Sku-te - Down With Nana Hiiragi

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2 months ago

Chapter 22: Mainland Purgatory

The mainland was a brutal, disorienting awakening into a new kind of hell. Stripped of the insular, albeit perilous, structure of the island academy, and now, crucially, without his phone translator which had been casually confiscated by a bored Committee agent during the chaotic disembarkation, Arthur found himself utterly adrift in a sea of indifferent, uncomprehending faces and a language that was now an almost impenetrable barrier. The yen he’d had in “Kenji Tanaka’s” school uniform pockets had been minimal and was quickly exhausted on a few meagre portions of rice balls. He was just another nameless, homeless youth, lost and invisible in the sprawling, pitiless concrete jungle of a large Japanese port city. His limited, halting Japanese, learned through painful necessity on the island, was woefully inadequate for navigating this complex new world.

Days blurred into a miserable, exhausting cycle of gnawing hunger, damp cold, and the constant, weary, often fruitless search for some form of shelter from the elements or a discarded, half-eaten meal in a fast-food restaurant’s overflowing bin. He slept in darkened alleyways that stank of stale urine and rotting garbage, under the echoing concrete arches of bridges, the ever-present fear of discovery by police patrols or less savory, predatory elements of the city’s underbelly a constant, unwelcome companion. He missed Michiru with an ache that was a physical pain in his chest; her quiet presence, her unwavering kindness, their shared, fragile peace during the last island break, had been a small, precious light in his otherwise oppressive darkness. Now, that light was extinguished, and he was stumbling blindly.

A few desperate, soul-crushing weeks into this miserable existence, as he was huddled in a damp shop doorway, trying to escape a biting, persistent late summer rain, a sleek, anonymous black car with tinted windows purred to a silent halt beside him. A man in a sharp, impeccably tailored dark suit emerged, holding a large black umbrella with practiced ease, shielding himself as he approached. He addressed Arthur by his island name, his Japanese precise and formal.

“Tanaka Kenji-kun?” the man inquired, his voice polite but utterly devoid of warmth or inflection, his eyes cold and appraising as they took in Arthur’s ragged, rain-soaked appearance. “My employer has taken an active interest in your current welfare. He understands, through various channels, that you may be… experiencing some temporary difficulties adjusting to mainland life.” He paused, allowing Arthur to absorb the implications of being so easily found. “He is, therefore, prepared to offer you refuge, assistance, a chance to rebuild your life under more… favorable circumstances.”

Arthur stared at the man, then at the opulent, waiting car, a stark symbol of power and influence in this grimy, indifferent street. He didn’t need his phone to translate the chilling intent behind the polite words. This was the Committee. This was Tsuruoka, reaching out with a silken, poisoned glove. “Who… who is your employer?” Arthur managed, his own voice raspy and weak from disuse, the Japanese words clumsy and heavily accented.

“A concerned benefactor,” the man replied smoothly, his expression unchanging. “He believes that Talented individuals like yourself, particularly those who have endured the… unique rigors of the island program, deserve ongoing support and guidance, not abandonment.”

Arthur almost choked on a bitter, hysterical laugh. Support. Guidance. From the very people who ran a death camp for unsuspecting, Talented teenagers. “Tell your ‘concerned benefactor’,” Arthur said, the English words a sudden, angry torrent from his lips, before he caught himself and forced out a stumbling, defiant Japanese reply, “that I… I appreciate the offer… but I prefer to manage my own affairs. I require no assistance.”

The man’s thin lips curved into the faintest, most chilling of smiles. “A most regrettable decision, Tanaka-kun. My employer is not accustomed to having his… generous offers so readily dismissed. This opportunity may not present itself again.” He produced a plain, unmarked white card from his inner pocket, offering it to Arthur. It held a single, untraceable phone number. “Should you reconsider your position.” Then, with a slight, almost imperceptible bow, he returned to his car, which slid silently away into the rain-swept streets, leaving Arthur alone once more, shivering in the damp doorway, the card quickly turning to sodden pulp in his trembling hand. He knew, with absolute certainty, that he’d made the right, the only, choice, but the brief, chilling contact, the effortless demonstration of their reach, left him profoundly shaken and with a renewed sense of being hunted.

Meanwhile, many miles away, Commander Tsuruoka was indeed displeased. Not only had this Kenji Tanaka anomaly refused his "generous" offer of controlled reintegration, but Nana Hiiragi, his once-star asset, was proving increasingly problematic, her operational effectiveness compromised by sentimentality and doubt. During a particularly harsh, psychologically invasive debriefing session following her return from the island after the truncated second year, Tsuruoka informed Nana that her next assignment would be a return to the island academy, with a new, carefully selected intake of students. He then fed her a meticulously constructed, entirely false narrative: “Kenji Tanaka has become a dangerous rogue element, Hiiragi. His so-called prescient abilities are unstable, making him a unpredictable threat. He has evaded all our attempts at compassionate control and assistance. He is now, regrettably, considered a significant threat to the integrity of the program, potentially even to wider national security interests if his abilities fall into the wrong hands. Your primary, non-negotiable objective for the upcoming term will be his swift and permanent elimination. There will be no failures this time. Is that understood?” Nana, still reeling from her own recent traumas and Tsuruoka’s chilling manipulations regarding Mai, had listened with a pale face, her mind a maelstrom of conflicting emotions and a growing, terrifying dread. Arthur, a threat to national security? The haunted, weary boy who had so tenderly cared for Michiru’s lifeless body? It didn’t track, not at all, yet Tsuruoka’s orders were absolute, backed by the implicit threat of unimaginable consequences should she disobey.

Arthur, entirely oblivious to Nana’s new, horrifying directive concerning him, eventually, through sheer, desperate persistence, found work. It was grueling, back-breaking, spirit-crushing labour on a sprawling construction site on the city’s outskirts, hauling bags of cement, shoveling rubble, mixing concrete under the relentless summer sun. The pay was insultingly minimal, barely enough for a shared, flea-ridden bunk in a crowded, squalid flophouse that reeked of stale sweat and cheap alcohol, and a daily bowl of watery, tasteless noodles. His days became a monotonous, exhausting blur of brutal physical exertion and profound mental despair. He was Kenji Tanaka, anonymous construction grunt, his past life as Arthur Ainsworth, respected (if unfulfilled) accounts clerk, a fading, almost unbelievable dream; his time on the island, with its constant terror but also its strange, intense connections, a recurring, vivid nightmare. He thought often, achingly, of Michiru, wondering where the Committee had taken her, if she was safe, if he would ever see her gentle smile again. The hope of it was a distant, flickering, almost extinguished candle in the vast darkness of his current existence. The irony of his current occupation, he sometimes thought with a bitter twist of his lips, was that this was the kind of life Kyouya Onodera had apparently endured before his own arrival on that cursed island.

His miserable reprieve, such as it was, didn’t last. One sweltering evening, as he trudged wearily back towards the dubious sanctuary of the flophouse, his body aching from head to toe, his spirit numb with exhaustion, a dark, unmarked van screeched to a halt beside him on the deserted, dusty road. Before he could even register the threat, before he could think to run, several grim-faced figures in plain, dark clothes erupted from its sliding door and bundled him inside with brutal, practiced efficiency. He struggled instinctively, a desperate, futile thrashing, but they were strong, their movements coordinated, their grips like iron. A rough cloth, smelling faintly of chemicals, was pressed hard over his face, a sweet, cloying, sickeningly artificial scent filled his nostrils, and the ugly, indifferent world dissolved into a suffocating, unwelcome blackness.

He awoke, gagging and disoriented, in a bare, sterile, windowless room, strapped tightly to a hard metal chair. A single, painfully bright spotlight shone directly into his face, making him squint. Tsuruoka himself wasn’t present – Arthur was clearly not yet deemed worthy of the commander’s personal attention for this particular stage of his “re-education” – but a subordinate, a cold-eyed, stern-faced woman in a severe, dark military-style uniform, stood before him, her arms crossed, her expression devoid of any discernible emotion.

“Tanaka Kenji,” she stated, her voice flat, impersonal, chillingly devoid of inflection. She consulted a thin file in her hand. “Or perhaps, given your rather… unusual background, you currently prefer the designation Arthur Ainsworth?” She didn’t elaborate on how they might know his original name; the casual, confident implication of their far-reaching, invasive intelligence network was, in itself, a potent form of intimidation. “You have proven to be a persistent, and rather tiresome, inconvenience, Mr. Ainsworth. You were given a generous opportunity to cooperate with our organization. You unwisely declined.”

She took a step closer, her shadow falling over him. “Our organization has a significant, long-term investment in the island program, and its successful outcomes. Uncontrolled, unpredictable variables such as yourself cannot, and will not, be tolerated indefinitely. You will be returning to the island academy for the next academic year, with the new intake of students.” Her lips curved into a smile that held no warmth, only a cold, clinical menace. “Consider this your final opportunity to demonstrate your potential utility to the Committee. Or, failing that,” her smile widened fractionally, “to be… neutralized, shall we say, in a more controlled, predictable, and entirely deniable environment. The choice, as they say, is yours. Though, I suspect, largely illusory.”

Arthur said nothing. There was nothing left to say. He was trapped, a terrified, exhausted pawn being forcibly moved back onto the bloodstained, treacherous board.

The journey back to the island was a disorienting, humiliating blur of sedatives, blindfolds, and the gruff, dispassionate presence of his Committee guards. When he finally stumbled off the transport vessel onto the chillingly familiar pier, the sight of the imposing school buildings, nestled amidst the island’s unnervingly lush, verdant landscape, filled him with a profound, soul-deep sense of dread and utter resignation. A new intake of students, fresh, innocent faces full of naive hope or nervous apprehension, were already disembarking from another, larger ferry, their excited chatter a grotesque counterpoint to his own internal despair. The Third School Year was about to begin, and Arthur Ainsworth knew, with a terrifying, inescapable certainty, that he was now not just an unwilling observer or a clumsy, desperate interferer, but a designated, marked target. And this time, he had no phone, no easy means of communication, and very few allies left.


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6 months ago
Hej

Hej

2 months ago

Chapter 6: The Camera Fiend

With her meticulous initial plans for Nanao Nakajima temporarily, infuriatingly, thwarted by Arthur’s unsettlingly accurate (or so it seemed to Nanao, at least) premonitions, Nana Hiiragi was a coiled spring of suppressed frustration. Arthur knew her handler, the enigmatic and ruthless Tsuruoka, wouldn’t tolerate delays or failures indefinitely. The invisible pressure on her to perform, to meet her quotas, would be immense. This, Arthur suspected, made her even more dangerous, more volatile, more likely to lash out with cold precision if another complication, another unforeseen variable, arose.

That complication promptly presented itself in the unctuous form of Ryouta Habu. Habu was a lanky, sallow-skinned boy with greasy hair and a perpetually smug expression, rarely seen without a bulky, professional-looking camera slung around his neck. Arthur had already clocked him as a minor creep from his hazy anime memories – the sort of boy who used his proclaimed Talent, the ability to photograph events moments before they happened, for leering, voyeuristic purposes rather than anything noble. His photographs often focused on unflattering angles of female students, or "accidental" upskirt shots, all passed off with a knowing smirk as the unpredictable nature of his future-capturing lens.

The evening after Arthur’s third successful, if nerve-wracking, intervention to keep Nanao safe from Nana’s clutches, the students were gathered in the noisy, brightly lit canteen for their evening meal. Arthur, as had become his habit, was seated alone, trying to make himself as inconspicuous as possible while keeping a wary eye on Nana. He saw Habu, a predatory glint in his eyes, saunter over to Nana’s table, where she was picking at her food with a distinct lack of her usual cheerful appetite. He was clearly agitated about something.

Habu leaned in conspiratorially, a greasy lock of hair falling into his eyes, and with a theatrical flourish, showed Nana a photograph on his camera’s small digital display. Even from across the crowded, echoing room, Arthur could see Nana’s posture stiffen, her perpetually bright smile dimming for a dangerous fraction of a second before being quickly reasserted, albeit with a noticeable strain. He couldn’t hear the hushed, intense exchange over the din of the canteen, but he could guess its ugly nature. Later, through snippets of terrified, whispered gossip from students who had been seated closer, and by piecing together the grim fragments of his own foreknowledge, he confirmed the sordid details.

“Interesting shot, isn’t it, Hiiragi-san?” Habu had apparently leered, his voice a low, suggestive drawl. The photograph on his camera clearly showed Nana looking intently over the cliff edge where Nanao had nearly been lured just days before. It was a damning image, especially in light of Arthur’s public “prediction.” “I was up there myself, you see, testing out a new telephoto lens. A bit suspicious, you standing there all alone, Hiiragi-san, looking down like that, especially after our peculiar Tanaka-kun had that little ‘vision’ about Nakajima-kun taking a tumble. I think you were going to kill him. I think you were planning to push him.”

Nana, ever the consummate actress, had feigned wide-eyed, innocent confusion, her hand flying to her mouth in a gesture of shock. “Kill him? Nakajima-kun? Why on earth would I ever contemplate doing something so utterly horrible, Habu-kun?”

“Don’t play dumb with me, Hiiragi,” Habu had sneered, his confidence bolstered by her apparent dismay. “I know what I saw. Or rather, what I think you were about to do. It’s a very compelling photograph, don’t you think? The kind of thing that might make people ask… awkward questions.” He paused, letting his threat hang in the air. “Now, if you don’t want this rather incriminating picture, and my… very strong suspicions… shared with, say, Mr. Saito, or perhaps that nosy Onodera Kyouya, or even the entire class, then perhaps you could pay me a little visit tonight? My room. Number 207. We can discuss how to make this… misunderstanding… go away. Maybe you could start by giving a hardworking, stressed photographer a nice, long, relaxing back massage?” His leer intensified.

The sheer, idiotic audacity of it was breathtaking. Blackmailing a highly trained, deeply ruthless government assassin. Habu was either incredibly stupid, dangerously overconfident in the protection his Talent supposedly afforded him, or, most likely, a lethal combination of both. Arthur felt a familiar wave of helpless dread wash over him. He knew, with a sickening certainty, where this was heading. He couldn’t warn Habu; the boy was far too arrogant and would either dismiss him as the “weird Tanaka kid” or, worse, report his ‘meddling’ to Nana herself, further complicating Arthur’s already precarious position and possibly accelerating Habu’s demise. All he could do was watch, a silent, horrified spectator, as the grim pantomime unfolded.

Nana, trapped and seething internally but maintaining an outward composure of reluctant agreement, had acquiesced with a tight, saccharine smile. “Of course, Habu-kun. I’d be happy to come to your room and clear up this… unfortunate little misunderstanding. A massage sounds… lovely.”

Later that night, the inevitable occurred. Nana, her face a mask of calm but her eyes glinting with cold fury, visited Habu’s cluttered, untidy room. Arthur, lying awake in his own dorm, his ears straining for any unusual sounds, could only imagine the scene. He knew from the source material that Nana, while giving Habu a perfunctory, unwanted back massage, would be seriously contemplating snapping his neck then and there. She would refrain, however, her cold logic overriding her immediate anger. She needed more information about his Talent’s specifics – its range, its limitations, how far into the future it could truly see. Knowledge was power, and Nana always sought to maximize her power before striking.

Instead, as her fingers worked his tense shoulders, she would deliberately, with surgical precision, press a sensitive pressure point, just hard enough to cause a searing, unexpected jolt of pain. Habu, arrogant and foolish, would yelp, then snap, “You stupid girl! Watch what you’re doing! Be careful!” Nana, Arthur pictured, would then offer a profuse, deeply insincere apology, her eyes wide with feigned innocence, claiming it was a complete accident, that her hands had simply slipped. This calculated incident would not only test his reaction but also fuel her resolve to eliminate him swiftly and efficiently once she had the information she needed.

The next day, Nana approached Kyouya Onodera in the library, her face a carefully constructed mask of terror and distress. She clutched a photograph in her trembling hand – one Arthur knew she had expertly faked in the intervening hours. It depicted Nana herself, seemingly unconscious, tied up with rough-looking ropes, in a grimy, unfamiliar room, a faint bruise artfully applied to her cheek. “Onodera-kun!” she’d cried, her voice breaking with convincing panic. “I… I found this! Slipped under my door! I think… I think it’s my future! Someone is trying to kill me! Could it have been Habu-kun? He was acting so strangely towards me last night!”

It was a brilliant, if diabolical, move, Arthur acknowledged grimly. She was establishing a preemptive alibi with the school’s most persistent, logical investigator, painting herself as a potential victim, and simultaneously casting suspicion on Habu. Kyouya, though perpetually suspicious and likely sensing the theatricality of her performance, would have little choice but to take her claim seriously and investigate.

The actual murder happened later that same evening, or perhaps in the early, silent hours of the morning. Nana, having deduced the limitations of Habu’s precognitive camera – likely that it couldn’t photograph events too far into the future, or in areas he hadn’t physically scouted and focused on, or perhaps that it only showed potential futures he was actively trying to capture – would have cornered him in his room. Arthur didn’t know the exact method beyond strangulation, but he imagined it was quick, brutal, and terrifyingly efficient, Nana’s smaller stature no impediment to her lethal training.

The discovery of Ryouta Habu’s lifeless body the following morning, his camera lying broken beside him, sent a fresh wave of genuine panic and fear rippling through the already unsettled student population. Mr. Saito was visibly distraught, his attempts to calm the students increasingly futile. The other teachers were tight-lipped, their expressions grim. Nana, of course, played the part of the shocked and grieving classmate to absolute perfection, even “confiding” in a few tearful girls that Habu had been acting strangely and aggressively towards her, subtly planting the idea that he might have been a dangerous individual who had brought his grim fate upon himself.

Kyouya Onodera was, as expected, intensely, almost ferociously, investigating, his impassive face a mask for a keen, analytical intellect piecing together timelines and inconsistencies. He questioned Nana again, who recounted her faked photo and her “fear” of Habu, her performance flawless.

Arthur watched it all from the periphery, a knot of cold fury, frustration, and a growing, weary despair tightening in his chest. Another death. Another victim he couldn’t save without revealing his impossible knowledge and immediately making himself Nana’s next, and undoubtedly final, target. He hadn’t even liked Habu; the boy had been an unpleasant, sleazy individual. But did he deserve to be murdered, his life snuffed out so callously? The question was a bitter, unanswerable torment.

The weight of his foreknowledge, his terrible prescience, was becoming a crushing, unbearable burden. Each death he failed to prevent, each life Nana extinguished, chipped away at his already fragile psyche. He was an unwilling observer of a horror show he’d already seen the grisly highlights of, powerless to stop the actors from hitting their gruesome, predetermined marks. His phone translator, his only means of coherent expression, felt less like a lifeline and more like a cursed tool for documenting a tragedy in a language he was only beginning to comprehend on a visceral, soul-deep level. Nanao was safe, for now, but at what cost? And who, Arthur wondered with a chilling certainty, would be next on Nana Hiiragi’s ever-growing list?


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2 months ago

Chapter 40: The Unwritten Page

The days that followed their desperate covenant in the firelit cave settled into a strange, new rhythm, a tense counterpoint of meticulous preparation and gnawing uncertainty. Jin Tachibana had vanished as silently and enigmatically as he had arrived, presumably off to navigate the treacherous labyrinth of the Committee’s bureaucracy and the shadowy underworld of forgers and information brokers, on his near-impossible quest to craft a new life for Arthur Ainsworth.

In his absence, the remaining four became a study in focused, if often fearful, resolve. Arthur, with a grim determination that surprised even himself, began his daunting studies. Kyouya, using his sharp intellect and surprisingly broad, if eclectic, knowledge base, became his reluctant, if exacting, tutor in the complex, often heavily redacted, history of this Japan, this unfamiliar world, carefully guiding him through the official narratives and hinting at the unspoken, darker truths that lay beneath. Nana Hiiragi, her own past a raw, open wound, offered bitter, insightful, and often terrifyingly personal commentary on the Committee’s methods of indoctrination and control, her words painting a chilling picture of the psychological landscape Arthur would have to navigate. There were no illusions between them now, only the stark, shared understanding of the monstrous enemy they faced. Michiru Inukai, a quiet, steadfast presence, ensured they ate what little they had, tended to their spirits with her gentle optimism, and created a small, fragile pocket of normalcy amidst the overwhelming abnormality of their existence.

Arthur would spend hours poring over scavenged textbooks Kyouya produced from some hidden cache, his brow furrowed in concentration as he tried to make sense of timelines and political shifts so alien to his own lived experience. He, Arthur Ainsworth, former accounts clerk from Crawley, a man whose most pressing historical concerns had once revolved around the Tudors or the English Civil War for a pub quiz, was now attempting a crash course in the socio-political development of an alternate, Talent-riven Japan. The sheer, unadulterated absurdity of it would sometimes strike him with an almost physical force, leaving him breathless. He thought of the quiet, predictable order of his old life, the mundane certainty of a bus arriving (usually) on time, the fixed point of a well-earned pint at the local on a Friday evening. Even the most chaotic council meeting back in what felt like a distant, almost imaginary England – perhaps debating fiercely over planning permission for a new supermarket on the outskirts of a town like Chichester, or some other sleepy southern borough – paled into utter insignificance compared to the life-or-death stakes of this new, terrifying "career" he was so desperately, so improbably, preparing for.

He looked at the crude map Nana was still meticulously sketching by the dim firelight, a map of an island that had become the nexus of his impossible new life, a place of horrors he was now planning to willingly return to. Back in his small semi-detached, the most pressing map he’d ever seriously consulted was likely an A-to-Z of Greater London for a rare trip up to town, or perhaps a well-worn Ordnance Survey map detailing the familiar, gentle contours of the South Downs for a bracing bank holiday ramble. This new map, sketched in rough charcoal on a salvaged piece of slate, its lines imbued with Nana’s painful, intimate knowledge, led not to quaint country pubs or historic, sun-dappled landmarks, but into the very dark, beating heart of a monstrous, inhuman deception.

Whether this path, this desperate, insane gamble, would lead them to any form of liberation, or simply to a new, even more terrible form of annihilation, was a page yet to be written, a future no story, no matter how bizarrely prescient or tragically detailed, had ever truly foretold. The narrative he remembered from his old world was now just that – a memory, a collection of increasingly unreliable echoes. Their lives had diverged, their choices now entirely their own, each step taken into a vast, terrifying, and utterly unscripted unknown.

And as the persistent May chill of the deep mountain cave – so unlike any English May he could recall from his past, a month that should have hinted at warmth, at summer, at hope – seeped into his weary bones, Arthur Ainsworth could only cling to the fragile, flickering ember of their shared, defiant purpose. He could only hope, with a desperation that was almost a prayer, that they possessed the strength, the luck, and the sheer, bloody-minded, stubborn resilience to survive the terrible, uncertain writing of it. The future stretched before them, a blank, ominous, and unforgiving page.


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6 months ago
hive.blog
The more fantastic a story, the greater the need for justification. To write a technothriller about a covert ops team hunting down terrorist
6 months ago
2 months ago

Chapter 31: The Great Escape

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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


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6 months ago
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The more fantastic a story, the greater the need for justification. To write a technothriller about a covert ops team hunting down terrorist

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2 months ago

Chapter 10: The Bullies and a Calculated Message

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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


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

The little bitch deserves nothing more than a nasty end

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