The aftermath of the horrific confrontation at the docks was, with chilling Committee efficiency, unsettlingly, almost surreally, muted across the wider school. News of Rentaro Tsurumigawa’s sudden, immediate, and permanent “expulsion” for “egregious and violent misbehaviour that endangered fellow students” spread like a carefully managed wildfire, a conveniently sanitized and deliberately vague narrative disseminated by a pale-faced, visibly shaken Mr. Saito and the other grim-lipped, tight-faced teachers. It was designed, Arthur knew with a cold certainty, to mask the true, terrifying violence of that awful evening and prevent any semblance of mass panic just as the students were on the cusp of departing for the long-awaited, much-needed term break.
Nana Hiiragi, it was quietly, almost confidentially, announced, had suffered a “severe emotional shock” from her “brave and selfless intervention” in the Rentaro incident and was under strict, isolated medical care in the school infirmary, strictly forbidden any visitors for her own well-being. Of Michiru Inukai, there was initially no official word, a heavy, pregnant silence that was, in itself, deeply, profoundly ominous. Then, just hours before the first ferry was due to depart, a sombre, almost funereal Mr. Saito informed the assembled students during a hastily called morning assembly that Michiru-san had, with tragic, heartbreaking suddenness, succumbed to a rare, aggressive, and previously entirely undiagnosed latent medical condition. Her passing, he’d said, his voice thick with carefully feigned sorrow and his eyes not quite meeting those of his students, had been peaceful. A suitable memorial service, he’d assured them, would be held at the start of the next term to honour her gentle spirit.
Arthur listened to the carefully constructed, insidious lies with a cold, contemptuous, almost murderous anger churning in his gut. He knew the truth. He knew, with a sickening certainty, that the Committee, through the school’s puppet authorities, would desperately want Michiru’s body. A Talent user who had performed such an unprecedented, almost unbelievable act of resurrection, sacrificing her own life to restore another’s, was an invaluable, unique research specimen. They would want to study her, to dissect her, to understand the profound, terrifying nature of her ultimate sacrifice, perhaps even to weaponize it. He would not allow it.
While the other students – a volatile mixture of genuinely relieved, superficially excited, and still deeply, palpably unnerved – bustled about the dormitories packing their bags, their chatter a jarring counterpoint to Arthur’s grim resolve, he moved with a singular, almost predatory purpose. He had already, under the cover of the pre-dawn darkness, retrieved Michiru’s impossibly light, still form from the cold slab in the school’s small, under-equipped morgue where she had been temporarily, disrespectfully placed. He’d carefully, reverently wrapped her in a clean, new sheet he’d "requisitioned" from the infirmary linen closet when no one was looking. Carrying her small, precious burden, he walked with a steady, determined gait through the increasingly deserted school corridors, a sombre, solitary spectre of grief and defiance amidst the fading echoes of youthful excitement and hurried departures. No one questioned him; no one tried to stop him. Perhaps it was the stark, unapproachable, almost dangerous grief etched on his face, a silent, potent warning against any form of intrusion. Or perhaps, more likely, in the frantic, institutional rush to vacate the cursed island, the lone, grim-faced boy carrying what looked like a peacefully sleeping, sheet-shrouded classmate was simply an oddity too inconvenient, too unsettling, too difficult to address or explain away.
He took Michiru to her own small, now entirely empty dormitory room. It was neat, almost clinically tidy, and already stripped of most personal belongings, her former roommate having clearly departed on the earliest available transport, eager to escape the island’s oppressive atmosphere. The silence in the room was profound, heavy as a shroud, broken only by Arthur’s own ragged, hitching breathing and the distant, mournful cry of the first ferry horn sounding its departure from the docks, a sound that seemed to echo his own internal desolation. This strange, suspended May, he thought with a fleeting, dislocated sense of temporal confusion – so different from any May he’d ever known back in England, a time usually of burgeoning hope, of lengthening, sunlit days, not this… this cold, grey, empty waiting.
Gently, with an almost reverent tenderness that felt alien yet entirely natural to his grieving heart, he laid Michiru on her narrow, bare mattress. Her white, fluffy hair, usually so vibrant and full of innocent life, seemed dull and lifeless against the stark, utilitarian pillow. Arthur found a washcloth and a basin of clean water from the thankfully still-functional communal bathroom and, with a gentleness that surprised even himself, began to clean the lingering traces of grime and sea spray from her pale face and small, delicate hands. It felt like a vital, final act of profound respect, a small, silent, defiant rebellion against the island’s casual, brutal disregard for its young, vulnerable charges. He straightened her simple school uniform, which he’d managed to keep relatively clean, and smoothed her soft hair back from her forehead. He wanted her to look at peace, to be accorded a dignity in death that this island, and the monsters who controlled it, so readily, so callously, stole from the living.
Then, the long, solitary, and uncertain watch began.
The final ferry horn blared in the distance, a mournful, fading cry signalling the departure of the last contingent of students and the few remaining skeletal staff. From Michiru’s small, heavily curtained window, Arthur could see the vessel pulling away from the pier, growing smaller and smaller until it was just an indistinct, insignificant speck on the vast, indifferent grey horizon. He was alone now. Utterly, terrifyingly, and in a strange way, almost peacefully alone, on an island saturated with unspoken secrets, spilt blood, and the sorrowful ghosts of lost innocence, with only the silent, still form of a girl who had so bravely, so selflessly, sacrificed her own precious life for her damaged, deeply undeserving friend.
He pulled the room’s single, uncomfortable wooden chair beside Michiru’s bed and sat, the silence in the room, in the entire deserted dormitory wing, in the whole silent, echoing school, pressing in on him, vast, profound, and suffocating. He knew the Committee would eventually realize Michiru’s body was missing from their cold storage. They would search. But he also knew something else, a strange, chilling piece of information gleaned from his fragmented anime memories, a detail about the Committee's own twisted beliefs regarding extraordinary Talents. They believed, or at least theorized, that a Talent as potent as Michiru’s, one capable of true resurrection, might possess a residual capacity for self-regeneration, even after apparent death. It was probably, Arthur thought with a cynical twist of his lips, the only vaguely true or insightful thing the Committee had ever inadvertently revealed about the true nature of Talents amidst their mountain of lies and manipulative propaganda.
The critical, terrifying unknown, however, was the timescale. If such a regeneration were even possible – and Arthur clung to this thought with a desperate, almost ferocious tenacity, fueled by the unnatural coolness that still eman మనed from Michiru’s body, a bizarre stasis that defied normal decomposition – how long would it take? Days? Weeks? Months? Or, God forbid, years? He didn’t know. Nobody did. But he made a silent, solemn vow to the still, silent girl before him, a vow that resonated in the deepest chambers of his weary, grief-stricken soul. He would tend to Michiru. He would watch over her. For as long as it took. He would not abandon her. He would not let her become just another experiment for Tsuruoka’s butchers. And more than that, a new, chilling fear took root: he would not see Michiru, if she did somehow return and was left alone, terrified, and uncontrolled, eventually transform into one of those monstrous “Enemies of Humanity” he knew were a horrifying potential endpoint for unchecked or traumatized Talents. That, he vowed, he would prevent at any cost.
In that profound, echoing emptiness, he found himself talking to her, his voice low, hesitant at first, then spilling out in a quiet, rambling stream of his native English, a stark, intimate contrast to the stilted, carefully translated Japanese he was forced to use with the living.
“It’s Arthur, you know,” he murmured, his gaze fixed on her pale, still face, so achingly young. “My real name. Arthur Ainsworth. From Crawley, down in Sussex. You wouldn’t know it, of course. Terribly dull place, Crawley. Grey skies, mostly. Nothing like this… this Technicolor, blood-soaked madhouse.” He spoke of his mundane, unfulfilling job as an accounts clerk, his quiet, amicable but ultimately failed marriage to a woman who had deserved better than his own hesitant apathy, the soul-crushing, quiet desperation of his previous, unlamented life, a life that now seemed like a distant, almost unimaginable, sepia-toned, irrelevant dream. “Funny, isn’t it, Michiru?” he continued, a dry, humourless, almost painful chuckle escaping his lips. “I used to think my life back there was utterly pointless, completely devoid of any real meaning or purpose. Now… now I’m here, trapped in this waking nightmare, and I’m failing on a truly epic, spectacular, almost biblical scale.”
He told her about his impossible, inexplicable predicament, his fragmented, cursed foreknowledge gleaned from a garish, violent television show his teenage nephew had been briefly, inexplicably obsessed with some years ago. “I knew… I knew so much of this horror was going to happen. Nanao, Habu, Hoshino… even you, in a way, though not like this. Never, ever like this.” A wave of profound, helpless, suffocating guilt washed over him, so potent it almost choked the words in his throat. “I tried to stop you, Michiru. With Nana. I really did. I shouted until my voice was raw. But you were so… so damned determined. So brave. Far braver than I could ever be.” His voice cracked, and for a long time, he simply sat in the silence, the only sound his own ragged, unsteady breathing.
Hours bled into days, an eternity of dim light and profound, echoing silence, marked only by the slow crawl of the sun across the dusty, curtained window. He ate sparingly from the dwindling tins of forgotten, non-perishable emergency supplies he managed to pilfer from the deserted school kitchens, his phone, its battery now carefully, obsessively conserved, his only companion for checking the slow, agonizing passage of time. He slept in fitful, nightmare-plagued starts in the uncomfortable wooden chair beside her bed, or sometimes, when the exhaustion became too much to bear, curled up on the cold, unforgiving floor at her feet, waking with a jolt, the oppressive, unnatural silence always the first thing to greet him, a constant, unwelcome, terrifying reminder of his utter, profound isolation.
As the first long, silent, grief-haunted week of the term break drew to its close, Arthur Ainsworth sat his solitary, unwavering vigil, a self-appointed, grief-stricken, and increasingly desperate guardian in a silent, empty, and deeply cursed school. He watched over a brave, gentle, and selfless girl who embodied a purity and unconditional love that this island, and the dark, malevolent forces that controlled its destiny, seemed hell-bent on eradicating from existence. He was adrift, his own future an utter, terrifying, featureless unknown, his only certainty the profound, crushing weight of the recent, tragic past and the silent, solemn promise he’d made to protect Michiru’s final, precious rest, and her even more precious, if improbable, potential return.
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.
The third term of the second, brutal school year began under a palpable, suffocating cloud of dread. The students, those who had survived the Committee’s earlier culling via starvation and the subsequent forced, chaotic “evacuation” to the mainland for a bizarrely truncated “break,” returned to the island not with any sense of relief or academic purpose, but with the grim, weary resignation of conscripts being redeployed to a particularly unpleasant front line. Nana Hiiragi was among them, her journey back from Tsuruoka’s mainland base having been a silent, internal torment. Her demeanour was now profoundly subdued, her usual bright, almost manic smile often strained and fleeting, her violet eyes shadowed with a depth of conflict and unwelcome knowledge that aged her beyond her teenage years. Her experiences with Tsuruoka, the horrifying “lesson” with Mai, and her own act of defiant, protective murder had deepened her internal chasm of doubt and self-loathing. The orders to resume her deadly mission on the island, to continue Tsuruoka’s bloody cull, now felt like grotesque chains forged in hell.
Arthur Ainsworth, though physically somewhat recovered from his collapse at the cliff edge weeks prior, remained emotionally fragile, a tightly wound spring of anxiety and grief. Michiru Inukai, also returned to the island and now mostly restored to a semblance of her former health (though still bearing the quiet, ethereal marks of her ordeal and miraculous regeneration), was a constant, bittersweet source of both comfort and profound anxiety for him. He watched Nana closely, a silent, wary observer. Her internal struggle was almost palpable to him. He noticed she made no overt moves to target any new students, her energy seemingly consumed by a fierce, almost desperate protectiveness towards Michiru and a weary navigation of the increasingly dangerous social landscape of the decaying school. Kyouya Onodera, too, was a silent, watchful presence, his earlier conversations with Arthur about impending, Committee-manufactured hardships clearly at the forefront of his astute mind. They formed an unspoken, uneasy triumvirate – Arthur, the unwilling seer of doom; Kyouya, the stoic pragmatist; and Nana, the compromised assassin – bound by their shared, unwelcome knowledge of the island’s true, malevolent nature.
As Arthur had grimly foreseen, the Committee’s starvation tactics, which had been temporarily eased during the brief mainland dispersal, were now re-implemented with a vengeance, and with a brutal, accelerated intensity. The meagre supplies that had tided them over at the very end of the last term were now a distant, almost unbelievable memory. The canteen, once a place of at least minimal sustenance, now offered little more than watery, flavorless broth, a few handfuls of rice often containing more weevils than grain, and occasionally, slices of dry, stale bread that tasted like sawdust. The small school store, once a source of minor treats and supplementary snacks, was now entirely barren, its shelves gathering dust. Hunger became a constant, gnawing, visceral presence, a relentless torment that frayed tempers, eroded civility, and ground down spirits.
The carefully maintained, increasingly fragile illusion of a functioning educational institution shattered completely. Fights, brutal and desperate, erupted with terrifying frequency over the smallest scraps of hoarded food – a mouldy potato, a handful of dried beans, a forgotten candy bar. Cliques, bound by mutual desperation and a primal need for security, formed and reformed, hoarding what little they could find or steal, suspicion and aggressive hostility becoming the new, ugly currency of their daily interactions. The teachers, including a visibly overwhelmed and demoralized Mr. Saito, were utterly powerless, their authority completely eroded. They retreated into a shell of ineffective platitudes and frightened avoidance, clearly as much prisoners of the island’s grim new reality as their starving students.
Kyouya Onodera, however, with his characteristic grim pragmatism, rose to the challenge. Drawing on a surprising wellspring of practical, hard-won survival knowledge Arthur hadn’t known he possessed, Kyouya began to covertly teach basic survival skills to a small, trusted group of students, including Arthur, Nana, and Michiru. He showed them how to identify the few edible, if unappetizing, roots and tubers that grew in the island’s less-travelled interior, how to set simple, effective snares for the island’s scarce small game, how to purify brackish water using makeshift filters. Arthur, his Japanese still halting but functional for simple warnings, would sometimes offer Kyouya cryptic “insights” based on his fragmented anime memories, cloaked in the guise of his now-unspoken, depleted "Talent." “The old, abandoned shrine grounds on the eastern ridge…” he might murmur to Kyouya, “…the soil there, particularly near the largest fallen stone lantern, might hide overlooked, edible tubers if one digs deep enough and knows what to look for.” Or, “The tidal pools in the western cove, especially after a particularly strong spring tide… they sometimes trap small crabs and other shellfish. But be wary of the treacherous currents and the slippery rocks.” Kyouya would listen to these pronouncements intently, his expression unreadable, then often act upon them with quiet, methodical success, sometimes returning with a meagre but life-sustaining haul.
Despite their combined efforts, it wasn’t nearly enough to combat the systemic, Committee-orchestrated starvation. Some students, driven to extremes by gnawing hunger or simple incompetence, fell violently ill from eating poisonous berries or incorrectly prepared shellfish. Others were seriously injured in increasingly vicious fights over hoarded food supplies or died in tragic accidents while foraging for sustenance in the island’s more treacherous, unexplored terrain. The island was rapidly devolving into a brutal, lawless state, a horrifying real-world reenactment of some dystopian novel. Nana, caught between her deeply ingrained Committee orders (which she was now clearly, if silently, defying by not actively culling Talents) and her burgeoning, tormented conscience, seemed almost paralyzed by her internal conflict. She made no attempts to kill, her energy consumed by ensuring Michiru’s safety and navigating the increasingly dangerous, unpredictable social landscape of the starving school. Arthur even saw her, on several occasions, discreetly sharing some of Kyouya’s hard-won foraged supplies with students weaker or younger than herself, a silent, almost ashamed act of atonement.
Then, just as the situation seemed about to spiral into complete, irreversible anarchy, with students on the very brink of open, violent rebellion against the cowering teachers, ships appeared on the horizon. Not supply vessels, but sleek, grey, menacing Committee crafts manned by uniformed agents. They weren’t here for resupply; they were here for “evacuation.”
It was a brutal, efficient, and entirely impersonal operation. The Committee agents, armed and uncommunicative, swarmed the school grounds, rounding up the remaining, emaciated students with cold, terrifying precision. There was no concern for comfort, no gentle handling. They were herded like bewildered, terrified cattle, their meagre possessions often confiscated. Arthur realized with a sickening lurch that this was the Committee’s endgame for this cohort: create extreme privation, observe the fallout, then forcibly remove the survivors. The sheer, organized chaos of it reminded him, incongruously, of a bank holiday crush at Brighton Pier back in England, but stripped of all joy, replaced with a chilling, military efficiency. This surreal, nightmarish May was unlike any he could have ever conceived.
In the terrifying chaos of the forced embarkation, as students were violently shoved and prodded towards the waiting transport vessels, Arthur desperately tried to keep Michiru in sight. He saw her, pale and frightened but surprisingly resolute, near the edge of the panicked crowd being funnelled towards one of the smaller transports. For a moment, their eyes met. Then, with a small, almost imperceptible shake of her head and a swiftness that belied her recent frailty, Michiru darted sideways, slipping behind a stack of forgotten cargo containers just as a wave of students surged forward, obscuring her from his view. Had she managed to hide? Had she chosen to stay? Or had she simply been swept onto a different boat in a different section of the pier? He screamed her name, but his voice was lost in the din of shouting guards and crying students. He was shoved forward himself by a black-clad agent, prodded with a stun baton, and forced aboard a crowded, stifling transport. He searched frantically for her amongst the terrified faces packed around him, but she was nowhere to be seen.
Arthur found himself disembarked hours later on a grimy, unfamiliar port on mainland Japan, with nothing but the ragged uniform on his back. He was destitute, utterly alone, and now, consumed by a new, agonizing uncertainty about Michiru. Had she been caught trying to hide? Was she alone and terrified on that now-empty, cursed island? Or was she, like him, just another lost soul swallowed by the Committee’s vast, indifferent machine, perhaps on a different transport, heading to a different, unknown fate? The not knowing was a fresh torment.
Miles away, in his sterile headquarters, Tsuruoka reviewed the reports from the island "evacuation." The number of survivors was… higher than anticipated. His cold gaze fell upon Nana Hiiragi’s file. Her kill rate had plummeted to zero in this final term. Her performance was unacceptable. He would need to address her… profound shortcomings… personally. And this Kenji Tanaka, the boy with the supposed future sight, he too was an anomaly that needed closer scrutiny. The island experiment had yielded interesting, if not entirely satisfactory, results. The next phase would require… adjustments.
Grendel Jinx in Talentless Nana: A Tale of Talents and Deceptions (on Wattpad) https://www.wattpad.com/story/393719322-grendel-jinx-in-talentless-nana-a-tale-of-talents?utm_source=web&utm_medium=tumblr&utm_content=share_myworks&wp_uname=MrTAToad
The last thing Grendel Jinx remembered was a frying pan swinging toward her face in a Chichester warehouse, courtesy of some goon from a rival secret organization. Then, a flash of green light, a sensation like being sucked through a straw, and now-this. She blinked against the sterile white ceiling of what looked like a hospital room, the faint hum of fluorescent lights buzzing in her ears. Her head throbbed, but her limbs were intact, and her trademark leather jacket was neatly folded on a chair nearby. Not bad for a girl who'd just been yeeted across dimensions.
Arthur’s challenging question – “Unless, of course, anyone else has any better ideas?” – hung heavy in the smoky air of the cave, a stark invitation that no one seemed immediately eager to accept. The fire crackled, spitting a few defiant sparks, but otherwise, a profound, contemplative silence enveloped the small group of fugitives. He watched their faces: Nana, her expression a complex mixture of fear and a dawning, almost reluctant consideration; Kyouya, his gaze distant, already dissecting the proposal with his sharp, analytical intellect; Michiru, her brow furrowed with worry, her gentle eyes fixed on Arthur with a mixture of concern and a hesitant, fragile trust; and Jin, his usual enigmatic smile softened into something more thoughtful, more appraising.
It was Michiru who spoke first, her voice barely a whisper, yet carrying a surprising weight in the quiet. “Arthur-san… your idea… it is very brave. Terribly brave. But… surely there must be another way? A way that doesn’t put you in such… such direct, unimaginable danger? If we all stayed together, perhaps, found a truly remote place…”
Arthur offered her a small, sad smile. “I wish that were possible, Michiru-san. Truly, I do. But Tsuruoka’s reach is long. The Committee’s resources are vast. There is no place on this earth, I suspect, where we would be truly, permanently safe from them if they were determined to find us. Hiding is merely delaying the inevitable. We need to confront the source of the poison, not just flee its symptoms.”
Kyouya Onodera finally broke his silence, his voice cutting through the smoky air with its characteristic cool precision. “Setting aside, for the moment, the almost suicidal audacity of your core proposal, Ainsworth,” he began, his pale eyes fixed on Arthur, “let us consider the immediate logistical impossibilities. You propose to return to that island, an island where your previous persona, Kenji Tanaka, is now undoubtedly flagged as a problematic individual, possibly even believed dead or ‘neutralized’ by some. You would require an entirely new identity – one so flawless, so deeply embedded with verifiable, albeit fabricated, history, that it could withstand the Committee’s intense, paranoid scrutiny.” He paused. “Crafting such an identity, complete with supporting documentation, academic credentials for a teaching position no less, and a believable backstory for a foreigner seeking employment in such a… unique educational institution… that is not a simple task.”
He was, Arthur knew, entirely correct. The sheer bureaucratic nightmare of what he was proposing, even before considering the physical dangers, was daunting. Forging a new life from whole cloth to bring down a shadowy, all-powerful government organization… it was a far cry from his old life, from debating complex VAT codes with Henderson from the accounts department back in the Crawley borough council offices. Though Henderson, Arthur mused with a flicker of grim internal humor, in his own quiet, pedantic way, could be just as terrifyingly thorough when he found a discrepancy. Still, this was hardly the stuff of the spy thrillers one might pick up from a dusty second-hand bookshop on a dreary Tuesday afternoon in… well, any quiet, ordinary English town. This was their insane, desperate reality.
Nana, who had been listening intently, her expression unreadable, now spoke, her voice low and strained. “Kyouya-san is right. The island’s security protocols, especially for new staff, will be… extreme. Tsuruoka is no fool. After the events of the last few years, after our escape from the mainland camp, he will have tightened everything. Background checks will be exhaustive. And even if you did somehow get through the initial vetting, as a teacher, you would be under constant surveillance. Every lesson, every interaction, potentially monitored.” Her gaze flickered towards Arthur, a silent warning in their violet depths. “And my… my own file… Tsuruoka knows I was… close… to Michiru-san. He knows you interfered with my assignment concerning Nanao Nakajima. He knows you are an anomaly. If he suspected for a moment that ‘Kenji Tanaka’ had somehow returned under a new guise…” She didn’t need to finish the sentence.
“I understand all of that,” Arthur said, his voice quiet but firm. “The risks are astronomical. But what are the alternatives? Do we have another viable plan? Another way to strike at the heart of the Committee’s operations, to reach those children before they are turned into… into what Tsuruoka intends for them?”
A heavy silence descended again. No one offered an alternative. Their current situation – fugitives, hiding in a cave, with limited resources and the constant threat of discovery – was a testament to their lack of viable long-term options.
It was Jin Tachibana who finally spoke, his voice as smooth and unruffled as ever, though his eyes, when they met Arthur’s, held a new, almost unnerving intensity. “The creation of a sufficiently robust new identity for a foreign national, complete with verifiable, if entirely fictitious, academic and professional credentials,” he began, his tone almost conversational, as if discussing the weather, “while indeed complex and resource-intensive, is not… entirely beyond the realm of possibility.”
All eyes turned to him. Nana looked particularly surprised.
“I maintain… certain connections,” Jin continued, a faint, enigmatic smile playing on his lips. “Individuals with particular… skills… in the art of information fabrication and bureaucratic navigation. It would be costly. It would be time-consuming. And there would be no guarantee of success. The Committee’s counter-intelligence measures are formidable.” He paused, his gaze sweeping over Arthur. “You would also, Ainsworth-san, need to significantly alter your physical appearance. Hair colour, eye colour, perhaps even subtle changes to your facial structure, if possible. You would need to adopt entirely new mannerisms, a new way of speaking, a new way of being. You would have to become someone else entirely, someone so unremarkable, so devoid of threat, that you could pass beneath Tsuruoka’s ever-watchful gaze.”
“And even if all of that were possible,” Kyouya interjected, his skepticism still evident, “how would you gain entry? That specific island academy is not a place one simply applies to for a teaching position through conventional channels. It is a black site, a secret institution. They recruit their staff, especially their foreign language instructors, through very specific, very carefully vetted, and often deeply compromised channels.”
Jin nodded slowly. “That,” he conceded, “would be the most significant hurdle. Finding a legitimate, or legitimately falsifiable, opening. Engineering an opportunity. It would require… patience. And a considerable degree of luck. Or, perhaps, the creation of a vacancy where none currently exists.” The last words were spoken with a chilling, almost casual quietness that sent a shiver down Arthur’s spine.
“So,” Nana said, her voice barely a whisper, her gaze fixed on Arthur with a mixture of fear, disbelief, and a dawning, reluctant respect. “You are truly… truly willing to attempt this? To walk back into that place?”
Arthur met her gaze, his own resolve hardening despite the terrifying litany of obstacles they had just outlined. “If Jin-san believes it is even remotely feasible to create the necessary cover,” he said, his voice steady, “and if a credible opportunity, however slim, can be found or made… then yes, Hiiragi-san. I am. Because, frankly,” he looked around at their tired, hunted faces, “I see no other way to even begin to fight back against what they are doing. We are currently reacting. This… this is an attempt, however desperate, however insane, to act.”
Michiru sniffled quietly, wiping a tear from her eye, but she said nothing more, her earlier protestations silenced by the grim, undeniable logic of their desperate situation.
Kyouya let out a long, slow breath. “The potential for catastrophic failure,” he stated, his voice flat, “is exceptionally high. The probability of your survival, Ainsworth, should you be discovered, is effectively zero.”
“I am aware of that, Onodera-san,” Arthur replied, his own voice equally devoid of emotion. “I have been living on borrowed time since the moment I arrived in this world. Perhaps it’s time I tried to make that borrowed time… count for something more than just my own continued, miserable existence.”
A new kind of silence fell upon the group then, no longer the silence of stunned disbelief, but the heavy, contemplative silence of individuals weighing the terrible, almost unbearable price of a desperate, fragile, and perhaps entirely illusory hope. The fire had burned low, casting long, flickering shadows that danced like accusing spectres on the damp cave walls. The decision had not yet been made, but the first, terrifying steps onto a new, even more perilous path, had been irrevocably taken.
The lunchtime encounter with Nana Hiiragi left Arthur feeling raw and exposed. Her ability to mask her true nature behind such a dazzling facade of innocent charm was profoundly unsettling. He knew, with a certainty that settled like a stone in his gut, that she had filed away every detail of his fabricated “vision,” and would be dissecting it for any hint of threat or exploitable weakness. His decision to put himself forward for class representative now felt even more reckless, but also, paradoxically, more necessary. He needed to understand how she operated in a position of influence, however minor.
The day and a half leading up to the vote was an uncomfortable lesson in social dynamics for Arthur. The other serious contender, Inori Tamaki, the sharp-eyed girl with the severe ponytail, campaigned with earnest efficiency. She spoke logically about her organizational skills, her desire for a fair and well-run class, and her commitment to representing student concerns to the teachers. She garnered a respectable amount of quiet support from the more studious and pragmatic members of the class.
Then there was Nana Hiiragi. She didn’t so much “campaign” as weave a subtle, irresistible web of charm. She seemed to be everywhere at once, a whirlwind of perfectly pitched compliments and thoughtful gestures. She learned names with astonishing speed, remembered trivial details about classmates’ hobbies – a favorite manga series here, a struggling subject there – and offered to help with homework (though Arthur, watching closely, noticed she often then subtly delegated the actual work to other admirers). When she spoke to someone, she made them feel like they were, for that moment, the most important, most interesting person in the room. Her promises for her tenure as class representative were vague but universally appealing – a more fun, more inclusive class environment, more activities, a stronger sense of unity. It was a masterful performance, and Arthur, watching her, felt a kind of horrified admiration. She was a natural politician, a born manipulator wrapped in a veneer of utterly adorable sincerity.
Arthur’s own “campaign,” by stark contrast, was a masterclass in awkwardness. He made no speeches, offered no grand promises. His efforts consisted mostly of him standing near groups of students during breaks, occasionally offering a stilted, phone-translated comment if directly addressed, or a clumsy nod if someone caught his eye. He’d initially entertained the idea of trying to rally some support, perhaps making a vague, unsettling promise about using his “Chrono-Empathic Glimpse” for the vague benefit of the class’s future, but the words felt hollow, dangerous, and far too likely to backfire. His primary reason for even putting his name forward remained largely internal: to observe Nana more closely as she vied for influence, and perhaps, in some small, almost imperceptible way, to signal to Nanao Nakajima – who seemed to shrink visibly whenever the topic of leadership arose – that not everyone who sought a position of authority was an overwhelming force of charisma. He’d hoped his own unlikely, ill-equipped candidacy might make Nanao feel slightly less isolated in his timidity.
Nana, naturally, with her acute social antennae, noticed his continued, if quiet, presence in the running. During a break between classes, as Arthur was trying to decipher a particularly complex kanji in his textbook, she approached his desk, her expression one of perfectly crafted, almost sisterly concern.
“Tanaka-kun,” she began, her voice soft and melodious, “I was just thinking… are you absolutely sure you want the burden of being class representative? It really does take up so much time, you know, with meetings and organizing things. And there’s an awful lot of… well, social effort involved.” She tilted her head, her violet eyes wide with feigned sympathy. “With your communication being through your phone, it might be terribly stressful for you. I’d hate to see you overwhelmed.”
Arthur met her gaze for a moment, seeing the glint of calculation behind the concern. He looked down at his phone, typed a brief reply. “Responsibility is… sometimes necessary, Hiiragi-san,” the synthesized voice stated, deliberately opaque. He didn’t elaborate.
Nana’s smile didn’t falter, but he saw a new flicker of something – annoyance? Reassessment? – in her eyes. “Of course, Tanaka-kun,” she said smoothly, her voice still dripping with false sweetness. “Just looking out for a fellow new student.” She gave a little wave and flitted off to charm another group.
Over the next twenty-four hours, Arthur began to notice subtle shifts in how other students interacted with him. When he tried to join a conversation, even with his phone ready, one of the participants would suddenly remember an urgent task elsewhere. He overheard snippets – or rather, his phone, with its microphone active, caught stray Japanese phrases that it dutifully translated on his screen when he reviewed the ambient audio later: “Tanaka-kun is a bit… strange, isn’t he? Always so quiet, with that machine…” or “Can we really rely on someone who needs a phone to talk for him to speak for us?” and even, more pointedly, “I heard his ‘Talent’ makes him moody and unpredictable. What if he has a bad ‘glimpse’ about a class trip or something?”
The comments were always deniable, never directly attributable to Nana, but their timing was impeccable, their effect insidious. She was isolating him, not with overt aggression, but with carefully planted seeds of doubt and discomfort, painting him as an unreliable eccentric. It was unnervingly effective. He felt a knot of unease tighten in his stomach; he’d hoped to remain a minor curiosity, but her actions suggested she was already taking him more seriously, as a potential irritant, than he liked. This wasn't just about winning a symbolic vote for her; it was about ensuring no unpredictable elements, however minor, remained within her sphere of influence. She was methodically clearing the board.
Finally, the last period of the next day arrived. Mr. Saito, with his usual slightly flustered cheerfulness, produced a small, slotted wooden box. “Alright class,” he announced, rubbing his hands together. “Time to cast your votes for your new class representative! Please write the name of your chosen candidate clearly on the slip of paper I’ll provide, fold it once, and then come up to place it in the ballot box.”
Small slips of paper were distributed. Arthur stared at his for a moment. He had no illusions about his own chances, nor, if he was honest with himself, did he particularly want the job. His candidacy had served its quiet, observational purpose. He carefully wrote ‘Inori Tamaki’ in hesitant katakana, then folded the paper. As the students filed up row by row to deposit their votes, he watched Nana. She dropped her own slip into the box with a confident, radiant smile, even offering a cheerful little wave to Mr. Saito, who beamed back.
The counting was swift and public. Mr. Saito, with the surprisingly willing assistance of Inori Tamaki herself (a sign of her own good sportsmanship, Arthur thought, or perhaps a subtle power play by Saito to demonstrate impartiality), tallied the votes on the chalkboard. The chalk clicked with a steady rhythm.
The results were, to Arthur, hardly surprising, though the decisiveness was still a little startling. Inori Tamaki: 8 votes. Kenji Tanaka: 1 vote. (Arthur felt a small, inexplicable pang. He suspected, with a strange mixture of gratitude and embarrassment, that it was a pity vote from Nanao Nakajima, or perhaps even a mistake by someone else.) Nana Hiiragi: 21 votes. (The remaining students in their class of thirty).
“And the winner, by a very significant majority, is Hiiragi Nana-san!” Mr. Saito declared, leading a vigorous round of applause. “Congratulations, Hiiragi-san!”
Nana beamed, her eyes sparkling as she stood to accept the accolade, bowing graciously to the class. “Thank you, everyone! Thank you so much! I promise I’ll do my very best to represent you all and help make this a truly fantastic and memorable year for us all!” Her voice was full of earnest sincerity.
Arthur felt a strange cocktail of emotions. There was an undeniable surge of relief; the thought of actually having to perform the duties of class representative, with his profound communication handicap and utter lack of understanding of their school’s social labyrinth, was daunting. But beneath that relief was a profound, chilling sense of unease. Nana’s victory had been a foregone conclusion from the moment she’d entered the classroom, but the subtle, almost surgically precise way she had neutralized him as even a token competitor was a stark lesson. He had wanted to understand how she operated, and he’d received a masterclass in social engineering and covert manipulation. The downside was now glaringly clear: he was definitely, irrevocably on her radar, marked as someone who didn’t quite fit, someone who had, however ineptly and briefly, stood in the path of her ambition.
“And in other exciting news,” Mr. Saito continued, his voice full of oblivious good cheer after the applause for Nana had finally died down, “please do remember that at the end of this school year, we’ll be having our traditional leaving party for those students who might be moving on to other pursuits! It’s always a wonderful highlight of the academic calendar, a chance to celebrate our achievements together!”
Arthur almost snorted aloud, a bitter, mirthless sound he barely managed to suppress. A leaving party. The irony was a palpable, acrid taste in his mouth. There would be plenty of students “leaving” this island well before the end of the year, he knew with a sickening certainty, and their departures would be anything but voluntary or celebratory. He glanced at Nanao, who was looking at the newly elected Class Representative Hiiragi with an expression of timid, almost hero-worshipping admiration. Arthur’s jaw tightened. He might have lost this meaningless vote, but the real struggle, the one for Nanao’s life and the lives of so many others in this classroom, had barely begun. He had to be smarter, more careful, and somehow find a way to use his terrible, fragmented knowledge before it was too late. And Nana Hiiragi, now armed with a modicum of official power, would be watching his every move.
Another pointless poster
Arthur awoke slowly, his head throbbing with a dull, persistent ache, to find himself not on the cold, windswept cliff edge where he had collapsed, but tucked into the surprisingly comfortable confines of his own narrow dormitory bed. For a disorienting, heart-stopping moment, he thought the previous day’s extraordinary, impossible events – Michiru’s miraculous return from apparent death, Nana’s shattering emotional breakdown – had been nothing more than a vivid, desperate hallucination, a final, merciful product of his unravelling, exhausted mind. Then, a soft, hesitant voice, fragile as new spring leaves but blessedly, undeniably real, spoke his island name.
“Tanaka-kun? Are you… are you awake now?”
He turned his head, his stiff muscles protesting with every small movement. Michiru Inukai sat in a rickety wooden chair that had been pulled up beside his bed, a chipped teacup containing water held carefully in her small, still frail hands. She was terribly pale and gaunt, an ethereal, almost translucent waif-like figure, but her gentle, unmistakable eyes, though shadowed with a profound fatigue, were clear, lucid, and undeniably, wonderfully alive. A shy, almost hesitant, yet incredibly precious smile touched her lips when she saw him looking at her. The sight of her, truly, tangibly alive and present in the mundane, familiar reality of his small dorm room, sent a jolt of profound, overwhelming relief through him, so potent it brought an unexpected, embarrassing sting to his eyes.
“Michiru…” he rasped, his own voice hoarse, cracked, and unfamiliar even to his own ears. He tried to push himself up into a sitting position.
“Easy now, Tanaka-kun,” she said, her voice still weak but infused with a gentle, soothing warmth as she helped him prop himself awkwardly against the thin, lumpy pillows. “You were… very, very exhausted. Nana-chan and I… we managed to bring you back here after you fainted. Nana-chan was very worried about you, you know.”
Nana. The memory of her raw, uncharacteristic breakdown at the cliff, her tearful, fragmented, almost incoherent confession, her utter, soul-deep devastation at seeing Michiru alive, returned to him with a fresh jolt. He looked past Michiru’s concerned, gentle face and saw Nana Hiiragi herself standing awkwardly, uncertainly, in the doorway of his room. Her usually vibrant pink hair was slightly dishevelled, her bright school uniform rumpled and bearing faint traces of mud from the cliff path. Her usual effervescent, almost manic cheerfulness was entirely, strikingly absent, replaced by a hesitant, almost timid, and deeply uncertain expression. Her violet eyes, usually sparkling with mischief or cold, hard calculation, were red-rimmed, swollen, and shadowed with a new, unfamiliar vulnerability. The dynamic between the three of them, Arthur realized with a growing sense of profound unease and weary, almost resigned acceptance, was now irrevocably, seismically altered, suspended in a strange, fragile, and deeply, profoundly uncomfortable new reality.
The official explanation for Michiru Inukai’s miraculous return from the “dead” was, when it came, as predictably flimsy and insultingly inadequate as Arthur had expected. A few days after the incident at the cliff, once Michiru was deemed strong enough to leave the infirmary (where she had been kept under observation, much to Nana’s now fiercely protective, almost possessive anxiety), a visibly flustered and deeply uncomfortable Mr. Saito made a brief, stammering announcement during morning homeroom. He explained, his voice cracking several times, that there had been a “most regrettable and unfortunate series of diagnostic errors” by a “very junior, inexperienced mainland doctor” who had initially, and incorrectly, pronounced Michiru-san deceased following her sudden, severe illness at the end of the previous term. Further, more thorough examinations by the island’s own “more experienced medical staff,” he’d continued, his gaze skittering nervously around the room, had revealed that Michiru-san had merely been in a “profoundly deep, coma-like state” from which, through the miracle of modern medical science and her own youthful resilience, she had now, thankfully, fully recovered. “A simple, yet almost tragic, misdiagnosis, class,” was the best, most pathetic explanation the homeroom teacher could apparently come up with, his face slick with nervous sweat.
Michiru being alive again, having been officially declared dead and her passing mourned (however briefly and superficially by most), certainly surprised a few of the more observant pupils in the class. There were some whispered exclamations, a few wide-eyed, incredulous stares directed at the pale but smiling Michiru. Arthur watched their reactions with a kind of detached, weary cynicism. Back in England, back in his old life, such an event – a person returning from the dead after weeks, months even! – would have been a nine-day wonder, a media sensation, a cause for profound existential debate. Here, on this island where the bizarre was rapidly becoming the mundane, where death was a casual acquaintance and survival a daily struggle… well. Not that the surprise, the mild titillation, lasted very long. Within half an hour, Arthur noted with a grimace, talk among the students had soon moved on to more immediately “interesting” and pressing topics, like who had managed to hoard an extra bread roll from breakfast, or the latest outrageous rumour about Commandant Ide’s new, even more draconian camp rules back on the mainland (as news of the internment camps had, by now, become common, if terrifying, knowledge). This strange, unending, almost timeless May, which had now bled into a sweltering, oppressive early summer on the island, felt so utterly disconnected from any concept of season, or normalcy, or rational human behavior he had ever known; it was just an endless, surreal expanse of dread, punctuated by moments of sheer, stark insanity.
Over the next few days, as Arthur slowly regained his own physical strength and Michiru continued her own gradual, delicate, yet steady recovery – a process that seemed to draw on some deep, internal, almost inexhaustible wellspring of her miraculous healing Talent – an unsettling new tension, a different, more insidious kind of menace, began to grip the island. The already dwindling food supplies in the school canteen started to diminish with an alarming, noticeable rapidity, just as Arthur had grimly “predicted” to Kyouya Onodera weeks before. At first, it was subtle, almost deniable: the portions became slightly, almost imperceptibly smaller, the more popular, palatable dishes ran out much quicker, the once-generous fruit bowls looked suspiciously less bountiful. Then, the choices became starkly, undeniably more limited, the quality of what little was available noticeably, appallingly poorer. The usual comforting, if unexciting, variety of snacks and drinks in the small, usually well-stocked school store vanished almost overnight, replaced by sparsely, almost grudgingly stocked shelves displaying dusty, unappetizing, and often near-expired items.
The teachers, led by a visibly stressed, increasingly harassed, and clearly out-of-his-depth Mr. Saito, offered a series of vague, unconvincing, and often wildly contradictory explanations: unforeseen, severe logistical problems with the regular mainland supply ships; unexpected, unseasonable, and particularly violent storms delaying crucial deliveries; sudden, inexplicable, and entirely unforeseeable issues with their long-standing mainland procurement contracts. Their excuses sounded hollow, almost insultingly flimsy, even to the most naive or least suspicious students. A low, anxious hum of discontent, of fear, began to spread like a contagion through the dormitories. Whispers of hunger, of being forgotten and abandoned by the outside world, of the island’s carefully maintained, picturesque isolation becoming a terrifying, inescapable, and potentially lethal trap, grew louder, more insistent, more desperate with each passing, increasingly meagre, unsatisfying mealtime.
Arthur watched it all with a grim, weary sense of vindication, the bitter taste of unwelcome prescience like ash in his mouth. He saw Kyouya Onodera observing the rapidly deteriorating situation with a keen, coldly analytical, almost predatory gaze, their earlier, urgent conversation in the dusty library clearly at the forefront of his sharp, calculating mind. Kyouya began to spend more of his free time away from the main school buildings, his movements quiet, purposeful, almost furtive, as if he were methodically scouting for alternative, hidden resources or making discreet, necessary preparations for a coming siege that Arthur wasn’t yet privy to. He would occasionally catch Kyouya’s eye across the increasingly tense, half-empty canteen, a silent, almost imperceptible nod passing between them – a grim, unspoken acknowledgment of Arthur’s unwelcome, terrifying prescience.
Nana Hiiragi, too, seemed to view the unfolding, manufactured crisis through new, deeply troubled, and profoundly disillusioned eyes. Her emotional implosion at the cliff edge, her raw, unfiltered confrontation with her own buried guilt and manipulated past, had irrevocably cracked her carefully constructed facade of cheerful, unquestioning obedience. While she hadn’t confessed the full, horrifying extent of her past actions as Tsuruoka’s assassin to either Arthur or Michiru, her interactions with Michiru, in particular, were now tinged with a fierce, almost desperate, suffocating protectiveness and a profound, soul-deep, sorrowful guilt. When the teachers stammered their increasingly unconvincing, almost pathetic excuses for the rapidly dwindling food supplies, Arthur saw Nana listening with a deep, thoughtful frown, a dangerous flicker of bitter doubt and dawning, angry understanding in her expressive violet eyes. Perhaps, he thought with a sliver of grim hope, she was finally, truly beginning to see the callous, manipulative, bloodstained strings of the Committee she had served so blindly, so devotedly, for so tragically long. Perhaps she was beginning to question the supposed benevolence, the absolute authority, of the monstrous Commander Tsuruoka.
“This is precisely what I told you would happen, Onodera,” Arthur said quietly to Kyouya one evening, his limited Japanese surprisingly steady, his voice low and urgent, as they stood observing a near-riot that had broken out with shocking suddenness in the canteen over the last few pathetic, fought-over servings of stale, mould-flecked bread. Several desperate, starving students were shouting, pushing, their faces pinched and pale with hunger and a growing, frightening, animalistic desperation. “The Committee. They’re tightening the screws, deliberately, methodically, applying unbearable pressure.”
Kyouya Onodera nodded, his chiselled expression grim, his pale eyes as hard and cold as flint. “Your foresight, Tanaka,” he said, his voice a low, dangerous rumble, “continues to be distressingly, if predictably, and I must admit, increasingly useful, accurate. They create desperation, they foster internal division, then they will undoubtedly offer just enough insufficient relief to maintain a semblance of control, all while callously, dispassionately observing how we react – who breaks under the pressure, who fights for scraps, who leads, who crumbles. It is a classic, if particularly cruel and inhumane, method of psychological assessment and brutal social control.”
And indeed, just as Kyouya had so cynically predicted, just as tensions in the camp reached a fever pitch, when open, violent fights were beginning to break out with alarming regularity over hoarded scraps of often inedible food and genuine, gnawing, debilitating fear had taken firm, unshakeable root in the hearts of even the most optimistic or naive students, a supply ship was finally, dramatically, sighted on the distant horizon. A wave of ragged, desperate, almost hysterical cheers went up from the starving students. But it was, as Kyouya had so accurately predicted Arthur would have foreseen, far, far too little, and far, far too late to fully alleviate the worsening, deliberately manufactured problem. The shipment that was eventually, grudgingly unloaded onto the pier was significantly smaller than usual, the quality of the provisions noticeably, insultingly poorer – mostly low-grade dried goods, suspiciously discoloured preserved vegetables, and very little in the way of fresh produce, protein, or medical supplies. It was just enough to prevent outright, widespread starvation, just enough to quell the immediate, simmering panic and prevent a full-scale, violent breakdown of order. But it was not nearly enough to restore any sense of security, or to dispel the growing, chilling, terrifying realization among the more astute students that their very survival was fragile, tenuous, entirely dependent on the cruel, capricious whims of unseen, uncaring, and utterly malevolent forces who could withdraw their meager lifeline at will.
The Committee’s manipulative, bloodstained hand was subtle, almost invisible to the untrained eye, but to Arthur, and now to Kyouya and perhaps even Nana, it was undeniably, chillingly apparent. They were master puppeteers, coolly, dispassionately orchestrating events from afar, content to let hunger, fear, and profound desperation do their brutal, dehumanizing work, systematically weeding out the weak, identifying potential threats or future assets, all under the carefully constructed, plausible guise of unfortunate, unavoidable, and entirely unforeseen logistical circumstances.
Michiru Inukai, though still physically weak from her own miraculous, near-fatal ordeal, instinctively, selflessly shared her meagre, often insufficient portions with those students she felt were more in need, particularly the younger, more frightened ones, her innate, unwavering kindness a small, flickering, precious candle of compassion in the rapidly encroaching darkness of their desperate, deteriorating situation. Nana Hiiragi, her own internal, unspoken torment a constant, silent, brooding companion, often, almost furtively, supplemented Michiru’s share with her own, a quiet, almost unconscious act of profound, desperate atonement, her gaze when she looked at Michiru a complex, almost painful mixture of overwhelming guilt, profound awe, and a fierce, new-found, almost suffocating protectiveness.
Arthur Ainsworth, watching them both, felt a strange, almost imperceptible, yet undeniable shift in the island’s oppressive, death-haunted atmosphere. Nana’s murderous, Committee-ordained crusade, for the moment at least, seemed to be on hold, overshadowed, perhaps even temporarily derailed, by this new, more widespread, and insidious threat of starvation, and by the profound, ongoing emotional upheaval of Michiru Inukai’s impossible, miraculous return. But he knew, with a weary, bone-deep certainty, that the Committee’s cruel, inhuman game was far from over. This was merely a new, more subtle, perhaps even more sadistic phase, a different kind of insidious pressure designed to test them all, to break them down, to see what, if anything, of value emerged from the unforgiving, brutal crucible of manufactured desperation. And Arthur suspected, with a cold, sickening dread that settled deep in the marrow of his bones, that the tests, the trials, the suffering, were only just beginning, and were destined to get harder, more brutal, and far more unforgiving.