Samson wandered across campus, looking for more messes to clean up. An Einstein-Odinson student had tried to replicate the magic/tech shutdown field their opponents had used during the paintball war, but thanks to an overzealous attitude and a lack of concern for safety features, theyâd ended up shutting down everything on campus without warning. The sudden failure of a hundred experiments had made for dozens of different micro-disasters rather than their one usual large incident. Samson headed for his own computer engineering department to make sure his friends were alright.
âSamson!â
At the sound of Helenaâs voice, Samson whipped around and went on guard. He snatched the rune that summoned his crossbow and activated it, readying the weapon to fire. He did a quick spin and aimed his crossbow down the various halls of the crossroads he had found himself at, but saw nothing.
âHelena?â
âYes, Samson, very canny observation.â
âWhere are you?â Samson demanded. âAre you invisible and just trying to mess with me?â
âNo, you moron, Iâm on the floor.â
Samson looked down. Helena was flat on the ground, her cheek smushed against the tiles, waving a few fingers in Samsonâs directions.
âHi, yes, down here,â Helena said. âSome kind of EMP today, apparently?â
âSome kind, yeah,â Samson said. He looked over Helenaâs prone body, and the inactive brace that went up her arms and down her spine and legs. âSo, let me guess, with no power, that thingâs mostly dead weight, right?â
âPrecisely,â Helena said.
âAnd?â
âAnd I need help,â Helena mumbled. Since she was already on the floor, Helena didnât have much pride to swallow at the moment.
âGood luck with that,â Samson said.
âSamson! Iâm not going to bother asking you to haul me around campus, but Iâm hoping your annoying morality at least compels you to pick me up and prop me against the wall.â
Samson looked down at her and raised an eyebrow.
âWould it help if I mentioned that the longer I stay like this, the more likely it is my lungs will collapse?â
Samson raised his other eyebrow. Helena let out a grunting sigh.
âPlease?â
âThere we go,â Samson said. âSo, anything I should know about how and where I grab you?â
âIf you just grab the brace on my spine there you can sort of use it as a handle,â Helena said. âI canât guarantee it wonât hurt me, but if it does, it isnât your fault.â
Getting dragged around hurt a lot, in fact, but Helena kept it to herself. Most things hurt a lot. Once Samson got her in place, Helena took a deep breath and shifted her body as much as she could to get comfortable.
âPerfect,â Helena said. âNow, letâs seeâ¦â
She tried to raise one arm in the hopes of undoing the latches that held her into the brace. Her hand shook and trembled as it moved a few inches, but ultimately collapsed short of the goal. Helena was disappointed but not at all surprised. Her DNA didnât know how to put any part of her body together right, arm muscles included.
âAlright then, thatâs not happening,â Helena said. âI guess Iâm just going to sit here for a while.â
The angel and devil on Samsonâs shoulders got into an intense but brief argument. The angel won. Heâd been doing that a lot lately. Samson rolled his eyes, bent down, and undid the latches on Helenaâs arms. She winced visibly as each one came undone, and Samson saw the red welts underneath each one.
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âDoes this thing hurt you?â
âOnly most of the time,â Helena said. âItâs not that much worse than the crutches.â
âWhy donât you get a wheelchair, or something?â
âOh, so people can look down on me literally on top of metaphorically?â Helena said, voice dripping with sarcasm. âWonderful idea, Samson.â
Samson undid the last latch holding the brace to Helenaâs legs, and took a seat next to her, much to Helenaâs chagrin.
âIf I stood you up, could you walk somewhere?â
âNot without you supporting me the whole way,â Helena said. âWhich I know you wonât do.â
âI would.â
âOh, fuck you, Samson.â
âWhy do you do that?â Samson asked. âYou get mad at people who are just trying to help you, you hang out with bastards like Kraid, you hate Vell for what, being a good person?â
âI donât hate him for being a good person,â Helena spat. âI hate him because thereâs no such thing as a good person.â
It didnât take much for Helena to get red in the face, but it was especially red now. She glared at Samson with an entire lifetimeâs worth of hatred in her eyes.
âDo you think you people invented kindness? That no one ever tried to help me, ever tried to be my friend?â Helena snapped. âIâve had friends before, Iâve had saviors before, and every single one of them let me down.â
She averted her gaze and looked down at her own mismatched legs.
âPeople are my friend right up until they get sick of having to wait while I limp after them, or get scared when I keep having seizures at their parties,â Helena said. âDoctors try to save me right up until the budget gets too high or the work gets too hard. At some point everyone decides Iâm not worth the effort.â
Had she been able to, Helena might have cried. Her tear ducts were just one entry on the long list of her broken parts.
âI had one person. One. I thought Joan would do whatever it took, for as long as it took,â Helena said. âAnd then she met Vell fucking Harlan. Now suddenly thereâs lines she canât cross, things she canât do. Now sheâs just as useless as the rest of them.â
âHelena, Joan was doing some fucked up shit-â
âIt was necessary.â
âIt was fucked up, and it made her life miserable,â Samson concluded. That wiped any anger off of Helenaâs face. âShe lost her friends, her relationships, her chance to go to her dream school, all because of what you wanted her to do.â
âExcuse me if I donât feel bad,â Helena said. âConsidering what Iâve had to deal with-â
âOh fuck off with that attitude,â Samson snapped. âYeah, Helena, your life sucks, and you have every right to be mad about that, but you have no right to take that anger out on innocent people.â
âAm I not allowed to complain?â
âYou can complain all you fucking want,â Samson said. âHell, Iâd even be okay with you doing some evil shit if you aimed it at the people who deserve it. Iâm talking about you working with a homicidal maniac to ruin all our lives! And that one time you killed me with a bomb, which, by the way: still mad about. Everything youâve done to Joan, to Vell, to me, itâs not some righteous anger, itâs just you throwing a tantrum.â
Samson stood up, turned around, and pointed a finger at Helena.
âYouâre so worried about looking pathetic because youâre sick, or in a wheelchair, or whatever else,â Samson said. âBut the most pathetic thing about is your attitude.â
After waiting a few seconds, Helena offered no rebuttal, so Samson turned his back on her and walked away.
âSamson!â
He didnât stop walking. Helena rolled her eyes and raised her voice.
âThanks for the help.â
âAny time,â Samson said. Much to his chagrin, he meant it.
----------------------------------------
âSo I kind of get where sheâs coming from but itâs still a little fucked up,â Samson said. He had recapped the conversation to Vell and Joan, after waiting for the second loop so Joan would actually remember it.
âItâs not really surprising,â Joan sighed. âSheâs been burned a lot.â
âSo sheâs never giving herself the chance to be disappointed again,â Vell said. It explained why Helena was so willing to work with Kraid. He was already at the rock-bottom of morality, so he had no room to disappoint her. âHow do we get her to listen to us if sheâs already decided she doesnât trust any of us?â
âIf she wonât listen to anyone good, maybe sheâll listen to someone evil,â Samson suggested. âMaybe we can get Alex to start acting like a bitch againâ
Joan and Vell made two entirely different but equally scathing expressions at Samson.
âOkay, not helpful,â Samson said. âThen I guess our only option is proving her wrong. Give her the answer sheâs been looking for without doing evil shit.â
âAll comes back to the rune in the end, doesnât it?â
âIt is literally the meaning of life, brother,â Samson said. âI think itâs the biggest possible deal of all big deals.â
âIt sucks we have to play this kind of game,â Joan said. âBut at least weâre going to win.â
Vell didnât say anything. Joan directed her scathing expression at him this time.
âYeah, of course,â Vell said.
âMore confidence, Vell.â
âYouâre damn right weâre going to win!â
âToo far the other direction,â Joan said. âYou turned into a youth pastor trying too hard to be cool for a second.â
âThatâs the worst thing youâve ever said to me.â
âDidnât I kill you once?â
âYeah, but you didnât insult me while you did it.â