Vell looked at the hand of Alistair Kraid, extended in an offer of alliance, and considered the opportunity for exactly zero seconds.
âNo, fuck off.â
Kraidâs skeletal hand hung in the air for a second before resuming its previous villainous position, tucked behind his back.
âWell, I was expecting maybe a moment of actual consideration, but alright,â Kraid said.
âWhy the fuck would I even think about working with you?â
Vell had tried teaming up with Kraid once before, to rescue Kim from the Wish Fish. It had actually gone fairly well, right up until Kraid had murdered most of Vellâs friends and tried to usurp reality. He would not be so stupid as to try again.
âBecause I want to get rid of the gnome too!â
âBee-biggle-wiggle and bee-big-â
âShut up!â
Kraid extended his skeletal hand, pointed one burnt knuckle at Bicklebong and incinerated him with a gout of green fire. Bicklebong reappeared around the corner two seconds later. The death, albeit temporary, did at least interrupt the incoming riddle.
âAnd what are you supposed to be bringing to this alliance?â Vell asked. âBrains? Money? Because as per our last meeting, I can outsmart you, and youâre broke.â
âBroke? Iâm still one of the richest people on the planet, Harlan,â Kraid scoffed. The rickroll stunt had briefly knocked Kraid out of the top one-hundred richest people on earth, but he had already clawed his way back to rank fifty-six, and he had no doubt he would soon reclaim his number one slot.
âThen give me two billion dollars and fuck off until I fix this,â Vell said. Kraid grunted with displeasure and shook his head.
âFine. Be that way,â Kraid said. As much as he wanted to be rid of the gnome, the only thing he was accomplishing right now was making himself deal with Vell Harlan, which wasnât much better. âThe offerâs on the table. If you need anything, you can ask Helena. Iâll be having her check in now and then, just to make sure you donât find a solution without me.â
âWe actually did find one solution already,â Vell said. âWonât work for me, but it should be perfect for you.â
âWhat is i- Youâre going to tell me to kill myself, arenât you?â
âYes.â
âI liked you better when you were meek,â Kraid said, as he turned to leave.
âIâve always hated you the same amount,â Vell said. He waved goodbye as Kraid teleported away. âBye!â
Kraid vanished in a flash of green light, leaving behind Vell, Skye, and a deathless riddlemaster in a pointy hat.
âBee-biggle-wiggle and-â
Skye slammed the door shut in Bicklebongâs face.
----------------------------------------
âI was kind of hoping not cleaning this place was part of the act,â Helena said. âYou just live like this?â
She ran a finger along one of the dusty shelves on the edge of the lair.
âYou vastly overestimate how much effort we had to put into tricking you,â Samson said. âWe told like, four lies, your ego did the rest.â
âEnough,â Vell said. âWe have a gnome problem we need to focus on.â
He took a seat at the head of the table, and the other loopers filed in to their places. Helena hesitated, but eventually slotted into the seat that had been hers before.
âSo, Helena, I assume Kraid is testing all the lethal means of being rid of Bicklebong?â
âAnd torture, yes,â Helena said. âHeâs proven surprisingly resistant to waterboarding, crucifixion, and the Bolivian Kazoo. Thatâs when you-â
âNot interested,â Vell said. âBut I think we can all agree that Kraid is better at murdering people than we are, so we can stop with the plans to punt Bicklebong into orbit or disintegrate him or whatever. We need to focus on displacing him or getting him to lose interest.â
âYouâve got your interdimensional storage locker right there,â Helena said.
âThat was one of the first things we tried,â Hawke said.
âWeâve also shoved him into the multiverse, displaced him through time, shot him into the center of the universe with the Theta Wave teleporter, and tried locking him in a bathroom.â
âA bathroom?â
âCosmic entities canât enter bathrooms without permission,â Vell said. Quenay had told Vell that once, and it had actually turned out to be true. Even Death had to wait for the souls of people whoâd died in the bathroom to drift out. Apparently someone whoâd written the laws of the universe valued personal privacy. âWe thought we could invert the effect to trap him, but per Bicklebong showing up while Skye was showering, he apparently doesnât follow that rule.â
âThen whatâs your next move?â
âWeâre going to try outsmarting him,â Vell said. âWeâre workshopping a couple different strategies.â
âWhat, like tricking him into saying his name backwards?â
âMore like seeing if we can ask him a riddle he canât solve,â Vell said.
âWeâre hoping the paradox will make his brain explode,â Kim said.
âOr just make him leave,â Vell said. No matter how annoying Bicklebong was, Vell still didnât necessarily want him dead.
âIâve got money on brain exploding,â Kim said.
âI think heâll just dissolve,â Hawke said.
âWhat an incredibly normal thing to bet on,â Vell said.
âThatâs our angle, Helena. Any suggestions?â
âIf that would work, wouldnât any old paradox do?â Helena said. âIf heâs ravaged entire alien worlds, surely someoneâs asked him about the Raven paradox.â
âYes, well, weâre assuming most of those other planets didnât have time loops with giant worms and horseshit like that,â Vell said. âWeâve got to know something Bicklebong doesnât.â
âThatâs actually reasonable,â Helena said. âAlright, Iâll start brainstorming.â
This text was taken from Royal Road. Help the author by reading the original version there.
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âBicklebong!â
Vell and the loopers caught up to Bicklebong just in time, from the looks of things. Luke looked like he was at the end of his rope.
âPlease tell me youâve got a way to get rid of this thing,â Luke said.
âIâm hoping I do,â Vell said. He squared his shoulders and stared Bicklebong down. âBicklebong! What happens if I ask you a riddle you donât know the answer to?â
âI go away, and me youâll miss,â Bicklebong said. âBut if I do know the answer, then I do this!â
Then he snapped his fingers, and Vell started screaming.
âVell!â
Kim caught him before he fell, and the screaming stopped. He let out a loud groan and briefly curled in on himself before taking a deep breath and standing on his own two feet.
âIâm okay,â he grunted. âBut that really hurt.â
âWhatâd he do to you?â
âI donât know,â Vell said. âItâs like I stubbed my toe, but my entire body. Itâs not bad, but...I mean, it sucks real bad, but I donât think Iâm actually hurt.â
He didnât feel as if heâd been injured in any way, but his entire body felt a sharp, acute pain that was slowly fading.
âWhy are you hurting him?â
âA game must have stakes to be properly defining,â Bicklebong said. âAlso, you hit me with antimatter, no whining.â
âOkay, yeah, heâs got a point. I think I can handle this,â Vell said. âAlright: Where does an octopus get a gun?â
âOnline shopping,â Bicklebong said. He snapped his fingers again, and Vell cringed in pain, clutching his thighs, but stayed up straight.
âVell-â
âI got it,â Vell said. âI can handle it.â
âVell, you dipshit,â Kim said. âI donât feel pain.â
She pushed Vell back and then squared up with Bicklebong.
âAlright, you fucking gnome,â Kim said. âWhat does a robot have, if not a soul?â
âSomething else.â
âThatâs not an ans-â
Kim cut herself off with a loud scream as her digital face flashed different colors rapidly.
âOw! God damn it,â Kim said. âHow are you making me feel pain?â
âMagic!â
Bicklebong demonstrated by making her feel pain again. Kim hit the floor and curled up in a ball.
âMan I forgot how much that sucks,â Kim grunted.
âOkay,â Hawke said. âMaybe we take this in turns.â
âAnd thatâs still not a real answer,â Samson said.
âWiggle-higgle-diggle and wiggle-higgle-diddles, thatâs not a real answer because these arenât real riddles. Throw in some wordplay, at least a rhyme, otherwise just quit wasting my time.â
âCome on, man,â Samson said. âThis sucks enough already without you making us do wordplay.â
âDo it right or not at all, I donât want to hear you bawl.â
âFine,â Vell said. âReal riddles it is. Give me a minute to think of something.â
âActually, let me give it a try,â Helena said. âI already have one ready to go, and thereâs something I want to test out anyway.â
She stepped up, made sure Luke and any other loopers were far away, and lowered her voice so only Bicklebong could hear.
âReasoned repetition without any rhyme, what could cause looping time?â
âThe power of friendship,â Bicklebong said. Then he snapped his fingers, and absolutely nothing happened. Helena took a step back and examined her arms and legs for a second.
âSo whatâs with that?â Samson asked. âThat brace youâre wearing make you immune to pain, or something?â
âNo, I just have chronic pain anyway,â Helena said. âItâs not all that different. I might feel a little better, honestly.â
âThatâs depressing.â
âYes,â Helena said. âYou can route the rest of your riddles through me, itâll reduce the time you all spend whining.â
Though they did not appreciate the insinuation they were whining, the other loopers took the opportunity to not be in pain. They took a step back and started brainstorming some riddles, which turned out to be much harder than anticipated. Once they had settled on a handful of riddles, they passed them over to Helena to get started.
âAll muscles and no fear, whoâs the master of the sport played on a sphere?â
âLeanne Mikkola!â
âI roar through the skies and try to eat guys, what am I?â
âA giant with a jetpack!â
âWhat has feathers, racism, and exposed bones?â
âAn undead nazi dinosaur!â
âAre you reading our minds?â Samson demanded. âHow the fuck would you guess that?â
âWiggle-higgle-diggle and wiggle-higgle-dart, Iâm very smart!â
Bicklebong never laughed, but the frantic jingling of his bells mocked Samson just the same.
âOne more try,â Helena said. âThereâs a lady with mismatched eyes she tries not to flaunt, who is she and what does she want?â
âEasy! Thatâs-â
This time it was Bicklebongâs turn to let out a scream of agony. After watching the Riddlemaster shrug off disintegrations and punts into orbit for weeks, the loopers took some satisfaction in watching him scream.
âHoo hoo hoo, I think we made her mad,â Bicklebong said. âDonât ask more questions about that, or it could get bad.â
âQuenay does tend to get angry when people play with her toys,â Vell said. The old principal had tried to mess with Vell, and gotten his brain fried because of it. If she had set up a game this elaborate, it made sense sheâd punish anyone who tried to spoil the ending.
âDoesnât that count as a question you canât answer?â Alex said. âShouldnât you leave?â
âI could answer, I just canât say,â Bicklebong said. âIâm getting stopped by Quenay.â
âThat feels like a copout.â
âWell if itâs just about questions you canât answer,â Vell said. âThen canât-â
He stopped himself mid-sentence, and his forehead jumped straight to four wrinkles as an idea hit him like a truck.
âFuck me running, how did I not think of that sooner,â Vell said. âHelena, call Kraid, tell him we need a two-way teleportation ticket.â
âAnd?â
âAnd nothing,â Vell said. âThatâs it.â
âAnd what do you plan on doing with that?â
âItâll be better if its a surprise,â Vell said.
Helena sincerely doubted that.
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âFlat as a leaf, round as a ring, has two eyes, canât see a thing! What is it?â
âIs it me after I pull my eyes out to avoid seeing you,â Joan groaned. âAnd then crush myself to death to avoid being around you?â
âWeedle-deedle-geedle and weedle-deedle-go, thatâs a no!â
âWant to bet,â Joan said. She kept her hands near her eyeballs just in case. If Bicklebong didnât already know her eyes were prosthetic, maybe pulling them out of her head could buy her a few seconds of silence.
âJoan! Bicklebong still there?â
âYes, please, god, save me,â Joan said. Vell came round the corner, followed by his gaggle of loopers. Any thoughts of riddles got blasted out of Joanâs head as soon as she spotted Helena.
âHelena-â
âShut up,â Helena snapped. âDeal with the gnome first.â
Vell briefly considered using disposing of Bicklebong as leverage to get Helena to talk to her sister, but quickly came to the conclusion that that sort of blackmail would only make things worse. He stepped up and readied a rune he had in his hands.
âAlright, Bicklebong,â Vell said. âHey-diddle-diddle and hey-diddle-darah-â
Vell snapped the rune in half, dispelling the invisibility field at his side. The magic withered, and revealed a young woman with jet black hair and equally dark sunglasses covering her eyes. Vell gestured to her grandly with both hands.
âWhatâs the deal with my friend Sarah?â
âHello.â
Bicklebong stared at Sarah. Sarah stared at Bicklebong. A legion of riddle-tormented students held their breath.
Bicklebong started running, and the frantic jingling of bells was muted only by the bloodcurdling scream he let out as Bicklebong began to sprint in a circle. He ran frantic laps around the room, running as if every nightmare on earth was hot on his heels. The panicked screaming and running lasted exactly thirteen seconds, at which point Bicklebong violently exploded in a burst of flame, leaving behind nothing but two pointed boots with bells on the toes and smoke pouring out of the tops.
Everyone stared at the smoking shoes for a few seconds.
âAnybody have money on explosion?â
âI think Cane bet on him bursting into flames,â Hawke said. âI donât know if that counts. Weâll have to discuss it.â
âFirst things first,â Vell said. âI think you owe-â
Vell turned to where Helena had been standing a few seconds ago, and found she was no longer there. Joan was staring forlornly in the same direction. Vell gave her a quick pat on the shoulder.
âNext time.â
âYeah.â
âFor now, uh, thanks for the help, Sarah,â Vell said. âCouldnât have done it without you.â
âI have uncertainty regarding my contribution, but helping is good,â Sarah said with a shrug. âWas exploding the gnome my only reason to be here?â
âYeah thatâs all,â Vell said. âYou can head back when you want. I figure I at least owe you dinner, if you want to stick around for a while.â
âThe offer is nice, but I was performing an important project,â Sarah said. âSeeing you again was good. Goodbye.â
She said her goodbyeâs to everyone, then stopped in front of Alex, the new face.
âNice meeting you,â Alex said, awkwardly. She had known Sarah for roughly seven minutes and was vexed, confused, and more than a little scared of her already.
âYou are more okay than you think,â Sarah said. She grabbed Alex by the cheeks and gave her a kiss on the forehead before she left, leaving the new looper stunned. Vell turned and watched Sarah go, then glanced back at Alex until she finally unfroze and asked a question.
âWhy did she do that?â
âI donât know, and weâre never going to find out.â