ran to the massive viewing window and pounded a fist into it.
âBastard,â Doc Ragnarok mumbled under his breath. âSkye, we need to get out of here.â
âWhat about Vell?â
âHas he not escaped yet?â Doc said. He looked over his shoulder and saw Vell. âOh, sorry, Iâd assumed you got out already.â
Doc Ragnarok pressed a button and released the forcefield around Vell.
âYou might be thwarting an actual supervillain today, Mr. Harlan,â Doc said. âThatâs Mi-Go, an old colleague. Never really got over the fact that I quit.â
âOh, Mi-Go, I remember him,â Skye said. âA real pioneer in genetic hybridization.â
The raygun aimed in their direction fired, bathing the room, and the entire island, in a blast of sickly green light. When the deathly glow finally cleared, Vell looked down at his hands, or rather at the pointed crab claws where his hands had once been. Skye and Doc Ragnarok had a similar set of misshapen, crablike appendages, and odd leathery wings sprouting from their slimy flesh.
âNot again,â Doc Ragnarok grunted from his new beak.
âI sure hope he worked on his genetic stabilization matrices,â Skye said. âOr else-â
Vellâs arm popped off his body and started melting on the ground.
âOr else that.â
Thankfully their brains melted first, so the rest of the melting didnât hurt much.