In one of his most productive study sessions of the year, Vell got a whole ten pages into the book before getting interrupted. The daily doomsday had already passed, and the knock on his door was fairly calm, so it probably wasnât going to be something completely asinine, at least. He popped open the door and saw his next door neighbor, Theo, standing in the hall with a large bruise on his forehead.
âJeez. You alright, Theo?â
âIâll be fine,â Theo said. âI think I got another one of yours.â
âWhat was it this time?â
As Vellâs neighbor, Theo was an occasional victim of someone or something barging into his dorm thinking it was Vellâs. Theo had displayed downright saintly patience about the frequent misunderstandings, but he had his limits. Vell had replaced Theoâs door for him about three times this year.
âCouple randos barged in, yelled âlava sneak attackâ at me, and then threw this at my head,â Theo said. He deposited a bucket of coarse black stone on Vellâs floor. âPresumably that used to be lava.â
âYeah,â Vell said. âI think I know whatâs going on. You sure youâre good, Theo? Youâre not worried about like, concussions or anything?â
âThey didnât throw very hard,â Theo said. âIâm heading to the med lab just to be safe. See you around, Vell.â
âSee you,â Vell said. He mentally added âget Theo some browniesâ to his to-do list, right behind a far more urgent task: deal with the source of the lava bucket. Given the utter ineptitude of the concept, planning, and execution, Vell had a sneaking suspicion he knew who the culprits were.
***
âRow, you idiots, row,â Leanna commanded. âTheyâre gaining on us!â
âIâm rowing as fast as I can,â Chicken squawked.
âAnd theyâre still gaining!â
âWeâre âgainingâ because youâre not going anywhere,â Kim said. She gave a length of rope a quick tug. âYouâre still tied to the docks, dipshits.â
The hasty escape attempt of the Patschke-Puck students had been thwarted, as their plans usually were, by their own stupidity.
âAlso, this boat has an engine,â Hawke said. He tapped his knuckles against a metal outboard motor.
âHuh. Has that been there the whole time?â
âI presume,â Vell said. âDid you row here all the way from Germany?â
âI didnât,â Leanna said. âThey did.â
She pointed over her shoulder at Chicken and Cain, who looked exhausted, but had killer triceps.
âCertainly explains why your bucket of lava cooled,â Vell said. He tossed the bucket of hardened volcanic stone back in their boat. âWhat exactly were you planning to do with that?â
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âAssassinate you,â Leanna said.
âCool. Get in line,â Vell said. âDo you have a particular reason, or just fucking around?â
âRevenge.â
âFor something specific, or just in general?â
âFor Leigh and Harmony!â
Vell racked his brain for a second, and could not come up with any particular reason why Leigh and Harmony would need revenging.
âBecause they...graduated?â
âBecause theyâre dead,â Leanna said. She pointed an accusing finger at Vell. âAnd itâs all your fault!â
âWhat? How did they die?â
âThey poisoned themselves,â Leanna said.
âAnd how is that my fault?â
âBecause they were trying to poison you!â
Vell didnât know whether he wanted to strangle Leanna or himself more.
âThatâs not my fault.â
âYes it is!â
Leanna grabbed the bucket of cooled lava and chucked it at Vell. With lightning-fast reflexes that shocked even his friends, Vell caught the bucket out of midair and whipped it right back at Leanna. The bucket made a dull thud as it bounced off a skull even thicker than the stone inside it.
âEnough!â
With a huff of frustration, Vell reached down and untied the boat for the Patschke-Puck students. Theyâd never be smart enough to do it themselves, after all. Once it was done, he gave the boat a kick and set it away from the coast.
âJust get out of here,â Vell snapped. âAnd hey, Leanna: you shouldâve graduated three fucking years ago! Move on already!â
âI donât have anywhere else to go,â Leanna snapped back.
Vellâs frustration snapped in half.
âPatschke-Puck is where people go when no one else will take them,â Leanna said. âMaybe it was messy, and maybe Leigh was super rude and bossy, but I belonged with them! I had a role, a purpose, people who counted on me, for the first time in my life!â
Vell experienced exactly two seconds of sincere sympathy before Kim slapped him in the small of the back.
âCut it out, Mr. Sympathy For The Devil,â Kim said. âHey, Leanna! Thatâs real sweet and all, but what does it have to do with you repeatedly trying to murder us?â
âRight, repeated murder attempts,â Vell said. He had a lot of sympathy for a lot of people, but he drew the line at those who tried to kill him (on purpose). âLook, Iâm glad you have your little community, but can you keep it far, far away from us?â
âNo! Iâll keep coming back, Vell Harlan,â Leanna said. âIâll never stop until my friends are avenged!â
âI could sink their boat,â Kim said. âNobody would ever question it.â
âNo,â Vell said. âI guess itâll just be one more thing we have to-â
Any conversation was undercut by the sudden blaring of Avril Lavigneâs âGirlfriendâ, a song fully capable of blasting any thoughts out of even the most coherent heads. Vell and company turned to stare at the boat as Leanna pulled out a flip-phone and answered it.
âHello? What? Harmony? Leigh?â Leanna said, shock evident in her voice. âWerenât you- faked your death? Insurance fraud? You need bail money? Iâll be right there!â
Leanna folded her phone and chucked it into the ocean.
âNever mind all that vengeance stuff, bye! Iâll never see you again!â
Leanna took hold of the oars herself and started rowing away, much to the consternation of Cain and Chicken.
âHey, wait, I still want to beat them at something!â
Leanna paid no heed to her juniors and kept rowing away at high speeds. Cain stood on the prow of the boat and shook his fist at his ârivalsâ.
âWeâll get you next time, Einsteins!â
At that point, Chicken remembered the motor and turned it on, sending the Patschke-Puck trio speeding over the horizon. Vell watched them go and shrugged.
âAt least theyâre happy,â Vell said.
âArenât you forgetting something?â
Vell put a hand on his chin and thought about it for a second. His forehead wrinkled, to no results.
âNo?â
âThey say âweâll get you next time, Einsteins!â,â Hawke said. âAnd then you say âyou probably wonâtâ.â
âOh. Nah, Iâm not going to be here next year,â Vell said. âOne of you guys can say it, if you want.â
âOh, oh, can I do it?â Alex asked. âIâm not part of any recurring bits yet.â
âKnock yourself out,â Hawke said.
âYou probably wonât,â Alex shouted, as loud as she could. âDo you think they heard me? They were pretty far away.â
âItâs the thought that counts,â Vell said. He gave her an encouraging pat on the back. âNow if youâll excuse me, I need to buy some brownies and then forget this ever happened. Iâve wasted too much brain bandwidth on those fuckers already.â