âWhy are we here again?â
âBecause itâs Leanneâs last game,â Vell said. âLike, ever. And I havenât watched any of them.â
In spite of their long friendship, Vell had never attended one of Leanneâs Ballball games. They usually fell on nights when he was otherwise occupied with academic activities, social events, or late-night apocalypse prevention. As the empty stands in the stadium proved, Leanneâs matches werenât exactly highly attended. Or attended at all.
âVell, you do realize Leanne has literally never lost a game?â Harley asked. âOf anything? Ever?â
âI beat her in tic tac toe once,â Vell said.
âNot that kind of game, dingus,â Harley said. She leaned back and stretched her legs across the stands. There was no one else sitting nearby -or anywhere at all in the stands, for that matter.
Every student had long since caught on that when Leanne was on the field, there could be only one outcome. Watching one woman completely embarrass an entire team of trained athletes stopped being fun after a few minutes. Vell, Lee, and Harley were the only people in the stands.
âVell, Iâm sure Leanne appreciates your support, at least in theory,â Lee said. âBut in actuality, this game isnât all that special.â
âYeah, even if it werenât Leanne playing, this would still be a free win,â Harley said. âTheyâre playing Patschke-Puck.â
âOh jesus,â Vell said.
The perennial fuckups of Patschke-Puck took the field. Some of them tripped over themselves as they stepped onto the circular Ballball field, and others were wearing their jerseyâs backwards. Vell could only sigh. Harley at least extracted some enjoyment out of watching them make fools of themselves, so the night wasnât a complete wash.
After the visiting team took the field, the home team also stepped up to play -slowly, and stumbling all the while. Every player on the Einstein-Odinson teamed moved with a stunted, awkward gait, most of them doubled over or clutching at their stomachs.
âUh, guys,â Vell said.
âOh dear.â
From the back of the crowd, Leanne walked forward, apparently unaffected by whatever was crippling her teammates. She tried to ask someone what was wrong, and was answered by them rushing off the field to go vomit. One playerâs moment of nausea caused a chain reaction, and soon every player but Leanne had abandoned the field.
âWhatâs going on?â
âWell,â the Patschke-Puck coach said. âIt appears as though every member of your team has received a completely coincidental case of food poisoning that has nothing at all to do with me poisoning all your food twenty-three minutes ago.â
A flabbergasted Leanne looked to the ref, and gestured to the coach who had all but confessed his crime. The referee shrugged.
âI also definitely didnât bribe your referee by paying him exactly two-hundred dollars to look the other way.â
âTwo-hundred dollars?â Leanne said. âThatâs not even a good bribe!â
âItâs two hundred more dollars than I had before,â the ref said. Leanne tried to protest, but couldnât.
âWell, whatever,â she said. âI was going to beat you single-handedly anyway. Now Iâll just do it more literally.â
Leanne punched the open palm of her hand, and a few of the Patschke-Puck players recoiled in fear. The bribed ref, however, had other ideas.
âSorry, kid, but you need more than one player on the field,â he said. âIf you canât meet a minimum team size, you forfeit.â
Leanne clenched her fists.
âWhatâs the team size?â
âThe suspiciously specific rule says you need exactly four players,â the ref said.
With a glimmer in her eye, Leanneâs head snapped towards the stand. She pointed at the three spectators with such force that Vell could feel a shockwave. Harley rolled her eyes and let out a loud sigh.
âFuck.â
----------------------------------------
âIâve fast-tracked all the paperwork,â Principal Goodwell said. âYouâre all fully registered team members now.â
The Principal handed out spare athletic equipment to Harley, Vell, and Lee. Goodwell had been fully onboard for their hasty recruitment into the Ballball team.
âI lost to Isaiah too many times back in school, Iâm not losing to him now,â Goodwell grunted. Their principal was still hyperfixated on his perceived rivalry with Patschke-Puckâs principal -among other things. He pointed at Leanne. âYouâve never let me down before. Donât do it now.â
Leanne said nothing. Sheâd broken her silence around all of the current generation loopers, but something about Goodwell still unnerved her.
âYeah yeah, you got a second chance to kick his ass, we get it,â Harley said.
âGood. Right. Second chances are meant to be seized,â Goodwell said. He nodded in the new teamâs direction once before walking out of the locker rooms and back to business.
âWell, that guy continues to be unsettling on several levels,â Harley said. âAt least him being a corrupt nutjob got us these cool jerseys!â
âYeah, real piece of work, but hopefully the quick recruitmentâll win us the game. Like I said before, Iâll beat these losers singlehandedly,â Leanne grunted. âAll you guys have to do is stay on the field and not get injured. Got it?â
âUnderstood, Admiral,â Harley said with a mock salute. âAlso, why didnât you tell me these outfits were so light and breezy? I love it.â
Harley bounced up and down to emphasize the utility of the light, sporty jersey.
âHarley, I know youâre...you, but please take this a little bit seriously,â Leanne pleaded. âIâm not going to lose my last match ever, especially not by forfeit, and especially not to Patschke-Puck.â
Lee stepped out of a side room, having finally finished changing and getting her long hair tied up for the game. She was far more uncomfortable in the jersey and track shorts than Harley, if only due to unfamiliarity.
âI do believe my father would have a heart attack if he saw me right now,â she noted.
âThen we should send him a pic,â Harley said. âSpeaking of! Team selfie!â
Harley corralled the three of them behind her and then snapped a quick picture of them all in their matching uniforms. After that, she put her phone in a locker and put her game face on.
âAlright, letâs go, game time, hoo-rah,â she grunted. âAre we going to do that thing where we put our hands together?â
âNo.â
âWhat about a pregame speech?â
âThe pregame speech is donât fucking get hurt,â Leanne scolded. âSo try not to trip over your own feet like you did in that mutant apocalypse.â
âIn my defense, I did have more feet than usual,â Harley said. âMan, youâre a lot more fun to banter with now that you talk.â
In response, Leanne made a shushing noise and then pointed back towards the field. She led the way as the newly minted team stepped out of the locker room and made the short hop to the levitating Ballball field.
âAlright, weâve got all our players now,â Leanne said. She gestured to the other three loopers. âCan we play?â
âLooks like youâre all set up,â the ref said. âVery well! The game can begin after the required several-minute-long pregame staredown between the opposing teams!â
âPre-game staredown?â Vell said.
âBallball has a lot of weird rules, just go with it,â Leanne said. She lined up along the meridian of the field, mirroring the other team -in more ways than one.
âOh, come on, fucking you guys again?â Harley said. She panned over their off-brand doppelgangers Leanna, Leigh, and Harmony. âDo you not have any other students at your school?â
She pointed out Harmony in particular.
âDidnât you literally go to jail for attempted murder? Of me?â
âI got therapy,â Harmony said.
âI sure hope you had a good doctor,â Harley said. âThough weâre probably about to undo a lot of mental health gains with how badly Leanne is about to crush you.â
Leanne flexed. Her doppelganger Leanna tried to flex in response, but had far less muscle to work with. She stepped back instead.
This text was taken from Royal Road. Help the author by reading the original version there.
âPlease donât hurt me.â
âBe brave, Leanna,â Leigh said. âWe came prepared this time. To prove that they, indeed, are the off-brand imitations, we found the original from which this so-called âVellâ is a cheap copy! Behold!â
Leigh gestured dramatically down the line, towards one of the teammates the loopers didnât recognize. A short, skinny young man with curly brown hair waved up at Vell, his matched counterpart.
âPhil!â
Vell looked down at Phil, and waved hello back.
âThatâs a bit of a stretch, isnât it?â Lee said. âPhil, Vell, I mean, really, theyâre not even the same height.â
âWell I guess I donât measure up to this big fella, but Iâm just happy to be here representing my school,â Phil said. He extended a hand in Vellâs direction. âLetâs both do our best, pal.â
âOh yeah, letâs,â Vell said, shaking the offered hand. Harley raised an eyebrow.
âWell, he seems nice,â Harley admitted. âGuess heâs got that in common with Vell.â
âStare down over! Play ball!â
At the refereeâs shout, Leanne took off so fast Harleyâs ears popped. Neither team had even gotten their bearings by the time the first âdingâ of a scored goal rang out. The scoreboard started to climb up and up again as Leanne scored another goal.
âShould we stop her?â Leanna said.
âYouâre welcome to try,â Leigh said. âFocus on hurting these imbeciles!â
Leigh made a dive for Lee, hoping that one dirty tackle could injure her badly enough to get her off the field and make their team forfeit. The doppelganger was still mid-air when Leanne shoulder-checked Leigh hard enough to send her rolling halfway across the spherical field.
âReflexes, Lee,â Leanne said. She tossed the ball over her shoulder, towards one of the goalposts, and scored another point.
âI was reacting,â Lee protested. âJust not at your frankly superhuman speeds.â
âFair enough,â Leanne said. The ball she had thrown a second ago rebounded directly back into her hands, and she held it for a moment rather than throw it again. âAny of you want to try scoring?â
âThank you, but no,â Lee said. Leanne tossed it at the goal and let it bounce back again. One of the Patschke-Puck players went for a diving tackle on Harley, and Leanne caught them by the ankle and tossed them across the field. She then offered the ball to Harley.
âHarley? Goal?â
âNo thanks,â Harley said. âOne of the chicks on this field tried to kill me a few months ago and I kind of want to stay focused on her.â
âGood thinking.â
Harley and Leanne side-eyed Harmony together. She seemed stable for now, but they were suspicious of even the slightest eye twitch. Leanne chucked the ball at the goal a few more times to secure a large lead. Meanwhile, Vell dealt with his own doppelganger.
âSo the olâ PP may seem like a school of rejects and losers to most people, but Iâve always seen it as a place for the underdog to feel at home,â Phil said. âA place for us to come together and realize that the things some people call âflawsâ are really what makes us unique.â
âYeah, thatâs very nice, but, uh- duck,â Vell said. He grabbed Phil by the shoulders and pushed him down as he ducked to avoid a thrown knife. âBut I think your school mates are a bit aggressive.â
âOh, theyâre just spirited,â Phil said.
âThey poisoned like twenty people,â Vell noted.
âI admit they can be a bit overly ambitious sometimes, but thatâs just Leigh being Leigh,â Phil said. âYouâve got to respect her can-do attitude. Never letâs something like the odds -or the law- being against her slow her down.â
While odds and morality never slowed her down, getting tackled by Leanne (again) did. Leigh rolled around the spherical field, tumbling right past their feet as Vell and Phil walked. The disgruntled doppelganger stood, brushed the turf off her backwards jersey, and went looking for Leanna. She was easy to find: all one had to do was find Leanne, and then look as far away as possible. Leanna cowered on the other side of the field, far away from her sportier duplicate.
âLeanna! Is this really how you want to spend your last game? Running and hiding like a coward?â
âBetter than spending it getting my bones broken,â Leanna mumbled.
âOh that viking bitch wonât hurt you too badly,â Leigh said. As soon as she was finished talking, the ball rebounded off her skull and back into Leanneâs hands. Leigh fell face first in the grass at Leannaâs feet.
âNot a word,â Leigh demanded.
âDo you get it?â Leanna said. âIâve never even scored a goal against regular players, much less against a giant, superpowered, amazonian one.â
âYou are absolutely useless,â Leigh said. She stood and brushed turf off her jersey again. âWouldnât even help with the poisoning, and now this.â
âIâm not sneaky,â Leanna said. âAnd why didnât you poison the big one, anyway?â
âI, uh, well, I did,â Leigh admitted. âDouble dosed, actually.â
The two doppelgangers turned and watched Leanne scored twenty-five goals in the span of eighteen seconds.
âShe appears to be slightly immune to poison,â Leigh said. âPerhaps her raw physical power also extends to her gut microbes.â
Leanne and her invincible gut microbes scored another ten goals, and then took a break to rebound the ball off of Harmonyâs head. She was starting to stare at Harley, and that wasnât good for anyone. While the ball bounced back, Lee sidestepped an attempt to kneecap her and left the offending Patschke-Puck member to trip over his own feet.
âHow much longer do you imagine this will take, dear? I think our would-be saboteurs are already starting to lose steam,â Lee noted. One of the PP team members took a swipe at Harley. She had dodged the cutlasses of undead pirates (briefly) so the inept attacks of a few z-list sports players were no issue. Vell had already dodged the last of the throwing knives, as well.
âDonât let your guard down,â Leanne advised. She made a few more quick goals while they chatted. âThey wonât give up. If I can say one good thing about these guys, itâs that theyâre persistent.â
Leigh proved Leanneâs point by trying another tackle. This time Leanne didnât even have to intervene, Lee simply stepped aside and let Leigh faceplant into the dirt all on her own.
âYou really need to stop going for dives, dear, youâre going to break something,â Lee cautioned.
âBite me.â
âWell, donât say no one warned you,â Lee said. She strolled away to check on Harley.
Leigh got herself out of the turf for the hundredth time, and scanned her opponents. She latched on to what she believed was a vulnerability.
âStop going after the women,â she demanded, as she pointed at Vell. âGet the tall, twig-like one! Heâll break easily!â
Vell looked up from his conversation with Phil as players all over the field started to converge on him.
âThat means you too, Phil!â
The diminutive âduplicateâ of Vell shrugged and looked up at his taller counterpart.
âSorry pal, nothing personal,â Phil said. âGot to have my friendâs back, you know?â
âI think you could pick better friends, but I understand,â Vell said. He placed his palm on Philâs forehead and extended his arm, pushing Phil aside and keeping him at bay while he appraised his odds against the approaching Patschke-Puck players. Vell started to react to their attempted dogpile, but never got a chance.
With fifteen consecutive rubbery bonks, the game ball bounced off fifteen different heads. Leanneâs expertly-aimed shot ricocheted off more than a dozen skulls, rattling each of them enough that they stopped in their tracks and gave Vell time to get clear of the rapidly-gathering horde.
âThis is ridiculous,â Lee said.
âAt least they donât have any more knives,â Harley said. A tomahawk came spinning through the air and embedded itself next to her feet. Harley looked at it and shook her head. âTechnically not a knife.â
âAll of this for two-hundred dollars, I canât believe-â Lee stopped mid-sentence and blinked twice. âWhat on earth am I doing?â
Lee dodged another axe and walked around the spherical field to the refereeâs position.
âSir, I will pay you three hundred dollars to ignore their previous bribe,â she said. The ref considered the offer and looked to Leigh for a counter-offer.
âGoing once,â he said.
âI- I can do two-fifty and-â
The referee could certainly be bribed, but he would not be lowballed. He started blowing his whistle and didnât stop until all the knives, axes, zweihanders, and claymore mines were off the field. It took several minutes to relieve Harmony of her various stored weapons (as well as several pictures of Harley with cartoonish red xâs over the eyes), during which Leigh called a time out.
âNow what do we do?â Leanna said. âOur whole plan was to cheat.â
âYou could try actually playing,â Vell suggested.
âNo one asked you, twig-boy!â Leanna shouted back. The unexpected vitriol from the usually soft spoken doppelganger caught Vell off guard. After he was done reeling, he stopped and looked down at his bare arms.
âAm I really that skinny?â
âItâs just that youâre so tall, dear,â Lee said. âIt makes you look, well, narrow.â
Vell looked at Leanne. She was only an inch shorter, but no one would ever call her ânarrowâ.
âI need to start working out with you,â he noted.
âVell, buddy, Iâd be happy to go for a jog with you or something,â Leanne said. âBut if you did my exercise routine, you would die.â
âPlay ball,â the referee shouted. The moment the call came out, Leanne vanished in a blur of speed, retrieving the ball and hurtling towards the goal once again. The Patschke-Puck students surprised everyone with their next move: absolutely nothing.
âYou guys okay?â Vell asked.
âOh yes, weâre alright,â Phil said, as his teammates began to sit or lie in the grass. âLeigh just thinks we should âembrace the inevitability of deathâ, as she put it.â
Phil joined his teammates in laying on the turf and allowing malaise to consume them as Leanne continued to rack up the points.
âI almost feel bad,â Lee said.
âI donât,â Harley said. âHarmony definitely still wants to murder me. They can suck it.â
----------------------------------------
After three quarters and several hundred points scored by Leanne, the game was finally called in favor of Einstein-Odinson. Leigh shuffled her teammates together and glared daggers (the metaphorical kind this time) at their opponents.
âWeâll get you next time, Einsteinâs!â She shouted, shaking her fist.
âYou probably wonât,â Vell said. He diverted his attention for a moment to look at Phil. âBye. Nice meeting you.â
âSame to you, big guy,â Phil said.
âMaybe weâll meet again next year,â Vell suggested. It would be nice to have a bright spot in these chaotic clashes with their ârivalâ school.
âOh no, buddy, Iâm a senior,â Phil said, with a broad smile. âAs much as Iâd love to stick around and help out my pals here, I got to move on to bigger and better things. I got a job lined up at Kraid Tech.â
Vellâs hand dropped.
âKraid...Tech?â
âOh yeah,â Phil said. âThat fellaâs merciless, no hold barred attitude is going to be what takes us into the future. Hey, maybe Iâll see you working for him too some day, right?â
âYou definitely wonât,â Vell said. He turned his back on Phil and stumbled back to friendlier face. Harley made sure to keep an eye on all the Patschke-Puck players until they were out of murdering range.
âHmm. I suppose that fellow really wasnât your doppelganger after all,â Lee said.
âBecause he was short, a senior, or because he was totally chill with Kraid?â Harley said.
âAll three, I suppose,â Lee said. âOne wonders how they couldnât find someone who even vaguely resembled Vell.â
âMaybe heâs just unique,â Leanne said, as she ruffled Vellâs hair. âIf so, Iâm glad we got the only one.â
As the cold night settled in, a purple butterfly flitted past one of the floodlights that illuminated the field. The âteamâ made their way off the floating field and headed back to the locker room.
âSorry your last game was a bit of an anticlimax,â Vell said. Leanne shrugged.
âEh, honestly, theyâre all like that,â Leanne said. âIf anything, that was the closest Iâve ever come to losing. Thanks for having my back, guys.â
âEh, save your thanks for Vell, I was whining about having to be here the whole time,â Harley said. âBut it all ended well. You kept your winning streak, and I found out I look great in jerseys. Iâm going to have to rock this look more often.â
âYou do have to give that one back, though,â Leanne said. âThat goes for all of you.â
âI know, I know,â Harley said. âLee should totally order us matching jerseyâs though.â
âOh, that sounds adorable,â Lee said. âIâll get right to it. What color, do you think?â
âWe can talk about it later,â Leanne said. She tugged at the collar of her own jersey, which was drenched in sweat. âRight now, showers.â
Seeing as Leanne was the only one who had actually exerted herself during the game, she was the only one who needed to shower. That suited her just fine. She needed the moment of privacy anyway, and not just for modestyâs sake.
Leanne rested her head on the shower stallâs wall and let out a deep sigh. She had played the last game of her school years. Just one more milestone behind her.
One step closer to leaving.