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1 month ago

Chapter 34: Echoes of a Fictional Past

The fire in the damp cave spat a shower of angry orange sparks into the heavy, charged silence that followed Arthur Ainsworth’s almost whispered, yet cataclysmic, question. The only other sound was the distant, ceaseless roar of the hidden waterfall, a monotonous, indifferent rush of water that suddenly felt like the rushing, uncaring torrent of a reality that had just been irrevocably, terrifyingly, and perhaps even liberatingly, undone. Nana Hiiragi stared at him, her violet eyes wide, her face utterly drained of colour, the half-sketched map forgotten in her lap. Kyouya Onodera’s hand had frozen midway through sharpening his makeshift blade, his usually impassive features now a mask of stunned, almost incredulous intensity. Michiru Inukai’s gentle face was etched with profound confusion and a dawning, childlike distress, her hand instinctively going to her mouth. Even Jin Tachibana, for the first time since Arthur had known him, looked momentarily, almost imperceptibly, thrown, his enigmatic smile faltering, his pale eyes fixed on Arthur with a new, sharp, unreadable intensity.

It was Nana who finally broke the spell, her voice a strangled, disbelieving whisper. “A… a story? You’re saying… everything? The island… the killings… me… it was all just… a story you read? In a… a comic book?” The sheer, insane absurdity of it seemed to overwhelm her. The carefully constructed narrative of her life, her suffering, her crimes – all reduced to pulp fiction in another world.

Arthur nodded miserably, the weight of their collective shock almost a physical blow. “Essentially, yes, Hiiragi-san. A manga, as they call them. And then an animated television series. ‘Talentless Nana’. It was… surprisingly popular for a while, in my time. Known for its dark themes, its psychological twists.” He felt a flush of shame, of acute discomfort. How could he possibly explain the ghoulish voyeurism of it all? Their real, lived pain, packaged as entertainment. It felt obscene.

Kyouya Onodera finally moved, placing his sharpened metal shard down with slow, deliberate precision. His voice, when he spoke, was dangerously quiet, each word a carefully chipped piece of ice. “So all your ‘predictions,’ Tanaka-kun… or should I say, Ainsworth-san? Your ‘Chrono-Empathic Glimpse’… your knowledge of our Talents, our weaknesses, our… our fates… it all came from this… this fictional narrative?”

“Most of it,” Arthur admitted, his gaze dropping to the cave floor. He couldn’t meet Kyouya’s piercing stare. “My memories of it are… fragmented. Incomplete. Like trying to recall a dream years later. I remembered key events, character traits, some of the deaths. Enough to make those ‘predictions.’ Enough to try and… interfere, sometimes successfully, often not.” He thought of the sheer, unmitigated unreality of it all, more like some bizarre, avant-garde play one might see in a small, underfunded provincial theatre back in Sussex, something designed to shock and confuse, than any lived experience.

“So you knew,” Nana’s voice was stronger now, laced with a dawning, terrible anger, a profound sense of betrayal. “You knew what I was. What I would do. You knew about… about Michiru?” Her gaze flicked towards the fluffy-haired girl, who was now looking at Arthur with wide, wounded eyes.

“I knew… some of it,” Arthur said wretchedly. “I knew Michiru was… important. I knew she had a powerful healing Talent. I remembered… I remembered her dying to save you, Nana-san, in the story. That’s why I tried so desperately to stop her at the docks.” He looked at Michiru. “And later, why I hoped… her body being warm, it matched some obscure detail I half-recalled about how truly powerful healing Talents might interact with death in your world, according to the lore of that story.”

Michiru’s eyes filled with tears. “So… my life… Nana-chan’s life… it was all… written down somewhere?” she whispered, her voice trembling.

“In my world, yes,” Arthur confirmed, his own voice hoarse with a mixture of guilt and a strange, weary resignation. “A fiction. Here… here it’s your reality. Our reality now, I suppose.”

“Why didn’t you stop more of it?” Kyouya’s question was sharp, cutting as the blade he’d just been honing. “If you possessed such… supposedly comprehensive foreknowledge, why allow so many to die? Why not expose Nana from the outset?”

Arthur finally looked up, a spark of his old, tired frustration igniting in his eyes as he met Kyouya’s accusatory gaze. “Do you truly think I didn’t want to?” he retorted, his voice gaining a raw, defensive edge. “My memory of this… this ‘story’… it was never comprehensive, Kyouya-san. It was like a shattered mirror, reflecting only fragments, often distorted, often out of sequence. I frequently didn’t know the when or even the exact where each murder or critical event would take place until it was almost upon us, or sometimes, tragically, not until it was too late.”

He took a ragged breath, the faces of the dead flickering before his mind’s eye. “Take Nanao Nakajima, for instance. I knew where Nana planned to kill him – that cliff by the sea. It was a very vivid scene in the story. But I had no idea when she would make her move – which day, which hour. I had to shadow him for days, make a nuisance of myself, an utter fool, just waiting, hoping I could intervene at the right, critical moment. With Yuusuke Tachibana, the time traveler,” Arthur continued, his voice tight with the memory of that particularly cold-blooded murder, “again, I knew where – the lake. But not when. My warning to him was vague because my knowledge was vague. I couldn’t tell him ‘Nana will drown you by the old boathouse next Tuesday at 3 PM’ because I simply didn’t know that level of detail.”

He looked down at his hands, clenching and unclenching them. “And Touichirou Hoshino, the poor boy dying of cancer… for him, I didn’t even have an accurate location. Just a hazy recollection from the story that it was possibly in a cave somewhere on the island. Which cave? When? The story never specified. I tried to find him, to warn him, but the island is large, and he was already reclusive due to his illness.” Arthur shook his head, the weight of these specific failures, these agonizing limitations, pressing down on him.

“And what if I had tried to change things too drastically from the outset?” he pressed on, his voice gaining a note of desperation. “What if I’d stood up on that first day and announced, ‘Nana Hiiragi is a government assassin, and here’s a list of everyone she’s going to kill’? Who would have believed me? They’d have locked me up as a lunatic! Or Nana herself would have eliminated me before I drew my next breath. The story I remembered was horrific, yes, but what if my blundering attempts to play God based on a half-recalled comic book from another dimension made things even worse? Created new, unforeseen tragedies? New victims I couldn’t have predicted?” He gestured helplessly. “And frankly, Kyouya-san, I was terrified. Most of the time, I am terrified. I was alone, in a foreign land I didn’t understand, in a body that wasn’t mine, surrounded by people with often terrifying superhuman abilities, one of whom was a highly trained, remorseless assassin systematically killing everyone around me. My primary concern, I’ll admit it freely, was often my own desperate survival, and simply trying to make some kind of rudimentary sense of an utterly impossible, insane situation.”

He turned to Nana, whose face was a maelstrom of conflicting emotions – anger, betrayal, confusion, but also, Arthur thought he saw, a flicker of something else, something akin to a strange, twisted validation. If her life, her actions, had been “scripted” in some other dimension, did that lessen her own culpability? Did it make Tsuruoka’s manipulation even more monstrously profound?

“And what,” Jin Tachibana finally spoke, his voice still calm, still enigmatic, though his eyes held a new, sharp alertness, “does this… ‘story’… say happens next? Now that we have escaped this camp? Now that your ‘Talent,’ your foreknowledge of our specific immediate actions, is supposedly… depleted?”

Arthur shook his head. “That’s the problem. The story I remember… it focused primarily on Nana’s time on the island during that first year. It detailed many of her… assignments. It touched upon Kyouya’s investigation, Michiru’s sacrifice and return, the conflict with Rentaro. After that, my knowledge becomes… patchy. Vague. I remember broader strokes about Tsuruoka, about the Committee, about the ‘Enemies of Humanity,’ about a growing societal fear of Talents leading to… to situations like this internment camp.” He gestured around the damp cave. “But specific events? Timelines? Who lives, who dies from this point on? I have no idea. The narrative, for me, largely ended with the first year’s major events, or became too divergent from what I was experiencing once I started interfering. From the moment Michiru first returned, from Nana’s breakdown at the cliff, things here have already been… different, diverging significantly from what I dimly recalled. My foreknowledge of your specific futures, your day-to-day choices, is gone. As I said, I’m as blind as the rest of you now.”

A new, uneasy silence descended. The implications of Arthur’s confession, the sheer, mind-bending audacity of it, were immense, earth-shattering. Their lives, their struggles, their very identities, mirrored, however imperfectly, in a work of popular fiction from another world, another time. It was a truth so outlandish, so existentially terrifying, it was almost impossible to fully grasp.

It was Michiru, her gentle voice trembling but surprisingly firm, who finally voiced the question that hung heavy and unspoken in the damp, smoky air. “So, Arthur-san… if our lives here are… were… a story in your world… does that mean we are not truly real? That our pain… our choices… that they don’t truly matter in the grand scheme of things?”

Arthur looked at her, his heart aching at her innocent, profound, and utterly heartbreaking question. “No, Michiru-san,” he said, his voice thick with an emotion he couldn’t quite name – a fierce protectiveness, a profound empathy. “No. Absolutely not. What happens here, what you feel, what you choose to do every single day… it is absolutely, terrifyingly, undeniably real. Perhaps, in many ways, it is even more real than anything I ever experienced in my own, mundane world. The story… it was just a flawed, incomplete window, a distorted mirror reflecting a sliver of your reality. It doesn’t define you. It doesn’t negate your suffering, or your courage, or your capacity for love and sacrifice.”

He looked around at their stunned, searching faces, lit by the flickering, unreliable firelight. He had laid himself bare, revealed his most unbelievable, his most vulnerable, his most insane truth. He felt strangely light, as if a tremendous, crushing burden had finally been lifted from his shoulders, but also terrified of their judgment, their potential rejection, their understandable disbelief.

It was Nana, surprisingly, who broke the heavy tension. She let out a long, shuddering breath, then, a small, hysterical, almost broken laugh escaped her lips, a sound utterly devoid of mirth. “A comic book…” she whispered, shaking her head in stunned, almost numb disbelief. “All this… all this horror… all this blood… because of a damned comic book character who just happens to look like me…” She looked directly at Arthur, and for the very first time since he had met her, he saw not anger, not betrayal, not even suspicion, but a flicker of something akin to a weary, horrified, almost surreal camaraderie. “Well, Ainsworth-san,” she said, her voice raw, cracked, almost unrecognizable. “It seems your life is, if anything, even stranger, even more unbelievable, than ours.”

Kyouya Onodera nodded slowly, his gaze distant, contemplative. “Indeed. This revelation… it re-contextualizes everything. Your past actions, your warnings… your apparent foreknowledge.” He paused, his sharp eyes meeting Arthur’s. “It also suggests that if such a narrative existed, then perhaps our struggles, our very existence, have some form of… pre-ordained pattern, even if you, personally, no longer have access to its specific details. Or, perhaps, and this is the more pertinent consideration, it offers us the definitive chance to consciously, deliberately break from it. To write our own ending.”

The future, which had always been a terrifying, oppressive unknown for Arthur despite his supposed “Talent,” now felt even more vast, more unpredictable, but also, strangely, more laden with a desperate, shared, and almost defiant agency. They were no longer just characters in a half-remembered story he carried within him like a curse. They were survivors, together, facing a monstrous, common enemy, armed now with not just their varied Talents and their hard-won courage, but with the most bizarre, the most unbelievable, the most world-shattering truth imaginable. Where they went from here, what they chose to do with this impossible knowledge, was now, truly, terrifyingly, and perhaps even liberatingly, up to them.

“Most of it,” Arthur admitted, his gaze dropping to the cave floor. He couldn’t meet Kyouya’s piercing stare. “My memories of it are… fragmented. Incomplete. Like trying to recall a dream years later. I remembered key events, character traits, some of the deaths. Enough to make those ‘predictions.’ Enough to try and… interfere, sometimes successfully, often not.” He thought of the sheer, unmitigated unreality of it all, more like some bizarre, avant-garde play one might see in a small festival theatre back in Sussex, something designed to shock and confuse, than any lived experience.

“So you knew,” Nana’s voice was stronger now, laced with a dawning, terrible anger, a profound sense of betrayal. “You knew what I was. What I would do. You knew about… about Michiru?” Her gaze flicked towards the fluffy-haired girl, who was now looking at Arthur with wide, wounded eyes.

“I knew… some of it,” Arthur said wretchedly. “I knew Michiru was… important. I knew she had a powerful healing Talent. I remembered… I remembered her dying to save you, Nana-san, in the story. That’s why I tried so desperately to stop her at the docks.” He looked at Michiru. “And later, why I hoped… her body being warm, it matched some obscure detail I half-recalled about how truly powerful healing Talents might interact with death in your world, according to the lore of that story.”

Michiru’s eyes filled with tears. “So… my life… Nana-chan’s life… it was all… written down somewhere?” she whispered, her voice trembling.

“In my world, yes,” Arthur confirmed, his own voice hoarse with a mixture of guilt and a strange, weary resignation. “A fiction. Here… here it’s your reality. Our reality now, I suppose.”

“Why didn’t you stop more of it?” Kyouya’s question was sharp, cutting. “If you possessed such… comprehensive foreknowledge, why allow so many to die? Why not expose Nana from the outset?”

Arthur finally looked up, meeting Kyouya’s accusatory gaze. “Do you think I didn’t want to?” he retorted, a flash of his old, tired frustration surfacing. “My memory was imperfect, like I said. I often only remembered crucial details moments before they were due to happen, if at all. And what if I had tried to change things too drastically? The story I remembered was horrific, yes, but what if my interference, my blundering attempts to play God based on a half-recalled comic book, made things even worse? Created new, unforeseen tragedies? And frankly, Kyouya-san, I was terrified. I was alone, in a foreign land, in a body that wasn’t mine, surrounded by people with superhuman abilities, one of whom was a trained assassin systematically killing everyone around me. My primary concern, I’ll admit it, was often my own survival, and trying to make sense of an impossible situation.”

He turned to Nana, whose face was a maelstrom of conflicting emotions – anger, betrayal, confusion, but also, Arthur thought he saw, a flicker of something else, something akin to a strange, twisted validation. If her life, her actions, had been “scripted” in some other dimension, did that lessen her own culpability? Did it make Tsuruoka’s manipulation even more monstrous?

“And what,” Jin Tachibana finally spoke, his voice still calm, still enigmatic, though his eyes held a new, sharp alertness, “does this… ‘story’… say happens next? Now that we have escaped this camp? Now that your ‘Talent,’ your foreknowledge of our specific immediate actions, is supposedly… depleted?”

Arthur shook his head. “That’s the problem. The story I remember… it focused primarily on Nana’s time on the island during that first year. It detailed many of her… assignments. It touched upon Kyouya’s investigation, Michiru’s sacrifice and return, the conflict with Rentaro. After that, my knowledge becomes… patchy. Vague. I remember broader strokes about Tsuruoka, about the Committee, about the ‘Enemies of Humanity,’ about a growing societal fear of Talents leading to… to situations like this internment camp.” He gestured around the damp cave. “But specific events? Timelines? Who lives, who dies from this point on? I have no idea. The narrative, for me, largely ended with the first year’s major events, or became too divergent from what I was experiencing once I started interfering. From the moment Michiru first returned, from Nana’s breakdown at the cliff, things here have already been… different, diverging significantly from what I dimly recalled.”

He paused, then added a crucial detail, his gaze shifting, almost reluctantly, towards Nana Hiiragi, who was watching him with a disturbing, unreadable intensity. “There’s something else about this… this ‘story’ you should know. It’s… or rather, it was… ongoing. Or at least, it was still being written, still being released, just before I… before I arrived here. I never read or saw the absolute end of it, because it hadn't been created yet in my time.”

He saw a flicker of something – hope? Dread? – in Nana’s eyes. “And Nana-san,” Arthur continued, choosing his words very carefully, the Japanese feeling heavy and inadequate for what he was trying to convey, “in the version of the story I knew, your character… she begins to change. Profoundly. After certain events, after certain realizations about Tsuruoka and the Committee… she starts… she starts trying to save Talents, not eliminate them.”

Nana’s breath hitched, an almost inaudible gasp. Kyouya’s head tilted slightly, his analytical gaze sharpening further.

“In fact,” Arthur pressed on, remembering the dark, vengeful turn the fictional Nana had taken, “the Nana in the manga… she wants nothing more than to, well…” He hesitated, searching for a way to translate a rather brutal English idiom. He pictured, for a fleeting, absurd moment, the old, battered woodchipper his neighbour in Crawley, old Mr. Henderson, used with noisy relish on his garden waste every autumn. “She wants to ram Tsuruoka into a… a proverbial woodchipper.” He made a crude, forceful pushing and grinding motion with his hands, then quickly dropped them, flushing slightly at the inadequacy of the gesture. “She wants to see him utterly, completely destroyed. And she’d undoubtedly go through every last member of The Committee to do so, to make them all pay for what they did to her, to everyone.”

He looked around at their stunned faces. “As for anyone else in the story… Kyouya-san, Michiru-san, Jin-san… what their ultimate fates were according to that unfinished narrative… I genuinely don’t know. My memory focuses mostly on… on Nana’s arc, as she was the titular character.”

A new, even heavier silence descended upon the cave, thick with the implications of this latest, astonishing revelation. The idea that Nana Hiiragi, their island’s most feared and prolific killer, was “destined” in some other-worldly fiction to become a savior, a destroyer of the very system that had created her, was almost too much to comprehend.

It was Michiru, her gentle voice trembling but firm, who finally voiced the question that hung heavy and unspoken in the damp, smoky air. “So, Arthur-san… if our lives here are… were… a story in your world… does that mean we are not truly real? That our pain… our choices… that they don’t truly matter in the grand scheme of things?”

Arthur looked at her, his heart aching at her innocent, profound, and utterly heartbreaking question. “No, Michiru-san,” he said, his voice thick with an emotion he couldn’t quite name – a fierce protectiveness, a profound empathy. “No. Absolutely not. What happens here, what you feel, what you choose to do every single day… it is absolutely, terrifyingly, undeniably real. Perhaps, in many ways, it is even more real than anything I ever experienced in my own, mundane world. The story… it was just a flawed, incomplete window, a distorted mirror reflecting a sliver of your reality. It doesn’t define you. It doesn’t negate your suffering, or your courage, or your capacity for love and sacrifice.”

He looked around at their stunned, searching faces, lit by the flickering, unreliable firelight. He had laid himself bare, revealed his most unbelievable, his most vulnerable, his most insane truth. He felt strangely light, as if a tremendous, crushing burden had finally been lifted from his shoulders, but also terrified of their judgment, their potential rejection, their understandable disbelief.

It was Nana, surprisingly, who broke the heavy tension. She let out a long, shuddering breath, then, a small, hysterical, almost broken laugh escaped her lips, a sound utterly devoid of mirth. “A comic book…” she whispered, shaking her head in stunned, almost numb disbelief. “All this… all this horror… all this blood… because of a damned comic book character who just happens to look like me… and who then, apparently, decides to go after Tsuruoka like a… a human woodchipper?” She looked directly at Arthur, and for the very first time since he had met her, he saw not anger, not betrayal, not even suspicion, but a flicker of something akin to a weary, horrified, almost surreal camaraderie. “Well, Ainsworth-san,” she said, her voice raw, cracked, almost unrecognizable. “It seems your life is, if anything, even stranger, even more unbelievable, than ours.”

Kyouya Onodera nodded slowly, his gaze distant, contemplative. “Indeed. This revelation… it re-contextualizes everything. Your past actions, your warnings… your apparent foreknowledge.” He paused, his sharp eyes meeting Arthur’s. “It also suggests that if such a narrative existed, then perhaps our struggles, our very existence, have some form of… pre-ordained pattern, even if you, personally, no longer have access to its specific details. Or, perhaps, and this is the more pertinent consideration,” his gaze flicked briefly towards Nana, then back to Arthur, “it offers us the definitive chance to consciously, deliberately break from it. Or, for some, to perhaps… embrace a different version of their scripted path.”

The future, which had always been a terrifying, oppressive unknown for Arthur despite his supposed “Talent,” now felt even more vast, more unpredictable, but also, strangely, more laden with a desperate, shared, and almost defiant agency. They were no longer just characters in a half-remembered story he carried within him like a curse. They were survivors, together, facing a monstrous, common enemy, armed now with not just their varied Talents and their hard-won courage, but with the most bizarre, the most unbelievable, the most world-shattering truth imaginable. Where they went from here, what they chose to do with this impossible knowledge, was now, truly, terrifyingly, and perhaps even liberatingly, up to them.

1 month ago

Chapter 39: A Desperate Covenant

The dying embers of the fire in the cave cast long, flickering shadows, mirroring the uncertain, shifting thoughts of the fugitives huddled around its meager warmth. Arthur Ainsworth had laid bare his desperate, almost suicidal proposal, and now, the heavy silence was thick with unspoken fears, unvoiced objections, and the stark, terrifying absence of any readily apparent, less perilous alternatives. He had asked if anyone had better ideas, and the silence itself was a grim, eloquent answer.

Nana Hiiragi was the first to speak again, her voice low, almost rough with a new, unfamiliar emotion that Arthur couldn’t quite decipher – was it reluctant admiration for his sheer audacity, or a chilling premonition of shared doom? “If… if Jin-san truly believes he can create a convincing enough identity for you, Arthur-san… if there is even a ghost of a chance that you could get inside that… that place…” She paused, her gaze flicking towards Michiru, then back to Arthur, a fierce, protective light glinting in her violet eyes. “Then the information you could gather, the… the seeds of doubt you might be able to sow amongst those new students… it would be invaluable. More valuable, perhaps, than anything we could achieve by simply… running and hiding.” Her own past as Tsuruoka’s tool, her intimate knowledge of the Committee’s indoctrination methods, gave her a unique perspective on the potential impact of Arthur’s proposed counter-narrative. She knew how potent, how insidious, the right words, planted in the right minds at the right time, could be.

Kyouya Onodera, who had been staring intently into the flames, his face a mask of cold, hard calculation, finally nodded, a single, sharp, decisive movement. “The risks, as I have stated, remain astronomically high,” he said, his voice flat, devoid of emotion. “However, the potential strategic gains, should you succeed in establishing a foothold and disseminating even a fraction of the truth about Tsuruoka and The Committee, are… significant.” He looked directly at Arthur. “If Jin-san can provide the necessary logistical support – a credible identity, a viable insertion method – then this plan, for all its inherent lunacy, warrants further, serious consideration. We are currently… outmaneuvered, out-resourced, and largely reactive. This, at least, offers a proactive, if extraordinarily high-stakes, gambit.”

Michiru, her gentle face still pale with worry, looked from Kyouya to Nana, then finally to Arthur. She twisted her small hands in her lap. “I… I am still so very frightened for you, Arthur-san,” she whispered, her voice trembling slightly. “But… if Nana-chan and Kyouya-san believe this is… this is a path we must consider… and if you are truly determined…” She took a small, shaky breath. “Then… then I will support you in any way I can. I will pray for your safety.” Her quiet courage, her unwavering loyalty, was a small, steadying anchor in the midst of their swirling fears.

All eyes now turned to Jin Tachibana. He had listened to their deliberations with his usual unnerving, almost preternatural calm, his faint, enigmatic smile never quite leaving his lips. He tilted his head slightly, his pale eyes glinting in the firelight. “To create a new identity for Arthur Ainsworth, an identity as a qualified, unremarkable, and entirely Talentless foreign educator seeking employment in the Japanese school system,” he began, his voice as smooth and cool as polished jade, “will require… considerable finesse, access to certain restricted databases, and the cooperation of individuals with highly specialized, and often highly illegal, skill sets.” He paused. “It will also require a significant investment of time, and what few remaining financial resources I can… redirect.”

He looked at Arthur. “The alteration of your physical appearance will also be paramount. Subtlety will be key. Nothing too drastic, initially, but enough to ensure that the Kenji Tanaka who once walked the halls of that academy is no longer recognizable. We will also need to craft a comprehensive, verifiable, yet entirely fictitious personal and professional history for your new persona. Every detail must be perfect.” He made it sound almost mundane, like planning a particularly complex holiday itinerary. The sheer, almost casual audacity of it all made Arthur’s head spin. Becoming a convincing Japanese schoolteacher, complete with a fabricated past and forged credentials… it was a far cry from his predictable, meticulously ordered accounting routines back in his old life. The most acting he, Arthur Ainsworth, had ever done was feigning polite interest during Mrs. Henderson’s lengthy, unsolicited discourses on the blight affecting her prize-winning roses back in Crawley. Or perhaps when trying to look suitably enthusiastic about the tombola stall at the annual village fete, somewhere on a soggy summer green in the heart of Sussex… This level of sustained, high-stakes deception felt like preparing for a leading role in a West End stage production, with a significantly more lethal form of audience heckling if he flubbed his lines.

“As for gaining entry to that specific academy,” Jin continued, his gaze unwavering, “that will be the most… challenging aspect. Kyouya-san is correct. They do not advertise vacancies in the usual manner. However…” A flicker of something unreadable crossed his face. “…organizations, even ones as tightly controlled as Tsuruoka’s, are still comprised of individuals. Individuals have routines. Individuals make mistakes. And sometimes, unexpected… vacancies… can arise, or be discreetly engineered, if one knows where and how to apply the appropriate leverage.” The chilling implication in his soft-spoken words was not lost on anyone in the cave.

He stood then, a graceful, almost fluid movement. “I will make the necessary initial inquiries,” he stated, his tone conveying a quiet, unshakeable confidence that was both reassuring and deeply unsettling. “I will assess the feasibility of creating this new identity for you, Ainsworth-san. I will explore potential avenues for your… insertion. This will take time. I will need to travel, to access resources not available to us here.” He looked at Nana and Kyouya. “In my absence, your group’s security, your continued evasion of Committee patrols, will be paramount. Maintain vigilance. Conserve your resources.”

He then turned back to Arthur. “And you, Ainsworth-san. While I am… engaged… you must begin your own preparations. Improve your spoken Japanese beyond its current, shall we say, charmingly rudimentary level. Learn everything you can about current Japanese educational curricula, about the expected comportment of a teacher in such an institution. You must become this new person, inhabit this role so completely that even you begin to believe the lie. Your life will depend on it.”

With a final, enigmatic nod to the assembled group, Jin Tachibana turned and, with the silent grace of a phantom, slipped out of the cave and into the pre-dawn gloom, vanishing as if he were merely a figment of their collective, desperate imagination.

With a final, enigmatic nod to the assembled group, Jin Tachibana turned and, with the silent grace of a phantom, slipped out of the cave and into the pre-dawn gloom, vanishing as if he were merely a figment of their collective, desperate imagination.

A new kind of silence descended upon the remaining occupants of the cave – Arthur, Nana, Kyouya, and Michiru. It was no longer the silence of stunned disbelief or fearful hesitation, but the heavy, contemplative silence of individuals who had just made a pact, a desperate covenant, with an uncertain and terrifyingly dangerous future. The fire had burned down to glowing embers, casting their faces in a dim, ruddy light. The decision, however tentative, however fraught with peril, had been made. They were going to try. Arthur Ainsworth was going back to the island, if Jin could pave the way.

Arthur looked at their faces, etched with weariness, fear, but also a new, fragile determination. He, an unqualified former accounts clerk from Crawley, was about to embark on a mission that would make most seasoned spies blanch. The idea of needing to become an expert on an alternate Japan's entire socio-political history, on top of faking teaching credentials and a new identity, was daunting. His mother, he thought with a fleeting, absurd internal pang, would have a fit if she knew. Still, it certainly beat another dreary Tuesday afternoon trying to make sense of overly complicated departmental spreadsheets back in... well, back where things, however mundane, at least made a modicum of conventional sense.

He cleared his throat, breaking the quiet. “Thank you, everyone,” he said, his voice heartfelt, his gaze encompassing Nana’s newfound, wary resolve, Kyouya’s stoic acceptance, and Michiru’s anxious but supportive expression. “For… for being willing to even consider this. I know it’s… a lot to ask.”

He pushed himself to his feet, a sudden, restless energy coursing through him despite his exhaustion. “There’s much to do, and Jin-san is right, I need to prepare. Not just the language, not just pretending to be a teacher.” He looked around the cave, at the crude drawings Nana had been making on a piece of salvaged slate. “I also need to learn about the history of this world as well as well. Properly. Beyond the fragments I remember from that… that story. If I’m to be convincing, if I’m to understand the context of what I’ll be walking into.”

A small, determined smile touched his lips. He clapped his hands together once, a decisive sound in the stillness. “Well,” he declared, a spark of his old, almost forgotten pragmatic energy returning. “No time like the present!”

The long, dangerous road ahead was shrouded in uncertainty, but for the first time in a very long time, Arthur Ainsworth felt not just the crushing weight of a terrible, unwanted fate, but the faintest, most fragile stirring of active, defiant purpose.


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4 months ago

Homebase is closing this Sunday


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1 month ago

Chapter 2: The Lie and the Lifeline

The insistent, jarring clang of a bell dragged Arthur from a fitful, shallow sleep. He lay for a moment on the unfamiliar, unyielding mattress, the cheap fabric of the thin blanket rough against his cheek. The dormitory room was small, spartan, and already filled with the grey, pre-dawn light filtering through a single curtained window. His roommate, a lanky boy whose name Suzuki he’d managed to glean through a torturous, phone-assisted exchange the previous evening, was already up and rustling about, his movements brisk and efficient. Arthur felt a familiar ache in his back – this teenage body, while undoubtedly more resilient than his 51-year-old original, was not accustomed to sleeping on what felt like a thinly disguised board.

His phone. The thought jolted him fully awake. He reached for it on the small, battered nightstand. 98%. He’d managed to keep it plugged into the common room charger for most of the night, a small victory in a sea of overwhelming disorientation. It was his shield, his voice, his only tenuous connection to understanding in this utterly alien landscape.

Breakfast in the canteen was a cacophony of unfamiliar sounds, smells, and social rituals. The clatter of chopsticks against ceramic bowls, the rapid-fire Japanese chatter, the aroma of miso soup, grilled fish, and pickled vegetables – it was a sensory assault. Arthur, acutely aware of his own clumsy foreignness, navigated the serving line with a series of awkward bows, nods, and pointing gestures, managing to acquire a tray of food he wasn’t entirely sure how to eat. He found a relatively isolated table and ate mechanically, his gaze sweeping the room, a new, terrible kind of people-watching. Were any of these bright-eyed, chattering teenagers future corpses? Future killers? The rice stuck in his throat. He kept his phone hidden, reserving its precious battery for interactions more critical than ordering natto, which he’d mistakenly selected and was now eyeing with deep suspicion.

The first class of the day was in a classroom that could have been pulled from any number of nostalgic school dramas – worn wooden desks scarred with generations of graffiti, a large, dusty chalkboard, and tall windows that looked out onto a dense, almost suffocatingly lush greenery. The air smelled of chalk dust, old wood, and the faint, lingering scent of floor polish. The teacher, a man named Mr. Saito according to the timetable Arthur had painstakingly deciphered, was balding, with a kindly, slightly harassed smile and a suit that had seen better decades. He beamed at the assembled students, then his eyes, magnified by thick-lensed glasses, found Arthur, the conspicuous late arrival.

“Ah, class, good morning!” Mr. Saito began, his voice surprisingly warm and resonant. He beckoned Arthur towards the front. “We have a late arrival joining our happy group today. This is Tanaka Kenji-kun. Please, let’s all make him feel welcome.”

A smattering of polite, if somewhat curious, applause rippled through the room. Arthur walked to the front, each step feeling like a mile, the thirty pairs of young eyes boring into him. He felt like an imposter in a badly rehearsed school play, acutely aware of the ill-fitting uniform and the sheer absurdity of his presence. He managed a stiff, jerky bow, an approximation of what he’d seen others do.

“Tanaka-kun,” Mr. Saito continued, his smile unwavering, “perhaps you could introduce yourself to your new classmates? And, of course, this being an academy for the Talented, we’d all be very interested to hear about your special gift.”

This was it. The moment he’d been dreading since the horrifying realization of where he was had crashed down upon him. His stomach churned. He fumbled for his phone, the smooth plastic cool against his clammy palm. The slight delay as he typed, the almost imperceptible whir as the translation app processed his English words, felt like an eternity.

“Good morning,” he began, his voice, when it finally emerged from the phone’s small speaker, sounding unnervingly calm and even, a stark contrast to the frantic, terrified monologue screaming inside his own head. “My name is Tanaka Kenji. It is… an adjustment being here. I hope to learn much.” He kept it brief, hoping against hope they might just move on.

No such luck. A girl in the front row, her dark hair pulled back in a severe ponytail, her eyes sharp and inquisitive, asked the inevitable question, her Japanese clear and direct. “And your Talent, Tanaka-kun? What can you do?”

Arthur took a ragged, internal breath. He’d spent most of the night staring at the unfamiliar ceiling of the dorm room, his mind racing through a dozen half-baked lies, discarding each one as too outlandish or too easily disproved. He needed something plausible within the insane logic of this world, something difficult to verify, something that sounded vaguely impressive but was, in practical terms, utterly useless in a fight or for any kind of nefarious purpose. He typed furiously, his English words a desperate scramble on the small screen.

“My Talent,” the phone announced after a moment, its synthesized voice echoing slightly in the quiet classroom. He paused for dramatic effect he didn't feel, then continued his input. Right, a suitably grand name. Something that sounds… profound. “I call it… Chrono-Empathic Glimpse.” He let that hang in the air, allowing the unfamiliar syllables to settle over the room. He could feel the weight of their expectant silence.

He continued dictating to his phone, carefully constructing the parameters of his fabricated ability. “If I make physical contact with someone…” Physical contact, yes, that’s a good limitation. Makes it less likely they’ll just demand a demonstration on a whim, and it gives me an out if I need one. “…I sometimes… see a brief, vivid moment from their future.” Vague. Good. Keep it vague. “Usually this moment is from twenty to fifty years ahead.” Far enough that no one here will ever be able to verify it. “It tends to be a moment of… significant emotional resonance for that person.” More vagueness. Could be joy, could be sorrow. Unpredictable.

Then came the crucial caveats, the built-in flaws. It can’t be reliable. It can’t be useful for fighting or predicting enemy movements. It must be a burden. “It’s… not always clear what I’m seeing,” the phone translated his carefully typed English. “The glimpses are often fragmented, deeply personal, and sometimes… quite unsettling.” That should deter casual requests. No one wants an unsettling glimpse into their private future. “And I have no control over what I see, or indeed, if I see anything at all when I make contact.” Perfect. Utterly unreliable, therefore, from their perspective, mostly useless. He finished with a touch of feigned weariness, allowing his shoulders to slump slightly, hoping he looked suitably burdened by this incredible, yet terribly inconvenient, “gift.” “It can be quite… draining, emotionally and physically.”

A low murmur rippled through the class. He couldn’t decipher the individual Japanese words, but the collective tone suggested a mixture of awe, curiosity, and perhaps a little trepidation. It sounded suitably esoteric, suitably… Talented. He’d bought himself a sliver of credibility, or at least, a plausible, if rather outlandish, explanation for his presence in this extraordinary institution.

Mr. Saito nodded thoughtfully, his brow furrowed in contemplation. “A most fascinating and unique ability, Tanaka-kun. A window into distant futures… remarkable.” He seemed to accept it without question.

Arthur decided to press his advantage, however slight. He needed to confirm his timeline, to know how long he had before Nana Hiiragi and Kyouya Onodera arrived. This was risky; it might draw undue attention. But not knowing was worse. “Sensei,” he addressed Mr. Saito, his phone dutifully translating, “to help… orient my Talent to this new… temporal-spatial location, sometimes it helps to focus on specific upcoming arrivals. It can stabilize the… glimpses, you see. Could you perhaps tell me if students by the names of Nana Hiiragi and Kyouya Onodera are expected to arrive in the coming days?” It was utter nonsense, a pseudo-scientific justification he’d concocted on the spot, but he delivered it with as much conviction as he could feign.

Mr. Saito blinked, then consulted a sheaf of papers on his desk. “Ah, yes, indeed!” he exclaimed, looking mildly impressed. “Hiiragi Nana-san and Onodera Kyouya-kun are both due to join our class in… let me see… approximately three days. Excellent foresight, Tanaka-kun! Perhaps your Talent is already beginning to acclimatize!”

Arthur managed a small, noncommittal nod, trying to keep the wave of mingled relief and dread from showing on his face. Three days. He was in the right place, the right horrifying time. The confirmation was a cold comfort, but a vital one. Nana was coming. The clock was ticking, louder now.

The rest of the school day passed in a blur of hyper-vigilance and linguistic confusion. He recognized a few faces from his fragmented memories of the anime – their youthful, innocent appearances a disturbing contrast to the bloody fates he knew awaited some of them. There was the lanky boy with the ever-present camera, Habu, already making some of the girls uncomfortable with his leering gaze. And there, sitting alone by the window, his shoulders hunched, radiating an aura of profound anxiety and loneliness, was Nanao Nakajima. Nana’s first intended victim. Arthur’s stomach clenched with a sickening lurch. He looked so small, so vulnerable.

Later that afternoon, during the final homeroom period, Mr. Saito cleared his throat, recapturing the students’ attention. “Now, onto another important matter for our class. As you know, we need to elect a class representative. This individual will act as a liaison with the teaching staff, help organize class activities, and generally be a voice for all of you. It’s a position of some responsibility.” He smiled. “We’ll hold the vote at the end of the school day tomorrow. Please give some thought to who you might like to nominate, or indeed, if you’d like to nominate yourselves.”

Immediately, a girl in the front row, Inori Tamaki, the one with the severe ponytail and sharp eyes, raised her hand with an air of quiet confidence. “Sensei, I would like to put my name forward for consideration.” Other, less confident murmurs of interest followed.

Arthur watched Nanao Nakajima, who seemed to shrink further into his seat at the mere mention of a leadership role, his face paling. He remembered Nana’s cruel manipulation from the anime, the way she would prey on Nanao’s shyness and insecurity. An idea, impulsive and probably foolhardy, sparked in Arthur’s mind. If he could somehow insert himself into this process, even in a minor way…

He raised a hesitant hand, the unfamiliar gesture feeling alien. All eyes in the classroom turned to him again, the strange new student who spoke through a machine. He fumbled for his phone, his heart pounding a nervous rhythm against his ribs. “I… Tanaka Kenji…” the phone translated his typed words, “I would also… like to be considered for the role of class representative.”

A ripple of surprise went through the room. Mr. Saito, however, beamed with encouragement. “Excellent, Tanaka-kun! Active participation in class life is always to be commended!”

Arthur didn’t particularly want the role. He knew he was a terrible candidate – his communication was severely hampered, his understanding of their school customs was non-existent, and he radiated an aura of awkward outsiderness. But it was a way to be seen, to perhaps disrupt the expected dynamics, to gauge reactions. And maybe, just maybe, it was a way to signal to Nanao, however obliquely, that not everyone was an overwhelming force of charisma or intimidation. Perhaps it was a desperate, subconscious desire to plant a flag, however small, signifying his intention to do something, anything, in this terrifying new world, rather than just be a passive victim of its unfolding horrors.

For the remainder of the day, he tried to melt into the background, to be a ghost observing the ecosystem of the classroom. Every interaction he witnessed, every snippet of conversation his phone managed to catch and translate, was another piece of a deadly, intricate puzzle he was only just beginning to comprehend. He was an unwilling anthropologist in a viper’s nest, his field notebook replaced by a faltering smartphone and a growing, bone-deep sense of dread. His mission, he realized with a clarity that was both terrifying and strangely galvanizing, was twofold: somehow, he had to survive. And somehow, against all odds, against all reason, he had to try and prevent the coming slaughter. The latter felt like trying to hold back a tsunami with a teacup. But he had to try. He owed it to… someone. Perhaps to the frightened, bewildered boy whose body he now inhabited. Or perhaps, more selfishly, to the terrified, fifty-one-year-old Englishman, Arthur Ainsworth, who was screaming silently inside.


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1 month ago

Chapter 12: Jin, the Cat, and a Phone's Secret

While Arthur Ainsworth was consumed with the grim, unending task of tracking Nana Hiiragi’s deadly progress and grappling with his own mounting failures and compromised morality, other, more subtle currents of intrigue were moving beneath the deceptively placid surface of island life, entirely unnoticed by him. He was so focused on the immediate, known threats derived from his fragmented memories of the anime, so mired in his reactive, desperate attempts to save individual lives, that he remained largely oblivious to the complex machinations of the enigmatic and aloof student, Jin Tachibana – or rather, the skilled operative who currently wore that name and identity like a carefully tailored disguise.

One sun-drenched afternoon, a small commotion near an old, ivy-choked, and long-disused well on the periphery of the school grounds drew a modest crowd of curious students. A cat, a scrawny, dusty white stray with unusually intelligent, wary eyes, had somehow managed to fall into the deep, stone-lined shaft and was now mewling pitifully from the darkness below, its cries echoing faintly. Several students were peering down, their faces a mixture of concern and helplessness, debating various impractical methods of rescue, but no one seemed particularly willing to risk the uncertain descent into the gloom.

Then, Nana Hiiragi arrived, drawn by the small gathering. Pushing gently but firmly through the onlookers, her expression one of perfectly pitched concern, she assessed the situation with a swift, practical gaze. “Oh, the poor little thing!” she exclaimed, her voice filled with what sounded, even to Arthur who watched from a distance, like genuine sympathy. Dismissing suggestions of complicated rope systems or waiting for a teacher to fetch a ladder, Nana, with a surprising, almost cat-like agility herself, hitched up her school skirt slightly, found a secure handhold on the crumbling stonework, and began to shimmy partway down the moss-slicked well wall. She stretched to her utmost limit, her small hand reaching into the darkness, and after a moment of tense silence, she emerged, slightly dusty and with a triumphant smile, cradling the frightened, trembling white animal.

She petted it gently, murmuring soft, soothing words in Japanese, before a grateful teacher, who had just arrived on the scene, quickly procured a small cardboard box and a saucer of milk. For a moment, watching Nana’s tender, almost maternal care for the creature, Arthur felt a familiar flicker of profound confusion. It was such a jarring, stark contrast to her ruthless efficiency as a cold-blooded assassin. Was it possible, he found himself wondering yet again, for such profound, calculated cruelty and moments of seemingly genuine compassion to coexist so easily within one individual? Or was this, too, merely another carefully calibrated performance, designed to enhance her image as a kind, caring, and approachable class representative? The cat, after a few tentative laps of milk and a long, unblinking stare at Nana, suddenly bolted from the box and darted off into the dense undergrowth, vanishing as silently as a ghost. Arthur filed the incident away as another perplexing, unexplainable facet of Nana Hiiragi’s terrifyingly complex character. He didn’t know, of course, that the rescued white cat was, in fact, Jin Tachibana, who had perhaps engineered the entire incident for reasons of his own.

A few days later, a different, more personal kind of confusion began to beset Nana Hiiragi. Michiru Inukai, her devoted, fluffy-haired admirer, began acting… strangely. Uncharacteristically so. During a conversation where Nana was attempting her usual subtle probing for information about other students’ Talents, cloaked in friendly concern, "Michiru" responded not with her usual naive eagerness to please, but with an uncharacteristic, almost unnerving sharpness. Her questions were surprisingly insightful, her observations on the social dynamics of the class and the potential weaknesses of certain Talents were almost Kyouya-Onodera-like in their astute, detached analysis. Nana found herself, for the first time in her interactions with Michiru, on the back foot, her usual manipulative conversational tactics strangely ineffective against this suddenly perceptive, almost cynical version of her normally guileless friend. This "Michiru" even questioned Nana’s "mind-reading" Talent with a directness that was startling, forcing Nana to feign a sudden, debilitating headache and claim her powers were unfortunately weak and unreliable that particular day. Nana was baffled, even slightly paranoid; it was as if Michiru had undergone a complete and inexplicable personality transplant overnight. In reality, Jin, using a sophisticated illusion or subtle mental suggestion Talent that allowed him to temporarily overlay his mannerisms and lines of questioning onto the unsuspecting girl (or perhaps even fully impersonating her, if his abilities were that advanced), was actively testing Nana, gauging her reactions, her intelligence, and the limits of her own deceptions from behind the disarming guise of her most ardent, trusting follower.

The culmination of Jin’s quiet, meticulous investigation into Nana Hiiragi and her operational methods came during one of "Michiru’s" now-regular visits to Nana’s dorm room. The real Michiru, trusting and eager for Nana’s company as always, had prattled on about her day, then, feeling a little warm, had decided to take a quick, refreshing bath in Nana’s small ensuite bathroom, leaving "Michiru" (Jin, in his current disguised observation mode) alone in Nana’s modest living area. This was precisely the opportunity Jin had been patiently waiting for, an unguarded moment he had subtly engineered.

While the sound of running water and Michiru’s off-key humming echoed faintly from the bathroom, Jin, moving with a silent, practiced efficiency that utterly belied the clumsy, endearing persona of Michiru Inukai, located Nana’s ever-present, Committee-issued mobile phone. It lay innocently on her nightstand. Jin had long suspected something was profoundly amiss with Nana's seemingly direct line of communication to her handlers. Her ability to receive detailed orders and transmit reports from an island supposedly under a strict communication blackout had always struck him as a significant operational flaw, or a carefully constructed deception.

With deft, nimble fingers, Jin navigated the phone’s simple operating system, easily bypassing Nana's rudimentary passcode – a four-digit sequence embarrassingly easy to guess for someone with his observational skills. Jin didn’t attempt to make an outgoing call or send a message, knowing such an action would likely be logged, traced, or might even trigger some hidden security protocol. Instead, he focused his attention on the incoming call logs, the message archives, and the phone’s underlying software architecture, running a series of silent, non-invasive diagnostic checks that would be entirely invisible to a casual user like Nana.

The discovery was both illuminating and deeply chilling: the phone was a sophisticated sham, a cleverly designed closed-loop system. It could send signals, or at least give the convincing appearance of doing so, transmitting Nana’s reports into a dead-end receiver. But it couldn’t receive genuine, unscripted incoming communications from any external, human source. All the "replies" from her supposed handler, "Commander Tsuruoka," the new directives, the words of encouragement or admonishment – they were all generated by an incredibly advanced, adaptive AI program housed within the phone itself. This AI responded to Nana’s reports and queries with pre-programmed, contextually relevant, and psychologically manipulative scripts, creating a flawless illusion of direct, two-way communication. Nana Hiiragi believed she had a vital, secure line to her superiors; in reality, she was conversing with a highly sophisticated algorithm, her detailed reports vanishing into the digital ether, her orders conjured by a machine designed to keep her compliant, motivated, and murderously on task.

Jin carefully replaced the phone exactly where it had been, a grim, cold understanding settling within him. Nana wasn’t just a killer; she was a profoundly isolated puppet, more thoroughly manipulated and controlled by the Committee than even she could possibly imagine. This information was extraordinarily valuable, another critical piece in the complex, horrifying puzzle of the island, its true purpose, and the shadowy, ruthless organization that pulled all their strings.

When the real Michiru Inukai emerged from her bath a few minutes later, refreshed, changed into her pajamas, and cheerfully oblivious, Jin (still maintaining his flawless Michiru disguise) was sitting exactly where she’d left him, perhaps idly flipping through one of Nana’s textbooks, offering a perfectly innocent, sweet smile.

Arthur Ainsworth, meanwhile, remained entirely unaware of these hidden manoeuvres, these subtle games of espionage and counter-espionage playing out in the shadows around him. He was still grappling with the aftermath of the time traveler’s death, his mind consumed with trying to anticipate Nana’s next victim, his world largely confined to the deadly, predictable script he half-remembered from a world away. The island, he was slowly beginning to realize, held far more secrets and far more dangerous players than he currently knew, and the true game was infinitely more complex than a simple, desperate confrontation between a reluctant transmigrator and a pink-haired teenage assassin. Other, older schemes were in motion, and Jin Tachibana, the silent enigma, was quietly, patiently pulling strings from the deep, unnoticed shadows.


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1 month ago

Chapter 10: The Bullies and a Calculated Message

Life on the island continued its grim, unsettling rhythm, a macabre dance between Nana Hiiragi’s relentless, unseen hunt and Arthur Ainsworth’s increasingly desperate, often futile, attempts to anticipate her moves and shield potential victims. After the murder of Touichirou Hoshino and her spectacular failure to eliminate the immortal Kyouya Onodera, Nana seemed to withdraw slightly, her usual bubbly energy muted by a layer of something colder, more watchful. Arthur knew this wasn't a reprieve, but a recalculation. She would be feeling the pressure from Tsuruoka, needing to demonstrate continued success. He feared she might target someone less formidable, an easier mark to reassert her deadly prowess.

His attention, and a growing sense of protective unease, was increasingly drawn to Michiru Inukai. A small, unassuming girl with a cloud of startlingly white, incredibly fluffy hair that seemed to possess a life of its own, Michiru exuded an aura of gentle, almost painfully earnest innocence. She was kind to a fault, quick to offer help or a shy smile, often to her own detriment in the harsh social ecosystem of the isolated academy. And it was this inherent vulnerability, this lack of guile, that soon made her an unfortunate target – not for Nana, not yet, but for a pair of mean-spirited, bored female students who had clearly identified Michiru as an easy mark for their petty cruelties.

Arthur first witnessed their bullying during a lunch break in the bustling, noisy canteen. The two girls, Etsuko and Marika, whose names he’d reluctantly learned through ambient classroom chatter, had cornered Michiru near the tray return. They were taunting her in rapid, spiteful Japanese that Arthur’s phone, tucked away, couldn’t catch, but their sneering expressions and aggressive postures were universally translatable. They mocked her fluffy hair, calling it “lamb’s wool” and “dandelion fluff,” tugging at it playfully, yet painfully. They belittled her shyness, her quiet voice, her general lack of assertiveness. Then, with a deliberately clumsy shove, Etsuko knocked Michiru’s carefully stacked lunch tray from her hands, sending her bowl of soup and chopsticks clattering and splashing across the floor. Their laughter was sharp, malicious, drawing a few uncomfortable glances from nearby students who quickly looked away, unwilling to get involved. Michiru, her face flaming red, close to tears, just stood there, trembling, absorbing the humiliation, stammering apologies for her own “clumsiness.”

Before Arthur could even formulate a stilted, phone-translated intervention – what would he even say? How could he interfere without drawing dangerous attention to himself? – a clear, bright voice cut through the air, sharp as a shard of ice despite its sweet tone. “Is there a problem here, ladies?”

It was Nana Hiiragi. She walked towards the tense little group, her expression one of polite, innocent concern, though Arthur, now highly attuned to her micro-expressions, detected a steely, almost predatory glint in her violet eyes.

“This is none of your business, Class Rep,” Etsuko sneered, though she looked significantly less confident now, her bravado faltering under Nana’s direct, unwavering gaze. Marika, her cohort, merely shuffled her feet and avoided eye contact.

“Oh, but I think it is my business,” Nana said, her smile unwavering, yet somehow conveying an icy displeasure. “It’s never pleasant to see someone upsetting a classmate, especially one as sweet as Inukai-san.” She gestured towards the mess on the floor. “Now, why don’t you two apologize properly to Inukai-san for your rudeness and help her clean this up? Then, perhaps, we can all just forget this unfortunate little incident ever happened.” Her tone was light, almost playful, but the underlying current of command was unmistakable.

Etsuko and Marika, clearly unwilling to pick a direct fight with the popular, deceptively formidable class representative, and perhaps sensing the dangerous undercurrent beneath her smile, mumbled a reluctant, insincere apology. They made a token, clumsy effort to pick up the debris before slinking away, casting venomous glares back at a bewildered Michiru.

Nana then turned to Michiru, her face instantly softening into an expression of pure, heartfelt sympathy. She gently took Michiru’s trembling hand. “Are you alright, Inukai-san? Please don’t listen to them. Their words are meaningless. And for what it’s worth,” she added, her smile becoming genuinely warm as she gently touched a strand of Michiru’s cloud-like hair, “I think your hair is absolutely lovely. Like freshly fallen snow.”

Michiru, overwhelmed with gratitude and relief, could only stammer her thanks, her eyes shining with unshed tears. From that moment on, her devotion to Nana Hiiragi became absolute, almost worshipful. She trailed after Nana like a devoted, fluffy white puppy, her loyalty unwavering and unquestioning, seeing in the pink-haired girl a savior and a true friend.

Arthur watched this entire exchange with a complicated, sinking feeling in his stomach. Nana’s intervention had been smooth, effective, and undeniably helpful to Michiru in that moment. But he also knew, with a weary certainty, that Nana rarely, if ever, did anything without a calculated motive. She was likely cultivating Michiru as an unwitting pawn, a source of information, a loyal admirer whose devotion could be exploited for an alibi, or perhaps even as a human shield if necessary. The almost tender way Nana had mentioned Michiru’s “lovely” white, fluffy hair sent a particular, ominous chill down Arthur’s spine – a grim, unwelcome echo of the fabricated future he’d described to Nana during their first unsettling lunchtime encounter. A woman approaches… white, fluffy hair… He wondered, with a jolt of unease, if Nana herself felt any resonance, or if his bizarre words had been buried too deep under layers of her own deceptions and the Committee’s indoctrination.

The bullies, however, had made a fatal, if unknowing, mistake. They had drawn Nana Hiiragi’s direct attention, and not in a favorable way. They had threatened and humiliated someone Nana had, for whatever strategic or nascent emotional reason, decided to take under her wing.

A few days later, the first bully, Etsuko, was found dead in her dorm room by her horrified roommate. The official cause of death, after a cursory examination by the island’s doctor, was listed as a sudden, violent, and inexplicable allergic reaction. Arthur, however, felt a cold knot of certainty in his gut. He remembered a chilling detail from the anime – a virtually untraceable method of assassination involving a contact lens coated with a fast-acting, synthesized poison. Nana was nothing if not meticulous, her methods designed to leave minimal evidence.

The second bully, Marika, met her end a week later, under even more elaborate and horrifying circumstances. Her body, alongside that of another girl Arthur didn’t recognize – likely an unfortunate acquaintance who had been in the wrong place at the wrong time – was discovered on a secluded, windswept stretch of beach on the island’s western shore. Both had apparently succumbed to a fast-acting, potent poison, consistent with the effects of Nana’s signature tainted needles. The discovery of two more deaths, so soon after Etsuko’s, rocked the already traumatized student body, sending fresh waves of fear and paranoia through the dormitories.

But Nana, Arthur knew, would have already woven her alibi with her usual chilling foresight. As Kyouya Onodera, his expression grimmer than usual, began his inevitable, meticulous investigation, it soon came to light that the unknown girl, just moments before her estimated time of death, had apparently sent a seemingly innocuous text message to Marika’s phone. The message, something trivial about meeting up on the beach, was found on Marika’s phone, which lay beside her lifeless hand. The timestamp on the message suggested Marika had died first, and the other girl had texted her, unaware of her friend’s demise, before also succumbing to whatever unknown toxin had claimed them.

Arthur, however, knew Nana’s almost supernatural cunning. He recalled the gruesome, ingenious trick from the source material: Nana would have killed them both, likely Marika first, then the other girl. Then, using the second dead girl’s phone, she would have angled it precisely on the sand so that the bright, unimpeded sunlight, refracted through a deliberately cracked portion of the phone’s screen, would overheat a specific point on the touch-sensitive display, simulating a finger press and sending the pre-typed message. It was a diabolical, if ghoulishly clever, way to manufacture a timeline that seemingly exonerated her from any involvement.

He listened with a growing sense of revulsion as the teachers discussed the “tragic accident,” the “unforeseen environmental toxicity” perhaps from some poisonous marine life they’d touched or something they’d unknowingly ingested on the desolate beach. He watched Kyouya Onodera frown at the cracked phone screen presented as evidence, a thoughtful, deeply suspicious expression on his face. Kyouya was no fool; he would sense the artificiality, the staged nature of it all, even if he couldn’t yet prove it.

For Arthur, these latest, brutal deaths were another stark, chilling reminder of Nana’s unwavering ruthlessness and her terrifying adaptability. He was managing, by the skin of his teeth, to protect Nanao Nakajima, for now, but he was just one increasingly weary, emotionally frayed man with severely limited resources and a fragile, dangerous secret. He couldn’t be everywhere at once, couldn’t save everyone on Nana’s list. Each murder Nana committed was another gruesome piece of data for him, another chilling insight into her methods and her mindset, but it was also another young life extinguished, another soul lost, another failure weighing heavily on his already overburdened conscience. He felt like a grim accountant, silently cataloguing the dead in a secret war he had no hope of winning, only, perhaps, surviving for a little longer. And with each successful, unpunished kill, Nana’s confidence, her sense of untouchability, and the omnipresent danger she posed to everyone on the island, only seemed to grow.


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1 month ago

Chapter 8: A Head in the Classroom

Arthur managed to slip back into the hushed, pre-dawn stillness of the dormitory just as the faintest hint of grey was outlining the window frames. He looked like something dredged from a nightmare – his clothes were torn, caked with mud, and stained with darker, more ominous patches he refused to identify. His face was smudged with dirt, his hair matted with sweat and grime, and a wild, haunted, almost feral look burned in his eyes. He moved with the stiff, jerky movements of someone pushed far beyond their physical and emotional limits.

He quickly, furtively, bundled the obscene canvas satchel, with its horrifying, weighty contents, into the dark recesses at the bottom of his rickety wardrobe, beneath a pile of seldom-used spare blankets. Then, he made his way to the communal showers. He scrubbed himself raw under the steaming water, trying to wash away the physical filth and the clinging, fetid odour of the night’s gruesome ordeal, but the mental contamination, the profound sense of self-loathing and violation, felt indelible. His hands, when he eventually managed to stop their violent trembling, still felt slick with an imaginary residue.

He skipped breakfast, the mere thought of food threatening to bring up the meagre contents of his stomach. He spent the early part of the morning in a dissociated daze, sitting rigidly on the edge of his bed, the image of Shinji’s lifeless, accusing eyes and the horrifying, sickening thud of rock against decaying bone replaying in an endless, torturous loop in his mind. He had to do this. He had to see this terrible, self-appointed task through. There was no turning back now. The die was cast.

The opportunity he’d been dreading, yet grimly anticipating, came during a long, unstructured free period before lunch. Most of the students were in the classroom, the usual low hum of chatter, the rustle of textbook pages, and the occasional burst of laughter filling the air with a deceptive sense of normalcy. Mr. Saito was at his desk at the front, spectacles perched on the end of his nose, diligently grading papers. Yūka Somezaki was present, huddled at her usual isolated desk near the back, looking even more pale and drawn than usual. She kept darting nervous, frightened glances towards Arthur, her hands twisting restlessly in her lap. She clearly hadn’t slept well after his ominous “warning” the previous day.

Arthur took a deep, steadying breath, the air feeling thick and heavy in his lungs. He retrieved the heavy canvas satchel from his room, its grim weight a palpable reminder of his night’s work. He walked to the front of the classroom, the satchel held carefully in front of him. The low hum of chatter gradually died down as students noticed him, their expressions shifting from indifference to curiosity, then to a dawning unease. He looked tired, dishevelled, and profoundly grim – a stark, unsettling contrast to his usual awkward, almost invisible demeanour. He placed his phone on a nearby empty desk, its screen lighting up.

“Yesterday,” his translated voice began, the synthesized Japanese tones cutting cleanly through the sudden, expectant silence, “I mentioned my growing concerns about the activities of the ‘Enemies of Humanity’ and their potential operations on the north side of this island. Last night, I took it upon myself to investigate those concerns further.”

He paused, letting the tension build, his gaze sweeping slowly across the room, taking in the rows of young, now apprehensive faces. He looked particularly tired, his eyes bloodshot, his posture radiating a bone-deep weariness that was entirely genuine.

“The encounter was… more harrowing than I could have possibly imagined,” he continued, his voice via the phone carefully measured, almost flat, which only served to heighten the underlying menace. “They are more dangerous, more depraved, than any of us can truly comprehend. It seems they may have found a new, terrifying weapon… or perhaps, a new, unholy method for creating their soldiers.” He let his gaze linger for a charged moment on Yūka Somezaki, whose eyes were now wide with a dawning, visceral horror. She looked like a trapped animal. “They may be… reanimating the dead. Or perhaps… the dead are their new weapon.”

A collective, sharp intake of breath, a series of stifled gasps, went through the classroom. Horrified whispers erupted, quickly shushed by the sheer gravity of his pronouncement. Mr. Saito looked up sharply from his papers, his expression morphing from mild irritation at the interruption to genuine alarm.

Arthur slowly began to walk down the central aisle between the rows of desks, the canvas satchel held carefully, almost reverently, in front of him. Students leaned away instinctively as he passed, a mixture of fear and morbid curiosity on their faces. He could feel Nana Hiiragi’s sharp, intensely analytical gaze on him, a silent, probing question in her eyes. Kyouya Onodera’s stare was equally intense, unblinking, his usual impassivity overlaid with a flicker of something that might have been cold, scientific interest. Arthur stopped when he reached Yūka Somezaki’s desk.

Her face was chalk-white, devoid of all colour, her breath coming in shallow, rapid, audible gasps. She looked like she was about to bolt, her eyes darting wildly between Arthur, the ominous bag, and the distant, unreachable sanctuary of the classroom door.

“I brought back… evidence,” Arthur’s phone announced into the suddenly tomb-like, suffocating silence of the room. With a deliberate, almost ceremonial movement, he lifted the heavy, cloth-covered satchel and placed it directly onto the polished surface of Yūka’s desk. The top of the bag was loosely tied with a drawstring, but a horrifyingly familiar, vaguely spherical shape, still partially obscured by the stained canvas, was sickeningly evident. A hint of dark, matted hair. The pale, obscene curve of a decaying forehead. The unmistakable, ghastly outline of a human head.

Yūka Somezaki stared at the bag, her eyes fixed, unblinking, on the dreadful shape within. A strangled, gurgling whimper escaped her lips. Her body began to tremble violently. Then, she let out a raw, piercing, animalistic scream that seemed to tear through the very fabric of the room, a sound of pure, unadulterated terror and shattered sanity. Her eyes rolled back in her head, and she slumped sideways, fainting dead away, her chair crashing to the floor with a deafening clatter.

The classroom exploded into utter chaos. Students shrieked, some scrambling back from their desks in blind panic, knocking over more chairs, their faces contorted in horror and disbelief. Mr. Saito rushed forward, his own face a mask of horrified disbelief and dawning anger. “Tanaka-kun! What is the meaning of this outrage? What have you done?!” he babbled, his voice cracking.

Kyouya Onodera was on his feet, not joining the general panic, but moving with a grim, purposeful stride towards Yūka’s desk, his eyes narrowed, fixed on the dreadful bag and its horrifying contents. Nana Hiiragi, however, remained seated, a preternatural calm amidst the pandemonium. Her knuckles were white where she gripped her pen, her gaze flitting with sharp, analytical intensity between the bag, the unconscious Yūka, and Arthur himself. A chillingly thoughtful, almost appraising expression settled on her face. Arthur had just thrown a live, decapitated grenade into her carefully managed hunting ground, and she was trying to understand the trajectory, the motive, the potential fallout.

The immediate aftermath was a blur of hysterical shouting, terrified crying, and Mr. Saito’s increasingly desperate, high-pitched attempts to restore some semblance of order. The dreadful bag and its horrifying contents were quickly, and with much trepidation, removed by a shaken, pale-faced Mr. Saito himself, who then had Yūka carried off to the school infirmary by two equally terrified older students. Arthur found himself being sternly interrogated by a visibly furious Mr. Saito and another grim-faced teacher in the corridor, his phone struggling to keep up with the barrage of angry questions and accusations. He stuck rigidly to his story: he had found the reanimated corpse, a clear and undeniable sign of the ‘Enemies of Humanity’ at work on their very doorstep. He was merely presenting irrefutable proof of a dangerous new threat. He was met with profound disbelief, horrified condemnation for his barbaric methods, and stern warnings about vigilante actions, but no one could deny the sheer, visceral horror of what he had unveiled. The image of that bag, that shape, would be seared into their minds for a long time.

Later that day, after the initial chaos had subsided into a sort of stunned, fearful quiet, Nana Hiiragi, driven by a potent mixture of cold suspicion, intellectual curiosity, and the pressing need to understand this new, unpredictable variable that Arthur Tanaka represented, visited Yūka in her dormitory room. Yūka had been discharged from the infirmary but was clearly in a state of profound psychological distress, sedated but still babbling incoherently about Shinji, about monsters with decaying faces, about heads in bags.

Nana, seeing an opportunity to probe Yūka’s shattered psyche and perhaps confirm her own suspicions about the girl’s true Talent, began her subtle, psychological torment. "The dead are restless, aren’t they, Somezaki-san," Nana might have said, her voice a soft, sympathetic, almost hypnotic coo, as she sat beside Yūka’s bed. "They whisper things to me sometimes, you know? Especially around those who are… close to them. They say… they say Shinji is lonely. They say you should join him. They even whisper… that you should kill me before I tell everyone your dark secrets."

This, Arthur surmised from his anime knowledge, was the point at which Nana would have feigned terror at her own “revelations,” fleeing dramatically into the nearby woods, deliberately goading a terrified and now highly suggestible Yūka into sending her reanimated servitors (likely lesser zombies she’d created from small animals or perhaps even older, forgotten human remains from the island’s lightless past) after her. Nana would have then easily evaded them, using the orchestrated chase to confirm Yūka’s necromantic Talent beyond any doubt. She would have then confronted the distraught Yūka, expecting to force a full confession about the arson that had killed the real Shinji, before delivering her own fatal, poisoned strike.

But things didn’t go exactly as Nana might have planned, or as Arthur had recalled from the source material. Arthur’s brutal, shockingly public display with Shinji’s severed head had already done irreparable damage to Yūka’s carefully constructed delusions. The foundation of her morbid obsession had been shattered. When Nana confronted her, after the feigned flight and the easily evaded pursuit of a few pathetic, shambling creatures, Yūka was already broken, a hollow shell of her former self. She confessed to the fire, yes, her words tumbling out in a torrent of guilt, self-loathing, and raw terror, but her confession was interspersed with horrified babbling about Shinji’s true, decaying face, the unimaginable horror in that canvas bag, the monstrousness of it all. She wasn't just confessing a crime; she was reliving a profound, sanity-shattering trauma.

Nana, poised to strike, her poisoned needle glinting faintly in the dim light of the dorm room, hesitated. Yūka was a wreck, utterly defeated, her spirit seemingly crushed beyond repair. There was no fight left in her, no defiance, only a raw, pathetic, abject misery. Killing her now felt… empty. Almost unsporting. This wasn’t the calculated elimination of a dangerous, hidden threat; it was like putting down a wounded, whimpering, already dying animal. Perhaps Tsuruoka wouldn’t even count this as a proper, satisfying kill, not with the target already so mentally and emotionally destroyed by another student’s grotesque actions. Nana, for reasons she couldn’t quite articulate, reasons that felt uncomfortably like a nascent, unwelcome flicker of pity or perhaps even a dawning, unsettling doubt about her own mission, slowly lowered her hand. She left Yūka Somezaki to her madness, a broken toy she no longer had any interest in.

Later that night, alone in her room, tormented by the fractured images of Arthur’s terrible evidence and Nana’s insidious whispers, Yūka Somezaki, in a final, desperate act of denial or a desperate plea for reassurance, tried one last time to summon Shinji. But the image Arthur had so brutally seared into her mind – the decaying, unrecognizable horror in that bag, the vacant eyes, the lolling jaw – had irrevocably tainted her Talent, her connection to her morbid fantasy. When Shinji’s ghostly form flickered into existence before her, it was no longer the romanticised, beloved boyfriend of her carefully nurtured delusions. It was a leering, putrescent corpse, its eyes vacant pits of horror, its flesh sloughing from its bones, its silent scream an echo of her own shattered sanity. She saw, for the first, horrifyingly clear time, what she had truly been embracing, what she had truly become.

The disgust, the self-loathing, the sheer, unadulterated terror, were overwhelming. With a choked, animalistic sob, Yūka screamed at the horrifying apparition, revoking the necromantic energies with a violence that shook her to her core, letting Shinji’s ghastly form dissolve into nothingness for the final, absolute time. She collapsed onto the cold floor, weeping, her body wracked with convulsions, and vowed, with every fibre of her broken being, never again to touch the cursed, defiling power of necromancy.

Arthur, unaware of the specific details of Nana’s subsequent interaction with Yūka, only knew that Yūka Somezaki remained alive, albeit a profoundly changed, withdrawn, and terrified shell of her former self. He had, through a horrifying, morally grey, and deeply traumatizing act, indirectly saved a life from Nana Hiiragi’s list. The cost to his own psyche, however, was mounting with every passing day. He was no hero; he was just a desperate, frightened man playing an increasingly deadly game with pieces of his own sanity, in a world that seemed determined to strip him of every last shred of his former self. And he knew, with a chilling certainty, that his actions had not gone unnoticed by the island's true predator.


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1 month ago

Chapter 35: Unravelling Threads of a Told Tomorrow

The fire in the damp cave crackled, spitting a shower of orange sparks into the heavy, charged silence that followed Arthur Ainsworth’s almost whispered invitation. For a long moment, no one spoke. The only sound was the distant, ceaseless roar of the hidden waterfall, a monotonous, indifferent rush of water that seemed to echo the vast, empty chasm of disbelief his words had torn open in their reality. Nana Hiiragi stared at him, her expression a battlefield of warring emotions: shock, anger, a dawning, horrified comprehension, and beneath it all, a flicker of something else – a desperate, almost unwilling hope. Kyouya Onodera’s usually impassive features were tight with a focused, almost predatory intensity, his mind clearly working at furious speed to process, dissect, and analyze the impossible. Michiru Inukai looked pale and stricken, her gentle eyes wide with a mixture of fear and a deep, compassionate sorrow for the sheer, unbelievable weight Arthur must have been carrying. Even Jin Tachibana, his enigmatic calm usually an impenetrable shield, seemed to regard Arthur with a new, sharp, almost piercing alertness.

It was Kyouya who finally broke the spell, his voice preternaturally calm, yet with an underlying edge as sharp as the makeshift blade resting by his side. “Ainsworth-san,” he began, the use of Arthur’s true surname a deliberate, pointed acknowledgement of the new reality between them. “You claim this… ‘story’… this ‘Munō na Nana’… it accurately depicted events on the island, events involving us, with a specificity that allowed you to make your… ‘predictions.’ How can you be certain this wasn’t merely a series of astute observations on your part, perhaps amplified by a genuine, if limited, precognitive Talent you are now choosing to deny for reasons of your own?” It was a logical, almost lawyerly challenge, an attempt to find a more rational, if still extraordinary, explanation.

Arthur met his gaze squarely. “Because, Onodera-san,” he said, his voice weary but firm, his Japanese surprisingly steady, “the details were too specific. Not just the ‘who’ but often the ‘how,’ sometimes even snatches of dialogue, internal motivations of characters that I couldn’t possibly have guessed. The sequence of Nana-san’s targets in that first year, for example, the methods she employed… many were almost identical to what I remembered from this… this narrative.” He paused. “And believe me, if I actually possessed a genuine Talent for seeing the future, I would likely have managed this entire horrifying situation with considerably more competence and far fewer… casualties.” The self-deprecating bitterness in his tone was palpable.

Nana spoke next, her voice low, hoarse, almost raw. “This… ‘Nana’… in your story. You said she… she changed. That she started to… to save Talents? That she wanted to destroy Tsuruoka?” There was a desperate, almost hungry intensity in her eyes. “Did it say how? Did it show her succeeding? What else did it say about… about what I became?”

Arthur looked at her, his heart aching with a complex pity. “The story, as I said, was ongoing when I… left my time. It showed her making that profound shift, yes. Driven by… well, by events similar to what you yourself experienced, Nana-san. By betrayal, by the realization of Tsuruoka’s true nature, by the influence of… of someone like Michiru-san.” He glanced at Michiru, who flushed slightly. “She became fiercely determined to dismantle everything Tsuruoka had built. As for how she went about it, or if she ultimately succeeded… those were parts of the story I never got to see. It was, as you might say, a continuing serial. I only had access to the ‘published volumes’ up to a certain point.” He hesitated. “It did show her becoming… incredibly ruthless in her pursuit of Tsuruoka. Almost as ruthless as she had been when serving him.”

“And my parents?” Nana pressed, her voice barely a whisper now. “The story… it truly said Tsuruoka arranged their murders? That they weren’t… my fault?”

“It was unequivocally clear on that point,” Arthur affirmed gently. “They were good people who opposed him. He had them eliminated and then, with sickening cruelty, manipulated you into believing you were responsible, to break you and bind you to him. That was a central, tragic element of your character’s backstory in the narrative.”

Nana closed her eyes, a single tear escaping and tracing a path through the grime on her cheek. The validation, however bizarre its source, seemed to offer a tiny, almost unbearable sliver of solace.

“What about the Committee?” Kyouya interjected, his focus shifting to more strategic concerns. “Did this narrative provide details about its internal structure? Its ultimate objectives beyond what you’ve already speculated? Were there insights into Tsuruoka’s specific long-term plans, or the identities of other key figures within the organization?”

Arthur sighed. “Frustratingly few concrete details, I’m afraid. Tsuruoka was always depicted as the primary antagonist, the mastermind. Other Committee members were shadowy, ill-defined figures. Their goals seemed to be about control, about manipulating society through fear of Talents, and perhaps, as I mentioned, about weaponizing those ‘Enemies of Humanity.’ But the intricate details of their hierarchy or their decades-long endgame… that was mostly left to speculation even within the story’s fanbase, as far as I can recall.” He paused. “Explaining a Japanese comic book that somehow predicted, or perhaps even influenced, their entire horrific existence… it felt like trying to summarize a particularly bizarre, convoluted dream to a skeptical psychiatrist. Or perhaps attempting to convince the local parish council back in Crawley – or for that matter, any sensible, rational person from Chichester to Land’s End – that their lives, their deepest pains and struggles, were nothing more than a work of popular fiction from another dimension. Utterly, certifiably mad.”

Michiru, who had been listening with a mixture of wide-eyed horror and profound sadness, finally spoke, her voice small and trembling. “Arthur-san… were… were other people we knew from the island… people like Nanao-kun, or Hoshino-kun, or Tachibana-kun… were they also… characters in this story? Did you know what was going to happen to them too, all along?”

Arthur looked at her gentle, troubled face, and the weight of his past inactions, his often-ineffectual interventions, pressed down on him anew. “Yes, Michiru-san,” he said softly. “Many of them were. And yes, I had… glimpses… of their fates. Sometimes clearer than others. As I tried to explain to Kyouya-san, my knowledge was often too little, too late, or too vague to act upon decisively without risking even greater catastrophe.”

“And what of me?” Jin Tachibana’s voice, smooth and cool as polished silk, cut through the charged atmosphere. He had remained silent throughout the exchange, his pale eyes fixed on Arthur, his expression unreadable. “This… ‘Rin’… Kyouya’s sister, who supposedly took on the identity of a boy named Jin Tachibana after a past tragedy. Was her specific role, her full story, also detailed in this… chronicle you remember so selectively, Ainsworth-san?” There was a subtle, almost imperceptible challenge in his tone.

Arthur met Jin’s gaze, choosing his words with extreme care. “The narrative I recall touched upon a character with a deeply tragic past, someone connected to Kyouya-san’s sister, yes. Someone who had been grievously harmed by the Committee’s system, who had lost their original identity, and who later operated from the shadows, with… complex and often ambiguous motivations.” He offered no more, sensing the dangerous, shifting currents beneath Jin’s calm façade. He knew he was treading on very thin ice.

“Why?” Nana asked suddenly, her voice raw with a new kind of pain. “Why didn’t you tell us all of this sooner, Arthur-san? From the very beginning?”

Arthur looked down at his hands, the hands of Kenji Tanaka, a boy whose life he had unwillingly usurped. “Would you have believed me?” he asked quietly. “If, on my first day, a strange boy speaking through a telephone had told you that your entire reality was a Japanese comic book from his world? You, Nana Hiiragi, trained assassin, would you have simply accepted that?” He shook his head. “You would have marked me for immediate elimination as a dangerous lunatic, and rightly so. I told you what I felt I could, when I felt I could, in ways I hoped might make a small difference, without getting myself killed in the process, or making things catastrophically worse. My ‘Talent depletion’ announcement after the escape… that was the first moment I felt it might be safe, or even necessary, to begin unravelling the true extent of the… absurdity of my situation.”

A long silence fell, filled only by the crackling of the fire and the distant, soothing roar of the waterfall. The survivors sat, each lost in their own thoughts, grappling with a truth that redefined their past, their present, and their utterly uncertain future. The world had not just been turned upside down; it had been revealed as a strange, distorted echo of a fiction from another dimension.

Finally, Kyouya spoke, his voice thoughtful, pragmatic. “This knowledge, however outlandish its origin, however unsettling its implications… it changes nothing about our immediate objectives. Tsuruoka is still out there. The Committee still operates. The threat to Talents, to all of us, remains.” He looked at Arthur. “But it does, perhaps, give us a new, if deeply unorthodox, perspective on our enemy. And on ourselves.”

Nana nodded slowly, a new, hard light dawning in her violet eyes, the earlier flicker of desperate hope now solidifying into something far more dangerous, more focused. “A story…” she murmured, almost to herself. “So Tsuruoka thought he was writing my story.” A small, chilling smile touched her lips. “Perhaps it’s time I started writing my own ending. And his.”

Arthur watched them, a strange sense of detachment settling over him. He had unburdened himself of his greatest secret. The pieces were now on the board, for all to see. His "one idea," the thought that had been coalescing in his mind since their escape, now felt more urgent, more necessary than ever. But first, they had to truly absorb this. They had to decide if they could even move forward together, now that the very foundations of their reality had been so profoundly, so utterly, shaken.


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1 month ago

Chapter 24: The Detective and the Drowning

The tense, unspoken, and deeply exhausting cat-and-mouse game between Arthur Ainsworth and Nana Hiiragi simmered beneath the deceptively placid surface of the Third School Year for several uneasy weeks. Arthur remained relentlessly vigilant, his limited Japanese forcing him into a mode of heightened observation and carefully chosen, minimal interactions. Nana, visibly haunted and profoundly conflicted, continued her hesitant, almost reluctant pursuit, Tsuruoka’s orders a poisonous whisper in the back of her mind, her own fractured conscience a screaming counterpoint. The new intake of students, meanwhile, remained largely, blissfully oblivious to this silent, deadly undercurrent. Then, a new, entirely unexpected variable arrived on the island, an element that would irrevocably shatter the uneasy status quo and drag the island’s darkest secrets into the harsh, unforgiving light: Akari Hozumi.

Akari was a petite, unassuming girl with short, neat black hair and sharp, intelligent, almost unnervingly observant eyes that seemed to miss absolutely nothing. Her arrival was unceremonious, just another late addition to the ever-shifting student roster, assigned to fill an empty bunk in one of the dormitories. But it became rapidly, abundantly clear that she was no ordinary student. During her formal introduction to the class by a vaguely apprehensive Mr. Saito, Akari Hozumi declared her Talent with a quiet, unshakeable confidence that brooked no argument and sent a ripple of unease through her new classmates. Her ability, she stated calmly, was "Forensic Insight" – a complex combination of acute environmental analysis, the ability to reconstruct past events with uncanny, almost supernatural accuracy by observing a location or individuals involved, and a near-perfect, almost infallible capacity to detect falsehood through micro-expressions, vocal inflections, and physiological tells. She was, in her own carefully chosen words, a truth-seeker, a dedicated, amateur detective.

The island, with its hushed-up disappearances, its string of unexplained “accidents,” and the palpable undercurrent of fear and suspicion that clung to its very stones, was a veritable, irresistible playground for someone with Akari Hozumi’s unique abilities and singular, almost obsessive inclinations. She began her disquieting investigations almost immediately, her polite but relentless, deeply probing questioning unsettling students and the beleaguered teaching staff alike. Rumours of past events, half-forgotten whispers of students who had vanished without a trace or died under deeply mysterious circumstances, drew her like a bloodhound to a fresh scent. She was a small, quiet whirlwind of disconcerting inquiry.

Her razor-sharp attention, inevitably, turned towards the large, picturesque, yet strangely ominous lake on the island’s northern edge. Perhaps it was the lingering, hushed stories of Yuusuke Tachibana’s sudden disappearance nearly two years prior, or the still-discussed, unexplained phenomenon of the unseasonable, localized freezing that had sealed its surface for a time. Or maybe her unique Talent simply picked up on the dark, cold secrets hidden beneath its deceptively tranquil, sun-dappled waters.

One grey, overcast afternoon, Akari, accompanied by a small retinue of curious and now somewhat fearful fellow students, and under the clearly uncomfortable and wary eye of Mr. Saito (who had been “persuaded” to attend by Akari’s polite but unyielding insistence), focused her formidable abilities on the lake. The thick ice that Sorano Aijima had been coerced into creating had long since thawed with the changing seasons, leaving the lake’s surface murky and undisturbed. After a long period of intense, silent concentration, her gaze fixed with unnerving precision on a particular spot near a dense, overgrown patch of reed beds, Akari calmly directed two of the stronger, older male students to begin probing the area with long, sturdy poles they had brought from the school’s neglected groundskeeping shed.

There was a sickening, dull thud from beneath the water’s surface, a sound that made several students gasp. With considerable, straining effort, the two boys, their faces pale and sweating despite the cool air, dragged a sodden, heavy, and horrifyingly human-shaped form from the murky, weed-choked depths.

It was, unmistakably, the badly decomposed but still identifiable body of Yuusuke Tachibana.

A wave of collective, visceral horror rippled through the assembled students. Some cried out, others retched, their faces turning green. Tachibana’s disappearance had eventually been officially written off by the school administration as him simply running away from the pressures of the academy, or perhaps a tragic, unexplainable drowning accident while swimming alone. The sight of his preserved, mud-caked corpse, brought forth so dramatically from its watery tomb after nearly two years, was a visceral, traumatizing shock that shattered any lingering illusions about the island’s safety.

Akari Hozumi, however, her expression grim but resolute, was just beginning. Her gaze, sharp as a shard of ice and utterly accusatory, swept over the pale, horrified faces of the upperclassmen who had been present during Tachibana’s time, eventually settling with unwavering, damning intensity on Nana Hiiragi. Nana, who had been observing the grim proceedings from the edge of the crowd with a carefully constructed mask of shocked concern, felt a jolt of pure, cold terror lance through her, a premonition of impending, inescapable doom.

“Hiiragi Nana-san,” Akari Hozumi said, her voice clear, cutting, and utterly devoid of emotion, carrying easily over the terrified whispers of the other students. “My Talent reconstructs events with absolute clarity. It tells me of deception. It shows me the hidden patterns of murder.” She then proceeded, with chilling, methodical precision, to lay out the sequence of events leading to Yuusuke Tachibana’s death nearly two years prior: Nana identifying Tachibana’s dangerous Talent, her careful grooming of him, her luring him to the secluded lake, incapacitating him, and then brutally drowning him in its cold, silent depths. Akari even detailed Nana’s subsequent coercion of the terrified Sorano Aijima into freezing the lake’s surface to conceal her heinous crime. Akari might have used her Talent on Sorano earlier, who would have broken easily under such intense scrutiny, or perhaps she was directly reading Nana now, whose involuntary micro-expressions, her sudden pallor, her barely perceptible trembling, would have been an open, screaming confession to someone with Akari’s acute lie-detecting abilities.

As Akari spoke, her calm, incisive voice detailing not just Tachibana’s murder but hinting at a clear, undeniable pattern of calculated eliminations, of other convenient “accidents” and “disappearances,” Nana Hiiragi’s carefully constructed composure finally, catastrophically, shattered. Cornered, exposed, with the irrefutable, horrifying evidence of Tachibana’s decaying body lying before them on the muddy bank and Akari Hozumi’s unshakeable, terrifying certainty pinning her down like an insect under a microscope, Nana broke. In a choked, hysterical, tearful confession, her words tumbling out in a torrent of incoherent guilt, fear, and self-loathing, she admitted to killing Tachibana. More admissions, fragmented and horrified, about other “enemies,” other “threats she had neutralized for the good of the Talentless,” began to spill from her lips, though she instinctively, desperately, refrained from implicating Commander Tsuruoka or the Committee directly, that deeply ingrained, conditioned terror still holding sway even in her utter disintegration.

The reaction from the assembled student body was instantaneous, predictable, and utterly savage. The simmering fear that had lurked beneath the surface of island life for so long, the paranoia born of so many unexplained disappearances and the constant, vague threat of “Enemies of Humanity,” erupted into a violent, cathartic rage. Cries of “Monster!” “Murderer!” “She killed them all!” filled the air. The students, transformed in an instant into a terrified, enraged mob, surged forward, easily overwhelming the few panicked, ineffective teachers present, and fell upon the sobbing, collapsing Nana Hiiragi, their fists, their feet, their hoarded, improvised weapons instruments of a brutal, summary, and entirely merciless justice.

Nana curled into a tight ball on the muddy ground, trying desperately to protect her head and vital organs, but the blows rained down upon her, a furious, unending hail of pain and retribution. Arthur Ainsworth watched, his expression grim, his heart a cold, hard, unfeeling knot in his chest. A primitive, vengeful part of him, the part that had carried the unbearable weight of Nana’s countless crimes for what felt like an eternity, felt a sliver of grim, ugly satisfaction – this was justice, in its rawest, most primal, and perhaps most fitting form. Another part of him, however, the weary, fifty-one-year-old man who had witnessed too much death, too much violence, recoiled from the sheer, unbridled brutality of the scene, recognizing with a sickening clarity the dangerous, self-perpetuating cycle of violence. He thought, fleetingly, of Michiru, of Nana’s tearful, human confession at the cliff edge. But he did not move. He couldn’t. His limited Japanese would be useless against this tide of fury, and a deeper, colder part of him believed, with a chilling detachment, that Nana Hiiragi had sown this terrible whirlwind, and now, she was simply, inevitably, reaping it.

It was Kyouya Onodera, his face an impassive, unreadable mask but his movements swift, economical, and incredibly powerful, who finally, decisively intervened. Pushing his way through the frenzied, screaming mob with an almost contemptuous ease, he physically dragged students away from Nana’s battered, bleeding form. “Enough!” his voice, cold and sharp as a razor, cut through the din with an authority that momentarily stunned the attackers into a surprised, hesitant silence. “This solves nothing. This is not justice; it is barbarism. We need answers. We need understanding. Not a lynching.” He stood over Nana’s crumpled, unmoving form, a silent, formidable bulwark against the still-seething, murderous crowd, his stance clearly indicating that any further attacks on the girl would have to go through him first.

Nana Hiiragi lay on the muddy ground, bruised, bleeding, her bright pink hair, now caked with mud and her own blood, a grotesque mockery of its former vibrancy. She was broken, not just physically, but spiritually, her carefully constructed world, her entire identity, utterly demolished. Her reign of terror, her intricate, carefully woven web of lies, manipulation, and murder, had been brutally, irrevocably torn apart. Akari Hozumi stood a little apart, watching the chaotic scene with a strange, almost detached expression, her face betraying no emotion, only a stern, unwavering adherence to the terrible truth she had so ruthlessly, effectively, and devastatingly uncovered, regardless of its catastrophic consequences. The island’s dark, festering secrets were finally, violently, bleeding out into the open, and its fragile, deceptive order was irrevocably, terrifyingly shattered.


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sku-te - Down with Nana Hiiragi
Down with Nana Hiiragi

The little bitch deserves nothing more than a nasty end

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