Chapter 10: The Bullies And A Calculated Message

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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3 months ago
sku-te - Down with Nana Hiiragi
sku-te - Down with Nana Hiiragi
sku-te - Down with Nana Hiiragi
sku-te - Down with Nana Hiiragi
sku-te - Down with Nana Hiiragi
sku-te - Down with Nana Hiiragi
sku-te - Down with Nana Hiiragi
sku-te - Down with Nana Hiiragi
sku-te - Down with Nana Hiiragi
sku-te - Down with Nana Hiiragi

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3 weeks ago

Chapter 33: The Unravelling of Reality

The crackling fire in the damp cave cast long, dancing shadows on the weary faces of the assembled escapees. Nana Hiiragi, her expression a mixture of fierce determination and a newfound, fragile openness, was sketching a rough map of the local terrain based on Jin’s latest reconnaissance. Kyouya Onodera, his usual stoicism a comforting presence, was methodically sharpening a scavenged piece of metal into a makeshift blade. Michiru Inukai, her gentle aura a small beacon of warmth in the grim surroundings, was quietly tending to a minor cut on the arm of one of the younger children they had managed to rescue from the camp. Jin himself sat a little apart, observing them all with that unnervingly calm, almost prescient gaze of his. They were a battered, disparate group, united by shared trauma and a desperate, uncertain hope.

Arthur Ainsworth watched them for a long moment, the weight of his secrets, his impossible knowledge, pressing down on him with an almost physical force. He had told them his “Talent” was depleted, a necessary first step. But now, after the shared ordeal of the escape, after witnessing their courage, their resilience, their willingness to trust each other in the face of overwhelming odds, he felt a profound, almost aching need for true openness, for complete, unvarnished honesty, whatever the consequences. This fragile alliance, this nascent resistance, could not be built on a foundation of lies, not his lies, at any rate. He took a deep, shuddering breath, the smoky air filling his lungs.

“Everyone,” he began, his voice a little louder than he intended, drawing their attention. He spoke in Japanese, his accent still noticeable, his grammar sometimes clumsy, but his fluency born of years of desperate necessity and now, a strange kind of acceptance. “There is something more I need to tell you. Something… fundamental.”

He saw Kyouya’s eyes narrow slightly, Nana pause in her map-making, Michiru look up with gentle concern. Jin’s expression remained unreadable.

“In the spirit of… of complete honesty, now that we are in this together,” Arthur continued, his heart pounding a nervous tattoo against his ribs, “I must confess something. First and foremost… I never actually possessed any Talent. Not in the way you understand it. The ‘Chrono-Empathic Glimpse,’ the future prediction… it was all a fabrication. A lie I concocted on my first day on the island out of sheer terror and a desperate need to survive.”

A ripple of surprise went through the small group. Michiru looked confused. Nana’s eyes widened almost imperceptibly, a flicker of reassessment, perhaps even a dawning understanding of some of his past, inexplicable actions, crossing her face. Kyouya merely nodded slowly, as if confirming a long-held, private suspicion.

“I have no doubt,” Arthur pressed on, encouraged by their mostly silent, attentive reception, “that many of you, especially Kyouya-san, perhaps even Nana-san, suspected as much. My ‘predictions’ were often… conveniently vague, or unsettlingly specific in ways that defied conventional precognition.” He met their gazes, one by one. “Therefore, you’ll all undoubtedly be wondering how I was so frequently, so disturbingly accurate with those predictions. After all, guessing such specific events, such personal futures, so often… that would be statistically, almost astronomically, impossible.”

He paused, gathering his courage for the next, far more difficult part. The air in the cave felt thick with unspoken questions. “Well,” he said, a humorless, self-deprecating smile touching his lips, “this is where things get… considerably weirder. More than weird, in fact. Almost unbelievable. And to be frank, even I struggle to comprehend it most days. It sounds like something out of a cheap, sensationalist paperback I’d have scoffed at back in… well, back home, on a dreary, ordinary May evening, a lifetime ago.”

He took another deep breath. “The truth is… I’m not actually from this time period. Not your time period, anyway. To me, this era, your present… it is a future. A horrible, disastrous, almost unthinkable future.” He saw Michiru’s hand fly to her mouth, Nana’s eyes widen further in stunned disbelief. Kyouya’s expression remained intensely focused, analytical. “I’m actually from what you would all regard as the distant past. Well before the first, and certainly before the second, of the great Talent Wars that so catastrophically shaped your world.” The mention of "two Talent Wars" was a deliberate insertion, a piece of world history he knew, that they perhaps only half-remembered or had been taught a sanitized version of.

“How I got here, from my time to yours,” Arthur continued, his voice low, earnest, “I honestly, truly, do not know. I was in my kitchen, in Crawley – that’s a town in England – and then… I was on that ferry, in Kenji Tanaka’s body. One moment, marmalade and existential despair; the next, a Japanese school uniform and a one-way ticket to this island nightmare.” He shook his head. “My best guess is that either The Committee have access to some sort of rudimentary, perhaps unstable, time-traveling technology or experimental Talent they were testing… or, and this feels somehow more likely given the sheer, random improbability of it all, I was pulled here, torn from my own existence, by some incredibly powerful, unknown Talent for reasons I cannot begin to fathom.”

He saw the disbelief warring with a dawning, horrified curiosity on their faces. “The second, and perhaps more immediate, problem this presents for me,” he pressed on, needing to get it all out now that he had started, “is that I don’t know for certain whether this future I’ve found myself in is my own world’s future, a terrible timeline I am now trapped within… or if I’m in some kind of parallel universe, an alternate reality, or even, though it sounds absurd, another entirely different Earth-like planet that just happens to have a similar history up to a certain point.”

He looked at them, their faces illuminated by the flickering firelight, their expressions a mixture of shock, skepticism, and a reluctant, dawning consideration. “Now,” he said, his voice dropping even lower, his gaze intense, “now I get to the weirdest part. The part that explains everything, and yet, explains nothing at all.” He hesitated, the sheer, unbelievable audacity of what he was about to say almost choking him. “In my time, in my world… there was a popular Japanese anime television series, based on an even more popular manga comic book series. It was called ‘Munō na Nana’.” He pronounced the Japanese title carefully, watching their faces. “Talentless Nana.”

He saw Nana Hiiragi herself flinch, her eyes widening in startled, almost fearful recognition of her own name embedded in that bizarre, foreign title. Kyouya’s head tilted, a flicker of something sharp and analytical in his gaze.

Arthur leaned forward, his voice barely a whisper now, yet carrying an unbearable weight of impossible truth. “Can you all,” he asked, his gaze sweeping across their stunned, uncomprehending faces, “can you all perhaps begin to see where this is going?”

The fire crackled, spitting a shower of sparks into the heavy, charged silence of the cave. The only other sound was the distant, ceaseless roar of the waterfall, a sound that suddenly felt like the rushing, indifferent torrent of a reality that had just been irrevocably, terrifyingly, and perhaps liberatingly, undone.


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5 months ago
10 Posts!

10 posts!


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3 weeks ago

Chapter 7: The Necromancer's Secret and a Ghastly Plan

The swift, brutal efficiency of Ryouta Habu’s demise, following so closely on the heels of Arthur’s successful, if temporary, safeguarding of Nanao Nakajima, sent a chillingly clear message: Nana Hiiragi would not be easily deterred or gracefully outmanoeuvred. If one target became too difficult or inconvenient, she would simply pivot to another, or ruthlessly eliminate any immediate threats to her mission or her cover. Arthur knew, with a sickening certainty, that simply playing defence, reacting to her moves, was a losing strategy. He had to find a way to be proactive, to disrupt Nana’s rhythm, to sow confusion, perhaps even to expose one of the other potent Talents on the island before Nana could get to them. If he could muddy the waters, create other suspects, other focal points of fear and suspicion, it might just buy him, and others, more time.

His attention, with a grim sense of reluctant necessity, turned to Yūka Somezaki.

Arthur remembered her vividly from the anime – a quiet, almost morose girl with wide, haunted eyes and an unhealthy, possessive fixation on her supposedly deceased boyfriend, Shinji. Her Talent, necromancy, was one of the island’s more disturbing secrets. She was, he knew, reanimating Shinji’s corpse nightly, engaging in a macabre, delusional charade of continued romance. The circumstances of Shinji’s actual death – a house fire that had occurred shortly before this cohort of students arrived on the island – were deeply suspicious, almost certainly a case of arson committed by a jealous, enraged Yūka herself, though she had likely long since convinced herself, and perhaps others, that it was a tragic accident.

He began to observe Yūka more closely, his scrutiny carefully veiled. Her tendency to isolate herself from the other students, the way her gaze would occasionally, furtively, drift towards the northern, less frequented and more overgrown part of the island. The almost feverish, defensive intensity with which she spoke of "Shinji" if his name ever, however rarely, came up in conversation, as if he were still alive, merely temporarily absent. It all fit the disturbing profile he remembered.

His plan was audacious, morally dubious, and frankly, gruesome. It carried a significant risk of exposure for himself, and of further traumatizing an already unstable individual. But if it worked, it might unsettle Yūka profoundly, perhaps enough to make her stop her nightly rituals, or at the very least, expose her dangerous Talent in a way that didn’t directly involve Nana identifying and eliminating her. It was a desperate gamble, an attempt to preempt Nana by creating a different kind of chaos.

One quiet afternoon, during a sparsely attended optional study period in the school library, Arthur approached Yūka Somezaki’s secluded table. She was hunched over a thick textbook, though he noted her eyes weren’t actually moving across the page. She looked up as he approached, her eyes widening with a startled, almost hunted expression.

He placed his phone on the worn wooden table between them, the now-familiar ritual initiating his stilted communication. “Somezaki-san,” his translated voice said, pitched low and serious, designed to command attention. He paused, affecting the distant, unfocused look he used when invoking his “Chrono-Empathic Glimpse.” “My visions… they have been particularly troubled these past few days. I sense… a significant unrest. A dark activity, concentrated on the north side of the island.”

Yūka’s eyes widened almost imperceptibly, her knuckles whitening as she gripped her textbook. The north side. That was where the burnt-out, abandoned shell of Shinji’s former dwelling stood, a place she likely considered her private, desecrated shrine.

“I believe,” Arthur continued, his translated voice dropping to a conspiratorial whisper that nonetheless seemed to echo in the quiet library alcove, “that the so-called ‘Enemies of Humanity’ may be planning something there. Something… unholy. Perhaps even tonight, under the cover of darkness.” He leaned forward slightly. “I intend to investigate. It could be extremely dangerous, of course. Would you… consider assisting me, Somezaki-san? Your unique perspective, your sensitivity, might prove invaluable in uncovering their plot.”

He watched her carefully, observing the subtle play of fear and suspicion across her pale features. He was banking on her profound fear of exposure, her desperate desire to protect her terrible secret, outweighing any faint curiosity or misplaced sense of civic duty. The specific mention of the north side, and the insinuation of unholy activities, was the carefully baited hook.

Yūka paled visibly, a sheen of sweat appearing on her upper lip. Her hands clenched convulsively in her lap. “I… I can’t, Tanaka-kun,” she stammered, her voice barely audible, a thin, reedy whisper that the phone dutifully translated. “I… I haven’t been feeling at all well recently. All this… terrible upset about Habu-kun’s death… I think I just need to rest this evening. Perhaps another time?” She wouldn’t meet his eyes, her gaze fixed on a point somewhere past his shoulder.

“A great pity, Somezaki-san,” Arthur’s phone intoned, his own expression carefully neutral. “But entirely understandable, given the circumstances. Rest well.” He picked up his phone and walked away, leaving her to her rapidly escalating agitation. He’d achieved his first objective: she would be terrified, deeply unnerved by his seemingly specific “hunch,” and almost certainly wouldn’t venture anywhere near the north side of the island that night.

That evening, under the oppressive cloak of a moonless, heavily overcast sky, Arthur slipped out of the hushed dormitory. He had discreetly “borrowed” a sturdy canvas art satchel from a mostly unused supply closet and a heavy-duty utility knife that had, for some inexplicable and fortunate reason, been left amongst a jumble of tools in the common room’s lost-and-found box. The island was eerily quiet, the usual nocturnal chorus of cicadas and the distant, rhythmic sigh of the ocean seeming only to amplify the profound silence and his own thudding heartbeat.

He navigated by the hazy memory of the island map he’d once glimpsed and the faint, almost invisible glow of his phone screen, its brightness turned down to the absolute minimum. The path to the northern, more remote part of the island was poorly maintained, overgrown and treacherous in the pitch darkness. After nearly an hour of stumbling through dense, clinging undergrowth, his shins scraped and his nerves screaming, he finally found it: the charred, skeletal remains of a small, isolated shack, its blackened timbers stark against the dark sky, just as he remembered it from a brief, unsettling panning shot in the anime. The air here was heavy, still thick with the faint, acrid, ghostly smell of old smoke and damp decay.

He found a concealed spot within a dense thicket of bushes, downwind from the ruin, and settled in to wait. His heart pounded a nervous, unsteady rhythm against his ribs. This was, he told himself for the hundredth time, certifiably insane. He, Arthur Ainsworth, a fifty-one-year-old former paper-pusher from Crawley, a man whose greatest prior adventure involved misplacing his spectacles during a rather staid Thomas Cook package holiday to the Costa del Sol, was now lurking in the haunted wilderness of a deadly island, preparing to confront a reanimated corpse. The sheer, terrifying absurdity of it all threatened to overwhelm him.

Hours crawled by with agonizing slowness. The cold night air, damp and clinging, seeped into his bones, making him shiver uncontrollably. Doubt, a insidious, gnawing worm, began to eat at his resolve. What if he was wrong? What if Yūka, spooked by his earlier veiled threats, didn’t summon Shinji tonight? What if some other creature, one of the real Enemies of Humanity, if such things truly existed beyond the manipulative government propaganda and Tsuruoka’s monstrous fabrications, found him first? He clutched the utility knife, its cold, unforgiving metal a poor and insufficient comfort against the rising tide of his fear.

Just as the first, almost imperceptible hint of bruised grey began to lighten the eastern sky, dimming the stars, he heard it – a distinct, unnatural shuffling sound, the sharp snap of a dry twig under a clumsy footfall. He peered cautiously through the dense leaves, his breath catching in his throat. A figure was lurching out of the pre-dawn darkness, moving with an unsettling, jerky, puppet-like gait. It was vaguely human-shaped, its clothes tattered and mud-stained, its skin a mottled, unhealthy, almost phosphorescent hue in the gloom. Shinji. Or rather, what Yūka Somezaki’s dark Talent had made of him.

Arthur’s breath hitched. This was it. No turning back. He gripped the utility knife, its handle slick in his sweaty palm. He’d never considered himself a brave man, not by any stretch of the imagination. He wasn’t entirely sure he was one now. But a desperate, cold, almost inhuman resolve had settled over him, born of fear and a grim, overriding necessity.

He waited, every muscle tensed, until the shambling, reanimated corpse lurched past his hiding place, then he lunged.

The struggle was a nightmarish, clumsy, terrifying wrestle in the damp earth and decaying leaves. The creature, despite its decayed state, was surprisingly strong, its dead limbs animated by an unnatural, jerky power. It clawed at him with surprising force, its decaying flesh exuding a fetid, sweetish odour of grave dirt and rot that made Arthur gag and his stomach heave. It moaned, a low, guttural, inhuman sound that seemed to vibrate in his very bones. He dropped the utility knife in the initial, frantic scuffle but managed to bring the heavy canvas bag down hard on its head, stunning it for a precious, disorienting moment. Scrambling desperately in the dirt, his fingers closed around a hefty, sharp-edged rock.

He didn’t allow himself to think, to hesitate. He just acted, driven by a primal survival instinct and the grim, horrifying necessity of his insane plan. It was a brutal, sickening, desperate business. When it was finally, blessedly over, he was shaking uncontrollably, his clothes torn, his body covered in dirt and something he desperately hoped wasn’t zombie effluvia. Shinji’s reanimated form lay still, a grotesque parody of life extinguished.

With trembling, bloodied hands, he retrieved the utility knife. The next part, he knew, would be even worse. He had to force himself, fighting back waves of nausea and a rising tide of self-loathing, to complete the terrible task he had set himself. Finally, his heart pounding a mad tattoo against his ribs, his stomach churning with revulsion, he managed to secure the zombie’s severed head in the canvas satchel. The weight of it was obscene.

As the sun began its slow, indifferent ascent, casting a sickly yellow light over the gruesome, desecrated scene, Arthur Ainsworth, or rather, the boy known as Kenji Tanaka, stumbled back towards the distant, still-sleeping school. He was physically and emotionally wrecked, a hollow shell of a man. The thought of what he had to do next, of presenting this horrifying, violating trophy to a classroom of unsuspecting teenagers, filled him with a fresh, overwhelming wave of revulsion and despair. But it was necessary. He had to try and break Yūka Somezaki’s cycle of delusion and necromancy, and perhaps, just perhaps, save her from Nana Hiiragi in the process – even if it meant becoming a figure of profound terror and moral ambiguity himself. He was walking a very dark path, and he wasn't sure he'd ever find his way back.


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3 weeks ago

Chapter 31: The Great Escape

The days bled into weeks, the weeks into months, each one a grim, monotonous repetition of the last, marked by gnawing hunger, forced labour, and the ever-present, chilling specter of Commandant Ide’s sadistic authority. By the late, bleak summer of what would have been 2029 in Arthur’s old world, over a full, soul-crushing year had passed since their incarceration in Ide’s brutal internment camp. The initial shock and raw terror had long since given way to a grim, soul-wearying, almost numb routine of survival. Food remained scarce, its quality appalling, often barely edible. Medical attention was a cruel joke, almost non-existent, with minor illnesses frequently festering into life-threatening conditions. The guards, under Ide’s increasingly tyrannical and paranoid command, ruled with a casual, almost bored cruelty, their arbitrary beatings and collective punishments a constant reminder of their absolute power. Hope, in this desolate, forgotten place, was a dangerous, almost treasonous currency, hoarded desperately by a resilient few, and all too easily, too frequently, extinguished by Ide’s iron fist.

Yet, within the oppressive, spirit-crushing confines of the sprawling, mud-caked camp, a small, fiercely determined group had begun to coalesce, a fragile ember of defiance glowing stubbornly in the overwhelming darkness. Nana Hiiragi, her spirit battered but not entirely broken by her past traumas and current imprisonment, found a new, unexpected focus for her formidable intellect and innate strategic mind. The Nana who had once meticulously, coldly planned murders now meticulously, passionately, planned freedom. Kyouya Onodera, fully recovered from his horrific ordeal in Ide’s torture block, his silent, unbreakable resilience an unspoken, almost legendary inspiration to many of the more demoralized prisoners, became her quiet, watchful, and utterly dependable partner in this dangerous, almost impossible endeavor. Michiru Inukai, her gentle, compassionate spirit a small, unwavering beacon of quiet kindness in the grim, dehumanizing surroundings, offered emotional support, tended to the minor injuries and ever-present illnesses that plagued the malnourished prisoners, and fostered a surprising network of trust and whispered communication among the disparate, frightened inmates. Arthur Ainsworth, though openly claiming his “Chrono-Empathic Glimpse” Talent was now entirely depleted, a spent force (a claim met with varying degrees of belief, though none could deny his past uncanny insights), found his sharp memories of fictional problem-solving scenarios from countless books and films, and his hard-won, cynical intuition about human nature, surprisingly useful in their clandestine, whispered discussions. And Jin Tachibana, a veritable ghost in the brutal system, would appear and disappear with unnerving, almost supernatural ease, providing crucial, often game-changing pieces of intelligence about guard rotations, structural weaknesses in the camp’s perimeter, or forewarning of impending, brutal shakedowns by Ide’s security forces.

Their plan, whispered late at night in the most secluded, shadowed corners of their overcrowded barracks, or during furtive, hurried meetings in the relative anonymity of the latrine queues, was audacious to the point of near insanity: a mass jailbreak. Not just for themselves, for their small, core group, but for as many of their fellow prisoners as they could possibly, safely include. Nana, in a profound, almost shocking shift from her former cold, Committee-programmed self, was fiercely, unyieldingly adamant about one particular, non-negotiable principle: “Minimal bloodshed on our side,” she’d insisted passionately during one of their hushed, risky planning sessions in a damp, disused storage shed, her violet eyes burning with a new, protective fire. “And we need to be as quiet, as invisible, as possible. We need time – days, if we can manage it – before the Committee on the mainland even realizes the full extent of the escape. That’s our only chance of scattering, of finding any kind of sanctuary.” Her words, her newfound focus on preserving life rather than taking it, resonated deeply with Arthur, a small, fragile sign of her painful, ongoing transformation.

The absolute, undeniable key to their improbable, desperate plan lay with a recently arrived prisoner, a nervous, unassuming, almost painfully shy young man named Kenichi Tanaka (a cruel irony of a shared name that Arthur didn’t fail to register). Kenichi was perpetually anxious, with a habit of stuttering and avoiding eye contact, but he possessed a Talent as extraordinary as it was vital to their hopes. Kenichi, whom Kyouya, with his characteristic bluntness, had quickly dubbed “Architect,” could mentally visualize and then, with intense, painstaking concentration and the slow, laborious reconfiguration of existing raw materials – even compacted soil, loose rock, and scavenged scrap metal – gradually, almost magically, manifest large, complex, non-organic objects into physical reality. The process was incredibly draining for him, physically and mentally, requiring days, sometimes weeks, of focused effort for even moderately sized creations, but he believed, with enough time, support, and a sufficient supply of rudimentary materials, he could create a vehicle. Not a conventional car or truck, nothing so complex or refined. But something large enough, something incredibly sturdy, something capable of breaching the camp’s formidable outer wall and carrying a significant number of escapees to at least temporary freedom. Their unlikely, desperate dream began to take shape in whispered conversations: a makeshift, heavily armored, Talent-powered land train, or something akin to a monstrous, multi-terrain personnel carrier, built from the very earth and refuse of their prison.

The planning phase was a masterpiece of clandestine coordination, meticulous attention to detail, and constant, nerve-shredding risk. They identified potentially sympathetic or sufficiently desperate fellow prisoners, those with useful minor Talents that might aid their escape – a girl who could temporarily muffle sounds within a small radius, an older man who possessed an uncanny ability to sense and temporarily disrupt simple electronic surveillance devices, a few quiet, physically strong individuals who were deemed trustworthy and capable of disciplined action under extreme pressure. Kyouya, with his innate toughness, his remarkable resilience, and his ability to heal from injuries that would kill ordinary men, took on the perilous role of scouting the riskiest sections of the camp’s perimeter, meticulously memorizing patrol routes, identifying guard blind spots, and assessing the structural integrity of potential breach points. Arthur often helped him analyze the gathered information, his mind, strangely sharpened by years of navigating Nana’s deceptions on the island, surprisingly adept at spotting subtle patterns, potential ambush points, and dangerous inconsistencies in the guards’ routines. His “intuition,” as he now called his residual flashes of anime-inspired insight, would sometimes offer surprisingly useful, if oddly specific, suggestions: “The searchlights on the north-east perimeter tower, Kyouya-san… there’s a rumour amongst the longer-term prisoners that the main junction box there is older, less well-maintained than the others. It might be more susceptible to… interference.”

Michiru, a quiet, unassuming force of nature, fostered a delicate network of trust and whispered communication among disparate, frightened groups of prisoners, her genuine, unwavering kindness and empathy disarming even some of the most hardened, cynical, or terrified inmates, ensuring their loyalty, their silence, and their willingness to cooperate when the time came. She also used her gentle healing touch to tend to the minor cuts, bruises, and illnesses sustained by their small team during their risky preparations, keeping their clandestine “workforce” as healthy and functional as possible under the brutal camp conditions.

Nana Hiiragi, with a focus and intensity that both impressed and slightly unnerved Arthur, orchestrated it all. Her quick, strategic mind, once dedicated to the art of assassination, was now wholly consumed with the complex, multi-layered logistics of their desperate gamble. She studied makeshift maps of the camp, painstakingly drawn from the collective memory of dozens of prisoners, cross-referencing them with Jin’s sporadically delivered but always vital intelligence updates. She assigned tasks, managed resources, developed contingency plans, and made difficult, sometimes heartbreaking, decisions with a quiet, newfound authority that surprised even herself. She was no longer Tsuruoka’s mindless, obedient puppet; she was, against all odds, becoming a leader, driven not by external orders or fear of punishment, but by a fierce, burning desire for freedom, for justice, and by a burgeoning, almost maternal sense of responsibility for the hundreds of desperate souls whose hopes now rested so heavily on her slender shoulders.

Commandant Ide, meanwhile, continued his daily reign of petty sadism and brutal terror, entirely oblivious to the silent, steadily growing conspiracy unfolding beneath his very nose, within the very walls of his supposedly impregnable prison. The harsher, more oppressive his regime became, the more desperate, the more determined, the more unified the core group of escape planners grew. The internment camp was a volatile, dangerously unstable pressure cooker, and Nana’s small, dedicated team was working tirelessly, meticulously, against the ticking clock, trying to build an escape valve before the entire system exploded into uncontrolled, suicidal violence. The hope they nurtured was fragile, almost intangible, the risks they took daily were immense, terrifying. But for the first time in over a long, brutal year, a tiny, defiant flicker of genuine, almost audacious optimism began to spread like a secret wildfire through the desolate, shadowed barracks. They had a plan. They had a leader. They had the Architect. They had a chance.


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3 weeks ago

Chapter 23: Hunted and Haunted

The months that followed the chaotic "evacuation" at the end of the Second School Year had transformed the island into a place of profound, echoing silence for Michiru Inukai. After slipping away from the frenzied embarkation, she had retreated into the island's deep, overgrown interior, finding a precarious solitude in hidden coves and forgotten, crumbling outbuildings of the sprawling academy. She had survived, barely, on her knowledge of the few edible plants Kyouya had taught them to identify, on rainwater collected in broad leaves, and on a fierce, quiet resilience she hadn’t known she possessed. The island, stripped of its teeming, terrified student population and its menacing faculty, had become a different entity – still haunted by memories, but also imbued with a wild, untamed, almost melancholic beauty. She missed Arthur’s quiet, if awkward, companionship, Nana’s newfound, fierce protectiveness, and even Kyouya’s stoic, reassuring presence more than she could say. She often wondered where they had been taken, if they were safe.

Then, one cool, late summer morning, the unnatural silence that had become her constant companion was shattered. Faint at first, then growing steadily louder, came the unmistakable, deeply unsettling thrum of powerful marine engines, followed by the distant, mournful blare of a ship’s horn. Ferries. More than one. Michiru’s heart, which had settled into a rhythm dictated by the tides and the rustling leaves, now hammered against her ribs with a mixture of terror and a wild, desperate hope. New arrivals. The Committee was repopulating its monstrous school.

Clutching the sharpened stick that had become her primary tool and occasional weapon, Michiru Inukai, on hearing the undeniable sounds of pupils arriving once more, decided to forgo her hard-won isolation. Her loneliness, a constant ache, warred with her ingrained caution. She had to know. Were they among the returnees? Or was this a fresh batch of unsuspecting victims, doomed to endure the island’s horrors anew? With a surge of trepidation, she began to make her way, slowly and stealthily, through the dense undergrowth towards the distant, now reactivated docks, her senses on high alert.

For Arthur Ainsworth, the return to the island was a descent into a familiar, deeply dreaded circle of hell. Strapped into a hard plastic seat on the transport vessel, surrounded by silent, grim-faced Committee agents and a new cohort of bewildered, frightened teenage Talents, he felt a suffocating sense of despair. His brief, brutal interlude on the mainland – the back-breaking labor, the constant fear, his abduction, and the chilling pronouncements of Tsuruoka’s subordinate – had stripped him of any lingering illusions. He was a prisoner, a marked man, returned to this cursed place with a death sentence hanging over his head. Nana Hiiragi, he knew with a chilling certainty, would also be here, Tsuruoka’s orders to eliminate him no doubt ringing in her ears. This strange, unending, almost timeless progression of his life, from one bleak May in Crawley to this even bleaker, surreal late summer, felt like a cruel, cosmic joke.

As the ferry docked with a familiar, jarring thud against the weathered pier, Arthur was herded off with the other students, his gaze sweeping the familiar, yet now even more menacing, landscape. He saw Kyouya Onodera further down the pier, his expression as impassive and unreadable as ever, though Arthur thought he detected a new, harder glint in his pale eyes. Nana, too, was visible, a flash of incongruous pink hair amidst the drab uniforms, her face pale and drawn, her usual ebullience entirely absent. She avoided his gaze.

The new students, wide-eyed and apprehensive, were being marshalled by a fresh contingent of stern-faced teachers Arthur didn’t recognize. He felt a familiar wave of helpless anger towards these oblivious newcomers, lambs to the slaughter. His priority, he knew with a grim clarity, was survival. He had to evade Nana, to anticipate her moves, to find a way to neutralize her as a threat without becoming a killer himself. The thought was almost laughable in its impossibility.

Then, a small movement at the edge of the bustling, chaotic pier caught his eye. A figure, small and hesitant, emerged from the shadows of a stack of weathered cargo crates. Her white, fluffy hair, though matted and unkempt, was unmistakable.

Arthur’s breath caught in his throat. His heart seemed to stop. It couldn’t be.

“Michiru?” he whispered, the name a fragile, disbelieving prayer, his Japanese clumsy but heartfelt.

The figure turned, her wide, gentle eyes finding his. A slow, hesitant, almost incandescent smile spread across her dirt-smudged, gaunt face. “Tanaka-kun?” she breathed, her voice weak but clear.

Forgetting the guards, forgetting Nana, forgetting the new students, forgetting everything but the impossible, miraculous sight before him, Arthur stumbled forward. Nana, too, had seen her, her own face a mask of utter, stunned disbelief, her hand flying to her mouth. Kyouya Onodera, his usual stoicism momentarily fractured, actually stopped in his tracks, his eyes widening almost imperceptibly.

Michiru Inukai, who had chosen solitude over evacuation, who had somehow survived alone on this cursed island for months, had come to see who had returned. And in doing so, she had just irrevocably altered the deadly game that was about to begin anew.

The fragile, almost forgotten sense of hope Arthur had so carefully, so secretly, nurtured during his vigil over her seemingly lifeless, yet persistently warm, body now surged through him, potent and overwhelming. She was alive. Truly alive. And she was here.

The reunion was brief, cut short by the harsh commands of the guards ordering the students to move towards the school buildings. But as they were forced to separate, Michiru flashing him a quick, reassuring, if still weak, smile, Arthur felt a subtle shift within himself. He was still a target, still hunted. But he was no longer entirely alone in his knowledge, or in his desperate hope. Michiru’s presence, her impossible survival, was a testament to something beyond the Committee’s cruel calculations, beyond Tsuruoka’s monstrous designs. It was a spark. And perhaps, just perhaps, that spark could ignite something more.

Later that day, as the grim routine of the Third School Year began to settle over them, Arthur knew his primary task remained unchanged: survive Nana Hiiragi. He saw her watching him during the opening assembly, her expression unreadable, the conflict within her a palpable, dangerous force. He would use his knowledge of the island, his understanding of Nana’s methods, his sheer, stubborn will to live, to evade her. He would be a ghost, a shadow, always one step ahead. The cat-and-mouse game had resumed, but now, there was a new, unexpected piece on the board, a fluffy-haired girl whose very existence defied death itself, and whose presence might just change everything. The new students, chattering nervously amongst themselves, remained entirely oblivious to the complex, deadly currents swirling around their upperclassmen, unaware that their island academy was, once again, a hunting ground.


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3 months ago

Homebase is closing this Sunday


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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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