In the chaotic, fear-drenched aftermath of Nana Hiiragi’s public unmasking and the subsequent savage beating by her terrified peers, a semblance of grim, heavily enforced order was slowly, painfully restored on the island by the few remaining, deeply shaken teachers and a grimly determined, stone-faced Kyouya Onodera. Nana, battered, bruised, and her spirit utterly shattered, was confined to the stark, unwelcoming island infirmary under the constant, wary guard of two stern-faced school orderlies. Her future, everyone assumed, would involve mainland authorities and a lengthy prison sentence, if not worse.
Akari Hozumi, the quiet, intense catalyst for this brutal upheaval, meticulously compiled her damning findings – detailed witness statements elicited with her unnerving, truth-compelling Talent, her own chillingly precise forensic reconstructions of multiple murder scenes, and the fragmented, tearful, partial confession Nana herself had made amidst the chaos by the lake. As soon as the next heavily guarded transport to the mainland was available, Akari, clutching her meticulously organized dossier of irrefutable evidence, departed the island, her expression one of grim, unwavering satisfaction. She presented everything to a Detective Maeda at the nearest mainland police precinct, a man whose calm, reassuring professionalism and apparent dedication to justice she found commendable. She was entirely unaware, of course, that Detective Maeda’s calm professionalism was bought and paid for, his primary loyalty sworn not to the law, but to the shadowy, all-powerful Commander Tsuruoka. Maeda assured Akari Hozumi that the matter would be investigated with the utmost thoroughness and urgency, then, as soon as she had departed, he promptly contacted Tsuruoka, who listened to the report with cold, silent interest. For the moment, Tsuruoka decided, it was best to let the official police investigation stall, to become mired in bureaucratic delays. He preferred to deal with his now dangerously rogue asset, Nana Hiiragi, personally, and far more… creatively.
A few disorienting days later, Nana, still nursing her extensive physical injuries and her profoundly fractured spirit, was abruptly, unceremoniously removed from the island infirmary by a team of silent, black-clad Committee agents. She was transported, not to a mainland hospital or a secure police detention facility as she had expected, but back to the cold, sterile, and deeply foreboding confines of Commander Tsuruoka’s isolated military base.
The debriefing, when it came after hours of being left alone in a featureless, windowless interrogation room, was a masterclass in psychological torture. Tsuruoka didn’t bother with pretenses, with veiled threats or subtle manipulations this time. He flayed Nana’s psyche with cold, surgical precision, recounting in meticulous, agonizing detail the horrific circumstances of her parents' tragic deaths, subtly, cruelly twisting the known facts to imply her own childish culpability, her inherent monstrosity, her predisposition to violence. He spoke with chilling calm of her myriad failures on the island, her rapidly declining kill rate, her inexplicable and operationally disastrous sentimentality towards certain targets, her ultimate, unforgivable betrayal of the Committee’s trust by allowing herself to be so comprehensively, so humiliatingly, exposed.
“But perhaps,” Tsuruoka said at last, his voice a silken, venomous whisper that seemed to slither into the deepest recesses of her mind, “you simply lack the proper, fundamental motivation, Hiiragi. Perhaps you’ve forgotten what it is we are truly, desperately fighting against in this shadow war.” He stood, his movements precise and economical. “Come with me. It is long past time for a… refresher course. A practical lesson in the true nature of our enemy.”
Flanked by two heavily armed, impassive guards whose faces she didn’t recognize, Nana, her body aching, her mind reeling, was escorted out of the interrogation room and down a long, blindingly white, sterile passageway deep within the bowels of the facility. The air was cold, recycled, smelling faintly of strong antiseptic and something else, something metallic and vaguely unsettling. As they passed a series of heavy, unmarked steel doors, one was inexplicably, fractionally ajar. Through the narrow gap, Nana caught a fleeting, disorienting glimpse of a figure inside a dimly lit observation room – a pale-faced man with stark white hair, his features indistinct in the gloom, who seemed entirely out of place amongst the banks of complex monitoring equipment. The man’s eyes, cold and piercing, met hers for a single, unnerving, unforgettable split second, a look of unreadable, almost alien intensity, before he slowly, deliberately, closed the door, plunging the room back into darkness. “Eyes front, Hiiragi! Maintain your composure!” Tsuruoka barked sharply from ahead, his voice echoing in the sterile corridor. Nana didn’t know it, couldn’t possibly have known it, but she had just seen Jin Tachibana – or rather, Kyouya Onodera’s sister, Rin, in her male disguise, a fellow prisoner or perhaps even an unwilling operative within Tsuruoka’s monstrous machine.
They arrived at a heavy, reinforced steel door at the end of the long corridor. Tsuruoka paused, then, with a faint, almost anticipatory smile, he opened it, revealing another vast, white, sterile room. In its exact centre, illuminated by harsh, shadowless overhead lights, stood a large, heavily barred cage, constructed of thick, gleaming metal alloys. Inside, a creature of impossible, nightmarish geometry writhed and pulsed, its form shifting and coalescing in ways that defied sanity and the known laws of physics. It was an abomination, vaguely, disturbingly humanoid in its basic outline, but utterly, terrifyingly alien in its execution, a living воплощение of a madman’s darkest fever dream.
“This, Nana,” Tsuruoka said, his voice resonating with a strange, almost proprietary pride as he ushered her and the two guards into the room, the heavy door hissing shut behind them with a sound of absolute finality. “This is what we’re fighting against. This is the true face of our enemy.” “What… what is it?” Nana whispered, her voice trembling, her eyes fixed in horrified fascination on the grotesque, shifting entity in the cage. “The Enemy of Humanity,” Tsuruoka replied, his tone matter-of-fact. Just then, the monster in the cage stirred, its multi-jointed, chitinous limbs twitching, and a horrifying, guttural, stuttering voice, like stones grinding together, echoed in the stark, white room: “H…help… me… Please…” Tsuruoka’s face tightened in a brief spasm of annoyance. He gave a curt, almost imperceptible nod to one of the guards, then gestured dismissively for Nana and the other guard to follow him out. As they exited the room, Nana heard faint, high-pitched, almost childlike screeching from within, abruptly, sickeningly, cut short. The door hissed shut behind them, sealing the horror within.
Tsuruoka, his composure perfectly restored, led them to another identical steel door, further down the echoing corridor. He pushed it open without ceremony. Inside this second room, the immediate, overwhelming stench of stale blood, chemical disinfectants, and visceral decay made Nana gag and her stomach heave. Another reinforced cage stood in the centre, containing a different, though equally grotesque and pitiable, monster. But this room was far worse than the first. It was a charnel house. The corpses of several uniformed Committee guards lay strewn haphazardly across the tiled floor, their bodies mangled, their weapons discarded. And lining the walls, stacked three deep, were rows upon rows of ominous, filled black body bags.
Tsuruoka, seemingly oblivious to the carnage and the stench, strode purposefully over to one of the body bags on the nearest stack and, with a theatrical flourish, unzipped it. Nana’s breath caught in her throat, a strangled, horrified gasp. Inside, lay the lifeless, greyish-white, waxy form of Etsuko, one of the female bullies Nana had so clinically, so callously, poisoned with tainted contact lenses during her first year on the island. Her eyes were wide, staring, her expression frozen in a silent scream of terror.
“I believe you know this girl, Hiiragi?” Tsuruoka stated, his voice cold, almost conversational. Wide-eyed with a dawning, sickening horror, Nana could only nod, backing away instinctively. The remaining guard, his face impassive, grabbed her arm in an iron grip, forcing her closer to the horrifying display. “A very… creative and deniable method of elimination, this one,” Tsuruoka mused, tapping the body bag thoughtfully. “A clear victory for you at the time, Hiiragi, a demonstration of your early potential. Though your operational record has, I must say, slipped quite considerably since then.” He gestured to Etsuko’s corpse. “Now, touch the body.” Nana recoiled, trying to pull her arm free, but the guard tightened his brutal grip, his fingers digging into her flesh, forcing her reluctant hand onto Etsuko’s cold, unnervingly clammy skin. Nana snatched her hand back as if burned, a small, choked cry escaping her lips. “Still warm, isn’t she?” Tsuruoka said, a predatory, almost gleeful smile playing on his lips. “That’s because, you see, whatever arcane, unfortunate force creates a person’s Talent also keeps them… lingering, their essence tethered, even when they appear quite dead to our conventional, unenlightened eyes. And eventually…” He gestured dramatically towards the gibbering, miserable monster currently confined in the cage. “…that is what they invariably become. No matter how many times you ‘kill’ them, Hiiragi, no matter how thoroughly you believe you have extinguished their lives, they just won’t truly, permanently die. They transform.” He strode over and casually kicked another body bag, then another, some of them showing clear evidence of multiple, massive gunshot wounds, others bearing the marks of even more esoteric, violent ends. “And yet, their bodies, their core temperature, remains inexplicably, unnaturally warm. This, my dear Nana, is the true, horrifying nature of our enemy. This is what we’re truly up against. And you, Nana,” his voice hardened, “you have failed. Badly. Profoundly. Perhaps The Committee no longer has any use for you. Perhaps it’s time you were… discarded. Like your unfortunate, less effective predecessors.”
He walked calmly towards the reinforced steel door. “Perhaps a more… direct lesson is required for you to fully appreciate the stakes.” He opened the door. “Guard!” he barked. “Open the cage!” The remaining Committee guard, his face suddenly pale with stark, unconcealed terror, stammered, his voice cracking, “N-no, sir! I can’t! You know what will happen if… if that thing gets out unrestrained! It’s too dangerous!” Tsuruoka, his patience clearly, finally, at an end, his eyes glinting with cold, murderous displeasure, drew his sidearm with blinding speed and shot the disobedient guard through the head without a moment’s hesitation. The man crumpled to the floor in a heap, his eyes wide with surprise and sudden, terminal understanding. “That,” Tsuruoka said, his voice chillingly calm as he holstered his weapon, “is the inevitable price of failing The Committee, Hiiragi. A lesson you would do well to internalize.” With that, he raised his weapon again, aimed it carefully at the cage’s complex locking mechanism, and fired twice, shattering it. He then stepped swiftly out of the room, a grim, satisfied smile playing on his lips, and the heavy steel door slammed shut behind him, its locks engaging with a series of definitive, echoing thuds. Nana Hiiragi was trapped. Alone. With a monster.
The grotesque “Enemy of Humanity” in the now-open cage let out a deafening, ear-splitting screech, a sound that seemed to resonate with all the pain and madness in the universe. “THIS IS WHAT EVERYONE BECOMES!” it shrieked, its voice a horrifying, discordant chorus of countless suffering souls. “THIS IS YOUR FUTURE! OUR FUTURE!” And then, with terrifying speed and agility, it launched itself at Nana.
The fight was a desperate, brutal, almost primal struggle for survival in the bloody, gore-strewn charnel house Tsuruoka had so callously, so deliberately, created as her final, horrifying classroom. Nana, driven by a surge of pure, undiluted adrenaline and a fierce, unyielding will to live, used every ounce of her assassin’s training, her agility, her cunning, her sheer desperation. The creature was inhumanly strong, terrifyingly relentless, its attacks bizarre, unpredictable, and sickeningly violent. Finally, after what felt like an eternity of pain, fear, and brutal exertion, Nana, bleeding from numerous deep wounds, her body screaming in protest, managed to exploit a momentary weakness in the creature’s defense, using a jagged shard of metal she’d wrenched from the broken cage lock to deliver a decisive, severing blow to the monstrous entity’s primary neural cluster, or what she desperately hoped was its equivalent. It collapsed with a final, gurgling shriek, its unnatural form dissolving into a viscous, rapidly evaporating ichor.
Exhausted beyond measure, bleeding freely from numerous wounds, but astonishingly, miraculously alive, Nana frantically, desperately searched for an escape route from the horrifying, sealed room. Her eyes, wild with adrenaline and a dawning, desperate hope, fell upon a small, almost hidden maintenance hatch set high in one of the walls. With the last of her strength, she managed to reach it, pry it open, and narrowly, miraculously, bypassed a series of sophisticated security measures within the narrow, suffocating crawlspace beyond. Somehow, running on sheer, unadulterated will, she managed to flee the nightmarish facility. She emerged, hours later, into the indifferent, sprawling anonymity of the vast, uncaring city, a wounded, traumatized, and hunted fugitive, her illusions shattered, her understanding of the world, of Talents, of good and evil, irrevocably, horrifically, and permanently altered.
Back on the distant, isolated island, life – or what passed for it in the wake of Nana’s dramatic exposure and removal – continued in a state of uneasy, fearful chaos. Arthur Ainsworth watched the fallout, the fear and anger amongst the surviving students slowly, inevitably giving way to a confused, rudderless, and deeply pervasive anxiety. He was entirely unaware of Nana’s current, even more horrific ordeal at the hands of Commander Tsuruoka, entirely unaware that she was now on the run, her entire worldview, her very sanity, demolished. He only knew that Nana Hiiragi, the island’s most prolific, most dangerous, and most enigmatic killer, was gone, and the future, for himself and for everyone else trapped in this terrible, unending game, was now more uncertain, more perilous, and more terrifying than ever before.
Nana is an evil little bitch
Would be even better if Nana is killed by someone she trusted. Would be nicely ironic
The fire in the damp cave crackled, spitting a shower of orange sparks into the heavy, charged silence that followed Arthur Ainsworth’s almost whispered invitation. For a long moment, no one spoke. The only sound was the distant, ceaseless roar of the hidden waterfall, a monotonous, indifferent rush of water that seemed to echo the vast, empty chasm of disbelief his words had torn open in their reality. Nana Hiiragi stared at him, her expression a battlefield of warring emotions: shock, anger, a dawning, horrified comprehension, and beneath it all, a flicker of something else – a desperate, almost unwilling hope. Kyouya Onodera’s usually impassive features were tight with a focused, almost predatory intensity, his mind clearly working at furious speed to process, dissect, and analyze the impossible. Michiru Inukai looked pale and stricken, her gentle eyes wide with a mixture of fear and a deep, compassionate sorrow for the sheer, unbelievable weight Arthur must have been carrying. Even Jin Tachibana, his enigmatic calm usually an impenetrable shield, seemed to regard Arthur with a new, sharp, almost piercing alertness.
It was Kyouya who finally broke the spell, his voice preternaturally calm, yet with an underlying edge as sharp as the makeshift blade resting by his side. “Ainsworth-san,” he began, the use of Arthur’s true surname a deliberate, pointed acknowledgement of the new reality between them. “You claim this… ‘story’… this ‘Munō na Nana’… it accurately depicted events on the island, events involving us, with a specificity that allowed you to make your… ‘predictions.’ How can you be certain this wasn’t merely a series of astute observations on your part, perhaps amplified by a genuine, if limited, precognitive Talent you are now choosing to deny for reasons of your own?” It was a logical, almost lawyerly challenge, an attempt to find a more rational, if still extraordinary, explanation.
Arthur met his gaze squarely. “Because, Onodera-san,” he said, his voice weary but firm, his Japanese surprisingly steady, “the details were too specific. Not just the ‘who’ but often the ‘how,’ sometimes even snatches of dialogue, internal motivations of characters that I couldn’t possibly have guessed. The sequence of Nana-san’s targets in that first year, for example, the methods she employed… many were almost identical to what I remembered from this… this narrative.” He paused. “And believe me, if I actually possessed a genuine Talent for seeing the future, I would likely have managed this entire horrifying situation with considerably more competence and far fewer… casualties.” The self-deprecating bitterness in his tone was palpable.
Nana spoke next, her voice low, hoarse, almost raw. “This… ‘Nana’… in your story. You said she… she changed. That she started to… to save Talents? That she wanted to destroy Tsuruoka?” There was a desperate, almost hungry intensity in her eyes. “Did it say how? Did it show her succeeding? What else did it say about… about what I became?”
Arthur looked at her, his heart aching with a complex pity. “The story, as I said, was ongoing when I… left my time. It showed her making that profound shift, yes. Driven by… well, by events similar to what you yourself experienced, Nana-san. By betrayal, by the realization of Tsuruoka’s true nature, by the influence of… of someone like Michiru-san.” He glanced at Michiru, who flushed slightly. “She became fiercely determined to dismantle everything Tsuruoka had built. As for how she went about it, or if she ultimately succeeded… those were parts of the story I never got to see. It was, as you might say, a continuing serial. I only had access to the ‘published volumes’ up to a certain point.” He hesitated. “It did show her becoming… incredibly ruthless in her pursuit of Tsuruoka. Almost as ruthless as she had been when serving him.”
“And my parents?” Nana pressed, her voice barely a whisper now. “The story… it truly said Tsuruoka arranged their murders? That they weren’t… my fault?”
“It was unequivocally clear on that point,” Arthur affirmed gently. “They were good people who opposed him. He had them eliminated and then, with sickening cruelty, manipulated you into believing you were responsible, to break you and bind you to him. That was a central, tragic element of your character’s backstory in the narrative.”
Nana closed her eyes, a single tear escaping and tracing a path through the grime on her cheek. The validation, however bizarre its source, seemed to offer a tiny, almost unbearable sliver of solace.
“What about the Committee?” Kyouya interjected, his focus shifting to more strategic concerns. “Did this narrative provide details about its internal structure? Its ultimate objectives beyond what you’ve already speculated? Were there insights into Tsuruoka’s specific long-term plans, or the identities of other key figures within the organization?”
Arthur sighed. “Frustratingly few concrete details, I’m afraid. Tsuruoka was always depicted as the primary antagonist, the mastermind. Other Committee members were shadowy, ill-defined figures. Their goals seemed to be about control, about manipulating society through fear of Talents, and perhaps, as I mentioned, about weaponizing those ‘Enemies of Humanity.’ But the intricate details of their hierarchy or their decades-long endgame… that was mostly left to speculation even within the story’s fanbase, as far as I can recall.” He paused. “Explaining a Japanese comic book that somehow predicted, or perhaps even influenced, their entire horrific existence… it felt like trying to summarize a particularly bizarre, convoluted dream to a skeptical psychiatrist. Or perhaps attempting to convince the local parish council back in Crawley – or for that matter, any sensible, rational person from Chichester to Land’s End – that their lives, their deepest pains and struggles, were nothing more than a work of popular fiction from another dimension. Utterly, certifiably mad.”
Michiru, who had been listening with a mixture of wide-eyed horror and profound sadness, finally spoke, her voice small and trembling. “Arthur-san… were… were other people we knew from the island… people like Nanao-kun, or Hoshino-kun, or Tachibana-kun… were they also… characters in this story? Did you know what was going to happen to them too, all along?”
Arthur looked at her gentle, troubled face, and the weight of his past inactions, his often-ineffectual interventions, pressed down on him anew. “Yes, Michiru-san,” he said softly. “Many of them were. And yes, I had… glimpses… of their fates. Sometimes clearer than others. As I tried to explain to Kyouya-san, my knowledge was often too little, too late, or too vague to act upon decisively without risking even greater catastrophe.”
“And what of me?” Jin Tachibana’s voice, smooth and cool as polished silk, cut through the charged atmosphere. He had remained silent throughout the exchange, his pale eyes fixed on Arthur, his expression unreadable. “This… ‘Rin’… Kyouya’s sister, who supposedly took on the identity of a boy named Jin Tachibana after a past tragedy. Was her specific role, her full story, also detailed in this… chronicle you remember so selectively, Ainsworth-san?” There was a subtle, almost imperceptible challenge in his tone.
Arthur met Jin’s gaze, choosing his words with extreme care. “The narrative I recall touched upon a character with a deeply tragic past, someone connected to Kyouya-san’s sister, yes. Someone who had been grievously harmed by the Committee’s system, who had lost their original identity, and who later operated from the shadows, with… complex and often ambiguous motivations.” He offered no more, sensing the dangerous, shifting currents beneath Jin’s calm façade. He knew he was treading on very thin ice.
“Why?” Nana asked suddenly, her voice raw with a new kind of pain. “Why didn’t you tell us all of this sooner, Arthur-san? From the very beginning?”
Arthur looked down at his hands, the hands of Kenji Tanaka, a boy whose life he had unwillingly usurped. “Would you have believed me?” he asked quietly. “If, on my first day, a strange boy speaking through a telephone had told you that your entire reality was a Japanese comic book from his world? You, Nana Hiiragi, trained assassin, would you have simply accepted that?” He shook his head. “You would have marked me for immediate elimination as a dangerous lunatic, and rightly so. I told you what I felt I could, when I felt I could, in ways I hoped might make a small difference, without getting myself killed in the process, or making things catastrophically worse. My ‘Talent depletion’ announcement after the escape… that was the first moment I felt it might be safe, or even necessary, to begin unravelling the true extent of the… absurdity of my situation.”
A long silence fell, filled only by the crackling of the fire and the distant, soothing roar of the waterfall. The survivors sat, each lost in their own thoughts, grappling with a truth that redefined their past, their present, and their utterly uncertain future. The world had not just been turned upside down; it had been revealed as a strange, distorted echo of a fiction from another dimension.
Finally, Kyouya spoke, his voice thoughtful, pragmatic. “This knowledge, however outlandish its origin, however unsettling its implications… it changes nothing about our immediate objectives. Tsuruoka is still out there. The Committee still operates. The threat to Talents, to all of us, remains.” He looked at Arthur. “But it does, perhaps, give us a new, if deeply unorthodox, perspective on our enemy. And on ourselves.”
Nana nodded slowly, a new, hard light dawning in her violet eyes, the earlier flicker of desperate hope now solidifying into something far more dangerous, more focused. “A story…” she murmured, almost to herself. “So Tsuruoka thought he was writing my story.” A small, chilling smile touched her lips. “Perhaps it’s time I started writing my own ending. And his.”
Arthur watched them, a strange sense of detachment settling over him. He had unburdened himself of his greatest secret. The pieces were now on the board, for all to see. His "one idea," the thought that had been coalescing in his mind since their escape, now felt more urgent, more necessary than ever. But first, they had to truly absorb this. They had to decide if they could even move forward together, now that the very foundations of their reality had been so profoundly, so utterly, shaken.
Existence of group chat including Hegseth, his wife and others prompt calls for defense secretary to step down
Nana is an evil little bitch
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.
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.
The tense, unspoken, and deeply exhausting cat-and-mouse game between Arthur Ainsworth and Nana Hiiragi simmered beneath the deceptively placid surface of the Third School Year for several uneasy weeks. Arthur remained relentlessly vigilant, his limited Japanese forcing him into a mode of heightened observation and carefully chosen, minimal interactions. Nana, visibly haunted and profoundly conflicted, continued her hesitant, almost reluctant pursuit, Tsuruoka’s orders a poisonous whisper in the back of her mind, her own fractured conscience a screaming counterpoint. The new intake of students, meanwhile, remained largely, blissfully oblivious to this silent, deadly undercurrent. Then, a new, entirely unexpected variable arrived on the island, an element that would irrevocably shatter the uneasy status quo and drag the island’s darkest secrets into the harsh, unforgiving light: Akari Hozumi.
Akari was a petite, unassuming girl with short, neat black hair and sharp, intelligent, almost unnervingly observant eyes that seemed to miss absolutely nothing. Her arrival was unceremonious, just another late addition to the ever-shifting student roster, assigned to fill an empty bunk in one of the dormitories. But it became rapidly, abundantly clear that she was no ordinary student. During her formal introduction to the class by a vaguely apprehensive Mr. Saito, Akari Hozumi declared her Talent with a quiet, unshakeable confidence that brooked no argument and sent a ripple of unease through her new classmates. Her ability, she stated calmly, was "Forensic Insight" – a complex combination of acute environmental analysis, the ability to reconstruct past events with uncanny, almost supernatural accuracy by observing a location or individuals involved, and a near-perfect, almost infallible capacity to detect falsehood through micro-expressions, vocal inflections, and physiological tells. She was, in her own carefully chosen words, a truth-seeker, a dedicated, amateur detective.
The island, with its hushed-up disappearances, its string of unexplained “accidents,” and the palpable undercurrent of fear and suspicion that clung to its very stones, was a veritable, irresistible playground for someone with Akari Hozumi’s unique abilities and singular, almost obsessive inclinations. She began her disquieting investigations almost immediately, her polite but relentless, deeply probing questioning unsettling students and the beleaguered teaching staff alike. Rumours of past events, half-forgotten whispers of students who had vanished without a trace or died under deeply mysterious circumstances, drew her like a bloodhound to a fresh scent. She was a small, quiet whirlwind of disconcerting inquiry.
Her razor-sharp attention, inevitably, turned towards the large, picturesque, yet strangely ominous lake on the island’s northern edge. Perhaps it was the lingering, hushed stories of Yuusuke Tachibana’s sudden disappearance nearly two years prior, or the still-discussed, unexplained phenomenon of the unseasonable, localized freezing that had sealed its surface for a time. Or maybe her unique Talent simply picked up on the dark, cold secrets hidden beneath its deceptively tranquil, sun-dappled waters.
One grey, overcast afternoon, Akari, accompanied by a small retinue of curious and now somewhat fearful fellow students, and under the clearly uncomfortable and wary eye of Mr. Saito (who had been “persuaded” to attend by Akari’s polite but unyielding insistence), focused her formidable abilities on the lake. The thick ice that Sorano Aijima had been coerced into creating had long since thawed with the changing seasons, leaving the lake’s surface murky and undisturbed. After a long period of intense, silent concentration, her gaze fixed with unnerving precision on a particular spot near a dense, overgrown patch of reed beds, Akari calmly directed two of the stronger, older male students to begin probing the area with long, sturdy poles they had brought from the school’s neglected groundskeeping shed.
There was a sickening, dull thud from beneath the water’s surface, a sound that made several students gasp. With considerable, straining effort, the two boys, their faces pale and sweating despite the cool air, dragged a sodden, heavy, and horrifyingly human-shaped form from the murky, weed-choked depths.
It was, unmistakably, the badly decomposed but still identifiable body of Yuusuke Tachibana.
A wave of collective, visceral horror rippled through the assembled students. Some cried out, others retched, their faces turning green. Tachibana’s disappearance had eventually been officially written off by the school administration as him simply running away from the pressures of the academy, or perhaps a tragic, unexplainable drowning accident while swimming alone. The sight of his preserved, mud-caked corpse, brought forth so dramatically from its watery tomb after nearly two years, was a visceral, traumatizing shock that shattered any lingering illusions about the island’s safety.
Akari Hozumi, however, her expression grim but resolute, was just beginning. Her gaze, sharp as a shard of ice and utterly accusatory, swept over the pale, horrified faces of the upperclassmen who had been present during Tachibana’s time, eventually settling with unwavering, damning intensity on Nana Hiiragi. Nana, who had been observing the grim proceedings from the edge of the crowd with a carefully constructed mask of shocked concern, felt a jolt of pure, cold terror lance through her, a premonition of impending, inescapable doom.
“Hiiragi Nana-san,” Akari Hozumi said, her voice clear, cutting, and utterly devoid of emotion, carrying easily over the terrified whispers of the other students. “My Talent reconstructs events with absolute clarity. It tells me of deception. It shows me the hidden patterns of murder.” She then proceeded, with chilling, methodical precision, to lay out the sequence of events leading to Yuusuke Tachibana’s death nearly two years prior: Nana identifying Tachibana’s dangerous Talent, her careful grooming of him, her luring him to the secluded lake, incapacitating him, and then brutally drowning him in its cold, silent depths. Akari even detailed Nana’s subsequent coercion of the terrified Sorano Aijima into freezing the lake’s surface to conceal her heinous crime. Akari might have used her Talent on Sorano earlier, who would have broken easily under such intense scrutiny, or perhaps she was directly reading Nana now, whose involuntary micro-expressions, her sudden pallor, her barely perceptible trembling, would have been an open, screaming confession to someone with Akari’s acute lie-detecting abilities.
As Akari spoke, her calm, incisive voice detailing not just Tachibana’s murder but hinting at a clear, undeniable pattern of calculated eliminations, of other convenient “accidents” and “disappearances,” Nana Hiiragi’s carefully constructed composure finally, catastrophically, shattered. Cornered, exposed, with the irrefutable, horrifying evidence of Tachibana’s decaying body lying before them on the muddy bank and Akari Hozumi’s unshakeable, terrifying certainty pinning her down like an insect under a microscope, Nana broke. In a choked, hysterical, tearful confession, her words tumbling out in a torrent of incoherent guilt, fear, and self-loathing, she admitted to killing Tachibana. More admissions, fragmented and horrified, about other “enemies,” other “threats she had neutralized for the good of the Talentless,” began to spill from her lips, though she instinctively, desperately, refrained from implicating Commander Tsuruoka or the Committee directly, that deeply ingrained, conditioned terror still holding sway even in her utter disintegration.
The reaction from the assembled student body was instantaneous, predictable, and utterly savage. The simmering fear that had lurked beneath the surface of island life for so long, the paranoia born of so many unexplained disappearances and the constant, vague threat of “Enemies of Humanity,” erupted into a violent, cathartic rage. Cries of “Monster!” “Murderer!” “She killed them all!” filled the air. The students, transformed in an instant into a terrified, enraged mob, surged forward, easily overwhelming the few panicked, ineffective teachers present, and fell upon the sobbing, collapsing Nana Hiiragi, their fists, their feet, their hoarded, improvised weapons instruments of a brutal, summary, and entirely merciless justice.
Nana curled into a tight ball on the muddy ground, trying desperately to protect her head and vital organs, but the blows rained down upon her, a furious, unending hail of pain and retribution. Arthur Ainsworth watched, his expression grim, his heart a cold, hard, unfeeling knot in his chest. A primitive, vengeful part of him, the part that had carried the unbearable weight of Nana’s countless crimes for what felt like an eternity, felt a sliver of grim, ugly satisfaction – this was justice, in its rawest, most primal, and perhaps most fitting form. Another part of him, however, the weary, fifty-one-year-old man who had witnessed too much death, too much violence, recoiled from the sheer, unbridled brutality of the scene, recognizing with a sickening clarity the dangerous, self-perpetuating cycle of violence. He thought, fleetingly, of Michiru, of Nana’s tearful, human confession at the cliff edge. But he did not move. He couldn’t. His limited Japanese would be useless against this tide of fury, and a deeper, colder part of him believed, with a chilling detachment, that Nana Hiiragi had sown this terrible whirlwind, and now, she was simply, inevitably, reaping it.
It was Kyouya Onodera, his face an impassive, unreadable mask but his movements swift, economical, and incredibly powerful, who finally, decisively intervened. Pushing his way through the frenzied, screaming mob with an almost contemptuous ease, he physically dragged students away from Nana’s battered, bleeding form. “Enough!” his voice, cold and sharp as a razor, cut through the din with an authority that momentarily stunned the attackers into a surprised, hesitant silence. “This solves nothing. This is not justice; it is barbarism. We need answers. We need understanding. Not a lynching.” He stood over Nana’s crumpled, unmoving form, a silent, formidable bulwark against the still-seething, murderous crowd, his stance clearly indicating that any further attacks on the girl would have to go through him first.
Nana Hiiragi lay on the muddy ground, bruised, bleeding, her bright pink hair, now caked with mud and her own blood, a grotesque mockery of its former vibrancy. She was broken, not just physically, but spiritually, her carefully constructed world, her entire identity, utterly demolished. Her reign of terror, her intricate, carefully woven web of lies, manipulation, and murder, had been brutally, irrevocably torn apart. Akari Hozumi stood a little apart, watching the chaotic scene with a strange, almost detached expression, her face betraying no emotion, only a stern, unwavering adherence to the terrible truth she had so ruthlessly, effectively, and devastatingly uncovered, regardless of its catastrophic consequences. The island’s dark, festering secrets were finally, violently, bleeding out into the open, and its fragile, deceptive order was irrevocably, terrifyingly shattered.