After a few minutes of ruminating on the possibilities, Vell had realized he had one fact that was very likely to distract Isaac Goodwell.
âSo did I tell you I met Lijia Mian?â
âWhat?â
âYeah, it was some time travel stuff, you know,â Vell said. âI went back, she tried to convince me to plagiarize something for her, I refused, she threatened to kill me with a sword, there was a cult to David Bowie involved. The usual stuff.â
âThat...youâre lying to me,â Goodwell said. He turned away from his monitor to look at Vell. He did remember a day where everyone had been screaming about David Bowie, but that had to have been a coincidence.
âNope, completely true,â Vell said.
âShe wouldâve told me,â Goodwell insisted. âLijia trusted me.â
âUh...not really? She didnât like you, man,â Vell said. âLike, at all. She sent you on fake tasks just to get away from you. Even had some other looper dress up in a rubber suit to keep you distracted.â
Goodwellâs eyes narrowed. âRoswellâ the alien had always looked a little rubbery. His fingers hovered over the keyboard for a second.
âSo maybe you really did go to the past,â Goodwell said. âBut youâre wrong about Lijia.â
âHey, donât worry, Iâve, uh, been there, you know?â Vell said. âYou think you have something with a girl, then they turn out to be willing to kill you. I know how that feels.â
As he spoke, Vell angled his head towards the monitor. Goodwell was still keeping his distance, letting Vell get a peek at his work. He could only see the edges of a few words and phrases, but he could see that âruneâ and âchangeâ were repeated more than once.
âYou...youâre not planning on trying to bring her back, are you?â
âI would if I could. Maybe I will, someday,â Goodwell said. In the end, Vell got what he wanted, though not on purpose. Goodwell leaned entirely away from his monitor and spun in his chair, giving Vell a clear look at the monitor as he gloated. âThanks to you, Iâm going to have all the time in the world.â
He looked at Vell, to find that Vell was not looking at him. Goodwell did a double-take and realized Vell was scanning the monitor, looking more and more concerned with every word. The rogue principal scooted back in front of the screen a second too late.
âYou want to swap brains with me?â
Vell didnât know whether to be horrified, confused, or amused. Goodwell wanted, by some means or another, to exchange his consciousness into Vellâs body.
âNot brains, necessarily. Personality, soul, whatever you want to call it,â Goodwell said.
âI call it a bad idea! Thatâs saturday morning cartoon bullshit, Goodwell, not science!â
âI know what Iâm doing,â Goodwell said, echoing Joan in a very unfortunate way. âYour bodyâs more acclimated to surges of magic, itâll endure the transfer.â
Vell gave the deepest, longest sigh of his life. Everywhere he turned there was some other lunatic trying to do the impossible, and expecting him to pay the price.
âWhy do you even want to do this, Goodwell? What do you possibly have to gain?â
âI want my life back,â Goodwell grumbled.
âNo, it sort of seems like you want my life,â Vell snapped.
âYour life should be my life,â Goodwell said. âIn the loop, getting a second chance at everything, having the chance to do things right!â
Isaac Goodwell had been out of the loop for nearly half a century, but he still missed it every day. After experiencing a life free of consequence, the real world seemed intolerable by comparison. All his cuts and scrapes were permanent, every mistake he made could never be undone -it was exhausting. Goodwell wanted to recapture his past, the idyllic chaos of his college years -those perfect, perfect days of the past.
Vell, on the other hand, saw a very clear problem with his plan.
âYou realize your whole plan hinges on me not getting a second chance at today, right?â
Goodwell paused for a moment.
âItâll be enough second chances to manage,â Goodwell grumbled. âTo avoid the worst of what happens to me.â
âI hate to break it to you Goodwell, but it wonât change anything,â Vell snapped. âYou think if you had do-overs you couldâve avoided hitting your wife, or losing your old job, or whatever, but it wonât work.â
âIt will work,â Goodwell snapped back.
âIt wonât! Because those things didnât âhappen to youâ, you did them!â Vell said. âYou can get all the second chances or steal all the lives you want, youâll never stop making mistakes! No one ever does! The only thing you can do is learn from them.â
âAre you sure youâre studying runes, because you seem to want to play therapist today,â Goodwell noted. He stood up and started digging through his gathered supplies.
âIâd be more than happy to sit down on a couch and talk about your issu- mmph.â
Vell managed one last grunt of displeasure as Goodwell slapped a piece of industrial duct tape over his mouth. Goodwell made sure it was stuck and breathed a sigh of relief.
âDonât know why I didnât do that at the start,â he mumbled. Vell grunted in agreement.
----------------------------------------
âItâs just down this way,â Joan said. Since sheâd been appointed as an âassistantâ to Principal Goodwell several days ago, and Lee was an RA, the faculty building staff didnât question their passage into the basement of the building.
âGreat, underground,â Harley said.
âDo you have to comment on everything?â Joan said.
âJust need to get it out of my system,â Harley said. âI got a lot of very negative opinions.â
âI get that youâre angry, and I understand why,â Joan sighed. âLee told me what I did to Vell.â
âHold on, what?â
âI told her about how I can see the future,â Lee said, giving Harley a stiff elbow to the shoulder. Luckily Joan was too busy being despondent to notice the exchange. Harley rubbed her sore shoulder and tried to play it cool.
âOkay, fine, you know about the future,â Harley said. âSo you know exactly how bad you fucked up.â
âYes, I know I hurt Vell-â
âOh, âhurtâ, is that what Lee told you?â Harley snapped. ââHurtâ?â
âYeah, I -christ,â Joan said, as the full weight of Harleyâs taunt hit her. Of course Lee had been softening the blow. Of course sheâd done something so much worse than just âhurtâ Vell. Joan stopped and leaned against the wall for a second. While she moped, Harley hissed at Lee
âYou told her about that?â
âShe asked,â Lee said. âAnd it...it felt wrong, Harley. As far as she knows, we were all friends one day and then everyone hated her the next. She deserved to know.â
âDoes she?â
âHarley, stop it, she feels bad enough already.â
âDoes she? Because she should feel pretty bad,â Harley said. âI know you like her because she hates your dad almost as much as you do, but come on. She killed Vell.â
âIt was an accident,â Lee protested.
âOh, and was the kidnapping and experimenting an accident? Do you not see the irony in Joan trying to save Vell from the literal exact thing she did to him in the first place?â
âI donât see it as ironic,â Lee said. âI see it as a second chance.â
âSome things you donât get second chances on.â
âHarley.â
Joan stopped leaning on the wall and took her hands away from her face. There were tears in her eyes, welling up amid the anger.
âShut the fuck up,â Joan demanded. âI fucked up. I get it. Iâm not asking for a second chance on that. Iâm asking for a first chance on this. So please just shut up and let me at least try to do something right for once in my life.â
âI canât promise Iâll shut up, but Iâm not going to stop you,â Harley said. âI get talkative when Iâm nervous.â
They werenât far from the lab that Vell was held in. Rather than arguing the point with Harley any further, Joan chose to focus on the mission.
âWeâre here,â Joan said. She gestured to the massive metal door in front of them. âOnce weâre in, only Goodwell can let us out. He should still trust me, so Iâll try to distract him long enough for you guys to sneak in and get Vell out, okay? You guys ready?â
Harley took a deep breath. She looked at Joan, the person on Earth she trusted the least, and at Lee, the person on Earth she trusted the most.
âYeah, weâll be fine.â
Harley took a deep breath, and both of them followed Joan past the point of no return.
----------------------------------------
âI think we should bring the helmets,â Cane said. âThey can shield you from most neurological magic.â
Unauthorized use: this story is on Amazon without permission from the author. Report any sightings.
âIâm aware of that, but they are very heavy and obvious,â Freddy said. The two helmets contained a thick layer of shielding, as well as a personal generator that created a minor distortion field, shielding the mind from any unwelcome attacks. âI kind of feel like this is a stealth mission?â
âIâm going to be real with you, Frizzle: I am not sneaky,â Cane said. âAnd you stick out like a bright red, very fuzzy thumb too.â
âGood point. Bring the helmets.â
âIâve only got three. One for you, one for me, and this one for Vell, since heâs the one most likely to get his head messed with. Everyone else is just going to have to deal with it, I guess.â
Freddy and Cane strapped their helmets on, looked at one another, and nodded. Their bulbous helmets bumped and made a sound like two coconuts hitting each other.
âYou two look ridiculous,â Harley noted.
âBah!â
Cane and Freddy both struggled to take off the ludicrous helmets and play it cool. The helmet hair they both suffered from didnât make them look any less silly, though.
âHarley? Arenât you supposed to be with Joan?â
âI mean, yeah, but I was looking for an excuse to ditch her,â Harley said. âAlso, I needed to tell you something. Goodwellâs just using tech, not magic, so you can ditch those helmets.â
Cane shrugged and tossed aside the bulbous helmets.
âYou are going to need a way through the door, though,â Harley said. âThereâs an âopenâ rune in the second drawer on the left of Vellâs desk. Youâre going to need it to dispel the magical barrier around the room.â
âHow do you know whatâs in Vellâs drawers?â Cane asked.
âHe tells me stuff, obviously,â Harley said. âI got to go. See you at the rescue!â
Harley sped off back into the halls, leaving the two behind. They headed for Vellâs dorm to pick up the promised rune and found it exactly where Harley had said it would be.
âThis must be pretty serious,â Freddy noted. âYou said âwhatâs in Vellâs drawersâ and Harley didnât even make a dick joke.â
âSheâs just worried,â Cane said. âEven she canât giggle at innuendo at a time like this.â
Freddy agreed, and the two moved on.
----------------------------------------
âAnd that doesnât strike you as odd in the least bit?â Luke asked.
âThe principal is just doing research,â the receptionist said. âThatâs sort of something that happens here.â
âIn secret underground basements with no witnesses?â
âYes.â
âRight,â Luke said. He actually wasnât surprised by that. Just another way his plan had hit a speed bump. Goodwell had, unsurprisingly, gotten to the faculty first, and prepared them for this exact situation. Heâd made all the necessary excuses and preparations, gotten a handful of permits and permissions, all to divert suspicion from himself.
âWe could try my cooking professor,â Renard said. âHe likes me.â
âNo offense, but I donât think your culinary teacher has much clout.â
âBut I know who does,â Lee said. She rounded the corner and pulled the duo away from the faculty building receptionist to conspire in secret.
âArenât you with Joan?â Renard said.
âI just thought of something important to tell you,â Lee said. Renard watched her carefully as she spoke. âVell mentioned that one of his professors, Nguyen, didnât trust Goodwell very much. If sheâs already suspicious, youâll have a much easier time convincing her.â
âMakes sense to me,â Luke said. âCome on, Ren. I think I remember where those offices are.â
âYou go ahead. Iâm going to talk to my culinary professor,â Renard said. âThe more the merrier, right?â
âI guess. Do your thing,â Luke said, before turning off towards Nguyenâs office.
âIâd better be off as well,â Lee said. As she likewise turned away, Renard stuck his foot out in her path. She deftly sidestepped his attempt to trip her -a suspiciously nimble bit of footwork for someone who often tripped over her own feet, much less someone elseâs.
âWhat was that for?â
Renard stared back at Lee with an unusually insightful glare, and said nothing.
âIf youâre done messing around, I need to get back to helping Vell,â Lee said.
âDo you?â
Lee paused and crossed her arms, taking a moment to stare right back at Renard. Their eyes met, and Renard stared intensely at the slightly mismatched shades of green in Leeâs eyes.
âYes, I do,â Lee said. âItâs why Iâm here, after all.â
âOkay,â Renard said. Lee turned and took a few steps away. âBut ask permission next time you borrow my friendâs face.â
âLeeâ stopped in her tracks, taking just enough time to look over her shoulder and smirk at Renard before she stepped around a corner and vanished.
----------------------------------------
âWelcome back, Joan,â Goodwell said.
âSorry it took me so long,â Joan said. âYou know how this school is.â
Goodwell hadnât looked up from his monitor at her return, which was good. Joan signaled for Harley and Lee to sneak in, and they took cover behind one of the many workbenches in the underground lab.
âI do know,â Goodwell said. âDo you have everything you need now?â
âI do,â Joan agreed. She tried to resist the temptation to glance over her shoulder and check on Lee as she approached Goodwellâs workstation. âAre you ready to go?â
âOf course. Put your data into the computer and weâll be ready to begin,â Goodwell said. Joan knew that this was more than just an âaggressive examinationâ of Vellâs rune, but she complied without question to avoid suspicion. Vell tried to mumble a warning, but the duct tape over his mouth impeded any protests from him. His muffled warnings came to a sharp halt as Harley crept to his side and tapped him on the shoulder.
While Vell gave a light squeak of surprise, Harley made a âshushâ gesture and then started examining the table he was strapped to. The initial prognosis was ânot goodâ. The complicated mechanisms all bore the same K-shaped logo of Kraid Tech: borderline impossible to hack even under the best circumstances, and right now circumstances were pretty fucking bad.
With her technical prowess a no-go, Harley turned back to Lee and silently gestured for her to try her magic. Lee immediately shook her head. She had tried her magic as an experiment and found the sparks of mana would not respond to her. Goodwell had likely enchanted the space to be protected from magic he didnât personally cast. While Leeâs simple gesture could not explain the nature of the enchantment preventing her from casting spells, the message was clear: no magic. Harley bit her lip. Their rescue was off to a shit start.
And it was about to get worse.
âThat should be it,â Joan said. All of her hypothetical research, and the cursory examinations of Vell sheâd done earlier, were plugged in and ready to be processed.
âAll done?â
âI might do a review if weâve got the time,â Joan said. Vell was still strapped to the table, which means her distraction wasnât going well. Sheâd tried to draw it out, but she could only type so slow without looking suspicious.
âWe donât have much time, actually,â Goodwell said.
âWhatâs the rush?â
In response, Goodwell reached into a drawer and withdrew a single handgun, which he immediately pointed in Joanâs direction.
âOh.â
âHarley, Lee, you can come out now,â Goodwell said. Heâd made sure the barrier around his lab warned him about every possible uninvited guest -especially Vell Harlanâs meddlesome friends.
âIâd rather not, actually,â Harley shouted from her hiding place. Lee was halfway through standing up and became paralyzed with indecision momentarily before ducking back down. Joan reluctantly stared down the barrel of a loaded gun all by herself.
âUnfortunately for you, Goodwell, you really canât finish this project without me,â Joan said.
âPlease. I have everything I need from you right there on that computer,â Goodwell said.
âCome on, Isaac, do you really think Iâd betray you and still be be dumb enough to type down everything I know?â Joan said, while staring at the computer where she had definitely typed down everything she knew. She hadnât exactly thought that part through.
Back on the table, Vell started making insistent humming noises and nodding down towards his own chin. Harley eventually got the hint and pried the duct tape off his mouth.
âJoan, get away from him,â Vell snapped. âHis plan isnât what you think it is. He wants my body!â
Harley giggled at the innuendo, even at a time like this, and Vell rolled his eyes.
âI mean he wants to take his mind and put it in my body,â Vell clarified. âHe doesnât need you to do that.â
Leeâs mind was racing for several reasons, but the stupidity of that idea was another one entirely. It was ludicrous, and would almost certainly get Vell killed. They couldnât let Goodwell proceed, but any attempt to stop him right now would get Joan shot. Lee could not fathom trading one friend for another, so she stood paralyzed by indecision.
While Leeâs brain raced with panic, Harleyâs raced with possibility. After looking around the room for a few seconds, she had spotted Vellâs glasses and phone stored on a nearby table, then looked back at the Kraid Tech logo on the experimentation table. Kraid Tech was hard to hack because of itâs soul-based security measures, but Vellâs soul was in a bit of grey area. If Harley routed her hack through Vellâs phone, she might be able to break the security measure and get Vell free. After that-
She had no idea what happened after that, actually. But Vell would be free, and maybe his cowboy bullshit would let him dodge bullets again. Harley got her phone out and got to work. She just needed everything to stay calm for a minute or so. Hopefully Joan wouldnât do something stupid.
That proved to be too much to hope for.
âSo thatâs the plan,â Joan said. âI figured you were hiding something from me, Goodwell. Now that all the cards are on the table, how about you and me make a real deal?â
Goodwell said nothing, and kept the pistol trained intently on Joan. She tried to ignore the gun pointed at her, failed, and then proceeded anyway.
âI want the rune,â Joan said. âEverything and everyone else is expendable. So long as I get to study the rune afterwards, Iâll help you do whatever.â
âAnd why should I trust you again?â
âBecause Iâll kill those two for you,â Joan said. Harley shot an angry glare at Lee, who shushed her. Harley got back to work, pounding away at her phone with renewed vigor.
âYou wouldnât.â
âAlright, not Lee, I like her too much,â Joan admitted. âBut Iâll kill Harley, and you can do Lee.â
Harley shot another angry glare at Lee, and got no response this time.
âYou first,â Goodwell said. Joan looked over her shoulder at Harley, shrugged, and reached into her pocket. Goodwell allowed her to reach down and grab the soulstone she had hidden away. She pulled the crackling black stone out into the light, clenched it in her fist, and focused all of the malignant energy within on one target: Isaac Goodwell.
To no effect.
Joan squeezed her fist one more time. Still nothing.
âOh. You shut off the magic, huh?â
âYes.â
Isaac Goodwell lifted his pistol again. Harley kept pounding away at her phone. She just needed a few more seconds...
âWell-â
In the background, Joan was vaguely aware that people were screaming or asking for Isaac to stop, but the voices really didnât register. All she could do was look up and shrug.
â-I tried.â
She wasnât sure who she was talking to, but it felt good to say. At least sheâd been trying to do a genuinely good deed, in the end. From all the inexplicable luck Vell, Lee, and Harley seemed to have, Joan had sort of assumed there was some divine force looking out for the good guys. But apparently that wasnât the case.
----------------------------------------
âOkay, weâre here, are we late?â
Luke and Renard hurried into place, with the stoic Professor Nguyen in tow. Freddy and Cane were already waiting.
âWell, uh, about being late,â Freddy said.
âWe mightâve busted our only way in,â Cane admitted. He gestured to the door. In their hurry to rescue Vell, they had already used the rune that âHarleyâ had guided them towards. It was currently attached to the door, lightless and inert.
âWe tried to use that âopenâ rune to open the door and, well, it didnât open,â Freddy said. âI donât know what we did wrong.â
âWell, thereâs got to be another way in, right?â
âI donât know! Magicâs not my specialty, but this barrier is pretty airtight,â Freddy said. âI donât think anything could get through it without making a lot of noise.â
âA doorâs a door,â Cane said. âMaybe we could take it apart.â
âYou got tools, Cane?â
âWeâre at a school for super-scientists, someone around here has to have a fucking screwdriver we can borrow!â
While the young men fell into a tense argument about the availability of power tools, Professor Nguyen stared intently forward and stared at the rune Freddy had used. After a momentary examination, she held up her hand for silence, and the argument immediately ended. Nguyenâs frigid attitude overpowered even the most hotheaded arguments, and all fell silent.
âThis is not an âopenâ rune,â Nguyen corrected. âThis is a rune for âentryâ.â
âWhatâs the difference?â
âSubtle, yet meaningful, Mr. Fennel,â Nguyen said to Luke. âAnd judging by the dispersal of energy patterns, this rune has fulfilled itâs purpose, and allowed entry.â
âWell weâre all still out here,â Renard said.
âPrecisely. But the rune has done its work.â
âOkay, so if not us, who got âentryâ into the room?â
Nobody, not even Professor Nguyen, had an answer to that question -until Renard remembered his encounter with Leeâs doppelganger.
âUh oh.â
----------------------------------------
Inside the lab, Goodwellâs finger brushed the trigger of his gun, and everything went silent. Even hearts stopped beating to let a moment of absolute quiet slip in. Then the silence ended, not with a bang, but with a quiet, gentle whisper.
âIsaac.â
Goodwell froze in his tracks. Vell froze too, though he hadnât been moving much in the first place. The rogue principalâs gun hand started to tremble, and turned away from Joan as he turned to face the mystery voice on the other end of the room. While he turned away, Joan all but collapsed backwards, managing to stumble far enough to be caught by Lee and held upright.
âLijia?â
The silence in the room redoubled as the shadows parted, and Lijia Mian stepped into the light.