
(They/them)Hero/villain has me in a chokeholdWriting for the sake of self-indulgenceAnd funI đ©· commas
60 posts
Helloo I Love Your Work I Wanna Just Munch On It Every Time You Post >:)
Helloo I love your work I wanna just munch on it every time you post >:)
I have a request but you totally dont have to do it I bet your probably busy with others anyway lol
If you could could you do a scenario where the Hero gets pretty sick and cant go out, but they have a public reputation they need to hold on to. And the Villain owes Hero for saving them once so they have to go out and impersonate the Hero? And they start to realize how hard and miserable the Hero has to work after saving somebody? Tyy :D sorry if to specific lol
(Hey! Thank you for the request, itâs my first and Iâm flattered! Hope you like it <3)
Calling In Sick
A faint jiggling could be heard from inside their desk. Villain sighed, hanging their head for a moment before opening the drawer and answering the call.
âIâm not interested in purchasing an extended warranty-â they began, only to be cut off by a familiar voice.
âItâs Hero, dummy.â
Villain pulled the phone away from their ear to glance at the number on the screen.
âHow did you get this number?â
âThatâs not important,â Hero spoke hurriedly, âWhat is important, is that I need you to be me for today.â
âYou need me to be what now?â Villain questioned, raising their eyebrow in a show of confusion, despite being completely alone in their office.
âItâs simple, you just have to put on the costume-â
âWhy would I do that?â the villain asked incredulously.
âBecause Iâm sick!â
Hero coughed pitifully for emphasis.
âSurely you have someone else you can call,â Villain replied, dumbfounded.
Was this a joke?
âNot on such short notice. Please, Villain, I have a reputation to uphold.â
âWhy would I care about your sterling reputation?â Villain laughed.
They were a villain, after all. Their entire role consisted of making the hero look bad.
A sniffle and sigh traveled through the speakers before Hero spoke again.
âYou remember the City Tower?â
Of course Villain remembered the City Tower. They remembered the blaring of a horn, a hard shove on their shoulder, and the burning of skin against pavement.
How could they forget when Hero saved their life and never let them live it down since?
âUgh! Seriously?! You push me out of oncoming traffic once-â
âTwice, actually.â
âWhat do you mean âtwiceâ-â
âCity park?â
Damn it. The pond incident.
âFine! Iâll put on your stupid costume,â Villain grumbled.
A little impersonation was nothing compared to saving a life. Plus, if they really thought about it, the villain supposed the deception of the act was villainous enough to justify partaking in.
âGreat! Iâll text you where to pick it up,â Hero informed them cheerfully before promptly hanging up.
A chime and a buzz came through the phone a moment later, and Villain gathered their things and headed for the door.
One finicky zipper and some shimmying later, and Villain was passable as the cityâs golden savior.
Now what?
They wandered around town aimlessly for a while, getting a multitude of strange looks from citizens going about their day. They froze when they heard sirens whooping around the corner, before they realized that they were currently residing on the right side of the law.
Right. Think like a hero.
First order of business, save some people.
The spotted the red and blue lights, breaking into a sprint to follow them around a corner. They arrived at a building a few blocks later, and walked in just as a perimeter was being set.
âHero! Thank God youâre here! My baby, heâs still up there!â A woman cried, pointing up to a balcony that appeared to be on the verge of collapse.
A boy hung off the side of it, feet kicking to try and find a grip on the wall.
Villain took off running towards the building, climbing three flights of stairs before they realized they hadnât stopped to count what floor the boy was stuck on. They quickly located the nearest window and kicked out the screen, ducking their head out and looking down then up.
There, two floors directly above them dangled the kid, and it looked like he was loosing his grip.
His fingers slipped away, but Villain was ready. They braced their legs against the wall and leaned out as far as they could. As the child dropped, Villain caught hold of his forearm, stopping his momentum and allowing Villain to pull him inside to safety. The boy was crying, probably a product of the terror of falling combined with the shoulder that had just been wrenched from its socket.
âYouâre okay, Iâve got you. Itâs okay,â the villain-turned-hero repeated in a whisper as they carried the boy down the stairs and past the (too-late) emergency personnel that had flooded the building.
Stepping outside, Villain easily located the hysterical mother and making a beeline for her. The second she saw them coming, she burst into tears and broke out into a run.
Villain handed over the kid they had cradled in their arms to the woman who reached them at record speed.
Relief washed over the motherâs face while she looked over her son. She pushed his hair back behind his ear, whispering to him how worried she was and how glad she was to have him back on ground level.
Something changed when she saw his arm, however. Fury overtook her features as she realized that an injury had been sustained by the boy during the ordeal.
âYou let my baby break his arm?!â She screeched, whipping her head back to the temporary hero.
âItâs not broken, maâam,â they started to explain, âitâs just dislocated-â
âIâm going to be telling the news about this!â She spit, turning towards the ambulances on the perimeter and marching away with a huff.
âAbsolutely unacceptable!â The villain could hear her yell as she walked away, injured-but-alive child in tow.
âI had no idea this profession was so thankless,â Villain murmured under their breath.
It wasnât until they had to fight past the sea of cameras and wall of reporters shouting questions (that really sounded more like accusations) that Villain realized just how idealized theyâd viewed the job of hero. There clearly was no simple fame and glory to be earned here. From what Villain could tell, it was mostly ridicule and media coverage masquerading as a reward for their heroism.
And no sick days?
Hero must be truly miserable.
If Villain was a little easier on Hero after that day, then nobody was any the wiser.
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More Posts from Neon-kazoo
Spy?
(Inspired by the song âSpy?â by WHOKILLEDXIX)
Hero stood in a rough circle surrounded by the group of villains. Their voices were overlapping, all arguing over the fresh mission failure.
âIt was Lookoutâs job to make sure we werenât followed,â one voiceâBlueprintâargued.
âWe werenât! Iâm positive,â Lookout defended.
âIt was probably the panic alert from the front desk,â Hero accused, looking pointedly at Guardsman.
âI got that guard before he even got close to that button, thereâs no way thatâs how the cops knew we were there.â
Pulling out a phone, one accomplice walked to the edge of the room, pressing the device to his ear.
Hero engaged passionately with the quarreling criminals, trying desperately to salvage their mission and keep their cover intact. Hero was deep undercover as a security expert in a large heist led by Villain, and the takedown they had orchestrated had not quite gone according to plan. The hero did their best to stoke the flames of anger and disappointment between the crew. The more they were at each otherâs throats, the less they were thinking rationally about what really went wrong.
âIf everyone had just stuck to the plan-â
âIt was YOU who-â
âOk, letâs be logical about this-â
âAnd then you didnât-â
âItâs a miracle we all got away-â
The man on the phone returned to the group, face made of stone. He raised a hand, and the bickering quieted.
âMy inside guy says they were there within a minute of us going in.â
âSo the cops were tipped,â Locksmith concluded.
âAlright, so who knew?â Lookout asked from the left.
âThe driver,â Blueprint chimed in on Heroâs right.
âHe didnât know the location, and I only hired him today. We picked up the vehicles 30 minutes before and it never left my sight,â explained Mover, the one who had been delegated to arrange transportation.
âNo one else was told, it was all in-house.â
Silence dawned in the room as realization hit the criminals one by one.
âThe location was need-to-know. Villain didnât even tell half of us,â Locksmith pointed out.
âActually, I only told one of you,â he corrected nonchalantly.
Shit.
âSo that means-â
âMy, my,â He turned slowly with the words, locking eyes with Hero, âI think we have a spy.â
They were made.
Two seconds and they were out the door, heart and feet pounding as fast as they could. Hero burst into the stairwell and was faced with a split second decision: up? Or down?
The backup spot at which they had met up after the disaster was located in the heart of the city, and Hero hoped the mid-day masses would be enough to help them get away. First though, they had to make it out of this building.
Temporarily closed for some upper level renovations, the office was five stories high and packed closely with the surrounding businesses.
Passing the large painted number three in a flash, Hero headed for the top.
They didnât risk a glance back, but they heard several people slam open the door behind them. A chorus of footsteps echoed through the stairwell. Hero climbed, breathing heavily and mind racing to trace an escape route. A painted number five marked the top of the stairwell and Hero turned away from the roof access. If they remembered correctly from their recon, the East side of the building should back right up to an apartment complex with an outdoor fire escape.
They threw the door open and were met with a bare-bones floor. The entire level was sectioned by plastic sheeting, making it difficult to locate the windows and any potential dangers. Heroâs feet danced over stray boards and around forgotten construction equipment. Shouts alerted them that their pursuers were not far behind, but their figure was already blurred behind several layers of sheeting.
Most of the yelling was unintelligible, but one voice rose about the rest.
âI hope youâre ready to learn what happens to little rats!â
Hero made the mistake of turning towards the voices, taking their eyes off the floor and the bucket that they were about to crash into. They tumbled to the floor with a yelp, taking a clear sheet of plastic with them. They flailed, scrambling to their feet and shaking their limbs frantically to unravel themselves. They caught a glimpse of a set of boots several feet away before they pushed off the floor and continued heading for the wall.
Pushing past a final divider, they saw unfiltered light spilling in through a missing piece of wall. They threw themselves through the gap, standing on the narrow window frame still intact on the exterior side of the building.
Just as they had remembered, a metal staircase laid just a few feet ahead.
They didnât mean to hesitate, but stopping their momentum had apparently allowed a singular assailant enough time to catch up. A hand gripped the back of Heroâs shirt, preventing them from making the leap.
Damn they were fast.
Hero threw back an elbow, connecting with a set of ribs. The grip on their shirt loosened and they turned, their fist connecting to a jaw and then a cheekbone.
Speedyâs head snapped to the side and Hero was released. They pushed off the side of the building before they could fall, catching the railing with both hands and hauling themselves up and over it.
They landed on the fire escape with a clang. Hoping to throw off the group closing in, Hero scaled a level before ducking in a conveniently-open window into an apartment. Hero used the time it took them to cross the kitchen area towards the door to make an unwitting accomplice of the person that startled on the couch.
âDo the inside stairs have roof access?â They asked breathlessly.
The stunned resident simply nodded their head.
Hero barely waited for the response, already halfway across the hall by the time the person shouted after them.
They turned a corner and caught the shine of an elevator door sliding closed a few feet away.
âHold it!â They called, and a man pushing a large trash can put a hand in the doorway, leaving Hero enough time to slip in just before it closed.
âIn a hurry, today, arenât we?â
Hero chuckled breathlessly.
âYou have no idea.â
The man gestured towards the buttons on his side of the small elevator.
âFloor?â
âThe lobby, please.â
Hero clasped their arms awkwardly in front of them, trying not to breathe too loudly as they watched the numbers tick down slowly on the electronic screen. When they finally reached the bottom, the elevator chimed and the doors slid open to a fairly-active lobby. The door to the staircase was still closed, and Hero breathed a silent sigh of relief.
âAfter you,â the service worker waved, and Hero voiced their thanks before crossing the carpeted floor and passing through the revolving door.
Out of immediate danger, they slowed to an even pace, sliding off their beanie and slipping off their jacket to tie around their waist. They tossed the hat as soon as they could without getting ticketed for littering and entered the second shop they saw after turning down a different road.
They needed to get off the street, and fast. By now, word would be out about their betrayal.
Unfortunately, things had gone so off script that Hero found themselves on the opposite side of the city than their usual safe houses. They couldnât risk getting near any police stations, and since this wasnât the typical residential side of town, staying on the street after another hour or so would be incredibly suspicious. Those who worked went home soon, and those who lived here locked their doors.
Weighing those thoughts, Heroâs best option seemed to be to cross the city while they still could.
One change of clothes later, and Hero was back on a crosswalk, moving with a crowd dressed in mostly business-causal attire. Two more rights and they spotted a station, and graciously they had enough cash left to cover the fare for a ride all the way to South side.
The covered bench at which they waited was warm, but they couldnât get comfortable. Their head was whipping in every direction, trying to identify if they were being followed. Paranoia creeped in and their neck muscles began to protest the strain of repeated movements. By the time they could board the Greyhound, the other citizens were eyeing Hero wearily.
Unconcerned with how erratic they appeared, Hero hopped on the bus, settling into a window seat in the middle. They relaxed as it started to move, shifting their gaze to the window.
Buildings upon buildings passed by, all slowly emptying as the minutes crept closer to the end of the business day. Idle chatter filled the bus.
The more blocks that passed, the more optimistic Hero became.
More commuters entered on the next stop. Exhausted, Hero paid no mind to the blue collar workers filling up the seats around them.
Some people must have pushed past the ones trying to exit the bus, because an older man in front of Hero made a comment about everybody being in a rush nowadays. Several people mumbled their agreement as someone settled into the seat beside Hero, holding a newspaper that crinkled as they sat.
âTrying to outrun the stressors of life, I suppose,â a woman replied from across the aisle.
Something tapped Heroâs shoe, and they leaned down to grab a water bottle that had rolled from the seat in front of them.
âYou know what my dad always said about that?â The man beside Hero asked, setting down his newspaper.
Hero raised their arm to tap on the shoulder of the bottleâs probable owner.
Behind them, another person shifted, then answered lightly, âYou can run, but you canât hide.â
If Hero was anyone else, they would not have recognized the danger in Villainâs tone.
Before they could react, cold metal pressed to the side of their neck. In the reflection of the window, Hero could make out a hand holding a knife behind them. They flicked their eyes to the side, finally catching the bruising coming up on their seatmateâs cheekbone and jaw. In front, Blueprint turned and grabbed the bottle from their outstretched hand.
They were surrounded.
Part Two: Youâre Gonna Go Far, Kid
A Gambit
[CW: threats, blood, knife violence, captivity]
(Hero POV)
There was a knife at my throat, which was pretty expected honestly.
I mean, I didnât exactly expect to sneak into public enemy number oneâs private base and be greeted with warm milk and cookies. Sure, being held at knifepoint wasnât ideal, but stakes were high enough that I was running out of options.
This was a risk I was willing to take.
I slowly raised my open hands. Surrender: the logical course of action when one is caught effectively off guard deep in unfamiliar territory.
âDonât move and I might consider letting you live another second,â was whispered harshly in my ear, and I heeded the command disguised as a suggestion. The slow and controlled rise and fall of my chest was the only movement I allowed my body to make as my captor grabbed a hold of one lifted hand and pulled it behind my back, my arm folding painfully to provide the physical leverage the knife against my neck could not. Undoubtedly uncomfortable, but I tried not to worry about anything more than my main objective: staying alive.
âGrab your weapon slowly. Drop it. Kick it out of reach,â he ordered concisely.
I obediently unclipped the large knife sheathed on my belt, then dropped it to the floor and kicked it away.
Apparently, the distance the knife skittered was not satisfactory because I was subsequently yanked backwards a few more feet until we stopped and my shoulders were once again flush with the collarbones of the chest behind me.
âGive me one reason I shouldnât slit your throat right now. Tell me what youâre doing here,â I was questioned, and thus the careful game begun.
It was much too early to show all my cards, but I had to say something. While it was a decently good sign that I wasnât killed the second I was discovered, I certainly wasnât going to push my luck by not providing an answer.
âI need something. You have it,â I answered simply, forcing the words out as strongly as I could and hoping to buy myself a ticket to a second location with a less immediate threat of death.
The hallway in which we currently stood seemed to be closing in on its self, the shadows threatening to swallow me the second the knife would pierce my skin and end my life. I needed to get out of here.
I needed to survive.
I didnât lie per se, but I was certainly aiming for a misleading omission with my statements. I felt like a shady salesman pitching a hook, except this salesmanâs life depending on this customerâs purchase.
âYeah? And what might that be?â The voice sounded deceptively interested, but it came from dangerously close to my ear.
And that was my cue to shut up.
âOk. We can do it this way.â
My knees were kicked out from behind, and I went slamming into the floor. My tongue caught between my teeth on the way down, and metallic blood soon found its way across my taste buds. Hands ran across my clothes and into my pockets, methodically stripping me of my tools and supplies. My boots were removed and their knives tossed across the room. Pressure on my shoulder kept me down, but on a positive note, there was no longer a blade biting against my skin.
I focused on the iron taste and taking steady and clear breaths as the man above me worked. A renewed grip locked both arms behind my back and I was hauled onto my feet again. An aggressive push had me starting to walk, my sock-clad feet padding against and periodically tripping on the concrete toward a door settled into the far wall.
I was harshly marched down two more halls and through a smaller room, becoming more and more disconcerted that my captor wasnât bothering to hide the layout of the base as we walked.
We eventually reached a room that was clearly equipped to handle prisoners. It was stocked with tools and restraints, which my captor made quick work of using to secure me. The room accomplished the intimidating vibe of a concrete box with bright-in-one-spot-but-dark-in-all-others fluorescent lighting, complete with chains along the wall and a metal chair bolted to the floor in the center.
Once I was settled into the aforementioned chair, I realized it faced away from the only door in the room, leaving a view of only a blood spattered wall.
This was certainly a second location. Mission accomplished, sort of.
I still did not speak, what was there to say, really? Begging for my freedom would be pointless, and I refused to show unnecessary weakness of any kind. I was here for a reason after all, I could only hope prayer and patience would be enough to get me through this ordeal.
My captor paced at my back, his footfalls loud as he allowed his shoes to scuff roughly on the concrete floor. They came to a stop.
âLetâs get to know each other, shall we?â He stepped in front of me and smiled wide, and suddenly I was considering the merits of spontaneously dropping dead right there in that chair.
âYou see, I donât take this kind of thing lightly,â he started, âHow did you know to come here? Were you planning to steal what you needed, or is this some kind of delusional attempt at a business deal?â He continued, but my lips remained sealed, not that he could tell.
He seemed to realize this too, because he quickly ripped off every piece of clothing that covered my face, leaving it bare to be read and identified.
âHero, how cute.â
Now he was interested.
His eyes traced the scar that ran from the corner of my nose up to my cheekbone. Thatâs what gave me away, he would know, because heâs the one who gave it to me. Not to suggest that us crossing paths was a regular occurrence, quite the opposite in fact. I had pledged to avoid the man after our unfortunate encounter, and it helped that I wasnât much of a front-line fighter to begin with. I preferred sidelines and shadows, subtle work. And I rarely interfered in the big leagues. I was content to not make any powerful enemies, but unfortunately, circumstances change.
âYouâre not getting what you came for,â Maybe I am, âso whatâs the harm in giving it up?â He asked sweetly, nothing but innocence in his eyes as he stepped closer.
âDonât think Iâll be asking nicely again,âhe followed, and that- that possessive twinkle in his eyes. That was what I was banking on. This was going to work.
He circled me like a shark, slow and deliberate, but never reaching to fill his hands with a tool or a weapon. His relaxed demeanor put me on edge nonetheless. He had nothing to worry about. Capturing me was all business, now this was all play.
Silence continued to be my preferred strategy.
âStill quiet huh? Donât worry, Iâm really good at the quiet game,â he whispered the last part from behind me eerily, before walking away and shutting the door with a loud metal slam and leaving me alone. Maybe this wasnât my best idea, but it was a little late for second thoughts.
By the time he returned, I had already begun to preemptively associate the sound of the door and heavy footsteps with the sound of my doom. He appeared in front of me much too soon, empty handed with a justifiable air of confidence.
My heart started to race when Villain strutted over to a roll of plastic propped against the wall to my left. Slowly, he kicked it over to the center of the room where I sat in the chair, and then knelt to the ground to roll it out around me. He produced a knife I didnât know he had been carrying, different from the one that had been held at my throat, previously concealed somewhere in the black cargo pants that covered over the ankle of his black combat boots. He sliced the plastic laid around me into a square perimeter about six feet on each side.
My mind screamed that I needed to change tactics, admit something or be admitted to an early grave. But revealing that I intended to use the most powerful man in the game was not going to work in my favor. What choice did I really have though, be a toy or admit to toying?
Villain stood now. He gave me little more than a glance before starting to walk past me on my left side, presumably towards the door again or maybe other equipment. Unfortunately that guess did not take into account his lighting-like speed.
He turned, and before I knew it a knife was stabbed straight through my hand. I blinked in disbelief at the metal jutting an inch and a half out the palm of my hand, blood starting to well up around it and drip down to the tip of the blade before falling to hit the plastic.
Maybe I was wrong. Maybe this wasnât better. Maybe this was as certain a death as I was already guaranteed.
Too late to turn back now.
The pain took about a full three seconds to register. I was unprepared for the strike, quick as a viper sinking its teeth into its prey. I choked on my shock, mouth opening but no sound coming out.
Millan seized the opportunity, shoving a ball of fabric into my gaping mouth with forceful fingers.
âYou donât wanna talk? Donât talk. I prefer it this way anyway,â he spoke, and my mistake became crystal clear.
Salvage. Games. He wants to play games.
His hand returned to the knife he had left skewered through my hand. His fingers wrapped around the hilt and my thoughts ran a thousand miles per minute, searching for something, anything, I could use as an opening move.
I was invited to the table, now I just had to figure out how to play.
The blade slipped easily back out of my flesh. It had missed bone, angled perfectly in the direction of my fingers.
I had to act now, before that blade found a new home in which to bury itself, presumably in a much more damaging location.
I coughed and spit to try and loosen the scrap in my mouth as I attempted to push it out with my tongue. I was making progress, but a hand was heading for my face again to try and re-secure the gag. Running out of time, I forced precious few syllables past the fabric that crudely hindered my speech.
âAh-so-shee-a-shun.â
The hand reached its destination, but surprisingly opted to remove the obstacle from my mouth and toss it in a soggy heap to the floor.
âWhat was that?â
âThe Association. I know something.â
I made a sour face in an attempt to resalivate my mouth and rid it of the awful cottony feel and taste.
âI have something on The Hero Association.â
âHero, you do not waste a breath. I knew there was something I liked about you.â That creepy smiled returned, coupled with the glint in the eyes as the knife was wiped off on the knee of his pants. He crouched to a squat in front of me.
âI donât suppose youâre in a particularly generous and sharing mood?â He cocked his head, studying my face as if seeing it for the first time.
âIn your dreams. Sharing is caring, and I could not give less of a fuck about you.â I watched his face as he reacted to my words and knew by the way he lit up that I had picked the right path.
Never doubted it for a second.
âSo why bring it up?â
âFigured it might save me a stab wound or two.â
âOr three or four,â he conceded, and I allowed a small smile to stretch my lips.
âProbably five.â He smiled back. âAt least.â
The air in the room was lighter, and this exchange was seeming more and more like a tentative opportunity and less and less like certain doom. Blood still dripped from my hand, but I didnât spare it another glance. I relaxed in my binds, and prepared for my next move.
Villains I dont see very often; mute. Mute villains are the best, nothing can convince me otherwise.
One idea thats been on my mind is a mute villain confessing to the hero, either through sign language, or a perfectly executed scheme. Youâre choice :))
Not sure if this counts, but I ran with it. Might try this again after I gather some ASL knowledge. Hope you enjoy :)
A Silent Movie
It wasnât exactly easy to get Hero sat in front of the cinema screen. In fact, the planning for this trap had taken over sixth months. Not to mention the money it took to buy this building off foreclosure, and the multitude of investments into Hero-proofing the location.
It was even harder to get said hero to stop yelling long enough to pay attention to the image being projected from the back of the room. Not that their sense of hearing was needed for this experience, but Villain imagined Hero would appreciate the lack of noise-based distractions, including sounds they themselves were making.
The theater was notably large, probably the most expensive showing room of its day. That is to say, the upholstery was a little outdated. The popcorn had been swept off the floor, the swirling carpet surprisingly clean. The velvet of the seats did not appear stained, and the cupholders were absent of any discarded snacks or tickets.
The glow of the emergency exit lights were the only thing illuminating the room, and they revealed a dim image of the hero situated in the center of the third row, which was optimal seating in the villainâs opinion.
Clearly, Hero did not agree, considering how hard they were pulling at the restraints to try and exit their carefully selected theater chair.
It was futile, of course, and the hero finally stopped straining when the villain appeared a row below them, quiet as a mouse, standing with a finger pressed to their lips.
Villain retreated when the hero quieted, letting their attention shift to the screen and this special showing. Images flicked past, and Hero became engrossed in the story unfolding on the screen.
Shown was a news reel Hero recognized as the time Villain had crashed their Election Day speech. A zoomed out map of the city, marking City Hall with a red square. Grainy footage of two figures dancing around next to a dumpster. Once again the map appeared, now with two squares pasted on top. The pattern continued, and Hero was amazed.
It was an agglomeration of every moment they had spent together, every public battle, every nighttime-shady-alley encounter.
There was only one reason to collect these momentos, these reminders. It had all meant something to the villain.
The complete lack of kernels on the carpet certainly pointed to a level of dedication and commitment to this scheme.
Maybe, they were hoping it meant something to the hero, too.
Another scene zoomed out a final time, revealing all the markers spread across the city. Only, now, Hero noticed, a rather distinct pattern had formed.
Villain moved like a phantom, appearing again, this time at the heroâs side. The ropes at their wrists fell away like magic while Hero gazed at the awkwardly hovering villain. They presented the hero with a glittering object hung from a chain held loose around their fingers. It was a large ruby gem, expertly cut into the shape of a 3-D heart.
Stolen, no doubt, Hero suspected possibly from the large jewelry exhibition that had just entered town.
The screen flashed bright, and lit up the heroâs face as it contorted in surprise. They processed the scene as fast as they could.
A heart of red markers, a heart of ruby, a heart fluttering in their chest, a heart laid open in front of them.
âOh,â Hero breathed, âOh.â
Villain sucked in a breath.
This was it, this was the moment they got rejected because they couldnât-
âI had no idea.â
Of course they didnât know, itâs not like Villain had ever spoken about it.
Preparing automatically for the rejection, Villain started to withdraw their hand, cold-as-steel demeanor returning to them with all the familiarity of a security blanket.
It was so stupid of them to think that they deserved any kind of reciprocation, so stupid to think that the hero could possibly-
The hero snatched the charm from their fingers before they fully withdrew.
âI didnât say no,â they spoke softly, and the villainâs heart skipped a beat.
They reached out their other hand, wrapping their fingers over the still-outstretched hand of the villain. Instead of elaborating, Hero pulled the frozen criminal closer, connecting their lips in a gentle proclamation.
Actions spoke louder than words anyway.
For the Greater Good
(Hero POV)
I walked into the warehouse alone. No weapons, no mask, no backup.
Every rise of my feet felt like a climb up a mountain, every fall feeling like a step off a cliff. I could have sworn I didnât take a single breath as I walked into the wide open space, crates and barrels scattered around in a typical warehouse fashion. The lights that remained on buzzed from the corner of what appeared to be a break room and from various machinery peppered by the garage-like doors.
I didnât know exactly where I was going, just that I was supposed to be here, at this exact time.
I arrived on the block two hours early, and spent every last second before 2 oâclock alternating between pacing and curling up into a ball and rocking myself on the empty sidewalk. I finally stepped into what I estimated to be the middle of the space, virtually incapable of taking another step. My muscles quaked and I considered if I should just give in to the exhaustion and lie right here until someone came and got me. My pride suggested I stay upright, so I settled for a comprise of leaning heavily against the nearest weighted crate. I crossed my arms in what should have been a nonchalant appearance, but it was really just to keep my hands from shaking by my sides.
I took a few deep breaths and checked my watch.
2:02
God, I wanted to laugh. If there was any humor left in this situation I would have. I tried to keep my mind blank, waiting. But as the minutes ticked on, my determination waned.
I couldnât leave.
Wouldnât.
Lightheadedness swam through my brain, and I relented and lowered myself to the floor as black creeped in around my vision. I laid flat on the concrete ground, kicking my feet up onto the slats of the crate I was previously leaning against. The lights above me were dim, but I still closed my eyes in aversion to the brightness. I needed dark, calm. I needed to be anywhere else but here.
I checked my watch again, then pillowed my hands behind my head. Tears welled up in my eyes against my will.
2:05
Screw pride. Pride went out the window a long, long time ago.
I let the thin little salty rivers run freely down the sides of my face to pool uncomfortably at my ears. I was surrendering to my enemies, why not surrender to the tears too?
An eternity passed before footsteps finally echoed around the building. I didnât bother to get up, not even to move. I didnât bother to stop crying either, in fact the tears may have only gotten stronger as I stayed rooted in place.
âSorry for the delay, we had to make sure you werenât followed,â a voice announced itself. I didnât turn towards it.
âYou doing alright down there?â It asked, sounding infuriatingly genuine.
âPerfect. Never better,â I choked. There was no hiding the crack in my voice now.
âShit dude, I didnât think this would get to you that bad.â
What did you think was gonna happen? I was just gonna skip to your door with a couple of flowers and some handcuffs all gift wrapped for you with a wide ass smile on my face?
âDo youâŠneed a minute?â
âYeah.â
âOkay.â
A minute or two passed before I gathered what was left of my composure. The tears stopped flowing and my head stopped swimming. I removed one boot after the other from the ledge they rested on and started the slow journey back to my feet.
âReady?â The voice I finally matched with a sight asked. Henchman.
I sniffed, wiping my nose on my sleeve before nodding solemnly. This was by far the most courteous capture Iâve ever had the pleasure of falling victim to, hilarious given the circumstances.
âIâm gonna pat you down,â he warned, and I nodded my acknowledgment. Gentle hands brushed my body and found nothing, as promised. A light touch gripped my arm and pushed towards a path between the crates.
âLetâs go.â
We walked in silence for a while, I was too close to the emotional edge to break it. Henchman had no such reservations though.
âI could tell the guys the extra time was from a fight,â he suggested lightheartedly.
I merely shook my head.
âYeah youâre right, probably a bad idea.â
Despite myself, a small smile crept past my lips. His words brought the only comfort Iâd felt all day.
With every step I could feel my clarity returning.
I was going to be fine.
We walked out a side door and outside into the gravel, where it appeared a caravan awaited. I might have been flattered if I didnât feel so damn helpless.
âOne Hero, clean as promised,â I was presented to the arc of people gathered in various states of masked.
âYou were supposed to secure them, Henchman,â Villain looked me up and down, then shot at annoyed look at the man at my side.
Henchman did not reply, only looking from me to the crowd closing in around us, then back to me and returning to Villain knowingly. So I definitely looked as bad as I felt; it was nice to know my face was making its debut red-blotched and tear stained no doubt with the edition of heavy bags under the eyes.
Villain simply shook his head, then stepped forward to grab me.
âWait,â called another voice, and I struggled to identify its origin until a blue and gray clad person stepped forward. âHow do we know itâs them?â
He stared at me in blatant disbelief, and I found the energy to be a little offended.
Like anyone else would do this. Like I would take the risk to let them.
Various people exchanged looks, and I struggled to believe that no one had actually thought this part through. Several looks pinned me down expectantly, and I also found the power to be a little bit annoyed.
Of course their lack of foresight would become my responsibility.
Nonetheless, my eyes roamed the crowd, before pinning down an unsuspecting figure in a suit with red chrome outlines. I pointed to them, before pulling down the collar of my shirt to reveal a thick pink scar stretching horizontally about an inch below my collarbone. Chrome stepped closer through the crowd to see, then nodded his approval. Villain stepped forward to grab me once more, but he was stopped by someone decked out in forest green.
âYour hand,â they indicated, and I brought up my arm to reveal the back of my right hand and yanked down my sleeve so they could trace the jagged scar carved down to middle of my forearm.
âThat enough? Are yâall convinced?â I spun around, pinning several people right back with their own gazes. I seemed nothing like the person on the warehouse floor.
No, with every passing second, I was feeling more and more like a hero.
I guess they were in fact convinced, because I was finally escorted into an SUV and placed in the middle of a bench seat sandwiched between Villain and a larger man I barely recognized. The whole process was pretty ego-inflating honestly.
Unfortunately, Villain did finally get his wish of restraining me after the car had rolled to a stop and I was transferred into a building via an underground garage.
I didnât think.
Couldnât.
My fate was in the hands of my enemies, and I had just handed it over.
Defiance
âSurrender yourself,â his voice boomed through rapidly-emptying event courtyard, courtesy of the poor-sound tech being held hostage.
âOr I will destroy this city.â
Hero faced the final remaining civilian, gesturing towards Villain with his thumb.
âThis guy canât be serious.â
The hostage stared blankly, vaguely shaking next to the sound equipment.
âI am most definitely being serious,â the villain hissed, âNow, come with me.â
It was not a request. The command was like ice on his tongue, meant to freeze any thoughts of defiance.
Unluckily for him, Hero liked the cold.
âNo, I donât think I will,â Hero responded, following it up by spinning and landing a solid right hook with record-breaking speed.
Wrong move.
Villain saw it coming, allowing the heroâs fist to collide with his face as an opportunity to grab his arm and twist, wrenching it behind his back.
The civilian intelligently took their cue to run.
âIf you donât start listening to me, this is going to get ugly-â
Hero rammed their elbow back into the villain and ducked, slipping their arm out the hold and sweeping at Villainâs legs.
Unfortunately, Villain was built like a tree and did not wobble, leaving Hero to scurry away a few feet before rising.
âIâm sorry, did you say something?â
Hero stayed back, measuring his next move carefully.
âYou know what I-â
Villain was forced to take a step back as Hero rushed forward and landed a series of successful gut punches.
âI couldnât hear over the loudness of your ego.â
Villain stuttered as he tried to discard his affrontedness to parry the attacks. As strong and strategic as he was, he was still no match for the heroâs next combination.
The heel of his palm struck the villainâs nose in a flash while his left fist flew and found its target behind the ear. Villain now sported a bloody nose and a dazed look on his face, forgotten fists falling limply to his sides.
A final kick and he was down, lying flat on his back on the concrete. He immediately grabbed his head, groaning and rolling over pathetically.
Hero laughed, victorious.
âNow whoâs surrendering?â