4 – Dreams of Another Place and Time

“Wow, it’s cleaner than when I was a kid, that’s for sure.”

The hurricane known as the Elites arrived at the old playground, at about six in the afternoon. It was not the shortest way home for Kato and his entourage, or for the members of middle class families that were Franco, Caius and the Jupiter sisters, but it was only a short detour, so they didn’t mind the extra couple of minutes.

From school, they had to climb up a pavement path on the side of the hill that the urban playground was atop of. Overlooking the inner city, the hill faced west and they could see the sun making its way down to the short peaks in the distance that surrounded the valley. A picturesque scenery for sunset sightseers.

“But it didn’t change much. They changed out the rubber mulch a couple of years ago but that’s it. That’s probably why it looks clean.”

“The slides, the monkey bars, the jungle gym, the swings are all still here.”

Mayumi climbed to the top of one of the slides and sat there to watch the sunset, feeling just a bit of nostalgia as she took in deep breaths of her old home neighbourhood’s air. The rest of the Elites, however, were still in heated discussion about the result of the Class War from lunchtime.

“The match was too close to call. Is it because Class C doesn’t have enough smart people, or is Class D especially strong this year?”

“Class D is stronger this year. They definitely didn’t expect Class D to do this well. Remember it was Mr Rigel doing all that literature quizzing. Now we know that at least in literature, Class D is comparable to Class C.”

“Even on the whole, Class C and Class D are on par with each other.”

“Ariel, how do you know that?”

“The Records Office has data.”

“…”

“Scary.”

Their large gathering from lunchtime had increased by one. Bianca joined them when doing the student council work that they all had some part in after school. For some of the Elites, it was a part-time job when they needed to align together items and strategies for the weekly conventions of the Assembly, while the rest were there to just hang out. But for the Jupiter sisters it was nonstop work to get student government running smoothly with their Class B classmates, and that work needed to also be done at lunchtime.

“Anyway, Class C narrowly won the war, but they imposed a really strict peace treaty onto Class D. They played for keeps, so whether it was narrow or not, it was still an all-or-nothing game. I feel sorry for Class D because they almost made it.”

“Three seats in the Assembly, taking the prime time slot for Class C in the talent show, and unrestricted requisitioning of resources from the clubs headed by Class D students for the purposes of that talent show. That last thing is like a kick in the nuts for the AC.”

“A kick in the nuts for the AC while asserting Donovan’s authority in the newly re-formed PSC. Re-formed with the hyphen. Unrestricted requisitioning means money and capital, so both funds and physical equipment can be confiscated from those clubs by Class C until the end of the talent show.”

“Off the top of my head, I believe the presidents of the Alchemy Society, a couple of the science clubs, literature, photography, and chess clubs are in Class D. Did I miss any?”

“Likely doesn’t matter if you can’t remember them. They probably wanted the photography club’s massive studio setup to do their own photo-shoots for the yearbook or something.”

“And they used a Class War to nick their stuff? They’ve got balls.”

“It’s a you-eat-them or they-eat-you world out there, brother. It wouldn’t be a problem if the drama department didn’t have beef with those clubs from Class D, but then again it’s normal for a PSC-affiliated group to be at odds with the AC-affiliated ones.”

“You’d think that Gilbert and Mona are on good enough terms personally that they wouldn’t fist-fight like this, but I guess not.”

“Well, mommy and daddy being on good terms doesn’t mean that their children won’t fight each other to the death. It’s a zero-sum game for them, to be honest. Like the talent show, that’s the first major school-wide event, and obviously everybody wants the prime time slot.”

“Because Class A is still suffering from the fallout of the PSC, and my class is one-half too busy on SLO duties and the other half in music doesn’t need the prime time, the spotlight was on Class C and Class D.”

“Class C is basically the whole drama department, but what was Class D gonna do with the prime time?”

“They were going to do some kind of a skit or performance too, using resources from outside of the drama department. They’re definitely gonna put on a crappier show, but it’s about sending a signal. It’s like a big ‘fuck you’ to the drama department, both the students and teachers.”

“They were just gonna wing something? Now that’s ballsy. And they almost did it too.”

“Yeah. That narrow win is gonna cast a long shadow on Class C and the PSC, but for now, they’re safe.”

Bianca’s presence was a strong one too. As the chancellor, also known as the student council treasurer, she was also the de facto vice-president, a role and title that unfortunately was not explicitly defined in the constitution. In Mirabelle’s continued absence from school, all of the president’s responsibilities fell on this unofficial VP.

Unlike her twin, however, Bianca didn’t have the same enchanting, almost possessive charisma—though she had the physical attractiveness—that led them to victory in the student council election last school year, so it was taking all she could to keep the machine together. What she lacked in natural charm she compensated with her talkativeness, diligence and fiery spirit, and thus she almost always took control of the conversation, especially against the Elites.

Despite the gaping differences in personality, appearance-wise Bianca was a mirror image of Mirabelle. They and their family were pure-blooded Yue, characterized by their narrow eyes and rounded noses. Usually, Bianca tied up her silky black hair in a loose bun, and her front still had really impressive fringes. If Kato had to say something, her most attractive feature was her bright rosy lips, thin but also had the width at just the right points and undeniably kissable. Of course, it meant the same for Mirabelle, but he was not going to say any of that to either of them.

Kato was quiet the whole time, merely observing the tropical storm immersed in their school politics. He stepped away from the group to look up at Mayumi, perched up high at the top of the slide.

“Mayumi, how’s your right eye been? Is it manageable?”

“Yeah, just about. It’s been the same since I’ve left. Nothing’s wrong with it.”

“Do you still have depth perception problems?”

“From time to time. You get used to it in your daily life. It’s only a problem when I see new or disorienting things.”

He continued to stare at Mayumi, who noticed and peeled away from the sunset to stare back, still smiling. The orange sunlight bathed her figure in a golden aura, though against her navy blue uniform it blended in poorly. He wasn’t fazed by the staring contest. He never was about a physical exchange.

“What about the power in your eye? Can you still use it?”

“It took you long enough to mention it.”

Though the smile disappeared, it didn’t turn into a frown. It was a matter of fact, after all. She stuck out her bottom lip, shrugging indifferently.

“It’s the same old story. It’s not as strong as it was before, though. I still can’t defeat automatic tables, and I still get super exhausted after using it.”

“Well, at least you can now use it without dying anymore. And you can control when to use it.”

“I know, right? Clairvoyance sounds really cool, until you realize it wrecks your body entirely.”

“How much does it wreck you when you use it now?”

“It’s reduced to just fatigue now. It was thanks to you that I’m still alive and wasn’t killed by the clairvoyance in my right eye.”

She smiled again, putting her hand to the bandage patch on her right eye to uncover it just enough so that Kato could see it.

He wasn’t surprised. It was the same as it was the last time he saw it. The iris was rainbow-coloured and it blended completely and malignantly with the sclera, but more importantly, her right eye was lame. The pupil only stared forward without purpose, in contrast to her left that was aimed squarely at Kato.

“There’s still no vision in your right eye?”

“Nope. It’s permanently gone. Though we knew that would be the case anyway. It’s only good for clairvoyance now.”

“So then what’s the eye patch for? Are the rest of the dead eye’s biological functions working properly? I can see its motor functions are gone already, I guess.”

“Well, that’s true, but also, I still can’t actually control my clairvoyance per se, because it’ll automatically start reacting to light. That’s why I have to wear the eye patch all the time. At least there’s an on-off switch compared to before when it randomly activates and kills me in the process.”

“I see, I see. So you’re peering into the future right now?”

“Only a few seconds ahead. I have to constantly reel it in mentally to not get too far and completely tire myself out. Sadly my body’s still pretty weak compared to a normal person’s, so I can’t exert myself. I still cough up blood from time to time.”

Kato gave her a sour face as she let go of the bandage, letting it snap back in place over her eye. Her face suddenly softened, turning the reliable grin of a gang boss into something gentler and becoming of her age.

“I don’t know, but I always feel like I owe you something all the time. I’ve said it many times before I moved away, but I can’t help but feel the need to say thank you to you again and again. So now that I’m back, I’m gonna say it again and again, for as long as I can. Thanks for saving my life.”

It was the most relaxed expression that Mayumi had made since she arrived this morning. Her overbearing presence in the crew was like a taut wire, never failing nor faltering, but in this moment her heart was made of glass.

“I didn’t save your life. What can a primary school kid do to prevent a terminal condition from claiming somebody’s life? In the end, if it weren’t for Lady Eterna healing your eye, everything else would have been meaningless.”

Her right eye was born with the latent power of clairvoyance. She could see into the future, though with varying degrees of uncertainty. Peeking into the future caused great distress, pain, exhaustion and even internal injuries, enough usually to prevent her from breaking causal relationships of the physical universe with information from the future.

However, her eye was defective and the burdens of the clairvoyant eye laid heavily on her body, leaving her naturally weak, prone to injury and requiring long recoveries. It almost reached a point of no return when the corrosive defect threatened to spread to her brain via the optic nerve, at which time she was hospitalized and in constant agony.

“You’re right, but it was you who asked for that favour from Lady Eterna. If you weren’t there to do that, surely I would have perished in that hospital.”

“I can only do what’s within the limits of my ability, and even today, if something similar were to happen again, I can still only beg for help from somebody else.”

“Don’t play down your role like that. It takes a lot to get on your knees to beg. Especially for you guys.”

“Hey, those circumstances were dire. There is no way I’m going to let our egos get in the way of that.”

Mayumi chuckled just a tad smugly, but it disappeared just as quickly.

“What I’m saying is, your efforts weren’t just as simple as convincing Lady Eterna to save my life. At the same time, my heart, too, was saved by you, Kato.”

In the past, Kato often wondered why this version of Mayumi sometimes showed up in front of him, but today he had enough experience to be able to recognize the underlying motivations of this Mayumi. Yet, he preferred to pretend to not see it so that he could preserve the status quo.

“If I could fix your heart, then I must be the most under-qualified heart surgeon in the history of mankind. Who’s heard of one who hasn’t got a high school diploma yet?”

“Apparently, you’re the only one. And the only one who can heal mine.”

Kato broke off from their staring contest and rubbed his forehead, suddenly exhausted. Seeing him sighing, Mayumi let out her usual squawking laugh at his expense.

“Well, I’ll leave it at that. How’s Caius been?”

She abruptly changed the subject, perhaps a little too quickly. He looked up again to see deep rosy cheeks, kind of like Alice’s, and he secretly thought it was endearing. He couldn’t help but feel an aura similar to Mirabelle’s emanating from her, but the difference was that Mayumi was like a brother to him and nothing more, and she seemed to be well aware of that.

“He’s been good. Nothing’s changed much, still as loose a guy as he was back then.”

“C’mon, he just happens to end up being interested in trashy girls. It doesn’t mean he’s trashy.”

“Being interested already implicates you in the crime, sister. Besides, I wasn’t referring to that. His mouth can say some dangerous things, and inappropriately in front of guys and girls.”

“If he really stopped doing that, I’d be surprised. And he didn’t disappoint today. His attitude hasn’t changed at all.”

“See, he’s exactly as I advertised. No exchanges or refunds.”

She looked away from him for the first time, back towards the glowing sunset and the city draped in orange.

“Then it seems like he’s doing very well. Do you think I still need to talk to him?”

“About what?”

“You know, if he’s still hung over by that.”

Kato sighed. Though there were seven missing years between them, he still knew what she was talking about. But it was also something that wasn’t his to solve, or rather, something that wasn’t solvable by him. Because of that, he decided to give her a blunt answer.

“Of course, he has plenty to say to you. You definitely do too, by the looks of things. It’s all on you, sister.”

“He does?”

“If you believed it didn’t mean anything to him, you wouldn’t ask me that question, would you?”

“Hmm…”

Kato sighed again. He softened up and threw her a bone.

“That’s my guess. It just depends on if there’s an opportunity for you and for him to be willing to talk about it.”

Mayumi obviously noticed and smiled again.

“You’re not good at this kind of talk, are you?”

“I just don’t think I’m the right person to talk to, now, am I? Look at it from my perspective. What would Caius think of it?”

“I don’t care about what he thinks of it. I just wanna talk to you about it.”

“Then this is whatchu gonna get.”

Mayumi laughed out loud again. She slid down the slide, comically slowly because she barely fit inside the inclined plane. Upon reaching the bottom, she jumped off and onto the rubber mulch, showing a nimbleness which Kato was surprised that she had now. She was a loud but sickly girl when they were children, so it was reassuring to see her able to move around like that. With a wink, it seemed like she returned to her usual, pompous self.

“Just kidding. I get whatchu mean. You can leave everything to me.”

“Yes, I definitely will. There’s no way I wouldn’t.”

Kato said, somewhat strenuously at Mayumi’s ambiguity. Then again, he wasn’t sure if he would have done anything differently were their positions reversed. At the very least, she was aware of her own place here and all the strings attached to it, and he could only patiently observe what was yet to come.


After Mayumi left the playground, heading back down the slopes along the way they came from towards the school, the rest of them gathered at the east end of the playground where the chain-link fences separated it from the wide street that ran north-south. This was where the two groups normally separated, Franco, Caius and the Jupiter sisters in one direction towards the gentrified suburbs, the rest in the opposite direction for another inner city-like district. Though the former might be called a suburb, it was still dominated by high-rises, albeit with luxurious flats and not-as-cramped urban planning as the latter, Kato’s busy home neighbourhood of Sancheung.

Today, however, Caius joined the Eternian children’s group instead. They made their way north along Jordan Street, which eventually turned east into Kato and Eon’s neighbourhood of apartment buildings. Peculiarly in this sector, some of the flats were not right on the main street, but rather there were sections with standalone shops before giving way to the apartment buildings immediately behind it, separated by a narrow pedestrian road that could barely fit two vehicles side by side. Needless to say, at the sections with the flats on the main street, there were more flats behind them too; the city was a dense concentration of mortar and steel.

Eon lived in one of those, the relatively newer flats that were built on the main street after the land was bought off from the standalone shops in a wave of gentrification, while Kato lived in those ones behind the shops that resisted and remained. At the base of Kato’s flat were small shop spaces that could also be used as garages. Since Kato’s family lived with an Eternian nomenklatura, Karl, and now an Eternian Heart too, Sisi, it wasn’t out of the ordinary for them to own a shop space directly below their flat on the second floor.

While the girls, Yui and Alice, went up first, the three men remaining hung out at Kato’s—Karl’s garage, taking out Caius’ bicycle that he kept here on occasion because his own garage was tight on space. Eon and Kato each had their own bikes too, and stored in this garage too in fact. They didn’t find much use for them except to get to school quickly when short on time.

“If I’m gonna practice saxophone at home, I’ll have to carry it on my bike in the morning. It’s gonna be a hassle otherwise to bring it back and forth on foot.”

Unlike Eon and Kato’s situation, Caius’ saxophone was his own so he could take it in and out of school on his own will. Not only that, but Caius lived in a detached house, meaning he could reasonably practice at home without complaints from neighbours. Affixing his saxophone’s case to the multi-purpose rear seat with its fastener belts, Caius shepherded his black bicycle along the shallow ramp that extended from the one-and-a-half vehicles wide garage onto the pedestrian road, to where he halted.

“So we’re gonna play band instruments for the talent show?”

“Hopefully, we can. Because at this rate we’re definitely not going to make it in time with a rock band setup. Either way Alice really wanted to do the talent show thing, and it’ll be the best opportunity for our debut, so why not?”

“Kato and being servile to women, name a more iconic duo.”

“Only a few specific ones. I don’t want to hear that from a man who’s also bullied by his sisters.”

“You’re also weak-willed against my older sister Katia too, so you can’t count them against me.”

“Eon, Kato, please. Be grateful you have wonderful sisters. Being an only child here is a sad existence.”

“Then you have no idea how painful siblings are.” “You don’t want siblings if you’ve ever had them.”

“You won’t want to live without siblings if your parents can’t be your playmates and your time’s spent alone with the radio or the television.”

Caius shrugged amusedly at their simultaneous response.

“Anyway, when’re auditions again?”

“Auditions are gonna keep going for the next four, five weeks. The talent show’s on the first Saturday of November, so we still have lots of time.”

“We need to learn how to play these instruments from scratch, audition with them a month later, and then perform two weeks after? Sign me up on this death train.”

They chuckled at Eon’s reality check, putting into perspective how high and lofty their goal was. However, they were not discouraged one bit; they were confident, perhaps not in their ability but in their ego, to pull through this with hard work and dedication. This was the modus operandi of the old men of the Elites.

“If I know ourselves well enough, we’ll probably get in by the skin of our teeth at the very last possible moment. In any case, I can always carry you guys when it comes to music.”

Caius agreed with Eon’s assessment as he mounted his bicycle, already ready to leave. Quick business was Caius’ style, but perhaps that principle was a little lax today as he still had not yet moved.

“What do you guys think of Mayumi?”

Caius calmly opened the can of worms, and Eon obliged to open it up with him.

“I’ve got nothing on her. She’s returned to us out of the blue, and personally, I’m wary at what her motivation is, but I know it’s got nothing to do with me, just as it was the case when she first left us. That’s why I’m fine either way. A blood brother returned. Nothing more, nothing less.”

After putting everything on the table, Eon looked to Kato expectantly.

“You both already know exactly what happened back then. My opinion of her hasn’t changed from that time, and it seems like her opinions haven’t changed either. I’ve never had a stake in any of this, and I’ve even reminded her so, just earlier. Got it, Caius?”

Caius nodded slowly, his serene face unflinching as usual, giving no indication of what was going through his head. Even in his voice, he showed nothing.

“Yeah, Kato, don’t worry. I understand what you mean. It’s not your fault to begin with.”

“See, there’s nothing out of the ordinary here. Kato’s probably sad now that he’s going back to getting wrecked by us.”

“Oh, yeah, I’m so looking forward to that, bro.”

Even though this was supposed to be a serious conversation, their tendency to derail anything and everything arrived soon enough. Alice had a hard time reining them in because the only people who could rein them in were the men themselves.

“Did she say anything else, Kato?”

“She didn’t say much about herself. She’s only asked me about you, which I’m guessing she’s worried about how you took it back then.”

“How did you respond?”

“I just told her it’s an issue between the two of you. She should clean up after herself.”

Caius nodded calmly again, accepting his answer. Seeing that, Kato felt as if he didn’t say enough to reassure one of his best friends of his position. Though it appeared a black box while it was operating, still Kato was around Caius long enough to know how he actually operated, and so he knew no amount of words could relieve Caius’ doubts. Despite that, he continued on.

“If you still have doubts about the past, then this is the time to ask her about it. I’ve already given you my side of the story a long time ago, so it’s up to you whether you want to believe it or confirm it or neither.”

They stood together for a good thirty seconds of silence. They stared at one another, Eon and Kato on one side, Caius on the other. The noise of the city was loud in their ears without the sounds of their voices. Random shouts, car tires grinding on the road, ticking pedestrian lights, spinning bicycle chains, idling trucks and accompanying snaps of metal on concrete ground, were all common sounds of their familiar city.

“I get it, Kato. I believe you. It’s not about that anymore. Truth to be told, I’ve already given up on it. Now, it’s more like I wanna see how I should treat our relationship from here on out, and hopefully nothing needs to be done about the past.”

Though his words were steady, neither Eon nor Kato bought it at face value. What Kato said was not a supposition, but an assertion that Caius had misgivings about the past. If that half a minute of silence wasn’t the evidence, then what else could it have meant?

However, Caius didn’t lie either. They could believe that his wound healed over time, but there were definitely parts of the story he kept to himself and out of sight of his best friends. Eon could only walk up to Caius to put a hand on his shoulder.

“If that’s all, then we’ll leave it to you. Does that sound good?”

Caius retracted his bike stand and put his feet on the pedals, already pedalling forward and away from them, and waved back with a content smile. Not once did the expression on his face crack.

“Sounds good, peeps.”

And just like that, he turned and disappeared between the shops and back onto the main street. Eon shook his head, grieving already in front of Kato, who was bemused the whole time.

Eon took a seat on the step to the side of Kato’s garage, which was raised above the pedestrian road by a couple of steps, hence the concrete ramp from the garage opening. He put his hands to his forehead, the strain from their stare-down finally receding from his face.

“Aaughhhhhhh. This sounds like a pain in the ass, dammit. Why did Mayumi have to come back?”

“What? You didn’t forgive her either?”

“Well, it’s not about if I forgive her or not. It’s about if Caius can forgive her. That’s what I mean by pain in the ass. You know Caius holds onto these grudges, even if he outright denies it. And you. You’re actually directly involved too, even though you try to portray yourself not as such.”

Kato sighed overdramatically, crouching down to Eon’s level.

“Technically, yes, but you know I’ve already done everything I could to make this situation not about me, even if it was by pure chance that I didn’t give in to her wishes.”

“Yeah, I know, but either way this’ll never end. But hey, at least it’s not my fault.”

“Do you mind Mayumi returning to us?”

“No, I don’t. It’s nice to have that kind of a spirit from back when we were kids, y’know, the nostalgia. It’s only really after her operation to fix her eye that things fell apart completely. How about you?”

“Same reasoning as yours. She’s one of us, an original Elite, so why wouldn’t I be happy that she’s back?”

Kato shrugged helplessly as Eon gave another sigh. It was extra depressing for Eon because he was also an original Elite but felt powerless to change its course. Kato and his sisters joined them at the start of primary school, but incredibly the original three had been together since kindergarten.

“So, what is this all exactly?”

Suddenly, Alice appeared from around the corner together with her high-pitched, sharp, almost naggy voice. Crossing her arms, she came here for the explanation she wanted from Kato earlier in the day. Trailing behind her was Yui, still carrying their schoolbags in her arms.

“Were you hiding just behind the corner?”

“Yes. Yui’s here too. Nobody’s gone home yet.”

She pointed up at the big steel cage that encased the opening in the concrete building that was a four-metre wide window, just above them on the second floor. No one could call their apartment building “modern” as it was built with a brutalist architectural style, underlining its origins as social housing within the sprawling city. The building itself was really plain and nondescript, but the inhabitants decorated their metal cages with plant pots, minor household shrines, and clothes hanging off wooden bars for air drying. For social housing, this apartment was one of the better ones, excellent even.

“I can’t say I’m surprised. But I think Yui remembered what happened, did you?”

“Only as a memory from long ago, but yes, I do remember the sequences of events. at least from an outsider’s perspective. It was surprising for the rest of the class too, but most of them quickly forgot about it after Mayumi moved away.”

Beside the space that was normally occupied by Karl’s small car was something like a miniature living room, with a tiny desk, a cabinet and several chairs. There was even a cramped Oriental-style washroom that was a source of hot water. Alice entered the garage to sit down in one of the lawn chairs, crossing her bare voluptuous legs that were her speciality in lieu of any significant assets on her chest.

“Then, tell me what happened.”

The boys and Yui looked at each other, and after a moment Eon motioned his head at Kato, who nodded in agreement.

“I’ll do it then. Let’s start with the initial problem—her clairvoyant eye.”


Clank. Click.

The lock to the folding metal grill barrier in front of the door deconstructed itself loudly as it always did. Thirty floors above the ground, Cecilia finally returned home with a Yue takeout meal inside the plastic bag she was holding onto.

She lived in an inner city district not unlike Kato and Eon’s, but the difference was that it truly was an inner city district which occupied the lowlands of the valley, which allowed for the construction of high-rises from early on in the city’s development. It would be years before high-rises as tall as hers would occupy all of the hillsides, and lots of progress had already been made. The hustle and bustle here, though already enough for most people, was still nothing compared to central downtown or the ghetto.

The entrance was quite dark, and she saw four pairs of shoes before the entryway. There were more on the rack to the side, but those were there for the alternating seasons and occasions. The bleached tiles extended further along the narrow passage that led to the well-lit living room and kitchen at its end, blindingly bright now that she closed the door behind her. There was a mixture of mumbles and rambles of male voices in Old Yue from that direction. Familiar clicks of stone on stone echoed throughout the apartment, but then suddenly these pebbles made a deafening waterfall and prompted her to move forward.

She cautiously made her way towards the light, and the walls close enough for her both her raised elbows to touch. But before she was able to take a sharp turn to the left into another narrow corridor, a truly repugnant call for her stopped her in her tracks.

“Cecilia! Why d’you come home late?”

“Sorry, Dad. I had club activities. They always make it long.”

“Then don’t be an ungrateful runt and call Steven’s for takeout. We’re all waiting for dinner here.”

She was met with sneers from the other three middle-aged men of varying sizes sitting at the mahjong table that her father had been hosting probably for the entire afternoon. She could see the recently disposed styrofoam boxes in the overflowing trash bin in the farther corner that, most likely, her mother had ordered and paid for. Their ashtrays were filled with soot and although the window behind them was open, the scent of tobacco was still strong.

“And how many times do I have to tell you? Fix yourself up. You look awful.”

“Right. I’ll call Steven’s right now. The usual is fine?”

Her hair was all over the place and it fell in front of her to obscure her face, giving off a roughed up impression. She did this on purpose, however, precisely because of the predatory stares of the other three men here in her home, to which her father was completely oblivious to. In fact, she regularly used the school’s girls’ dormitory facilities to shower before she returned home, changing from her uniform and miniskirt into the current jersey and sweatpants; the classic shut-in appearance. She normally carried a duffel bag around instead of a schoolbag for this reason. It was a little difficult to do in the summer because of the humidity immediately invalidating the shower, but there was no other convenient choice.

“Nng.”

A strange grunt for affirmative, she stepped just inside the living room’s boundaries to reach for the corded telephone perched atop a short wooden stand. While the living room was not as grimy as Cecilia expected it to be after the wear and tear of being a gambling site, it was nonetheless somewhat dusty and dirty, with smears of pigment or otherwise from chairs and other things scraping the white walls. The small couch was worn down enough for the plastic-like top layer to fracture into chips and pieces, revealing the woven lines of the fabric right underneath. The radio and television sat unused while they played, and they were just as run-down with the cracks and worn-out buttons and gears.

She could already feel the lecherous stares from behind her, and unfortunately for her it was inevitable. There was bound to be a day where she couldn’t avoid returning home in a tempting form, and since she was naturally on the attractive side, it undoubtedly caught the attention of these wretched middle-aged unemployed men who wouldn’t have this kind of a chance to ogle otherwise.

Cecilia immediately retreated after the telephone call was done with, hurriedly down the corridor and into her room. She made sure to lock and double lock the door behind her before she could let herself relax. Luckily, they never drink alcohol because it actually interfered with their game, so the chances of anything happening to her was relatively low, but the pressure and fear of this unknown still weighed heavily in the smoke-filled air. It was against all of her instincts to place any trust in those men, including her father.

Unfortunately, her trips to the washroom were when she was exposed to risk, and there wasn’t much she could do about it. This had been the state of affairs since she was young so she learned to live with it, but as a result she couldn’t wait for graduation and get out of this godforsaken house.

Sometimes, she lamented the loss of her father’s sanity. About twenty years ago, a massive economic depression swept Auxiria as a result of a collapse in the financial system in the neighbouring continent of Eiria, first with the great Hellenic West Yunia Company going bankrupt. Businesses closed and companies disappeared, and it continued for years to come. Her father was swept up in one of the successive waves of foreclosing businesses, around when Cecilia was just a toddler. The image of a not depressed and miserable father was just a distant memory.

She noticed a small grocery bag on the top of her crowded desk and promptly opened it up. It was a sizeable collection of packages of candy from a local confectionery, and Cecilia smiled wryly at it. She put it away in the topmost drawer underneath her desktop where she kept all the other packages because she wanted to control her sugar intake.

It was something her mother left behind for her from daytime. Unlike her father who had lost his way to gambling, her mother worked many jobs day in, day out to keep Cecilia in school and the household fed. Possibly due to a combination of these influences, from very young she was taught to take care of her health because seeing the doctor meant exorbitant costs for her mother.

As she weaved her chopsticks through her takeout dinner with her right hand, in her left she ran her fingers through the reading material from the classes she skipped. Instead of earphones, her compact disc player was connected with a bulky headset for use at home. She was sure she had the innate ability to make good use of her polytechnic education, and if she didn’t have to take care of her mom and dad in the places they lacked, she would have made it into Class A by now. At least that was her hubris. It was only past seven-thirty, but in a couple of hours she would fall asleep on her bed, completely exhausted, and no amount of motivation could get her to focus well enough on her studies living in a household like this one.

After paying the delivery boy with her mother’s money and leaving the packaged meals behind in the living room, she threw away her own dinner’s packaging and the rest of her room’s trash into the garbage chute at the end of the apartment floor’s main corridor. She occasionally saw a neighbouring boy, likely only approaching middle school age, shyly waiting around the corner to have a chance to talk to the fair, tall, older girl. She appreciated the company, but unfortunately he was a bit too young for her.

However, today was rather unlucky as the one who waited round the corner was not the infatuated neighbourhood boy but her erstwhile family and cousin.

“What is it, Stephen? If you’re looking for Dad, he’s playing mahjong as usual.”

“Your tone hasn’t changed, I see. Is it too difficult for you to behave civilized for once?”

“I’m glad you noticed that I don’t want to see you, then.”

There was nothing but contempt in both of their stares, more animated so on Stephen’s face than Cecilia’s. Stephen almost physically flinched from holding back his tongue, but he managed to swallow it whole.

“I’m not here for Marcel today. I need to speak with Aunt Nellie about the Yaumatei dance hall management gig she was offered a while back. Is she in right now?”

“Mom’s busy. Come back later, and she might be here. Can’t guarantee it though.”

“You do realize I’m sent here as a gesture of friendship, right?”

“Doesn’t matter if Mom doesn’t want to do anything for the old family. It’s been like this for years and years now, and I’m surprised that you all still haven’t given up yet.”

“Father doesn’t want to give up on his only younger sister, so I too have the same responsibility to Aunt Nellie. But if you insist, then I’ll tell Father the same to drop this.”

“Yeah. And tell Uncle Vincent that he’s not going to convince Mom otherwise anytime soon. Just like every other time.”

It was hard for anybody to figure out with Stephen’s messy black hair and permanently rigid frown that this man was Cecilia’s direct cousin. He was still in his school uniform, although somehow loosely clung to his big frame as if his shirt didn’t deserve to be worn by his enormous ego.

The old family was the Liguro family, from which Cecilia’s mother had been estranged from, which operated a prominent property management business in Livia and Lien. They were in charge of the day-to-day running of property and naturally could perform consultant and other middle-man work between the renters and property owners. While the tycoons owned the land and property, it was the Liguro family that managed the buildings on it for the lay-people who came to rent, whether they were for private residences, commercial shop spaces or even factories.

Of course, this naturally meant that the Liguro family business was dependent on the patronage of the real estate tycoons, especially their relationship with Mona’s family, the Mackenzies. Being Gilbert’s right hand man, the Gilbert faction and the Mona faction were in reality one and the same, no matter how different their politics in school were.

Giving him a pout, this was what irked Cecilia in her childish idealistic dream-world. She could see first-hand the hypocrisy of supposedly diametrically opposed political factions being tied at the hip underneath their shirts. Just as in the real-world, powerful and seemingly opposed interests could be intricately tied together under the table.

This was the fucked up world that Stephen represented for Cecilia, and perhaps because her mother also had this childish idealistic view, the ego to reject the corporate mob world and run away from home, that Cecilia turned out this way too. Because both these sentiments were part of Tommy’s rejection of suburbia, Auxirian Idiot appealed to Cecilia so well.

“My concern is why Aunt Nellie insists on taking it on herself to do everything, including continuing to cling herself to some doofus like Marcel for all these years. She can return to the family at any moment because Father’s generous enough to let her, but yet she doesn’t. Why?”

“Your concern? It doesn’t need to be your concern because neither you nor Uncle Vincent understand any of the principles that Mom lives by. Even if she’s living in hell on earth, she will never look back at the old family and say she regretted leaving them.”

“Suit yourself. It’s Father’s wish to support Aunt Nellie, but you’re free to continue to turn us down. Similarly, I wish for you to be in good shape.”

“Sorry, I don’t need your fake charity either. Whether it’s the nomenklatura or the aristocracy, it’s all the same bullshit to me.”

Stephen’s fuse was much shorter than Gilbert’s, but at least it was only a snarl at the end.

“I won’t argue principles right now. But the fact remains that you and I live in this reality, so grow up and deal with it.”

“Coming from you, it’s gotta be a joke, right? Speak for yourself. But you’re right in that let’s just leave each other alone and not argue principles. Goodbye.”

Though Cecilia’s appearance wasn’t as disturbed as Stephen’s, whenever she spoke to him she felt an inexplicable urge to talk back and deny every one of his ideas. Stephen scowled as she attempted to turn around for home.

“And another thing. Watch your morning class’ tardiness. You’re gonna be put on probation if you keep this up.”

“I don’t need a life lesson every time I speak to you. And don’t be a creep. It’s kinda fucked up for you to be able to look up my grades and attendance, so don’t do it to other girls. I’ll be the first to testify in a pedophilia case for you.”

“The PSC and the student council have all of that data. If you have a problem with it, then don’t attend Korolev Senior.”

“Psh. It’s more convenient for you to not have me attend the same school as you, eh?”

“That’s not it. No one can tell we’re related anyway, even if you put Aunt Nellie and Father next to us.”

Stephen pointed to his jet-black hair, on top aplenty but shaved short on the sides and back, and obviously different from Cecilia’s dirty blonde hair; a colour that Cecilia inherited solely from her father. She sighed. It was enough, and she already talked back too much today. The day’s fatigue made her especially inhospitable.

“Of course. Business as usual, then. Nothing has changed.”

Stephen sighed as well. Perhaps because Cecilia was still family, it was easier to throw in the towel at this stage. He turned away without missing a step.

“Understood. Then let’s keep it that way.”

3 – Shadows and Cons

“So, how come you’re in our class?”

“Why not?”

The number in their group increased to five in the fifth period home economics class with the addition of Mayumi. On Alice’s left were Evie, Franco and Bianca, while the newcomer but also old guard sat on her right on the previously empty stool.

It was a chill class with lots of teaching downtime for the students to work on their “projects”, as cooking was something that couldn’t be taken home as homework. As such, there were no exams for this class and instead marking only involved what was done in class and a few relevant written reports.

“Hey, Alice, what’s your relationship with Kato?”

“W-w-w-what do you mean, r-relationship?!”

Alice jumped at the question, flustered. Fortunately, the others were too focused on the flaming kitchen in front of them to notice. Staring back at Mayumi, Alice could see nothing but innocence in her eye, which made it even harder to reply.

“Do you like him?”

“What—”

Levelling up her distress, she dropped the spoon in her hand onto the floor as her face turned beet-red. Amazingly, Mayumi didn’t blink during the whole ordeal, which internally scared the living soul out of Alice.

“Was it not clear enough?”

“N-no, it’s abundantly clear. And also no, it’s not what you think it is.”

After a short pause, Mayumi burst out laughing, apparently finished with her antics and returned to her usual bright smile.

“I thought I’d just ask directly. The two of you are super close, that much I can see.”

“R-really? Does it seem that way?”

While Alice’s stammer remained, Mayumi sighed exaggeratedly with an arrogant smirk.

“The whole class can see it if they have a pair of eyes. Kato was never subtle with the girls he favoured.”

“Then what you mean is—”

“Oops, I worded that wrong. I have to say ‘people’, not ‘girls’. That makes more sense.”

Mayumi’s grin turned several shades darker with evil. Knowing that her own face lit up for a moment there, Alice put a hand to her face in defeat. Unbelievable, this tiny runt was.

“Mayumi…”

“It’s okay. Don’t worry too much about it. I just want to know what everyone’s situation is. I just got back from a seven-year hiatus, y’know?”

“Then, if I may ask, what’s your relationship with Kato?”

“Hm, mine? You can say I’m another Caius or Eon. Don’t you agree?”

“Actually, yeah, I can see a lot of similarities. I’m not sure how I want to feel about it, though.”

“Pft. Well, I don’t blame you for asking. I do favour Kato in that sense.”

“… I see.”

“Your reaction, that’s all? I’m dropping my own dimes here, Alice! I pay my dues, obviously.”

“I guess… I’m kinda surprised that you would tell me that, that’s all.”

Mayumi put a finger to her head, and she struggled a little while she gave it some thought.

“Hmm. I guess I want to tell you because, well, it feels like we’re in a similar situation, aren’t we?”

She dropped another cryptic message accompanied by an innocent smile, and Alice could only hesitate.

“Mayumi, is he the reason why you’ve returned?”

A plethora of emotions danced across Mayumi’s face, a mixture of surprise, curiosity, admiration and satisfaction. She eventually shrugged contently.

“I guess it would have to be you who would ask that. None of the others would have the balls to ask that to my face.”

“You said it yourself. You’re their big boss, aren’t you?”

“So you’re not gonna recognize me as your boss?”

“Hmph. I’ve never recognized anybody as my boss.”

“Well, I guess that’s not out of the ordinary. To answer your question, it’s a partial yes. This is the last chance, after all. Am I right?”

Mayumi shrugged once more, and Alice’s eyes widened.

“You knew about that too?”

“It’s also my understanding that you’re joining the nomenklatura as well. So yes, I’m in the know, so to speak.”

Now, Alice was sufficiently alarmed. Mayumi was more mysterious than she initially thought.

“How did you—who are you?”

“You can say I’m connected to Eternia in an indirect way. I mean, most everyone in this school is, otherwise they wouldn’t be here. I heard it from when you broke off your engagement with a son of the Lafayette family.”

She smiled lightly, but it was obvious to Alice that she was hiding a lot more about herself than she was showing. Alice crossed her arms in defiance.

“If you’ve heard about that, then you’re not a nobody. You’re at least close to the nomenklatura to know that kind of info.”

“Hehehe. That’s about right. Still, I’m only tangentially related because I only happened to hear of it, not because I’m supposed to be privy to it.”

“Then you already knew who I was!”

“Knew of you. I didn’t know what kind of a person you were, or what your relationship with Kato was like until today.”

Alice stiffened at the mention of Kato’s name, and tightened her hands’ grip on her arms to mentally defuse herself. She felt embarrassed not only because of Mayumi’s straightforwardness but also her own failure to not blush when that topic was brought up.

“Then how about your other reason to come back?”

“Hey, you’re pretty sharp, aren’t you? Not letting me get away with half an answer, huh?”

“Apparently, I’m the only one who’s qualified to ask, like you said earlier, right?”

“Not wrong.”

Mayumi grinned and nodded agreeably, wagging her finger at Alice. It wasn’t the condescending kind; rather, it was of the silly grandstanding kind that the Elites usually did.

“I just wanna settle some old scores. If you have an idea of how I knew you were going for nomenklatura status, then you’d probably know what kind of scores I’m settling; although those aren’t the only ones.”

“And you’re not gonna tell me what it is?”

“Nope. And the rest of the Elites don’t know either. It’s completely unrelated to them, after all. It’s my family’s business at the end of the day.”

“Really?”

“To be very honest, though, it’s not that big of a factor for me. If I end up not needing to deal with it, it’ll be even better.”

Alice nodded at the hint she dropped, understanding why she took such a roundabout way to explain herself. In Alice’s imaginative head, she already thought of several identities that Mayumi could be in relation to Eternia. But just as Mayumi did not question Alice’s unique position, Alice decided that Mayumi would explain herself when the need arises, at the very least to the original Elites.

“Also, there’s a third reason.”

“What? There is?”

“I don’t just have scores to settle with the establishment, but ironically, with the Elites as well. Or rather, I want to fix things up.”

“Fix things up? What kind of things?”

Mayumi shook her head readily and kept her mouth shut. Alice took that as another dead end and sighed, almost exaggeratedly. Maybe it was her impatience, but it might also be the Elites’ influence. Mayumi’s comment definitely piqued Alice’s interest, but if she was unwilling to say any further, that was fine; Alice was planning on cornering Kato about it later anyway. Parlaying that mild frustration, she demanded from Mayumi.

“Forget that then. What’s your endgame with Kato?”

Even Alice was surprised at the plain naked aggression in her question. Maybe it was because Mayumi was too much like the Elites that her usual restlessness with them naturally asserted itself. Mayumi was an original, after all, so it made perfect sense. Instead of asking an impossible question about her relationship with Eternia or the Elites, Alice instead asked an impossible question about her relationship with Kato. Amused, Mayumi gave her a rough shove on the back and moved across to join the others at the front of the stove. She gave Alice a parting peace sign.

“For starters, I’ll be tentatively joining you guys’ morning practices. I’m also a student of the performing arts, after all.”

“Wait, what? Really?”

Alice, too, followed her lead and joined in their multiple simultaneous cooking efforts. She didn’t even have the energy to find a better rebuke, and by corollary accepted Mayumi’s determination to do as she wanted. She briefly wondered if this was going to be the new norm between them going forward, but her thoughts were distracted by the flames continuously spouting out of the gas stove. It had only been half a day. She could think about it later, she guessed.


Inside the spacious drama classroom today after class were members of the drama department whom, on the back of Class C’s victory, secured the prime time slot for the upcoming talent show. It lasted for almost two hours, with both sides putting all of their weight into the fight. The last round did indeed go to a deciding match between the two class representatives, in which Class C ultimately prevailed. Of course, as the Elites had pointed out, Class C stole a couple of seats in the Assembly as collateral for their victory.

In a normal school, the student council was supposed to make the executive decision to cut one or the other in the talent show, but this was Korolev Senior; the decision was ultimately made by the Activity Council.

Nominally, the PSC and the AC were extensions of the student council, but it had been traditionally that these two organizations cannibalized certain responsibilities for themselves with great autonomy to exercise these privileges; namely public order and extracurricular activities respectively, to summarize their roles. The Student Liaison Office was, in some ways, the predecessor to the AC, and over the years it devolved into something that matched its namesake as it steadily lost its authority to the autonomy of the AC.

On a separate note, the Records Office was the SLO counterpart to the PSC, in that the Records Office shared equipment, facilities and intelligence with the PSC and vice-versa, albeit the level of integration was never as close as the one between the SLO and the AC. Their relationship was informal at best, but because of the practical logistics of how the faculty provided for these two groups, they coexisted alongside each other fairly closely.

During the years that an ally of the PSC became student council president, they would use the SLO to put pressure on the AC to bend to its will. Conversely, during the years that an ally of the AC was student council president, they would turn the Records Office into an arm that would let them have immense leverage over the PSC.

But this year the balance of power was broken by Class B taking control of student council. It was purely a coincidence that the city of Lien on the other side of the border was almost in open rebellion in the name of justice and freedom, and then in Korolev Senior an underdog group of students were elected to the presidency. And then not too soon after that, one of two pillars of Korolev Senior’s establishment, the PSC, suffered an almost fatal wound by the senatorial investigation scandal and forcing their marshal to resign. Cecilia felt she didn’t live in more troubled times than these.

For better or for worse, the departure of Gilbert from the PSC meant that there was only one other candidate that was far enough from his inner circle to justify his succession, and that was the now-former president of the drama department, Donovan Avgothia. His protégés from the drama department naturally joined him at the PSC, and with them the PSC gained new blood, new ideas and newbie incompetence that came with such a shift in human resources.

“And with today’s victory in the Class War, my duties here are close to its end. I won’t be able to take on the role of president of the drama department any longer.”

Donovan waved to the crowd of students who were sitting in chairs or standing up haphazardly, most of which were from Class Cs of all three years. He stood at the blackboard that allowed this classroom to be used as a regular one. There was a mini-stage at the other end of the classroom complete with an elevated platform and a backstage. The drama room was also two stories high, essentially as large as the main music room.

The crowd was rather large today. There were almost sixty students in here, close to a third of which were from Class 3-C. Normally there wouldn’t be this many gathered at once as students had their own roles and specializations, so they had their daily activities separated accordingly. Though there were students from outside of Class C, their total didn’t make it to five, and they were mostly made up of subject enthusiasts or those who were seeking to join Class C the next year.

Donovan was an imposing man by his own right, so appearance-wise he fitted the bill to become PSC marshal. His dirty blond hair was not unlike Cecilia’s, and he had a face that was comparable to a rough boulder. If he put on a chequered shirt and overalls he would look like a stereotypical lumberjack, but in the school’s semi-formal uniform he was just a big guy with an abundance of short facial hair.

“This is an unprecedented situation as I was never expected to become marshal, so we won’t have an internal election lest we set inappropriate precedents. There won’t be a new president, and I’ll leave the student body to our general operations manager, Anne Congreve.”

A freckled brunette with twin ponytails in the audience stood up at the mention of her name, waving to her peers as they clapped in response. It was a clear acknowledgement of her rising to the position of president in all but title.

“Of course, our faculty advisors, Mr Verne, Mr Nigel and Mr Madison will continue in their roles unchanged, and helping out where there’s any backfilling of duties needed as a consequence of my departure. As for myself, I won’t say goodbye to all of you yet. I’ll still be here as a senior member, as well as my trusted classmates who are going with me to the PSC. We’ll just be doing less work here, and it’ll be a wonderful opportunity for others to take on leading roles on both the stage and the drama department.”

Murmurs abound, Donovan continued professionally with the corporate smile on his face.

“As you all know, we’re gonna be performing our rendition of Auxirian Idiot as a part of the talent show and a few of us moving on to the PSC were casted in some major roles, including myself where I’ve been casted in Tommy’s role. We’ll have to vacate these roles and the faculty must recast them. Mr Verne?”

Mr Verne stood up at his cue and waved to the obviously growing noise that was the crowd.

“Although this will mean our schedule is a bit shorter to make the November timeline for the talent show, which is only less than seven weeks out, hopefully we can find the appropriate people to fill in these roles in the stage performance by the end of this week. This means emergency tryouts, especially for the role of Tommy.”

“Isn’t Tommy’s role tied to Whatzshecalled’s?”

A question from the audience was shouted out at Mr Verne, who took it good-naturedly.

“That’s right. That’s why the tryouts will be different from usual. We don’t want to take away roles that were already decided on, but we’ll have to accommodate both sides by making some compromises between the tied roles and our new replacements.”

Cecilia, who was spaced out staring at the floor, looked up at Mr Verne’s response. She didn’t expect her part, Whatzshecalled, to be managed in this manner. In her head, she sighed at Mr Verne’s decision as, while it was nice to retain a main role, it wasn’t worth the daggers in the eyes of her peers that were now unrelentingly digging into her back. She sat alone in one of the chairs near the front as she usually did, since almost none of Class C were her friends.

“Then what you’re saying is, we’ll have to recast Tommy’s role with Cecilia remaining in her part?”

“For now, yes, that’s our intention.”

Anne asked to specifically confirm, and nodded agreeably at Mr Verne’s answer. Murmurs turned loud at the revelation and a girl behind her piped up in response.

“Why can’t we recast both parts?”

In Auxirian Idiot, Whatzshecalled was a true rebel that Tommy met in the city ghetto, whom he fell madly in love with. So if Donovan was vacating Tommy’s role, then Cecilia expected her role to be re-casted too, but apparently that wasn’t the case and it didn’t fall on the deaf ears of her peers.

“Because we really don’t have enough time to do both roles’ recasting. It’ll be a lot faster if Mr Verne can make an executive decision on who gets Tommy’s role, or on any of the roles, to be very honest. If the AC announced the talent show at a sooner, more appropriate timing, we wouldn’t have this kind of time crunch.”

Donovan slighted the AC behind a reasonable explanation in place of Mr Verne, who himself nodded in agreement. It attracted some sneers from the crowd, naturally so as they were Donovan’s clique.

“In any case, our ultimate goal is to put on as good of a show as we can with the resources we have, so let’s put our faith in Mr Verne to see this through.”

Anne piped up to affirm Donovan’s assertion. With both de facto leaders of the drama department taking the same stance the rest of the room quieted down, albeit begrudgingly.

“Thanks, Anne.”

“Oh, no, no need to thank me. Your explanation is reasonable, given our circumstances. That’s all.”

And just like that, Donovan and Mr Verne sat back down as the rest of the room started moving again, suddenly dismissed. A smaller crowd gathered around them to ask further questions, but otherwise the club returned to their regularly scheduled programs.

There were a few specialists within the drama department. The fashion team, for example, was in charge of makeup and costumes. There was the small film crew, who took care of producing the show from off the stage. A few were in the publicity team, which took care of advertisement and liaison with those outside the drama department; doubling as secretaries for Donovan and Anne due to the nature of that role. Most of the rest were in the nebulous stage crew, who were responsible for everything on stage; from procuring props, lighting, and sound for performance prepping, to directing cues and making scene transitions during a performance.

Performers, those who were selected to play a role in a performance, were not mutually exclusive. Students were expected and did take on multiple roles, whether they were performing or not, and the big stage crew was usually made almost entirely of performers; there might be a few outliers when there was not enough manpower. Only the most precocious of performers would not voluntarily accept a stage crew role, for example the relocation of props during a transition. All of these people were under the direction of the president and the general operations manager—which was just another name for the vice-president—to bring the whole thing together into a show.

“Looks like you lucked out. You got to keep your role, Celia.”

“Not too bad, is it? I’d bet it was Don who vouched for you.”

“I wish I had Don’s bankrolling too. Celia, what’s your secret, really?”

“I don’t have any secret, really…”

“Aw, don’t sell yourself so low, Celia. If you just kept yourself not so shaggy, you could have been a popular girl for sure.”

“It’s obvious that Don’s liked you since the start of high school. You’re still unsure? If I were you, I would’ve taken his bait a long time ago, just for the benefits.”

“Flora, it’s useless. Celia’s too airheaded to even know that that was an option, despite us reminding her all this time.”

“I know, Risa. Celia’s been too obstinate. What’s wrong with Don?”

Cecilia’s only two friends in the drama department were these two black-haired Yue girls from Class 3-E. They weren’t performers like Cecilia was, and instead they were just enthusiasts who were part of the fashion team, and luckily for Cecilia they were the only ones who were willing to do her makeup for her these last two years. As dedicated makeup artists and hairdressers, naturally, their faces too were perennially behind mascara and powder, and wore intricate hair accessories, earrings and baggy clothes of today’s popular trends. Together with Cecilia, their appearance was not too far from the classical punk style and ethos.

“I told you guys many times. He’s just not the type for me. You saw how he took the PSC job so readily. I don’t think I can handle being the… the marshal’s object of affection.”

“I can’t believe you. A man’s gotta have some ambition to be a man. From my point of view, the benefits outweigh the disadvantages.”

“And besides, it’s not like you’re accepting his hand in marriage. If it really turns out that you don’t like him, then you can leave him after we graduate. You can’t force a relationship that isn’t working anyway, so no harm in that.”

“You two… if I really were like you two, I would have done that a long time ago, but I still don’t want to be so involved like that. I dunno, it’s just hard to put myself into the fire.”

Cecilia could only force a smile at her two sighing companions.

“I guess that can’t be helped. Celia’s been too traumatized, eh?”

“I wouldn’t say traumatized, just really cautious, and I just don’t want to have unnecessary trouble following me around.”

“That’s what we call traumatized, Celia.”

Flora patted her head as Risa picked up their schoolbags, preparing to leave. There was only this general members’ meeting, and the fashion team didn’t need to show up as much as the performers, after all.

“We’ll see you around, Celia.”

“See ya.”

“Bye.”

The two fashionable gals left the buzzing room, leaving Cecilia alone in her seat once more. Cecilia appreciated their friendship over the last two years. If they were Class C, they would not have been friends at all, and even as non-Class C students, it was already a miracle that they remained friends for this long.

“Cecilia!”

A shrilly voice called out not long after the Yue pair departed and it was a voice Cecilia recognized like the back of her hand, for better or for ill. It was Anne, and as usual the annoyance and disapproval in her tone was as clear as day, despite the neutrality of the lettered words that were coming out of her mouth.

“Have you finished helping the lighting team fix their setup? Last I heard, we needed to replace several big coloured lights and put them together, and they’re going in the centre, so it’s important we have it. What’s the status?”

“Um, I still haven’t been able to get the lights replaced. I’ve handed the potential receipt to Ariel, but she hasn’t approved of the transaction yet.”

“And did you ask Mr Verne to push that forward? The drama department’s funded nominally through the student government, but we, as a non-partisan union, can have our money bills recommended directly by the faculty.”

Procuring resources for school clubs was somewhat bureaucratic in Korolev Senior. In general, school clubs were divided between two groups; ones affiliated with the AC, and the independents. In technical terms, the first group were school clubs funded directly by the student government; the second group were known as non-partisan unions, i.e. student organizations established by the faculty. This was what the drama department was. In other words, if the student council was not willing to provide funds, the faculty sponsoring the non-partisan union could recommend a money bill amendment in the Assembly to enforce the change in the budget. Of course, this was the case only if the faculty agreed to intervene, and that was what Anne was asking for.

“No, not yet. I just asked Ariel last Friday, so it’s only been two days… ”

“Hmph. I know you’re friends with Madam Secretary, but I’ve told you many times before. If they don’t get anything done within two days, use Mr Verne’s position to get things done. Like Mr Verne said, we have just seven weeks to get a stage performance out the door, and neither the setup nor the casting are even close to wrapped up. We don’t have spare days to waste, do you understand?”

“Um, but we’re not supposed to use Mr Verne as much as possible…”

Of course not. Using faculty intervention was controversial because it violated the “students governing student life” principle. For non-partisan unions, it obviously happened more often, but usually only with good reason, and the only non-partisan union that regularly warranted this intervention was the student newspaper club. Anne rolled her eyes.

“And I have a stage performance to bring together. The Assembly’s convention is tomorrow, so let’s use what we have to get this done, all right?”

Anne closed on the topic just like that, leaving her in a sticky situation. As Cecilia was a Member of the Assembly for the Class C constituency, thanks to Donovan’s grace, she would have to propose a money bill in the Assembly’s convention tomorrow with Mr Verne’s signature, which should expedite the passage of the bill within the session. Anne basically told her to take the brunt of the blame if the Assembly, especially the Mona faction, took offence to faculty intervention.

In the years that the AC’s faction controlled the student council, every faculty intervention went to the courts; essentially filibustering by delaying that bill’s passage by a week since the court almost always returned in favour of the faculty, and the Assembly convened only once a week. The judicial review would not accomplish anything substantial, but it obviously frustrated the efforts of the PSC and the non-partisan unions that backed the PSC. This was a major reason why the contest over the student council was important to these two factions.

“All right.”

Cecilia could only feebly agree with Anne’s patronizing suggestion. Anne responded with another impatient roll of her eyes, and without wasting a second she switched to the next item of business.

“On the topic of procuring new stuff, I believe the fashion team too had a list of items that they need purchased. Go ahead and make them from our purse, and get it to them by next week when they meet. Check with Mabel to make sure you’re getting the right things for her.”

She handed a paper list to Cecilia, who also had access to the drama department’s purse, and again thanks to Donovan. It was a liquid pool of cash for the department carried by the faculty advisors, and it was a subset of the overall budget. The remaining balance was inside student council.

“Okay, understood.”

“For now, please go to Mr Verne anyway. He needs your help with recasting Tommy’s role. Go on.”

Casually and honestly quite abruptly, Anne dismissed Cecilia with a wave of her hand and moved on without a second thought to the next group of students to berate; at least that was Cecilia’s imagination. Thinking rationally though, Anne had always been like this to her, and she didn’t expect Anne’s attitude to change.

“Ah, Cecilia, you’re here.”

At the corner of the chalkboard were the three faculty advisors and Donovan, surrounded by some of the remaining cast; the departing cast, of course, didn’t need to be there. Donovan graciously came up to Cecilia first.

“Sounded like you got an earful from Anne over there. Don’t take it too personally. She’s trying to get things done by a deadline.”

“No, no, no, I didn’t take that personally, Don. Don’t worry ‘bout it.”

“Cool. Good to hear.”

Cecilia, of course, didn’t mention the part where Anne was like this to her on a regular basis, though Donovan already had an idea that that was happening. Plus, she was sure Anne was using Cecilia’s personal connection to Ariel and therefore the student council to try to expedite some of these money requests, and when things weren’t working out, Anne immediately threw it away and proceeded to go with a method that utterly disrespected Ariel’s position; all while Cecilia did the dirty work.

“Cecilia’s here? Great, then most of the main cast’s here. Then let’s start.”

Mr Verne noticed that Cecilia joined them, and got the attention of the cast. Cecilia guessed that Anne volunteered to Mr Verne to call her over because Anne had housekeeping items to push on her.

“As we all know, we’re in a bit of a pinch because we need to recast a bunch of roles. Most importantly, we’re recasting Tommy’s and St. Timmy’s roles. Quite honestly, we’ve lost too many star talents both on and off the current cast to Don’s new job, and I don’t think any of you left in the secondary roles would want to upgrade to a main role when we’re already three weeks into practice.”

The students looked around to each other in curiosity, but also in expected silence. Mr Verne’s appraisal was accurate. There was already a drought of star talents in the drama department after the seniors from last year had graduated, and on top of losing the students moving out with Donovan, the pool of talent left was even drier.

“Normally, I’d suggest bringing up first- or second-year students in this case, but that’s not fair to them on this short of a timeline; using them to fill in the vacant secondary and backup roles is already challenging enough.

“So we’re open to multiple avenues of filling these roles; if anyone is willing to volunteer for an upgrade, let me know by the end of the day after tomorrow, because we’ll need to find a replacement for the role you’re vacating. Afterwards, we’ll go back to the tryout list from before and ask those on it to quickly re-audition. Sounds good?”

Surprisingly there were no complaints about the arrangement. Probably because it was an emergency situation, they were more willing to let the teacher handle everything.

“Cecilia, you will need to choose somebody to pair up for Tommy’s role. Please show up for club every day this week to do the re-casting with us.”

“Okay.”

Cecilia looked away from Mr Verne to Donovan expectantly, and he shrugged with an expression that read “it isn’t my problem anymore”. There was no doubt that Donovan was excited for this golden opportunity in the PSC, basically being handed a free pass upwards. From the utilitarian perspective, she felt a bit uneasy with Donovan’s departure as he was her get-out-of-jail-free card for years, but at the same time she was emotionally relieved to not have to implicitly reject his advances over and over again.

“Or, if you think otherwise, you can also settle for a downgrade by the end of the day after. You’re welcome to do that, and so is anyone else.”

Although the offer sounded great in the ears of the others, it was not really acceptable given the little time they had left. Despite that reality, she could still feel the smirks and snarky eyes on her; though it was a logical fallacy that this decision affected her at all, the optics seemed cynical enough.

They were dismissed early because of the need to wait for the recasting, with the drama department only doing housekeeping work. While there were hardworking members staying behind, knowing they would need all the time that they would get, the performers couldn’t make much progress without the main roles filled out. Donovan waved to Cecilia as she was about to leave.

“Hey, Cecilia. Sorry again, eh? I wished I could have casted in the play together with you. I have no doubt that it would have been a great show.”

“Don’t worry about it, Don. You’re moving up in the world, so just take it as you should.”

“Are you sure you don’t want to move to the PSC with me? You don’t have to put much effort into it. You can just coast alongside me, and relax and get some benefits. Anne’s too much of a chore for you, no?”

Suddenly, Donovan took her by the hand, and quite elegantly too; as expected from a star talent. He seemed truly sincere in his words, and perhaps too conspicuously attached to her. She let him hold her hand, as she did many times before, and amicably declined whatever he suggested, as she also did many times before.

“I’m very sure. I’m not interested in the PSC. Like you said, if Anne’s really too much of a chore for me, I would’ve agreed with you the first time.”

“Then, can you at least tell me why? Is it because of your cousin?”

Cecilia let out a forced laugh and almost rolled her eyes, but luckily her general lethargy prevented her from doing so.

“No, no, no, Stephen has nothing to do with it. Our families might not be close, but we’re not enemies either.”

She extricated her hand from his grasp and turned away to the side with a harsh look on her face, unwilling to say any further. Donovan, of course, saw the discrepancy between her expression and her words in plain sight but agreed with her nonetheless.

“I see. If you say so, then I’ll take your word for it. I wished you could have joined me, but if you insist, then please make Auxirian Idiot successful. It’ll be in your hands, Cecilia.”

“Shouldn’t it be in Anne’s hands?”

“You’re the star, after all. You’ll end up choosing the next Tommy, now that my role in the drama department’s been relegated.”

“You mean that’s your doing? Why?”

“Well, for this particular instance, I really think you have the talent to make the show a success, so at the very least I want to keep you in a primary role to put at ease Mr Verne’s headaches. Of course, I’ll still be around here to help out, just less often than I would’ve liked.”

She nodded slowly with a twinge of cynicism. It was another way of saying “I don’t want to leave behind a mess of a student organization because it’ll hurt my reputation down the road”.

“Whatever, dude. Then exactly how often are you gonna be sticking around to help out? Not enough to be here every day I assume. That’s why you had to give up your role.”

“It seems at most I can join only a few times a week, probably less. Sadly, there’s much to do on the PSC side, but at least with me in charge, the rest of the drama department will continue to be in good standing. The PSC is our patron, after all.”

“You don’t say.”

“Anyway, it’s unfortunate that you don’t want to come with me. You’re welcome to change your mind at any time, if you so choose to.”

He left behind a wink, to which she promptly shrugged and turned again to leave the drama classroom. She let out a breath of relief as her tedious day finally ended.

If Donovan mentioned Stephen, then she didn’t expect him to have any trouble moving into the PSC. They had a good friendship to start with already, and while Gilbert resigned, Stephen decided to, controversially, stay on the PSC. This was the source of the narrative that Donovan would just become a puppet of the Gilbert faction, which had many grains of truth in it, knowing their friendship quite well. She sighed at the thought of Stephen, with whom she had a neutral yet rocky relationship with, and as her thoughts drifted from Stephen to her family, she sighed again and shook her head furiously to try to get rid of it from her thoughts. No need to think any deeper than it was necessary, she told herself.

Instead, she forced her thoughts to wander back to her encounter earlier in the day with the rebel from Class F. She remembered the siege of the 3-F classroom not too long ago and how Stephen was on one side while Caius was on the other. It was almost surreal to think that people like these actually existed, personifying two opposing positions and ideals not just from their actions but from their very personalities as well. Even more interesting was how a plain person like her had some kind of connection to these two extraordinary individuals, not unlike how Tommy first went into the city and was at the same time awed and disappointed by the city lights; awed by its romanticism, disappointed by its reality. As she exited the school through the big front doors and skipped off the grand steps, she snickered to herself at the realization that she looked forward to having Caius rejoin her at some point to discuss Auxirian Idiot again.

2 – Idiots of Suburbia

Caius took a bit of a detour before going to his literature class after lunch. Normally he would go with Ariel if they were gathered together for lunch as they just were, but perhaps just as usual he felt he needed the time to himself to wander about by his lonesome before rejoining his friends.

The bell already rang for the end of lunch period, meaning it was almost the start of the first of two advanced classes every day that went for about fifteen weeks before their final exams. Then the next two advanced classes would start fresh in the next semester, for three semesters a year. It was already the fifth week in, so almost a third of the semester was already over.

Actually he merely remained in the vicinity of where they just were, near the entrance to the main library. The war was still ongoing, but most of the spectators retreated for their classes.

However, he wasn’t concentrating on the fight anymore. Rather, he was ruminating over what had happened in the morning. Out of nowhere a childhood friend reappeared in front of him, and not just that, but it was somebody with which he had some reservations.

Caius sighed with a forlorn expression on his face. His feelings were mixed, to say the least. It wasn’t that he didn’t get along with her, though. In fact, the three of them plus Kato got along the best. Precisely because they once did, he was at a loss at how he should conduct himself.

When Mayumi had left them, she had left them at a time when there was a falling out in the group for the very first time. Specifically, it was between him and Mayumi, and this was why he was still leaning on the balcony railings as class was about to start. Did the passage of time heal those wounds, or would Mayumi hold a grudge against him in the back of her mind? Her attitude this morning didn’t seem to point to that. He couldn’t know if it was one or the other, and at this stage he knew that he would never find out. Despite that, he couldn’t help but run the possibilities through his brain, desperately trying to recollect the events from the past that he spent so much time and effort to bury deep enough in his memories so that he couldn’t recall it easily anymore.

He turned around to lean his back against the rails as he let his eyes wander, watching the last batch of students making their way to their advanced classes. Naturally, his line of sight was drawn to the skirts, both short and long, of the female students, and of course he was smart enough to not let his eyes linger for more than even half a second. It helps to an extent, but only to an extent. The female students who were more alchemically compatible would be able to sense, from the mana flow in the ether, the feeble but uncomfortable energy coming from his glances. He was aware of it of course, but hey, it was what boys did.

Caius then noticed a tall, blonde girl with loose socks and a sweater tied by its sleeves at her hip entered the library, which was remarkable to him because no girl who looked like that would ever go to the library. Her hair was long and dishevelled, and her skirt was super short, which was part of why he noticed in the first place. However, he was not able to get a good look at her face because she already opened the doors and disappeared inside. Unfortunate. Caius liked this particular brand of street fashion of inner city popular culture, similar to Alice’s and Scarlett’s casual wear outside of school. Although they hadn’t crossed paths enough to learn each other’s names, over years of indirect contact he could still recognize that she was from Class C. At the very least, this girl had been in the Korolev school district for at least a few years.

Before the second bell rang for the start of class, Caius quickly made his way to the classroom, but was carrying none of his belongings. He asked Ariel to do that for him as a favour, and as promised he saw them on the seat next to her with a minute to spare before attendance was taken.

“How’re you feeling?”

Caius almost did a double take. He didn’t expect Ariel to speak first; usually he was the first to do so, because Ariel was the kind of girl that didn’t talk unless it was necessary.

“I’m fine, thanks.”

“What do you think of Mayumi returning?”

He smiled wryly at her question.

“Is it that obvious to you?”

“You give off too many clues. Why would you hang around outside at such a bizarre time with only minutes before class?”

“An observant person, you are. Worthy of a rival of the Elites.”

Ariel shrugged, unimpressed.

“If I wasn’t, then I would be another Scarlett.”

“That reminds me, though. This class is the first time we have class together, eh? Even though we always took the same advanced courses, we missed each other completely for the last two years.”

As she turned her head towards him, Ariel’s platinum hair waved in the air beautifully together like radiant chandeliers. It was a mystery as to why her hair was so silky smooth, but then again her sisters’ hair were also of similar quality.

“It only took you five weeks to notice? Here!”

She raised her hand at the call of her name. Unusually, the class continued on talking even while attendance was being taken, but since it was the eccentric and lenient Mr Verne who was teaching the class, this degree of freedom was expected. It didn’t help that the noise meant it would take twice as long to finish with it.

“But at least Mayumi isn’t here. If she was, it would’ve been a big oof for me. Here!”

“Is it really that bad?”

“No, I’m probably just over-thinking it. Really, it doesn’t matter to me if it falls either way. I just want to know what her motivations are, and then I’ll be at ease.”

Caius obediently returned to her initial question, to her mild surprise, but then this was one of Caius’ styles too.

“Well, what happened back in grade four was something from when we were children. Would you not take this opportunity to start off on a clean slate?”

“I think that’s the plan, eh? But it doesn’t mean that I can pretend nothing happened back then. It’ll still haunt me in the back of my mind, until she shows me what her intentions are.”

“I see, though I think this is still a you problem. But have fun waiting for that. She won’t let it slip, because she’s waiting for the same thing from you.”

“Waiting for the same thing?”

“Of course. You’re not the only one in the wrong, so to speak. Both of you are looking for—”

Ariel suddenly stopped herself, and right on cue Mr Verne closed off the attendance book to slap his desk with his ruler, finally signalling to the students to be silent and get on with class. His mind already detached from Ariel’s half-finished analysis, Caius thought it was nigh impossible to know what Mayumi was thinking, just as Ariel thought too. What was he going to do, go up to Mayumi and ask “remember the time when we fought and hurt each other? Have you forgiven me for that yet?” If it was only as simple as that.

Ariel’s face remained pensive, and usually did so no matter the subject. Her disposition was naturally calm, steady and reliable in contrast to her more emotionally-charged sisters. But it didn’t mean she was a pushover in their childish competitions; she was probably the most competitive and resourceful of them, leading the Jupiter sisters to win after win over the Elites, whether it was an athletic contest or a card game. She seemed to have a knack at solving games like no other and, having sisters whose abilities met her strategies’ high burdens of execution, made her feared by the Elites, who on the other hand largely depended on their absurd individual talents to contest the Jupiter sisters.

But outside of their competitions she was a sober and quiet girl who didn’t have much ambition, or at least she never showed it. Out of the children between the Elites and the Jupiter sisters, probably Ariel changed the least, both in personality and physical stature. Most importantly, she happened to be the most emotionally detached from the group, and that was why even the feistiest rival in Caius would talk to Ariel this easily.

They sat very far into the classroom, right next to the windows in fact. Although students could sit anywhere and didn’t have designated seating plans for the advanced classes, because Ariel was the student council’s undersecretary, she was given a lot of respect by her allies and enemies alike. Usually, having a Class B student sit together with a peon from Class F would have been an immense controversy in this socially stratified school, and that was correct. And because she held public office, it was expected for her personal life to be followed around and gossiped about, and this pairing was the most obvious choice of speculation for the busybodies.

Ariel, however, didn’t care about it as long as she commanded the loyalty of the Class B students who worked under her in the Department of the Administration, and in the Records Office that was under her department. Luckily, Class B was more or less familiar with the Elites of Class F already, more specifically those who the Jupiter sisters were friends with.

In no time, class was at its end with the end of fourth period bell ringing. Mr Verne was talking to almost the very last minute; it was one of those high intensity classes where the teacher talked by his lonesome for the entire duration. As a result, the rest of the class was in a hurry to gather their belongings with the short amount of time left before the next period. The exception was Caius, who under any circumstances marched at his own pace.

“Sorry, I have to rush. See ya later.”

Ariel, on the other hand, quickly packed her notebooks as was the rest of the class.

“There are more trials?”

“Yup. The last set of them. Skipping fifth period again today.”

“Good luck.”

Ariel cocked her head to one side, taking the spare moment to stare back at Caius with a blank expression. Caius returned the glance curiously.

“Never mind.”

Ariel finally uttered her exit line, and it was Caius’ turn to tilt his head bemusedly. This happened often, and it was an indication of the gears in her brain turning vigorously to solve a problem. Whether it was about the trials or something else, that was unknown to him.

But she hurriedly skipped away from their desks for the door. Along the way, several other girls from her homeroom class hastily joined behind her. Caius couldn’t help but be impressed by the great extent of the Jupiter sisters’ influence, whereas the Elites only had dubious authority over their own homeroom students. Their network was no doubt built up by Mirabelle’s auspicious charisma, and required the efforts of both Bianca and Ariel to manage it.

As for the trials she alluded to, it was the consequence of the senatorial investigation into the abuses of power by the PSC. Key members were put on trial for past crimes, crimes that the PSC historically got away with through sheer dereliction of their duties. The crooks who accepted bribes and put down personal enemies were the same people who were supposed to fight and protect against those very wrongdoings.

As the undersecretary, her auxiliary role was to also act as the attorney general, who performed such public prosecutions in the name of the student council. Constitutionally, the Senate should not prosecute students on issues that lied inside the areas of student life as the Senate was made up of third-year homeroom teachers, and that would break with the constitutional principle of “students governing student life”. Then again, the Senate wielded the power to investigate, so most of the leg work was already covered by them. It was then up to the student council to deliver the prosecution and argue for the offences committed by the PSC to the judges, who were specially selected students appointed by the Senate. These judges formed the Council of Six, the judiciary body that was responsible for trial proceedings like these, judicial reviews, and interpreting the supreme law.

Caius, however, was not so buoyant about the prospects of these trials. Most of the wrongdoings involved were made last year, so it was very difficult to press charges when half the operation was manned by the former third-years who had already graduated. And at most, a successful case could only force resignations from the indicted. Despite Gilbert’s preemptive resignation, Caius and most others expect Gilbert to continue exerting immense influence over the remains of the PSC.

“Caius! Come here!”

By now the classroom was cleared of most of the students, leaving only the laid-back stragglers like Caius left. He promptly made his way to Mr Verne at his call, who was sat at the tall stool at the front of the classroom. Unfortunately for Mr Verne, his chequered sweater vest gave off more of a geeky than a sophisticated feel to him.

“I need a favour from you.”

Mr Verne took a stapled stack of paper from the teacher’s table next to him and handed it to Caius.

“Another assignment set for me? I already have it.”

“I know, I know. This one’s not for you. I want you to take it to a classmate of yours.”

“Hm? Ariel’s the only one who I actually know in this class, though… and would have any chance of seeing again after class.”

Mr Verne scratched his balding head apologetically.

“Usually, I let Ariel do this job, but she left for the trials already. You can take it to Ariel if you want; she’ll understand what to do. The assignment’s for Cecilia, from my homeroom class.”

“You can’t ask another person from your class to give it to her?”

“No, and though it’s a bit rude of me to say, she doesn’t have many friends from my class. I would give the assignment to her tomorrow in homeroom, but the first part of it is due tomorrow. I want to give her a chance at least.”

“I understand. But how come she didn’t come to this class?”

“She usually skips classes. Her tardiness is going to be an issue soon, though, but until then I can only make the best out of her situation.”

Mr Verne shrugged lightheartedly as Caius put away the assignment package in his bag.

“Usually you can find her in the library, but I’d thought you’d know her through Ariel. Like I said, pass it on to Ariel if you don’t think you can find her.”

“Mhm. Okay.”

Caius was about to leave, but stopped as he recalled the girl he saw earlier.

“Cecilia. Is she a tall, blonde girl with long hair and wears super-casual?”

Mr Verne turned his head around towards him as his body was still turned away, his arms putting away the paperwork into his suitcase.

“Uh, yeah. Exactly. That description fits her.”

Caius nodded, somewhat satisfied. That girl was a friend of Ariel’s? Interesting.

“Okay, I might know who it is then. I think I saw her going into the library before class.”

“That sounds like her, yep. See what you can do. Thanks, ya big foig.”

Caius slowly bit his lip with confusion, mildly startled but also entertained at Mr Verne’s attempt to use trendy lingo. With a final bow, he left as the bell rang for fifth period, already late for the last class of the day. And as usual he was the last student to vacate the classroom.


The school’s library was on the third and fourth floors above the cafeteria. Though the third floor was spacious enough, there was more even surface area the floor above because on the fourth floor it protruded outwards over the school grounds, producing an overhang that consistently shielded the third floor windows and the cafeteria from the direct sun. In turn the edge of the overhang hugged an independent clear-glass overpass connecting the auditorium and gymnasium’s fourth floor. The fourth floor had two short connecting overpasses to that one, which served as extra emergency exits for the obvious reason that a library should only have one regular exit. On a separate note, the neighbouring classroom was the art room that also occupied the third and fourth floors, and like the library it also had its self-contained staircase.

Besides the secret rooms operated by the Records Office of the Department of the Administration, the fourth floor was a dense store of books with few desks and workspaces, which were more common on the third floor. Precisely because of that, it was prime real estate for anybody who wanted to study undisturbed, though it was almost always unoccupied during regular class hours. It was more of a place for students to catch up on schoolwork before school, during lunch or after school.

It was at one of these tables that Cecilia sat comfortably, leaning back into the chair with her head in one of the few books that she took out from the shelves and stacked neatly on the table next to a notebook. She set aside her light sweater on the adjacent chair, her dress shirt loosely clinging to her slender body. The dirty blonde hair flowed beyond her shoulders in garbs and patches, almost as if it was alive and would actively resist any attempt to comb or straighten it. Several stray strands flowed over her front, but she heeded no attention to it. Her expression was composed, her eyebrows never moving up and away from her indigo eyes. Her features had varying topography, with her tall, thin nose, deep eyes and high cheekbones, and together they were well-formed. In a normal world, with her looks she would definitely be above average in popularity, but just like Yui, other factors around Cecilia didn’t allow a fan group around her to emerge.

She had her earphones in, connected to a portable cassette tape player on the tabletop. For somebody to have one was a mark of economic status, as with Alice’s walkman compared to Kato’s lack of portable music. The new fangled thing in Auxiria proper was the portable compact disc player, but they hadn’t made their way to popular use yet; perhaps in several years as the fad gets caught up with more artists releasing their music on the new medium.

She often spent her time alone in the library like this. She didn’t like the crowded classroom where she couldn’t focus, and regularly skipped classes to self-study here. If only her grades were also just as good to justify it, because if it wasn’t for her homeroom teacher Mr Verne’s eccentricity she would have been on academic probation by now.

And she was self-studying. At least for now. What was in her hand was a major piece of analysis work on the play that her fourth period literature class was studying, the same literature class that was taught coincidentally by her homeroom teacher. Auxirian Idiot was a high-profile musical theatre stage adaptation of the story in the popular music album of the same name by the alternative rock band The Outlaws. It received critical acclaim across Auxiria, and its popularity even spilled over into the Yue language cultural sphere; both the musical and the music were originally produced in Standard Candoran in Auxiria proper. It wouldn’t be a contemporary Auxirian literature class without any study of recent Standard Candoran works.

In Korolev Senior almost all students were bilingual in Old and New Yue, but as they were part of the larger Confederation of Auxiria, and through a long, tangled political and cultural history with Auxiria proper, most Yue speakers also learned Standard Candoran; or the other way around too in a lot of cases, like the Jupiter sisters, and Cecilia herself.

“Yo. You’re Ms Cecilia, is it?”

Her reading was interrupted by a bright smile shining from across the table. The owner of the smile was a boy with short curly blond hair who waved to her warmly. He was only about as tall as she was, which for a girl might have been on the taller end, but for boys he was on the shorter end. His baby face was naturally cheerful, with round features all throughout. Momentarily, she eyed her notebook that had her name in clear handwriting on it, but she turned back to the boy quickly. She knew who he was, and that was why it took a moment to find her words.

“Uh, yeah. T-that’s me. What is it?”

Caius beamed.

“This is the assignment for today from Mr Verne.”

“Ah, thanks. Sorry for troubling you.”

Taking out the earphones from her ears, she awkwardly received the stapled assignment from him, abundantly confused. Her hands didn’t tremble but felt a bit out-of-body, and the heat on her forehead was a consequence of how unquestionably nervous she was. Why was it Caius, one of the troublemakers of Class 3-F, here?

Then, she remembered exactly what she was holding onto.

“The assignment, how come Ariel…”

She trailed off as her mind suddenly blanked out on the words to finish her question. She immediately caught it and straightened up, alarmed and embarrassed, but before she was able to correct herself, Caius answered anyway the question that was stuck in her throat.

“Ariel went off to prosecute some PSC thugs in the senatorial trials, so I’m here to give it to you in her place. Well, it was Mr Verne who asked me to do this. Ariel got away too quickly.”

“Mr Verne asked you?”

“I sit with Ariel, so naturally Mr Verne would ask me. I was going to hand it off to Ariel if I couldn’t find you here.”

He shrugged, almost as if it were normal, everyday things to do; it was an average Tuesday for Ariel and Caius, but not for most people.

“Anyway, how come Ariel’s been handing you off your assignment questions? You’re in different homerooms, aren’t you?”

At Caius’ enthusiasm, Cecilia’s eyes widened and hesitated in her response.

“W-we’re in different homerooms, yeah. But we’ve been in the same literature classes together for the last two years now, so she’s a good friend of mine.”

Friendships across different homeroom classes were uncommon due to the way it socially stratified the students. Some would remain friends if one got promoted or demoted to another class, but most others wouldn’t. Even in the advanced classes students tended to stick to their homeroom classmates.

“Not bad, not bad. Sounds like she treats you really well, then? As her long-time friend, all I get from her is attitude.”

He gave her a carefree laugh, but somehow Cecilia was still taut with tension. Maybe she was overly cautious with him and his intentions, but his last bit did pique her attention. Ariel was a close friend, after all.

“Really? She’s usually a quiet girl, but we always have something to talk about together and we’re super friendly. She’s also a really amazing person of her own abilities, so it’s interesting to be around her.”

“Hmm, that does sound like her, a super genius. You have no idea how many times she beat us in the fights we have.”

“Fights?!”

“Not fighting with our fists, but with our brains. We have been friends since primary school, so we’ve competed with each other many times during recess playing different games.”

“Ehhh, so it’s like that? The two of you have a really long history then.”

“I guess that’s true, but it’s more accurate to say that our friend circle has a long history together. We were in different homerooms since long ago too, after all.”

“To remain close friends for that long, you’re both really exceptional people.”

“If that’s the only criteria, then you’re just as exceptional. Not many can make friends across classes.”

“No, no, no. I’m just a normal person of no particular importance. Well, she’s a close friend to me, but that’s nothing out of the ordinary, is it?”

“It shouldn’t be in a normal world, but this is Korolev Senior. That Class War your class just fought at lunchtime, that shouldn’t happen in a regular school, should it?”

“Nah, that Class War’s got nothing to do with me. I stayed in homeroom while my classmates went to fight it.”

Caius suddenly stood up and held his hand out to her, still smiling warmly.

“Ah, I’m so sorry. I should have done this earlier. It was rude of me to not introduce myself before I mentioned the Class Wars. My name’s Caius Evans, Class 3-F and Member of the Assembly in Class F’s constituent. Apologies for not declaring myself earlier.”

“No, no, it’s all right. Like I said, I don’t care about the Class Wars. You don’t have to be that official with me when you talk about it.”

She waved her hand nonchalantly as she said “no”, trying to convince him that it truly didn’t matter to her.

“And also, I already knew who you were. You and your circle are infamous in this school, after all. Definitely so after that impressive defence against the PSC’s raid. That’s part of what I mean you being exceptional.”

“Ah, that. That makes sense, yeah.”

“—!”

As he listened slowly, Caius’ smile turned apologetic as his extended hand slackened, letting it droop there in the air between them. Only then did Cecilia realize she spoke too much of what she was thinking and her eyes darted away from him in embarrassment, freezing up at her mouth’s misfire. The cogs in her brain kept turning rapidly as the silence turned increasingly awkward.

“Nnnng, damn it!”

But Cecilia wasn’t one to keep it awkward. She already knew what she should have done.

“Cecilia Nightingale, Class C. Pleased to make your acquaintance.”

She swiftly clutched his hand with both of hers as she forced a smile awkwardly onto her face. It wasn’t because she felt Caius was a bother, but rather she was flustered by her own absentmindedness.

“Nice to meet you.”

Caius’ smile returned to its flamboyant form, or rather it turned into a smirk. He shook her two hands just once; reminding her of this position she hurried herself into. As soon as she was made aware of that, she hastily let go of his hand and instinctively hid her hands under the desk, gripping each other with strength proportionate to how deeply coloured red her face was turning.

Caius felt a strange kind of tingling delight in his chest as he watched Cecilia fidget shyly across from him. He didn’t want to admit that he had the same obsession that Mayumi had, who always put the boys on the spot for almost everything, but he understood now why this could be addicting. He cut her some slack and sat back in his seat.

“Anyway, now that you mention it, am I really that infamous now across school? I understand that the siege of Class F was pretty sensational, but I’d imagine it was Kato and Alice whose names would be remembered.”

Cecilia breathed a sigh of relief as she was handed an easy slow ball, her whole body evidently relaxed for the first time since he appeared before her.

“That’s probably true, but they’re already kinda famous. Kato and Evianna are obviously deities, while Alice was Gilbert’s fiancée. If I don’t recognize them, I would know their names at the very least. I guess the people around Kato and Evianna got more attention because in that siege, you were actually one of the people the PSC were after, right? Even Ms Romana was named as one of their targets.”

“Oh yeah, I was actually named as one of the to-be-arrested.”

“And then, you were the one who carried the black blossom flag into the hallway after the siege was lifted. The newspaper club took a photo of that and it made their front pages, dude.”

The black blossom flag was a symbol of resistance in the neighbouring city of Lien, which was currently suffering from social unrest. The spread of the revolutionary contagion naturally sparked the aspirations of the youths who dreamed and sought for a better, just world. Or in Caius’ case, a good photo op.

“True, that was a good photo op. Well, it’ll be like that. If I’m gonna fight for a cause, I’d have to put at least that much effort into it.”

“Hey, at least you have the heart to put into it. For normal people, it’s hard to find that kind of heart to do something like that.”

As she gave him a light chuckle, she realized that she was way more relaxed than she was before and her brain was put on pause for a moment. Maybe it was because Caius was chill the whole time and not the troublemaker that the newspapers made him out to be, that she gradually loosened her wariness. She was on edge precisely because of his recently acquired notoriety, after all.

“I’m just a regular folk like you, Cecilia. I literally have contributed nothing except for that photo op in that siege.”

“Stop right there—you are definitely not regular folk. Regular folk wouldn’t be waving rebel flags, nor would they be fighting the establishment inside and outside the Assembly.”

Cecilia put her hand up in protest, but Caius just smirked.

“Regular folk wouldn’t be skipping class on a regular basis either, would they?”

“Wait, how did you know?!”

“It isn’t that hard to figure out you haven’t been to a class if I’m supposed to be in the same class as you, and Ariel’s been passing on the assignments to you the whole time…”

He trailed off as he shrugged exaggeratedly. Cecilia’s head dipped again, deflated once more as she scratched her head and gave a relenting smile. Point taken.

“Ahahaha… well, that’s true…”

“Why not come to class?”

“Uh… I don’t like going to class, I guess. I don’t like it when there’re too many people around.”

“Mah, can’t say that I can deny that if I’m doing the same right now. But you’re actually looking at the class’ material anyway, aren’t you? That’s like, some kind of companion analysis book to Auxirian Idiot, isn’t it?”

He pointed to the text that she put down earlier, to which she jumped a bit in surprise.

“You also know this book?”

“Mhm. I mean, it’s one of the few good ones that are around, innit?”

“Wait, then you know Auxirian Idiot pretty well, then?”

“Of course! It’s pretty popular, so why not?”

“No, no, no, no, no, nobody knows the musical theatre enough, and definitely wouldn’t know literary analysis works on it of their own! I mean, maybe you’d know from class, probably… but this text isn’t in the course syllabus, I don’t think.”

“Hehe. It’s not. I just like the music and the story in Auxirian Idiot so I do my own readings on it, and it was just coincidence that our class is gonna study it.”

Caius smiled brightly, and was obviously proud of his taste in music.

“How much of this have you got through?”

“Erm, most of it already. I already know the whole story though. This is like the third analysis work I’m reading through.”

“This book’s really good too. It’s a really in-depth multimedia analysis, including the music and the theatre parts, not just the lyrics. It’s written by a Yue author from Yue’s cultural perspective, so it gives more spice to it and probably more relevant to us. Although the story itself is about an Auxirian-centric social phenomenon, it definitely is not just Auxirians who share the same sentiments with this story. Even us fake Auxirians who lived in a Yue territory for our whole lives can connect with this story.”

He took the text away from her and opened it up expertly to a specific page, as if he knew the pages by heart. The text was in Standard Candoran, of course. Cecilia shook her head as she sighed.

“There you go with your dangerous use of vocabulary again. No wonder you’re in the PSC’s sights.”

“What did I say? And what do you mean ‘again’?!”

“You were the one who was quoted in the newspaper for that kind of incendiary rhetoric. At least that’s their claim. Livia is a free city in Auxirian territory.”

“Don’t tell me you’re on the blue side…”

 Caius’ expression turned cautious, but comically so because it was that exaggerated. Cecilia sighed once more and put a little more force in her words.

“I’m on neither the blue side nor the yellow side. I just don’t want to get in trouble for no reason and waste my time with the PSC.”

“But your class is gonna take over the PSC’s mantle from Gilbert and Class A, aren’t you?”

“If my class has anything to do with me, I wouldn’t be skipping class like this.”

“I thought that was just a daily routine or something.”

“I didn’t have a choice to start with.”

Cecilia realized she uttered that more to herself than to him, and also let on more of her inner thoughts than she really should, but luckily Caius didn’t seem to heed too much of it.

“Hmm. Well, I’ll have to take your word on your neutrality. Then let’s get back to this.”

Ending the political distraction, he pointed one more time at the page he opened to and began.

“The part of the assignment that’s due tomorrow is about the opening act of the play. The three neighbourhood friends and highschoolers, Tommy, Mark and Susan, lived in the dreary suburban town Sunnyville, Auxiria. Tommy was the unhappy everyday boy, Mark was the bullied chubby kid at school, and Susan had the dangerous personality combination of dumb and loose. Growing up in a quiet and peaceful community filled with sugary pop and potato chips, couches and television, petty crimes and juvenile delinquency, they slowly became disenchanted with the inertia and do-nothing lifestyle of suburban Auxiria. That was the song Auxirian Idiot, and also the name of the whole stage performance.

“They saw that they were doomed to become an insignificant part of this world, destined to take on the same boring and monotonous jobs and lifestyles that their deranged, messed up or even separated parents carried. When they couldn’t handle it anymore, the three resolved to run away from home to look for a new life in the city ghetto. Before they were able to leave, Susan was found to be pregnant with her boyfriend’s kid, so only Tommy and Mark took the bus for the city. That was the song Prince of Suburbia, the epithet for Tommy.

“When they got to the city, they were obviously lost because they’re completely new to the place. Tommy found that the city was not all the lights and excitement he dreamed it was. It was hard to get by on nothing, but he continues to search for his escape. Mark, on the other hand, really couldn’t handle life in the ghetto and after seeing a recruiting ad on TV, he enlisted with the Marines and left to serve overseas.”

“Thanks for the summary, but I read the story at least fifty times over by now.”

“I thought it was only fair to deliver on the scope of tomorrow’s assignment, like Mr Verne did.”

“Is that what he covered in class today?”

“For the last three or four days, actually. We’re gonna be studying this work for the next four or five weeks as the second of three different works for this class.”

“… issat so?”

“Does Ariel ever tell you what happens in class? Or do you even look beyond the first paragraph of the syllabus?”

“Of course, I do. I just don’t know it like the back of my hand. That’s a good student’s habit, not mine.”

Caius made a hearty chuckle.

“To me, that’s the bare minimum effort needed to survive in this school, but let’s not talk about those standards right now and get back to Auxirian Idiot. Since the first question is asking about Tommy, what impressions do you have on the protagonist? It can be anything from his character to the decisions and actions he makes and takes.”

“Are you the discussion facilitator now?”

“Indeed, I am. And also a participant at the same time, since it’s only the two of us.”

She sighed, but she was also aware that she was letting her thoughts slip out too much again, so she tried her best not to get distracted from the main point of the conversation. Caius did entertain the distractions, but he always steered it back eventually, and twice now.

“It’s an autobiographical story, so we’re given the view of the characters from Tommy’s standpoint. Naturally, he’s the easiest to understand because he’s the protagonist. So, we’ll start with him. He’s a kid who’s sick of the suburban lifestyle, which festers a really unsettling feeling of uncertainty and discontent with first his daily routines, then his immediate surroundings like his school and family, then his two best friends, and then if we look forward, everything in the city as well; ironically, since the very thing he thought would cure him also becomes corrupted by, within his mind of course, his dissatisfaction with the world; which is what it really was. An unrequited dissatisfaction with how the world is.

“As for his personality, he seems to be a well-meaning kid, but he’s still in an age of innocence, still trying to figure out how the world worked, and thus becomes disenchanted seeing how it was so mismatched from ideals. In that process, he became a well-known troublemaker and went on delinquency streaks with his two friends, which is what Auxirian Idiot and a part of Prince of Suburbia served to describe.”

“Huh, not bad. You already know enough about it to already start writing something down. The first question is asking about how his surroundings shaped his decisions, and then how the author used this as a vehicle to reflect a real life social phenomenon.”

Cecilia looked down on the assignment paper in front of her. They were a series of short-form essay answers, expecting at least a few long paragraphs per answer. Typical. It would take an hour to fill out the first part with something substantial.

“Yeah, it’s an easy enough question. I mean, the whole character of Tommy is a direct comparison to suburban life. Like you said, that’s where the title Prince of Suburbia comes from.”

“Then let’s talk about that. What is this suburban life that’s described by MJA, and how much of it can be seen in the real world?”

Mary Jane Armstrong was the lead singer of the band and wrote the songs in the album, and on stage she was known as MJA because her first name was too common to sound cool in a rock band.

“Well, in the story it describes it as very boring, monotonous, has a lack of excitement, and doomed to be a place that ‘goes nowhere’, whatever that means.”

“Right, it’s about the feeling of ‘going nowhere’ in the quiet suburbs. But isn’t this where ‘ignorance is bliss’ would apply? If peace and quiet is all you ever know, then you’d be more inclined to lay back and coast through the rest of your life in easy mode, wouldn’t you?”

“Maybe for the adults who went out into the world and failed to reach their dreams. For the younger kids, they see it in the media and from the previous generation, and they start thinking ‘do I have a choice whether to live in this place or not?’. Not all kids are equal in this social order, and naturally some will not fit in and feel oppressed by it. If the conclusion they come to is that they don’t have a choice, then they’ll become someone like Tommy.”

“So you’re saying it’s more of a social issue rather than a problem with living in suburbia?”

“Of course. That’s my and also the Yue interpretation of it, no? We don’t have the sprawling miles upon miles of houses-only districts like they do in Auxiria proper. It’s just that the ideas of ‘going nowhere’ and ‘no other choice but to live in misery’ manifests themselves very visibly in suburban life. For the advantaged, they would think nothing of their quiet and easygoing lifestyle. For the disadvantaged, it’s like a slow suffocation of their minds, thinking that they have to endure this for the rest of their lives.”

“It’s even more miserable because of the physical scene too. Compared to the city, a suburban district is basically one colour, one paint brush.”

“Exactly. The physical imagery’s way more striking. In fact, where Tommy escapes is right to the busy city, just like Livia here.”

“It does sound edgy enough. Tommy’s state of mind is like this because he’s part of the ‘undesirable’ group; or so he labelled himself because the whole point of suburbia is that everybody can coexist peacefully and be in a reasonably comfortable state, physically and mentally.”

“Yes. I think we can sum up the issue as, like I mentioned at the start, a general dissatisfaction of the status quo; in the case of Tommy, he’s dissatisfied with the state of suburban life.”

“Not only dissatisfied, but completely disenchanted with the idea. He sought for a completely different lifestyle in the city that was advertised to him from afar, which he eventually went for in the end. Now, we’ve said that ‘going nowhere’ and ‘no other choice’ are the key motivating factors for his disenchantment, we need to unpack one more level deeper about what caused him to feel this way.”

“That one level deeper is more and more speculation, though, since the source material only goes this far to describe his state of mind.”

“Then good thing we can come up with our own interpretations. Songs can be interpreted from different angles, and the author is only one of these angles. That’s the beauty of lyrical work.”

Cecilia smiled lightly.

“Then what would your interpretation be?”

Caius did not let off the gas pedal.

“Let’s take a step back and look at Auxirian Idiot again. Most of that song is a rebuttal of the state of mass media in the modern age. If you’re familiar with the Auxirian press, to pursue corporate agenda they increasingly made the news more violent and sensational. References to a ‘redneck agenda’, ‘doing the propaganda’ or the ‘age of paranoia’ is basically spelling out how the media can be used to control the narrative of the day, whatever it may be; MJA didn’t explicitly say what it was.

“This power, or authority, to control the way people think is what’s dangerous, even if some of the so-called propaganda has merit to it. The Candoran Assimilation ended only a mere few decades ago, but we’re already sending troops abroad again, unrest at home here continues to rumble and the Candoran problem is still unsolved. Those in control of the media can control which side of these conflicts gets favourable or unfavourable coverage, swaying the opinion of the unknowing masses who lived in the peaceful suburbs that would never ever see the level of violence or lawlessness shown on TV or the newspapers.”

“MJA definitely has politics behind that insinuation, but she probably kept it broad to include the social aspect too. Tommy wouldn’t know about the city if it wasn’t for the very mass media that he and MJA thought were propaganda arms of the powerful. Ironically, the very thing he thought was wrong with the country also gave him an escape route.”

“Yup. The mismatch between what he sees in the media and what he sees in his suburban home is bizarre and unsettling; why is there so much injustice and carnage out there, while at home we’re just sitting on the couch doing nothing? And even at home, peace and quiet is only relative; mom and dad are separated for some reason, Susan has a penchant for unprotected sex at an age where she can barely provide for herself, and being in the lower-middle class means they didn’t have any social standing in a gentrified area. They’re ‘going nowhere’ because they’re told that they live in peace, but at the same time everything around them tells them otherwise. They conclude that them, their society, and their country aren’t ‘meant to be okay’, as in the song, and of course there seems to be no solution to it.”

“Not only that, but the media angle goes the other way around too. They see that their parents, while being led like sheep by the news, also become jaded and indifferent to the violence and injustice; they really didn’t want to become that pitiful existence either. Their naturally disadvantaged social and economic situation is already pitiful enough, and because of that they feel like they do not have the power to change this status quo. That’s what ‘no other choice’ means.”

“That would eventually feed into their anti-establishment attitudes later on. The song right after that is Holiday, after all.”

Suddenly, Caius leaned back into his chair and took a deep breath, smiling brightly.

“Not bad, Cecilia. I never get to have these kinds of discussions except in class, and usually on subjects like these, most everyone is always more diplomatic so the answers aren’t that great. Only the most edgy and whack in the head would blabber on like we did.”

“… huh.”

Taken aback by the abrupt halt, Cecilia’s hard-won energy deflated and naturally returned to a state of wariness once more.

“I’m just here to bounce ideas off of another hardcore fan of Auxirian Idiot. I thought it would be a good use of time.”

“How would you know if I’m a hardcore fan or not?”

“Isn’t it obvious?”

“…is it?”

She lost count already of how many times she was bewildered by his way of thinking; or rather, she thought this situation was occurring too many times.

“I mean, nobody would spend their time reading through three different analysis works on this story if they didn’t love it.”

“Uh, I guess you can say that…?!”

“Is it not? What do you like about it?”

It sort of made sense, but who normally would be able to see that? Nobody. Caius shrugged and gave a crooked grin, as if it was nothing out of the ordinary. Cecilia stuttered a bit, again unsure of how much to say.

“Mmm… I guess you can say that Tommy’s story is really cool.”

“Tommy’s story is really sad and depressing, my sister. You find that cool?”

Caius bursted into laughter at her answer as she instantly straightened her back at attention, eyes wide in alarm at his insinuation.

“I mean, that’s just how it is, isn’t it?! I can’t help it if I find it cool.”

“All right, all right. I get it. Then which part of it appeals to you?”

“… I don’t know. The whole setting around Tommy, the unease he felt at home, the struggles he eventually goes through in the city, all of that are interesting to me. Maybe it’s the whole spectacle put together? I’m not quite sure what exactly…”

“Well, while you give some more thought to it, I’ll explain mine too since it’ll be only fair.”

“Okay…”

While Cecilia was incredulous, Caius didn’t hesitate in his declaration. He was either stupidly confident, or his eighth-grader syndrome was relapsing.

“I think why a lot of people, as well as myself, liked Auxirian Idiot is because a reader can, on some level, sympathize or connect with Tommy’s character. They shared some issue or struggle or whatever with Tommy, whether it is in his surrounding situation, his decisions or his story. In other words, they saw a part of themselves in Tommy and the story, which makes that connection personal. And who would identify themselves this way? Anybody who is sick and tired of suburban life, like MJA.”

“Then do you see a part of yourself in Tommy’s story?”

“Why yes, of course, but what about you? Do you agree with my analysis, and would that explain your train of thought?”

She nodded tentatively. Without a doubt she felt the same way, and only after he explained it that she realized that.

“I guess his surroundings remind me the most about myself. I do completely agree with MJA’s take on the empty life of suburbia.”

“Mhm. And given how much popularity this work has, many others probably share the same sentiment as yours.”

Cecilia’s cheeks tickled pink as the confession was a little too close to her heart, as all inner thoughts were, but she had to hand it to Caius to have the balls to bring it up in the first place. Normally others would shy away from him pressing forward into uncomfortable or personal areas of discussion.

“Then what about you? Which part of his story did you connect with the most?”

“That, uh, is… hm.”

Caius actually paused for once and so Cecilia looked on expectantly, but then he smoothly answered as if it was natural to think of the answer, which to his credit it did, and Cecilia sensed the meaning behind the pause immediately.

“You should know how Auxirian Idiot ends, right? What really hit home with me is the final song, a fitting conclusion to what happened in the song three songs before that. You get it?”

He smiled lightly, but in no way were those two songs light. Although it wasn’t directly about the social issues, it was an imaginative display of its symptoms, and symptoms of a very personal nature. Cecilia’s expression turned dry at his continuous lightheartedness.

“You’ve had… that kind of an experience? Can I confirm that, you’re talking from Tommy’s point of view, right?”

“Yes, exactly. Even I was surprised at how the events matched so closely with my own, but that’s just pure luck. MJA is good, but she won’t be writing songs about my life story any time soon.”

“I see…”

“She still haunts me in the back of my mind from time to time, but that was what Tommy’s life had become too in the end, didn’t it?”

“That part, yeah, I guess that makes sense.”

Cecilia nodded at his good-natured reply. He was still mildly cheerful, as if it wasn’t a big deal to him, to which Cecilia did not and could not know if she could take it at face value or not. But she felt it still wasn’t her place to pry into it any further, even though Caius didn’t seem to mind it at all and opened the discussion in that direction in the first place. Though, she was still fascinated by how the true rebel—true at least to her—across the table could also experience the same thing that the fake rebel Tommy did.

Almost as if done way too well, Caius seamlessly segued into the next matter at hand; probably because they should be doing it if they wanted to make good use of their little discussion anyway.

“Well then, Cecilia, let’s get started with writing down the answers, shall we?”

Cecilia forced another smile, but again, not because Caius was unpleasant, but because of her disbelief at the current situation. On these topics, she was used to being left alone in her head, but now she felt a tickling anticipation, finally finding somebody who shared the same interest to discuss about. Maybe it was because he finally shared his earnest thoughts with her that she felt much more at ease now, compared to her perception of him from before talking to him for the first time, this time. She pointed lightheartedly at him.

“Celia is fine. It’s a bit easier that way, right?”

Caius brightened up at her cooperative mood and nodded agreeably.

“Then Celia it is.”

1 – The Return of the Captain

“Again, from bar fifty-five’s pickup into the D.S. al coda. One, two—”

An unholy chorus of woodwinds, brass and percussion reverberated throughout the soundproof audio-visual recording studio on the fourth floor of Korolev Senior Secondary School. It was early in the morning for the little band of students who were immersed in their music practice, some time before their first period class at ten past eight.

The fourth floor of the school was a floor of spare classrooms, used according to the variance in the local demographics. In recent times the floor slowly fell into disuse due to the dwindling student numbers. Fortunately, this meant that specialty rooms like this one were up for grabs for students to use, and many groups and clubs did take up these spare classrooms for their own use.

“Kato, you’re still coming in too slow on the pickup. Do it again, from two bars before.”

Halting the ensemble, Alice shook her head along with her wavy and volumized pure blonde hair topped with a red hair band. There was an acuteness in her words that matched well with her sharp features and personality. In the absence of the other girls, her tone was one of paternal arrogance that, to be fair, was needed to control the little group of newbie musicians, for the boys here were a bunch that were normally too independent-minded for their own good.

“If you’re having trouble with that pickup, which I’ll admit is unorthodox enough because it’s on the third beat rather than the fourth, instead of counting the beats, you can count the eighth notes. It takes more effort, but more importantly you’ll come in on time.”

“Got it.”

Kato nodded at their new music instructor who was also their classmate, and once more played his trumpet at her command. His short, dull auburn hair was even messier than usual because he was now committed to waking up early, and as a bad morning person he left his cowlicks and all in sleep mode. Although Kato and his younger sister Teto were Auxirian by birth, they both had smaller, narrower eyes and a comparatively flatter facial geography that were more characteristic of the Yue people from the Orient, making them less obvious that they were technically foreigners to this city of Livia.

As Alice took out her dissatisfaction on Kato, the other three in the room let go of sighs of relief at the draconian drill that Alice had put them under for the past week they began playing.

“Heh, Kato’s getting it again.”

On the trombone was Eon, a black-haired and glasses-wearing Yue native of their city. Still sometimes termed as a border town, Livia straddled along a strategic pass in the mountain ranges between the two territories of Auxiria and Ava. Founded by Yue refugees long ago, it and its surrounding towns became a multiethnic region of all kinds of nationalities that assimilated and spoke the Old Yue language, the vernacular of the Yue homeland. Somehow, the pass was blessed with a very warm and mild climate, actually close to subtropical, making the valley one of the most suitable for a sprawling major settlement. On the Auxirian side of the range, it followed a major tributary river towards the capital of Auxiria, New Karine. On the Avian side, it followed the only reasonable path from Auxirian territory to Kalmar, the second-largest city in the Kingdom of Ava.

“Alice’s been on top of him the whole time, yeah?”

Letting the alto saxophone hang by the shoulder strap, an edgy comment dripped out ever so softly from the short blond with curly hair sat next to Eon, drawing out delighted chortles from the men around him. For the uninitiated, Caius’ baby face did not give any indication of the absurd things he said on a regular basis.

“I’m not sure what to say to that…”

Behind the drum set was a tall redheaded Rinian boy, quite toned and sporting a bowl cut that was popular from the last decade or two. His taste in fashion was baffling, but because his macho stature was somewhat imposing it never affected him. As his chunky presence suggested, he was the stereotypical no-brains type of brawn that became both the butt of many jokes and a peculiar source of aggravation for the rest of the boys.

“Huh? What did you have to say about me?”

A menacing glare accompanied the snap from Alice, immediately silencing the three at the back, but they were all smiles nonetheless. Alice’s face was tickled pink against her porcelain skin, her emotions amply apparent to all around her, but at least this time it could be blamed on the physical activity they had been doing. Kato on the other hand heard every word and was enjoying the show, and turned away from them as he stifled a snicker.

“Hey! Don’t you give me that look! Man, why are the Elites always like this?!”

Still red-faced, Alice tried to push it out of her head as her imagination ran too wild too often. Her mental efforts manifested in a superficial slap on Kato’s head, ending their tangent as she picked up her flute from her chair. She returned to her stand in front of their little group, lifting her instrument up for the first time in a while.

“Let’s try again with everybody. Yes, everybody. One, two—”


It had been three weeks since the standoff between Alice’s former Class 3-A and the Elites’ Class 3-F, in which Kato had won it all against Class A and under the peace terms brought Alice over into his class. Masked as a crackdown against seditious elements, the marshal of the Public Safety Committee, who was contemporaneously Class A representative and Alice’s formerly arranged fiancé, Gilbert de Lafayette, laid siege to the 3-F classroom in a vengeful effort to bring Kato to heel, but the ensuing Class War led to Gilbert’s defeat and Alice was released, at least in part, from the chains of her family responsibilities. There were other crucial motivating factors, but at least on the surface, the PSC suffered a major setback as one of the foundational pillars of student institutions in Korolev Senior.

With her newfound freedom and friends, they decided to form a small band with Alice in the centre and the four horsemen of the apocalypse around her. Because she was an outstanding music student, she was able to convince the faculty to give her use of that A/V room on the fourth floor.

The fourth floor was technically an abandoned floor ever since an education reform removed the thirteenth year of public education, also known as grade thirteen, almost a decade ago. This meant that senior high used to be four years long, but the de facto first year, the tenth year of education, was not actually called first year but called a probation year, and was assigned a zero in its notation, as in Class 0-A or Class 0-B. Thus, what used to be the thirteen year would have been Class 3-A or Class 3-B and so on.

Though the fourth floor slowly fell into disrepair, over the years some students found use in these old rooms, but like the rooftop, most of the fourth floor was normally off-limits. Under normal circumstances, the student organization known as the Activity Council would be responsible for the management of student facilities, like these kinds of rooms, but for prohibited areas of the school those rights were reserved with the faculty.

As the bell rang and music played for the imminent start of first period, they returned to the third floor to head for their homeroom. It was a simple stratification where the first-years were on the ground floor, second-years on the second floor, and third-years on the third floor. The school building was huge but simple in design, which was basically a hollow square without a fourth side, and at its two open ends was an auditorium and a gymnasium.

“Alice, how much longer until the guitars come in?”

“I told you already, Eon, it’ll take a few weeks’ time. Meanwhile, I’d rather have everybody learn the basics of music through classical instruments first.”

They all initially wanted to form an amateur rock band, and they would eventually. As a part of the top of the bourgeoisie, Alice bankrolling their hobbies like this was not even a dip in her wealth.

“Hey, it’s good to know a classical instrument. You can disguise yourself as a music student if you do.”

Caius nodded, the only boy in the group who was already well-trained in music. He played piano for a long time.

“I need to go undercover to infiltrate the music department. Just like in those undercover cop movies, I’ll bust down the drug ring disguised as a wind ensemble.”

Kato snickered with the rest of the boys as Alice shook her head and felt a bit exasperated. They made their way to their seats at the window corner at the back of the classroom; to say it was the back of the classroom though was a misnomer, because behind them were several rows of counters with sinks and faucets that were characteristic of a chemistry lab than a regular classroom, but they were left to disuse ever since this classroom was reserved to be 3-F’s homeroom. Because of this extra space, it was some twenty feet or so longer than the average as it was more like a massive double classroom than a regular one.

“Yo.”

“Hey, everyone.”

There were two other girls already there waiting for the rest of the crew to arrive. The first was the cool supermodel and Kato’s stepsister, Evianna. The second was the kind and gentle longtime classmate who grew up alongside the old guard of Class F, and under extenuating circumstances recently joined Kato’s and Evianna’s household, Yui.

“Evie, did you remember to bring the lunch we left for you on the counter?”

“Yeah, it’s right here.”

“Yui, how ‘bout you?”

“I’ve got it too.”

Though Kato asked the two of them the question, it was Alice who prepared the food. Because of the fallout with her family, Alice chose to live with Kato’s family for the time being.

“It’s better to eat homemade food once in a while instead of eating from the cafeteria all the time, y’know.”

Alice usually spoke in New Yue in contrast to most everybody else in the school who spoke the common vernacular of Old Yue, mainly because her Old Yue carried the embarrassing reverse accent that reflected her order of learning these two languages. A foreigner by both circumstance and technicality, her first language was her ethnic Rinian.

“The cafeteria’s food’s awesome, what’re you going on about.”

“So are you saying my cooking is not good enough?”

“No, of course not. Yours is the best, I swear.”

Kato put his hands up but the smirk on his face put an asterisk on it as the other men joined in.

“You’d be real amazing if you’re able to make barbecued and roasted meats in Kato’s kitchen.”

“Or frying the rice noodles, although his gas stove might let you make something close to it.”

“Are any of those even good for lunch? They’re best served hot, not reheated.”

“…”

If you squint just hard enough, you could see the steam spurting out of Alice’s head, but that was only for a moment before Evie weaved her fingers through Alice’s, holding her hands firmly and calming her down.

“You’ll get used to it soon. If you keep up the insults, they’ll bend eventually.”

“Since when did we bend to you?”

Alarmed at Evie’s lack of discretion in her words, the four turned their heads toward her in sync, giving Evie sideways looks as well as checking out her alluring form. Even with just a simple platinum blonde bob cut and fringes pinned to the sides, her face and form exuded such an overwhelming aura that it was hard to avert your gaze. Her facial features were neither too sharp nor rounded, only could be described as Yue’s most perfectly balanced. Also showing her half-Yue ancestry, her skin was smooth but not as fair as Alice’s, though Alice’s might be too far to the other side.

Evie stared back with an evil-spirited ghoul behind her blue eyes, immediately making each and every one of them break off eye contact with the devil.

“If those loose tongues of yours aren’t bent already, I can do much more than bending to fix that problem.”

Knees weak and palms sweating, they eventually sat down in their seats obediently, giving up at Evie’s aggression as they usually do. They took out their textbooks quietly for first period and remained eerily silent for the bunch of troublemakers that they were.

“See? They’re dogs who know their place.”

Once again her incendiary commentary drew synchronized incredulous eyes, but no sound was made. Alice sighed at how her best friend took the draconian method to put down the men of the Elites.

“It only works when you do it, Evie. It’s not something that’ll work coming from me.”

“It’s easy. Train them.”

“You’ve had years to do that! I can’t do it in this short of a timeframe.”

“Of course you can. It starts today.”

“More like it started a week ago, but again, it’ll be a miracle if it worked.”

The bell finally rang for first period, indicating that the boy band plus Alice had made it to their homeroom just in time. The door opened simultaneously and their homeroom teacher entered, strutting to the front of the class with her notebooks in one hand and a piece of chalk in the other.

“How come Sisi’s late? Teachers should make it to homeroom easily, no?”

“Did you come to school with her?”

“Yes, Sisi came to school with us.”

Yui, who sat in front of the square phalanx of the four men and away from the Evie-Alice pair to the east side, answered for them. Between her shoulder-length orange-red hair, soft visage and dimpled smile, she seemed too much of a gentle soul for this group of merry men.

“With Teto, it should be the four of you coming to school together. Huh, strange.”

“Yeah, and Sisi’s not at all a sloppy person. If anything, she’s the most punctual of everybody.”

As their teacher took a pause writing on the chalkboard, she turned around and shouted in their direction, high-pitched and squeaky as usual. It was a noise that matched her very small physique, and her partially tied-back shoulder-length blonde hair puffed out fittingly together with the outburst.

“Don’t use ‘Sisi’ in class! This is not home!”

They immediately straightened their backs, remembering that their teacher was not only a by-the-rules kind of person at school, but also the matriarch for Kato’s humble household of lost children who possessed sharp enough senses to overhear that bit of their conversation among the noisy chatter of their class, which naturally didn’t quiet down until their teacher got their attention with the squeal.

“Yes, Ms Romana.”

Even though Sisi was some seventy years old, her outer appearance was no different from a primary-schooler’s, a consequence of an old alchemical experiment. Of course, they were well aware of her seniority, and they responded in unison as to not get into too much trouble at the very start of the day. A bit miffed by the interruption she herself made to her flow of work, Sisi decided to just get going with homeroom and cleared her throat to address the class, leaving the print on the chalkboard half-written.

“Ahem. Mine beloved class; as you all know the first midterm period for the advanced classes are starting middle of next week, which shall last for almost two weeks.”

Advanced classes were the afternoon classes that followed a course selection scheduling method that would mix up the students from the different classes, unlike the compulsory morning classes that moved from one subject to another with the same class of students and homeroom teacher.

“As a result, the first midterm period for the morning classes shall begin a week after the advanced classes finish. In terms of dates, your advanced classes’ midterm period shall finish on the… eighth of October, so the seventeenth shall be our expected first midterm.”

Already struggling to extend her reach because she was too short, Sisi went to finish writing the dates on the chalkboard. Acknowledging the difference of schedule systems between morning and advanced, the faculty tended to set aside designated exam periods to make sure they didn’t overlap. Of course, exam periods weren’t blackout periods. If there wasn’t an exam for the subject on that day, then the class would move on as usual.

The class murmured amongst each other, but the situation was within expectations. The first month of school was over and with it their free time. Because there were three semesters of advanced classes a year on top of the partially standardized morning classes, it was pretty much for certain that there would be some kind of examination period every month.

“This time they’re cutting it a bit close though, eh?”

“With two exam periods per semester of advanced classes, and then four big exam periods for the morning classes, sometimes they’ll have to cut it close. That’s ten exam periods in total.”

“The advanced midterm periods are easy. The big chunk of the morning midterm periods are the worst.”

“Well, yeah. We only take two elective advanced classes a semester, but the morning classes are year-long courses so instead of writing two midterms we’d be writing six or seven? I don’t remember.”

“Must be nice to be someone who consistently aces their exams so that they don’t even need to worry about which exam they’re writing.”

In response, Eon’s grin was wide yet cryptic like a chameleon’s. Out of the Elites that sat in a bloc together for many years, he was the only one that was able to make study seem effortless.

“Ahem. Then onto the second order of business. Starting today, there shall be a new transfer student from Regia Miriam All-Girls Private Academy joining our class. Romana says new, but she has been told that some of you may already know her, so perhaps it is more appropriate to say ‘welcome back’.”

As Sisi spoke, she moved across to open the classroom’s sliding door so that the new student waiting at the door could come inside. Tapping lightly on the floor tiles, a short girl who seemed to belong in middle school arrived at the front in her former school’s summer uniform, which was mostly navy blue on white in comparison to Korolev Senior’s white or white on baby blue.

Though her uniform was clean and tidy, her black hair was too messy for comfort and shiny to the point of seemingly greasy, though it was actually not so. At least it wasn’t long and didn’t reach her shoulders. Her complexion was as pale and rosy as Alice’s, but nonetheless evidently Yue, a bonafide face of a girl from the Orient.

Naturally, eyes followed the girl with interest. Or more accurately, their eyes followed her one brown left eye. The other was hidden behind a large white eyepatch, one of a medical rather than decorative use. Her slim frame was similar to Sisi’s tiny stature, but neither her height nor her apparent disability could make her unidentifiable from her past form from long ago. In fact, her current form made even more sense to those who knew her. She wrote her name, a New Yue one, on the chalkboard before turning to the class, eye sparkling, cheerful and full of energy as she had always been known to be.

“Hi! For those who don’t know me or have forgotten about me, my name’s Mayumi Hanamiya. Though I’m transferring from Regia Miriam, I also was formerly of Class F from Korolev District Public School. I wasn’t able to finish it there, but I have returned to do so here. I’ll be in your care!”

Speaking in surprisingly perfect Old Yue and smiling radiantly, the class gave her curious looks before a warm applause spontaneously materialized alongside salutations and cheers, indicating that some of the class did remember who she was. To be exact, around a third of them did, growing up and staying within the Class F caucus all these years.

As Mayumi waved to her old and new classmates, she scanned the classroom. And when she finally saw the Elites sat at the back, showing expressions varying from bewilderment to impishness, she jumped from her spot and ran into the rows of desks for the group with her arms out wide.

“Kato!”

Somewhat baffled at the call of his name, he stood up and kicked his desk to Eon’s side just before Mayumi was due to trip into it and caught her in his clutches brilliantly. It was as if he was a soldier who just disembarked from a warship returning from an overseas deployment, greeting his ecstatic wife who was eagerly awaiting his return.

“Mayumi!”

They all exclaimed together; all meaning Kato, Eon and Caius. Plus Evie, the ever reserved one, they were the Elites who knew Mayumi from their childhood. Eon was especially alarmed with Kato’s desk slamming into his on short notice, demonstrating Kato’s natural disposition, a trait known as physical superiority. Born with this greater-than-normal physical ability and combining it together with paramilitary and martial arts training all throughout his life, he slowly and steadily reached this abnormal degree of physical strength, reaction time and coordination.

“Ahahahahahaha! I missed you so much! Didja miss me?”

Looking up at Kato with her arms around his neck, her smile stretched from ear to ear. He could feel the warmth rushing into his cheeks as he was reminded of how brazen this childhood friend was, the shock especially strong after this many years of separation.

“Y-yeah, missed you loads, Mayumi. It’s been years. How’ve you been?”

His stutter was all that was needed to tell the newer Elites who was the dominant one in their relationship. Both Alice and Evie turned colourless at Kato’s submissive attitude.

“I’ve been all right, but much better now that I’m back here with you.”

“Uh, mm. Thanks, I guess?”

“Heheheh. You’re still the same old Kato, aren’tcha? Letting me have my way with you without a fight?”

“And you haven’t changed much either, have ya? Dialling it up when you don’t need to?”

Without letting go of her tight embrace she giggled at Kato’s mere slap on the wrist and turned to her right, where Eon and Caius watched on curiously.

“Eon! Caius! How’re ya?”

“Still kicking, Mayumi, and you too it seems. They must call you a bee gee ‘cause you’re stayin’ alive.”

“I guess you could say, the Elites are like the hotel California; you can check out any time you like, Mayumi, but you can never really leave.”

Her raw laughter that was akin to a squawking goose was loud and piercing to the point of annoyance, but that was also a part of what made up her uniquely infectious personal charisma. It wasn’t only Kato who was accommodating; the other two were just as amenable, albeit Kato was overly so.

However, awkwardly for the rest of the class, in her words or her actions there was no intention of letting go of Kato. The moment that realization set in, a restless impulse within Alice urged her to get up from her seat and reach out to grab hold of Mayumi from behind, attempting to peel her off. The strain in her voice was about to burst into outright shouting.

“Excuse me, but could you let go of Kato?”

“Ah.”

And suddenly, a coarse and unruly pounding of a fist on the chalkboard brought everyone’s attention back to the front, where Sisi had had enough of the disruption already.

“Hanamiya! Please take your seat. It is the empty one in front of Misaya.”

“Okay, Ms Romana~”

Mayumi and Alice both extricated themselves from the melee, turning to head back to their seats in earnest. For a moment their eyes met, and in Mayumi’s was an unrestrained kind of mischief while Alice’s were with impassioned apprehension.

Kato noticed the minor exchange and sighed as he pulled his desk back into position. While Mayumi set up shop in front of Evie quietly, Alice shot Kato an angry glance, obviously demanding an explanation for later. He forced an apologetic smile, tentatively agreeing with her.

“Let us get started. We shall pick up right from where we left off yesterday, and then we shall discuss it. Misaya! Start reading from the last passage on page sixty-seven.”

Sisi decided to move on as quickly as possible, and so Evie stood up to recite the passage from her textbook. Mayumi waved at the Elites from below the desk, and with a cheeky parting grin at Kato she turned to the front. He sighed again, having a feeling that things would explode once they all were freed from class. Recalling those times with Mayumi from long ago, he couldn’t expect anything less.

“Y’all still go to that park? It’s been so long since I’ve been there!”

“If you come with us after school, we can hang around there for a while.”

“Yeah! Let’s do that!”

It was already lunchtime before they had a chance to continue the reunion, and even then a lot of old and new classmates came by to greet or welcome back the old Elite, so it wasn’t until everybody got their food and was halfway into their lunch that they had time for themselves.

Those from Kato’s household had lunch that they brought from home, but the others bought theirs from the school cafeteria. They had moved their desks together to sit around it, and after exchanging some of his food with Kato’s, Eon gave it an appraisal.

“Although the caff’s Yue lunches are really good and made on the spot, Alice’s is almost as good and it’s been microwaved. Kato, do you have a big gas-fired stove at home or something?”

“It’s in Karl’s kitchen, that’s why.”

“I ‘member Karl! He’s like your uncle, right, Kato?”

Suddenly, Mayumi interjected emphatically.

“Yeah, something like an uncle. He’s got reassigned to a new job this year though, so Sisi’s our new caretaker instead.”

“Ms Romana? She’s like, living with you but also is your homeroom teacher?”

“Whack, I know, but that’s just how things turn out. We’re Eternians, after all.”

“Ah, it’s got to do with that.”

Evie shrugged. Eternia was a secret society, or an underground mob, who was the patron of Kato’s household. It wasn’t only Kato but also together with Teto and Evie, that they had undergone training to be the top soldiers in service with Eternia. As plain as their daily lives could be, the inexplicably abnormal was also the norm.

“It’s not that unexpected, I guess. After all, Kato and Evie were selected long ago to become Hearts, and Korolev is basically the Eternian school.”

Eon explained in place of Evie’s characteristically lack of explanation. If there was anything that Evie was good at, after her physical ability, giving half-baked commentary was her next best trait.

“Anyway, I guess I have yet to formally introduce myself to the Elites who have come after me, don’t I?”

With a breakfast wrap being eaten for lunch still in her hand, she stood up from her seat and postured elegantly, surprising the original group more than the newcomers. Their little gathering at the back of the classroom became more of a club meeting than lunch hour.

“I’m Mayumi, one of the original Elites along with Eon and Caius, and together with Kato we were the Elite Four. Due to my fam’s circumstances, I moved away from the Korolev district right at the end of grade four to Regia Miriam’s in Tuenmun. Now, I’ve returned when that was no longer a problem.”

She smiled earnestly at the newcomers, Alice, Franco and Yui, although Yui was a classmate from that time too.

“I’m surprised that Yui out of all people joined the Elites. How did that come about?”

“I’ll have to thank you, Mayumi. The Elites are a good group of kids because of you, and they helped me get away from my old life in the Shamshuipo ghettos. I live with Kato and them now.”

“Hmmmmm? Since when did that start happening?”

Mayumi leaned in to Yui’s face with an exaggerated expression, a stunt that was normally associated with Eon and Caius. While Alice was still cautious about her, in this moment she begrudgingly acknowledged that Mayumi was undoubtedly the origin of the Elites’ eccentric idiosyncrasies.

“Several weeks? Since the start of this school year. It wasn’t that long ago.”

Yui didn’t budge and returned an earnest smile to Mayumi. She was surprisingly steady when under pressure.

“Ah, I see. It’s a very very recent thing. Well, we kinda know each other well enough anyway, eh?”

“Like Kato said before, I don’t think you’ve changed much either, Mayumi. Welcome back.”

Mayumi reached over to clap her on the back cheerfully, grinning like a gremlin, although that was her usual state of being. Yui could only maintain her warm smile, relieved that that part of Mayumi had not changed.

“If I may, Ms Hanamiya. I’m Franco Atkinson, the first of the Elites that came after your time. I moved to the area about five years ago, at the start of middle school. My original home’s in Breisgau. Nice to meetcha.”

Alice perked up at the name of a certain familiar city, but said nothing.

“Same, Franco. Just call me Mayumi.”

Although Franco intended for his extended right hand to be a normal handshake, Mayumi grabbed it by the base of the thumb instead to turn it into a bro shake and quickly followed through with the hug with her free left arm. He stumbled at first but he was able to successfully recognize and reciprocate the camaraderie in the end, even though the other guys burst out laughing at Franco’s expense.

“Hey! What gives?”

“Mayumi’s not actually a girl. She’s the eldest brother of the brothers here.”

“It’s not your fault for tripping over, Franco. Mayumi’s been like this since forever.”

A mischievous spark illuminated Mayumi’s eye.

“But gosh, Franco is a real looker, eh? Poster boy material?”

“What are you, a grandma? I’m a handsome man too, y’know. In my own world on some standard.”

“For as long as I’ve known him, Franco is a blessed creature, that’s all I gotta say.”

“Blessed creature indeed. And yes, Eon, only in your own messed up world that you’d be anything close to Franco.”

“What the hell, man…”

“C’mon, Mayumi, at least throw him a bone.”

“I can throw other things at him if you want, Caius.”

Franco’s forehead began sweating buckets. Eon and Caius were usually already overwhelming enough, but he can’t help but suspect that Mayumi only added more fuel to this fire. He had got to manage that fire.

“But hey, how come it’s the Elite Four? Weren’t there six of you if Kato’s already there?”

“Kato, Evie and Teto count as one. Don’t ask me why that’s the case, but we kept our fights with the Jupiter sisters on fair numbers.”

“So they’re like a substitution team.”

“Rotating in for that one spot, yes.”

Evie leaned back into her chair, feeling comfy about the old times as Mayumi turned to meet her eye to eye.

“And Evie, you’re as relaxed as always, aren’t you? But I guess now I have to look up to see your face. How the bodies have changed.”

“I know, right. It’s been seven years of puberty, after all.”

To condescendingly emphasize her point, Evie puffed out her chest, jiggling her nice rack in plain sight of everyone around her. The boys, of course, stared at the tall hills intensely, but perhaps surprisingly Mayumi was doing the exact same thing too. In fact, there was a naked lust in her eye which accompanied an open mouth that was on the verge of salivating. It was hard to imagine that this was what Evie had become when she was a midget as a little kid.

“Well, I can agree with everybody else’s silence that you possess an unworldly physical attractiveness compared to the rest of us, but can I touch those—”

“—no.”

Evie calmly turned herself away from Mayumi’s hands that were in grabbing mode, which snapped Mayumi out of her trance just in time to wipe away the drool at the corner of her mouth. She cleared her throat to put a stop to her unbecoming behaviour, but nevertheless showed no sign of repentance.

“Mm. But I’ll have a squeeze of those in due time, just watch me.”

“We’ll see.”

Evie only shrugged, prompting an ill-advised idea from Eon and Caius.

“Evie! What if we said we want the same?”

“I’m on board too. Whaddo’yasay?”

“I’m gonna break your necks the moment you touch me.”

Delivering yet another threat calmly and securely, the two receiving it were spooked but sadly not unfazed, which meant they continued talking.

“See, this is discrimination! What of equal rights for men and women? This is preposterous!”

“Sadly we live in a new age of feminism where double standards and affirmative action takes precedent. We’d be better off just keeping our head down and minding our own business.”

“Oh my god, you guys.”

Surprisingly the bemused dissent was from Mayumi, but it was because she had already made her way to the front of the latest Elite to join the ranks. Despite being about to lay down a challenge, she still smiled good-naturedly.

“Well? What’ve you got for me?”

Mayumi laid her free hand on Alice’s desk, making a loud and clear thud as she took a bite out of her sandwich. Alice didn’t take offence to the flippant attitude, and decided that holding her ground cautiously and observing a bit more was a more prudent strategy.

“I’m Alice Westgrove, formerly of Class A, and joined this group only a month ago. As for Korolev, I’ve only come here at the start of second year. My old home’s in Breisgau, the same as Franco, apparently.”

“Oh, actually? That’s a coincidence.”

“I guess there’re a lot of people who move between Breisgau, Livia and Lien. They’re all big Yue majority cities.”

Franco was pleasantly surprised, though it was true that the interchange of people between these cities were definitely significant. Breisgau was some five hours away by train in the neighbouring, formerly independent Kingdom of Rine.

“Hm, you seem like you understand Old Yue, but how come you use New Yue?”

Of course that question would come up. It came up every time for Alice, so she was used to it by now.

“My Old Yue sounds awful, so I tend to stick to New Yue. Sorry.”

“Oh really? Then you should speak more so you can get it right! C’mon, give it a whirl!”

Eye sparkling again, the presence that Mayumi possessed felt the same as when Kato too egged her on to use Old Yue when they first met. Alice attempted to brush it off, but to no avail.

“I’ll pass. It’s already an incurable habit, so there’s no way I’m going to use it.”

“Aw c’mon, just say something just once. I wanna hear it!”

“No! We’re not doing it!”

“Please? Please? Pretty pleeeeeaaase?”

“Your perfect Livian standard is not helping your case!”

Food still in her mouth, Mayumi laughed at Alice’s flustered resistance. The Old Yue language was in fact a group of linguistically similar but only partially mutually intelligible dialects, the lingua franca being the Kwangchow dialect. Within this lingua franca, the Livian standard was one of two standards, the other being the Homeland standard, where they differed only in minor pronunciations. However, in mass media, the Livian standard was the preferred variant.

“Then all right, I give, I give. Pleased to make your acquaintance.”

“Likewise.”

Mayumi clutched Alice’s free hand with her own, beaming as she was the whole time. Alice could feel that their relationship was going to be a bumpy one, yet at the same time she couldn’t help but be impressed, though also envious. For Alice, it was difficult to bring that kind of a smile to her face, but Mayumi readily showered everyone with her happiness.

Bleeeeeeeee—

The blaring noise of the P.A. system rang loudly, bringing everyone’s attention to the imminent announcement that was sure to follow.

“Attention, school. A casus belli has been claimed by Class D against Class C. As a Supervisor of the Class Wars, namely Elizabeth Miklos Romana of Class F, senator, acting on the authority of the principal, namely Lady Eterna, while in her regrettable absence, shall determine that the casus belli claimed is true and justified. Romana shall now declare the commencement of war between Class D and Class C.”

The students around them rose up in curiosity as their peripheral vision turned mysteriously purplish, signifying that there truly was a Class War starting. The barrier that encased the school grounds was activated, and outside the window they could see the barrier boundaries some distance away materializing as rainbow-coloured auroras.

“Mayumi, do you have your cleanse tag yet?”

“Yeah. Ms Romana gave me and briefed me about the cleanse tags this morning.”

Kato asked Mayumi as he held up his left wrist, where he wore his own cleanse tag. It wrapped around his wrist and forearm like a ribbon-like bandage, but it was in fact his student identification with his name and class printed on it along with the school chop. Mayumi lifted hers up to show them the same, also already personalized with her New Yue name.

“Then remember to keep it on at all times, especially during a Class War. And especially during a Class War involving our own class. And even with it, still try not to get hurt.”

While wearing a cleanse tag with the boundaries of the now-rainbow-coloured alchemical barrier, it protected the wearers from injury by instantaneously reversing damage to a previously healthy state at hyper-speeds. However, the system was far from perfect.

“Umu. I get it, I get it. We’d still feel most of the pain, minor injuries tended to not trigger the protection effect, and major injuries don’t get fully restored, right? Like if ye got a big ol’ cut, it would get reduced to a li’l cut.”

“Sisi’s taught you a lot then, eh? That’s good.”

“But this Class War is between C and D only, right? It won’t involve us.”

“Right. And at least during a war, when the barrier is glowing like city lights, even if you lose your cleanse tag for whatever reason, the activated barrier will still prevent you from getting injured.”

“And you win a war by beating up the… opposing class rep? I remember this whole thing is a martial tradition, but it’s kinda whack in this day and age.”

Mayumi retreated back to her seat in front of Evie, barbarically sitting down on the chair in reverse, her front leaning on the backrest and her legs open wide with her feet on either side.

“Beating up? Yeah, that’s the basic method. Nowadays, though, Class Wars are mostly just answering subject-focused trivia questions overseen by a teacher. It’s called the Duel system, which basically means a teacher-mediated fight of some sort.”

“So the loser allows himself to get beat up? Heh.”

Eon was unperturbed.

“Your cleanse tag slowly turns from white to black as it reverses your injuries, and it turns completely black when it’s fully saturated. However, in a Duel, the teacher artificially saturates your cleanse tag. Once the class rep’s cleanse tag is fully saturated, they lose the Class War.”

“The Duel system is supposed to bring a peaceful way to resolve conflicts between the classes, but pop quizzing like Who Wants to be a Millionaire isn’t the only method. Sometimes we do get brawls. Right, Kato?”

“Indeed we do.”

Kato nodded satisfactorily at Caius.

“Geh. Isn’t that kinda unfair for Kato’s opponents? And Evie’s too. They can probably take on everybody else in this school at the same time.”

“That’s exactly our class’s advantage.”

“Yup. Do you think we have enough nerds in our class to fight an orthodox Class War with our competitors?”

“No, I guess not. Ohhhh, I get it now.”

A lightbulb went off in Mayumi’s head, illuminating her face.

“Yeah, that makes sense now. Korolev’s classes are stratified by merit, so because we’re Class F out of, like, ten classes or something, we’re smack in the middle of the pack. We’re not supposed to win against the higher classes.”

“But miraculously, we did win against Class A a few weeks ago, courtesy of Kato’s fists. And you all say I’m the one who always uses brute force.”

Evie said as if it completely justified her own twisted tendencies, which naturally frightened the men here.

“Really? Then is that why—”

Mayumi paused for a moment before a crafty grin spread across her face. She turned at Alice, closely observing her as Mayumi’s eye sparkled once more with mischief. Like a time goddess, she wasted none with anything and pounced at the first opportunity.

“That’s why Alice is here, isn’t it?”

As if receiving an electric surge Alice’s back was straightened immediately. Mayumi got it right on the mark, and Alice’s inability to speak as she turned red as a tomato pretty much confirmed Mayumi’s thinly veiled insinuation. Too late. Kato was a moment too slow to intervene before Alice’s face gave it all away.

“Well, that’s true, but it was also an opportunity to put a dent into Class A and its reign of terror.”

“Opportunity?”

Leaving no trace of the smugness in her face, Mayumi returned to normal, almost abnormally so. Both Alice and Kato were glad that she didn’t insist on pressing the issue.

“Most of our school outside of academics is essentially student-run. We exist in a system that’s patronized by the parents of the elites, not us Elites but the bourgeoisie. It has always been that way, so the privileges of the students are grossly disproportionate.”

“Yes. Unlike in other schools where those powers are invested monolithically in the student council, Korolev split those powers into two branches, the student council and the Assembly.

“The Assembly is the legislative branch of student government that passes policies, resolutions, laws, et cetera, for the student council and the rest of the school to run on.”

“On the other hand, the student council is the executive, responsible for the day-to-day functions of student government and carrying out most of the policies passed by the Assembly.”

“In practice, we’re under the rule of the Assembly, and it’s an elitist club that’s controlled by Class 3-A. The constitution gives Class A an almost majority of seats.”

“Meanwhile, a good portion of the student council’s nominal powers are actually split off into two different and independent organizations, the Public Safety Committee and the Activity Council.”

Eon and Caius began explaining to Mayumi in tandem once again.

“A few weeks ago, the Mona faction of Class A, or the Activity Council faction, put forward a bill in the Assembly called the Act of Neutrality. The substance is here.”

Caius threw a file folder on Kato’s desk, already the focal point where everyone was turned facing for their lunch gathering.

“In essence they wanted, for the sake of so-called neutrality, to ban political campaigning in relation to the real world situation in Lien right now. This was proposed immediately after the defacing of national symbols in the legislative council in Lien.”

Lien was a neighbouring Yue-majority city on the other side of the border with Ava, and heavily integrated with Livia on many levels, the most tightly at the socio-cultural level. However, the difference was that while Livia enjoyed de facto independence from the imperial government of Auxiria, Lien was nominally under the control of the Kingdom of Ava, a possession of the Auxirian Empire for almost two centuries. Decades of struggle between imperial power and localist demands came to a head in a storming of the legislative building by protestors four weeks ago, directly challenging the current political arrangement between Lien and Auxiria.

“Our class is spearheading the lobbying for striking down this bill. Most of the lower classes are on the ‘yellow’ side of the conflict, so to speak. They tend to be more localist-leaning than collaborative with an oppressing ‘blue’ power. It’s the spirit of the Yue people.”

Eon said confidently, proud of his people. Of course, it included the non-ethnic Yue people around him as they were every bit Yue on the inside, regardless of their race or skin colour.

“Yeah, but it isn’t you who’s doing that. It’s Chantal and them who’re doing that, and somehow Alice’s been the poster girl for the anti-neutrality movement.”

“I’m only a figurehead, okay? It’s the result of circumstance, not because I’m a capable leader.”

Alice pointed out quickly to correct Caius. Mayumi tilted her head.

“A result of circumstance?”

“If only me joining Class F was as simple as you thought. Imagine, the fiancée of the marshal of the Public Safety Committee leaving him behind and crossing the floor for the class that was the explicit target of police action by the PSC. Not only that, but that class was being charged with sedition, or in other words, undermining the authority of the PSC. That was me. With such a high profile defection, the story’s romantic to the point of delusion, so of course it’ll turn the whole school upside down.”

“Ooooooh! It does sound amazing! So you’re no longer his fiancée? Are you now Kato’s?”

Both Alice and Kato almost gagged while the people around them snickered.

“So that’s all you’ve got from my explanation?!”

“Well, for the other parts, I already have a sort-of-an-opinion on it based on my political views. So what did you end up doing for the anti-neutrality side? Making speeches and public appearances?”

“Pretty much. It’s tiring sometimes, but Chantal and them are good people. I wished I was in this class earlier.”

“But do you have your own political position?”

“I do. I’m on the yellow side, but as rude as it sounds, it’s not my fight. I’m not from here, and I can only cheer from the sidelines within the limits of my abilities.”

Alice shrugged without much emotion as Mayumi looked towards Eon and Caius.

“Then are the rest of you guys in on this project too?”

“In on the project? Sure, but a lot of the on-the-ground work is left to the rest of our class. Our fight is in the Assembly.”

“What? What do you mean?”

“Me, Caius, Kato and Yui are Members of the Assembly from our class constituent, while Alice is a Member by virtue of being our class representative. Originally, Class F only had one seat, but it got expanded to four after a couple of wars. By stealing it from the losing classes of course.”

Mayumi just as quick turned back to Alice on the other side.

“You’re our class rep too? Didn’t you say you joined this class only a while ago?”

“The rest of Class F thought I would be a better public-facing figure for the class than Kato, who is now our former class rep. I’d tend to agree, don’t you, Kato?”

Needling Kato was second nature to Alice, but at least in this instance he didn’t mind the jab. She was probably better than him at that job, to be perfectly honest.

“Whatever, dude. You’re way better than me at public speaking, so it’s a lot better for us both inside and outside the Assembly.”

Mayumi’s eye lit up again, doubtlessly another great idea spawned in her brain.

“Hey, can I join in too? If Alice needs someone else to do the public speaking outside the Assembly, then I’m the perfect replacement. We’re doing this.”

She puffed out her chest arrogantly and directed the last sentence to her two oldest lackeys, to which Eon and Caius nodded readily. Alice smiled, albeit bemusedly.

“You’re welcome to do that. It’s Chantal who’s calling the shots anyway.”

Mayumi stood up from her seat again.

“Where is she right now?”

“Right now? Busy with organizing the next protest most likely. Or already doing it. Sometimes I get pulled away for it too. It’s lunch time after all.”

“Don’t worry, Mayumi. She’ll show up sooner or later to discuss her next plan with us.”

“Good job, Kato. I’m glad to hear that the Elites are still the kings of this class.”

Both thumbs up, Mayumi laughed again, but without the background chatter of a fully occupied classroom it was a few decibels louder than normal. Included in the last flurry of students leaving the classroom for the hallways were Eon and Caius, who gestured to the remaining Elites to come hither.

“Let’s go watch. It looks like an orthodox Class War.”

“Because at this rate, we’ll probably get more abnormal wars than orthodox ones.”

After quickly tidying themselves, or in the case of Mayumi still holding onto her food, they followed the two out and after a short walk through the somewhat crowded corridor they made their way to the balcony that overlooked the atrium. Many other students too were looking over the balcony at the students on the first floor below, which they recognized to be students from Class 3-C and Class 3-D.

“Wow, I’m still impressed that your school’s atrium is really humongous.”

It was indeed a wide open space, probably enough to stage a small-scale performance with a sizeable audience. Though they were on the third floor, they could definitely still see all the tiny details of the class confrontation. Students from the two belligerent classes lined up on either side of the atrium with a big open space between them, all encased by a ring of crowds of mostly first-years. Immediately below them, they could see second-years lining their own floor’s balcony.

“What’re they fighting over?”

In place of the Elites, two girls, one short and one tall, suddenly appeared next to them to provide that explanation.

“A place in the upcoming talent show.”

“If they were just a bit smarter, they’d avoid the war, but hey, I’m not complaining about them fighting each other into exhaustion.”

“Ooooo~”

Eye lightening up again, Mayumi grabbed hold of the short one’s hands. Unfortunately for her, Mayumi was just a bit shorter than the newcomer with the sparkling platinum blonde hair in an old-fashioned hime cut. But like Mayumi, this girl hadn’t changed much from the last time they saw each other. On the other hand, the gal with the brown pixie cut standing tall behind her had a wide smile on her face, clearly physically different from when she was a little runt. She was as tall as Evie and equally imposing, a great contrast with her much smaller sister in front of her.

“We meet again.”

“Oi! Long time no see, Mayumi!”

“Ariel! Scarlett! Good to see you too!”

They were all smiles, exchanging salutations and subsequent small talk as Mayumi did earlier with the Elites. They were surprisingly amiable, as they used to challenge each other at the playground. The new arrivals were two of the Jupiter sisters, the antithesis of the Elite Four. Eon eventually waved at one of their childhood rivals for her attention.

“Hey, Ariel, what exactly are they going for when they win? It shouldn’t be just a spot in the talent show, is it?”

“Yes. They are definitely using it as a pretext to fight for seats in the Assembly.”

Ariel was a calm girl, serene to the point where as if her voice could make echoes all by itself.

“Why? How come they’re that desperate?”

“Class C is part of the Gilbert faction, while Class D is part of the Mona faction. Though Gilbert and Mona are on the same side at the personal level, at school they represent different interests.”

“So this is a proxy war? That kinda explains why they went for the orthodox method of war.”

“Exactly. Given Gilbert’s resignation, the next in line to succeed him in the PSC is the class representative of Class C, Donovan Avgothia. Gilbert and his inner circle will still control Donovan from behind the scenes, but the public will be seeing Donovan and his people more than Gilbert.”

Caius snapped his fingers, an idea clicking in his head after Scarlett’s commentary.

“Class C and Donovan are mostly people from the drama department, which is a big independent organization. But for Class D, they’re mostly a divided class of multiple smaller clubs that are under the Activity Council’s thumb, which is Mona’s territory. They’re fighting a war of big clan versus small clans.”

Mayumi put her fingers at her temples.

“What’s going on? I’m kinda lost.”

“The Mona faction is in charge of the Activity Council, or the AC, which is responsible for club activities and other cultural events, and naturally also manages their resources like manpower, facilities and to an extent finances as well. So they have a handle on Class D.”

“On the other hand, the Gilbert faction is law enforcement, as they’re PSC. Historically, the big independent organizations, like the drama, music and phys. ed. departments, are aligned to the PSC because of their natural conflict of interest with the AC. The AC tends to be a control freak when it comes to managing their external resources, like getting approved for a publicity campaign or whatnot. And these organizations are provisioned close to no representation in the Assembly or other parts of student government, so they leverage the PSC’s influence to retain their independence. Since the PSC usually doesn’t care about the endless resources that these organizations use up, they get along well.”

“Hey, aren’t all these supposed to be the responsibility of the student council? Where do they come in?”

“You mean, where do we come in.”

Ariel smiled easily as her older quadruplets sister Scarlett grinned as well.

“I am the undersecretary, head of the Department of the Administration and the Records Office.”

“And I am the executive manager, head of the Student Liaison Office.”

Speaking proudly, low-key in a pretentious way to show off to the Elite Four, they revealed their identities to Mayumi.

“No way! You girls are actually student council? That’s cool! And judging from your job titles, I’d assume Mira and Bia should be part of it too?”

“You’ve got that right.”

The Jupiter sisters were quadruplets, but only Mirabelle and Bianca were identical. It was a strange complement of twins plus two others with completely different physiques.

“I’m the most involved with the AC, since the AC and the SLO are supposed to be joint organizations sharing the same responsibilities. And I can say that Eon and Caius’ perception of the AC is accurate.”

“Hoho, politics. And I guess the SLO’s existence is to try to impose the student council’s will in the AC?”

“Exactly, exactly.”

Scarlett nodded excitedly as Mayumi caught on quickly.

“So then what’s Ariel responsible for?”

“General administration. Tabulating minutes, running Assembly sessions, making public announcements, data collection, espionage.”

“Espionage?! Did I hear that right?”

“Damn straight.”

Mayumi paused for a second.

“But if the Jupiter sisters are student council, then they’re on our side, right? The anti-neutrality protesters’ side. Then we have this triangular struggle for power.”

“Bingo. A triangular struggle.”

“And the struggle is going to get a lot more complicated because of the new incoming PSC marshal. He may be a puppet of the Gilbert faction, but he has his own clique as well.”

Eon concluded their thoughts as he watched the war, or more accurately, the trivia contest just starting down below.

There was a teacher standing in the middle of the clearing, flanked on both sides by the two opposing classes a safe distance away. He held his arm high in the air, showing a teacher’s cleanse tag wrapped around his wrist over the long sleeve and glowing blue. Immediately, one student from each side walked forwards to meet each other in front of the teacher, where they also held up their cleanse tags, glowing yellow instead before they lowered their arms again.

“This is the preparatory phase, where the Supervisor lays out the rules of the Duel. In other words, this is where the trivia question is asked.”

Caius explained to Mayumi, who was stretching forward and leaning over the ledge a bit too far. Without a moment to spare, the teacher asked the first question loudly so that even the third floor could just hear him with enough clarity to make out the question.

“In the play Macbeth, explain the author’s meaning and the significance to the play of the excerpt starting from line two thousand three hundred eighty-one, for five lines, in act five scene five, beginning with ‘life’s but a walking shadow’?”

They could see both sides’ cleanse tags glow a bright blue, indicating that the Duel had begun. Immediately, the student on Class C’s side raised their hand in the air first and the teacher acknowledged it, but with their distance they couldn’t hear the subsequent answer clearly.

“That’s a really hard question, what the hell?”

“Tough luck, I guess?”

Then, surprisingly, the teacher gave the Class D student a chance to answer as well. The student gave an empathic one that sounded more confident than Class C’s.

“Class C’s answer isn’t good enough? Wow.”

“Yeah. Normally, the first taker has the advantage because if the answer is sufficiently correct, they get the win.”

After Class D gave their answer, the teacher gave it a good ten seconds of thought before tapping his cleanse tag, which ended the challenge period. Class C’s student’s cleanse tag turned from blue to red, while Class D’s turned to green, which was accompanied by cheers and celebration by the rest of Class D.

“Well, Class D could have given a crappier answer than Class C too, but this year looks like Class D has some smart people.”

“You’d think Class C would know these answers better because they’re from the drama department.”

And that was exactly the sentiment among the bystanders. Right out of the gates, Class C suffered a loss on home turf.

“Even the Supervisor in charge here is Mr Nigel, one of the drama department’s advisors. Class D is already on the back foot ‘cause the Supervisor is definitely favourable to Class C.”

The Class C student had to retreat back to his class in disgrace, and another of his comrades had to step up to replace him, once again facing the same opponent from Class D.

“Wait, they’re replacing their vanguard already? What gives?”

“What do you mean?”

“Usually in this kind of trivia quizzing format, they’re given two or three lives before they’re considered ‘out’. I guess they’re playing with only one life this time around.”

“Hmm. That seems to be the case. Then they’re playing on really high stakes, eh?”

“How do they keep track of the antes?”

Caius held up his cleanse tag to Mayumi.

“Remember this cleanse tag turns to black as you get injured? After every one of these quizzing rounds, the Supervisor artificially saturates the loser’s cleanse tag, turning them black. Once it’s all black, the Supervisor won’t accept your participation anymore because you’ve used up all your chips. No ante, no game.”

“So it’ll end up with the whole class getting taken down, with the class reps the last ones to join the fray.”

“In isolation, that’s what game theory tells us. The bigger your class, the more defence in depth you have. But you can also win it all with just one genius at every subject. It really depends. But at the same time, classes play a game of resource management and damage control too. Cleanse tags don’t get fully de-saturated until the start of the new month, except for the class rep’s which gets de-saturated after every war.

“So, say if Class C is going to lose, and Class C knows that another class has beef with them and likely has a valid casus belli against them, they might not throw everybody at this war if they think the next one is more dangerous to lose.”

Mayumi sneered, just a little bit.

“Do you guys actually need to calculate that hard? Are the rewards of a war that good?”

“Of course! A peace treaty has the same effect as an Act of the Assembly. In other words, the peace terms become the law of this land. Within the boundaries of their reasons for war, naturally.”

“It just sounds surreal that you guys would wager your student life on a series of trivia questions.”

“Well, wars are supposed to be rarer than this, and this is the civilized way of doing things. Trivia quizzing isn’t the only peaceful method of war, just the traditionally most popular. We saw a couple of games of association football decide some matches last year, for example. That’s ‘cuz those classes had their own football teams that were pretty good. The Class War made the stakes in those games super-high, so those were really good matches.”

“Oh I get it, the classes can agree on any kind of competition that they can propose to the Supervisor to referee.”

“Exactly. And if all else fails, we go back to the barbaric way of settling things, by the way of fists.”

“Hmm. I can see why things trended towards peaceful measures. I assume that only classes with challengers or deities would consider the free-for-all option.”

Challengers and deities were existences that Kato, Teto and Evie were; trained in combat and physically superior. Depending on the level of superhuman ability, they were assigned the challenger moniker for green up-and-coming super-soldiers, or a deity for a recognized or established fighter of incredible ability. They were the latter, not through any established reputation of themselves but a recognition of such status from an established peer.

“Or be cool like Kato, proposing a one-on-one physical fight to decide the Class War. Stole a bride out of it too.”

Kato’s eyes narrowed at Eon’s choice of words as Alice, who was coincidentally standing with Kato, turned away in embarrassment.

“I understand the optics may appear that way, but that was the plan from the start, my foul-mouthed friend.”

“Nah, Kato. That was all you, my man.”

“Caius, what happened to one for all and all for one?”

“Nowhere to be found, of course. What, d’you think we’d soften up and let our feet off the gas pedal?”

Mayumi giggled but was also touched. Kato, as the edgy newcomer at the time, used to be the butt of their jokes until Mayumi left, and his role began to slowly shift away from that. It was nostalgic to see them all as if rewinding back in time. She peeled herself back from the railing and launched herself into Kato and Caius, hanging onto them by their shoulders.

“Hah! We never had, and we never will!”

“I can’t say that ain’t true, but we haven’t done that at my expense for a long time. And I implore you to keep it that way.”

“If only there was any other way, Kato. And no, Franco’s not gonna help.”

“I, for one, welcome Kato in reprising my role as the court jester.”

Franco said with comical arrogance, as if he made all the effort to make that happen when it was abundantly obvious it was Eon’s and Caius’ efforts.

“Isn’t it great? Things are the way they should be, right, Kato?”

Seeing her eternal smile made him choke on his retort, and could only laboriously bring out a forced smile of his own. Maybe it was because of her sudden reappearance that he was softer towards her than he used to.

“Agree? Agree on what? No matter how you look at it, you can’t convince me to throw away my self-respect.”

“Oh, right. I forgot that this doesn’t need the consent of the tormented. It’s okay. It’s already a done deal.”

Sticking her tongue out, she let go of the two of them and gave them the peace sign. Kato sighed, but was also relieved. It was going to be a long year with her here and thankfully too, because he didn’t want it to end quickly either. He was grateful that she decided to drop whatever she was doing, whichever path she was going down, and returned to rejoin her old friends one last time.