Lijia Mian, dressed in a dark grown, stepped forward from the shadows on the other side of the lab. She looked just as Goodwell -and Vell- had last seen her, seemingly untouched by time. Vell blinked a few times to make sure he wasnât hallucinating and double-checked that Lijia was still there. She was. Or it seemed she was, at least.
âIs it really you?â
âOf course it is, Isaac,â Lijia said. There was a gentle, welcoming lilt to her voice -entirely at odds with how she had spoken to Vell on their one meeting. Oblivious to this difference, Goodwell stumbled in her direction.
âWhere- What happened to you?â
âI was lost,â Lijia said, in that unnatural sing-song voice. âFinding my way back. Finding my way home. To you.â
Goodwell dropped his gun and took a few steps towards her, hands reaching out to touch her and confirm she was real.
âItâs been so long,â he mumbled.
âI know,â Lijia said. She stepped forward, and let his hands rest on her shoulders. âBut we can finally be together again, my love.â
Vellâs eyes snapped open wide.
âGoodwell, get away from her!â He shouted. The principal was entirely deaf to his pleas. âGoodwell, sheâs not real!â
There was something ever so slightly off about this âLijiaâ, but saying she loved Goodwell confirmed that something was very, very wrong. Vell didnât know much, but he knew for sure that the real Lijia Mian hated Isaac Goodwellâs guts. But not only did Goodwell refuse to believe it, he was blinded by nostalgia, overlooking all the small flaws that differentiated this Lijia from the real one.
âDonât listen to him, Isaac,â âLijiaâ said. She lifted her own pale arms and cupped his face gently in her hands. âYou know itâs me. Just look into my eyes.â
âGoodwell, donât!â
Too starstruck and blinded by misguided infatuation to care about Vellâs warnings, Isaac Goodwell bowed his head and looked, longingly, deeply, into the eyes of his long-lost âloveâ. A faint smile grew on his face, growing wider every second -until he finally looked close enough to see that one of Lijiaâs eyes was slightly the wrong color.
Isaac Goodwell started to laugh -and laugh, and laugh. His body shook and trembled, and tears welled up in his eyes. With a smirk, Lijia Mian released her grip on his face, and Principal Goodwell collapsed to the ground, still laughing, convulsions rocking his body as he boomed with tortured laughter.
âGood to be done with that,â âLijiaâ said. She stepped away from Goodwellâs prone, trembling body and brushed his filth off her hands. âThink Iâve shapeshifted more today than I have in eight thousand years.â
She turned, and the visage of Lijia Mian shifted out of existence. It was less that her appearance changed and more that everyone looking at her suddenly realized what she had looked like all along, as if her appearance was some optical illusion that had suddenly clicked into place.
The illusory woman stood tall, with skin as white as ivory and clothing as black as midnight. The clothes she wore were lopsided and strange, and her hair was undercut on one side and stretched into a long, black ponytail on the other. The odd asymmetry of her appearance made her appear to be two entirely different people depending on what angle you looked at her from. Confused and afraid, everyone who could step back took a step back. Vell, still strapped to a table, had to stand â or rather, lie- his ground as their mysterious savior sauntered his way.
âWhat are you?â
The asymmetrical stranger stepped up to the side of Vellâs table and looked down at him.
âWhy donât you look into my eyes and find out?â
Vell put a lot of effort into looking everywhere but her eyes. The stranger chuckled at him.
âClever kid,â she said. She put an elbow on the table and leaned down closer to Vell. âYou can call me Quenay. Like Q-N-A. Question-â
Quenay tapped herself on the chest, and then pointed to Vell.
âAnd answer.â
With a smile, Quenay reached into the table Vell was strapped to, her hand passing through the metal surface as if it was intangible. A second later, every single restraint holding Vell snapped open at once, tearing themselves to pieces as they were ripped apart with great force. Lee, Joan, and Harley ducked for cover as the metal shards burst outwards and embedded themselves in nearby walls. One of the flying shards struck Quenay in the face and bounced right off. She didnât even blink.
âHowâs that for a deus ex machina, huh? Iâm a God, and I was literally in the machine!â Quenay chuckled.
Vell had been halfway through sitting up and getting off the table, but Quenayâs words froze him in place.
âWhat?â
âCome on, Vell, arenât you supposed to be the problem solver?â Quenay said. âPut the pieces together.â
Vell rolled off the table and backed away from Quenay slowly. He eventually stumbled into Lee and Harley, who clung to him, partly out of relief to have him back, and partly out of fear of Quenay. Joan huddled in as well, clinging to Lee and Vellâs wrists.
âYou -youâre what Lijia found,â Vell said. âYouâre the reason she disappeared.â
âWell, when you get down to it, I think sheâs the reason she disappeared. Sheâs the one who got the bright idea to try and take my power for herself,â Quenay said with a shrug. âShe wanted to turn me into a battery, so I gave her a taste of her own medicine. Condensed her soul down into its component mana and shoved her in a few double-Aâs. Left her in a basement somewhere around here, some guy found her and used her to power his Gameboy a few decades back.â
Quenay chuckled to herself and leaned on the experimentation table.
âAnd hey, letting some guy play Pokemon isnât a half bad way to go,â Quenay said. âShe was a bitch anyway.â
Vell managed to tear his eyes away from Quenay long enough to check on Goodwell. He was still on the floor, convulsing with some strange mix of laughter and sobs.
âWhat about him?â
âOh, yeah, that one,â Quenay said. âWell, continuing my trend of divine irony, he wanted to relive the past, so I let him relive the past. Except he gets to live it from a different point of view. Lijia Mianâs. Specifically all Lijiaâs thoughts and memories about how disgusting he is.â
Quenay looked down at Goodwellâs tormented form and nodded approvingly. Then she glanced back at Vell and the three women cowering behind him. She bared her teeth in their direction.
âI know meting out all this divine punishment probably makes me look harsh, but hey, Iâm an old god. The oldest god, actually. Kind of comes with the territory. But you kids, youâve got nothing to fear from me,â Quenay assured them. âYou should know that, Vell.â
âWhy would I?â
Somehow, the tilted smile on Quenayâs face answered that question without her saying a word. In spite of his terror, Vellâs jaw dropped, and a shiver went down his spine, ending just above his tailbone -right on top of the ten-lined rune on his back.
âYou?â
Quenayâs broad smile got a little wider. In the blink of an eye, Quenay moved from one place to another, appearing in front of Vell. She poked one finger into his chest, just above his heart.
âNice to see you again, Vell,â Quenay said. âGlad youâve been doing well.â
âYou? You brought him back?â Joan gasped. âCan you do it again? Heal someone else?â
Having apparently not learned her lesson yet, Joan stepped away from the pack, to stand alone in front of the unknown god. Quenay didnât even glance in her direction, keeping her mismatched eyes locked on Vell.
âIâm not done with you yet, Vell Harlan,â she said. âBut I am for today. Weâll talk more next time.â
âWait, next time? When? What are-â
Ignoring all of his questions, Quenay flashed one last smile at Vell, and then vanished. Without an âentryâ rune to assist her silent passage through the barrier, the movement of a divine entity shattered the magic force field violently, filling the room with sparks and sound as the renegade Goddess made her exit.
Aside from putting on a divine light show, the collapse of the barrier also dispelled Goodwellâs remaining protections on the underground chamber. The metal door to the laboratory slammed open, and four young men pushed their way through at once. Freddy fell to the floor under the tidal wave of Vellâs roommates, but got himself to his feet in a flash.
âDonât worry, weâre here to-â
Freddy took a quick look around the room, to see the walls filled with metal shrapnel, Goodwell convulsing on the floor, and his friends standing packed in a corner, looking like theyâd seen a ghost.
Stolen from its original source, this story is not meant to be on Amazon; report any sightings.
âI think weâre late,â Freddy noted.
Professor Nguyen stepped through the open doorway as well. While the sudden entrance had caused all of Vellâs roommates to trip over their own feet, the professor remained steadily aloft as she took in the scene.
âIs this some manner of prank?â Nguyen asked.
Harley and Lee turned to Vell. They were starting to hope it was.
âNo,â Vell said. âThis is all...very real.â
Nguyen stepped further into the room and observed Goodwell twitching on the ground like a rabid dog.
âIs he alright?â
âNo,â Vell said. âAnd on that note: neither am I!â
Harley and Lee clinging to Vellâs shoulders were the only thing that kept him from falling forward as he blacked out.
----------------------------------------
Vell woke up in a bed -a soft one, this time, and he wasnât tied to it, which was a marked improvement from the last bed heâd woken up in. He breathed a deep sigh of relief and dared to open his eyes, hoping that he wouldnât find a malevolent Goddess staring down at him. There wasnât, which he marked as another win.
âMorning,â Luke said. Vell turned his head to see all three of his roommates sitting by the side of his bed.
âHey guys,â Vell said. âUgh. How long have I been out?â
âTen years,â Cane said dramatically. Luke slapped him on the shoulder.
âDonât fuck with him, man, itâs been a rough day,â Luke chided.
âItâs been like thirty minutes,â Renard said. Vell nodded. Heâd never really been worried by Caneâs âten yearsâ joke, seeing as everyone was still wearing the same outfits. If anything, the joke was reassuring. It meant that things had turned out alright.
âWhatâd I miss?â
âWell, Freddyâs trying to help the staff make sense of Goodwellâs weird machinery, Harleyâs making sure the authorities get all the info on Goodwellâs evil plan, Nguyenâs the acting principal, Joanâs getting expelled-â
âWait, what?â
âYeah, I mean, even though she helped in the end, she still sort of helped Goodwell do something super illegal,â Luke said. âNot to mention sheâs the one who sabotaged Goodwellâs stuff and made him have that weird brain meltdown whatever.â
âNo, thatâs not- Hold on. Whereâs Joan? I need to find Joan,â Vell said. He hopped out of bed, wobbled for a second, and then turned to find the door. Renard pointed him in the right direction.
âYou sure you want to be on your feet?â Cane said. âThe doc said you were fine, but after what youâve been through-â
âIâm fine,â Vell said. âI just need to, uh, find Joan.â
âLast I heard the security bots were helping her pack up and get out,â Renard said.
Vell stumbled out of the medical building and wobbled his way back to the dorm room. It was late in the day now, and they were almost entirely empty. The halls were completely barren except for two security robots standing guard at the door of Joanâs dorm. They didnât bother Vell as he moved inside, to find Lee somberly helping Joan finish packing the last of her boxes.
âJoan, whatâs going on?â
âHey, Vell,â she said hoarsely. âYou want to help me get moved out? For real this time?â
âNo. I mean, yes, maybe later,â Vell said. Joan smiled at him. Heâd never turn down a chance to be helpful, even now. âBut whatâs going on? Why are you getting expelled?â
âBecause I helped Goodwell, obviously,â Joan said. Lee stepped aside, tucking herself into a corner as Joan and Vell continued their conversation. âI canât really hide it.â
âBut you helped us,â Vell said. âAnd you didnât do anything to Goodwell.â
âYeah, but what was I going to tell them?â Joan said. âA god dressed up as a Chinese lady from the seventies showed up, saved my dumb ass from getting shot, and fucked off after admitting sheâd brought you back from the dead?â
âWell, not in so many words, but-â
For now, no one outside the three loopers and Joan had any idea what had really happened -and who had really appeared in the lab. Renard had suspicions, but he trusted the loopers to know that if they werenât telling people the truth, it was probably for a good reason, so he kept those suspicions to himself. For now, the story the world knew was that Joan had sabotaged Goodwellâs project, causing a dangerous backlash to Goodwell himself.
âLee didnât like it either,â Joan said. Lee tried to sink deeper into her corner. âThatâs why I didnât tell her. Just, uh, sneaking in one more lie before I go away for good.â
âJoanâ¦â
âThey wouldâve asked too many questions, Vell. Questions you guys didnât have answers to,â Joan said. âBut everybody already knew I was the bad guy. Nobody questioned that.â
Vell stepped up to Joan and put a hand on her shoulder. Joan reached up and put her hand on top of his.
âYouâre...not a bad person,â Vell said. âPeople should know that.â
âYou know, Vell, Iâve realized something. Even if Iâm not a bad person, which I might, possibly, be...I sure am bad at being a person,â Joan said, forcing herself to laugh. âEven when I was doing everything I could think of to help you guys, I still nearly got us all killed. I just...Iâveâ¦â
Joan paused for a moment and shrank from Vellâs touch.
âYouâre right about my sister. Sheâsâ¦dying. With me it was just the eyes that went wrong, but for her, itâs...itâs bad,â Joan said, not willing to linger on the details. Vell stayed deathly silent. âEveryone says thereâs no way to help her. But theyâre not even trying.â
In spite of the dayâs event, bitterness and anger welled up in Joanâs voice, and she clenched her fist tight.
âSo Iâve been trying. Trying everything. I told myself I had to do it all...and I guess I did,â Joan said. âIncluding some things I probably shouldnât have done.â
The sidelong glance at Vell could not be ignored.
âI know what I did to you,â Joan said. âAnd Iâm sorry. I was trying to save my sister, but that doesnât excuse hurting you. Or anyone else. I was just too obsessed with what I thought I needed.â
Joan bit her tongue and hesitated. She really didnât want to say the next thing she had to say.
âAnd now, what I need is in your hands. Or, on your back, I guess. And I have to be okay with that, because- even though youâre a little slow on the uptake sometime, and you lack confidence, and youâre a little too cautious- you are...youâre- you-â
Joan bit down hard and forced herself to say it.
âYouâre smarter than me.â
Vell had an entirely underwhelming reaction to Joanâs herculean effort of overcoming her own ego. Lee appreciated it, though.
âIâll...try my best,â Vell mumbled. Joan nodded in agreement. They had very different definitions of what the word âbestâ meant, but they both wanted to do their own version of their best. In that brief moment of solidarity, Joan pushed her head forward for a second, as if to kiss him. Against his better judgment, Vell flinched. Joan paused, only momentarily, and then tilted her head to give Vell a quick peck on the cheek.
It was a second-long brush of her lips against his cheek, but in that brief second, Vell felt more passion, more intimacy, and a deeper connection than any of the dozens of kisses Joan had given him through their months-long relationship. Then it was over.
âIâll be fine,â Joan insisted. âMost people donât make it past their first year here anyway. Getting expelled from the EOC is more prestigious than having a degree from some places.â
âRight. Youâll, uh, youâre going to do great. Iâm just, you know...uh...â
âIâll miss you too,â Joan said, finishing Vellâs thought for him. She left it at that, in spite of all the other things she wanted to say. She forced herself to step away from Vell and sought out Lee, still looking stuck in her corner of the room. She had been unsure what else to do while Joan and Vell had their chat, and had just tired to disappear into the corner. It had not worked.
âThanks for trusting me, Lee,â she said.
âAlways. Youâre my friend, after all,â Lee said.
âOf course.â
âAnd, Harley has asked me to pass along that sheâs sorry for most of the things she said.â
âDid she really, or are you just saying that?â
âShe did! In those exact words. So, you knowâ¦âmostâ of what she said.â
âYeah, that sounds right.â
Joan looked at her packed boxes. Sheâd expected to do so much more here at the Einstein-Odinson college, but in retrospect, she had done enough. She could leave with a clear conscience, at least. Or a mostly clear conscience, as Harley might put it. That was better than Joan had expected, and probably better than she deserved.
âWeâll see each other again,â Joan said. She could hardly believe the next words that were about to come out of her mouth. âLet me know if you ever need help with...the God.â
âOh right, weâre probably going to have to deal with that eventually,â Lee said.
âI really donât want to think about that right now,â Vell moaned.
----------------------------------------
Thanks to the dayâs events (and the criminal investigation that followed) Vell and company had ended up needing a ferry to themselves to get back to the mainland. They had taken full advantage to sprawl out, relax, and enjoy each others company on the long boat ride back to the California coast. But now the ride was over, and everyone was being pulled in a different direction.
âThanks for everything, you guys,â Vell said. âFor the rescue, and everything before that too.â
âSorry we werenât there a bit earlier,â Freddy said.
âYou were very brave, bad timing or no,â Harley said. She gave Freddy a swift kiss on the cheek, which nearly caused him to black out, but he managed to stay on his feet. Freddy said goodbye and found his way to a cab to head home.
âRenard, weâve said it before, but weâll say it again,â Luke said. âWonât be the same without you around.â
âYou guys will do great,â Renard said. âAnd if youâre ever in Paris, come around to my parents restaurant, Iâll cook for you guys again any day.â
âTraveling all the way to Paris for a free meal seems...completely worth it, if itâs your cooking,â Cane said. âYouâll see me again.â
âFor sure,â Renard said. âGood luck with...all that weird stuff.â
Renard walked off, sad to leave his friends behind, but also sort of glad to be free of the island and all itâs strangeness. He still didnât know what to make of that shapeshifter whoâd gotten involved out of nowhere, but luckily, Renard found it very easy to not think too hard about such things. Cane and Luke said their final goodbyes and wandered off in turn, leaving the looperâs alone.
âSo. Lot to say here,â Vell said.
âWe know, we know,â Harley said. âLove you, miss you, world wonât be the same without you in it, please just skip the sappy stuff. Itâs a two month break, guys, Iâll be back to annoying you in no time.â
âVell?â
âYeah, Lee?â
âYou are coming back, right?â
In spite of Harleyâs joking, Lee looked worried -terrified, even. She wrung her hands together nervously, and looked at Vell like she was about to cry.
âWhy would I not?â
âAfter everything youâve been through, Vell, I mean, youâve died hundreds of times, been torn through time and space, and been kidnapped -twice!â Lee said. âHow can you want to come back to us- to the school?â
âWell, admittedly, sometimes itâs difficult to put up with,â Vell said. âBut I just found out Iâm a Godâs...toy? Chosen one? Experiment? The point is, I donât think my life is going to get any meaningfully less weird any time soon, time loops or no.â
Vell shrugged, and in a fluid motion, turned the shrug into a hug, grabbing Lee around the shoulders.
âMight as well face all that weirdness with my best friends.â
Lee bit back tears and returned the embrace, as Harley tried to force her way into it.
âHey, make room you two,â she said. âVell said âfriendsâ, plural, this is clearly a group hug scenario.â
Vell and Lee relented, giving Harley room to squeeze them both far too tightly.
Overhead, a clock tower ticked away, counting down the time at the ferry station. Atop the tower, an asymmetrically dressed woman lounged, watching the hug from a distance with a warm smile on her face. Quenay stayed silent, watching the loving trio eventually drift apart and go their separate ways. She nearly went on her own way, until she saw a purple butterfly drifting on the wind around the clock tower. The butterfly settled down on an extended fingertip, and Quenay examined it carefully as itâs impossibly patterned iridescent wings shimmered in the waning sunlight.
âYou too, huh?â She said as she examined the butterfly. âYou get interested before or after I showed up?â
The butterfly twitched itâs wings, and offered no response.
âIt was rhetorical anyway,â Quenay said, before turning her attention back to Vell. âWell well, mister Vell, you are quite the person of interest. You got two forces of the universe on your case.â
The butterfly took off, leaving Quenay behind. She carefully watched Vell Harlan as the enigmatic purple butterfly drifted towards him.
âWell, thereâs an idea,â Quenay whispered to herself.
The mismatched eyes of the hidden Goddess slowly drifted to the rune sheâd inscribed on Vellâs back, and a sly smile parted her face.
âTwo is better than one.â