âAlright, Vell Harlan, letâs do a quick recap of your situation,â Kim said.
âWe really donât have to,â Vell sighed. Kim did it anyway.
âYou devoted all of yesterday to an endeavor which you are not good at, donât enjoy, arenât getting paid for, and is actively detrimental to your academic career,â Kim said. âYou got so overwhelmed by this newfound responsibility you forgot your studies, had to spend most of your evening bothering your classmates and the rest of it desperately trying to catch up on your studies, which caused you to lose sleep. So now youâre up for round two, except sleep-deprived this time?â
âIt still has to get done,â Vell said. âAnd hey, this time I have people already making spare notes for me, so I donât have to go through that whole thing again!â
âOh, good, one problem among several dozen resolved,â Samson said. âItâs time to face the music, Vell, this is whole teaching thing is a whomper.â
âScientifically speaking, it has whomped,â Alex said. âFreddy and I ran the calculations.â
âYou canât calculate for that,â Vell said.
âYes you can,â Alex said. âI have the math right here.â
She held up a complex sheet of facts and figures, which Vell ignored. Hawke grabbed it to take a closer look.
âHmm, carry the two, account for time...add in neglecting Skye,â Hawke mumbled. âOh geez, this is actually worse than I thought. You got to quit, Vell.â
âI am not quitting,â Vell said. âNot while thereâs no replacement.â
Though he had spent a sleepless night in search of a substitute, Dean Lichman had not yet found a suitable replacement for Professor Nguyen. Since he was not quite so close to Vell to be aware of all the difficulties he was facing in his new role, the Dean had no qualms about allowing Vell to continue. Those who were much closer had significantly more qualms. Almost all possible qualms, in fact.
âI donât know where this stubbornness is coming from, Vell,â Kim said. âBut I hope you get over it soon, for your sake.â
âSorry Iâm trying to help people,â Vell grunted. âMaybe youâre right, I should just tell several hundred students to go fuck themselves because Iâm more important, apparently.â
âUgh, youâre starting to sound like me,â Alex grunted.
âLook, I appreciate the concern, but Iâm handling it,â Vell said. âYeah, I got a little behind yesterday, but I also had to carve and combine an entire nine-rune sequence for that Shamaxus guy.â
âNine?â
âYeah,â Vell said. âI know they were only a few lines each, but thatâs still a lot of work.â
âI know, but Vell, I was in charge of hauling the reliquary back to the archaeology lab,â Alex said. âThere were definitely only eight runes on that thing.â
All eyes turned to Vell, and he shook them off.
âThat canât be right, if Iâd broken the sequence the whole thing never wouldâve worked, the Runelord wouldâve escaped by now,â Vell said. Then his forehead wrinkled. âUnless I missed the âchargeâ rune, thatâd leave the whole sequence with barely enough energy to last-â
In the distance, the archaeology lab blew up. The conversation died down as the shockwave passed through the room and rattled the shelves of Professor Nguyenâs office.
âI was in a hurry, alright?â
***
One time loop and a repaired rune sequence later, the Runelord had been imprisoned for a second, more permanent time, and Vell had gone right back to work as a professor. Nothing Alex had been able to say to him had made any difference, so she stuck to watching from the sidelines as Vell marched into the dining hall, got something to eat, and marched right back out. He didnât even stop to sit down and relax.
âIs it really that bad?â Freddy asked.
âItâs worse, if anything,â Alex said. Freddy didnât even know about the Runelord or the explosions. âVellâs having a tough time with this.â
âItâs weird to think that after everything heâs been through, teaching is what gives him the most trouble,â Freddy said.
âHeâd probably be doing a lot better if it werenât for...you know,â Alex mumbled. âProfessor Nguyen.â
As much as the rigors of academic life were challenging Vell, the pressure and guilt were even worse. He would be more willing to step back if he didnât feel like he had to live up to Professor Nguyenâs legacy, at least, Alex was sure of that.
âI get it,â Freddy said. âI didnât really know Professor Nguyen that well, because she terrified me-â
Alex nodded in agreement. She had met Nguyen only once, but the memory of that stare haunted her.
â-but it seemed like Vell really respected her.â
âVery much so,â Alex said. âAnd I guess the feeling was mutual. She wouldnât have asked him to do this if she didnât think he was capable.â
âI donât think she really knew what she was asking, though.â
While Vell certainly had the knowledge required to be a teacher, he did not have the temperament, the resources, and most crucially, the time necessary to dedicate himself to it. His life had been a clusterfuck in six different ways before all this had begun, and now it was a clusterfuck in at least seven. Possibly more.
âI know. I wish there was something I could do to help,â Alex said. âI feel like shit, not being able to help Vell after all heâs-.â
Alex almost managed to take another bite of her lunch before some of her braincells sparked. She froze with a piece of lettuce dangling right in front of her open mouth.
âAlex? You look like you had an epiphany,â Freddy said.
âBecause I did,â Alex said. âI need to go.â
She abandoned her salad, gave Freddy a kiss on the cheek (an act which caused him to turn bright red), and then ran away. She knew what she needed to do, but it would require some preparation. This sort of thing didnât come naturally to her.
***
â-And that mostly covers the Ikoshi Method,â Vell said. He checked the time. âAnd perfect timing, because we are about done.â
A few hands in the classroom went up.
This tale has been unlawfully obtained from Royal Road. If you discover it on Amazon, kindly report it.
âSorry, I really donât have time for questions,â Vell said. âIâll be here- I might be here tomorrow, though, so if we have time I can answer it then.â
Vell returned to Professor Nguyenâs office before he could get pestered any further. He made it about halfway through packing up his papers before someone knocked on his door.
âI donât really have office hours,â Vell said. âBut if youâre desperate, I guess-â
âVell, itâs me,â Alex said. Vell opened the door for her, and she reviewed some notecards in her hands as she stepped through.
âAlex, whatâre you doing?â
âIâm not good at this kind of stuff, I want to make sure Iâm doing it right,â Alex said.
âAlex, I swear to god, if you cast some kind of spell on me-â
Alex tucked the notecards away and threw her arms wide, and Vell got worried she really was going to cast a spell on him. He flinched, but the green glow he was expecting never came. Instead, Alex stepped forward and grabbed him in one of the most uncomfortable hugs of his life.
âIâm sorry about Professor Nguyen,â Alex mumbled. Vell bit his tongue.
âThereâs nothing to be sorry for. She was-â Vellâs words caught in his throat. âShe made her choice.â
âShe was ready to go, but you werenât ready for her to leave,â Alex said. âIâm sorry you couldnât help her, Vell. But what youâre doing isnât going to change anything.â
âThat isnât- get off me,â Vell said. He shook Alex off and went back to the desk to pack up his things. âIâm not doing this because of- I mean, I am doing it for her, but she asked me to! For the students.â
âYouâre doing it for you, Vell,â Alex said. âYou want to pour yourself into this and make up for the fact you think you didnât do enough.â
âOf course I didnât do enough,â Vell snapped. âIf Iâd done enough, Professor Nguyen would still be alive.â
Vell grabbed the last of his papers, slammed them into his bag, and then collapsed into the chair behind the desk.
âShe came to save me when I got kidnapped,â Vell said. âAnd I couldnât even...â
He shouldâve done more, said more, but instead Vell had backed down. Accepted something he shouldnât have accepted. He felt like the biggest idiot on Earth.
âProfessor Nguyen didnât need to be saved, Vell. She was ready. She made her choice,â Alex said. âYou just need to honor it.â
âI am honoring it,â Vell said. He gestured to the desk in front of him. âThis is me honoring it.â
âVell. Look at me.â
When Vell looked up to face Alex, she was holding a mirror right in front of him. All he could see was his own face, with coarse stubble on his chin and dark circles under his eyes. He had grabbed at or toyed with his hair out of stress enough that it was a tangled mess.
âDo you think thatâs what honor looks like?â
âHonor is more of an internal quality, the fact I need a shower has nothing to do with it,â Vell said. He shoved Alexâs mirror aside and stood up. âAnd going after someoneâs physical appearance is always kind of a dick move.â
âSorry. Iâm just trying to make a point,â Alex said. âThis isnât good for you. And itâs not what Professor Nguyen would want.â
She stepped up and grabbed Vell by the shoulders. He started to worry another terrible hug was coming, but Alex stopped there.
âYou want to take care of her students. Honor her legacy,â Alex said. âI get that. But youâre her student. Youâre her legacy. You need to take care of yourself too.â
Vell could not manage to look her in the eye.
âI shouldâve done more,â he mumbled.
âYou did enough, Vell,â Alex assured him. âYouâve done enough. Give yourself a break.â
Alex leaned in and gave him another hug, much to Vellâs chagrin. He tolerated it for ten seconds before realizing she was probably not going to let go on her own.
âI hate to ruin the mood, Alex, but you really got to work on your hug technique,â Vell said. She stepped back and balled her fists.
âDamn it,â she said. She pulled the notecards back out and scanned them. Now that he had a closer look, Vell could see they were all various diagrams of hugs. âI worked so hard on that. Was it the elbows?â
âShoulders, actually. Very pointy,â Vell said. âReally need to lead with the chest. Were all your preparations hug-related?â
âWell, yes, I kind of felt like I knew what to say,â Alex said. âIâm terrible at hugging, though, havenât done it very much.â
âYouâll learn.â
âSo, terrible hugging aside...did anything I said help?â
âUgh. I donât know, maybe?â Vell said. âI need to sleep on it. I need to sleep in general, frankly.â
âWell, somebody made sure the apocalypse happened early this morning,â Alex said. âYou should have plenty of time to rest.â
âHeh. I still have to deal with catching up on notes, among other things,â Vell said.
âThen Iâll get out of your way,â Alex said.
âOne more thing, though,â Vell said.
âYeah?â
Vell held his arms out.
âYou need some practice.â
âOkay, hugs. I got it. No shoulders,â Alex said, as she put her shoulders back. âLead with the chest. Is that...isnât that kind of weird, with my breasts?â
âItâs only weird if you make it weird.â
âWhich I just did?â
âWhich you just did,â Vell said. He put his arms down and grabbed his bag. âWeâll try some other time. Good night, Alex. And thanks.â
Alex stepped aside and let Vell exit the office. He had a lot to think about. Probably too much.
***
A multicolored elephant stared down at Vell from a shelf when he woke up. He had no idea what to do with the elephant, so for now it sat on a shelf in his room, adorning the same wall as Roxyâs guitar and Prickly the Cactus. The inexplicable ornament glared down at him with a judgmental look in its mismatched eyes.
âI really wish I knew what was up with you.â
Right next to him, Skye stirred and checked the time. She sighed as soon as she saw the clock.
âVell,â she mumbled. âAre you talking to the elephant at six AM?â
Vell delayed a moment, hoping Skye might go back to sleep and forget this had ever happened. She didnât.
âYes.â
âYouâre lucky youâre cute,â Skye said. âAnd also that Iâm up in half an hour anyway.â
The rigors of academia did not leave much time for sleeping in. Skye was not feeling the year end squeeze quite as hard as Vell, but she still felt it. She woke up, got dressed, and turned on the coffee machine.
âSo, you still going to be playing professor today?â
Vell finished getting dressed, sat down at the table, and watched the coffee drip into the pot.
âNah.â
âYou should think- wait, really?â
âYes, really,â Vell said. âI think I got in over my head.â
Everything that Alex and the others had been trying to tell him finally made sense. Vell was trying to fix something that he couldnât fix, and overexerting himself in the process. No one would want that, least of all Professor Nguyen. Were she still alive, she wouldâve given him a scolding lecture about it, even.
âGood,â Skye said. She gave Vell a kiss on the cheek. âIâve never been so proud of you for giving up.â
âDonât get used to it,â Vell said. âIâm going to head out a little early anyway. I owe Dean Lichman a heads up.â
âWeâll have to throw you a retirement party later.â
âI just got some of my spare time back, Skye, weâre not using it on parties,â Vell said. He kissed her goodbye and then got ready to face the day. He hoped Dean Lichman wouldnât mind losing him as a teacher too much. The Dean had enough going on without being down a professor right before test season -but that was not Vellâs problem. Mostly. He stopped thinking about it before he could talk himself back into teaching. He had to look after himself too.
The door to Dean Lichmanâs office was open, so Vell stepped inside. Dean Lichman looked up from his computer with his usual pleasant smile.
âMr. Harlan. How is the teaching going?â
âGoing to be honest, Dean, it sucks real bad.â
âAh.â
âI came to tell you Iâm calling it quits,â Vell said. âI just canât handle the extra responsibility right now. Iâm sorry if that-â
âAllow me to spare you the speech and a significant amount of guilt,â Dean Lichman interjected. âThe school board hired a substitute earlier this morning. Iâve just finished off their paperwork.â
âOh.â
That slightly defanged his climactic decision to quit, but Vell would at least be spared the guilt of leaving the classes unattended.
âI was going to go meet them in a moment, but since youâre here, would you mind accompanying me?â Dean Lichman asked. âIâd ask you to hand over Professor Nguyenâs lesson plans, at the very least. If you could help acclimate the new substitute, it would be appreciated, but I understand if youâre busy.â
âIâve got time to talk,â Vell said. Easing the transition would be simple, at least.
Dean Lichman finished his work and headed out towards the rune labs, and Vell followed.
âSo who is the new sub? Anyone notable?â
âIâm afraid I donât track the academic community closely enough to say,â Dean Lichman said. âTheir resume looked impressive enough, at least. Is the name Adair Kristali familiar?â
âNot really,â Vell said. It hadnât popped up in any textbook or research paper heâd ever read, at least. âSeems kind of-â
Four wrinkles appeared on Vellâs forehead as if from nowhere, and disappeared just as fast. Vell took off running towards the lab, leaving Dean Lichman in the dust. The name Adair Kristali didnât mean anything on its own, but as an anagram, it meant something very, very bad. Vell slammed the door to the classroom open and stepped through. A piece of bone-white chalk scratched out a name written by a hand of blackened bone.
âKraid.â
Alistair Kraid turned and aimed his trademark sinister smirk at Vell.
âThatâs 'Professor' Kraid, Harlan.â