Polaris was right, wasn’t she? Nobody really
planned on being a villain or a victim—circumstances (or Circumstance) demanded that the roles be played. Dick could talk big, but when faced against the cruel mistress that was Fate he’d simply shrivel and shrink. He didn’t want to be a victim or a villain, what were his options?
Then, a distant and muffled scream from outside the church…
"HE-E-ELP!"
Dick felt a shiver down his spine and a fire in his belly. He was shoving his things in his duffle bag and moving with a focus, drive and speed that had previously been missing. Pressure had made him paralyzed—panic pushed him forward. Richard thought of what could lie outside. Dicky thought of his own fate. Big Dick thought of Boston College and The Man With The Red Bandana: Welles Crowther. During the 9/11 attacks, Crowther saved eighteen lives at the cost of his own, going back into the burning and crumbling building seventeen separate times to save others. They didn’t know his name; they didn’t know where he came from—they just knew they had been saved by the man in the red bandana.
Boston College played a game every year called the Red Bandana Game in which they honored his heroism and legacy. Richard's father while working for ESPN and later local Boston radio had covered it more than a dozen times. It was a bedtime story for Dick. Maybe it was prologue. If this was how the story was supposed to end—what kind of story was it in the first place?
The supplies shoved in the bag, the bag zipped up and then slung over his shoulder. Pistol in hand, blue eyes caught grey steel. Dicky saw his reflection clearer in the gun than he did in the room he was in. He was unsure if he liked what that meant or what to do with it. Helping others was as good an idea as any.
“Someone’s in trouble,” Big Dick stated the obvious like he invented it, “You comin?”