After a few minutes of impatient squawking, Vell finally relented and handed over the remnants of his apple. He wasnât that hungry anyway. The ostrich snatched it out of his hands, threw it to the ground, and began to voraciously peck at the remnants. Vell returned to his homework.
Tiny chunks of apple were still flying moments later when Cane walked around the corner. He latched on to Hanifaâs wrist and walked the long way around to join Vell at the picnic table.
âHey Vell,â Cane said. âI assume the ostrich is part of whatever it is youâre doing today?â
âHmm? Oh, no,â Vell said. He looked up at the ostrich as if he had forgotten it was there. âSomebody just asked me to watch it for them.â
âSomebody- hold on,â Cane said. He let go of Hanifa and walked around the table to the ostrich, much to Hanifaâs chagrin.
âCane, weâve talked about this, an ostrich is not one of the animals you could beat in a fight,â Hanifa said. He topped out at a large dog, and even that was only a maybe.
âIâm not going to fight it,â Cane said. He edged closer while the ostrich was still preoccupied picking at apple scraps. âJust going to get in close here andâ¦â
After ensuring the ostrich was not paying attention to him, Cane reached forward and grabbed the collar that helped leash it to a stake in the ground. He dug his hand around the interior of the tight cord for a second and then found what he was looking for.
âThere we go,â Cane said. He removed his hand, stepped away from the ostrich, and held out a small mechanical device. âSome kind of short range scanner.â
Getting Vell to agree to watch an ostrich was easier than getting him to agree to an invasive scan, something some Quenay-curious students had taken advantage of. Cane dropped the device on the ground and then slammed his foot down on it. Almost immediately, two heads popped out of the nearby bushes.
âHey, those are expensive!â
Cane lifted his foot to reveal an entirely undamaged device. The fake âdamageâ to their machine had brought the spies out of hiding, just as planned.
âAnd you assholes are spying on my friend,â Cane said. âCome here!â
The two students lurking in the bush broke into a dead sprint as Cane ran after them. Hanifa rolled her eyes as her boyfriend sprinted out of sight.
âHe wonât hurt anyone,â Vell said.
âI know. He just likes to play tough,â Hanifa said. âHeâll be back once he thinks theyâve been scared enough.â
Vell nodded, and jotted down another answer for his coursework.
âSo, howâve you been, Vell?â
âIâve been getting by,â Vell said. He looked up from his work for the first time since Hanifa sat down. âSorry if I seem busy. Itâs just that...I am busy.â
âApparently not too busy to watch an ostrich.â
âHeâs chill.â
The ostrich let out a small chirp.
âAnyway, did you and Cane need something?â
âMaybe he did, but I donât know it,â Hanifa said. âHe said we should try and find you, I guess he wanted something. Apparently not something important.â
The two spying students crossed a gap in the distance, with Cane hot on their heels.
âAt least not more important than chasing some guys.â
âSometimes chasing guys is very important.â
The current instant of chasing did not turn out to be that important, and Cane returned to the table visibly exhausted.
âThanks for that,â Vell said. Getting scared like that always made people a little more likely to leave him alone.
âNo problem,â Cane said. He then pointed to the ostrich. âYou still got this thing around?â
âWhat am I supposed to do, set an ostrich loose on campus? At least heâs leashed.â
The ostrich had tugged at the stake in the ground multiple times, but could not free itself. Regardless of the circumstances, Vell did not have the time to do ostrich wrangling, and figured having it staked here was better than letting it roam free.
âItâs fine, Iâll get it out of here,â Cane said. He took hold of the leash in one hand and twisted the stake out of the ground with the other.
âHere, let me give you a hand,â Hanifa said.
âNo, itâs cool, you take a seat,â Cane insisted. âYou, uh, you two hang out for a bit. Iâll be back soon.â
Cane allowed no further argument, and hauled the ostrich away as fast as the ostrich itself would allow, which was not very fast. Vell and Hanifa watched him struggle with it for a few minutes before he managed to wrangle it around a corner and out of sight, and even then they could hear the frustrated squawks of an ornery ostrich in the distance.
âThatâs weird.â
âYeah, youâd think an ostrich would put up more of a fight,â Vell said.
âNot that,â Hanifa said. âThough that is also weird. I meant him telling me to stay. Did he sound nervous to you?â
âI donât know, maybe a little,â Vell said. âI assumed it was ostrich related.â
âI donât think so,â Hanifa said. âHeâs been on edge lately. I assumed it was just graduation stress, but maybe thereâs something else going on.â
âCould very well still be ostrich related,â Vell said. âActually, why the hell are we sitting here? An ostrich can kill a man in one kick.â
âGood point.â
Both got up to go help Cane wrangle an ostrich.
----------------------------------------
Luke stared very intently at a rock. The rock continued to very intently be a rock.
âHey, Luke,â Cane said. âWhyâre you looking at that rock like it called your mom a bitch?â
âBecause it did,â Luke said.
âOh. You want me to grab a hammer so we can smash it?â
âI think that was a joke, Cane,â Hanifa said.
âYour better half is correct.â
âDonât look at me like that, a talking rock wouldnât be the weirdest thing weâve seen,â Cane said. Luke could not disagree. âAnyway, you switch to geology or something? Why do your classes involve rocks now?â
âItâs not specific to rocks,â Luke said. âPart of my physics finals involve estimating physical properties like drag, density, terminal velocity, et cetera, through simple observational techniques. No tools. Iâm practicing on this rock.â
This book was originally published on Royal Road. Check it out there for the real experience.
Luke continued to stare at the rock. Cane stared at Luke staring at the rock.
âRiveting,â Cane said. âYou need a hand with that?â
âSomehow, Iâm pretty sure Iâve got it under control,â Luke said, as the rock continued to be a completely normal and inert rock.
âHanifa makes stuff,â Cane said, prompting a somewhat confused grunt from his girlfriend. âShe knows all about the properties of things.â
âI work with leather and fabric, not basalt,â Hanifa said.
âObsidian, actually,â Luke said.
âCase in point,â Hanifa said. She took Cane by the hand and pulled him a step away. âI think what Luke really needs is to focus, babe.â
âI could also use a slightly more interesting rock, if you find one,â Luke said.
âWeâll keep an eye out,â Hanifa said.
âBut...ah, never mind,â Cane said. He walked away, still looking nervous.
----------------------------------------
With a loud scream, Hawke went flying through the air overhead, and Kim jumped up to catch him.
âThanks.â
âCanât have you landing on anyoneâs head, big guy,â Kim said. She landed hard and dropped Hawke on the ground. âAnd try not to do that again. These things are huge, Hawke, they shouldnât be hard to dodge.â
âAbout that.â
A swinging tentacle slammed into Kim and launched her into the air.
âTry not to land on anyoneâs head!â
Even as she spun through the air, Hawke could tell Kim was flipping him off. He chuckled to himself and then got back to his real priority: running away from orca/shark/octopus hybrids.
âYou seem remarkably chipper about all this,â Skye snapped. She was concocting an anti-mutagen for the hybrids, while Vell led the loopers in her defense.
âItâs just nice to be doing something familiar, is all,â Vell said. âIt feels more manageable.â
âExactly what about this is familiar?â Skye said. She snatched a few valuable chemicals off a shelf and then ducked as a tentacle swung overhead. âOr manageable, for that matter?â
âLong story, tell you later,â Vell said. âJust some good old fashioned Marine Biology department nonsense.â
Unfortunately for Vell, there was a great deal of nonsense from a great number of sources in the universe. Todayâs source was Cane.
âVell!â
âCane?â
Cane dragged Hanifa under the flailing tentacle of an orcarktopus and then smacked another one aside with a large garden shovel he was carrying.
âHey,â Cane said. âWeâre here to help.â
âWe kind of have this under control,â Vell said. He shot another orca hybrid in the face to scare it off. âMostly. Not sure you can really help here.â
Hanifa nodded in frantic agreement.
âIf anything we are actively making the situation wo- Look out!â
An orca-hybrid lunged at the group. Cane valiantly smacked it in the face with a shovel, which had little effect. The second metal impact was far more effective, since it was Kim plummeting down to earth and landing directly on the creatureâs skull.
âLanded on its head,â Kim shouted in Hawkeâs direction. âHey Cane, Hanifa. You guys probably shouldnât be here.â
Kim dashed off to dole out more orca-based violence before they could respond. Vell wanted to shift the topic anyway.
âCane, what are you doing here?â
âTrying to help-â
âI mean with Hanifa,â Vell said. âYou keep bringing her around, trying to get her to hang out with me or Luke.â
âWhy is that so suspicious-â
âCane! I can tell youâre up to something too,â Hanifa said.
âI just like you guys, and you never hang out,â Cane said. âIs it so weird that I want my best friends to get to know my girlfriend?â
âUnder the current circumstances, yes,â Hanifa said. She took cover behind a desk to avoid the gaze of another orca hybrid.
âWell I figured that in high stress situations-â Cane paused to swat aside a tentacle with his shovel. âPeople tend to show their true selves!â
âActually the opposite is usually true,â Vell said. âHigh stress levels cause people to make impulsive reactions, and behave in ways very uncharacteristic of their usual-â
An orca hybrid came crashing through a nearby wall, and its gaping jaws latched on to the desk Hanifa was hiding behind. She kicked away from the colossal fangs of the beast, scrambled to her feet, and ran off screaming.
âHanifa!â
âExactly what I mean,â Vell said. âIn a less extreme situation, nobody normal would abandon their boyfriend like that.â
âAm I not normal, then?â Skye asked, as she plugged away at her chemicals.
âNope, and I love it!â
----------------------------------------
âFucking Jerome stealing my fucking vials again,â Skye grumbled. She filled her hands with containers of orca, shark, and octopus DNA and then stormed off to secure them even better. No matter how hard she locked down her samples, someone always found a way to break them out eventually. Usually Jerome, that fucker.
âAnd now that that nonsense is handled, time to go deal with the other nonsense,â Vell said. He texted Luke that he was free and got moving. His former roommate met him halfway, and the two headed to Caneâs dorm together.
âSo, what do you think is going on in Caneâs head?â
âIâve got my suspicions, but I want to talk to him first,â Vell said. âThereâs a lot that could be going on there.â
Relationships were complicated enough, as Vell knew firsthand, and with the stress of school (and occasional orca-based incidents) added on top, Cane might be acting weird for a lot of different reasons. Vell kept his mind open to all the many possibilities as he knocked on Caneâs door.
âVell, Luke, what are you guys doing here?â
âTalking. Maybe doing some mild to moderate haranguing, depending on how the conversation goes,â Luke said.
âYeah, cool, let me just call Hanifa, Iâve been meaning-â
âNo,â Luke insisted. âThatâs actually what weâre here to talk about.â
âYouâve been weirdly insistent on us hanging out with Hanifa lately,â Vell said.
âWhat? Is that a problem? Do you not like her?â
âWe like her just fine, Cane, youâre just being weird about it,â Luke said. âIs there something going on with you and her?â
âNo, nothing, except a great relationship,â Cane said. âYouâve just barely ever spent any time with her. Is it weird that I want my best friends to know my girlfriend?â
âItâs not inherently weird, but you are doing it in a weird way,â Luke said.
âWell I just wanted to get your guys opinion before- you know, graduation,â Cane said. Vell raised an eyebrow.
âGraduation?â
âYeah, graduation,â Cane said. âThereâs not a lot of time left, and -and stop looking at me with that wrinkly forehead, man.â
Vell continued to look, and to have a wrinkly forehead. He was thinking real hard about something, which Cane did not like. What he liked even less was when Vell stopped thinking and stepped up to put a hand on his shoulder.
âCane. You and Hanifa are a good couple,â Vell said. âAnd if you ask her, I think sheâll say yes.â
It took a moment for Luke to follow the thread. The look of embarrassment on Caneâs face was the final piece of the puzzle, and Luke let out a surprised gasp.
âCane Beukes, are you thinking about getting down on one knee? Popping the question? Making an honest woman of Hanifa??â
âI would appreciate it if you were chill about this,â Cane said. âBut...yes. And get the fuck inside, Iâm not having this conversation standing in a fucking doorway.â
Cane dragged them both inside, and grabbed both of them something to drink, both to be polite and also to have an excuse to put the conversation off slightly longer. Eventually he could stall no longer, and Cane was forced to live out one of his least favorite things: talking about his feelings.
âYeah. Iâve been thinking about proposing a lot,â Cane said. âWeâve already decided weâre moving in together after we graduate. Figure I might as well go one step further, right?â
âYou could give yourself some time after the move to let things settle,â Luke said. âBut if you love Hanifa and she loves you, go for it.â
âIt ainât so much about love, Iâve got no doubt about that. Itâs the logistics,â Cane said. âWeâve got to find a place to live, get jobs, get settled, Iâve got to adjust to living in Egypt. Feels like thereâs a lot going on before adding a wedding into it.â
âWell, like I said, you can always wait, let all that play out first,â Luke said. âNo harm in it.â
âAnd if youâre really worried, maybe just talk to Hanifa about it,â Vell said. âSeeing how she feels about getting married right now could make things a lot easier.â
âThat is completely lacking in romance, Harlan,â Cane said.
âSome people find practicality romantic,â Vell said with a shrug. âIf you want to commit to something, you plan it, and if you want to commit to something together, you should plan it together.â
âWait a minute,â Luke said. âHave you been talking with Skye?â
âIt, uh, came up after her dad visited,â Vell mumbled. âShe says we have to have lived together for a while before she wants to really open that can of worms. Same approach might work for you and Hanifa.â
âMaybe,â Cane said. He took a sip of his beer and rubbed his face for a moment. âI think Iâm getting too worked up over this. Weâve got to at least graduate first.â
âSmart. You shouldâve just sat down and talked to us at the start, Cane,â Luke said. âThis was, what, two minute conversation? Couldâve saved you a lot of stress.â
âIâm not the type of guy to beg for help with dumb shit like this,â Cane said. âBut...thanks. I think I just needed some advice from the two smartest guys I know. Man, I do not know what Iâm going to do when you two arenât around.â
Though Vell had extended an invitation to join Harlan Industries, neither of his former roommates had accepted it, opting for opportunities closer to home. Part of the reason Cane had opted to move to Egypt was an abundance of job opportunities near Cairo, and Luke was apparently already on track for a job at the University of Dublin.
âDonât be talking like weâre never going to see each other again,â Luke said.
âThree guys on three different continents does make it hard to arrange movie nights,â Vell said. Throughout the past four years, Luke and Cane had been reliable constants in a chaotic world. Soon he would go from seeing them nearly every day to being lucky to see them at all.
âYeah, weâre not breaking up the band yet. It seems like weâve got a wedding or two to plan for,â Luke said. âAnd- damn. I just realized Iâm the only single one here. Howâd that happen?â
âMost people probably think youâre out of their league,â Vell said. Luke was, objectively, a very beautiful man.
âTheyâre right,â Luke said. âBut Iâm not an asshole. Iâm willing to date down.â
âIf you want to not seem like an asshole, maybe donât refer to it as âdating downâ,â Cane said.
âShit."