Vell Harlan actually whistled a tune as he marched straight towards enemy territory. The students of the Allied Schools were still fleeing from his approach everywhere he went.
âSo is our strategy to just have them run away in circles until they all get too tired to fight,â Cane said. âOr is there an actual plan here?â
âI do have a plan,â Vell said. âIâm relatively confident in the plan too. I had Kanyaâs help and everything.â
âRight, Kanya helped you plan the heist,â Cane said. âVell, Iâve done a heist with you, this doesnât feel very heisty.â
âNow youâre getting it,â Vell said.
âWhatâs that supposed to mean?â
âYouâll know when itâs time,â Vell said. He patted Cane on the shoulder and then returned to the front of the group as they made their way up the slope. Since the space by his side was free, Hanifa settled in and held Caneâs hand.
âYou know, if anyone else was talking to you like that, youâd be arguing with them,â Hanifa said.
âYeah, but not Vell,â Cane said. âThatâs just how things are with Vell. They never make sense.â
Hanifa waited patiently for a second half of that sentence, and never got one.
âUntil?â
âUntil what?â Cane said. âThereâs no âuntilâ. Things never make sense. Sure, sometimes you get a nice wrap up and things get maybe ninety-nine percent to making sense, but thereâs always at least one little thing that never fully adds up.â
âHmm. I guess that makes sense.â
âNinety-nine percent sense, anyway,â Cane said. Hanifa laughed at that, and they continued on.
Once the rocky slopes gave way to almost level ground, Vell took a moment to admire the view. They stood on the second highest peak of the islandâs many rocky hills, giving them a panoramic view of most of the island. From here they could see the fortified laboratoryâs, the boats far below, and even most of the structures at the peak that the Allied Forces had turned into their base of operations. Vell could see massive banners waving in the wind from here.
âHow long do you think theyâve been planning this? Between the marching formations and the matching banners, it has to be at least two months, right?â
âIâd wager this has been more of an all-year endeavor,â Kim said. âThis isnât a casual thing for them, this is a massive undertaking.â
âSpeaking of massive undertakings,â Hawke said. âTake a look at everything around us.â
He pointed downhill, towards the lab building where the anti-magic device is stored, then at the various buildings where defenses like the communications blocker and the electronics jammer were located. Vell was also taking a look at the labs, scrutinizing them for some odd detail only he could see.
âSo, all around us, we have incredibly important strategic targets, and we currently have a good vantage point,â Hawke said. âAnd over there-â
Hawke pointed at the fortified war camp of the Allied Schools.
â-we have the incredibly dangerous, well guarded, and tactically inadvisable center of operations,â Hawke said. âWhich I assume we are going to walk directly towards.â
âYou assume correctly,â Vell said. He nodded in the direct of the defenses below them and then turned to face the war camp. âLetâs get to it. Oh, and take your hands off your guns.â
âSo our plan is to walk directly into the center of the enemy war camp completely unarmed,â Kim said. âThis better be one motherfucker of a scheme youâre cooking, Vell.â
âIâm pretty proud of it, yeah.â
Such confidence was a rare thing, so his friends followed him, and the many eyes of the Allied Schools followed in turn. Scouts, drones, and hacked cameras watched their every move as Vell led the march directly into the enemy camp. He waved at some of the gate guards as he walked right through, without a single shot being fired.
âHey guys. Nice camp, love the banners,â Vell said. âSo, Iâm assuming you have some war council type thing? Can I talk to them?â
âWeâre right here,â said one of the council members. Vell turned towards seven students who were not dressed any differently from the others.
âOh. You should really get some heraldry, some tabards or something,â Vell said.
âWe spent a lot of time on the banners alone,â one of them mumbled. âWhat do you want?â
âWell, I want a fight, obviously, whereâs the action?â Vell said. He pointed towards some snipers who had their guns trained on his position. âIâve been waltzing around your camp for like a minute now and nobody has so much as fired a warning shot.â
âWe know what youâre doing, Harlan,â one the of the councilmen hissed. âWeâve studied you. Your first year in the paintball war you deliberately lost a game to spare yourself the trouble of attention, and youâre trying the same thing now. A victory you hand to us is no victory at all.â
âDraw your guns and fight.â
âAre you sure? Feels like youâre throwing away a golden opportunity here,â Vell said. âLast call for an easy win.â
âWe donât need your hand outs to win, you arrogant bastard. Stand and fight.â
âWell.â
Vell Harlan put one hand on a gun and the other one in his bookbag.
âIf you insist.â
In a blur of motion faster than the eye could see, Vell drew one gun and fired six shots at the Council of Seven. The Last member standing turned to his troops and screamed.
âFire now! Heâll need to reload-â
A seventh bullet struck the last council member in the back of the head. As he faced his troops, he could see them all splattered with multicolored paintballs, falling one by one in a blindingly fast barrage.
â-manually.â
The council member turned to see Vell Harlan, guns blazing, eliminating dozens of opponents every second. He never stopped to reload.
âHow.â
The trademark glint of magic gleamed off Vellâs revolver. With his other hand, he reached into his bookbag and withdrew a few runes, protecting himself and his allies with a forcefield as the Allied Schools finally regained their wits and returned fire. Vellâs friends sheltered under the magic dome as they too got up to speed.
âWell, looks like the magicâs back on,â Kim said. âFuck if I know how, though.â
âIâll explain later, fight now,â Vell said. Samson didnât need to be told twice. He reached into Vellâs extra-dimensional bookbag, which was now fully functional, and withdrew a little something heâd prepared for the occasion. Samson did not have Vellâs speed or accuracy with shooting, but a paintball minigun could compensate for both. Skill didnât much matter when you were firing two-hundred rounds a second.
âTake cover and hold the line,â one of the Allied Students shouted. âWe still have him surrounded. That shield canât hold forever!â
âAnd on that note,â Hawke said. He grabbed his phone out of his pocket and called up Kanya, since apparently everything worked again. âHi Kanya, I donât know what happened but all the nonsense is back on.â
âI noticed,â Kanya said. âIâll tell everyone to unleash the nonsense.â
From their hiding places, the forces of the Allied Schools were suddenly bombarded, not by multicolored paintballs, but by an equally multicolored array of lights. Spells were cast, portals were opened, and experimental devices were powered on as the Einstein-Odinson and Zeus-Stephanides forces were fully unleashed. The paint-stained commanders of the Council of Seven wandered to the edge of the hill and watched as pirate ships rolled out, harpies and jetpacks took to the sky, and portals flung paintballs from every possible angle.
âNow all comes to ruin,â one of the commanders mumbled.
âOkay, this is all embarrassing enough without us doing the shakespearean thing.â
âSorry.â
----------------------------------------
Approximately fifteen minutes later, the Einstein-Odinson armies gathered at the top of the island peak to celebrate their victory. It had only taken them about seven minutes to win, but hiking uphill was hard.
âWhoof, I miss a flat campus,â Bruno said, as he rolled his wheelchair to the level summit.
âDonât you have a power setting on that thing?â
âI blew out the battery with the built-in paintball cannon,â Bruno said. He tapped the side of his chair to redeploy the hidden gun. âWorth it.â
Bruno put his gun away and rolled past Vell to congratulate him on a job well done. The moment of camaraderie passed, and was swiftly replaced by outright hostility when the Council of Seven stormed up to Vell.
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âWhatâd you? How did you cheat?â
âI didnât cheat at anything,â Vell said. âYou just lost.â
âWe had eyes on you and your friends every second,â a councilmember said. âWe had every countermeasure prepared, we knew everything about you!â
âAnd thereâs your problem,â Vell said. âYou were prepared to defend against me and everyone I know. So-â
A young blonde man stepped off the sidelines and waved. Vell stepped up and put an arm around his shoulders.
âI asked somebody I didnât know.â
âHi, Iâm Craig,â said Craig.
âEverybody, this is Craig, Iâve never met him before in my life.â
âNice to meet you, Vell.â
âNice to meet you too, Craig,â Vell said. âOnce I realized how hyperfixated you guys were on me, I had Kanya cook up a heist plan and select a student at random to pull it off. You guys were so busy tracking my every move, nobody bothered to follow Craigâs moves.â
âWhich made things really easy,â Craig said. âI pretty much just walked right in and disabled all your security without anyone even noticing.â
âCompletely wasting my heist plans, by the way,â Kanya said.
âWhy would I use a grappling hook to go through the air vents when they left the door open?â
âBecause grappling hook!â
Vell gave Craig a grateful pat on the shoulder and then pushed him away as the grappling hook argument escalated out of control. He returned his attention to the Council of Seven.
âSo, I hope youâve all learned a valuable lesson.â
âWhat could we possibly have learned from this?â
âThat being overlooked isnât necessarily a bad thing?â
âGo fuck yourself, Harlan,â the council spat. âItâs easy to talk about how the bottom isnât so bad when youâre on top.â
âOkay, fine, whatever,â Vell said. He started to walk away, but the Council wasnât ready to let him have the last word.
âWeâre not done yet, Harlan,â they snapped. âWeâll prove we deserve just as much -even more attention than you!â
Vell rolled his eyes and returned to his friends, who were relaxing as the battle ended.
âWe just formally surrendered, so you guys are the undisputed victors,â Jay said. None of the Zeus-Stephanides students were that eager to cross paintballs with Vell again. They knew how that ended. âSorry about those other guys.â
âEh, I didnât really expect it to go any other way,â Vell said. âIâm used to it by now.â
âJust one more problem for you to deal with,â Alex said.
It took her a few seconds to realize the conversation had not continued. Vell was staring at her, and everyone else was staring at Vell staring at her.
âDo I have paint on my face?â
âYeah, Vell, whatâs up?â
In reply, Vell unhooked his gun belt and let his paintball pistols fall to the floor.
âOne second.â
He turned on his heel and started marching right towards the remnants of the Allied Schools alliance. They had stayed a while to lick their wounds (and wipe paint off their clothes), but they all froze when they saw Vell stomping his way towards them.
âCome to gloat?â
âNo. Just ask a question,â Vell said. He stood before the paint-stained Council of Seven and crossed his arms. âWho built the first nuclear reactor?â
The baffled council members looked between each other for a second. They were caught off guard by the question in two ways.
âAre you a physicist? Iâm not a physicist.â
âWas that also Oppenheimer?â
âNo, no, that was just the bomb. I think like...Fermi, maybe?â
âYeah, I think thatâs right,â the council member said. âFermi.â
âWhat about the rest of them?â Vell asked. âFermiâs just one guy, can you name the entire team?â
Nobody even offered a guess this time.
âWhat about the people that created the smallpox vaccine? Do you know who built the first internal combustion engine?â Vell continued. He raised his voice and turned away from the council, towards all the thousands of students that had allied against him. âCan anyone here name the first caveman to carve a stone into a wheel?â
No one answered. Vell continued anyway.
âYou canât name them. Neither can I. Average person probably couldnât either,â Vell said. âIs nuclear fission not important? Does that mean vaccination, engines and wheels arenât important?â
Vell put his attention back on the council. They met his gaze, and were surprised to find that his eyes, while intense and focused, held no anger.
âThe world we live in is built on the work of countless unsung heroes,â Vell continued. âBeing unappreciated doesnât make them unimportant. It doesnât make you unimportant either.â
The students from every school had been milling about and making idle chitchat, but the conversations slowly died out one by one as Vellâs speech continued.
âIâm sorry youâre not getting the recognition you deserve, but weâre scientists,â Vell said. âScience shouldnât be about fame, it should be about building a better tomorrow. And we can build a tomorrow thatâs a hell of a lot better if we stop feuding over the limelight and start working together.â
Nobody responded. Nobody said anything. The members of the council cast sideways glances at him, but most averted their eyes from Vell. He let out a deep sigh.
âAnd also, if you really want that recognition so badly...people pay a hell of a lot more attention to my friends than my enemies.â
Vell held out his hand. The Coyote-Oppenheimer council member stared at his palm, then looked back up at Vell and raised her eyebrow.
âThis is your plan? Say some nice things and hope this entire rivalry just goes away?â
Vell glanced at Alex for a second.
âItâs worked before.â
The Coyote-Oppenheimer representative took such a deep breath that her shoulders raised, and then drooped again when she sighed.
âAnd fuck me,â she said. âItâs working again.â
She stepped forward, took Vellâs hand, and shook it.
âIâm Adrienne.â
âAnd Iâm Hua,â the Wukong-Wu representative said, as they too stepped up to shake Vellâs hand. She was not the last to shake Vellâs hand, though she was the first to ask him a question. âHow do you do that, with the guns?â
âHonestly I donât know, it sort of comes naturally to me,â Vell said. âEven Quenay once told me she doesnât get how I do it.â
âHe tried to train us once,â Hawke said. âDidnât work. Itâs really just inexplicable.â
âHuh.â
âSo, followup question, howâd you build that magic suppression field?â
âI think weâre keeping that a secret until next yearâs game, at least,â Adrienne said.
âOh, come on, Vellâs graduating, you wonât need superweapons to put up a fight,â Kim said. âTell us.â
âHey, just because youâre losing your advantage doesnât mean we have to give up ours,â Hua said.
âHey, whatâs this âourâ business,â the Anansi-Clerk representative, Kwame, said. âThatâs an Anansi-Clerk original.â
âWhat about it?â
âIf weâre not all teaming up against these guys next year,â Kwame said, pointing at Vell and Jay. âThen itâs a free-for-all. Weâre keeping it for ourselves.â
âHow quickly the bonds of brotherhood fail,â Adrienne said, feigning shock. âYou know that means weâre keeping the communications jammer.â
âWeâll live without it.â
âOnly because paintballs are nonlethal.â
The former council fell into semi-friendly bickering about the state of the next game. Vell excused himself and left them to their own devices. He wouldnât be a part of next yearâs war anyway. He felt no need to linger on that topic. He wandered off and took a seat on a large boulder facing one of the campusâs many cliffs, and was soon joined by his girlfriend.
âYou do have a way of bringing people together, Vell,â Skye said. âUsually because they hate you, but theyâre together in hating you.â
âIâm just glad I could turn it around,â Vell said.
âYou sure fucking did,â Skye continued. âI am, for the record, incredibly impressed, but also: where the hell did that come from? Youâre not usually the confrontational type.â
âWell, thatâs the thing,â Vell said. âI couldâve talked to those people from the beginning, but I avoided a confrontation, and that just let a confrontation happen.â
He leaned forward and rested his elbows on his knees.
âItâs just like I handled Alex,â Vell admitted. âHow much better off would we both have been if Iâd tried to help her from the beginning?â
âYou did help her from the beginning,â Skye said. âYouâre the whole reason she still goes to school here. That happened day one.â
âI mean...more than that,â Vell said. âI didnât do anything, I just put up with her. How many other problems am I just putting up with that I could be solving?â
âThatâs a good question,â Skye said. âAnd a hard one to answer.â
âWell, when we get back home, I think I need to start trying.â
âI got your back every step of the way,â Skye said. âThough, usually your front, considering your preferences.â
âMy prefer- ugh, come on,â Vell said. He gave Skye a playful shove. âIâm trying to have a moment here and youâre just being horny about it.â
âI like when youâre decisive,â Skye said. She shoved him right back. âThe confidence is a turn on!â
Vell laughed it off and let her lean on his shoulder to enjoy the view.
----------------------------------------
The march downhill was much easier, much to everyoneâs relief. The Einstein-Odinson students trekked downhill in a disorganized blob, mingling with students from other schools, until they all filed on to their ships and sailed off to their homes. The sun was setting now, and Cane and Hanifa stayed above decks to enjoy the view, although any romance was slightly spoiled by the presence of their undead Dean.
âYou enjoy the show, Dean?â
âSomewhat. I will admit I also fell for Vellâs gambit,â Dean Lichman said. âHad my observation drone fixed squarely on him, completely missed the efforts of Mr. Craig.â
âWell, apparently you didnât miss much,â Hanifa said. By all accounts, Craigâs âheistâ had amounted to walking through a few doors and flipping a few switches. Even his most dramatic retellings could not make it sound exciting.
âI suppose thatâs true,â Dean Lichman said. âIt was a successful venture, in spite of the flaws.â
âWhat flaws?â Cane asked. âEverything went off without a hitch.â
âThe closing ceremonies were meant to be quite different, you know,â Dean Lichman said. âOur patron, Loki, was supposed to appear, alongside the Trickster patrons of the other schools.â
âReally?â
All of the various trickster gods had founded their own schools to ensure they had a steady supply of clever people to outwit, thereby perpetuating their own existence. Aside from those rare attempts to trick or confound the students, the divine patrons rarely made appearances at the schools that bore their names.
âYes, it was to be a grand display,â the Dean sighed. âBut I suppose I should have known better than to expect Trickster gods to keep an appointment.â
âYeah, that makes sense,â Hanifa said. âTheyâre probably off somewhere giggling at us right now.â
âIndeed.â
Dean Lichman stood and excused himself. Hanifa turned to Cane for some cuddling, but found him with a decidedly un-cuddly expression on his face.
âThereâs always that one little thing that doesnât make sense,â he mumbled.
----------------------------------------
âWhatever you hoped to accomplish feeding intel to those students, it didnât work.â
ââWhatever I hoped to accomplishâ,â Kraid said, mocking the dry, dusty voice of the Board of Directors. âI hoped to accomplish annoying Vell Harlan for a few hours, an effort which was a resounding success.â
A few well-placed hints and some tactical information leaks had given the other schools plenty of reason and plenty of methods by which to torment Vell. A proper defeat wouldâve been nice, but Kraid had never really expected it. Even he was a little wary of Vellâs cowboy bullshit.
âYou are using our resources now, Alistair Kraid,â the Board croaked. âOur partnership would benefit from your discretion.â
âYouâre already benefiting from it,â Kraid said. âOur little stunt got all the little has-been gods in one place.â
In the distance, a faint thumping could be heard, as Loki continued his struggle against the magically-sealed tank he was now held in. He was the only god still putting up a fight. The others had given up -or been silenced in other ways.
âTheyâre the closest thing we have to usable test subjects, after all,â Kraid said. âOr did you expect me to cage the only real God on the first try?â
âFrankly, we were expecting you to,â the Board said. âYou rarely back down from a challenge.â
âI am not backing down, I am being a scientist,â Kraid said. He put on some gloves and slid goggles over his dark eyes. âGood experiments require repetition.â
âStill, was capturing all of them entirely necessary?â
âYes,â Kraid said. âEven though theyâre all tricksters, all these gods have their own unique subdomains and areas of influence. If I- we donât accurately account for Quenayâs unique divine sphere, everything we do will be less than useless.â
Kraid tabbed through some of his most recent data, and analyzed the spectrum of divine power. Though considerably weaker than the last true Goddess, these smaller divinities were important clues to the real deal.
âNow if youâll excuse me, gentlemen,â Kraid said, sliding his goggles back into place. âItâs time for my favorite part of science: taking things apart to see how they work.â
Heâd done it a thousand times over, but it never stopped being fun.