âThis is a bit more Iron Chef than I was expecting,â Vell said.
He hadnât even known the school had an auditorium, much less the capacity to convert it into a fully-stocked kitchen arena on short notice. The sizable stands were already packed with spectators, and more were crowding in the closer it got to showtime. Renard was double-checking his workplace before the contest, giving the loopers some time to conspire.
âAlright, so we have to ask about Lijia Mian on the first loop, that way no one else will remember telling us anything,â Vell said. âIs there anything else we should ask about while weâre at it?â
âI donât know,â Harley said. âGoodwell might be a little crazy, but heâs not very interesting. Not a lot to him.â
âI imagine having one question answered will simply raise another,â Lee said. âWe should focus on extracting as much information about Ms. Mian as we can.â
âGood point,â Vell said. âAnd Lee, I think you should ask the guy. Youâre good at dealing with authority. And at bribing people.â
Lee nodded in agreement. There werenât many secrets that a million dollars couldnât reveal. Since it was the first loop, she could make whatever outlandish promises and bribes she wanted, and none would be the wiser.
The loopers finished their scheming, and as if on queue, Principal Goodwell appeared, with his arm wrapped tight around the shoulder of a stranger.
âAh, thereâs my competitors,â Goodwell said cheerily. âThis is my counterpart and former partner-in-crime, Isaiah Malbasin. Izzy, these are some of my brightest students. The tall one is Leanne, you should know her.â
âYes, I believe I do,â Isaiah said. âMy Ballball team speaks of you in tones normally reserved for atomic bombs or the devil himself.â
Leanne nodded.
âThe refined looking woman over there is Lee, the shorter one in red is Harley, the redheaded man there is my team lead, Renard, and that tall gangly looking fellow is Vell.â
As they were introduced, each member of the team waved politely. Isaiah looked them all over in turn and seemed deeply impressed. Once the entire gang had been introduced, Isaiah waved to the far side of the stage.
âWell, you all look impressive,â Isaiah said. âLet me introduce you to my team.â
A squad of four stepped into view, mirroring their counterparts on the looperâs team -in more ways than one.
âThe tall one is Leanna, the refined looking woman over there is Leigh, the shorter one in pink is Harmony, and the redheaded man there is my team lead, Ronald.â
The two mismatched teams stared one another down -except for Vell who, lacking a counterpart, looked around at their four opponents awkwardly.
âItâs like looking at an off-brand version of us,â Harley said. Leanna was tall and muscular, though not so tall and muscular as Leanne, Leigh was slightly less poised and refined than Lee, and so on down the line, with each of the Patschke-Puck competitors looking like a flimsier version of the Einstein-Odinson originals.
âHey, rude,â Harmony said sassily, though not as sassily as Harley would have said it. âMaybe youâre the offbrand version of us.â
âOh thatâs not possible,â Harley said. âI mean, you guys donât even have a Vell.â
Harley pointed over at Vell, who lifted his hand in a stiff wave.
âMaybe we donât need a Vell,â Leigh protested.
âWhat are you talking about, everybody needs a Vell,â Harley said. âLook at this guy. Heâs great.â
âI donât know, he does look pretty cool,â Leanna whispered to Harmony. Vell stood up a little straighter.
âHah, see, your Leanne isnât as cool as ours either,â Harley said. âOurs is all stoic and silent.â
Leanne crossed her arms and stared silently down at her counterpart. The lesser Leanna withered under the mighty glare of her superior.
âThereâs no need to get caught up in competition, sweetheart,â Leigh said, in a British accent slightly less posh than Leeâs. âTheyâve got one more member and a goliath of a woman, but we have resources.â
âRight, and what resources would those be?â Lee said.
âMy father is the manager of Innovation Electronics.â
âHmm. Right,â Lee said with a surprisingly sadistic smile. âMy father is the CEO of Roentgen. The parent company of Innovation Electronics.â
Leigh leaned back on her heels, suddenly red in the face. She looked to her left, at where Ronald had been standing. Their redhead was gone -as was his counterpart on the Einstein-Odinson side of the aisle. Both teams looked to the nearest kitchen and saw Renard and Ronald stooped over the burner.
âSo the real trick to caramelizing onions is to slightly undercook them,â Renard explained. âMost of the time youâre going to be putting them into a hot dish, so you gotta let that heat be what finishes cooking them.â
Ronald nodded and jotted down some notes.
âWell at least those two get along,â Isaiah noted. âThe rest of you, get ready.â
âOh, yes, one thing, real quick,â Lee said. She turned to her teammates and nodded. Harley distracted Principal Goodwell by informing him that it was the first loop and theyâd bought him a bag of candy to eat guilt-free, and led him backstage, away from Isaiah. Vell and Leanne helped Renard prep while Lee latched on to Isaiah and pulled him away from helping his team prep.
âExcuse me, Mr. Malbasin, I was hoping to pick your brain for a moment, about our principalâs past,â Lee said. âYou went to college with him, didnât you?â
âI did,â Isaiah said. âWhat did you want to ask about?â
âWell, thereâs an old classmate he mentions now and then,â Lee said. She took a deep breath. âDid you happen to know anyone by the name of Lijia Mian?â
Isaiah rubbed his chin. He seemed to disapprove.
âIsaacâs still hung up on her, huh?â Isaiah said with a sigh. âFigures.â
âHe does still seem to place great importance on her,â Lee said.
âWell, I donât know whatâs been thinking or doing since we left school,â Isaiah said. âBut back in the day, Isaac was head over heels for her. Lijia never seemed to like him very much, though, but they spent nearly every day together, getting up to some kind of strange shenanigans.â
Lee nodded to herself. That sounded familiar, but she could analyze it later.
âWhat was she like?â
âOne of the brightest women you could ever meet,â Isaiah said. âShe was a genius. Knew more about the flow of mana than anyone Iâve ever met, even all these years later. Sheâd probably be the biggest name in science, if she hadnât disappeared.â
âDisappeared?â
âYep. Up and vanished one day, about halfway through our last school year,â Isaiah said. âI donât know too many of the details, but I know they looked for her with every kind of scanning and scrying known to man, but never found her.â
âOh dear. Thatâs unfortunate.â
âItâs a real shame, yeah,â Isaiah said. âItâs a surprise Isaac still talks about her, though. Last I heard he got married and had kids. Itâs just sad that heâs still talking about the one that got away.â
âSome people get so caught up in the past they fail to appreciate what they have,â Lee said. âRegardless, thank you for answering my questions. I understand Principal Goodwell much better now.â
âAnything else?â
âNo, I wonât ask for any more of your time,â Lee said with a curtsy.
âYeah, you should be getting back to your team anyway,â Isaiah said. âItâs almost time for you to get absolutely annihilated by my team!â
Isaiah pumped his fist and posed emphatically towards his team of knockoffs, who responded with a weak cheer. Lee squinted at Isaiahâs sudden odd behavior.
âDonât ask for mercy because youâre not getting any,â Isaiah taunted. âTry not to cry too much, little girl.â
Lee nodded and started to back away from Isaiah slowly. She began to see why Goodwell hated him so much. Leaving Isaiah and his childish taunts behind, Lee returned to her team and repeated the information about Lijia Mian.
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âSo, she hung out with Goodwell and got up to a lot of shenanigans too, huh?â Harley said. âSounds like Mian was a looper too.â
âIâd sort of assumed, but itâs nice to have confirmation,â Vell said. âThe disappearance is new, though. And, uh, worrying.â
âI know,â Lee said. âEven back then, scrying magic made it difficult for a person to go missing. There must be exceptional circumstances at work.â
âSpooky,â Harley said.
âVery much so,â Vell said. He didnât like spooky. Spooky didnât end well.
âI think weâll have to look into it more later,â Lee said. âPerhaps I can ask Isaiah more questions about it-â
Leanne interrupted Lee by tapping her on the shoulder, and then pointing to the kitchen area. The loopers looked up to see that the kitchen Renard and Ronald had been working in was now burning with purple fire.
âOh thatâs probably not good,â Lee said. They four scuttled over to Renard, matched by their off-brand counterparts scuttling over to Ronald.
âWhat happened?â Both groups asked.
âOh, Ronald was just showing me some cool trick he knew,â Renard said. All heads turned to Ronald, who shrugged.
âWell he knew so much cool stuff, I felt ridiculous, so I tried to light a magical fire to cook something with and it, well, it did that!â
Ronald pointed at the purple flames, which were now spreading past the stove top. Leanne did the most pragmatic thing available and blasted the flames with a fire extinguisher, which had no effect. Leeâs hydromancy also failed to douse the flames. Panicked spectators started to flee the stands as the flames continued to spread.
âYou guys got any ideas?â Harley asked, turning to the group of Patschke-Puck students. Leigh made it halfway through mustering up the courage to say something when the purple flames erupted in a bright -and distressingly humanoid- pillar. Leighâs courage flew out the window and she let out a loud scream as the magical flames coalesced into the jagged figure of a four-armed man.
âRun!â Leigh screamed. She pushed Harmony towards the flaming figure before turning to flee. Leanna and the others followed -except for Harmony, who was reduced to cinders as the fire elemental swiped at her with one infernal limb.
âOuch,â Harley said. She could not help but feel a touch of sympathy watching her doppelganger get reduced to ash. âYouâd never do me like that, right Lee?â
âOf course not,â Lee said. She demonstrated her point by grabbing Harley and pulling her away from one of the fire elementalâs flaming strikes. âLike you said, theyâre off brand. Our friendship is name brand.â
âAww, thatâd be really sweet if it made more sense,â Harley said. âAnyway, this thingâs going to incinerate us friendship or not, so Iâll catch you guys on the flip side.â
Leanne grabbed the nearest piece of food and chowed down before the fire elementalâs fury started to spread and consume them all.
----------------------------------------
âHey Renard, stop fooling around with the competition, we need you over here,â Harley shouted. Renard popped his head up and looked at Harley, who waved him over.
âOkay,â he called back. âSorry Ron, youâll have to show me that magic fire trick later.â
âSure, I guess,â said a disappointed Ron. Renard walked away and Ronald, having no one to show off to, left the magical fire unlit. Lee had brought a magical fire-extinguisher along, just in case, but the solution had ended up being remarkably simple.
The second loop proceeded without incident, and with only a few minor changes on their part -mostly that Lee did not ask any questions about Lijia Mian. With those questions, and preventing the daily apocalypse, out of the way, the loopers focused on the next most important task: the cooking competition.
As competitors on both sides of the stage took their places, the stage lights came on, and a catchy pre-show jingle started playing.
âVell was right, this really is knockoff Iron Chef,â Harley noted. There were even smoke machines. The odd level of hype only amplified as the MC of the event stepped up to the mic.
âHello and welcome, the third annual Einstein-Odinson versus Patschke Puck cook-off, where the name isnât the only mouthful involved,â the host said. No one laughed at his joke. âIâm your host, Mark Damascus.â
He received a smattering of polite applause, which he absorbed with suitable aplomb.
âAnd allow me to introduce our guest hosts; Mr. Gordon Sheepsey! Mr. Bobby Clay! And last but not least, Mr. Emeril LaOille!â
Harleyâs eyes narrowed as the trio walked on stage. They all looked familiar -but not too familiar.
âWait a minute,â she whispered. âSheepsey? Clay? LaOille? These are all cheap imitations of more famous and successful chefs!â
Harley leaned over the counter top to glare at their off-brand counterparts from the other school. All four of the poor imitations had smug smiles on their faces.
âThose bastards stacked the deck,â Harley muttered under her breath. âTheyâre cheating!â
âWell thatâs a bold accusation to make,â Lee said. Before she could continue, the announcer continued.
âAnd in keeping with the traditions of our challenge, each team will be provided a special ingredient in addition to their basic kitchen supplies. For the Patschke-Puck students-â
Mark Damascus posed dramatically as a tray of ingredients was teleported onto the kitchen counter top. The silver lid lifted to reveal a tray of raw meat.
âKobe beef! And for the students of Einstein-Odinson-â
Damascus posed once again, and a matching tray appeared in front of Renard. The lid on this one lifted to reveal a plain white bag.
âFlour!â
âOkay, they might be cheating a little bit,â Lee said quietly. Vell grabbed at the bag of flour and peered inside.
âThis bag is half-empty,â he noted. âAnd thereâs a note inside that says âsuck it, Einsteinâsâ.â
Vell noticed an arrow pointing to the opposite side of the note. He flipped it over.
âWith a crude drawing of a penis on the other side.â
âThose bastards,â Harley noted. âDidnât even have the decency to draw a good penis!â
âBegin!â The announcer shouted. The Patschke-Puck team sprang into action with choreographed grace, while Renard appraised his bag of flour. It seemed to be the variety one might buy at a dollar store.
âOh well, I was feeling like baking anyway,â Renard said. He grabbed a bread tray, along with some salt, water, and yeast. As an afterthought, he also took out a pinch of sugar.
âThis is bullshit,â Harley said. âLee, what kinda magical stuff you got to get back at them?â
âI suppose I could enchant the water for a bit of extra flavor,â Lee said. âIâm not sure how Iâd-â
âNot like that,â Harley protested. âWe have to kneecap them as hard as they kneecapped us. Possibly literally. Leanne, do you think you could throw something hard enough to break a knee?â
Leanne grabbed a nearby mixing spoon, tested the heft, and nodded affirmatively.
âHey, no kneecapping,â Vell protested.
âWhy would we need to?â Renard asked.
âYou really need to listen, Renard,â Lee said. âThe other team is cheating.â
âYeah, I know,â Renard said. âBut why does that mean we have to cheat?â
Harley kept her mouth shut, knowing she had no good response to that. Cheating back would make her feel good, at least.
âThereâs always going to be people doing bad stuff, and if you respond to it with more bad stuff, nothing ever gets better,â Renard said. âThe only thing on the line is a cheap trophy. Thatâs not worth dragging ourselves down to their level.â
âActually, Renard, the prize is a several thousand dollar scholarship grant for the respective schoolâs culinary program.â
âOh,â Renard said. âWell still. Weâre the good guys. We need to win the good guy way.â
âUgh, fine, since you made a whole speech about it,â Harley said. âLetâs get this bread.â
Renard laughed at Harleyâs joke and started giving orders. With the limited resources available to them, each member of the team had very little to do, but Renard found a role for everyone regardless. With their assorted tasks quickly wrapped up, all they could do was sit and watch as Renard put together the finishing touches and put their loaf in the oven. Then it became a matter of waiting -and staring angrily at their competition as they seasoned and cooked their expensive beef.
âThat smells delicious,â Harley said. âIâm starting to regret taking the high road.â
âWell the fun part about the high road is that itâs pretty easy to jump down,â Renard said. âBut itâs a lot harder to climb up from the low road.â
âYouâre right, I- Are you talking about the moral high road or literal climbing?â
âIt works for both,â Renard said. Harley shrugged. âNow hold on, I have to watch the bread.â
Renard stooped low in front of the oven and stared through the glass screen. Lee examined their workspace to see if hey were almost out of time, and saw no countdown of any sort.
âRenard, did you not set a timer?â
âOf course not,â Renard said, without taking his eyes off the bread. âBaking isnât about timing, itâs about color.â
Then, without a word -and without any perceptible change in the color of the bread- Renard decided it was done and snatched the loaf out of the oven to let it start cooling. To everyone else it looked exactly as it had a minute or so ago, but Renard had a trained bakerâs eye for very small differences in color.
âTimeâs up!â Mark Damascus shouted. A loud siren blared to signal the end of their cooking time. The Patschke-Puck teams continued to season and prepare their food in spite of the time being called. Harley didnât bother raising a complaint. Mark took the prepared food to the judges table, who deliberated on it in silence.
âI know we had that talk about morality, but Iâm still going to be quite cross if we lose this to a bunch of cheaters,â Lee grumbled. In response, Leanne pounded a clenched fist against her open palm.
âLeanneâs right,â Harley said. âWe can always jump them in an alley after the showâs over.â
âThatâs not what you meant, right?â Vell asked, looking up at Leanne. She didnât blink.
âItâll all be fine,â Renard assured them. âWhatever happens, we did our best, and we did it the right way.â
The judges finished their deliberating. Each teamâs food was ranked on a scale from one to ten, with the rating displayed on an electronic screen above the judges head. Each judge rated Patschke-Puckâs kobe beef steaks a solid ten -and Renardâs loaf of bread a solid eighty.
âAlso, Iâm like, really good at baking,â Renard said, as confetti started to rain down on him. Across the stage, Leigh screamed.
âWhat! Whatâd I even bribe you idiots for?â
âItâs good bread!â Gordon Sheepsey shouted back, before shifting his focus to fighting the other judges for more of the bread. As the knockoff celebrities sank into a full-on fistfight over a loaf of bread, Damascus awkwardly presented Renard with a trophy.
âGood job, youâve earned this, I think,â Mark said. In the background, Bobby Clay screamed as Sheepsey bit his hand. âThereâs supposed to be more to this but I think we need to do something about that. You should go.â
âOkay, but I want to know who wins,â Harley said.
âIâd put money on Sheepsey,â Lee said. âHe looks feisty.â
âYou really need to go now!â
And go they did. Event proctors shuffled competitors and spectators alike out of the arena as the trio of judges started to fight over breadcrumbs like a gaggle of angry ducks. Once they were outside the auditorium again, Isaiah Malbasin gathered together his off-brand students and retreated, shaking a fist at Renardâs team as they went.
âYou may have narrowly won a victory today, but weâll get you next time, Einsteins!â he cried, as his team rounded a corner.
âYou probably wonât,â Vell cried back.
The Patschke-Puck students vanished, leaving behind the triumphant Einstein-Odinson students. Renard appraised his trophy and offered it to his teammates.
âAnybody want this thing? I donât have any room for more cooking trophies.â
âI like shiny things,â Harley said, and Renard handed it over. Harley admired her reflection in the faux-gold as Principal Goodwell approached his team, applauding all the while.
âGood show, good show, I knew I could count on you guys,â Goodwell said. âFeels good to keep that win-streak going.â
âSomehow I feel we were never really at risk of losing,â Lee said. âIs Patschke-Puck cursed? I feel as though they might be cursed.â
âNope, weâve checked,â Goodwell said. âNot cursed, hexed, bewitched, or stricken. They just suck real bad.â
âHow unfortunate.â
âFor them,â Goodwell said. âAnyway, good work all, Iâll let you know if I ever need your help again.â
âIf you do, please hesitate to ask,â Lee said with a curtsy.
âWait, did you mean âplease donât-â
âMaybe.â