Carmella Nguyen prodded the captive Akua in the back, pushing her towards Vell and Leanne. This time, Leanne took a firm hold of the dangerous looper. Nguyenâs timely appearance had probably used up all their luck for the day.
âYour stunned silence implies you have difficulty trusting me. An understandable reaction based on the behavior of the student body as a whole,â Nguyen said. âIf I may elaborate upon my reasons for-â
âNo, actually, we, uh, I trust you,â Vell said. âIâm just a little surprised. By your timing, mostly.â
âConvenient, yes, I agree, but I believe the universe must throw at least a few coincidences in my favor,â Nguyen said. âLijia certainly benefits from a great deal of good fortune.â
Vell and Leanne exchanged a quick glance, and then shushed Akua. Nguyen noticed their odd behavior, but did not bother asking for an explanation.
âThe very pliable Akua tells me you are looking for something,â Nguyen said. She gave a cold glare to Akua, who withered beneath the chilling gaze. Akua didnât seem to have much of a backbone when separated from both her guns and her evil overlord. âShe has also told me that what you are looking for is currently in Lijiaâs possession.â
âOkay, I guess weâre going after the crazy bitch with the sword,â Vell said.
âA concerning statement under ordinary circumstances, but your armaments seem to be slightly less outdated,â Nguyen said, with a critical glare at Vellâs cowboy-era firearms.
âI know my way around these things,â Vell said.
âYour skill, or lack thereof, is not my area of concern,â Nguyen said. âDo you not have superior armaments in the future?â
The sentence hit Vell like a brick in the head. He chose to direct his sudden confusion at Akua in the form of outrage.
âYou were gone for like three minutes,â Vell snapped. âHow did she get literally everything out of you?â
âThat one was an estimation, actually,â Nguyen said. âAkua was surprisingly recalcitrant to explain your origins, given how easily she gave up every other relevant factoid. Thank you for confirming my theory.â
Leanne gave Vell a gentle slap on the head. He rubbed the sore spot on his scalp and tried to cover his own mistakes as best he could.
âRight, well, we canât like, answer any questions or anything,â Vell said.
âI assumed. Time paradoxes are not to be trifled with,â Nguyen said. âI am willing to let the matter lie while we focus our joint efforts on Lijia Mian.â
âCool. So, uh, do you have a plan? Because Iâm going to be honest, we donât,â Vell said. The stare Nguyen gave him contained an entire novelâs worth of scolding. Not just some light airport reading, either, but an old school Russian novelâs worth. A veritable War and Peace of Vellâs own stupidity.
âLock the minion in a bathroom and follow me,â Nguyen ordered. Leanne threw Akua into the bathroom and barred the door with a chair, then followed Nguyen and Vell back out of the dorms.
âThe plan is as follows: we will appeal to Lijiaâs ego, taking advantage of her desire to prove herself superior, and bait her into a confrontation without the massive mob which she has at her back,â Nguyen said. âAt this point- My apologies, we did not properly introduce ourselves, my name is Carmella Nguyen. And yourselves?â
âYou can call me Bill, and thatâs Jane,â Vell said, sticking to their initial, panic-inspired aliases.
âAh, after Wild Bill Hickock and Calamity Jane,â Nguyen noted. âFitting, given your armaments. As I was saying, after Lijia has been drawn into a solo confrontation, Bill will shoot her.â
âUh, what?â
âYou have a gun. When she renders herself vulnerable, you will use it.â
âI mean, I donât want to kill anyone,â Vell said.
âAn admirable, if not pragmatic stance. I am not asking you to kill, however, merely incapacitate her long enough for us to retrieve the item you seek.â
âI guess I can do that,â Vell said.
âAnd you will,â Nguyen said. âI appreciate the faith you have placed in my plan. I assure you it will not fail.â
----------------------------------------
It failed.
Nguyenâs proposed duel of wits was cut short by Lijia snapping her fingers and demanding the crazed mob of students to surround them. Lijia herself cut through the swarm of bodies and strutted in front of the trio of would-be assassins with cocksure pride.
âYou really should communicate better,â Lijia taunted. âWhat good is appealing to my ego if no one here is going to remember me backing down?â
Nguyen turned to Vell and Leanne for clarification. They shrugged.
âIf you really need a decades-old freshman to come up with your plans for you, I shudder to think of what stupidity your time holds,â Lijia said. âI think Iâm going to do the future a favor by getting rid of you.â
âYou donât even know youâre getting rid of us,â Vell said. âWeâre going to be waiting for you in the future, you know.â
âIf your performance today is anything to go by, Iâm not worried about what you can do,â Lijia snapped back. âAnd from the way you recognized me, Iâd wager Iâm someone important in the future you come from. Someone with resources.â
Vell tried his best not to make a face. He didnât want to give Lijia any hint that sheâd be disappearing mysteriously sometime in the next few days.
âI think Iâll do fine,â Lijia said. She turned her back on the trio and faced the mob. âTear them apart! But do it slowly. Itâs what Bowie would want.â
The mob brandished a surprising amount of torches and pitchforks for a college campus and began to close in. While Nguyen and Leanne backed away and prepared to fight for their lives, Vell started to grab his phone.
âWait a minute, this is all about Bowie?â
âYou have insulted one of our generations greatest rock artists,â the lead of the mob shouted. âZiggy Stardust demands blood!â
âAlright, hold up with the cries for my blood for a second,â Vell said. He held up his phone close to his face to eliminate background noise. âPlay Heroes by David Bowie!â
Vell cranked the volume as high as it would go, held up the phone, and hoped for the best. The dulcet tones of legendary rock musician David Bowie had a way of cutting through even the violent rage of a bloodthirsty mob. The roiling mass of bodies halted in their tracks as the song continued to play.
âThis is a trick, Iâve never heard this song before,â someone said.
âSilence! The silky smooth baritone and rhythmic bass backings are beyond question! It must be the work of Bowie!â
âThatâs right,â Vell said. âI am a, uh, Prophet of Bowie, sent from the future, I guess, to deliver the truth of David Bowieâs iconic musical career.â
The violence of the mob turned to reverence. Some of the people at the front even started bowing to Vell, which he did not like at all.
âUh, no bowing, please, thatâs weird,â he said. âI am, you know, just the messenger here, guys, Bowie did all the hard work.â
âBut what of this one,â the mobâs now de-facto leader (by virtue of being the first one to talk) demanded. He pointed at Lijia. âShe claimed you were a liar, a heretic to the universal truth of Bowie!â
âWow, you guys really get into this cult stuff, huh?â Vell said. He was far from comfortable with this situation. âShe was just, uh, trying to silence the voice. Of Bowie. I guess.â
âHeretic!â
In an instant, all the mobs wrath became focused entirely on Lijia.
âOh shit,â Vell said. âPhone, play everything by David Bowie!â
He then held up his phone, which had started broadcasting a new song, and waved it tantalizingly towards the crowd, the way one waved a treat at a hungry dog.
âYou guys want more Bowie?â He asked. The mob cried out âyesâ in unison. Vell tossed the phone to Leanne and mimed a throwing motion. âGo get it!â
Taking the hint, Leanne cocked her arm back and then chucked the phone across the quad. The music faded into the distance, as did the stampeding footsteps of the mob that chased it, as the phone flew through the air. In an instant, Lijia, Leanne, Vell, and Nguyen were alone. Lijia was starting to sweat.
âSo...â Lijia said. âWhen can I expect Bowieâs next album?â
âAs if,â Vell said. âLeanne?â
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It took two steps for Leanne to close the distance, grab Lijia by the wrist, and start shaking her down for the pen. While she did so, Nguyen turned to Vell.
âThat was unorthodox,â she said blankly. Vell really couldnât tell if it was praise or an insult.
âYeah, probably,â Vell said. âIâm just glad I checked my playlist earlier. I forgot I even had that much Bowie on my phone.â
âYou have a portable phone that stores music?â
âBoy am I glad you arenât going to remember I said any of that,â Vell said. He avoided further time-paradox-causing interactions with Nguyen by walking in Leanneâs direction âLeanne, you find it yet?â
Leanne nodded and dropped Lijia to the ground. As Vell stepped up, she handed over the pen. He examined the generic object and sighed.
âNow we still have to figure out where this belongs,â Vell said. âHow do you figure out where a single pen belongs on a huge college campus...â
âOh, where did you find that?â Nguyen asked. She snatched the pen from Vellâs hands. âIâve been looking for my pen all-â
Vell and Leanne felt a brief electric tingle, then looked. Cane waved to them from across the quad -the modern quad.
âWell all righty then,â Vell said. âI guess that works.â
----------------------------------------
Vell checked the time on his phone. Leanne would be leaving practice -and the time-traveling pen would be dropping from the sky- any second now. He kept a watchful eye towards the skies and towards the surroundings. Leanne stepped off the field and looked up as well. She caught the glint of light as the pen started to fall. She then looked to Vell and gave a conspiratorial nod.
With a dull thud, the pen hit the ground. Vell stepped up to examine it.
âSo...do you want to touch it?â
Leanne shook her head.
âWell Iâm not going to touch it,â Vell said. âLast time we touched it we both time-traveled. Letâs go get some, uh, pliers or something. Maybe thatâll do it.â
Leanne nodded, and they both put on a dramatic show of turning their backs on the pen and walking away. Vell had had a few hours to rehearse his lines, so his acting was slightly better than usual. He just hoped he had an audience. This whole routine fell apart if Dr. Akua wasnât watching. Thankfully, they had correctly estimated her level of inept evil.
With a triumphant cry, Dr. Akua emerged from the bushes and nabbed the pen from the dirt. Vell and Leanne looked on in mock confusion as Dr. Akua cackled.
âItâs been a long time, âBill and Janeâ,â Dr. Akua said.
âBeen about, uh, thirteen hours for us, actually,â Vell said. âI see old age has done nothing to mellow you out.â
âOh no, âBillâ, Iâve been waiting a long time for this,â Akua said. âI never forgot you.â
âRight. Exactly what are you holding a grudge for, anyway? Lijiaâs gone. Has been for a while.â
âI know,â Akua said, venom dripping from every frantic word. âAnd itâs your fault. Itâs all your fault! You beat her! She lost, for the first time in her life, to you, and because of you, she pushed herself harder, she went further, and then one day she was gone!â
âLook, Iâm sorry about your friend, but-â
âI donât want your apologies,â Akua said. She reached into her purse and grabbed on to something.
âThen what do you want?â
âI want you to grab on to this pen,â Akua said. It took two or more loopers grabbing a time-displaced object to create the necessary quantum bullshit to cause time travel. âSo we can fix what you broke, and I can have Lijia back.
âWell thatâs obviously not going to work,â Vell said. âIf it did, youâd already remember us going back to the past, and Lijia never wouldâve vanished in the first place.â
âIâm not here to discuss temporal mechanics,â Akua said. âGrab the pen.â
âWhy would I do that?â
To answer Vellâs question, Akua removed a gun from her purse.
âAh,â Vell said.
Leanneâs eyes went wide at both the gun, and the fact that Vell jumped between it and her. The gun had barely left Akuaâs purse before Vell placed himself directly in front of it, shielding Leanne to the best of his ability. Leanne didnât know whether to consider it stupidity or courage.
âTwitching around wonât save you this time,â Akua said, in spite of the fact that Vell had stopped moving. âIâve been practicing.â
Akua, who had been obsessively practicing her revenge for more than forty years, easily tracked Vellâs every move. Before she could pull the trigger, however, her blood ran cold. Not because of any psychological reasons, as Akua was absolutely down to commit a double homicide and had in fact been looking forward to it for several decades, but because everything about her hand went cold. Mavis Akua looked down to see that her hand had been completely encased in a block of ice.
âBitch!â Harley shouted. She had been planning to shout something more clever, but seeing the gun pointed at her friends had blasted all the comedy right out of her mind. Harley hurled the âweaponâ sheâd brought -a bag of expired flour borrowed from Renard- in Akuaâs direction, and it exploded across the would-be murdererâs head. She had initially just thought it would be funny to see the bag pop on Akuaâs head, but the fact that the powder blinded her added another layer of security, in case Akua broke the ice Lee had formed around her gun-wielding hand.
âWhat the-â
âSurprise, asshole, thereâs four of us,â Harley said, stepping fully out of her hiding place. âCongratulations on having forty years to not fuck this up and fucking it up anyway.â
Lee stepped into view as well, as their trap had already been fully sprung. Despite having forty years to prepare for this reunion, versus Vell and Leanneâs thirteen hours, Dr. Akua had been wholly caught off guard thanks to the reinforcement of the two other loopers. Lee concentrated intensely on keeping Akuaâs hand frozen, focusing especially on the gun.
âWe mightâve been content to leave you with a warning-â
âAnd a head covered in flour.â
âYes, and a head covered in flour, but you have taken it much too far, Dr. Akua,â Lee said. âHarley, please contact campus security, inform them we have a lunatic wielding a gun on campus.â
âYou got it boss,â Harley said. She made a call and then wandered off to help nab the nearest security bot. Akua stared at the frozen gun in one hand, and the pen she held in the other. A smarter person might have tried to use the pen to break the ice, but Akua was the opposite of a smarter person. With her safely disarmed, Vell stepped away from his place between Leanne and the gun. Leanne stayed right where she was.
âSo,â Vell said. âForty years of grudge-holding, huh?â
âShut up,â Akua snapped. Vell shrugged and stuck a hand in his pocket.
âIâm just saying, was it really worth trying to steal a handful of Professor Nguyenâs notes?â
âWhat do you mean, trying? We stole them anyway,â Akua said. âDozens of them. More than we planned on, even. I took credit for hundreds of hours of Nguyenâs work.â
âOkay, cool, thanks for enunciating that very clearly,â Vell said. He took his phone out of his pocket and hit the button to stop recording. âHave fun with that confession playing in court.â
Akua stared impotently at the phone. She hadnât even mentioned the loops, something that mightâve rendered the âconfessionâ unusable.
âAgain, you had like four decades to prepare for this,â Vell said. âI understand the phone throwing you off back in the 70âs, but smartphones have been a thing for a while now. What have you been doing?â
âScheming, mostly.â
âWas it worth it?â
Akua looked down at her frozen hand, and the thick covering of flour over her upper body. She chose to say nothing, if only to deny Vell the satisfaction of hearing her admit defeat.
----------------------------------------
A day later, after Professor Nguyenâs class wrapped up, Vell lingered for a moment. Once again, the ironclad professor didnât look up from her desk as she spoke to him. Vell found that significantly less off-putting now. He had assumed, once, that there was some deeper meaning behind her stern demeanor, some emotional wound she still bore, but his travel to the past had proven that wrong. Carmella Nguyen was just a natural hardass. It was comforting, in a way.
âMr. Harlan, what can I do for you?â
âI was just wondering how that thing with Dr. Akua turned out?â
âShe was summarily stripped of her credentials. The school, and several academic institutions, have granted me retroactive honors for the discoveries she stole credit for,â Nguyen said flatly. While no institution had been able to explain exactly how Akua had plagiarized Nguyenâs work, the recorded confession, and Akuaâs own bumbling nature, had allowed them to establish a solid case.
âThatâs good to hear,â Vell said. âIâm glad youâre finally getting the credit you deserve.â
âThe plaques I received went directly into the trash, Mr. Harlan,â Nguyen said. âI have never pursued knowledge out of a desire for fame and acknowledgment. Ambitions of that nature are what led to Lijia Mianâs inevitable downfall -as well as the unfortunate fates of her cohorts.â
Over the past few days, Vell had spent more time looking into the fates of the loopers from the early 70âs. Lijia had disappeared mysteriously, Isaacâs life had fallen apart, Akua was now disgraced and headed to prison, and the as-yet unseen Jason had apparently died in an easily preventable accident shortly after leaving college -an act of carelessness Lee theorized might have been born from his repeated deaths and resurrections affecting his self-preservation instincts. Over all, the loopers of the past seemed to have met grim fates. A pattern which starkly worried the loopers of the modern day.
âWell, uh...I guess itâs nice that Akua got what she deserved, then?â
âWithout access to my notes to steal, Akuaâs scientific career floundered, Mr. Harlan,â Nguyen continued. She still had not looked up from her paperwork. âShe was stuck in a dead end laboratory position, doing tedious work in service roles. She had suffered plenty of indignity already, by my estimation.â
âI guess thatâs one way to see it,â Vell said.
âFishing for praise is not becoming of you, Mr. Harlan,â Nguyen said. âYou jumped in front of a gun for the sake of plagiarism done half a century ago. Courage and virtue are admirable qualities, Mr. Harlan, but not when separated from wisdom. Your life is worth more than doing the ârightâ thing once.â
With a stiff motion so momentous Vellâs heart skipped a beat, Dr. Nguyen looked up from her paperwork and glared at Vell.
âI firmly believe you have the capacity to make the world a better place, Vell Harlan,â Dr. Nguyen said. âDo not disappoint me.â
Vell stood in place for about ten seconds and contemplated what to say. Nguyen didnât wait for him to get a word in edgewise before returning to her paperwork.
âIâll do my best,â he said. âNot to. Not to disappoint you, that is.â
âI understood your meaning,â she said. âYou are dismissed, Mr. Harlan, youâve put me behind on my paperwork.â
Vell took the excuse to leave. As heâd left later than every other student, the hallways were empty, other than one lone figure leaning against a wall on the opposite end of the hallway. Vell waved at Leanne as he passed by.
âHi Leanne.â
âHey.â
Vell stopped in his tracks and turned around. Leanne pointed at herself with a smile on her face.
âYeah, I figured, itâs just, uh,â Vell said. âI thought you were kind ofâ¦â
âI figured if I never talked to you again I couldnât say thanks,â Leanne said. âYou sort of jumped in front of a gun for me, Vell. That warrants at least one more conversation.â
âOh, I guess, yeah,â Vell said.
âAnd I guess I owe you an apology for flipping out on you in that hallway,â Leanne said. âI get it.â
While Vell, in his own way, acted just as insane as every other looper Leanne had ever met, she was starting to understand that he did so for very different reasons. Sheâd known a lot of people who would do crazy, reckless things, but only because constant death had made them forget their fear. When Vell did something crazy and reckless, he did it so someone else wouldnât have to.
âAlright. Well, Iâm still sorry for scaring you,â Vell said. Another point in his favor. Vell actually apologized. Unlike some people Leanne knew.
âCool. Talk to you later, Vell.â
âReally?â
Leanne shrugged.
âWell, maybe. Iâm still kind of the quiet type.â
âUnderstandable.â
âI have at least one more conversation loaded up, though,â Leanne said. She followed along at Vellâs side as he continued walking to his next class. A question had come to mind. âIn all of this, did you find anything out about what happened to Lijia?â
âOh, now youâre curious,â Vell said. Leanne had tried to gesture him out of investigating Lijia when all this had started, and now she was the one asking questions.
âThe bitch tried to stab me, I want to know if sheâs in some kind of pocket dimension waiting to jump out and ambush me,â Leanne said.
âGreat, now Iâm afraid of that too,â Vell said. âBut I donât know. I tried to ask Akua before she got arrested, but all she knew was that Lijia went âlooking for someoneâ.â
âHmm. Thatâs ominous.â
âYeah.â
âYou know, Vell, itâs always been weird here, but itâs gotten a lot more ominous since you showed up.â
âIâm sorry.â