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NOVEL 7
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CONTENTS
SQ 4: INSANITY
C LIAS Ss R oom O
ul H EE ITE
NOVEL 7
STORY BY
Syougo Kinugasa
ART BY
Tomoseshunsaku
ISBN: 978-1-64505-820-5
Printed in Canada
First Printing: January 2021
10987654321
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Table of Contents
Character Gallery
Title Page
Postscript
Newsletter
Chapter 1:
Ryuuen Kakeru’s Soliloquy
abnormal.
The fact remains, however, that people are hostile toward those they
sense are different from them. I’ve had many enemies since that day, both
internal and external.
Even so, I was never afraid. All I thought about was how to get
revenge, and how to turn the tables on my enemies. Eventually, they would
all bow to me. Those who possess an unparalleled capacity for violence are
truly the elite.
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INTELLIGENCE: C+
DECISION MAKING: D
PHYSICAL ABILITY: c
COOPERATIVENESS: B+
COMMENTS FROMTHE INTERVIEWER
Chapter 2:
The Sound of Footsteps in the Middle of Winter
freezing cold. More and more students donned scarves, gloves, and long
socks. Clouds hung low in the sky. It looked like it was going to snow.
Come to think of it, ’'d never seen snow before. I’d watched it on
television and read about it in books, but never touched it, never felt the
sensation of it on my skin. I decided I’d like to experience it.
Sometimes we hung out for over two hours, and other times, we split
after only thirty minutes. They were a casual, easygoing group who came and
went as they pleased. We did often hang out together after class on Fridays,
because our currently absent fifth group member, Miyake Akito, had a
situation to contend with.
“Class C doesn’t seem any more capable of studying than us,” Haruka
answered, eyes on her phone. “Miyacchi says he’ll be here soon. Sounds like
he just left his club.”
She was texting the very person we were waiting on. Akito was the
only group member who belonged to a club, and couldn’t hang out with us
immediately after class.
“But it’s good that we made it through this exam, isn’t it? Besides, I
don’t want to see someone expelled, even if they’re from another class,” said
Airi. She didn’t have the stomach for cruelty.
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“Well, yeah. I get that you want to get along, but that’s kind of hard,
with how this school is designed. Rising in the ranks means kicking another
class down,” said Haruka.
“Well, wait a minute. What if, after the final exam, all four classes had
the exact same number of class points? Then everyone could graduate from
Class A... Just kidding. That’ll never happen,” said Haruka.
“T’ve heard the upperclassmen talk about it. If all the classes happened
to have equal points after the final exam, the school would hold an additional
special exam to determine our rankings,” he said.
“What kind of exam?”
“Who knows? I’ve only heard rumors. Apparently, it’s never happened
before.”
“So, only one class can be A in the end, huh?” asked Akito, arriving to
join us.
“Like normal. Not really great, not really bad. You don’t have to
pretend to be interested,” said Akito.
“Come on, isn’t it nice to ask? We’re just having a casual conversation
between friends, right?”
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“Well, how do I put this? It’s not like I have any interest in archery
myself. I never have. I just want to know what youthful missteps led you to
care about it, you know?” replied Haruka.
“Yeah. Come to think of it, why archery? It’s not like this school’s
archery club is legendary or anything, right?” asked Keisei.
“Ah, so this other student made you want to join?” Airi chimed in more
and more often these days. It was a welcome sight, if a surprising one.
“Airi, you have a digital camera, right? That’s a fad these days, huh? I
suppose I understand why you prefer something like photography,” said
Haruka.
“Hey, that’s sexist,” said Haruka. “There’re lots of dudes on the ’gram
these days, you know.”
After all, at this school, you couldn’t communicate with the outside
world at all. The only people who’d see you on social media would be other
students.
“No.” I didn’t want her to picture me doing anything of the sort. “Do
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“Not at all. It’s a pain, and I don’t like putting myself on display,” she
replied.
Airi was quiet, but she looked hurt by their dismissal. Although she
was taking a break from it at the moment, her hobby was posing for pictures
and uploading them to the internet.
“Well, it’s pretty popular worldwide. It’s not that strange a hobby,” I
said. I didn’t want to depress Airi. She probably intended to hide her true
feelings, but it was obvious that she cared what I said. She always reacted
when I helped her, and Haruka and the others immediately noticed it, too.
“Well, I’m not the person to ask about what’s cool these days. I
apologize to anyone who happens to like Instagram and stuff like that,” said
Haruka.
“Just because it’s not for me doesn’t mean I should dismiss something
other people like out of hand. That’s on me. I didn’t think it through,” Keisei
apologized to Airi.
“Sorry to change the topic, but I was wondering about something,” said
Akito as the discussion calmed down. He sounded slightly irritated. “Doesn’t
Class C seem strange lately?”
I knew what Akito referred to. He was describing the people who’d
followed us over the past few days. Even now, one watched us from his
hiding place: Komtya, a Class C student and one of Ryuuen’s henchmen. He
was undoubtedly monitoring our group, but sat just far enough away to be
able to deny it as a coincidence. We would risk being labeled the aggressors
if we confronted him. Akito understood that we still didn’t have any solid
proof.
“During our study sessions, those Class C students came over and
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“Well, they sent different people this time around. Komiya and Ishizaki
showed up today at archery club. They said they came to observe, which the
upperclassmen readily accepted. But they just glared at me the entire time,”
said Akito.
Ryuuen was continuing to pressure us, and lately, he’d turned up the
heat. I could almost hear his bold laughter, hear him say, “Sooner or later,
you'll give way.”
The fact that Ryuuen was treading lightly was proof that he thought
about this very carefully. How would he go about finding his puzzle’s final
pieces? If I examined his movements thus far, it wasn’t hard to guess what he
might do. It was a matter of “when,” not “if.”
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points shortly after we started school, but now we’re within arm’s reach of
Class C. Factor in the Paper Shuffle test’s results, and there’s a chance we
might overtake Class C by our third semester. They should be panicking,” he
reasoned.
“You're right. We’re going to overtake them. Us, the same people
they’ve been making fun of!”
“Correct,” Keisei said. “When the school announced the class point
totals at the start of December, Class D had 262 points, and Class C had 542.
There was a 280-point gap.”
Class D had faced off against Class C in the Paper Shuffle, and won
decisively. One hundred points were transferred from C to D, letting us close
the gap by two hundred points total. The difference between Class D and
Class C was now a measly eighty points.
“It seems that Class C did something to severely violate the rules. The
school’s keeping the details hush-hush, but Class C had a hundred points
docked.”
“T wonder what they did? Sounds like a very Class C thing, though.”
Haruka seemed amused...not that Class D had any room to talk. We’d
managed to lose a thousand class points within a month of starting school.
“Well, whatever the reason, their internal conflict’s doing some real
damage. If things continue this way, our class might be promoted after winter
vacation,” Keisei said, though he didn’t sound cocky.
“Is that why Class C started messing with Miyacchi?” asked Haruka.
“T think it’s likely,” Keisei replied.
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way the school works. But I think it’s also something that doesn’t happen
often. Class D’s growth after its initial severe fall has to be making Class C
panic. It’s only natural that they want to ascertain the reason for our growth.”
“Ryuuen-kun acts all high and mighty, but he’s still their leader. His
reputation’s gonna hit rock-bottom if we overtake them.”
“We beat all the other classes during the island exam. Ryuuen defeated
us on the zodiac test, but we made a comeback in the Paper Shuffle.
Meanwhile, Class C have been using their class points willy-nilly, haven’t
they?” Keisei pointed out. “Even on the uninhabited island test, they quickly
used up all the points available to them.”
“You could see it like that. Their recent rule violation was certainly
self-destructive.”
The special exam on the uninhabited island had been conducted right at
the start of our summer vacation. Each class had been allocated 300 points
for their own use during the exam, and we had to use those points we were
given over a period of one week to clear the test. Then, whatever points we
had remaining were added to our class point total after the exam ended. Each
class, D included, did everything they could to have at least one point
remaining, but like Haruka had said, C Class had quickly spent all 300 points
they had.
“Is that why D Class was able to close the gap by that much?”
Even though there were certainly many twists and turns along the way
for D Class, we had successfully managed to save 225 points.
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anything to try and counter us. It did look like they really enjoyed their
vacation, though. I might be a little bit jealous that they didn’t really know
what we had to endure.”
“Ryuuen’s just reckless. He’s an idiotic child who thinks that doing the
unexpected somehow makes him cool. That’s why it doesn’t mean anything
to him if his class loses.”
There were only a few students who knew the truth. And Keisei
seemed like he belonged to the group of people who didn’t know.
“Y-yeah. A lot of the girls had it real bad on the island during that time
of the month. If it had gone on much longer, I think I might’ve been in
trouble too,” Airi whispered, her cheeks red.
“Why would you have been in trouble if the test continued?” asked
Keisei, who clearly didn’t know the first thing about how women’s bodies
worked.
“W-well, that’s...” Airi, unable to tell him anything about the time of
the month all girls went through, averted her eyes.
“You know what, Yukimuu? It’s cute how dumb you can be, but you
really need to know when to shut up. Get it?” Haruka shot back scathingly at
Keisei.
Desperate for this to end, Akito gently tapped Keisei on the shoulder.
“People have a lot of problems, dude,” he said.
“IT don’t have a single clue what you’re getting at. What do you mean,
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Akito changed the subject. “Class D won because Horikita saw through
Ryuuen’s strategy, right?” He looked to me for acknowledgement.
“All Class C did was party. They pretended they had to retire, but why
did Ryuuen-kun stay on the island? He’s their leader. Shouldn’t they have left
someone less conspicuous behind?” Haruka’s reasoning wasn’t totally off-
base, but anyone could’ve been nominated as leader for the purposes of that
test. There had been no way to rule out the possibility of another, more
inconspicuous Class C student hiding in the shadows.
“Hey, Kiyotaka, tell us the information you got from Horikita,” said
Keisei, a serious expression on his face.
“T can only tell you what I’ve heard secondhand, but...” I started.
I wanted to suggest calling Horikita, but Keisei spoke up. “That’s fine.
Just tell us what you know,” he said.
The four of them stared at me. It was a lot of pressure. “All right. Well,
don’t blame me if I get something wrong.”
With that disclaimer out of the way, I explained what had happened on
the island, starting from the very beginning. The moves I described were
mine, of course, but the official story credited them to Horikita.
I told them how Ryuuen had used a radio to communicate with a spy
while he hid somewhere on the island. About how, in addition to Ibuki, other
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spies had infiltrated the other classes. About how Ryuuen had been obsessed
with Horikita ever since the exam on the cruise ship. I told them about the
strategy Ryuuen used on the ship, and how he won, but I hid the fact that
he’d planned to crush Horikita in the sports festival. I said nothing about
Kushida’s betrayal, either.
“That’s generally how it went down. It’s not really any different from
what you guys already know, Keisei,” I told them.
If the leaders had been nominated after everyone had gathered, then
Ryuuen would probably have had a different strategy. However, the manual
that was distributed out to us on the uninhabited island clearly stated that the
nominations would be held immediately after our roll call on the final day. In
other words, it was done before each class had assembled. Ryuuen probably
went with that strategy he did because he saw that.
“Just as I’ve come to expect of Horikita. I could never think that far
ahead.”
“We had all that trouble with rations and sanitation, someone burned
our manual, and someone’s underwear even got stolen. Class D was in
complete shambles. We didn’t have the time or energy to conduct
reconnaissance on other classes,” said Akito.
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“Horikita-san 1s amazing.”
“She really is. To think she figured out all that stuff,” said Ari,
sounding genuinely impressed.
“Tn fact, it looks like they’re still trying to get in our way, even now.”
Rather than deny it, I decided to just tell them how things were.
“It seemed like there was some kind of dispute between people in the
same group during the zodiac test, too.”
“T suppose I can understand what happened on the island and the cruise
ship. But why come all the way to spy on me during archery club? That’s not
normal, right?” asked Akito.
He had a point. If Horikita was Class C’s main target, why waste time
tailing all of us?
“They might be trying to find weak links in Class D,” I said. “After all,
it doesn’t seem like Horikita has any weaknesses they can exploit. Maybe
their plan is to destroy those around her.”
“T suppose.”
“Even if she isn’t your girlfriend, don’t you like her?” asked Haruka.
“Or have you already got a girlfriend?”
“IT see. Then I guess that settles it. We’re all going to be lonely this
year.”
“Lonely?”
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“Look around. It’s almost Christmas, isn’t it?” Haruka whispered. She
had a point. The mall was so festooned with Christmas decorations that it was
hard to believe we were on a school campus. Happy couples walked past
where we sat.
“Tt’s not that special a day, right?” said Keisei. “It’s just like any
other.”
“That might be the case for you, Yukimuu, but it’s important to us
girls,” Haruka replied.
“Yeah, yeah. Stuff like who’s dating, and who isn’t. Or who spent the
night together, and who didn’t. You know? Even if you’re just single because
you like being alone, they’ll pity you,” said Haruka.
“What, so you’ve never, ever thought even a little bit about dating?
You’re blushing.”
“Shut up.”
“This mango juice 1s way too sweet. Whew,” said Akito, handing me
the cup while pretending to vomit.
“You mean like people asking each other out?” Airi inquired.
“Probably. If couples go out, other couples are going to break up. A lot
can happen at Christmas, after all.” Haruka nodded sagely, as if she’d spent a
lot of time observing the battlefield of relationships.
“Putting aside who might start dating, what about who might break up?
The only couple in Class D is Hirata and Karuizawa, right?” Akito clutched
his throat while talking, as if the mango juice’s sweetness was throttling him.
It was super sweet.
“Love can bloom anywhere, Miyacchi. It’s not as though your only
romantic options are the people in our class. If there’s a girl you like, you
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gotta make a move before someone snatches her up,” said Haruka.
“Sadly, archery is my only love,” said Akito.
“Dude, that’s so lame. You’re not even all that passionate about it.
Super uncool.”
“Shut up!” he averted his eyes as if embarrassed. “Anyway, I’m not
taking time off from club activities during winter break. I suppose it might be
a different story if I had a girlfriend, but I don’t.”
“So, you would like to get a girlfriend?” asked Haruka. She mimed
holding a microphone up to Akito’s mouth.
“T mean, I’m not going to broadcast it to the world like Ike and those
other guys, but I imagine both guys and girls want the same things, right?”
“Well, if my ideal guy’s out there, I’d love to find him. What’!] you do
if a girl says she likes you, Yukimuu?” Haruka pressed.
“What? ll I do? It’d depend on the relationship I had with that girl, I
guess.”
“Oh, so you wouldn’t date her just because she was cute? I see, I see.
You’re quite the serious little boy,” she teased.
“Knock it off.”
“Kiyotaka-kun, do you have any plans for Ch-Christmas?” asked Airi.
“What else could it be, then? Kiyopon just said that he didn’t have a
girlfriend.”
“That’s not what I was getting at. It’s only... I mean... Well, I wanted
to know what his plans were. It’s just that ’'m curious about what you want
to do, when you spend Christmas all alone,” said Airi.
“Hmm, that makes sense. Miyacchi probably has club stuff, but what
about you, Yukimuu? What are you up to during Christmas?”
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ladder to holding our position. We don’t have all that many academically
skilled students in our class, so I’d like to stay ahead.” So, he wanted to
contribute his strongest talents to the class. He seemed to have grown more
confident after tutoring Haruka and Akito.
“T don’t know how much I can help on the academic front. Pll leave
that to you, Keisei,” Akito said.
“Yeah, you’re probably right. Pll slide right back down if I start
slacking off now.”
“Yep. I’m not doing anything special. Ill probably spend the day
quietly in my room.”
“Heh. Hee hee!” Airi chuckled to herself. She tried frantically to stifle
her laughter, but failed.
“S-sorry. No, it’s just... Well, I’m having fun. I’m having so much fun
I started to laugh.”
“You’re laughing because you’re having fun?” Haruka and the others
looked as though they couldn’t quite understand. I looked too, noticing tears
welling in Airi’s eyes.
“Tt’s just that I’ve never had such a fun time before. I’m really happy,”
she answered, revealing her heart to us.
“Well, I don’t really get it, but I’m glad. I’m having fun too,” Haruka
concluded.
“Since we’re all here now, why don’t we grab dinner together before
heading back?”
Everyone was down with that. As we started to head out, I spoke up.
“Hey, I’m going to use the bathroom quick. You guys mind going on ahead?”
“Nah, itll be really crowded at this time of day. It’d probably be faster
if you got in line. Save me a seat.”
The girl was Kamuro, from Class A. She messed with her phone as if
she hadn’t noticed my presence.
I took a chair next to Kamuro. You could’ve cut the tension in the air
with a knife.
“TI saw you after class yesterday. Two days ago, at Keyaki Mall. Four
days ago, at Keyaki Mall. Six days ago, after class. Seven days ago, after
class. You were always there. That’s quite a string of coincidences, isn’t it?” I
asked. On my phone’s screen, I showed her several pictures I’d taken of her
spying.
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“Not especially. It’s not hurting me or anything. I’m not going to tell
you to stop, either.”
“But I have to wonder...what will your boss think when she finds out
about this?” I asked.
“Boss? What’re you talking about? You’ve been watching way too
many movies.”
“Then I suppose I'll report this to Sakayanagi. I’Il tell her you’re not
really very good at tailing me.”
“There’s really no need for you to lie. You’re spending your precious
time doing something as boring as tailing me, and you’re doing it precisely
because you trust and respect Sakayanagi.”
“If you’re not doing it out of goodwill, then it must be because she’s
got some dirt on you.”
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your inability to act on her behalf. Then that weakness of yours she’s
exploiting will probably come back to bite you.”
“Too,” huh? That just about confirmed that Sakayanagi was indeed
using some weakness of Kamuro’s. She’d fallen hook, line, and sinker for my
ploy.
“You’re the Class D student that Ryuuen’s looking for, aren’t you?
That’s the only thing I can think of.”
“You're trying to threaten me, but I could give Ryuuen some friendly
advice, if I felt like it,’ Kamuro said.
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Yamada Albert
CLASS: First Year, Class C
STUDENT ID: S01T004708
CLUB AFFILIATIONS: None
INTELLIGENCE: C
DECISION MAKING: C
PHYSICAL ABILITY: A
COOPERATIVENESS: B
Chapter 3:
Reunions and Farewells
66
Wiaars up with those guys?!” Sudou grumbled irritably as he
walked into our classroom the next day, bypassing his seat and approaching
Horikita. The look on his face made it immediately clear that he was
extremely pissed off. “Hey. You got a sec, Suzune?”
“Those jerks from Class C! That Ryuuen guy and his lackeys. They’ve
been followin’ me since this mornin’, trying to pick a fight. They even
blocked my way in the hall. They’re seriously getting on my nerves!”
“Oh, Suzune told me that whenever I run into something I can’t deal
with properly, I should just ignore it,” said Sudou. That was certainly sound
advice. If Sudou rebuked the Class C students, it would probably only add
fuel to the fire, so to speak.
“Well, I guess I did bump their shoulders a little when I forced my way
through,” he added. “The students from the other classes knew I was boxed
in, so there shouldn’t be anything to worry about, right?”
They’d already gotten the school and student council involved once
before, and it had caused an uproar. If Sudou punched someone, that would
be bad, but if he just pushed his way through, it should be fine.
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“They called me a monkey, an idiot, childish stuff like that. They were
tryin’ to start a fight.” Smack! Sudou pounded his fist into his palm. I
wondered whether this was a continuation of Class C’s plans, like when
they’d appeared at the archery club yesterday.
“Some Class C guys also tailed Akito—I mean, Miyake,” I told Sudou
and Horikita.
“Do you think they’re plannin’ on staging another fight, like that time
they tried to get me in trouble?” asked Sudou.
“Yeah,” I replied. “His speech 1s still a little crude, but that’s fine.”
“Tt looks like it’s time for him to take the next step.” With that cryptic
comment, Horikita got a notebook and started scribbling something down.
“What are you talking about? What next step?” I asked. When I tried to
sneak a peek at her writing, Horikita quickly closed the notebook.
“That’s a topic for another time. Besides, we have more problems than
just Sudou-kun right now,” she said.
I didn’t know what she meant, and honestly didn’t care. Lately,
Horikita had thought and acted independently of me with increasing
frequency. She’d gotten better at communicating with Sudou, Hirata, and the
others, too.
“At any rate, Ryuuen-kun’s been a busy bee—we only just got done
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with the Paper Shuffle,” she continued. “I wonder what he’s plotting now?”
“There aren’t any exams in the immediate future,” I said.
I pretended not to notice and shrugged the look off. “I wonder what
he’s after this time?”
“Do you really not know? Or are you just pretending?” Horikita asked.
“What do you mean?”
“He’s looking for the person controlling Class D from behind the
scenes.”
“Perhaps your strategy during the Paper Shuffle was more effective
than he expected? He might be moving more carefully this time. Taking a
while to remove the obstacles in his way first,” I said.
“T wonder. I don’t think that’s it, though. It’s more like he lost interest
99
in me.
“Does this mean you miss Ryuuen’s attention?” I asked.
“Does that mean you want me to kick you?”
“IT do not want to be kicked.” She was definitely the kind of person
who would actually kick me, too.
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sat at their desks. It didn’t seem as if anyone was listening in, but this wasn’t
a conversation we could risk having overheard.
“At any rate, you apparently understand Ryuuen quite well. I’m not
teasing. I mean it,” I added quickly, because Horikita glared at me again.
“His modus operandi has remained essentially the same. If he plays the
same tricks over and over, I’m going to learn from it, even if I don’t like it.
That’s how I predicted that he’d use Kushida-san during the Paper Shuffle.
Of course, it goes without saying that I would’ve preferred that not happen,
but...” Horikita trailed off.
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“Because I have no choice but to accept it. It’s not like you’re going to
quit now, are you?”
This optimism wasn’t a bad thing. Horikita was perceptive. She had
quite a lot of potential. If she improved her communication skills to Hirata’s
level, she could stand among the ranks of the elite.
“For what?”
“There you go again.” She huffed, looking irritated. “Let’s change the
topic. Are you still participating in those meetings?”
“Meetings? You mean, with Keisei and the others? Is there some kind
of problem?”
“Tt’s not about necessity. I just feel at ease when I’m with them,” I
answered. Horikita’s life revolved around her quest to ascend to Class A. It
was all she ever talked about. Since I didn’t share her enthusiasm on that
front, I had little reason to hang out with her the way I did with Keisei and
the others.
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3.1
“What? Did you want to continue our talk from this morning?” I asked.
“Tt shouldn’t take much time.” Horikita reached into her bag and took
out a library book. “Didn’t you say last week that you wanted to read this?”
“Tf you'd like. It’s also due back today. I was hoping you could take it
to the library for me, then check it out for yourself,” said Horikita.
“Is this because you don’t want to go to the trouble of returning it?” I
asked.
True enough. This just saved Horikita the time and effort of having to
return the book herself. You needed a student ID card when you wanted to
check out a book, so trying to check out a book in someone else’s name
would be impossible. On the other hand, you didn’t need to present anything
if you were simply returning a book.
“If you refuse, I’Il just head over to the library. I don’t know when
you'll be able to get your hands on this incredibly popular book that’s in such
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“Thank you.” Horikita handed it to me. “I don’t care when you return
it, as long as it’s sometime today. If I hear that it’s overdue, I'll be coming for
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you.
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3:2
hideaway. Students weren’t allowed to eat in here, so only a few people were
around, guaranteeing that the return process would go smoothly.
“Since I’m already here, I might as well check out another book,” I
muttered to myself.
A conventional blurb could make that book sound like a mystery, but
wouldn’t it have fit better in the romance section?
“Sorry, I don’t mean to butt in, but...” I looked at her and trailed off.
“Wait a minute. You’re from Class C. You’re...”
Shiina Hiyori. I'd seen her with Ryuuen a short while ago. It seemed
that she recognized me, too.
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fa
"~
i iy
ay
“T don’t really like or dislike the book. It was in the wrong section, so I
thought I’d return it to its proper place,” she replied.
“IT see.”
“By the way, that book you have—Farewell, My Lovely, right? It’s
wonderful,” said Shiina. Her eyes started to sparkle.
“Tt’s all right. I’ve already read it. Besides, I was fortunate enough to
find another good book while I searched for that one. The school library’s
quite large. If I tried to read everything on its shelves, I’d probably graduate
before I could finish,” said Shiina. She clutched Bronté’s book, a small smile
on her face.
“Yeah. You’re probably right. Sorry for disturbing you, by the way.”
She’d come here during the lunch break instead of eating, so she
probably didn’t want to waste time chatting to a student from another class. I
decided to leave her be.
“If you just came to return Farewell, My Lovely and then borrow it for
yourself, you could’ve done that at the service desk. Are you looking for
another book to check out?” Shiina asked, stopping me in my tracks.
“T thought I’d come back and try another time, so...” I replied. Shiina
was already scanning the mystery section. “Hey, what are you doing?” I
asked.
“In that case, I would most definitely recommend Whose Body? That’s
the first book in the series featuring Lord Peter. If you read that book, you'll
inevitably want to read the rest.” She pulled several books from the shelves
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“No,” I told her. “I was just a little surprised. Since I’m already here, I
might as well grab some more books.”
“Huh?”
Shiina had probably heard that either Keisei or I were likely candidates
for the person pulling Horikita’s strings. It was very likely that was why she
was trying to talk to me now.
In some ways, Shiina Hiyori was even creepier than Ryuuen. She was a
completely unknown quantity. I might be able to extract some information
about her by using Karuizawa, but that was too risky, now that Karuizawa
was Ryuuen’s target. Keisei, Haruka, and Horikita, of course, were all poor
spies. I could try to use Hirata, but he was fundamentally neutral.
“Please don’t worry. I just play along so that Ryuuen doesn’t bother
me. I’ve never been interested in conflict. Or is it that you think talking with
me will be a problem on its own?” Shiina asked.
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Who could’ve predicted this would all result from a simple library
visit?
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3.3
Suma AND I made our way to the cafeteria. It was twenty minutes
into our lunch break, and the room was packed. Most students were eating,
though, so hardly anyone was in line to get a meal ticket. I chose the daily
special, but Shiina seemed unable to come to a decision. Her finger hovered
over the buttons, and she looked at all the options carefully.
“Sorry, sorry...” she said. I waited another two minutes. Finally, she
ended up choosing the same meal I had. “Sorry. I’m so indecisive.”
“No worries. It’s not like there was anyone in line behind us.”
After we turned in our tickets, two meals were placed on the counter.
Shiina struggled to adjust her schoolbag to take her tray.
“Sorry.” She handed over her bag, which turned out to be quite heavy.
Did she carry all her textbooks in it? “It’s a lot, isn’t it? Thank you very
much.”
We avoided the crowds, found some empty seats, and sat across from
one another, slowly tucking into our late lunch.
“No. I usually buy lunch from the convenience store in the morning
and then eat in the classroom. Do you come here often, Ayanokouji-kun?”
“Convenience store food isn’t my favorite. Food tastes best when it’s
freshly made.”
“Hmm, I see. The cafeteria food certainly is delicious, isn’t it? I’ll keep
that in mind,” she replied.
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“I’ve always wanted to try it, but if you miss out on your initial chance
to do something, you kind of drag your feet, don’t you? I figured this was a
good chance to go,” Shiina said.
I understood those feelings. You didn’t want to let people see that you
didn’t know how to do something they could do, after all. Pride made you
cautious, like when I was reluctant to buy drip coffee at the convenience
store.
Shiina placed her bag on the table with a thunk. “I think I'll head back
to the library. Have you read any of these before, Ayanokouji-kun?”
I suddenly realized that there was something off about the books.
“Wait. These aren’t from the library, are they?”
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“Go ahead.”
If Shiina was acting, this was quite the performance. I got the feeling
she just genuinely loved books. I’d made a strange connection in a rather
strange place. I would remain wary, of course, just in case this was a Class C
plot, but it really felt like a coincidence. After I promised to return the books,
the bell rang, signaling the end of our lunch break.
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3.4
Come to Keyaki Mall if you can. Usual spot. A casual, chatty message
from Haruka.
“Whose?”
“Are you playing dumb again? I’m talking about your inner self,” said
Horikita. Apparently, she smelled my joy like a bloodhound. “You’ve found
a cozy little nook, haven’t you?”
With that, she grabbed her bag and stormed off to the dorms by herself.
“T was grinning, huh?” I muttered.
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“T told the seniors I felt distracted, so I was going to take today off. The
club’s pretty lenient,” Akito explained. That was pretty blunt. I supposed that
he wouldn’t have been able to come meet us here if he’d lied and said he was
feeling ill.
Akito simply shook his head. “There’s nothing the teacher can really
do. If Class C trespassed in our private places, that’d be one thing, but they’re
free to observe the archery club,” he explained.
“Ugh. Class C really are annoying, aren’t they? Oh, speaking of. I saw
it. | saw it. How deplorable of you, good sir,” said Haruka, speaking like
some old-timey aristocrat as she jabbed me with her elbow.
“What do you mean, ‘what’? I’m saying that I saw you eating with
Shiina-san from Class C, Kiyopon! Airi’s so worried about it, she’s been
spilling rice all over herself.”
'?
“Oh, did I?” said Haruka. “Then, Kiyopon, pretend I never said
anything.”
Well, that wasn’t exactly possible, but now I understood what was
really going on.
“Really, Kiyotaka? I didn’t think you were that kind of guy,” said
Keisei, sounding slightly annoyed.
“Naive. Much too naive, Yukimuu. All roads lead to romance in the
end. Young people these days live life at a much faster pace,” said Haruka.
“Faster? What do you mean, faster?” replied Keisei. “We’re in our first
year of high school.”
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Keisei’s mouth hung open. “I-I’ve never heard of anything like that
before.”
“That just means you never paid attention, Yukimuu. I mean, most
girls aren’t interested in childish boys,” said Haruka.
“S-see?” said Airi. “I told you, but you wouldn’t believe me, Haruka-
chan.”
“So, you’ve been marked too, Ayanokouji. Does that Ryuuen dude
hate the thought of losing to Class D that much?” asked Akito. He sounded a
bit resentful, like it made him less special that he wasn’t the only person
Class C targeted.
“A bunch of different things, but she did ask about the mastermind,” I
answered.
“T-I see. So, it wasn’t a date or anything.” Airi patted her chest and
sighed in relief.
“Even so, it looked like you had a pretty good time,” said Haruka.
“Hmm.”
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“T couldn’t just let her see me looking disgusted, right? She’s still a
Class C student.”
Haruka seemed suspicious, but Keisei changed the topic. “Putting aside
Haruka’s imaginary romance, Class C is becoming a problem. I feel bad for
eavesdropping, but apparently Sudou got wrapped up in something and went
to Horikita for advice.”
“IT see. They haven’t done anything to me, though,” said Airi, raising
her hand timidly.
Akito was the quick-witted one in our group. His observational skills
were sharp. Haruka tried to look around, being extremely obvious about it,
but he stopped her.
“Don’t. We don’t know what they’re after. It’s better not to react,” he
said.
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“We don’t know whether or not that person exists,” said Akito.
“Ryuuen spews lies as easily as breathing.”
“It’s not me. All I did was help out during the island test and the zodiac
game.” Keisei let out a deep sigh, as if he found the subject irritating.
“Tn that case, how about Kouenji-kun?” Haruka suggested. “I mean, his
personality’s, well...off. He’s brilliant, he’s athletic, he’s perfect in every
way.”
“Impossible,” replied Keisei. “Like you said, he’s a jerk. Do you really
think he’d do anything for our class?”
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“Besides, Kouenji retired on the very first day of the island test,” added
Keisei confidently. “He wouldn’t have known what was going on with us. If
there was another mastermind on that island aside from Horikita, it couldn’t
have been him.”
“But this is all conjecture based on the assumption that there really is a
mastermind, like Ryuuen believes. Even if there is, we’re not sure they were
involved in a// the tests.”
“But how could Ryuuen-kun know for sure that the mastermind isn’t
Horikita-san?”
“Maybe Hirata-kun’s the mastermind?” suggested Keisei. “Back when
we were on the island, he got some advice from Horikita-san, I think.”
Someone from Class C was probably tailing Hirata, too. But he was
bound to remain neutral and abstain from conflict, and I barely spoke to him
lately. I wouldn’t risk it while Ryuuen and his goons were on the hunt.
“Please don’t be upset, but I wanted to ask you something,” she said.
“Ts it possible that maybe you ’re the mastermind?”
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“S-sorry. It’s just, well, I kind of thought that, for some reason or
another. Maybe because of the advice you gave, that Ryuuen-kun might be
after you. I felt bad for you...” Airi continued.
“If that’s true, it’s bad news for you, Kiyopon,” said Haruka.
“Yeah, it really is.”
“What a drag. Hey, if they give you trouble, feel free to talk to us about
it,” said Akito, placing his hand on my shoulder.
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3.5
Satou from Class D. Her skirt fluttered slightly in the breeze as she stopped in
front of me.
“Hey, Ayanokouji-kun. Are you free today? If so, would you like to
have some tea or something before going back to the dorms?” She twirled her
hair on her finger, as if it were pasta on a fork. She was bold—and obviously
looking for a date.
Horikita, who sat next to me, didn’t seem to care at all. After gathering
her things, she left the classroom. However, I felt the other members of the
Ayanokouji Group observing. Why’s a popular girl like Satou talking to
Ayanokouji? they likely wondered. Haruka seemed deeply interested.
“OW ellis.
I didn’t really have any plans. Hanging out with our group wasn’t
mandatory, so they wouldn’t mind. I was a little worried about the way they
were staring, though.
I felt bad for making Satou sad, but this was just terrible timing. I
exited the classroom as if I was walking her out, and as soon as I did,
Chabashira-sensei followed me into the hall. Clearly, I was correct to think
that she had some business with me.
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I took care to avoid the main hallway, instead heading over to the
stairs.
Resistance was futile. I decided to follow her, and we moved from the
student area to an even more private location.
“Why are we headed over here?” I asked. “It’s too early to counsel me
on my post-high school career, isn’t it?”
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forehead.
One other person was there, sitting opposite the principal.
I now knew the reason I’d been called here.
“You two may talk now,” said the principal. “I trust this is
acceptable?”
“Of course.”
“Very well. Pll take my leave now. Excuse me,” the principal said. He
bowed out humbly, despite the fact that the person sitting opposite him was
only in his forties.
As I stood completely still and silent, the man spat out his first words.
“How about you take a seat? I came all the way here to meet with you, after
all.”
It had been one year—no, a year and a half since I’d heard this man’s
voice. His way of speaking and tone hadn’t changed at all.
He cut straight to the heart of the matter. “I’ve prepared the documents
necessary for you to drop out. I spoke to the principal about it. All I need is
for you to say yes.”
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He looked right at me for the first time. The sharp gleam in his eye
hadn’t faded. If anything, it’d only grown sharper. His gaze was a blade,
threatening to slice to the very heart of you. I was sure that gaze had
wounded many people.
“Does a parent have the right to ruin their child’s life for the sake of
their own selfishness?” I asked.
“You're certainly right.” I doubted that this man had ever regarded me
as his own child. In truth, we only recognized each other as father and son in
the most technical way possible.
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“You’ve become quite talkative in the short time since we last met. I
suppose that’s due to this absurd school’s influence, hmm?” The man rested
his chin on his hand, looking at me as if I were less than filth.
“Badger me all you like. I’m not dropping out,” I told him.
We could keep going back and forth on this, but it didn’t matter. We
weren’t going to agree. He knew that, and hated wasting his time on pointless
conversations. So, what would he do?
“Don’t you wonder how Matsuo’s doing? The person who told you
about this school and gave you the idea to enroll?”
“T hired him to manage you for a year in his capacity as a butler, but he
chose to go against his employer.”
He said it in one breath, without pausing, then stopped cold after the
word “employer,” a pause designed to etch that final word into the listener’s
heart. The tone of his voice and the dramatic pause indicated that a
conversation of grave importance was about to begin. His dark look was
designed to make me fearful. To cause me to wonder just how bad things
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“You can probably guess what I’m about to say,” he continued, “but he
was disciplined and dismissed.”
Matsuo married young, but hadn’t been blessed with children right
away. He was over forty when he had his first baby, but sadly lost his wife in
childbirth. His son was about my age, and Matsuo’s pride and joy. I’d never
met the boy myself, but Matsuo said his son studied diligently every day so
that he could achieve great things and repay his father’s sacrifices. His smile
as he said those words still burned in my memory.
“You know about him, I assume. Matsuo’s son, his pride and joy.”
He’d predicted my train of thought. He saw right through me.
“When you enrolled at this school, Matsuo’s son also managed to pass
the difficult entrance exam for a wonderful, prestigious private high school.
He worked exceptionally hard, and achieved it all on his own.”
He paused.
“But now he’s been expelled.”
His meaning was plain. He’d forced the school to rescind the boy’s
acceptance as a form of payback. That was the sort of power he wielded.
“Matsuo’s son was strong. Even though he was expelled from the
school on which he’d pinned his hopes, his determination didn’t fade. He
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bounced back and immediately tried to enroll in other schools. I did whatever
was necessary to crush his attempts to advance. I made him give up. I did the
same to Matsuo, too. I tarnished his reputation, leaving him unable to find a
job. His son also lost his way, and is now unemployed,” said the man.
Matsuo and his son had lost everything because of my selfishness. The
man before me wasn’t making this up. Every word he said was almost
certainly true.
If he came all this way to spout this nonsense at me, then he was in for
a disappointment.
So, that was what he came here to say. That my selfish actions led to a
man’s death.
“Right now, his son’s working part-time, earning enough to live on and
nothing else, with no guarantee of a future. No dreams. No hope. His family’s
tragedy is your fault. The boy must surely bear a deep grudge against you.
Even in death, he won’t forgive you.”
“The man who took care of you, who saved you, has died. And you
show no reaction whatsoever. If Matsuo could see you now, he’d be full of
regret.”
Dead people felt no regret. The man before me was the reason why
Matsuo and his son lost everything—why Matsuo killed himself—and he
wasn’t even trying to make me feel guilty. He was simply stating the fact that
he had no mercy for those who angered him. That was what he wanted to
convey to me.
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“First of all, there’s no evidence that what you say is the truth,” I
argued.
“Matsuo’s death has already been recorded. If necessary, I can send for
the papers confirming it.” He was basically daring me to ask for them.
“Tf he really is dead, then that’s all the more reason for me to stay in
school. Matsuo helped me enroll, even though he knew you’d punish him. I
must honor his wishes.” A ridiculous reply for a ridiculous story.
I’d always followed his orders before. Well, I followed the White
Room’s orders. It had been my entire world. This man’s sole failure was the
one year he left me with Matsuo.
“Tt’s certainly true that you supplied me with the best possible
education,” I told him. “Even though you used methods that must be kept
from the public, I can’t deny what the White Room offered. I don’t plan on
revealing my past to anyone, nor will I do anything that would endanger you.
However, I’m the result of your absolute pursuit of an ideal. That was your
mistake.”
I was a first-year high school student. I was only sixteen years old, and
already, my knowledge far exceeded what a normal person could learn in a
lifetime. That was precisely what allowed me to recognize the infinite bounds
of human curiosity.
“You taught us all kinds of things. Not just the liberal arts and
sciences, but martial arts and self-defense techniques, and bits of worldly
wisdom too numerous to mention. Learning fascinated me. I wanted to learn
about the common, everyday world that you deemed worthless and turned
your back on,” I continued.
“Do you think I could learn what I have at this school if I stayed with
you? What’s freedom? What does it mean to be unconstrained? I couldn’t
have learned that in the White Room,” I replied.
That part alone was something even he couldn’t deny. The White
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Room might have been the most efficient facility for nurturing and training
someone in the entire world, but you couldn’t learn everything about the
world there. It was a facility that cut away anything it deemed unnecessary.
To the extreme.
“Matsuo told me that this school was the only place in Japan where
you couldn’t reach me.” If I hadn’t chosen this school, but just waited as
instructed, or chosen another option, I would probably have been put back in
the White Room again. I was absolutely not going to drop out.
“Firstly, I don’t see any of the bodyguards who normally follow you
everywhere. You shouldn’t be without them, since so many people hold
grudges against you. But your bodyguards aren’t in this room, nor are they in
the hallway,” I countered.
“That'd be sloppy, considering that you’re the sort who has guards
escort him to the bathroom. No, you couldn’t bring them here even if you
wanted to. The authorities didn’t allow it.” If he hadn’t obeyed, they wouldn’t
have permitted him to enter.
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“One more thing. You could easily consider this school enemy
territory. If you took aggressive action here, and the public found out, your
dreams of making a comeback would disappear forever, wouldn’t they?”
“Did Matsuo put that idea in your head? Even in death, he’s still
impeding me.”
“T couldn’t possibly deduce all that from things Matsuo said.” I’d heard
no details from Matsuo, but I could easily guess what was going on. “Putting
aside the facility’s temporary suspension, there’s another problem you never
considered. No matter how perfectly you train someone, sooner or later, a
rebellious phase occurs.”
“Why would someone like you veer off your path? You were taught
from the very beginning that there was no point learning unnecessary things.”
“Utter nonsense. The only path in this world is the one I prepared for
you. You will one day surpass me, and become the person who guides Japan
into the future. Why can’t you understand that?”
Our statements only went in circles, not intersecting. We’d never see
eye to eye.
“The White Room has resumed operations. This time, my plans are
perfect. Nothing will get in the way. I’m prepared to make up for lost time,”
he said.
“In that case, you must have quite a few candidates to succeed you.
Why fixate on me?”
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“It’s certainly true that things are going well. However, there’s no one
who exhibits the talent level you do.”
“This is the last thing I'll say to you, Kiyotaka. Consider very carefully
before answering me. Which would you prefer? To run away from this school
of your own free will, or to have your parent force you to leave?”
This man was determined to drag me back there. I didn’t know what
measures he expected to take, but I didn’t want to listen.
“T don’t know if there’s any help for a man like you, but I have no
intention of giving up. This school is developing its students’ talents, even if
it goes about it differently from you. I expect to learn a lot here,” I told him.
“How foolish. This school’s nothing more than a barn full of common
rabble. I’m sure that your own class holds many such worthless bottom-
feeders with no hope of salvation.”
“You think that even incompetent morons can stand toe-to-toe with
geniuses?”
“We should end this. We know that, no matter how long we talk, we’ ll
never agree.”
A man in his forties slowly opened the door. His expression was grim
at the sight of our unexpected visitor.
“Ah, would you mind waiting just a moment longer? I was hoping to
speak to you both, Ayanokouji-sensei. Please, have a seat.”
I couldn’t refuse that request from a third-party, let alone the board
chairman of the school. I sat down. The chairman sat beside me.
“T already heard from the principal. You intend to make him withdraw
from the school, hmm?” Sakayanagi asked the man.
“That’s right. Since it’s what his parent wishes, the school must
immediately take appropriate action.”
“Absolutely not.”
I finally understood what Matsuo meant when he told me, “If you go to
this school, you can escape from the White Room.” He’d said that because of
Sakayanagi, who now spoke to my father without a hint of cowardice or fear.
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“You’re free to succeed your father and carry on his wishes. However,
if that’s your intention, then why did you allow Kiyotaka to enter this
school?” the man inquired.
“Even though you could say you’ve retired, you remain an impressive
figure, Ayanokouji-sensei. You’re quite well-informed,” said Sakayanagi.
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“Yes. I can assure you that the school won’t give him special treatment
just because he’s your son,” said Sakayanagi.
“In that case, we’re done talking. If you’ll please excuse me.” The man
got up from the sofa.
“No need.”
I spoke up. “If you call yourself a parent, why not come by the school
now and again?”
“Coming to a place like this once is quite enough.” With those cutting
words, the man left the office.
“Whew,” said Sakayanagi. “It sure feels like you’re on pins and
needles when Ayanokouji-sensei’s around, doesn’t it? You must’ve had a
tough time of it.”
“Tn truth, I’ve known about you for a long time now,” he said. “I never
spoke with you directly, but I had my eye on you. Sensei always spoke highly
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of you.”
“Ah, so that’s how that mechanism was removed.”
“Mechanism? What do you mean?”
“Oh, but she’s not in Class A just because she’s my daughter. Our
assessments are fair.”
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He probably only told me this much because that man was targeting
“You’re trying to hide how shaken you are, but it’s obvious just from
looking at you,” I told her.
The fact she wasn’t looking me in the eye. Her choice of words. She
was trying to conceal her emotions from any outside observer to the best of
her ability, but even so, she couldn’t hide her unrest completely.
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“That man never contacted you. And he didn’t push you to expel me,
either.”
It was certainly true that my father was pushing for me to drop out.
However, judging from his behavior, and that this was the first time he set
foot on school grounds, I was fairly sure he’d never been in contact with a
teacher. I didn’t have any solid proof, though.
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She was now totally unable to look me in the eye. “That’s just
speculation, Ayanokouji.”
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was incapable of submitting to authority. That she desired for a lower class to
supplant a higher one; the inferiors overthrowing their superiors.
“You want me to be your ticket to Class A. And now the chairman has
said he’ll watch over me. Put it all together, and you’re at my mercy. All you
can do is stand there and pretend not to hear any the abuse I’m throwing at
you right now,” I added. “You’ve been stuck with Class D for an eternity, all
the while hankering to rise u to Class A. You can’t pass up on this
opportunity. You even decided to lie about being in contact with my father in
order to use me. That was the reason why you contacted me, and Horikita
was nothing more than a pawn for you to use to that end. However, things
aren’t so simple.”
I’d had no desire to excel when I first started at this school. I never
intended to aim for Class A. Even though she hadn’t yet known what to do
with me, Chabashira-sensei made her first move during the test on the island.
“You knew we had to win when the special exams started, or we’d
never catch up to the other classes. You panicked and made up a story to tell
me. Desperate times call for desperate measures, I suppose.”
Class D had done pretty well, ever since. But Chabashira-sensei had
miscalculated. And now my father had finally contacted the school directly,
and all her lies had been laid bare.
“You probably intended to corner me,” I said. “Instead, you’re the one
with your back to the wall.”
Really, to do all this and now threaten me more? “So, you’re not giving
up on your ambitions?”
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“Exactly.”
“Unfortunately for you, you can’t get me expelled.”
“May I ask why you’re so certain?”
Class D had risen for months. We were on the cusp of overtaking Class
C, and if the school expelled one of us now, it would ruin that. This meant
Chabashira-sensei’s hands were tied.
“Even if I step down, the fight will continue. You still have reason to
hope, Chabashira-sensei, and that means you’re going to leave me be.”
“So even though you know everything now, you’re still done trying to
reach Class A?” she asked.
“At the very least, I think I’m done taking my turn onstage,” I said.
“Now, please stay back, stay quiet, and watch me. If you try to manipulate
me to the tune of your personal desires again, it’1l only hurt the other
students.”
“Not at all. It’s certainly possible that something in the future will
devastate our class points. If that happens, and you lose all hope, feel free to
come at me.” She wouldn’t stop even if I asked her to. Better to let her do as
she pleased. “Just remember that your position as a teacher isn’t rock-solid,
either.”
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3.6
Every time I breathed out, that white steam rose into the air. I exhaled
and inhaled, over and over again. I tended to forget because of the extremely
temperature fluctuations from day to day, but winter was here. Last year
around this time, I’d always been indoors.
A girl passed me, shivering in the cold. She chatted happily with
someone on her phone.
Her thighs peeked out from beneath her skirt. Exposed to the winter
air, they were probably really cold. I caught the fragrant scent of shampoo on
her shoulder-length hair.
“Student council? Sorry, but I’ll pass. I’m not interested. Besides, you
still haven’t settled things with the former student council president, have
you, Miyabi? Wait, what? Why are you suddenly confessing your feelings for
me? Come on, I know you’ve made passes at lots of other girls. Well, if you
win against President Horikita, then Pll consider it, okay? Talk to you later.”
I didn’t want to eavesdrop, but if she was going to talk that loudly, then
I couldn’t help but overhear to. Based on the contents of her conversation,
she was probably a second-year student.
The girl finished her phone call and exhaled deeply, steam escaping her
mouth.
“Jeez, that Miyabi. Getting all cocky. Still, that student council
president was pretty useless. In the end, Miyabi will win,” she said to no one
in particular.
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“Wah!”
The girl immediately got up and looked around, her face red. That was
when she noticed me for the first time, and forced a slightly embarrassed
smile. She didn’t seem injured at all, and she took off in the direction of the
second-year students’ dorm.
It seemed students didn’t really mingle with those from different grade
levels very much at this school, outside of student council or club activities.
That was why I hadn’t really had any opportunity to commit their faces to
memory.
This was the first “winter” I’d experienced. It was so chilly. There was
a song about a dog that got super excited after seeing snow for the first time,
and I understood that feeling now. Was it going to be this exciting every time
it snowed?
I let out a deep breath, and thought back on the events of the day. I
spoke directly with my father, met Chairman Sakayanagi, and ascertained
which of the school’s policies were meaningless. Seeing through Chabashira-
sensei’s lies was a huge gain. This should allow me to make quite a bit of
progress.
“Should I stop?”
I’d been careful to remain behind the scenes so far, but 1f Class D
continued to flourish, I wouldn’t be able to avoid attracting attention.
Ryuuen’s scrutiny would intensify, and eventually, his investigation would
bear fruit. Though I'd tried to prop Horikita up as the class mastermind, he’d
seen through it. Sakayanagi knew about my past, and Ichinose probably had
her doubts, too.
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I’d planned to start off with some small talk, but Karuizawa wasn’t
having it. “You don’t enjoy our conversations?”
“T suppose you’re right.” She wasn’t the Class D girls’ leader for no
reason. She understood people. “Did Manabe and her friends contact you?”
“No. That’s not a problem right now. Is that why you called?” she
asked. Rather than surprised, she sounded exasperated.
“It’s been quite some time, huh? Guess there’s nothing to worry about
anymore,” I said.
The wind howled, turning my bare face raw from the chill. “You’re
still outside,” said Karuizawa. She probably heard the wind over the phone.
“I’m on my way back to the dorms. Seems like you turned in pretty
early today yourself. You’re normally out much later than this, aren’t you?”
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“Even I feel like heading back early sometimes.” She sounded a little
standoffish.
At the fork in the road, a red charm lay on the ground where that girl
had fallen a little earlier. I wondered whether she dropped it. It might’ve been
better to just leave it, but it would likely snow this evening, soaking the
charm. There were no signs that the girl was coming back for it, so I decided
to pick it up so I could hand it over to the dorm manager.
“You’re smart and all, but why don’t you let people know? I mean,
Class D’s pretty much full of morons. If you came forward like Yousuke-
kun, people would like you more, right?”
“There’s nothing for you to base that evaluation on, is there? My test
scores are pretty average. I don’t contribute much in class, either.”
Of course, I knew what Karuizawa wanted to say. I’d recruited her help
many times at this point, like while stopping the Idiot Trio from sneaking
photos and peeping, and during the incident with Kushida in the Paper
Shuffle. It was obvious to Karuizawa that I was more than I seemed.
“Tt’s just that you were open about the things you did, your reputation
would improve, wouldn’t it? You’d probably even draw the school’s
attention, just like during the sports festival,” she continued, sounding almost
excited even though this should have had nothing to do with her.
“You know I’m not the kind of person who wants that, right?”
“Then why are you doing all this? If you didn’t want attention, you
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Normally, I’d never reveal that much. But today was special. I was in a
good mood.
“T never intended to take control. Never have and never will,” I told
her. I needed to make sure Karuizawa was clear on that point. I didn’t want
people coming to me for help if Class D ran into problems in the future.
“Tt’s you, isn’t it? You’re the one that Ryuuen’s searching for.”
Class C’s surveillance increased day after day—it wasn’t just Sudou
and Akito—and rumors had spread well beyond Class D’s walls. Talk was
going around about how Ryuuen had been defeated by someone in Class D
and was now out for revenge. Karuizawa had probably known it was me right
away.
“Apologize?”
“Yeah. PII leave it all to Horikita and Hirata. I don’t want the hassle of
Ryuuen discovering my identity; I’m done. You’ve been a great help to me—
for instance, that time at karaoke, and getting in touch with Kushida. I’ve
imposed on you quite a lot.”
“T see. So, that means I’m finally free, huh? I won’t be working with
you anymore?”
“This will probably be the last time I call you,” I told her clearly.
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“Huh?” Her response was delayed. Maybe she hadn’t heard me?
“This is the last time I’Il call you,” I repeated.
She had to have heard me this time.
“It’s only natural, since I don’t need anything from you now. Besides,
no one knows that we’ve been talking. It’Il be suspicious if we continue to
make pointless contact,” I told her.
“Of course, I’Il help you if you ever need me to. I made a promise, and
I'll honor it. You can contact me if there’s an emergency, but please delete all
traces of our conversations. I already deleted your contact information.”
“Well, yes, but...” Karuizawa was stumbling over her words more and
more. The stretches of silence were getting longer. Best not to drag this out
much longer.
“T think we’re done. Did you have anything you wanted to say?” I
asked, pressing her to speak.
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emotion. Emotion had no place here.
“T guess Ill hang up then...” Even over the phone, I could tell
Karuizawa was in the grip of some strong emotion.
“See you.”
“Well. I took a few detours, but I’m finally back where I was when I
started school, huh?” I said to myself.
I gave the red charm to the second-year students’ dorm manager and
went home.
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Sf
I PICKED UP THE DAMP CLOTH I’d been using to mop up dirt and dust,
and threw it in the garbage bag. After washing my hands, I sat on my bed,
listening to the creak of the springs.
Since it was December, I decided to use the weekend for some end-of-
year cleaning. I wasn’t much of a packrat, so it only took about half a day to
finish everything. Had I managed to return my room to the pristine condition
it was in when I first moved in?
Why had I enrolled at this school in the first place? So, I wouldn’t have
to return to my old environment. It wasn’t that I was particularly dissatisfied
with the White Room, though it was quite problematic from a human-rights
perspective. Still, you could receive the best possible education there, and it
was that education that had shaped my personality and abilities.
It was because I’d lived my life believing there was always something
more to learn that I considered learning to be meaningful. So, what happened
when there was finally nothing left to learn? Life would be horribly boring,
wouldn’t it?
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known that my father would contact me someday. I’d been prepared for it
from the moment Chabashira-sensei insinuated that she would get me
expelled, though even then, I’d had my doubts about whether she spoke the
truth. If my father really came for me, Chabashira-sensei couldn’t stop him.
He wasn’t the kind of foe someone like a class teacher could thwart.
If he did figure out that I was Class D’s secret mastermind, he might
create an uproar by circulating that information. It would have been ideal for
my identity to remain completely concealed, though that seemed impossible
now. Even if I cut all ties to Karuizawa Kei, we were still bound by an
invisible thread. If I left things the way they were now, someday, beyond a
shadow of a doubt, Ryuuen would find that thread. Would it take a week? A
month? A year?
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A classmate would just have rung my doorbell. Who could this be? I
went to check the screen and found myself looking at a surprising face. I
could’ve pretended not to be home, but I opted for honesty. After all, this was
someone I’d been thinking about going to see myself, and he’d come all the
way out here.
If Horikita saw her brother and I chatting in the hallway, she’d cause a
fuss. Besides, I wanted to avoid being seen with the former student council
president as much as possible. I let Horikita’s older brother into my room.
“For a first year, you keep your room quite clean,” he said.
“T just don’t have that much stuff.” I decided not to tell him that I’d
cleaned my room today. Of course, he probably deduced as much from the
garbage bag full of damp paper towels. “To come all the way to the first
years’ dorm... Do you have business with me, former student council
president?”
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True. He had a little over two months left. It’d be over in the blink of
an eye.
“T can’t imagine what you have to say to me,” I replied. “I’m not part
of the student council like Ichinose.”
“You were already student council president when Nagumo was a first
year, right? Doesn’t that make you responsible for bringing him in?”
“You might say that.” Horikita’s brother made no attempt to deny it. “I
made one mistake after joining the student council. I failed in training my
successor. Nagumo was the only one I believed had potential, but his
ideologies differed from mine. Now, he’s managed to bring almost all the
other second-year students under his sway.”
Huh. I didn’t know what this guy was doing, but apparently it was
pretty crazy.
“Two first years applied for student council positions this year:
Katsuragi and Ichinose. They’re both talented students with a lot of promise,
but I decided not to admit them, precisely because of their talent. I was
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concerned Nagumo would snatch them up. However, Nagumo worked behind
my back to establish contact with Ichinose, eventually forcibly adding her to
the student council.”
“If you don’t want to draw attention to yourself, use Suzune as you’ve
done in the past. It’Il be fine. ll be the bridge between you and the student
council,” he told me.
“Traditions change, even the ones you staunchly uphold. That’s just
how the passage of time works, isn’t it?” I asked.
There was a lot about this conversation that I still couldn’t grasp, but a
picture was beginning to form. Horikita Manabu, now reduced to an ordinary
student, wanted to derail the student council’s plans. And he wanted to use
me to do it.
“What?”
I unplugged my phone from its charger. “I'd like time to think about
putting your little sister on the student council and manipulating her behind
the scenes.”
“You came here despite the assumption that I’d refuse, huh? It’d be
rude if I didn’t at least think it over,” I said.
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“T really don’t think there’s any need to be that hung up on the student
council, though,” I said out loud to myself.
3.8
Tis FIRST SNOW of the season arrived late Saturday night. It was just a
“So, the second semester’s finally going to be over next week, huh?
Wow, it’s barely felt like any time at all.”
On Sunday morning, I went to check how Akito was doing with his
club. Then we hung out at Keyaki Mall with the rest of the Ayanokouji
Group until evening. We shopped, chatted at the café, got some lunch and hit
up a karaoke room. It was a good day, and I enjoyed it doing ordinary things
that ordinary students did.
“My throat hurts because of the punishment game, not the singing.”
Keisei scowled at her.
There was a variety of food at the karaoke place, some of which was
designed to use in games of chance. For example, the takoyaki came as six
pieces, one of which was extremely spicy. Whoever got the spicy one had to
sing immediately after eating the whole piece, and additionally, wasn’t
allowed to drink water until they were done singing. I didn’t quite get the
point of it, but we all had a blast, so it clearly fulfilled some kind of purpose.
“So unlucky...”
“On the contrary, doesn’t that mean you’re really lucky?” asked
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Haruka. “Think of it like you used up all this year’s bad luck at once. You’ve
probably got lots of good stuff awaiting you for the rest of the year.”
“There’re only two weeks until the year ends! You did this on purpose,
Haruka.”
“Sorry, sorry.” Haruka clutched her stomach and laughed out loud, but
still apologized. “They were really that spicy?”
“T thought I might start breathing fire. I know they said ‘spicy,’ but
there has to be a limit. Come on.” Keisei was still sticking his tongue out
from the lingering heat.
“Hey, I saved you from the last one. It was seriously spicy,” said
Akito. He’d ended that particular hot streak.
“Okay, but you might draw the spicy takoyaki, too,” I said. “You know
that, right?”
“T know, I know. I’m not gonna wimp out after suggesting we all do it
again,” said Haruka.
Well, now I felt like we didn’t have a level playing field for this game.
“T wonder whether I can eat that stuff at all?” said Airi, who’d been
anxious even before the game started.
“Don’t worry, don’t worry. If it’s too spicy, you can just spit it out.
We’re not gonna force you to eat anything,” said Haruka. Certainly right.
Akito and Keisei probably wouldn’t force Airi to do anything she didn’t want
to, either. “Anyway, I already said this about Yukimuu, but you’re a good
singer, Airi. Was that really your first time at karaoke?”
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“Y-yeah. It, um, was really embarrassing, though.” Even though she’d
been painfully shy, Airi had given it her all.
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We headed back to the dorms. It wasn’t even five o’clock yet, but the
sun was already setting.
“It was really warm today,” said Airi. “Everyone’s out in pretty light
clothing, huh?”
“You could even walk around in short sleeves this afternoon, so that
makes sense.”
“T’m not good with the cold,” said Haruka, sounding melancholy as she
looked up at the sky.
“Well, a little chilliness is good for me. It means I don’t sweat during
club, which makes practicing easy,” said Akito, making him the only member
of the group to prefer the cold.
“Well, based on what I’ve seen, you’re with Horikita-san a lot of the
time. This is different,” said Ichinose, taking a long look at our group’s
members. “That reminds me. I heard that you won against Class C in the
exam. Congrats! We lost to Class A, unfortunately.”
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“Only by a slim margin. Two points. I think we were just about evenly
matched,” said Sakayanagi. The battle had been close, and it seemed Class B
was just barely lagging behind Class A by the end. “With this win under your
belt, Class D might actually become Class C next semester, right?”
Sakayanagi closed her eyes and chuckled. Keisei seemed to find that
insulting, but he had to remember that we were still Class D for now. No one
in our group was especially close to Ichinose, and since we weren’t really the
type to force smiles or engage in small talk, the conversation ground to a halt.
“Ah, sorry. Guess we’re bothering you guys. See you later,” said
Ichinose graciously.
“That’s just like Ichinose, though, right?” It was a well-known fact that
Ichinose could make friends with anyone.
“Tt’s just, like, how do I put this?” muttered Airi. “It’s like Ichinose-san
lives in a different world from us or something.”
“As a fellow woman, I kinda don’t like her.”
“What? Do you dislike Ichinose, Haruka?”
“T don’t dislike her, it’s just...she’s way too perfect at everything. You
can’t be human without at least a couple flaws, right? I sorta almost hope that
she’s actually rotten on the inside.”
“You have a point. She’s so flawless it’s almost creepy. Saying you
hope she’s rotten inside is going a bit too far, though,” said Akito.
“That’s true. I’m just saying that being flawless and totally sweet is
boring, even in a manga,” said Haruka. She thrust her hands inside her
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“1... think it’s good that she’s like that, though. If Ichinose-san really
was a bad person like Haruka-chan said, no one would believe it,” said Airi.
She sounded anxious, as if she really didn’t want that to be true.
“T guess so. Maybe there really are unbelievably kind, perfect people in
the world. We may just not even know them when we see them,” said
Haruka.
If our class was promoted, more conflict down the road was inevitable.
We'd be attacked from below by Ryuuen and the newly demoted Class C,
who'd be raring for revenge. It was unclear what would happen to Horikita
and Ichinose’s currently cooperative relationship in the future, too. In an ideal
world, we’d work together with Ichinose to attack Class A. Then, once
Classes B and D were promoted to Classes A and B respectively, we’d end
our alliance and turn on each other.
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/t
262
Unlike previous years, Class D managed to come out on top this time.
However, their cooperation abilities haven't improved. They seem to have
won through luck.
Working alongside other classes led Class D to finally recognize their own
lack of coordination. In addition, establishing new relationships led to
various personal revelations.
Class D managed to work together and cooperate as a team for the first
time. They might've been able to triumph, but they still need to develop
their fundamental abilities. We hope to see more effort from every student.
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Chapter 4:
Insanity
happened just after the end of homeroom. Our classroom door swung open,
and Ryuuen and his fellow Class C students strode inside. The entire class
immediately erupted into chaos.
Horikita, who was packing up her things to leave, stopped and stared at
the Class C group consisting of Ryuuen, Ishizaki, and Yamada Albert.
Komiya and Kondou were there, too.
With all these opponents gathered together in force, the mood was
tense.
“Hey, what’s goin’ on? This is Class D.” Sudou was the first to react.
He was usually quick to pick a fight, but seemed more defensive this time.
More importantly, he probably felt he needed to protect Horikita.
“Do you have some business with our class, Ryuuen-kun?” Hirata
asked.
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and composed. “That’s normally true, yes. But this school isn’t normal, is it?
Besides, you’ve never visited Class D before.”
“Heh. Guess the only thing big about you is your head, you
incompetent monkey. Time for you to get a taste of being Class D,” said
Sudou.
“Working hard, huh?” said Ryuuen. “I mean, the concept of hard work
seems completely foreign to Sudou, yet he’s still here. I thought he’d be the
first to get kicked out.”
Ryuuen and Sudou stared each other down. The air between them was
electric. Several classmates who’d been heading out stood frozen in place.
“Could you tell us why you’re really here?” asked Hirata. Perhaps he
wanted to bring the situation under control as soon as possible, and was
therefore trying to keep Ryuuen from dragging it out. Or perhaps he was just
being as straightforward as always.
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perhaps he just didn’t care. In fact, he was heading back to the dorms.
“Hey, hey, that Ryuuen dude looked like he was gonna do something
crazy! This is unreal!” Ike exclaimed.
“This is really bad, isn’t it?” asked Horikita, while I was deep in
thought. Even she, who wanted to avoid entanglement with Class C as far as
possible, couldn’t leave this situation alone.
“Maybe,” I said.
It did seem as though Ryuuen had some business with Kouenji, but that
puzzled me. me think. Kouenji was weird, sure, but even to an outside
observer, the possibility of him being a big mover and shaker in Class D had
to be low. There had to be a reason why Ryuuen was trying to make contact
with him in such a blatant way, while simultaneously scoping out a number
of other people.
“So many people are around, though. There’s not much Class C can
99
try.
“They may have something planned.”
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This was odd. Even from an outside perspective, the probability that
Kouenji was Class D’s secret savior was low. In the unlikely event that Class
C assaulted Kouenji, other members of Class D might get in trouble for
jumping into the fray. Then again, if we held back when we could’ve helped,
we'd regret it.
When I went into the hallway with Akito, Keisei trailed me. “Ill come,
too. Safety in numbers,” he reasoned.
Horikita lagged slightly behind us, and Sudou followed her. Hirata also
came along, looking worried. This was shaping up to be a real storm. I asked
Keisei and Akito to wait, then went to talk to Hirata.
“Keisei? Huh. Okay. Just don’t do anything rash, sound good?” Hirata
looked puzzled at the way I referred to Yukimura, but went back inside the
classroom.
The next problem was figuring out where Kouenji and the others went.
Even Ryuuen and his goons couldn’t start trouble in the school building. If
they were going to try something, it would probably be outside, but I had no
idea where Kouenji might’ve gone.
“T don’t know, either.” Akito and Keisei tilted their heads to the side,
apparently clueless.
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If his shoes were still there, we could confirm that he was still in the
school building. In that case, we probably still had enough time to deal with
this. We hurried there, keeping pace with one another.
“Well, ’cuz I’m worried about you, Suzune, you know? There are
rumors that Ryuuen will even hit girls.”
“Not to worry. Still got a little time left until practice. Let’s hurry up
and find Kouenji.” Sudou was going nowhere.
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4.1
| Weare THE SCHOOL BUILDING, we took the tree-lined path back to the
dormitories. Since class had just ended, barely anyone was around, but we
saw a bunch of Class C guys on the path ahead. Ibuki was with them, though
she hadn’t accompanied Ryuuen when he visited our classroom. Some
distance in front was Kouenji, walking alone.
“Tt’s just like Suzune predicted. Let’s stop ’em,” said Sudou, looking to
Horikita for orders.
“Let’s wait and see what happens. We still don’t know what Ryuuen-
kun’s after,” reasoned Horikita.
As Ryuuen himself said, it was well within the rules to simply talk to
someone from another class. We approached slowly, observing the situation.
“What’re you doing? I don’t recall behaving in any way that’d warrant
you flagging me down.” Because Ishizaki was in the way, I couldn’t see
Kouenji’s face. But his tone of voice was arrogant as usual.
“You remember me, don’t you?” asked Ryuuen. Both hands still in his
pockets, he walked up to Kouenji.
“Of course. You’re Class C’s obnoxious dictator, aren’t you?” said
Kouenji.
“T missed you last time, but now you’re coming with me, freak,” spat
Ryuuen.
“My apologies. I’m afraid I must’ve been busy, whenever you missed
me,” said Kouenji, smoothing his hair back. It didn’t seem like much of an
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apology. “However, you just said something I’m afraid I cannot overlook.
When you said ‘freak,’ were you referring to me?”
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Kouenji crossed his arms and appeared deep in thought for a moment.
They trailed Kouenji to the rest area up the path, threatening to leave
our sightline.
“Y-yeah.”
Sudou took the lead, with Horikita in hot pursuit. The rest of us
followed slightly behind, and we headed over. “Ryuuen-kun,” Horikita called
to Ryuuen. “What are you planning? If you try anything, we’re going to have
trouble.”
“I’m here too, Ryuuen,” said Sudou, smashing his fists together.
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Ryuuen lifted his chin in a signal. On his command, Ishizaki and the
others surrounded Kouenji.
Akito, watching the situation unfold, couldn’t hide his disgust. “It’s
like he thinks he’s a king. Bossing his classmates around just by moving his
chin,” he spat.
“Sorry, Miyake, but I was born this way,” replied Ryuuen. Hands still
in his pockets, he drew closer to Kouenji.
“Stop? What should I stop? As you can plainly see, I’m not doing
anything.”
“The zodiac test. Thanks to you, I lost the chance to capitalize on more
points,” said Ryuuen.
So Kouenji said, but he sure didn’t look the least bit apologetic. Ina
brazen gesture, he took his hand mirror from his breast pocket. The Class C
goons eyed him suspiciously, and he responded in a courteous manner.
“It’s quite windy today. I’m making sure my debonair hairdo isn’t
mussed up.” Turning his face left and right, he checked his reflection. ““Hmm.
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I’m looking tragically disheveled. Sorry, but would you mind holding this?”
Kouenji presented Ryuuen with his hand mirror. Ryuuen took it,
smiling.
“You may aim the mirror toward me,” said Kouenji. Retrieving a small
container of hair wax from his bag, he scooped a glob onto his finger and
started styling his hair with both hands.
Kouenji, still arranging his hair, sighed gently. “You really are quite
the scoundrel. That mirror was rather expensive, you know.”
“Tch. In that case, will you kindly release my arm so I may finish
styling my hair? Of course, I’m the kind of man who’d look good even with
disheveled hair,” said Kouenji.
We were on pins and needles as the tension grew. Ryuuen slowly let go
of Kouenji’s arm. Doing this in public was risky behavior, but in keeping
with his usual style of trying to push his enemies to their limits.
“Aren’t you just attacking him? This seems one-sided. He doesn’t want
this.” Carefully picking up fragments of the broken hand mirror, Horikita
glared at Ryuuen.
“Pll do it. You might hurt your hands,” said Sudou to Horikita.
“T don’t mind. It’d be more of a problem if the glass cut you, because
you have your club.”
“Don’t say stupid stuff like that. I can’t let a girl get hurt.” Sudou
moved Horikita aside and began picking up the fragments.
“T’m not doctoring you if you get cut,” said Horikita. Sudou ignored
that and kept picking up the pieces.
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Sakayanagi stopped and lightly tapped her cane on the concrete. This
was turning into quite the crowd. Including Kouenji, six of us were gathered
here from Class D, five from Class C, and now four from Class A, making a
total of fifteen people.
“To think I’'d stumble on Class C’s major players having it out with
some Class D students. Are you planning a Christmas party?”
“Back off. I don’t have any business with you,” snapped Ryuuen.
“Come now, there’s no need to say that. If you’re party-planning, the
more the merrier. Wouldn’t you agree? May I join you?”
She took a seat on a nearby bench. The three other Class A students sat
around her, as if shielding her with their bodies. There were no surveillance
cameras in this rest area, after all, though we were surrounded by students
walking back to the dorms. There was no telling how many people might
walk by.
Kouenji Rokusuke, still wearing that bold, fearless smile, spoke once
more. “I don’t mind that our audience has grown, but isn’t it about time that
we end this? If we aren’t going to talk, Pll be on my way.”
“Wait, Kouenji. Ryuuen-san said not to let you run away this time.”
Kouenji wore a thin smile. “My apologies that our conversation was
delayed. I think we should get to the heart of the matter. I surmise that you’re
fixated on defeating whomever gets in Class C’s way, or whomever forms an
99 Goldenagato | mp4directs.com
“Exactly.”
“In that case, I’m afraid I don’t fit the profile. I have absolutely no
interest whatsoever in Class D’s future, nor in any of the other classes. I’ve
contributed nothing noteworthy to any exam thus far, and I have no intention
of doing so. Tell me, are you truly fixated on making such a person your
enemy?”
“Well, how would you explain the zodiac exam, then? Talk’s gotten
around,” said Ryuuen.
“Oh, that. I was simply saving time. I didn’t really feel like
participating in those bothersome meetings, so I decided to end it and enjoy
my freedom again. Nothing more,” said Kouenji. He got his phone and used
the camera to appraise his face. It was sufficient as a makeshift hand mirror,
apparently.
“We can’t rule out the possibility that you helped with other tests,” said
Ryuuen. “That means there’s no guarantee that you aren’t controlling Class
D.”
“TI suppose that’s possible. But if it’s the conclusion you’ve settled on,
it must mean you’re a moron with a paltry intellect,” said Kouenji.
Ishizaki looked ready to charge, but Ryuuen smiled and stopped him. I
had to admit that I admired Kouenji’s comeback. If Ryuuen was harassing the
“Heh. You’re certainly right. If you are telling the truth, then you’re
completely and utterly harmless.”
Horikita tried to reply to that disturbing question, but Kouenji cut her
off with a laugh. “Now that’s just nonsensical. You wouldn’t do that here,
with this large of an audience. It wouldn’t benefit you at all.”
“T see. I suppose that if you did choose that option, I’d defend by pride
and knock down everyone who came at me,” said Kouenji.
“But let me ask you one thing, Kouenji. Class D’s points are steadily
increasing. Someone has to be responsible for that. If it’s not you, who is it?
One of the people who followed us here like a flock of slack-jawed sheep?”
asked Ryuuen.
For the first time, Kouenji glanced at us. Then he sneered and
shrugged, having immediately lost interest. “I’m happy to tell you, but—”
“My, my, you don’t like it? I think it’s a wonderful nickname. Sorry.
Anyway, there’s something here that I don’t quite understand.”
“Someone in Class D saw through your plans and defeated you,” she
continued. “Is that all there is to it? This school is fundamentally designed to
pit classes against each other. You and I have clashed numerous times in this
manner. I don’t know who this Class D student is, but they’re employing
excellent strategy by remaining anonymous while waging war on you. Are
you really going to expend all this energy on interrogating an unrelated
student? Honestly, I can’t see your actions as anything but rather pathetic.”
“If you do that, not only will you appear pathetic, but you’ll also reveal
your own incompetence. I heard quite a bit already from Masumi-san and
Hashimoto-kun about the strategy you used on the island, and how your
tricks failed. If you regard the situation objectively, it’s clear that Kouenji
wasn’t involved, isn’t it? Besides, I heard that the mastermind was Horikita
Suzune-san, the girl standing right over there. I wonder—does this person
you're searching for even exist in the first place?” Sakayanagi asked,
excoriating Ryuuen with her sharp gaze and words.
“Are you sure you’re not just trying to cover up your own failure,
Ryuuen-kun?” muttered one Class A student.
“That’s going too far, Kitou. Ryuuen isn’t that much of an idiot,”
replied another. I think it was Hashimoto, or whatever his name was.
“Huh? What?! Are you really okay with that?” cried Sudou.
“It’s not against the rules,” said Sakayanagi. “It’s a contract both
classes mutually agreed upon. We’d receive the class points that Class C
should’ve received, and compensate them with private points in exchange.”
I knew that classes A and C formed an alliance during the island exam,
but the exact nature of the deal had been unclear to me. Apparently, after
using up all their points and leaving their 270 remaining points (minus the
thirty deducted due to Sakayanagi’s absence) to Class A, Class C had
requested twenty thousand private points in exchange.
At first glance, it might seem like Class C came out on the better end of
the deal. However, what was most important was whether you could lead in
class points at the end of the exam. Class points determined the class
rankings, after all. You might even say the private points were only awarded
as a bonus. If Katsuragi hadn’t taken the deal, the island test could’ve gone
much worse for Class A. They would have had barely any class points
remaining now, and the gap between them and Class B would be much
narrower.
However, why bring this up now, after keeping it quiet all this time? It
looked like Sakayanagi was trying to show up Ryuuen. He’d accused her of
being stupid, and she’d made a fool of him in response by showing she’d
known about the contract all along. Maybe?
“Well, I’m not the one who’s gonna be in trouble if those details leak.
You will,” said Ryuuen. “Other classes will find out we’ve been getting
twenty thousand monthly points from you, won’t they?”
She hadn’t been present on the island, and could avoid taking
responsibility for the decision. It was even possible that she instructed her
followers in Class A to let Katsuragi go ahead, but we couldn’t know. What
mattered was that Katsuragi was keeping a low profile right now, while
Sakayanagi appeared to be in control of the class.
“Don’t let them fool you, Sudou-kun. Class C could’ve obtained those
class points themselves, but they wasted them. They gained nothing,” said
Horikita.
“Ts that really true, Suzune?” asked Ryuuen. “It’s no different than
getting two hundred class points the real way, back on the island. Besides,
our private point income is going to continue indefinitely. We’ll keep earning
those points until Class A loses their standing.”
“Wrong. It seems similar, but it’s not. All you’re getting is private
points. They have nothing to do with class points.”
“Ryuuen-san, this jerk’s looked down on us for the last time! Let’s
teach him a lesson!”
Ishizaki raised his fists, but the person who spoke up to stop him
wasn’t Ryuuen. It was Sakayanagi, who had simply sat on the sidelines and
smiled at us so far. Kouenji had said something she couldn’t overlook.
“There’s something you said that interests me,” she began. “Dragon
Boy-san aside—”
“Whoa!”
“No. I fell over.” Hashimoto slowly got back up, dusting himself off.
“There you have it, Horikita-san.”
“I’m sorry, Ryuuen-kun. I’ve teased you too much,” said Sakayanagi.
She focused back on Kouenji. “To return to my original question—what do
you mean when you say that everyone here, myself included, is boring?”
“Did I really hurt your feelings that much, little girl?” Kouenji pointed
at Sakayanagi, approaching the bench where she sat.
“That’s not for you to decide. Calling you a little girl 1s appropriate,
considering your age and physique,” replied Kouenji.
“The heck is with that guy? Will a demon appear if he takes those
gloves off or something?” Sudou muttered.
“What?” I asked, surprised.
“You don’t know? It’s from this old manga that used to be real
popular. There’s this dude, and when he takes off his white glove, a demon
shows up to fight devils,” said Sudou. I’d never heard of it in my life, but
then again, I’d never read any manga.
“Ha ha! Well, I don’t mind you fighting over me. Unfortunately, my
tastes in both men and women run toward older people,” said Kouenji. He
was toying with both Sakayanagi and Ryuuen, the representatives of their
respective classes. Maybe lunacy was a kind of power after all, much like
both violence and lies.
“Very well, then. See you,” said Kouenji. He turned on his heel and
walked away.
The storm we’d feared would break might just have been Kouenji, not
Ryuuen.
With that source of controversy gone, everyone grew quiet. Sudou had
collected most of the broken mirror’s shards, and it seemed that the tension
had dissipated for now.
“If he were the one, I wouldn’t have let him leave,” answered Ryuuen.
“He seems super suspicious to me, though. He could’ve been lying.”
“His way of thinking doesn’t match mine. Whoever X 1s, he and I think
the same way. Besides, does he even look like the type to join forces with
Horikita?”
“It’s hard to imagine, true. But then why’d you target Kouenji?”
Horikita stopped Sudou in his tracks with a look and a wave of her
hand. “Your actions are bizarre and incomprehensible, Ryuuen-kun,” she
said.
“I’m not listening to anything you have to say. This 1s a waste of time.
In future, stop approaching my classmates,” said Horikita.
“Who knows? I doubt anyone truly understands how his mind works.”
542
It seems to me that Ryuuen Kakeru, the unofficial Class C leader, has laid
down some ironclad rules for his classmates to follow. It is my hope that
he'll lead them to many victories.
Ryuuen Kakeru executed his own strategies. | must praise him for em-
ploying such unusual tactics without placing too much of a burden on the
other Class C students.
After acquiring no points at all during the island test, Class C turned things
around and achieved the best possible results on this exam.
Chapter 5:
Time to Settle Things
66 . ; ;
Dns BRINGS US to the end of homeroom,” said Sakagami-senset1,
Class C’s teacher. “I'd like to remind everyone to please be on your best
behavior, even during winter vacation, and to make good use of your time.
That’s all.”
“T eliminated everyone I can, but that still leaves about ten possible
candidates,” I muttered to myself. Some were people I’d never even spoken
to, but it couldn’t be helped. I would’ve preferred to do this without using
Karuizawa, but X had eluded me so far.
“Well, I guess this just means I get to have some more fun.”
To be honest, there was a particular person I’d had my eye on all along,
but I couldn’t jump to conclusions yet. If anything, it would be all the more
fun to be able to confront X with a clear head and no doubts.
I’d taken certain steps after the Paper Shuffle. I mobilized every Class
C student and assigned them targets to spy on. Of course, it wasn’t like
tailing people was likely to get me much closer to discovering X’s identity. I
excluded the weaklings, narrowing my list of suspects to delinquents like
Sudou and Miyake, and conservative people like Hirata.
The Class D punks had noticed they were being tailed—except for
Sudou, who was so dumb and oblivious I’d had to have my people provoke
him directly. But being noticed was fine by me. I wanted them constantly
aware that I was watching. I wanted X to spend their days trembling with
fear, terrified of having their identity discovered.
Yet they’d continued to use Suzune as a cover, stubbornly keeping
One more thing. Though I’d all but told X I’d target Karuizawa, I had
yet to make a move. I was sure they’d been on edge these past two weeks or
so, probably wondering how and when I’d contact Karuizawa, how I’d
extract information from her. Chances were, they were asking her daily
whether anything out of the ordinary had happened. The uncertainty would
take it out of them. It would confuse them. They’d be exhausted, paranoid,
and jumping at shadows, constantly imagining me breathing down their neck.
Which made today the best day for me to strike. Now, I was ready to
corner them.
Even though it’d only been a few minutes since dismissal, more than
half the class had left. The clock on the wall seemed as if it was ticking
slower than normal.
“Heh heh...”
My heart raced. It’d been years since I felt this kind of exhilaration.
Ibuki had asked why I risked so much just to identify X. She called it
meaningless. She was right that I didn’t care about anything past discovering
X’s identity, at least. Ibuki thought I’d feel disappointed once I found out
who X was. That might be true of normal people, but fighting Class D had
led me to understand that X thought and moved like me. I’d never met
another person like myself before. That fascination drove me onward.
I would do anything, use any means, to find them. The text I’d sent to
X this morning was already marked as read. They knew what was going to
happen today. What would they do, then? What kind of plan would they
devise?
“No, I must decline. I don’t quite see how that would be fun.” Shiina
paused, then said, “Do you really need to hunt them down?”
“Huh?”
She said that calmly, without a trace of fear, then left. Hiyori was
clever, but she hated conflict, which made her useless as a pawn. People who
obediently followed me around were much easier to use.
I handed Ishizaki a bag with certain indispensable items in it. Ibuki and
Albert stood up, too. I didn’t need large numbers for this. I needed people
who were tight-lipped, because we were about to do something that would
shock this proper, well-behaved school to its core.
5.1
The campus was practically deserted. As with summer vacation, the students
stampeded back to their dorms, leaving barely anyone to witness our bold
movements.
“So, where are we going? Cut the crap and tell us,” said Ibuki.
“Concerned, Ibuki?”
“You make me nervous, dragging me into all your stupid schemes.”
“That loud girl from Class D, right?” Ibuki had infiltrated Class D on
the deserted island, so she knew its students quite well.
“Huh? The rooftop? No way Karuizawa will come if you ask her.”
“She’ll definitely show. I told her that, if she doesn’t, P’Il expose her
past.”
“Even if Karuizawa does show, do you think she’d tell you X’s
identity?”
“She won’t do that. If she does, I’Il expose her right away. No matter
what she tries, Karuizawa can’t turn the tables on us.”
“That’s not true at all. Crushing Karuizawa means taking one of X’s
most valuable pawns off the board. It seems they’ ve been using her in various
ingenious ways.”
Even I had only recently realized that Karuizawa was one of X’s pawn.
I had arrived at that conclusion precisely because of several incomprehensible
things that happened during the Paper Shuffle.
“Heh. Well, eyes forward, Ibuki. X aside, you’ll definitely get to see
Karuizawa terrified by the threat of me exposing how she was bullied in the
past,” I said.
“Tt all depends on your plan. If I think it’s dangerous, I’Il leave.” She’d
been curious about X’s identity for some time now, too.
I had Ibuki, Albert, and Ishizaki wait near the rooftop door, taking the
bag from Ishizaki. I removed the necessary tools, then handed the bag back.
“This is...”
“Wait.”
However, the roof was also a secluded spot. With its cafes and mall,
the campus had many much more popular hangouts. I was probably the only
one eccentric enough to often come all the way up here.
There was also a limit to the number of cameras the school could
install. There was only one surveillance camera on this particular roof,
positioned above the door, which was the only real place a camera could be
installed here. The one camera was more than enough to capture nearly the
entire rooftop in its field of view, leaving almost no blind spots. The flipside
of this, of course, was that if that one camera stopped functioning, the rooftop
would be unmonitored.
It was the same kind of camera as the ones in the school building:
vandalism-proof, with a strong polycarbonate lens and tough steel body that
would be tough to break. But violence wasn’t the only way to disable a
camera.
I stood directly underneath it and looked into the lens. I took the can of
black spray paint I’d brought with me, pointed it at the lens, and sprayed.
The school was bound to be on low alert today, when most of the
students had left.
“You painted over the camera?” asked Ibuki. “Isn’t that a punishable
offense?”
5.2
IL. WAS ALMOST Two in the afternoon, just shy of the time I’d set for
Karuizawa, when the rooftop door opened to admit a lone student. The
leading lady of today’s show appeared, stiffening in the cold air.
I turned off my phone and slipped it into my pocket. Ibuki and Ishizaki
faced Karuizawa, both looking a little nervous.
“I’m guessing you told no one, as I instructed? Well, it’s not like you
had a choice. You can hardly let just anyone know about your past, after all.”
Karuizawa might’ve panicked and alerted X, considering that X alone
probably knew her secret, but I didn’t really care. As I told Ibuki and the
others, I’d sent X a message myself.
Today, I’d pass judgment on Karuizawa. And then, I’d hound her for
X’s identity. Whether or not she’d asked for help, it didn’t matter. The end
result would be the same.
It wasn’t like X, who’d done so much to hide their identity in the first
place, was going to carelessly show up here. And Karuizawa couldn’t ask for
help from anyone other than X, because if she did, then her past would be
exposed. The same applied to X, who wanted to keep their identity hidden. In
other words, both of their options were severely limited.
“Look. I really don’t, like, have a single clue what you’re talking
about, but it’s cold out. I wanna finish this quick.” Karuizawa rubbed her
arms, as if she had a chance of pretending she didn’t know what was going
on. She was a poor actress.
“Tn that case, why come here? You should’ve just ignored me.”
“Well, that’s...because I didn’t want any lies spreading around.”
She was trying her hardest to appear calm, but I easily called her bluff.
“Lies, huh? Everyone here knows the truth... that you were bullied before
you started high school.”
“Tt was a stroke of luck that Manabe and her friends found out. If you
want to blame anyone, blame yourself for not handling them better.”
“What do you want? What do you gain by threatening me?”
“What would you do if I told you I’m just killing time?” Though I still
had plenty of leverage, Karuizawa was already out of options.
“Aren’t you getting carried away, Ryuuen? She might still have
something up her sleeve,” Ibuki said. She still seemed to suspect something
was up, since Karuizawa had come to the rooftop alone.
“But—”
“Enough. Shut up.”
I already knew what Ibuki wanted to say. She was going to say that
Manabe and her friends had been threatened with evidence of them bullying
Karuizawa. They’d been forced to lay off her, made to promise they wouldn’t
speak a word of it to anyone, and then strongarmed into digging their own
graves by giving away information about Class C.
Ibuki was anxious that evidence of what we were doing up here might
be used to blackmail us the same way, but that wasn’t going to happen. I
would make sure of it.
Karuizawa’s past was our weapon. As long as I made good use of that
weapon, we had nothing to fear. Anyone trying to drive us into a corner
would be doing the same to Karuizawa. And the danger there went both
ways, of course. It was a double-edged sword.
“Let’s stop going in circles. You want me to let you off, right? Tell me
the identity of the person hiding behind you. If you do, I’Il keep quiet about
your past,” I told her.
“T don’t, like, get what you mean.” Karuizawa looked upset. She’d
known that I was looking for the Class D mastermind, but until now,
probably hadn’t realized that we’d figured out her connection to them.
It seemed X had kept more details from Karuizawa than I’d thought. I
would slowly and methodically exert more pressure on her until her back was
up against the wall.
“T have no idea. Besides, they weren’t bullying me. Even if you say
this stuff about X, or whatever—”
“Okay, okay. I get it. If you’re not going to fess up, I’Il just tell you.”
Looked like she wasn’t going to spill the beans unless she had the facts laid
out for her. “X threatened to expose Manabe and her friends for bullying you
if they didn’t do as they said. That’s how they got them to keep their mouths
shut.”
“Heh heh. I see... So, you did know how X kept Manabe and her
friends quiet, then.”
99
own.
I continued speaking.
“Tf that was all X did, I wouldn’t care. But that wasn’t enough for
them. You see, X forced Manabe and her friends to betray me during the
sports festival, too. They made them be their spies and leak information to
them by threatening to expose the fact that they’d been bullying you.”
“Your eyes are shifty, aren’t they? Seems like this is the first time you
heard about the sports festival.”
No. I didn’t think Karuizawa would follow orders from someone she
couldn’t see and didn’t know. If she really had no idea who they were, why
not just admit she’d worked with them to an extent but knew nothing more?
If she was denying that she knew anything, there had to be a reason for it.
“All I want is X’s name. The name of the person who’s been attacking
me. I honestly couldn’t care less about your past. Wouldn’t it be wisest to
comply?”
“No matter how many times you ask, my answer’s the same. I don’t
know anything. Seriously, it’s cold out here...” She was wearing extremely
thin clothing. Perhaps she hadn’t intended on being out here very long.
“Yeah, it sure is cold, isn’t it? Don’t you want to finish our little chat
quickly and head back inside?”
““T 99
eee
“There’s no point fighting me,” I said. “You can’t brainstorm your way
out of this situation. You know your options are limited. If you want to save
yourself, you know the correct choice is to tell me their name.”
“T-If there really is someone hiding in the shadows like that, you have
no way of knowing whether the name I give you is actually the person you’re
looking for, right?” asked Karuizawa.
Ishizaki, perhaps because he was also hung up on that point, cut into
our conversation without permission. “Ryuuen-san, she’s right. We have no
way to know if she’s telling us the truth.”
The idiot was just giving Karuizawa an escape route. I shot Ishizaki a
look to tell him to be quiet. Realizing his mistake, he shut his mouth.
“If I find out you lied to me, Pll expose you later,” I told Karuizawa.
TT hat—"
“The only way you can save yourself is to tell me everything you
know.” I laughed at her, but Karuizawa just looked at me sideways and
countered my words.
“I’m not that stupid,” she shot back. “It doesn’t matter if I tell you the
truth now, or lie. Either way, you’ll just try to use this against me again down
the line. Sorry, I’m not going to be a pawn you can use whenever you want.”
“T can neither confirm nor deny that there’s someone hiding behind me.
I’m not going to just blurt out a name to you, either. In other words, I have no
answer for you.”
“You think that someone’s controlling Class D from the shadows, but
you wouldn’t have contacted me unless you’d failed to discover their identity
so far. In which case, I’m the only lead you have, and you can’t afford to
throw me away.”
“T see. So, if I expose your past before I get anything out of you, I’m
screwed, eh? You won’t tell me anything, and my hunt for X’s identity will
be delayed even further,” I reasoned.
Karuizawa averted her eyes, as if to say, “Yes, that’s exactly what I
meant.”
“Honestly, I don’t really care if I don’t learn X’s identity from your
lips. ’'m happy to take my time figuring out who they are. You think that I
won’t have plenty of opportunities to catch X in the future?” I asked.
“You really came up with some good self-defense measures, huh? All
on your own, too?” I asked Karuizawa. I was guessing she’d racked her
brains to get here. It was possible X had fed her some ideas... but the chances
of that seemed slim.
“Get the picture? Don’t you think the best option would be to just
quietly let me go?” she shot back in return.
“Look, all you need to do is tell me who X is,” I told Karuizawa. “If
you know, I’m going to extract it from you one way or another.”
This is your fault, X. This is the result of you trying to have your cake
and eat it too; both saving Karuizawa and hiding your identity.
“If your threats don’t work, how do you intend to make me talk?” she
asked.
“Why me? You can do it yourself, can’t you?” Ibuki didn’t seem very
willing to join in.
“Look, I’ve got problems of my own. Sorry,” said Ibuki. She moved
behind Karuizawa and grabbed her hands.
“Ishizaki, go fill some buckets with water. Let’s start with two. There
are two cleaning buckets in the men’s bathroom one floor below. No one
should be using it right now.”
“N-no. [ll get them!” Ishizaki panicked and ran past Ibuki, looking as
if he was about to trip over his own feet.
“Now, let’s enjoy a nice little chat until Ishizaki returns,” I said.
“No! Let me go!”
“If you lay one finger on me, I’II tell everyone!” Karuizawa shouted.
“Heh heh. It was pretty cocky of you to show up here. Did you think X
would protect you this time, too?” I asked.
No matter how many times I asked her, the answer was the same. She
stubbornly refused to admit whether this X person really existed.
“I’m gonna go out on a limb and guess X, Class D’s hidden puppet
master, promised to protect you from things like this. Right?” I asked.
Karuizawa’s eyes darted around. She might have thought she was
hiding her thoughts, but they were plain for all to see.
“If not, this doesn’t add up. If your past became known, your
headstrong, bossy attitude would work to turn people against you, even girls
from other classes. Manabe and her friends wouldn’t be the only ones
targeting you,” I said.
Ibuki took her eyes off Karuizawa and looked over at me.
“You must spend every day racked with fear that they’ II all learn the
truth. But you managed to get this far without your secret getting out. Why?
There’s only one possible explanation. It’s because of the person who saved
you and supported you.”
“For now. But that’s only been the case recently, right?” I asked
Karuizawa. “X only learned the truth about your past after your spat with
Manabe and her friends. You made Hirata pretend to be your boyfriend to
protect yourself, didn’t you?”
violently.
“Do you know how many surveillance cameras this school has? I bet
you don’t even know that much.”
“You won’t know if you don’t investigate. But if you do your research,
youll begin to comprehend everything that you see around us,” I told them.
Every day, little by little, I’d scoped out all the locations where
surveillance cameras were installed throughout the school. As a result, P'd
also learned about the buckets stored in that particular bathroom for cleaning
purposes.
“One of the experiments I used to ascertain all this was the time I had
Ishizaki and the other guys attack Sudou,” I said. “Because they’re idiots, it
seems there was a witness from Class D there at the time.”
As a result of the witness’s presence, Ishizaki and the others had been
tricked into confessing by a fake surveillance camera. Ishizaki wore a look of
shame on his face as I mentioned the incident. If not for the witness, C Class
could have gained quite a bit that time.
The very first thing I’d done after enrolling at this mysterious school
was look for its “rules,” and how to beat them. The second thing I’d done was
something vital to understanding the system: test the importance of private
points.
“For instance,” I said, “have you ever noticed one particular thing
that’s strange about all these tests? The uninhabited island test, the cruise ship
test, the Paper Shuffle—whatever the test, you’d think the senior students
would be able to give us some advice, wouldn’t you? But if you try and ask
them, not a single one will give you a satisfactory answer. Why do you think
that is?”
“*,.Maybe the exams are conducted differently each year? Like, it’s
possible the rules are different.”
“Yeah. I don’t think the exams are exactly the same each year. Strictly
speaking, though, it’s probably more accurate to say the rules for every grade
level are different.”
If you could clear exams by with from senior students, then they’d
hardly be exams at all. Everything would just turn into stupid competitions to
see who could butter up the seniors more. There had to be rules put in place
to prevent that from happening.
“But... Well, I suppose you might be right. Komiya and Kondou said
something like that a while ago, too. They said they tried to ask some
upperclassmen for hints and got nothing. If anything, it kind of felt like they
weren’t even allowed to ask.”
Which was precisely what gave rise to the feeling that it had been
forbidden for generations. It was very likely the actual rules were more
detailed, but we’d learn them eventually.
the surveillance cameras, bribing the senior students, and making the back-
alley deal with Class A were all part of my experiments to ascertain what I
could and couldn’t do. “What we’re about to do to Karuizawa is one such
experiment, too.”
Based to what Manabe and her friends had told me, the fierce
Karuizawa would quickly buckle when subjected to this.
“Ah!”
“Do you remember the baptism you received at your previous school?”
I asked.
“N-no!” She covered her ears and sat there, her whole body trembling,
as if she were a little girl afraid of ghosts.
“Come on, we’re just getting started.” I took out my phone and began
recording. I pushed Karuizawa’s wet bangs from her eyes, watching her spirit
begin to break. She was probably flashing back to being bullied right now. “If
you won’t talk, then I'll circulate this video throughout the school.”
That was a lie, but Karuizawa was no longer in any state to tell.
“Come on, scream. Beg me to have mercy.”
“N-no!”
The deeper the scars, the more they hurt when you uncovered them.
“T can’t watch this. I knew I shouldn’t have helped you,” said Ibuki,
averting her eyes.
“Bullying the weak is pretty fun though, right? It really gets you
going.”
Despite being so weak, she’d held her head high. She’d created a new
identity for herself, then maintained that position by using Hirata and through
X’s protection.
I picked up the other bucket and dumped the water over Karuizawa.
ce 99
ot
Letting out a silent scream, she curled into a ball, shrinking in
fear.
“Who’s protecting you and keeping Manabe and her friends quiet?” I
demanded.
1?
“Heh. Still trying to hide it? I guess you do have spirit. Or maybe it’s
just that you’re so used to being bullied? Maybe this doesn’t even qualify as
bullying for you.” I grabbed Karuizawa’s arm and yanked her to her feet.
“You’re evil. This is disgusting.” But Ibuki didn’t leave. She leaned up
against the door instead. “I’Il leave after you get a name out of her,” she said.
“Fine by me.”
5.3
water over me four times now. My uniform was soaked right through; even
my underwear was wet. But what scared me wasn’t the way my body
violently trembling from the cold. What scared me was the ice in my heart.
I was facing down a deep darkness, so intense and bitter that 1t made
me hate the entire world.
I started blaming myself. My heart was frozen and my body was being
devoured. The deep scars etched into my being started to throb again, like
they were hot.
That was a dead end, though. If I told him about Kiyotaka, it might
reprieve me temporarily, but there was no guarantee that Ryuuen wouldn’t
try to blackmail me again. He might even command me to betray Class D.
Like the tragic finales you saw on television, misery was all that awaited
people who continued to betray others.
I would hold on to hope until the very end. I’d believe in Kiyotaka’s
words, and his promise that he’d protect me. That was my final defense
against my heart being swallowed up by the darkness.
“Do you want to die holding onto hope? Are you okay with going back
to the way things were?” Ryuuen’s vicious words cut me. “X can’t save you.
I can, if you give me their name.”
I was scared.
“If you won’t cooperate, though, I have no choice but to destroy you.”
Save me.
“When that happens, will you be able to keep your position in your
class? Will you still be a leader?”
Save me.
“No. You'll just go back to being what you were before. You’ll be
back to the real you, that pathetic girl who was always bullied.”
The cruel memories of the bullying I’d endured long ago continued to
play in my head on loop. I never wanted to return to that dark, miserable
world where all I could think about was how much I wanted to die.
My pride had already shattered. No, that wasn’t true. It’d shattered
before, and I’d clumsily pieced it back together with tape. The Karuizawa Kei
who made a new life for herself was dying. I could feel my second chance at
a happy school life crumbling into dust.
“T’m not merciful like Manabe and her friends,” said Ryuuen. “We
know your secret. Even if you get me expelled, it’s not just me who knows.
I'll spread rumors of your past. Your own classmates will smell blood in the
water and turn on you!”
For a moment, my mind went completely blank. All I saw was endless
white. And then immediately after, there was darkness.
In times like these, the defense people have is to just accept whatever
happens. After a while, I learned to do that. To accept reality. Accept that
Ryuuen and his follower were bullying me again. It would be easier if I just
accepted it.
My old school had abandoned me. The only good thing it ever did for
me was tell me about this school. They threw me a lifeline by letting me go
someplace where no one knew me. If no one knew me, then I—
Ryuuen said he just wanted to find the person he was looking for. In
other words, if I gave him Kiyotaka’s name, I’d be free. But there was no
guarantee he wouldn’t reveal my past anyway. It might be public knowledge
come tomorrow. If that happened, I wouldn’t just lose Kiyotaka’s trust, but
all my friends.
But—
It was still possible. I might be saved. If I just gave him Kiyotaka’s
name, it was possible this cruel, painful torture would come to an end.
Kiyotaka had promised me that, but he wasn’t here. Even if I kept faith
in him, that didn’t change my current situation. Didn’t he see the message I
sent him? I’d also looked at him, begged him quietly. Our eyes had met. He
definitely saw me.
He told me he’d protect me. Had I just imagined it? Had I been a fool
to believe him? I didn’t know anymore. There was no way I could be sure,
anymore. Our relationship was far too shallow. He cut me off with no
guarantee he’d keep Manabe and her friends at bay. He quoted selfish reasons
like how it was no longer necessary for him to manipulate the class further.
“Do you see anyone coming, Albert? I see.” Ryuuen sighed quietly,
standing in front of me, “I assume you’re holding on to the hope that
someone’s coming to save you. But it doesn’t look like it.”
Ah. So, I'd been abandoned after all. Well, what was I supposed to do,
now if not believe? Kiyotaka had told me he’d save me. And the truth of the
matter was that he did protect me from Manabe and her friends.
“Tt seems like you trust X quite a bit, Karuizawa.” Ryuuen sighed in
exasperation. “You were tricked.”
“T’m not wrong. I'll tell you the truth about the cruise ship test. The
truth X never told you.”
“The tr-truth?”
Ryuuen’s smile disappeared.
“Manabe wanted to get back at you for being mean to her friend,
Morofuji, but she couldn’t find a good opportunity to do it. I mean, even if
she tried to summon you somewhere secluded, it wasn’t like you’d show up.
But then, for some reason, you went down to the lowest floor alone. Why?”
“That was—” Because Yousuke-kun had asked me to. Back then, I’d
been emotionally unstable. I’d had no choice but to rely on Yousuke-kun, the
host I attached myself to like a parasite. That was why I went.
“Manabe and her friends couldn’t follow you around all the time,
especially not on such a big ship. Them showing up wasn’t coincidental, but
an inevitability.”
No...
“X set you up. They intentionally let Manabe bully you so they could
record it to use against her. Unjust of them, don’t you think?”
I wanted to tell him that he was wrong. But what Ryuuen was saying...
I couldn’t easily deny it. So, Kiyotaka showing to save me wasn’t
coincidence, either?
“You weren’t saved. You were trapped. Pretty stupid, huh?”
I'd been...tricked?
“Look around you. Is X here right now? Is X saving you?”
Kiyotaka...had been deceiving me from the very start?
“It’s safe to assume that X cut all ties with you when their identity was
about to be exposed,” Ryuuen said.
“You finally get it, yeah? That’s right. You’ve just been bullied all
over again.”
“Well, there’s still one way for you to save yourself,” said Ryuuen.
A name.
Kiyotaka’s name.
“K...” Iwas trembling all over, shaking with fear, but finally got one
sound out.
Because I...wouldn’t...
“No matter how many times you ask me...I’ Il never, ever tell you...
creep.”
KES:
“Even though X was just using you, why you’re still protecting him?”
I wanted to ask myself the same question.
“T don’t know why.” But there was one thing I did know. “I want to
stand tall until the very end!”
“T see. That’s too bad, Karuizawa. I don’t want to do this, but you’ve
left me no choice. Still, you have my respect. Despite all your trauma, and the
one person you could rely on betraying you, you didn’t sell him out.
This is fine.
This is fine.
I kept telling myself that. I was going to be broken, now, but somehow,
I couldn’t help but feel proud of myself. Even though he’d betrayed me, I
hadn’t betrayed him. I’d protected him. If I could somehow help him find the
peace he sought, that wouldn’t be so bad, would it? It even made me pretty
cool. Right?
My life had never been very interesting, except when I worked with
Kiyotaka. Helping him out with all his different schemes wasn’t so bad. In
fact, it was exciting. I had fun. I felt like I was playing the role of supporting
actress, aiding the hero from the wings. I didn’t understand a lot of what we
were doing, but somehow, it was extraordinarily fun.
Besides, no matter what happened, the truth was that he’d saved me.
That was why I had no regrets.
But, well...deep down, I still hoped he’d come and save me. Those
fleeting feelings within me were...real, I guess. Ah, I was such an idiot. I’d
only ever been dancing in the palm of his hand. Guess you reap what you
sow, huh?
First Yousuke-kun, then Kiyotaka, had protected me. I was a girl who
couldn’t do anything on her own.
753
Class B got along well with Ichinose-san as their leader. | expected more
internal conflict, but it looks like they're on track to give it their best over
the next three years.
It seems that Class B didn’t perform well because they weren't very good at
suspicion or subterfuge. Even so, their strong resolve and honesty should
see them through to Class A.
Class B worked extremely hard, striving to be open and honest with Class
C, who aren't very friendly. | wish Ryuuen-kun would learn to cooperate a
little more.
Chapter 6:
Intersecting Thoughts
For some reason, our teacher gazed soundlessly around the classroom
after she was done speaking. We waited, but she showed no sign of
dismissing us.
Ike, clearly itching to leave, raised his hand. “What’s the matter,
Sensei?”
“I’m sure that many of you are already aware of this, but your
promotion to Class C is almost guaranteed. Well done.”
“W-wow. Sensei just praised us. This is rare.” Ike wasn’t the only one
who felt that way. I was sure the rest of the class was equally amazed.
“However, don’t get sloppy. If you get in trouble over the break, it
might affect your class points. Don’t forget, even during the holidays, you
represent this school.” With that, Chabashira-sensei dismissed us, bringing
the second semester to a close.
That morning, I’d received a text from Karuizawa at the email address
I reserved for emergencies. The message said that Ryuuen had asked to meet
her on the roof at two o’clock today, and that it had something to do with
Manabe and her friends.
I didn’t reply to Karuizawa’s text. And yet, she left the room with her
friends looking satisfied, perhaps because she felt confident that I’d gotten
her message. Maybe she intended to leave the classroom and then come back.
An hour later, though, almost all the students had left the school building.
“Hey, we were talking about going over to Keyaki Mall. What do you
think? Want to come?” asked Keisei.
“Sure,” I said. “I don’t have anything planned. I’ll head over after I
finish getting ready.”
“Hey. Are you busy today, by any chance?” Satou called, sounding
rather sheepish.
“Yeah. I just promised Yukimura and the others I’d go hang out with
them,” I replied.
“I-I see. Bad luck, I guess,” said Satou, her shoulders slumping.
“...Today’s no good, but are you free over the winter break?” I asked.
“Huh?”
“T mean, I feel bad for turning you down twice now. If you’re okay
with it, Satou, I just thought...”
“R-really?!”
“Y-yeah.”
“T mean, yeah. Just looking at Satou-san, it’s not hard to imagine that
something’s going on, right?”
“At any rate, where are we going? The mall’s probably pretty crowded
today. Since break starts tomorrow, there should be quite a few students
hanging out until late tonight,” said Keisei, pressing us to make a decision.
It seemed that Ryuuen planned on settling things once and for all
today. He must’ve decided that following us was no longer necessary.
“Hey, you know, even though Keyaki Mall’s got pretty much
everything, I think I wanna go off campus after all,” said Haruka, looking
into the distance at the main entrance. “I really want to go to Shibuya or
Harajuku, or see the lights in Omotesando, you know?”
“T’m okay with staying here...” said Airi. “Plus, the campus has almost
everything we need. Do you feel the same as Haruka, Kiyotaka-kun? About
going off campus?”
“I’m happy to stay here, Airi. But I get why people want to go off
campus,” I replied.
“T know that it’s in the school rules, but isn’t saying that we can’t
contact our families for three years kind of extreme? I mean, you’d think
people would be concerned about their kids, right?” Maybe this was a tender
subject for Akito, because he was glowering. “My mom’s a worrywart. She’s
probably really anxious,” he added.
“T’ve heard that the school takes care of that. Apparently, they
regularly send out report cards and stuff.”
“Ah, no worries. That’s not the case with me. My family’s fine,” said
Haruka, smoothly dodging the topic. It seemed there might be something that
she didn’t want to touch on. “So, are we heading over to karaoke? It might be
a bit crowded.”
“We’re not going to play that punishment game again, are we?” asked
Keisei.
“Of course we are. So Yukimuu can have his revenge.”
Airi looked disappointed, but I trusted Haruka to make sure that she
had a good time, even without me around. I said my goodbyes to the group
and left, pulling out my phone to call Chabashira-sensei once I was a safe
distance away.
“What are you planning? Didn’t you wash your hands of me?” replied
Chabashira-sensei.
“Yes, but there’re still a few loose ends that need tying up. I’d like to
discuss this in person. Can we meet at school?”
“Tf this is like previous years, it’Il probably snow,” she said.
“Do you like snow?”
“T can’t imagine that’s all there is to it. If you really aimed for Class A
from the very beginning, you’d never have put Class D at a disadvantage the
way you did.” During our first midterm exam, Chabashira-sensei had
deliberately withheld critical information from us.
“You hesitated, right? You weren’t sure this class really had the ability
to aim for Class A. You weren’t sure it was even worth trying.” I didn’t really
care what her secret feelings were. The important thing was whether she
could be of use to me.
“Tt seems that this is a waste of time. I’m going back to work.”
“Is that what this is about? I thought you already wriggled free of my
grasp, didn’t you?”
“This is crucial. If you don’t take action now, Class D will never make
it to Class A. If anything, it’s unlikely we’ll even reach Class C.”
I looked at the clock on the wall, making it obvious that I was checking
the time. “It’s already two p.m. Ryuuen is putting on a very interesting show
right about now, after calling Karuizawa to the roof.”
“So, even you don’t know, Sensei? Karuizawa was horribly bullied in
the past.”
“Naturally.”
True enough. A teacher going up to the rooftop alone, not just to stop
Ryuuen from bullying Karuizawa, but also to prevent word of Karuizawa’s
past from getting out...it was a dream scenario, too perfect to ever come true.
“To think that a student would threaten a teacher. The tables have
certainly turned.”
“If you do this for me, I promise Ill do nothing to hinder or sabotage
Class D going forward. I think that’s significant, don’t you?” I asked.
“If refusing to help you with this means that we never make it to Class
A, then so be it.”
“T was just testing you, that’s all. So, why not come observe this little
drama’s conclusion?”
6.1
However, Karuizawa must not have spilled the beans right away,
because neither she nor the Class C students showed any sin of coming back
down. It was possible things were going slightly differently from how I’d
envisioned. Still, putting my initial assumptions aside, this was a change for
the better.
Just a little longer. I'd come this far; I didn’t need to rush to take
action. The further I let the situation on the roof develop, the more likely it
became that things would go my way. Being late carried its own risk, but a
necessary one.
It’d been over six months since then. Time sure did fly.
“There’s nothing you cannot buy with private points. That’s what you
said, right?” I asked.
“Tt’s not that easy to get private points. This year’s Class D has
managed to accumulate a decent number, but that’s a departure from normal.
Most years, Class D has about half that amount. Besides, not every student in
the class gets along. At least not enough to use their private points to save a
classmate, even if that means accepting a drop in class points,” she countered.
“True. But that’s a flaw in the system, isn’t it? If salvation through
private points is always an option, it dramatically lowers the danger of
expulsion based on test performance,” I reasoned.
“That might be true.” Chabashira-sensei didn’t deny it, but she didn’t
look me in the eye, either.
“Back when I asked you to sell us that single point, you added a value
to it, Chabashira-sensel.”
“No, that’s not what I mean. I’m asking whether exchanging one test
point for one hundred thousand private points was something you came up
with on the spot, or if you had some basis for attaching that price to it. At the
time, I thought you sounded like you came up with it off the top of your head,
but since then, I’ve come to doubt you arbitrarily decided that on your own
without consulting the school.”
“This school has taken great care to legislate, in writing, all matters
related to points, hasn’t it? It’s not far-fetched to think that it might’ve
anticipated someone trying to purchase a test score increase. I would believe
it.”
“In other words, you’re asking whether the price I named you and
Horikita was something that the school decided on in advance?” she asked.
“Tt’s not like I can answer any question you ask of me,” she said.
I cut Chabashira-sensei off. “Is the hundred thousand points per test
point rate only available for a limited time after we’ve enrolled? Does the
price go up every time we make a purchase? Or are we only allowed to make
such a purchase once? The more I think about it, the more questions I have.
Please tell me if I’m correct.”
“There is. I just need to ask you directly, Sensei.” She tried to avert her
eyes, but I wasn’t budging. “How many points would I need to buy one test
point on the next midterm right now?”
Even so, her inability to answer was an answer in and of itself. It told
me there was established procedure to be followed in situations like these.
“A few students are already doing just that, aren’t they? Look at
Ichinose and Ryuuen, both accumulating private points.” They were each
trying to find a strategy that benefited their respective classes, undergoing a
process of trial and error every day.
“Understood. Very well, I’1l answer your question. It’s true that the key
to beating the system lies in understanding the actual rules surrounding
private point use. Students from previous years have approached the problem
from various perspectives, as you’re doing now. Even Class D, the collection
of ‘defective products’, is no exception. Some students have been quicker
than others on the uptake, though. Additionally, the school has established
thousands of detailed rules to cover every possible scenario. Buying and
selling points, sweeping violent incidents under the rug, preventing expulsion
—there’s a point value attached to every single one of those. However,
teachers are very limited in what we’re allowed to reveal or allude to. In fact,
we’re prohibited from revealing most of this information. There might even
be rules the teachers aren’t aware of yet.”
One mystery solved. Our teachers could only reveal the private points’
special uses to us when certain conditions were met. In other words, the price
of buying a point for the next midterm had already been set; I just hadn’t met
the conditions necessary for Chabashira-sensei to disclose that information to
me. Now that I knew that, I could begin to devise countermeasures, though
the ambiguity would keep us from being too reckless.
I checked my phone and saw that it was past 2:40 p.m. I sent a certain
person a message instructing them to come here immediately.
“It doesn’t matter. Even if Ryuuen learns that I orchestrated all Class
D’s strategies so far, he now gains nothing. If anything, he might assume I’m
involved next time, and end up sabotaging himself.”
“If you do this, you'll be the talk of the school. You’ll destroy all
possibility of leading a quiet life here.”
“T see. Well, you were certainly correct that it’s easier for people to
become attached to something if they have a goal to strive for. But you
needn’t worry. I choose to stay here. I have no intention of going back to
being under that man’s control.”
“Back to the topic at hand. You’re free to make your grand entrance
and expose your identity. But will that really resolve the problem?” she
asked.
“T can’t guarantee it. At most, I can say Ill deal with the situation
based on my evaluation of Ryuuen’s personality and behavior.” I caught sight
of the person I’d texted approaching us. Chabashira-sensei was free to leave
if she wanted, now. It would no longer hinder me. “Well then, thank you very
much for accompanying me this far.”
“He’s here as a witness. After all, Ryuuen will try to win by any means
necessary, and I’d like to avoid this becoming violent.”
Having a teacher stand witness was the ultimate trump card, of course,
but not as feasible to implement. I’d chosen to use the next best thing.
“Are you planning to have Horikita go to the rooftop in your place?”
“Does the former student council president look like someone who’d
ever do that sort of thing?”
“There will be a person on the rooftop who will witness what happens
there. As long as that holds true, then we’ll be fine,” I concluded.
It was for that purpose that I’d come to an agreement with Horikita’s
brother. Not that that was relevant right now.
I turned to the elder Horikita. “A few minutes after I head up, I’d like
you to stop halfway up the stairs. There’s no need for you to talk to the
students who come back down from the roof, nor is it necessary to punish
them. Just make sure they see you on their way down. I need them to be
aware you were here.”
“Wait, Ayanokouji. What would you have done if Horikita didn’t agree
to help?” asked Chabashira-sensei as I started down the hallway that led to
the rooftop.
6.2
blocking the path to the roof. It was Yamada Albert, the perfect gatekeeper
for the task. I didn’t know much about him, other than the fact that he was
one of Ryuuen’s underlings.
He continued watching me, not moving a muscle. Did his silence imply
refusal, or did he not understand? His large hands swiftly withdrew his
phone.
“Don’t panic. I’m the one you want,” I said to him in English.
Albert stopped moving, but said nothing,
“I’m ending this today. No one else will interfere,” I added.
Albert seemed to give this some thought. He stood aside and silently
signaled me to pass, apparently having acknowledged me, but I needed him
on the roof for what was to come.
The gray clouds hanging in the sky threatened rain. I saw Karuizawa
near the fence, cowering away from the door. Having noticed the door open
and close, Ishizaki and Ibuki looked over at me, as did Ryuuen. I checked the
area for surveillance cameras, noting that the sole camera’s lens was painted
black. He’d covered it with spray paint, huh?
Karuizawa had noticed me. She said nothing, but I could tell that she
was shocked and wondering why I’d come.
“Oh?”
“It’s obviously a lie,” said Ibuki. “You came here on someone else’s
orders, Ayanokouji.”
“What’s the matter, Ibuki?” asked Ryuuen. “It seems you want to
believe that Ayanokouji isn’t X.”
“It’s not about what I want to believe. I’m telling you; he can’t be.
He’s... This guy’s stupidly good-natured. He’s a softie. Besides, he probably
doesn’t even know about Karuizawa, and X, and everything—don’t you
think?”
mp4directs.co
“Do you believe it, Ryuuen-san? That Ayanokouji’s X?” asked
Ishizaki.
“T’ve had my eye on Ayanokouji from the start. He’s always clinging
to Horikita, who’s reputed to be quite exceptional herself.”
“But that’s so obvious... isn’t that way too out in the open for someone
trying to hide their identity?”
“Stop trying to make yourself look cool. You didn’t even target
Ayanokouji or Hirata until well after that, did you?” demanded Ibuk1.
Well, this was a strange situation. I’d admitted to being X, but Class C
was divided on whether they believed me.
“It’s precisely because I was the most suspicious that I did things that
way. Or perhaps it was because I had no other method available to me other
than using Horikita?” I told them.
“But—!”’
I decided to throw out a vague yet helpful statement to stir them up.
“I’m the person you’ve been searching for.”
“Hah! Isn’t that suspicious?” Ibuki added. “Would X really just come
right out and say that?”
“T think this is fishy, too. He might’ve been told to step forward and
claim he’s the mastermind as part of a ploy,” said Ishizaki.
“Yes, I certainly did,” replied Ryuuen. “This looks like a bad move on
your part, Ayanokouji. Your best option would’ve been to abandon
Karuizawa Kei, not walk into an obvious trap. I suppose I understand why
Ibuki and Ishizaki don’t believe you. If you’re really X, tell me how you plan
on getting out of this dilemma.”
“T only came here because Karuizawa asked for help. If you want proof
that I’m X, you could just wait until the next exam and see what I do,” I
added.
“Awful things?”
“Enough already. Stop playing dumb and show me what you’ ll do.”
“What I'll do? There’s nothing I can do.”
“T bet Sudou and those other guys are waiting nearby,” said Ishizaki,
glancing at the half-open door.
“If her classmates knew about Karuizawa’s miserable past, her social
life would be dead without me having to say a word. Try and use your head a
little.”
“T-I see.”
“Still, I gotta say, you must think you’re a real big deal if you’re still
trying to play dumb.”
“Man, oh man. Now this is a problem. Ibuki and Ishizaki don’t seem to
believe that you’re X,” said Ryuuen.
161 Goldenagato | mp4directs.com
“You say there’s nothing you can do, Ayanokouji? But I need to
ascertain the truth of the matter here. For that to happen, I think you need to
let these two know what’s going on and make everything clear. Is that all
right with you?” he asked, looking over at me with a broad smile on his face.
“T’ve already admitted to it. But if you won’t believe me, then allow
me to explain, Ibuki,” I said, turning my gaze on the person who wouldn’t
stop doubting me. “The island exam. You were instructed to take pictures of
our leader’s keycard, but your digital camera got damaged somehow. Am I
wrong?”
“It was me. I used water to short-circuit the camera without causing
visible damage. When I met you in the forest, Ibuki, your fingers were
covered in dirt. There were signs that you were digging nearby. When I
returned to the spot later that night, I found a wireless transceiver. That was
so you could communicate with Ryuuen, right?”
Even within Class C, not many people could have known they had a
digital camera. The only people who could have seen Ibuki’s hands covered
in dirt at the time were me, Yamauchi, and Airi. In other words, this was
definitive proof of my claims.
“Trick?” I said. “There’s no trick I can pull in a situation like this. You
already know Karuizawa’s big secret. I understand what’ ll happen if I get
“Exactly. So, what’re you gonna do about it? I can reveal your identity
whenever I want. And I still have the threat of exposing Karuizawa’s past to
use against you. You’re powerless.”
“Indeed. I can’t exactly report what you just did to Karuizawa to the
school, either,” I said.
“And if you try to tell the school what we did up here, we’ll leave
Karuizawa high and dry in retaliation,” said Ryuuen.
So, we’d both go down in flames if I tried anything, and Class D would
probably be the one going down hardest. Ryuuen had switched from using his
knowledge of Karuizawa’s past to attack her, to using it to defend against me.
“Okay. Well, are you satisfied? If so, Ill be taking Karuizawa back
with me,” I said.
“Come now, don’t be so anticlimactic. You came all the way here. We
might as well take our time.” Ryuuen grabbed Karuizawa’s arm and yanked
her up.
For the first time since I stepped onto the rooftop, Ryuuen’s smile
began to fade.
“All this time spent hyping up the mysterious ‘X,’ and he’s nothing but
talk. What a disappointment. Maybe the digital-camera thing was just dumb
luck,” said Ibuk1.
Even though they were allies, Ibuki had always distrusted Ryuuen,
which was precisely why she dared question him so openly. Seeing an
opportunity, I made my next move.
“T may have revealed myself to you, but that doesn’t mean I’m in
trouble. Only Horikita and Karuizawa from Class D know who I am, so if
this information makes its way to other classes, I'll know one of you leaked
it.”
“If you spread word of my actions, Ill report everything that happened
here to the school,” I said.
“We just established that we have you cornered because you can’t do
that.”
“You assumed from the start that I'd abandon Karuizawa. But when I
showed up here, you started talking as though you thought I wasn’t going to.
Am I wrong?” I asked.
“Now, hold on, that doesn’t make sense,” said Ryuuen. “You could’ve
kept yourself hidden if you sacrificed her to start with. You came all the way
here precisely because you couldn’t sacrifice her. Don’t try to trick me.”
“Fine. If they already know about you, Kiyotaka, they can go ahead
and tell everyone they like about my past,” said Karuizawa, looking over at
me as she slowly picked herself off the floor.
I kept my eyes fixed on Ryuuen. “You heard her. Believe what you
like, but if you spill the beans about me to the other classes, itll be war,” I
said.
“Heh heh heh!” Ryuuen suddenly clutched his head and laughed.
“Well, you’ve got that right. If either side spills the beans, it’1l be open war.”
If Ryuuen declared this to be the end, we’d be done. But he’d never
choose that option.
“Man, this is anticlimactic. Not only did you give up your identity so
easily, but you have no choice but to leave the decision up to me, your
opponent! Even then, there’s no doubt in my mind that Ayanokouji is X, the
one who’s been keeping me entertained. Which means I’d be missing out if I
don’t have you entertain me to the very end. Isn’t that right, Ishizaki?”
mY aves
“Heh. You were so full of despair moments ago, but now your eyes tell
me that you have absolute faith in Ayanokouji. I bet you’d tell everyone
about your past yourself if it’d protect him, wouldn’t you? Relax. Your role
here has ended,” said Ryuuen.
choose that once I met you.” His tone was almost pleasant. “Now I’ve
decided.”
Ibuki drew level with Ryuuen, and looked him right in the eyes,
without fear. “What you’re about to do puts Class C at risk,” she said.
“Heh. You, the eternal lone wolf who never tried to cooperate with her
classmates, talking about risk to Class C? Don’t make me laugh,” said
Ryuuen.
“T cooperated with you because I thought you were acting for the
class’s sake. But this is a step too far. Ayanokouji clearly has nothing up his
sleeve.” Ibuki sounded as if she was releasing months of pent-up anger and
frustration. “Iwon’t be a part of what you’re about to do.”
“You think you know what I’m going to do?” asked Ryuuen.
“Yes, because I’ve watched you since April. You’re going to hurt him,
aren’t you?”
“Ishizaki. Komiya. Kondou. Even Albert. You beat every single one of
them until they were ready to obey you at all times,” Ibuki continued.
“I’m telling you, that kind of thinking is going to endanger our class!”
Ibuki cried.
Smack! Ryuuen struck her across the face, and she fell silent
immediately.
“As long as I’m having fun, I don’t care,” he said. “Violence is easy to
understand.”
As illustrated by what he’d just done. So, that was his answer, huh? I
supposed the outcome was inevitable once we passed the point where we
could continue to delude ourselves.
“Listen, what matters right now is what each side will do with the
information they’ve gained. Ayanokouji wants to wrap things up here without
anyone else finding out what happened, including his identity and
Karuizawa’s past. It’s also true that we blackmailed Karuizawa and dumped
freezing water on her. If that gets out, we’ll be punished. To put it simply, as
long as both sides keep what happened here secret, no one needs to know.”
“No matter what happens, both sides have no choice but to grit our
teeth and accept it.”
Albert closed the door that led from the stairwell to the roof.
“But, in the end, it was still a bad move,” continued Ryuuen. “You
might’ve thought that fight would end here, but I’m not letting things go.”
Everyone present could feel in their bones what was about to happen.
Ryuuen wasn’t about to change his methods.
“My escape route’s gone, huh? Well, I guess you got what you
wanted,” I told him.
“First, I’m going to wipe that calm look off your face and replace it
with fear. You’re underestimating me, aren’t you? You think I won’t do it.”
“War isn’t just a battle of wits, you know. You can win just as well by
assassinating an army’s leader as by outsmarting its tactician. Violence is the
most powerful force in the world. It doesn’t matter how crafty you are—
violence will bring you to heel.”
“I’m going to burn the image of your gangly, beaten body into my
eyes. Then, starting next semester, Ill take a bite out of Ichinose,” said
Ryuuen.
“Huh?”
“The four of you won’t be enough to stop me.”
“Wha...?” Ibuki raised an incredulous eyebrow.
“A-are you sure?” Ishizaki hesitated. It would’ ve been one thing if his
opponent were someone like Sudou, who was known for getting into fights,
but I was a regular student. His resistance was understandable.
“Hey, hey. Stay out of this, Karuizawa. You served your purpose here.
Thanks to Ayanokouji’s sacrifice, your secret is safe. Show some gratitude.”
Ryuuen grabbed Karuizawa’s hair once again.
““Guh!”’
He shoved her away. “Stay out of it.”
Even so, Karuizawa bared her teeth at Ryuuen for my sake. She got
back up and tried to leap at him.
“That’s right. You ’re the one who oughta worry,” Ishizaki told me,
stepping forward. “I’m not a bad guy, Ayanokouji. I’m just following
Ryuuen-san’s orders.”
“T don’t really care,” I told him.
This was all going according to plan.
Ishizaki casually threw a punch at me—no, it was more like the swat
you might give a naughty child. A slow, monotonous motion that even a
junior high or elementary school student could have avoided. His right fist
came at me in a wide arc, and I caught it with my hand.
“Huh...?”
“If you’re going to do this, you better take it seriously,” I warned him.
He didn’t seem to take the hint, even though I’d completely blocked
his blow, perhaps because it had been such a lazy blow to start. So, I
squeezed his fist. My right hand still clamped down on his, I applied more
and more pressure.
Albert was the first to grasp the reality of the situation. He didn’t wait
for Ryuuen’s order, but swung at me with his thick arm, which was the width
of an electrical pole. He attacked from my left even though I was free on that
side, probably anticipating that I would take a defensive stance after Ishizaki
freed himself. He was wrong. I could’ve dodged the attack, but instead, I
steeled myself and caught Albert’s punch with my left hand, prepared to take
a little damage.
SMACK! An almost-electric jolt traveled from my elbow all the way to
my shoulder.
“No way. Y-you’re not messing around, are you? Albert? Ishizaki?”
Ibuki asked incredulously.
Maybe she couldn’t tell Albert really had swung at me with all his
might, or that Ishizaki was in pain. Or maybe she just didn’t want to believe
her eyes. I released Ishizaki, who crouched and clutched his arm.
Albert charged at me, his powerful fists swinging. I’d intentionally let
him land the first blow, but I couldn’t take too many more hits of that caliber,
so I dodged under his swing and went in for a frontal attack, punching him in
the gut. I didn’t hold back, either. It wouldn’t be wise to underestimate an
opponent whose abilities were still largely unknown to me.
Based on the slight change in Albert’s flat expression, and how hard
his body had felt against my fist, I judged that I’d dealt minimal damage.
He’d clearly trained his body well—but it still had all the weaknesses human
bodies did. All this meant was that I would have to work a bit harder to crush
him. The human body had numerous weaknesses—the solar plexus, for
instance, was a part you couldn’t strengthen through training. At best, you
could accustom yourself to pain so it was easier to endure.
He must’ve realized that I was going for his solar plexus with my next
strike, because he twisted away to evade it. However, I’d been feinting in
anticipation of just that, and quickly jabbed his throat with my palm like a
sword.
was confident in his skills, huh? I didn’t expect this,” said Ryuuen.
“S-so, you’re saying that Ayanokouji turned the tables on you?” Ibuki
stammered.
“Ryuuen’s always been the sort to use violence. Do you think I’d
voluntarily allow him to engineer a situation where he could rampage without
repercussion?”
“You still don’t get it, do you?” I sighed deeply. “Our confrontation
here was determined long in advance. I knew that, when faced with a
stalemate, Ryuuen Kakeru would resort to violence to settle things.”
Ryuuen thought that everything that had happened so far was his
doing. He couldn’t have been more wrong.
“You were convinced that a link existed between Karuizawa and me.
You had Ishizaki, Komiya, and the others tail Class D students, and moved
openly against Kouenji yourself, thinking that it would put pressure on X. I
imagine you genuinely enjoyed yourself, but you actually gave me some time
to think.”
“Heh. My, now you’re saying some pretty interesting stuff. So, you
purposefully made it look like I had you in the palm of my hand?”
It was like a switch had been flipped inside of her. Ibuki took a couple
steps toward me, closing the distance between us, then kicked again, leaving
me little room to dodge. She was good. Even if Horikita had been in the pink
of health during their fight on the island, Ibuki would’ve beaten her.
And yet, I evaded all her kicks. Ibuki stopped attacking and clicked her
tongue in apparent frustration. “Seriously, what are you...?”
She leapt at me once more. This time, rather than dodge, I immediately
closed the distance between us.
I wasn’t averse to playing with Ibuki, but I didn’t want to drag this out
much further, either. I grabbed her by the neck and slammed her to the
ground, giving her no chance to dodge or guard. Her eyes went wide, and she
stopped moving entirely. Slamming her head would’ve been even more
effective, but this wasn’t a fight to the death.
“Violence isn’t a tool only you and your goons possess,” I said to
Ryuuen.
“I’m impressed you’re still keeping your cool after seeing that play
out,” I added.
“You’re not just clever, but also capable of dishing out violence when
called upon. I underestimated you.” Ryuuen clapped in genuine respect as he
walked up to me. “Do you know what I'd like to say now, Ayanokouji?”
“Nope.”
He adjusted his stance so that he was lower to the ground, then thrust
his left fist toward me, aiming not for my face but my abdomen. I leapt
backward to evade, and he followed in hot pursuit, jabbing with his right arm.
I evaded him once more, then grabbed his hair with my left hand. He
reacted instantly, pushing my arm away. The moment I had his attention
focused on my arm—lI kicked him hard in the side.
“Why don’t you show off your fighting skills more often?” Ryuuen
demanded.
“T have my reasons.”
“That so? After I beat you, how about you tell me them?”
“Do you think you’re going to win?”
“Sure, you might win this time. But what about tomorrow? The day
after?”
“So, you’re saying if we keep doing this over and over, you’ll win
eventually?” I asked.
“No fear, huh?” Now that was interesting. This was probably the
source of his confidence.
“You'll understand once you know pain,” Ryuuen said. “Pain gives
way to fear for ordinary people.”
Ryuuen moved forward to kick me, aiming for the same spot he’d just
hit. He closed the distance between us, and I guarded my face with my left
hand. He lashed out with his right arm, and when he pulled it back, struck me
again with his right knee. It was his strongest blow yet. I staggered back,
feeling pain shoot through my entire body.
“How about it? You get it now?”
“Unfortunately, I don’t ‘get’ anything,” I said. “This is just pain.”
“Are you trying to say you’re the same as me? That you don’t feel
fear?”
I knew all about fear born through pain. I knew the terror and misery of
being a loser. I’d seen people destroyed by it before my eyes, time and time
again. But eventually, I stopped feeling fear. Instead, I just felt cold, because
I’d come to realize that no matter how much suffering or despair others
experienced, the same would never happen to me.
If you have the means to protect yourself, that’s all you need. If you
can keep yourself safe from all harm, you win.
I would deal with this by dodging his attacks and keeping my cool. I
absolutely would not take any critical injuries.
“What’s the matter? Aren’t you gonna play, Ayanokouji? Why didn’t
you dodge those easy blows at first, huh?”
He’d sensed the gulf in power between us, but he was unfazed.
Usually, the more confident a fighter was in their skill, the deeper the despair
that overcame them when they discovered themselves outmatched. But I
didn’t get that feeling from Ryuuen. He wasn’t in a reckless rage that blinded
him to the truth, either.
I’d let him think he held all the cards, then flipped the table in an
attempt to break his spirit, but I’d underestimated his resilience. That was a
miscalculation on my part. Of course, misreading his upper limits was a
trivial error. It just meant this would take longer than anticipated. Ryuuen
would just have to suffer that much more pain.
True enough. You didn’t get skills like mine just through brawling. I
said nothing, but closed the distance to Ryuuen, who was clearly waiting to
strike back, his sharp gaze fixed on me.
“You’ve got all this power, but you keep it hidden?” he asked. “Do you
get off on looking down on mere mortals? Does that turn you on? Make you
feel good?”
Ryuuen didn’t seem to like that answer. He pushed his hair back and
laughed, as if rejecting the very notion that a person could be that apathetic.
“Impossible. Humans are made of greed.”
Of course I experienced greed, among many other things. But that was
beside the point. Indulging Ryuuen’s games wasn’t going to change his mind.
I readied my stance again, getting in position.
“All right, then. Pll just keep pounding you until you do feel fear!” he
barked.
That’s enough, Ryuuen.
“Gah!” he cried.
The blow would have rendered another person unconscious, but
Ryuuen just went flying backward. I had no intention of knocking him out
with a single blow, anyway. He hit the concrete and I was on top of him in a
moment, raining punches on his unprotected torso.
“You said you’ve never felt fear, didn’t you, Ryuuen?” I asked.
“Ah...ah...heh, that’s right. I don’t know fear. I’ve never known it.”
His face bruised, his eyes nearly swollen shut, Ryuuen still fought
back. But his strength was all but gone, and it was all he could do to swing
weakly at the air. I responded with a powerful but precise blow to his solar
plexus, and his expression turned rigid.
“Ugh...ugh! I’m a confident fighter, but it’s not like I’ve never lost
before. No, it’s precisely because I’ve been beaten more times than other
people that—gah!”
I punched him again and again, alternating left and right fists in quick
succession. Blood trickled from Ryuuen’s mouth.
“Violence shows you who people really are. The ones doing the
beating, and the ones being beaten.” He closed his eyes and chuckled weakly.
It was like he was provoking me, daring me to hit him as much as I wanted.
“Ah, ahh...heh. Ha...this is probably fun, huh, Ayanokouji? You can afford
to be cocky, with strength like that. You’re free. You can do whatever you
want. Show me, Ayanokouji...”
He opened his eyes. I hit him again, aiming for his already-swollen
face. He was bleeding freely now, both internally and externally, and yet, I
saw no fear in him. What should’ve been an intrinsic emotion was nowhere
to be seen.
He was goading me. All but handing his life to me on a silver platter. I
took another swing, and his face contorted into an expression of pain for an
instant.
His eyes hadn’t changed. He believed in losing the battle but winning
the war. He had no doubts.
“Even if you win today, I’ll keep coming at you, no matter how times it
takes,” he taunted. “No matter where you are at school, I’ Il find an opening
and attack. And eventually, Pll win.”
The fear that, once you’d made him your enemy, you’d never know
when he’d attack again or how badly he might hurt you.
“Go ahead. Enjoy this temporary delight. Your victory’s right in front
of you, Ayanokouji,” he taunted. “This feels good, doesn’t it? It feels good to
face off against a weaker opponent, doesn’t it? And lurking underneath that
pleasure is...fear!”
“Do you want to win? Do you want to lose? What are you feeling,
Ayanokouji?”
Do I want to win?
Do I want to lose?
“Are you laughing at me now that you’re on top? Are you angry?
Excited, overjoyed? Maybe frustrated? Tell me!”
I had no idea what he was talking about. I couldn’t see my own face or
read my own expression, but I was certain of one thing. Something this
insignificant would never shake me. I felt no emotions, and definitely not
fear.
I hit Ryuuen in the face again. I’d lost count of how many times I’d
struck him at this point, but I kept going, punching him over and over as his
face twisted in pain. Yes, that’s it, Ryuuen. Now you see, don’t you?
He had to see, now, that the feeling known as fear certainly existed
within him.
I landed one last blow, more powerful than any before, and Ryuuen
finally lost consciousness. He wanted to toy with my emotions. Unfortunately
for him, there was nothing there. I had no heart for him to manipulate.
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I slowly got off his limp body and stood. I couldn’t afford to leave
Karuizawa out in the cold any longer.
“Sorry. I put you in a really difficult situation. Are you hurt?” I asked
her.
“T’m...fine. I’m just cold. ’ve kind of lost feeling in some places...”
I extended my hand toward Karuizawa, who’d sat there the whole time,
watching the scene from beginning to end. When she took it, her fingers felt
like ice.
“For my own sake. That’s all there is to it,” she replied before
collapsing into my arms, trembling. “I was scared. I was so scared!”
This was Karuizawa Kei we were talking. She could do it. ’d been
sure of that from the moment I met her on the rooftop.
“T hurt you. I won’t ask you to forgive me. But please remember just
one thing. If something like what happened today happens again, I will come
save you.”
“Kiyo...taka...”
Of course, if she had given Ryuuen my name, she would feel guilty,
and I could manipulate that guilt in my favor. After getting my hands on a
pawn like Karuizawa, letting her go would be a waste. How necessary she
was to my plans was secondary; what mattered most was ensuring she stayed
under my control.
“A few steps below us, the student council president—well, the former
student council president—and Chabashira-sensei are waiting. They know the
circumstances to a certain degree, so they should be able to handle things,
including taking care of your soaked uniform,” I told Karuizawa.
“T’ve still got a few things to tidy up here. Besides, we don’t want to be
seen together. It’s best if you go first.”
I lightly pushed her back. Karuizawa left the roof, heading back down
the stairs, and I assessed my next move.
I couldn’t just leave the four unconscious people spread across the
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aa el res
“Awake, huh?”
“Do you think this...1s over, Ayanokouji?”
“Tt’s over,” I said. No matter how you looked at it, this fight had been
decided. “Surely you’re not about to say you want to keep going?”
“T’ll use any means necessary...to win,” said Ryuuen, slowly sitting
up. “Even if it means...all-out war.”
“Let me give you some advice. I don’t recommend it. The former
student council president is waiting on the stairs as we speak. He may not
know all the details of what happened here, but it’s obvious you were the one
setting a trap, Ryuuen...especially since you were caught on video spray-
painting the surveillance camera. I, on the other hand, was at Keyaki Mall
when you did that. I can produce many alibis as I need to prove it.”
“Yes. I knew you wouldn’t stop attacking me until I struck you at least
once.”
“You seriously think I’m just gonna lay down and accept defeat?”
“Td like to say I'd be happy to have a rematch, but I’m done drawing
I’d expected him to lash back at that, but instead, Ryuuen silently
contemplated what I’d said.
“Since you deliberately had a witness keep his distance, that means
you’re keeping that card in play to use against us in the future if you have to,”
he said. “Even if it means admitting your identity and Karuizawa’s past.”
Probably so. I wasn’t sure exactly what would happen to them, but it
was safe to say it would involve a suitably harsh punishment.
“In other words, Class C’s in trouble as long as I’m in charge, huh?” he
asked.
“I’m not naive enough to take you at your word on that. If Class C ever
corners you again, you'll report what happened today to the school. Am I
right?”
“Maybe,” I said. It was certainly true that I couldn’t promise him that.
Who knew if Class C was even capable of functioning normally if they were
forced to keep their heads down? “But what are you going to do? You can’t
undo what happened, Ryuuen.”
“Shut up. My fight with you is finished. My own battle’s over, too.”
Ryuuen looked at Ibuki and the others, then took out his phone and
typed something. He slid the phone across the roof, where it stopped by
Ibuki’s feet.
“Y-yeah, Ryuuen-san! It’s not like anyone’s gonna blab about this,”
Ishizaki babbled. “You don’t have to take responsibility!”
Neither side could talk publicly about what’d happened here today, but
Class D held an overwhelmingly advantageous position. Ryuuen realized
that. There was only one way to cut his losses.
“Don’t be dumb,” snapped Ryuuen, wiping some more blood from his
mouth. “A tyrant can only reign as long as his power holds meaning. If I’ve
lost after coming this far, no one’s gonna follow me anymore.”
It would seem I’d made the right decision by choosing to set this stage
and let him go on a rampage.
“Stop screwing around! Why would you entrust your points to me?!”
demanded Ibuk1.
“Because you hate me. Divide the remaining points among everyone.
Once the school expels me, I bet Katsuragi and Sakayanagi will void our
contract, but there’s nothing to be done about that,” replied Ryuuen. If the
person named in the contract dropped out of school, that was probably
exactly what would happen, too.
“Ryuuen-san, are you serious?!” exclaimed Ishizaki sorrowfully.
“Shut it. No need to shout, I can hear you just fine.” Ryuuen chuckled.
“T’Il leave the rest to you. Later.”
It seemed his mind was made up. He stood, and approached the stairs,
deaf to both Ibuki and Ishizaki’s final words to him.
“Are you sure? I think you’ll come to regret this,” I said, stopping him
in his tracks.
“Why do you care?” he shot back.
“If you leave without knowing why you lost, you won’t grow,” I told
him.
“Huh?”
“Are you really fine with not knowing why you lost to me?”
“Let it go. There’s no point trying to save me. You’ve got nothing to
gain by sparing me now that I know about you and Karuizawa. I could
expose you at any time.”
“Allow me to add just one thing,” I said. “You are free to drop out of
school of your own volition and you’re free to doubt me. But I have
absolutely no intention of telling anyone about today unless you force my
hand. The former student council president has similarly promised to keep it
to himself. Nothing about this situation is forcing you to withdraw—but if
you do, I won’t stop you.”
With those words, he opened the door and vanished from sight.
Ishizaki and Ibuki, left behind, looked like they didn’t agree with his actions
in the slightest.
/t
874
| think Class A truly got off to a strong start by electing two cooperative
leaders. While they've maintained high standards, they've also proven to
be modest, and not conceited in the slightest.
The Class A students studied diligently and the test proceeded without
incident.
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Chapter 7:
What Ryuuen Wins and Loses
a snake. If I'd grabbed it and taught it to feel fear before killing it, would I
still have slaughtered it in the end?
“Freakin’ stupid.”
That line of thought was pointless. You only got one life, and it didn’t
have an undo button. Some days you won, and some days you lost. Yesterday
just happened to be the latter. The number of times I’d been beaten was
probably in the triple digits by now. Heck, yesterday hadn’t even been the
first time I'd lost to Avanokouji.
So, what made this different from everything that’d happened so far?
At eight o’clock the next morning, I left the dorms and made my way
to the school building. Although this was the first day of our winter vacation,
club activities were still being held, so the building had been left open.
School rules required uniforms be worn within the building, but I didn’t need
to pay attention to that particular rule anymore.
**..Achoo!”’
Along the way, I encountered a lone student standing by the side of the
path, trembling from the cold. I ignored her and kept going, but she called out
to me.
“T don’t exactly want to touch you. You foisted your phone on me,
remember? I’m just giving it back,” said a red-nosed Ibuki, thrusting the
phone at me.
“You could’ve done this at a better time. How long have you been
waiting?”
“Who knows?”
That probably meant she’d waited for quite a while. Why was she so
sensitive when it came to pointless things like this? I didn’t take the phone,
but Ibuki grabbed my arm when I tried to slip past.
“Didn’t you just say you only wanted to give my phone back?” I
snapped.
Ibuki glared at me. “Do you remember what you said back when you
fought Ishizaki and Albert? You said that the strongest person is whoever
wins in the end, no matter how many times they lost before. That’s exactly
how it went when you fought them.”
“So what?”
“Are you really going to end this after losing to Ayanokouji one time?”
I didn’t care anymore. Guess that guy was a big deal after all, if he
could make me feel this way.
“T cooperated with you because you said you’d get us to Class A. Now
you’ re just going to leave us in the lurch?”
Ibuki had her outbursts every so often, but 1t seemed like this had been
building for a long time. She had more to get off her chest, apparently,
because she showed no sign of stopping.
She took a breath, and added one more thing. “Is there anything more
pathetic?”
“You really gonna spin this however’s most convenient for you?” I
asked.
“Yeah, I told you good-for-nothings that if you followed me, I'd get
you to Class A. That was just me dangling a carrot before your noses while I
used violence to sow the seeds of fear. You do know about my contract with
Class A, don’t you? That was all for me. Just me. I couldn’t give a shit about
the rest of you.”
“Yup. There’s really no way Id try to take you lot with me. Don’t you
agree?”
“If you were trying to make it to Class A alone, two million points
would’ve been enough. So why come up with a strategy that includes this
number? Eight hundred million is the number of points necessary to get all of
Class C up to Class A, isn’t it? Though I can’t imagine how we’d ever save
up that many points...”
“If you’re going to drop out, then fight me,” she replied.
What an absolutely crazy proposition. Idiots made good pawns, but the
downside was that they ran wild every so often, like this.
“With the injuries you got yesterday, and how cold it is today, you
probably can’t move too well, hmm?” I mused out loud. I’d noticed already
that her grip on my sleeve was weaker than usual.
I pulled my arm free and started forward—and she hit me. I went
flying, landing hard on the pavement.
“Ah. That felt great. Well, if you’re going to quit, hurry up and do it,”
snapped Ibuki, before turning to head back toward the dorms.
I wondered just how long she had been waiting for me.
7.1
I’d called ahead and made an appointment on the dorm’s landline. I was
doing this the very next day to forestall the complications of the whole mess
on the roof as much as I could, especially considering I’d tampered with a
security camera and the former student council president knew what had
happened.
“T gotta talk to you about the thing I reported yesterday, Sakagami.”
“Sure.”
“But first, there’s something we must address.”
“What?”
“Ryuuen-san...”
Ishizaki and Albert emerged to join us in the hallway. First that idiot
Ibuki, now them? Why were they here?
“What’re you even doing here? Beat it, or I’Il kill you.” I glared at
Ishizaki.
“We—”
Piast
“T did that by myself,” I replied. “Come on, let’s get on with it.”
If Ishizaki and Albert said anything careless, they’d put the noose
around their own necks. I shook them off, ignored Sakagami, and started
walking to the counselor’s office.
Sakagami had to suspect something was up, but he told Ishizaki and
Albert to head back and followed me. “I have a general idea of what
happened, based on what you said over the phone, but walk me through this
once more, Ryuuen. First of all, you admit to defacing the security camera by
spray-painting the lens?”
“Yeah. I did that on my own.”
“Okay, one more thing. Is it true that a fight broke out between you,
Ishizaki, Albert, and Ibuki?” Sakagami asked.
“Yeah, it’s true. I take complete responsibility for it. I threw the first
punch. They retaliated.” No need to involve them in this losing battle.
“How many times do you plan on making me say it? Did the beating I
gave you yesterday not satisfy you?” I spat at Ishizaki, who crouched on the
floor in pain.
“You can add that outburst just now to whatever my penalty is,” I told
Sakagami.
“Class D already paid the private points necessary to cover the repair.
What I wanted to confirm with you was whether you wished to split the
blame.”
If you think this’1l prevent me from dropping out, you’re making a big
mistake, Ayanokouji.
“There’s no problem here, though. You still want to drop out, despite
that?” Sakagami was no fool. He had to have figured out that something
serious had gone down on the rooftop yesterday.
“T see. If that’s your final decision, I can’t stop you,” Sakagami said,
pulling out a piece of paper. “Please write your name, student ID number,
and reason for withdrawal on this form.”
I picked up a pen, and Sakagami pulled out two more forms. “Once we
finish processing your withdrawal, please deliver these to Ishizaki and
Yamada.”
“You're certainly right. But this was their wish. They said that, should
you choose to drop out of school, they would quit too. They wouldn’t listen
to reason.”
“Shit.”
py
It was like looking in a mirror—a mirror of the person I’d been when I
first started at this school. I wondered whether there would come a day when
Ryuuen regained what he lost. I was sure of one thing, though. He and I were
similar.
Postscript
Hy. it’s been five months since last time. Syougo Kinugasa here.
To update you on what’s been going on in my life, I had the atheroma
that’s been growing in my back for the last ten years (and got to be about
seven centimeters in diameter) surgically removed. I’m glad to be rid of it,
but, well...I couldn’t lie on my back for a whole week. At least I’m healing
up nicely.
The anime adaptation is out there now. Did you all enjoy it? I was
deeply moved to see my story brought to life in a way only animation can
achieve. There’s been a huge increase in the number of people reading
Classroom of the Elite since the anime came out, and I’m exceedingly
grateful—especially for those of you who read the books before they were
adapted. Your support allows us to keep publishing these books. Thank you
all very much.
Ayanokouji seems to have settled things with Ryuuen for the time
being, but that’s not necessarily the end of Class C. The third semester will
be a brand-new stage, involving not only the student council, but the second-
and third-year students, too. Class A and Class B will be facing off, and
previously minor characters will take the spotlight more often. In the near
future, you’ll see Ichinose and Sakayanagi’s stories, as well as Katsurag1,
Hirata, and others. Who will become enemies? Who will become allies? Pay
close attention, and find out.
And, as always, thank you very much for your continued support.
SS
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