The keypad by the door beeped out a familiar tune as Vell punched in the code to Joanâs door. She always kept her door locked, unlike most of the people on the floor. As far as he knew, Vell was the only person who had the code. It was either a sign of trust or a way to make booty calls more convenient. Vell chose to believe it was more so the first one, though he didnât have many objections to the second.
Joan beckoned him in as soon as the door opened. She was slumped over on the couch, looking as exhausted as Vell had ever seen her.
âGeez. You look wiped out,â Vell noted.
âYeah, turns out having to talk about every shitty thing thatâs ever happened to you kind of sucks,â Joan said. She rubbed her red eyes and let out a deep sigh.
âCan I help?â
âI could use a hug,â Joan admitted. Vell obliged. Joan buried her face in his shoulder and remained there for a solid minute in absolute silence.
âI also need you to do my hair,â Joan said, her voice muffled by Vellâs shoulder. She pulled her head away from him and pointed at her tangled mess of hair. âThis undercut is ugly as hell when I have my hair down.â
âI donât know, I kind of like it,â Vell said. âThe mess has itâs own style.â
âIâll keep that in mind. But right now I need to get it tied up,â Joan said. âIf only as a symbolic gesture of me getting my shit together again.â
Vell nodded and retrieved a hair tie. As he got to work fixing her ponytail, Joan got to work explaining the situation.
âSo thereâs a lawyer guy set up in the faculty building, came here to ask me and a bunch of other people about Roentgenâs mana-harvesting incidents and how itâs affected us. I already told him everything, obviously, but the case gets stronger with corroborating testimony, so you basically just need to go to him and tell him you agree with everything I said and that Roentgen totally sucks.â
âWell, I will do that, but first Iâd kind of like to know what Iâm agreeing with,â Vell said.
âWhy? Weâve talked about Roentgen, you know theyâre a bunch of shitheads.â
Like every good member of his generation, Vell maintained a healthy distaste for large corporations. He made a point of avoiding products from Roentgen, Kraid Tech, and many other unethical companies when he could, an ideology Joan shared in. Most major companies had a long checklist of scientific and magical abuses stretching back to before Vell had even been born, but Roentgenâs list was particularly long.
âThis is a legal case, Joan,â Vell said. âI canât just go in there and say âRoentgen sucks, give my girlfriend moneyâ.â
âBut I want money.â
âJoan.â
âIâm kidding, Harlan, Iâll tell you,â Joan scoffed. âFinish up with the ponytail so I can look you in the eyes. Talking to someone with your back turned feels weird.â
âIt really does,â Vell said, speaking from experience. He put the finishing touches on Joanâs ponytail and waited for her to turn around and explain herself. She started by gesturing towards her eyes again.
âSo, I mentioned on the phone about my eyes,â she started. Vell nodded, and Joan carried. âMy dad worked in one of the old ley-line mines for years, during that time Roentgen was skimming off the top of their workers.â
Vell bit his tongue. Roentgen had achieved corporate dominance thanks to incredibly efficient mana-harvesting, with their machinery leaving competition in the dust at every turn. After several years of almost monopolistic control of the mana market, a leak had revealed that their efficiency was due to Roentgen machinery also absorbing small amounts of mana from the souls of their workers. The fury (and the lawsuits) had been swift, but Roentgen had amassed enough money to fight off every legal battle, claiming that the soul-harvesting had been an unintentional incident, a clinical error based on how new mana gathering technology was. New regulations were put in place, and any mana-harvesting from humans had stopped long ago, but the damage had been done.
âMessing with the soul messes with the body, you know. My dad got lucky, and avoided the worst of the effects, but that kind of damage can get passed down to the kids too. I just got the eyes, but my sister has it way worse.â
âYour sister?â
A sister was news to Vell. Joan had never mentioned having any siblings before. Joan reached up and clapped her hands over Vellâs mouth for reasons neither of them entirely understood.
âForget I said that,â Joan said. âForget it. Like, really, go to Cane and his department of, of brain-learning or whatever and get it erased from your head.â
âNeurology,â Vell corrected, as he removed Joanâs hand from his mouth. âAnd Iâm, uh, not. Iâm not going to do that. I promise I wonât tell anyone, though. Is that good?â
âItâll have to do,â Joan said. âWeâre going to talk about the brain-erasing thing, though. Like, she really fucking hates being talked about.â
âWhy?â
âLook, sheâs, uh...how do I put thisâ¦â
Joan looked away from Vell and wracked her brain for a minute.
âLook, she just doesnât like it, okay? And seriously, donât tell anyone about her. You just have to trust me.â
Vell was more than a little concerned about Joanâs secret sibling, but he figured that was their family business. He added it to the ever-growing list of secrets and mysteries in his life and moved on.
âAlright, no talking about secret sister, I can do that,â Vell said. âLetâs get back on track. Whatâve you been talking about with this lawyer guy, and how do I back you up on it?â
âWell for starters these eyeballs are expensive,â Joan said, pointing to her face again.
âGood job mentioning your eyes twice and not taking them out, by the way,â Vell said.
âUgh, donât compliment me on that, I catch myself about to pull them out and just point instead,â Joan said. âAnyway, like I was saying, the prosthesis's are expensive, so thatâs a source of stress right there. And then thereâs how it affects my self-esteem with my appearance, and my relationships with my peers, and then thereâsâ¦â
Vell sat by patiently as Joan gave an extensive list of everything wrong with her. It turned out far longer than he had expected.
----------------------------------------
Harley mashed the code for Leeâs room into the keypad and let herself in. She could hack her way through if she wanted, and had done so several times, but the beeping gave Lee a heads up that Harley was inbound.
âLee! Vell isnât answering my texts and I need somebody to sabotage a date. Whatâre you doing tonight?â
A muffled groan rang out from the kitchen area of the dorm. Harley sighed and rounded the corner. Lee was sitting at the table, arms crossed on the table, and her face pressed flat against it as well. Harley had come to know this as the âLeeâs got a problemâ pose. Harley took her usual spot at the far end of the table and clapped her hands together.
âSecret swap not go so well?â
âAll was going quite well, actually, at least the first half,â Lee mumbled. âYes, Vell got cut in half once upon a time, thatâs all rather odd, I was all set to tell my story, and then Joan called.â
âIs Joan calling bad? I thought you liked Joan?â
âI like Joan very much,â Lee said. âWhich is why it concerned me greatly that her current eyeless state is a result of the Roentgen corporation, and she is currently participating in a massive lawsuit against them.â
âOh-ho, wow, yeah thatâs shitty timing,â Harley said. âWow. Yâall are just a monumentally complicated group of people, you know that? It is fucked up what kind of layers of secrets and bullshit you all have going on.â
âI know. Itâs why Iâm truly blessed to know someone as simple as you. Uh, rather, whose life is as uncomplicated.â
âThatâs me, the mentally stable one, much to everyoneâs surprise,â Harley said, pointing a thumb at her chest. âYou want some of the patented Harley straight-talk?â
âI would appreciate it.â
At that prompt, Harley jumped out of her seat, dove across the table, and grabbed a startled Leeâs face with both hands.
âGo. Talk. About. It.â Harley demanded, punctuating each word with a light shake of Leeâs head. The shaking ended, but the tight grip on Leeâs cheeks did not, as Harley continued. âThe longer you sit around and worry about things like this, the more complicated they get. You have to move, you have to take action, and you have to resolve things on your own!â
A muffled mumble of a response let Harley know she was gripping Leeâs face too tightly. She relaxed her grip on Leeâs cheeks enough for Lee to move her lips normally again, and Lee cleared her throat.
âIâm worried that if they find out-â
âMom and dad are going to come to visit eventually, theyâll find out one way or another,â Harley said. âThe best way for everyone to find out is you telling them. Right. Now.â
Harley once again punctuated words with a head shake. She loosed her grip once again afterwards, giving Lee enough space to nod.
âYouâre right,â Lee said. âYouâre absolutely right.â
âI usually am,â Harley said. She rolled over and laid on her back on the table, staring up at Leeâs dorm room ceiling. âHonestly this is probably your best bet. Go spill some beans to whoever is in charge of that lawsuit. Do some damage, prove youâre on the good guyâs team.â
âHuh. I suppose thatâs true,â Lee said. âYou should have led with that, dear, I feel remarkably more confident now.â
âI give good advice, I donât necessarily give it in the optimal order,â Harley said. âYou want streamlined service you go to a therapist.â
âStill thinking about that, honestly,â Lee said. âThe rate this year is going, weâll see.â
Lee stood and retrieved her purse. Harley stayed on the table.
âWould you like to come, or do you intend on staying on my dining table all evening?â
âHonestly? Iâm considering it. Got to skip on my Michaela date somehow. Is it cool if I hide in your dorm?â
âYou are welcome to, of course, but I will try and wrap this up quickly so I can help ruin your date this evening,â Lee said. âUnfortunately, things may become...complicated.â
âDonât pause dramatically like that, you know I hate it.â
âSorry.â
----------------------------------------
Vell sat across the table from a man whose face seemed to be composed mostly of mustache, with a smattering of eyebrow to remind you that there should, presumably, be a face somewhere under the fluff. Vell tried to keep his eyes focused on where the lawyerâs eyes should have been were they not hidden by the bountiful brows.
âYouâve been very helpful, Mr. Harlan,â The lawyer said, in a droll monotone. âYour confirmation of Ms. Marshâs testimony should be very useful.â
âIâm just glad I could help,â Vell said. âHopefully it helps everyone get what theyâre owed.â
The lawyer had helpfully explained the exact details of the case. He was representing over twenty-thousand individuals across the world who had been negatively affected by the lingering effects of Roentgenâs soul-harvesting operations. They were hoping for a settlement of two-hundred million dollars, to be spread evenly across each of the victims, but with Roentgenâs army of lawyers on hand, they were prepared for that to be negotiated down to a few dozen.
âNow, I believe I have reached everyone on this campus,â the lawyer said. âBut if you are aware of any others who have been affected by Roentgen, or by other corporations, please direct them to me. My firm specializes in such settlements.â
âUh, right, weâll keep you in mind,â Vell said. The lawyer had insisted on giving them his business card, which Vell had politely tucked into his pocket without reading it. âBut I donât think thereâs anyone?â
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âNot that I know of,â Joan said.
The door slammed open, and Vell nearly jumped out of his seat as it pounded loudly against the wall. The mustachioed lawyer did not flinch, though his mustache hairs did twitch slightly with the rush of air from the door.
âIâm sorry, that was a bit much,â Lee said. She grabbed the door and closed it politely. âI was in a hurry.â
âHey, Lee,â Joan said. âWhat brings you here?â
âI was looking to testify in this case,â Lee said. She walked over, flexed her fingers oddly as she struggled for a gesture, and then settled for putting an awkward hand on Joanâs shoulder. âBecause I want to help you, Joan. Iâm on your side, and I want you to know that.â
âThatâs cool,â Joan said, not knowing how else to process Leeâs strange behavior. âBut, Vellâs already sort of got it covered, I donât think this guy really needs anymore support?â
âItâs not necessary, no,â the lawyer said. Lee shook her head furiously and removed her shaking hand from Joanâs shoulder.
âNo, I mean, yes, I know, but Iâm not here to corroborate anything,â Lee said. âI have my own testimony Iâd like to provide.â
The lawyer tilted his head forward in a stiff nod and opened a new document on his laptop. He then gestured to Vell, who stood up and let Lee slide into the seat across the table from the lawyer. Lee took a deep breath and wrung her hands together.
âMay I ask that everything Iâm about to say be kept anonymous?â
âIâll have to take your name for legal reasons, but yes, we can use anonymous testimony -to a limited extent.â
Lee gave a stuff nod, and the lawyer gave an equally stiff nod in return.
âWould you like to give your testimony privately?â
âNo, they should stay, actually,â Lee said. âI believe they are long overdue to hear this. Might as well let them know now.â
âVery well then.â
Vell had an odd feeling that that wasnât how legal testimony was supposed to work. He felt like none of what was happening was normal procedure for a lawsuit, but then, he was a scientist, not a lawyer. He accepted the weirdness and kept his focus on Lee.
âNow, your friend said your name was Lee? Is that short for anything?â
âNo, actually,â Lee said. âItâs a pseudonym.â
Joan and Vell looked at each other, then at Lee, then back at each other. Thinking back on it, Vell had noticed a few clues that Lee was just a nickname, but heâd always assumed it was short for Lenore or something in that vein. âLeeâ tapped her fingers on the table nervously and worked up the nerve to continue.
âMy legal name is XL-X8 C/P Burrows,â Lee said, her voice shaking as she said it. The bushy eyebrows of the mustachioed lawyer raised in shock. Joan looked like sheâd been stabbed in the gut. Vell, for his part, had no idea what was going on. It was a really weird name, but that didnât explain Joanâs look of utter shock -and anger.
âI donât mean to assume,â the lawyer began. âAre you-â
âHow many people do you think are named XL-X8 C/P?â Lee asked, her voice edged with disdain. âOf course. I am the daughter of Roentgenâs CEO, Noel Burrows.â
Vell nodded. That explained the looks. It did not explain any of the other questions now raised, but Vell was starting to get used to the questions piling on.
âWell then,â the lawyer said. âThis should be interesting. What do you have to say in regards to your fathers actions?â
âI have to say that he knows exactly what he has done,â Lee said. âAnd he knows he has weaseled out of underpaying lawsuits before. I was in the room when he congratulated his lawyers for âmaking sure those people got a quarter of what they couldâveâ. Exact quote.â
The lawyer began typing with a furious energy Vell hadnât seen during his own testimony. He understood that perfectly. Even buried as it was behind the mustache, Vell could see excitement on the lawyerâs face.
âNow, can you name the lawyers he spoke to?â
âI can and will,â Lee said. âAnd a whole lot more.â
Lee began a tirade, naming every name and quoting every quote she could remember off the top of her head. Joanâs expression of shock softened, but did not fade.
----------------------------------------
As soon as Lee provided the last of her testimony, the lawyer practically ran out of the room. He assured them all that Leeâs testimony could very well ensure the most successful lawsuit ever filed against Roentgen. Lee had reiterated once more that she wanted her testimony to be anonymous, and politely bid the lawyer goodbye. As soon as he and his mustache had left, Lee turned to face Vell and Joan. She did not speak. Neither did Joan.
âSo,â Vell began. âI take it youâd prefer we still call you âLeeâ.â
âIf you ever call me that other name, or any variation thereof, I will slap you,â Lee said, without an ounce of humor. The silence returned again. This time Joan deigned to break it.
âI donât buy into that âsins of the fatherâ bullshit, if youâre worried about it,â Joan said. âI donât blame you for what your dad or your grandpa did.â
Lee nodded. That was a relief to hear. Joan wasnât done yet, though.
âBut I do blame you for what you havenât done,â Joan said. âAnd you havenât done a hell of a lot.â
âJoan-â
âNo, hold on, what are you thinking, only getting involved now, because youâve finally seen firsthand how miserable your dad made someone? We hang out a few times and now you grow a conscience? People have been out there suffering for years, Lee, and you knew!â
Lee held her hands out in a placating gesture.
âJoan, I know youâre upset, and you have reason to be,â Lee said. âBut-â
âNo, Lee, you listen to me, because all those âreasonsâ I have to be mad, Iâve got a lot less of them than some people,â Joan said. âI was born blind, and Iâm one of the lucky ones.â
âHey, maybe we should give her a chance to talk,â Vell suggested. Joan shook her head.
âYou could have done so much more, so much sooner,â Joan said accusingly. Vell physically grabbed Joan by the shoulder and pushed her a step further from Lee.
âHey! Whatever you think, she helped you and a lot of other people just now. You need to at least give her a chance to explain herself.â
In all the time both Lee and Joan had spent with Vell, they had never heard him raise his voice in anger. The sudden and unfamiliar tones of frustration in his voice shocked Joan into compliance. She withdrew another step back and nodded. Vell gestureds towards Lee, giving her the go-ahead to speak.
âThank you,â she began. âAnd, Joan is right. Iâve had ample opportunities to make change. I have chosen not to make use of them, because I have a plan.â
âWhat plan?â Joan asked, the venom in her voice making clear her anger had not been entirely muted.
âSo far as my father is concerned I am still his perfect little girl, and his heir apparent,â Lee said. âIf I continue to play the role he has imagined for me, Iâll be in charge of Roentgen one day.â
âAnd how many years is that going to take?â Joan said. âYour dadâs company hurt people and is still hurting people, Lee. Thereâs going to be a lot of suffering while you wait to take the throne, princess.â
âI know that,â Lee spat. âBut what am I supposed to do? Help more lawsuits? I understand that the money will help you, Joan, but what is it going to change in the long run? My father and his cronies donât even blink at losing two hundred million. They just cut the wages and benefits of their employees to recoup the losses. You canât beat them with legislation and lawsuits.â
Joan had no rebuttal for that. Lee took the silence as an invitation to continue.
âI will continue to play my part,â Lee said. âFor the long term benefit of everyone.â
âIt doesnât sound like youâre happy about it,â Vell noted.
âItâs not a perfect plan, I will admit,â Lee said. The melancholy in her voice could not be ignored, even by Joan. She shrugged her shoulders and stepped back.
âI guess this must be tough for you,â Joan said. âSorry I freaked out on you. I canât possibly understand having to choose between doing whats right and my family.â
âOh thatâs not the hard part of it at all,â Lee said. Her quiet, mournful tone was suddenly cut with a bladed edge of anger. âThe hard part is putting up with my family long enough for the plan to work.â
The rage seeping into Leeâs voice put a chill down Joanâs spine. The unexpected anger in Vellâs voice had been righteous frustration, a more muted, understandable kind of anger. The sudden fury that crept into Leeâs voice now was vindictive, unrestrained, and intense.
âSo. You donât like your dad, I take it?â
âDonât like him? No. I despise him,â Lee hissed. âYou think you hate him? You think you loathe my father? You have suffered the consequences of one decision. I lived with him. Every day, for twenty years years of my life, I was beholden to him, on the front lines of every childish whim, every malevolent, thoughtless impulse.â
As she spoke, Lee gestured more and more frantically with her hands, her hands tensing as if putting a throttling an invisible neck. Whenever Lee got too stressed, she liked to imagine strangling her father. It was calming, like a stress ball but with patricide.
âMy âreal nameâ is a series of gibberish bullshit my mother thought would be âuniqueâ. Vell got confused earlier when I told him I was from Egypt, you know why? Because I have a British accent, and I have a British accent because my parents though it would be charming, so they hired British tutors and caretakers, and banned anyone without a British accent from speaking to me for the first eight years of my life!â
Joan inched closer to Vell and stayed silent as Lee continued, sounding like she was about two steps removed from a supervillain monologue with every word.
âDo you want to know why Iâm always tripping over myself? Because I had a posture coach who would hit me with a ruler if I didnât sit and walk and do everything with the inhuman poise of my parents ideal little princess, and now when I try to walk like a normal fucking person I barely know what to do!â
Lee grasped at her temples in a fury for a moment. Joan stepped up, but Vell put a hand on her shoulder and kept her back. He could tell Lee wasnât done yet. Tears of rage were welling up in her eyes now.
âI hate my parents! I hate them so much it makes me want to puke,â Lee said. âBut I put up with their deluded whims, and their childish idiocy, and my fatherâs cartoonish villainy because I want to inherit his company and burn it to the ground.â
Lee pulled her hands away from her head and clenched them into tight fists.
âI am going to be the CEO of Roentgen some day. And the minute I am in charge, I will end it all. I will reveal every evil thing my family has ever done, I will spend every cent of his fortune on reparations and charity, and I will laugh while I drag his name through the mud. The last time my father ever sees his âprecious, perfect daughterâ will be when I come to spit in his face as I tear apart his lifeâs work brick by brick and dollar by dollar.â
Her clenched fists tensed so tight Leeâs knuckles turned white and her veins bulged.
âChoosing between doing whatâs right and my family is easy, Joan,â Lee spat. âThe only hard part is resisting the urge to push my parents off a cliff, or put them on one of my fatherâs stupid spaceships and blasting them into the sun, or reprogramming all their self-driving cars to run them over on sight, or-â
Lee then proceeded to list off seven other possible means of parricide, and showed no signs of stopping. Vell kind of felt like she needed to be stopped, though, so he let go of Joan. The continued ranting was starting to get uncomfortable, and he hoped Joan had an idea on how to calm Lee down. Joan stepped up and put her hands on Leeâs shoulders.
âI knew I liked you,â Joan said, with a sly smile on her face. âYou want to burn the motherfucker down?â
Lee looked up with red eyes and a hungry grin.
âMore than anything,â she hissed.
âCount me in.â
Joan extended her hand, and Lee clasped it firmly in a conspiratorial stranglehold. Vell stared on in confusion. That certainly hadnât turned out the way he planned. He still felt like Lee needed to take her rage down a notch or two, but he had no ideas. He could possibly ask Harley-
âOh shit, Harley,â Vell said.
----------------------------------------
Harley eyed the knife on the table. It was dull, but with the right force behind it, itâd do.
Michaela had set up a beachfront table for their date, and all but dragged Harley to it in spite of her attempts to cancel or change their plans. Michaela started to hit the tenth minute of her monologue about her vacation to the Galapagos over the summer, and despite her attempts to not listen, Harley was starting to piece together the details of Michaela nearly extincting a species of finch without realizing it.
Around a nearby building corner, Joan, Vell, and Lee leaned around the corner. The reminder of Harleyâs plight had spurred them to change the subject from corporate sabotage to romantic sabotage. The trio observed Harleyâs precarious situation and then darted back around the corner. Lee nearly fell into the nearby bushes as she darted, but Joan caught her and set her upright.
âAlright, ideas?â Vell asked, as Lee regained her balance.
âI could use hydromancy to create a wave and wash the date away,â Lee suggested.
âGood start, but I think Harleyâs already mad at us for being late and we donât want her to be mad at us for getting her wet,â Vell said.
âI actually think sheâd be rather keen on walking across campus in a wet t-shirt,â Lee said. Vell had to admit she was right. âHowever, I now recall Michaela is a marine biologist and will likely not be bothered by a little saltwater.â
âCanât we just walk in and say Harleyâs mom is sick and she needs to take a phone call or something?â Joan asked.
âOh nothing that simple ever works, darling,â Lee said. âYouâll need to get at least twice as contrived for the plan to function properly.â
âI wish Iâd remembered sooner, I couldâve carved a rune that would help,â Vell said. Joanâs eyebrows jumped up and she reached into her pocket.
âIâve got this,â she said, holding up an uncharged âsightâ rune. âI was carving it to have something to do with my hands while I talked to the lawyer.â
âAlright, so we can make someone see something,â Lee said. She took the rune and charged it, just in case. âWhat can we do with that?â
Vell poked his head around the corner again. Michaela was still ranting away, talking about her Galapagos expedition, to a supremely disinterested Harley. It took a solid minute of staring, but Vell finally put together a plan.
âGive me the rune,â Vell said. âI need to make some minor changes.â
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âAnd then I had to go all the way up this hill to find another nest, but it was so worth it, those little eggs just made the most divine eggs benedict youâve ever had,â Michaela said. He continued story about the breakfast on her fifth day of vacation was cut short by Vell and Joan arriving.
âHey there, Michaela,â Vell said as he clapped her on the shoulder. After the greeting, Joan took over, since she was the better liar.
âDid Harley mention maybe doing a double date? We thought we had something else going on, but our schedule cleared.â
Vell and Joan took a seat without waiting for an answer. Harley was struggling to find a facial expression that balanced her gratitude that theyâd shown up with her anger that theyâd shown up so late.
âIâd rather you didnât,â Michaela said. Joan suddenly switched to a pitiful expression.
âIâm sorry. Itâs just, Vell really needs to learn his way around a date. I love him but heâs just no good at conversation,â Joan said. She then gestured to Michaela. âI just really thought I should bring Vell to a date like this, to see how someone should really handle romance.â
The ego-stroking was as obvious as it was effective. Michaela preened, brushed back her hair.
âWell, if he needs to learn by example that badly,â Michaela said. âAs I was sayingâ¦â
As she resumed her tirade about nearly eating a species of finch onto the endangered list, Vell leaned over and whispered to Harley.
âLetâs go, I slapped a rune on her shoulder to make her see an illusion of us all,â Vell said. Harley didnât need to be told twice. She bolted before Vell had even finished the last word of his sentence. He and Joan shared a quick glance at Michaela and then made a mad dash in turn.
âYou guys are so late,â Harley hissed, as soon as they were all around the corner. âIâve been listening to her rant for thirty minutes!â
âWhyâd you even go along with it, I thought you were just going to hide?â
âMichaela can be surprisingly persistent and surprisingly okay with breaking and entering,â Harley said. âYou might need to have someone fix your door, Lee.â
âWonderful,â Lee said.
âWell, at least we know she can afford it,â Joan snapped.
âOoooh, so I take it the conversation went well,â Harley said, her harsh expression suddenly brightening. âAre we all good? All secrets laid bare? Everybody friends?â
âEverything is just fine,â Joan said. âIn fact, I think we could do a bit more talking. I got some ideas for how you can drain daddyâs coffers without risking your inheritance.â
âI am all ears,â Lee said with a predatory smile. The two of them walked off side by side, chatting about some ways to stab Leeâs dad in the back. Metaphorically, for now, but Vell didnât like their tone. He and Harley were left behind for the moment.
âSo, she gets a little intense,â Vell said.
âGee, you think?â Harley said. âDid she mentioning pissing on her dadâs grave? She always liked saying that.â
âShe did not,â Vell said. âShe did mention spitting in his face as she burned his company to the ground, though.â
âAh, yeah, thatâs a favorite too.â
âAny ideas on how to make her chill out a little?â
âOh I was actually hoping youâd have some,â Harley said. âI got nothing.â
Vell shook his head.
âWell fuck,â Harley said.