The Eminence in Shadow - Volume 06 (Yen Press) (Kobo - LNWNCentral)
The Eminence in Shadow - Volume 06 (Yen Press) (Kobo - LNWNCentral)
 Cover
 Insert
 Title Page
 Copyright
  Prologue There Are People Ruling the Midgar Kingdom from the Shadows?
I’m So Jealous!
 Chapter 1 Enter Jack the Ripper!
 Chapter 2 Assassins at the Sleepover!
 Chapter 3 Deciphering the Calling Card!
 Chapter 4 The Monster Becomes a Legend!
 Auxiliary Chapter Following in the Monster’s Footsteps!
 Side Story The Grassland Vow
 Chapter 5 Welcome to the Shadow Garden!
 Epilogue That Nostalgic Smell
 Appendix
 Afterword
 Yen Newsletter
                                    Prologue
  Christina greets the morning from the Hope family’s Midgar villa.
  She switches between sleeping in the dorms and sleeping at her villa
whenever the mood strikes her. As of late, though, she’s been staying
exclusively at the villa, and her mood has nothing to do with it. For her, it’s a
matter of self-preservation.
  “Is it morning already?”
  She looks up in surprise upon seeing the sunlight streaming in through her
curtains. There are faint bags under her eyes. It’s clear how obsessively she’s
been collating documents related to the incident.
  She sets her pen down on her desk and does a big stretch. Then she picks up
the documents and sighs.
  “Bringing charges against someone is harder than it looks…”
   Her documents list out the full events that transpired and testimony backing
it all up, but the way things are going, it looks like Eliza’s actions are going to be
deemed an accident rather than a crime. The official story is that the whole
thing was just a freak tragedy that took place when a bunch of teenage
academy students got wrapped up in a terrorist attack and panicked at the
stress of having their lives in such danger.
  “Earl Shoddi Goodz has been covering up and fabricating evidence. I had no
idea the Thirteen Nightblades’ influence was so vast.”
   Not only were they perfectly happy making up stories and suppressing the
truth, but they didn’t hesitate to kill if the need arose. Christina herself has felt
like she’s being watched. That’s why she started sleeping exclusively at the villa.
  “Their corruption is spreading. I can’t beat them, not on my own. And as for
the Hope family’s strength, well…”
  Her father has no interest in getting involved with the case. To use his words:
“How exactly do we benefit from saving some no-name noble girl?”
  The Thirteen Nightblades’ power is why their tyranny stands unopposed.
Everyone just looks the other way.
 “I don’t…I don’t have that kind of power.”
  Political power, military power, financial power, institutional power… If you
have power, you can get away with anything. That’s just a fact of living in
Midgar.
 “How do we benefit from saving a no-name noble girl, huh?”
 They didn’t. Doing so wouldn’t change the world one bit.
  Christina knows that from a noble’s perspective, her father is right. However,
that’s not enough to satisfy her. There are people doing evil, and the fact that
she can’t punish them makes her feel completely powerless.
 Christina has no idea how to reconcile those emotions.
 Perhaps if she were stronger, she would be able to stamp out evil. Stamp it
out…the way Shadow does.
  Christina can picture it in her mind’s eye. She can see herself mowing down
the Nightblades, vanquishing the wicked, saving the weak, and defending her
nation.
 She laughs at herself. “Okay, that’s enough of that.”
 All she’s doing is making herself feel worse.
  She lets out a long exhale and rubs her tired eyes. Then she takes the
documents about Eliza and the Nightblades and stores them in her drawer to
take her mind off things. Instead, she pulls out another set of files.
 “Shadow…and the Shadow Garden…”
  The new files contain the investigation Christina’s been conducting into the
Shadow Garden in her free time.
 “It appears as though the Shadow Garden began operating over a year ago,
but I can’t track down any details. I assume Shadow’s been leading them that
whole time…but again, I can’t find details. I swear, it’s like I can’t get
confirmation on anything.”
 She flips through the papers. They’re packed full of clippings from wanted
posters and newspaper articles.
  “The reporting in the north side of the kingdom is atrocious. It’s been
confirmed that Shadow operates up there sometimes, you know! How is it they
barely have any mugshots, and the quality of the ones they do have is so
terrible?”
  Despite her grumbling, her expression slowly brightens as she looks at the
papers.
  “The man has a tremendous sense of duty. That’s why he walks his
bloodstained path, and it’s why he can’t exist where the light shines. But he’s
out there vanquishing evil. Unlike me…”
 She laughs at herself again.
 Then there’s a knock on her door.
 “Come on in.”
 A middle-aged man steps inside.
  Christina uses the full force of her dark knight talents to shove her documents
into the drawer at record speed.
 “Good morning, Father.”
 “Have you not been sleeping, Christina?”
 “No, no, I was just doing some thinking. Did you need me for something?”
  “I assume I don’t have to tell you this, but don’t do anything that will anger
the Thirteen Nightblades. No good would come of getting on their bad side.”
 “………”
  Christina doesn’t say a word, and the nod she gives him is brief. It’s the most
resistance she can muster.
 “Things are about to get very chaotic. There’s no telling what could happen to
the Hope family if we do anything rash.”
 “Chaotic how, Father?”
  “Ah, right, I forgot to tell you.” Her father lets out a sigh. “Shoddi Goodz is
dead.”
 “What?”
  “The whole aristocracy is on edge, and the Nightblades are furious. The
capital is in turmoil.”
  Christina watches her father leave, then hurriedly gets dressed and heads to
the scene of the crime.
  The chaperone takes them to the Knight Order member in charge of the
scene.
 “I’m Gray, chief of the Knight Order’s criminal investigation department,” the
man says. “Please make sure you don’t touch the body or move anything in the
room.”
 “Got it,” Alexia replies.
 “I’m going to get back to work. If you need anything, give me a holler.”
 “Will do.”
  The first thing Alexia is greeted with when she steps inside is the
overwhelming smell of blood. But of course—the pile of corpses in front of the
door has been left untouched, and beyond them, Earl Shoddi Goodz’s body is
bleeding from the head as it stares upward.
  Alexia crouches beside it. “Looks like the cause of death was a single blow to
the forehead. But that’s no ordinary weapon…”
 Throughout the room, members of the Knight Order are rushing around
working. Christina, on the other hand, simply stands by the door in a daze.
 “What’s the matter, Christina?” Alexia asks. “They said we can go in.”
 “Huh? Oh, right, coming.” After snapping back to her senses, Christina
hurriedly follows Alexia inside.
 “If you’re not feeling well, you might want to just leave.”
  “No, I’m fine. That thing stuck in the head…” Christina stares curiously. “Is
that a playing card? What an odd design.”
 “It’s from Mitsugoshi’s high-end line. I think it’s a limited edition.”
 “We might be able to narrow down who bought it, then.”
   “I wouldn’t be so sure. With a company as big as Mitsugoshi, even their
‘limited edition’ products get print runs in the thousands.”
  “That would take a while to go through…” Christina looks down at Earl Goodz.
“The ace of spades, huh?”
  The earl died with his eyes wide and a shocked expression. Sure enough, the
card lodged in his brow is the ace of spades. It’s almost as if the skeleton knight
on the card’s design is symbolizing the man’s death.
 “Why use a playing card?” Alexia murmurs. “Earl Goodz’s dark knight
academy grades were nothing to sneeze at. This man was a skilled dark knight,
yet the killer impaled his forehead with a normal old paper card. That would
have taken some serious magic.”
  “Paper conducts magic at a rate of less than ten percent. That’s nothing
compared with something like mithril, and plus, it would have taken incredibly
precise mana control to overcome the paper’s natural resistance. Why did they
choose such an obtuse method, I wonder?”
  “I have no idea, but it certainly helps pinpoint our perp. We’re looking for a
dark knight with huge mana reserves and highly precise mana control.”
 “In other words, this isn’t just some random murderer we’re dealing with. If it
was, they would never have used a playing card like that.”
 “No, they would have been more efficient about it.”
  “They were clearly working with some kind of purpose. The card, the
footprints, it doesn’t add up. Perhaps it’s some sort of code that only those in
the know can decipher.”
  “They could have been making an example of him, or satisfying a grudge, or
sending some kind of message… You might be onto something.”
  The two of them spend some more time standing in thought before the
corpse.
  Eventually, a male voice breaks the silence. “There are witnesses?! Are you
serious?”
 It’s Gray, the man in charge of the Knight Order operations there.
 “There was, sir,” a knight replies. “Apparently, the servants were merely
unconscious. Several of them woke up and are able to describe the culprit.”
 “And? What did they look like?”
 Alexia and Christina strain their ears.
 “According to the staff…it was a clown drenched in blood.”
 “I’m sorry, what?”
 “They say a bloody clown appeared out of nowhere, and a moment later,
everything went black. The next thing they knew, it was morning. They’re all
reporting the same thing, so I have to imagine they’re telling the truth.”
 “And none of them got a good look at the killer’s face?”
 “No, sir. It was hidden under a clown mask. They say the killer seemed ‘tall,’
but that might just have been the costume talking.”
 “Did you get anything else?”
 “No, sir. We’re canvassing the area, but so far we haven’t found any other
witnesses.”
  “Keep pounding that pavement. If they were dressed like a clown, they must
have stood out like a sore thumb. We’re dealing with an absolute wacko here.”
Gray watches his subordinate go, then sighs.
 “A clown costume, a playing card… This is a strange case,” says Alexia.
 Gray frowns. “Why, if it isn’t Princess Alexia. Don’t you know it’s poor
manners to eavesdrop?”
  “I think the killer was trying to leave some sort of specific message. Do you
have any idea what that might be, Chief Gray?”
 “You’re overthinking things, Princess. This here is an open-and-shut case.”
 “How so?”
  “Our culprit is some rich person who had a bone to pick with Earl Goodz. They
used their wealth to hire some hotshot assassin, and it turned out the assassin
was a homicidal nutjob. Simple as that. Amateurs tend to assume that
mysteries are these complicated affairs, but people’s motives are always dead
simple. The only killers who go and leave messages are the ones in Ms.
Natsume’s novels. Are you a fan of her Churlock Holmes novels, too, Princess
Alexia?”
 “No, I just—”
  “Aren’t they fantastic? I own every one she’s put out. But the thing is, they’re
interesting because they’re fiction. Reality is far more boring.”
 “I’m not a Churlock Holmes fan! Why would you think I have an ounce of
respect for that woman?!”
  “Oh, you mean you prefer the Case Clawed series? The one where a drug
turns a famous detective into a kitten?”
  “That’s not what I’m saying at all! I’m just worried there might be more to the
case than meets the eye!!”
  “Oh, I see. In that case, I can assure you that you have nothing to worry
about. As I said, we’ve already narrowed down the culprit’s profile. Someone
rich with a grudge against Earl Goodz.” Chief Gray flashes the two girls a smile
brimming with confidence. “Someone like, for example, Miss Christina.”
 “What? I had nothing to do with this!”
 “Why so flustered? By the way, I’m not the only one who suspects you.”
 “What’s that supposed to mean?”
 “Let’s just say you’ve made yourself some enemies in high places.”
 “You’re talking about the Nightblades…”
  “Now, I must be getting back to work. Gotta collect evidence so we can catch
the culprit.” Chief Gray turns to leave and drops a catchphrase. “One truth
prevails… Ms. Natsume’s novels really are fantastic. You should check them
out.”
 With that, and with a hearty chortle, Chief Gray leaves.
  “Well, he’s not wrong when he says that you have more reason than most to
be happy about Earl Goodz’s death,” Alexia remarks.
 “I told you, I didn’t do it!” Christina cries.
 “Well, yes, obviously. But that’s not how people are going to see it. I’d watch
my back if I were you.”
 “It sounds like the Nightblades are coming after me.”
  “I do wish I could offer you more help, but…people tend to get testy when
royals meddle with judicial proceedings.”
  “No, no, I completely understand the position you’re in. That testimony you
gave was more than enough.”
 “I really am sorry.”
  “And also, I would be lying if I said Earl Goodz’s death didn’t help me out. I
need to think things over and figure out how I want to play this.”
 “This could certainly help the trial turn in your favor.”
 Christina nods. “There’s something you should see, Princess Alexia.”
 “What is it?”
  Christina leads her over to Earl Goodz’s desk. “There are traces of a big coffee
spill all over the desk.”
  “Sure, and pieces of a broken cup all over the place. It’s no surprise that its
contents would have splashed onto this.”
 “Look at the shape of the stain, though. It’s a perfect rectangle.”
  “You’re right! That means there was something here on the desk. Something
shaped like a document…”
  “So the coffee spilled on the document, and someone took it. That’s why the
coffee stain has that big rectangle in it. It’s the only logical explanation.”
 “But nothing’s supposed to have been removed from the crime scene.”
  Christina lowers her voice to a hush. “Then it was either the killer who took it,
or the Knight Order.”
 Alexia’s expression hardens. “It could be dangerous to trust the Knight Order
more than we have to. We’ll need to keep an eye on them.”
 “Yeah. Be careful out there, Princess Alexia.”
 The two of them spend a bit more time surveying the room, then part ways.
  Later that day, after school, Christina waits in her Midgar Academy classroom
so she can talk to Kanade about the attack. Kanade is the girl who exposed
Eliza’s crimes back in the white fog incident. Naturally, doing so earned her the
enmity of the Nightblades.
 “Th-thanks for waiting, Christina.”
  Kanade looks terrified, and she’s constantly checking her surroundings.
There’s still a handful of students getting their stuff together before heading
home, but there’s no guarantee whatsoever that that would stop the Despohts
from taking extreme measures.
 “Did you hear about what happened this morning, Kanade?”
  “Yeah, of course. I never imagined something like that could happen to the
earl…”
 “The situation’s changed now. Both for the better and for the worse.”
 “For the worse?”
 “That’s right. You have a target on your back. I’m sure of it.”
 The blood drains from Kanade’s face. “……?!”
  “The only reason the Despohts didn’t attack you earlier was because they
were confident they didn’t need to. The way they saw it, there was no need to
take that kind of risk. But with Earl Goodz dead, all that’s gone out the
window.”
 “As in…they’re at a disadvantage now?”
  “Exactly. They don’t have the luxury of protecting their image anymore.
They’re coming after me, too, of course. I have a suggestion I wanted to run by
you—”
 Right as Christina is about to elaborate, they’re interrupted.
 “AHHHH! Wh-what is this thing?!”
 A pathetic-sounding cry echoes through the classroom.
  “What’s wrong?” Christina calls over to the male student who yelled. By that
point, the only people still there are Christina, Kanade, and the guy who let out
the cowardly shriek.
  The dark-haired boy turns around in a panic. In his hand, he’s holding
something that looks like a document.
 “Ch-Christina…,” he stammers.
  Christina digs his name up from the depths of her memory. He’s not
particularly remarkable, but he inexplicably ends up at the center of attention
just often enough for her to barely remember him.
 “You’re Claire Kagenou’s brother, um…Cid Kagenou, right?”
 “Y-yeah, that’s me. Can you take a look at this? It was just lying here.”
 “What is it?”
 The documents are dirty and stained.
  The stains come in two colors, black and red. The black stains have a faint
coffee odor to it, and the red ones…well, they smell like blood.
 “Is that…?”
  The moment Christina takes the documents, she freezes. These papers
contain the details of the events of the Eliza Despoht incident, the costs
associated with the cover-up, and a list of people involved with notes hinting at
their motives and interests.
 These are the documents that were missing from the scene of Earl Goodz’s
murder.
 Christina hurriedly double-checks to make sure there’s nobody else around.
 “Where did you find these, Cid?” she asks, taking care to keep her voice level.
  “Uh, they were just sticking out of that desk. I figured someone left them here
by accident.”
  The desk he’s referring to is one of the ones in the classroom. Each student is
assigned a desk, and the one Cid is pointing at is Christina’s.
 “My desk?!”
 “Oh, that’s your desk? Sorry, I should’ve just left them be.”
 “No, I’m glad you spotted them.”
 “See, that’s what I figured. I’m glad you didn’t forget them.”
 “Did you see what the documents said?”
 “Huh? I mean, I kinda got a glimpse…”
  “Ah…” Christina’s voice darkens. “So you saw them.”
  “Shoot, was there something private in there?”
  “Very, very private, yes.”
  “Well, I only got a tiny look, so it’s kinda like I didn’t look at them at all. How
about we leave it at that, and I’ll see you tomorrow?”
  “Hold it!”
  Cid makes an unexpectedly swift beeline to the door, but Christina grabs him
by the back of his collar.
  “Sorry, but I can’t let you leave.”
  “What?” Cid says, sounding like he can’t be bothered. “C’mon, there’s no
need to get violent.”
  “I’m saying this for your own sake. You don’t want to wake up with your head
cut off, do you?”
  “Wait, you’re gonna cut off my head?”
  “I’m not going to cut off anything. The problem is, I don’t know if anyone saw
you. If they find out you read these, they’ll come after you for sure.”
  “Who’s ‘they’? I’m not really following any of this, but I feel like this is your
fault for leaving something like that in your desk.”
  “I didn’t.”
  “Huh?”
  “I didn’t put the documents there.”
  “But then, who did?”
  “Someone who wanted me to read them.”
  The air seems to chill as a quiet, hard-to-describe unease falls over them.
There’s someone out there who stole important documents from the scene of a
murder and went out of their way to put them in Christina’s desk all the way
over in the academy.
  In fact, that person might be watching them at that very moment.
 Christina certainly stands to benefit from the situation, but it’s still unsettling,
not knowing what the mystery party hopes to achieve.
 Then, out of nowhere, Cid speaks up. “Oh, wow, gosh, there’s something
written on there.”
  “What are you talking about?”
  From where Cid is standing, all he should be able to see are the documents’
backsides.
  “The backs of the papers are stained red. Don’t you think it kinda looks like
letters?”
  “You’re right!”
  Christina turns the papers over, and sure enough, there’s a message written
in blood. It’s a little runny, so the message is hard to make out, but…
  “‘Jack the Ripper.’ Is that a name?”
  “Maybe that’s the person who left the papers in your desk,” Cid offers.
  “But who could they be? And why give these to me…?” Christina inhales
sharply as she sinks into thought.
  “Dunno, but I gotta get going.”
  “Hold it.”
  Once again, Cid tries to flee, and once again, Christina catches him.
  “Uh, my sister’s in a coma, and I’ve been so worried I can’t sleep at night, so I
really need to get going so I can look after her…”
  “I know about you sister’s situation, but I can’t let you leave. You’re not safe.”
  “I’m fine. I can protect myself.”
  “As I recall, your grades are a lot closer to the bottom of the class than the
top. I’m telling you this for your own good.”
  “I mean, you’re not wrong about that, but still.”
  Christina ignores Cid and turns around. “And, Kanade, you can’t go home,
either.”
 “Wait, me too?” Kanade asks in surprise.
  “That’s right. This is actually what I was trying to suggest earlier, but as of
today, the two of you are going to be living at the Hope family villa.”
 “Ugh,” Cid grumbles.
 “Oh, thank goodness,” says Kanade. “That’s such a relief.”
 Two very different responses.
 “We don’t have a choice here, not if we want to keep the two of you safe. The
Hope villa is well guarded.”
 “Ugh.”
 “Thank you so much, Christina.”
 “Now, let’s collect our stuff so we can head there.”
 And just like that, the three of them begin living together.
 When I kill people, I have a couple of rules that I kinda sorta vaguely try to
obey.
  One of those rules is that I generally try to avoid killing people I’d feel sorry
for.
 Another rule is that if they’re a bad guy, it’s probably okay to give ’em the ax.
 “Cool, no problems here.”
 I just double-checked, and I’ve been following all my rules today.
 “Gotta say, though, I wasn’t expecting things to play out like this.”
 As a result, I now find myself in Christina’s reception room.
  “Would you like some, Cid? We might never get another chance to drink high-
end Mitsugoshi coffee again, so we have to make sure we drink enough to last
the rest of our lives!”
 Kanade the broke aristocrat happily chugs her coffee. Her timidity from back
in the classroom seems to have gone without a trace. She’s a pretty girl with
dark eyes and dark bobbed hair.
 “You can have mine,” I offer.
 Gamma sends me more than I’ll ever be able to get through.
 “Wait, really?! I love you, Cid!”
  After receiving an awfully casual declaration of love, I lean back on the sofa
and sigh. I never expected to get dragged into staying at Christina’s place. I
worry that this might not be appropriate background-character behavior…but
then I realize Kanade is giving off the biggest background-character energy ever
as she downs a lifetime supply of coffee, so maybe this is actually fine.
 “Cool, no problems here.”
 Looks like I’m leading a deeply unproblematic life today.
 “Can I have your chocolate, too, Cid?”
 “Nah, the chocolate’s mine.”
 “Boo, what a jerk. I hate you, Cid.”
  I swiftly rescue my share of the chocolate out of Kanade’s hand. These are the
expensive new matcha truffles Mitsugoshi just released. Gamma sent me a
sample package last month. I’m surprised Christina managed to get her hands
on any, considering that the preorder backlog is over a year long.
  So this is what major aristocrats are capable of, huh…? Once again, I’m jealous
as hell.
  “The sofa’s from Mitsugoshi’s fancy furniture brand… And the chandelier, rug,
and tableware are from their high-end lines as well…,” I mutter.
 Man, these people must be die-hard Mitsugoshi fans. That said, just how
many pies does Mitsugoshi have its fingers in?
  As I pop the matcha truffles in my mouth, I hear a knock on the reception
room door.
 “I’m coming in.”
 It’s Christina.
 Kanade shifts gears at a startling speed and bows her head low. “Thank you so
much for having us over!”
  “You really don’t have to be so formal about it. The bedroom’s all made up, so
let me show you where it is.”
 The two of us follow Christina out into the hallway.
  Between the gorgeous carpet, the decorations on the walls and ceiling, and
the works of art adorning the hall, this place puts the impoverished Baron
Kagenou house to shame.
 “Seventeen million… Fifty-four million… Nine million… Two hundred
million…,” Kanade quietly mumbles as she walks beside me.
 “What’re you doing?” I ask.
 “Hyeep?! You heard that?”
 “Yep.”
 “I was just estimating how much all these works of art cost.”
 “Oh, huh.”
  I take a good long look at the vase Kanade just valued at two hundred million
zeni and burn it into my memory.
  “This here is the dining room. We’re going to be eating here tonight. And right
beside it…”
  Christina guides us through the villa with practiced steps. Then, after
ascending a spiral staircase, she comes to a stop before a set of double doors.
There are two dark knights serving as guards right in front of them.
 “Here we are.”
 With that, she opens the doors to reveal the spacious bedroom within.
  “Oh, wow! It’s like the kind of room a princess would have!” Kanade cheers as
she rushes over to the bed.
 “Okay, uh…”
 “Cid, your bed’s the one on the left.” Christina points to the bed in question.
“Okay, I gotta ask—”
  “Can I have this one, Christina?” Kanade inquires.
  “It’s all yours,” Christina replies. “That puts me in the middle, then.”
  “I gotta ask,” I cut in. “Why are there three beds?”
  The question’s been killing me since we first stepped into the room.
 “Because there’s three of us,” Christina says, pointing one after another at
me, then herself, then Kanade.
  “Well, I certainly can’t argue with that math.”
  “It’s more efficient to have all the people who need to be guarded in one
place.”
  “Ah.”
  That’s actually pretty reasonable.
  “We’ll be sleeping in the same room, but I’ll put a bookcase up between Cid’s
bed and ours,” Christina says. “That way, there shouldn’t be any problems.”
  “Plus, Cid’s grades on practical tests are garbage, and I’m, like, a hundred
times stronger than him,” Kanade adds. “If he tries anything funny, I’ll just beat
him up. Fwoosh, fwoosh, fwoosh!”
  In a profound display of disrespect, Kanade hops up and down on her bed and
assumes a combat stance.
  “I’m not some weirdo.”
   I raise my hands in a show of surrender and sit down on my bed. The suitcase
I brought from my dorm is waiting for me by the foot of the bed.
  In order, we’ve got me closest to the window, then Christina, then Kanade.
  “In front of the door and next to the window, huh? If anyone attacks, I’ll be
the first to die. The perfect spot for the son of a broke-ass baron,” I mutter.
 “You’re the one least likely to get attacked out of all of us, Cid,” Christina tells
me.
  “Oh, sorry. I didn’t mean that in a snide way.”
  To the contrary, I’m looking forward to it.
  “We have two guards in front of the door and another three stationed below
the window. And they’re all skilled dark knights who’ve made it to the Bushin
Festival primary rounds.”
  “Gosh.”
  “Don’t worry. You’re far safer here than you would have been at your dorm.”
  “If you say so. I think I got the gist of the situation on our way over, but can I
ask what happened this morning?”
  “I suppose that’s only fair.”
  “Actually, sorry,” Kanade pipes up. “I need to use your bathroom…”
  This is what you get for drinking all that coffee.
  “There’s a toilet and a bath in the next room over.”
  “Thanks!”
  After watching Kanade scamper off, Christina starts explaining.
  “Someone killed Earl Shoddi Goodz. People will probably be talking about it at
school tomorrow.”
  “What?! He got murdered?! That’s so morbid. Now that you mention it, the
name on those documents did look like it was written in blood…”
  “I suspect those papers were taken from the scene of the crime.”
 “Holy cow… Scary! To think that someone would do something as totally
messed up as writing a message in blood.”
  “The way Earl Goodz was killed wasn’t normal, either. This isn’t just your
regular old murder. The culprit is acting with some sort of purpose.”
  “I can’t believe that a normal old unremarkable academy student like me is
getting wrapped up in an incident this grisly…”
  “I can only imagine how hard this is for you, but you have to hang in there.
You might be a target, too.”
  “Man, I’m gonna be trembling so bad I won’t be able to sleep tonight. After
all, someone might be after my life.”
 “Oh, Cid…”
 Christina rubs my quivering back.
 The cold night wind blows in through the cracked window.
  After Kanade gets back from the bathroom, the three of us share a late
dinner.
  The meal is a lavish affair made from adapted versions of recipes from
Mitsugoshi’s fine dining cookbook, and what surprises me most of all is when
they bring out the sushi made from a fish resembling salmon. I haven’t had
sushi since before I died.
  “The food was so novel, and it was all so delicious!” Kanade says in elation
after we return to the bedroom.
  “Mitsugoshi’s cookbooks don’t have a single bad recipe in them,” Christina
replies. “You should really think about getting one, Kanade.”
 “Hweh?! M-my family can’t afford expensive ingredients, though…”
 “Some of their cookbooks focus on affordable dishes. For example, tuna
burgers use the parts of the fish that we used to throw away.”
 And thus, a fantasy world’s dietary culture gets overwritten.
 The three of us continue chatting from our beds for a while. It’s exciting, like
we’re out on a school trip.
  Some time later, though, Christina gets up amid the hearth’s crackling and
begins turning off the room’s lights. “We should really get some sleep. I was
having so much fun I lost track of the time.”
 “Awww, but I wanna keep chatting!”
 It’s already past midnight. Kanade slips under her blanket, grumbling all the
while.
 “G’night,” I say as I tuck myself into bed.
 “Good night, you two.”
 Right as Christina is about to do the same, there’s a knock on the door, and a
maid comes in.
 “Miss Christina, your father is asking for you,” she says.
 “…You two, go ahead and go to sleep. I’ll be right back once I’m done.”
 “You got it,” I reply.
 “Zzzz.”
 Kanade is already fast asleep.
  “Say, Cid…” Christina turns around in the doorway and gives me an intent
stare.
 “Huh? What’s up?”
 “Have we met somewhere before?”
 “In class.”
 “That’s not what I mean. I just get this sense that we’ve talked before.”
 “Huh. I don’t think we have.”
 “Maybe it’s just your energy. I feel like you remind me of someone… Sorry for
bothering you.”
 With an evasive smile, Christina steps out of the bedroom.
 Earl Azukay and Baron Stergang share a conversation in a dim secret chamber.
  “So we still don’t know who iced Shoddi Goodz?” Azukay says as he smokes
his cigar.
  “All the witnesses did was babble about a clown,” Stergang grumbles.
“Nitwits, the lot of ’em.”
 “Whoever did it knew their stuff. There’s no eyewitness reports outside the
Goodz estate, and our top mana tracers couldn’t find the guy’s trail.”
 “We’re dealing with a professional here.”
  “Yeah. Goodz had an impressive guard roster, and the killer took them all out
in a single hit. This guy’s got skills on par with Chief Gray’s.”
  “Could be someone from the Lawless City. They’ve got that assassin’s guild
ZERO over there, right?”
  “ZERO would make sense skill-wise, but I haven’t heard of any clowns working
for them.”
 “Could be a new recruit.”
   “Sure, maybe. Either way, we don’t have to know who the clown is to figure
out who hired them.” Azukay spreads a series of papers across the desk.
“There’s a couple possible candidates, but the Hope family’s at the top of the
list for sure. Still, we don’t have any proof.”
  “Aw, damn, no proof? What a bummer.” A sinister grin makes its way to
Stergang’s face. “Well, guess we’ll just have to merc ’em like we always do. Let
’em taste a little pain, and they’ll tell us whatever we want.”
 “Don’t get ahead of yourself. What if they didn’t do it?”
  “Heh, then we can just make up some evidence. Dead men tell no tales,
y’know?”
 “Yeah, but this is the Hope family we’re talking about. Think of what a
headache that would be to clean up.”
  “What? We’ve killed plenty of big shot aristocrats.”
  “In the past, sure. But you heard about how the Fenrir sect got taken down.”
  “The Fenrir sect? Oh, right, those cultists who’ve been backing up the
Thirteen Nightblades.”
  “Exactly. Now that the Shadow Garden’s stamped them out, it’s a lot harder
for the Cult to have our back. We’re in talks with another of their factions right
now, but until that’s all wrapped up, we need to watch our backs.”
 “Ugh, what a pain in the ass. I don’t get what the big deal is. They’re just one
measly little cult.”
  “You don’t know anything. You have no idea how powerful the Cult is, or how
terrifying they can be…”
  Stergang is taken aback at how grave Azukay’s voice is. “I-if that idiot Goodz
hadn’t gotten himself killed, we wouldn’t even be in this mess,” he snaps to
hide how shaken he is.
 “Don’t lose your cool. Until we get new orders, our job is just to keep the
Hopes under surveillance.”
  “Y’know, Boss, that Christina chick is a bona fide hottie. If we do end up killing
the Hope family, you mind if I take her?”
  “She’s all yours. Just make sure you don’t slack on the cleanup.”
  “You’re the best, Boss!”
  A wicked grin spreads across Stergang’s face. “Hee-hee-hee-hee-hee-hee.”
  “Shut up, Stergang.”
  “Sorry, Boss.”
  “Hee-hee-hee-hee-hee-hee.” A disquieting peal of laughter rings through the
darkened chamber.
  Stergang isn’t smiling now, and Azukay grimly sets down his cigar. “What the
hell…? Who’s there?” Azukay growls.
  Azukay and Stergang are the only ones in the room. A mere handful of people
even know it exists.
 “Hee-hee-hee-hee-hee-hee.”
 However, the laughter is clearly coming from inside the room.
 The two men warily draw their swords.
 “You think you can laugh at us?! Show yourself, asshole!” Azukay roars.
 “Hee-hee-hee-hee-hee-hee.”
 The laughter remains unchanged.
 Azukay and Stergang strain their ears to figure out where it’s coming from. It’s
not from their left or their right. Not from ahead of or behind them, either.
 Then the two of them start to look up.
 “Hee-hee!”
 That’s when something comes falling down. It’s a dark liquid, and it pours
down on their table and stains it red. The smell of blood assaults their noses.
 They stare at the ceiling.
 There’s a clown drenched in blood clinging to it.
 “Hee-hee-hee-hee-hee-hee.”
 The clown laughs as it eyes them.
 “It’s him!”
 “Is that a clown?!”
  Azukay and Stergang swiftly swing their swords overhead. People call them
the militant arm of the Nightblades, and their moves are well honed. Their
swords cleave through the clown, sending blood spraying everywhere.
 Splurch.
 The bloody clown collapses onto the table.
 “Get his ass!!”
 The two men grin as they bring their swords down.
   Each time the blades find purchase in the clown, more and more blood goes
flying. The clown twitches, and the laughter finally fades.
 “…Did we finish the job?” Azukay asks as he looks down at the mangled jester.
  With a practiced flick of the wrist, Stergang shakes the blood off his sword.
“This is the guy who took out Goodz? What a total pushover. Or hey, maybe I’m
just that strong.”
  Azukay smirks as well. He feels like he’s finally gotten his old edge back.
“There’s a reason I made a name for myself in the Bushin Festival back in the
day. Goodz’s piddly guards don’t have nothing on us. The clown picked the
wrong guys to mess with.”
 “All right, clowny boy. Let’s see what kinda face you’ve got under there…”
 Stergang laughs and reaches to pull off the clown’s mask.
 “What the…? Stergang!!”
 Stergang looks back, annoyed by the interruption. “What’s the matter, Boss?”
 “Y-your head…”
 “What about my head?”
 “There’s a playing card sticking out of the back…”
 “Huh?”
  Stergang hurriedly pats the back of his head. Sure enough, there’s a playing
card stuck deep in it. He wipes at the blood trickling down his neck in
bewilderment.
 “B-Boss… By, by, by heab…”
 With that, he crumples to the floor.
 The card embedded in his head is the two of spades.
  Then a figure looks down at Stergang’s convulsing body and slowly rises to its
feet.
 It’s the bloody clown.
 “H-how…? How are you still alive?”
  Azukay shudders and draws back. The clown is covered in wounds that should
clearly have been fatal, yet it stands there seeming none the worse for wear.
 The clown advances. Splurch.
 “Hold on. What do you want?”
 The clown advances. Splurch, splurch.
 “Is it money? Who’s your client? How much did they pay you?”
 Splurch, splurch, splurch.
  “L-let’s talk about this! I’ll double their offer! I’ll get you money, women,
anything you want!”
 Azukay feels a soft thump on his back. He’s reached the wall.
 Before he knew it, he’d been driven all the way to the edge of the room.
 “Stay back! I might not look it, but I’m a master of the Bushin style!”
 Splurch, splurch, splurch, splurch.
 “You won’t like what happens if you come into my range!”
  Azukay gives his sword a mighty swing. This is the range he fights best at, and
he can visualize every moment right up to the clown’s head flying off its
shoulders.
 However, his attack comes up empty.
 “What…? You dodged it from this close up?”
  All the clown did was take half a step backward, but it’s a movement that
defies everything Azukay knows about human capabilities. Nobody’s supposed
to be able to react that quickly.
 “Just what the hell are you?”
 Another splurch.
 “Hur…gurk…”
 There’s a playing card lodged in Azukay’s throat. It’s the three of spades.
 Choking up blood, Azukay swings his sword down. His blade grazes the tip of
the clown’s nose before slamming into the ground.
 “You’re…a monster…”
 Then Azukay keels over forward, coughs up more blood, and goes still.
  The blood-drenched clown scoops up the two corpses and vanishes into the
night.
                                   Chapter 2
 Alexia scowls at the copies of the incriminating documents. “So that’s what
you meant. Jack the Ripper already made contact with you…”
  There are three people in the unused academy classroom: Alexia, Christina,
and Cid.
  Christina’s expression is equally grave. “Using this evidence carefully could
allow us to really corner the Despohts, but we can’t afford to act rashly, not
when we don’t know what Jack the Ripper is hoping to achieve.”
  “We have no idea if he’s a friend or a foe,” Alexia agrees. “We know he wants
us to use the evidence, but there’s no telling what he stands to get out of it.”
  “And we can’t tell anyone where we got the evidence from, either. That limits
the ways we can use it.”
 “As far as that goes, I actually have an idea. Would you mind letting me hold
on to those for a bit?”
 “They’re just copies, but you’re welcome to them. What are you thinking?”
 “I’m going to ask my father for advice.”
 “Oh, that would be a huge help.”
 Alexia smiles sadly as she stows the bloodstained documents in her bag. “I
wouldn’t be so sure about that…”
 “Whatever do you mean?”
  “Oh, nothing. Now, the real question here…is why you and this thing were
staying together.”
 Alexia grabs Cid by the collar and thrusts him in front of Christina.
  “Um, for his protection?” Christina says like it’s obvious. “He caught a glimpse
of the documents, and I knew things could get ugly if the Despohts found out.”
 “It sounded like you were sleeping in the same room.”
 “Because it’s more efficient to only have to guard one location, yes.”
 “I mean, I guess you’re not wrong…”
  “Actually, that reminds me. Didn’t you pretend to be dating Cid that one time,
Princess Alexia?”
 “Wh-what about it?”
  “Oh, I was just worried that you two might be dating for real. If you are, then I
apologize for my thoughtlessness.”
 “W-we weren’t. We definitely, absolutely weren’t.”
 “Yeah, I’d rather die than date Alexia,” Cid chimes in.
  “You can just be quiet, Fido!” Alexia violently shakes Cid by the scruff of his
neck.
 “I see,” Christina says. “Then I guess you weren’t dating after all.”
  “Of course not. If I went out with Fido, it’d be a black mark on the Midgar
family name.”
 “Ah, then there’s no problem.”
 “Huh?”
  “If the two of you aren’t dating, then I don’t see any problem with the two of
us sleeping in the same room.”
 “I…I’m just worried about you, Christina. He might try something sketchy.”
 “I won’t,” Cid says.
 “Worried? About me? I do appreciate the concern, but I assure you, there’s
nothing to worry about. I’m a much stronger dark knight than Cid.”
  “You have a point, but Fido has these rare moments when his sword work
gets incredibly refined. I know it’s unlikely, but you can never be too careful.”
  “You’re too kind, Princess Alexia. I had no idea you were so concerned for me.
In that case, why not come join us yourself?”
 “Huh?” Alexia blinks in bewilderment.
 “If you came and stayed over as well, then surely nothing could possibly go
wrong,” Christina suggests.
  “Please no,” Cid says. “I’m getting chills just thinking about having to sleep in
the same room as Alexia.”
 “Shut up, you.” Alexia clamps her hand over Cid’s mouth. “That might not be
a bad idea.”
 “Father will be thrilled.”
 “Mmrnf!” says Cid.
 “I’ll go ahead and shift my plans around.”
 “Sounds perfect. I’ll go ahead and make the preparations.”
 “Mmrf! Mrrrnf!!”
 “See you later, then.”
 With that, Alexia jogs away.
  “Oh, geez, how’d things end up with Alexia staying with us?” Cid moans, his
expression that of a hero knowing he’s going to die in battle.
 “Isn’t it exciting?” says Christina.
 “I’m going back to my dorm.”
 “That’s not an option.”
 “Sorry, but I can’t see this through with you. I have some business I need to
—”
 “WHAT EXACTLY IS THE MEANING OF THIS?!”
  Before Cid can finish his sentence, there’s a feminine scream from out in the
hallway.
 “I know that voice!” says Christina.
 “Huh?”
 “That was Eliza just now. Something must have happened.”
 Christina and Cid head out to see what’s going on.
 Out in the hallway, Eliza and her lackey are kicking up a fuss.
 “How dare she. Does she think I’m just going to roll over and take this?”
 Eliza gives the onlookers a scathing glare, and they scatter like flies.
 Then her gaze lands on Christina.
  “Goodness gracious me, Christina. You have a lot of nerve, walking around
here after what you did.”
 “What I did? What are you talking about, Eliza?”
  “I’m talking about this! You’re the only person who would ever have given this
to me!”
   Eliza holds up a piece of paper with a message written in blood: “Thirteen fat
little piggies. The first piggie died fleeing. The second died filled with pathetic
contempt. The third died with a fool’s pride. How will the next one die? —Jack
the Ripper”
 “Is that…a death threat? Where’d you find that?” Christina asks.
  “It was stuffed in my bag. You think you’re real funny, don’t you?” Eliza stares
daggers at her. “I take it the ‘thirteen fat little piggies’ are supposed to be my
family and our friends?”
 “Oh, I couldn’t possibly say.”
 “Playing dumb, are we? As if Jack the Ripper wasn’t the assassin you hired.”
 “He really isn’t.”
 “And now you go and pull this stunt. If you think I’m going to let you get away
with this, you’re dead wrong.”
 “Like I said, it wasn’t me.”
 A sharp crack echoes through the hallway.
 Eliza just slapped Christina across the face.
  “Enjoy this confidence of yours while it lasts. You’ve managed to enrage my
father, and you have no one to blame for what’s coming next but yourself.”
 Christina icily returns Eliza’s glare.
 Then, behind her, Cid goes flying.
 “PLAAAARGH!”
 Blood spews from nose and mouth as he soars through the air.
 “Cid?!”
 “Ah-ha-ha, how pathetic!”
 Eliza’s lackey is the one who punched him.
 “How could you?!” Christina cries. “He isn’t a part of this!”
 “That’s hardly my problem. This is what happens when you try to oppose me.
Good work there, Dunder Hedd.”
  Her lackey, Dunder Hedd, wipes the blood off his fist and smirks. “Heh-heh-
heh, all I did was give him a little tap.”
 “You’re amazing, Dunder. Even with just a light tap, you sent him flying all the
way to the end of the hall.”
  Somehow that single punch Dunder threw was enough to send Cid careening
a full 150 feet.
 “I mean, I am getting stronger,” Dunder says.
  Eliza twines her arm around Dunder’s and presses her chest against him. “I
feel so safe around you. I love me a real manly man.”
 “Heh-heh, you can count on me.”
 “Do be careful, though. You might be the next target.”
 “Ha. If Jack the Ripper tries anything, I’ll kill the sucker dead!”
 “Tee-hee. If you do, I’ll be sure to give you a special reward.”
 Flashing a coquettish smile, Eliza leaves with her lackey in tow.
 After dinner, Christina, Kanade, and I play some Old Maid in the bedroom.
  “Oh no, Miss Eliza sounds really, really mad! I’m gonna die. I’m totally gonna
die,” Kanade wails as she takes a card from my hand.
 Ooh, she took the Old Maid.
   “Don’t worry,” Christina reassures her. “The manor is under heavy guard, and
if worse comes to worst, you have me to protect you.”
 “But…but what about that giant guy Miss Eliza had with her?”
 “Oh yeah, that guy,” I remark.
  She’s probably talking about the man Eliza had working as her bodyguard
back in the white fog. The same one who punched me.
 “You mean Dunder Hedd?” Christina asks.
  “Yeah, yeah, him. I heard that his dad has ties to organized crime, and that
they use illegal mercenaries to quietly off people. Apparently, they sell off the
organs of the people they kill, turn their flesh into ground meat, and use slimes
to melt their bones so there’s no body left to identify… I’m gonna diiiie.”
  “That’s Earl Haushold Hedd you’re talking about. There are definitely some
nasty rumors about him, but I doubt he would have the nerve to attack the
manor.”
 “I’m out,” I announce.
 The card I just took from Christina gave me the last pair I needed.
  “Cid, you traitor!” Kanade yelps. “If we get attacked, I’m using you as a
shield.”
 “All right.”
 “Oh,” says Christina, “I’m out, too.”
 “Whaaat? How do I keep loooosing?”
  Because one hundred percent of your thoughts get written all across your
face.
 Not like I’m gonna tell her that, of course.
 “Look, is Old Maid even any fun with three players?” I ask.
 “It’s a blast!” Kanade replies without a moment’s hesitation.
  “If you say so.” I guess there’s no accounting for taste. “Well, I’m gonna go
take my bath now.”
 “Whaaat?!”
 “We agreed we’d get to take them in the order we won, remember?”
 “But I was just about to start my comeback…”
 I ignore Kanade’s grumblings and head for the bathroom.
 “Kanade, do you want to play, just the two of us?” Christina offers.
 “Yeah!”
 I don’t like the sound of that one bit. Christina’s taking her bath next, and that
means I’m gonna be stuck alone with Kanade.
  Actually, maybe this is fine. Surely even she’s gonna realize how stupid two-
player Old Maid is.
 Shortly thereafter, Kanade and I end up playing two-player Old Maid.
  It’s the dead of night, and a group of masked figures slink across the quiet
grounds of the Hope manor. Their weapons are drawn, and they’re waiting for
the moment to strike.
 “Is it time yet, Father?”
 “Don’t be hasty, Dunder.”
 Among them, Dunder Hedd and Haushold Hedd share a quiet exchange.
 “But they turned off all the lights already.”
  “We put Viscount Shinobi in charge of surveillance for a reason. We wait for
his signal.”
 “If you insist, Father,” Dunder replies, not sounding convinced in the slightest.
  “Don’t you worry, Dunder. I intend for you to get all the credit for tonight’s
raid.”
 “Really?!”
  “I’m past my prime, Son. Not long after you graduate, I plan on stepping down
and letting you take my place on the Nightblades.”
 “Heh, I’m gonna tear that Christina bitch to shreds. That’s what she gets for
messing with me.”
  “We’ve got two targets tonight: Christina and Kanade. Duke Hope is waiting
for us with that evidence.”
  Dunder lets out a mocking laugh. “Poor sap, getting sold out by her own
father.”
  “It was the only smart choice to make. The Hope family’s stood strong for
generations. He can’t let it get crushed over the actions of one idiot girl.
Remember, we promised that we’d spare the duke in exchange for that
evidence. Don’t go killing him by mistake, now.”
 “Heh-heh. I know, I know.”
  “And be careful. There’s a boy staying in the same room as the targets. If I
remember right…his name is Cid Kagenou.”
 “The little runt who was hanging out with Christina, you mean? What should I
do with him?”
 “He doesn’t matter, but we don’t want any witnesses. Might as well kill him
while you’re there.”
 “Got it.”
 “Don’t forget your job, Son. Viscount Shinobi is in charge of surveillance, we
Hedds are in charge of the raid, and Marquis Jet is in charge of keeping the
manor surrounded.”
 “They’ve got nowhere to run, huh?”
  “Nope. If anything goes wrong, the surveillance and sieging teams will move
in to provide backup. Our attack team even has an assassin from the Lawless
City, and the siege team has both a dark knight who made the Bushin Festival
primary rounds and the Sword Devil, a master of the White Tiger style who got
excommunicated for his wicked deeds. Not even a miracle could save them.”
  “Heh-heh. This is what you’re best at, Father. You make sure to win the fight
before it even begins. It’s like you always say: The best kind of battles are the
ones you can’t lose.”
 Haushold Hedd’s mouth curls into a smirk. “Ha-ha, I do say that.”
 “There’s the signal from the surveillance team, Father.”
 “At last. Let’s do this.”
 With that, the figures begin invading the manor.
  Christina stares up at the ceiling as she lies in her bed. The room is filled with
the sound of Kanade’s snoring and Cid’s light breathing.
  She can’t get to sleep.
  It has nothing to with Kanade’s snoring and everything to do with what
happened that morning. Every time she thinks about those two men strung up
on the fountain, it sends a twinge through her heart. The duo used violence to
achieve their ends, then got brutally killed when faced with a greater power
still.
  It’s all about power.
  Raw power transcends everything. Laws, morality, and influence are helpless
before it.
  She extends her arm toward the ceiling and chuckles. “Heh-heh…”
  When she does, she hears the quiet sound of fabric rustling.
  “Is one of you up?” she asks her two roommates.
  There’s no reply.
  “Kanade? Cid?”
  Kanade’s snoring and Cid’s light breathing are the same as ever.
  “Was I just imaging things?”
  Then she hears the click of the door opening.
  “…Who’s there?”
  The door stops halfway. She can hear someone breathing from the other side.
  “Did you need something?” Christina asks as she grabs the sword lying by the
side of her bed. Any member of the staff would have answered immediately,
and it’s odd how the guards by the door haven’t been reacting.
  For the next little while, Kanade’s snoring is the only noise in the room.
  Then…
 “Kill them.”
 On that signal, a group of people dressed all in black surge into the room.
 “Wake up, you two!!” Christina shouts, then flips Kanade’s mattress over and
hurls it at the intruders.
 “SNRRRRRRK… Hweh?! Wh-wh-what’s going on?!” Kanade stammers.
 Christina tosses her a sword. “We’re under attack!”
 As she shouts out her answer, she blocks a slash from a brawny assailant.
 She tenses her grip a little to test his strength.
 He’s strong. This guy knows what he’s doing.
 Christina shifts the angle of her sword to fend off his attack.
 She knows she can beat him.
  Her attacker’s stance is shot, and she thrusts her blade into the tip of his
shoulder.
 “Rrgh! Now you’re really asking for it!!”
 His voice is rough and sounds oddly familiar.
 Christina tries to press her advantage, but another five attackers cut her off.
 “I told you to be careful!! Stand down!!”
 “B-but, Father—”
 “Not another word out of you!!”
 The brawny man’s father shoves him aside and takes up a stance in front of
Christina. He appears to be the group’s leader.
  “Hwehhhhhhhh?! What?! I’m gonna die?! I’m gonna die here?!” Kanade wails
as she narrowly manages to survive her two assailants.
 And as for Cid Kagenou…
 …he’s trying to quietly slip out the window.
 “Ah…”
 When he meets Christina’s and Kanade’s gazes, he flashes them an
embarrassed smile— “Well, I’m out!”
 —and quickly leaps out the window.
  “T-TRAITORRRRRRRRR!!” Kanade shouts. “Curse you!! I’ll come back as a
vengeful spirit and haunt you for thiiiiiiiis!!”
 “Don’t let him escape! After him!!”
 On the group leader’s orders, three of the attackers follow Cid.
 “That really helps,” Christina whispers.
  Cid manages to draw the attackers away. Now there are only six left, and one
of them has a badly injured shoulder. The situation still isn’t good, but it’s at
least potentially manageable. All Christina needs to do is hold out a little, and
her guards should notice the commotion and come to help.
 “You probably think you have help coming,” the leader says.
 “Is that what I’m thinking, now?”
  “There’s no point trying to hide it. I know all about how you spend top zeni
beefing up your defenses. Bad news, but those guards ain’t coming. There’s
another team dealing with them as we speak.”
  “Gosh, I appreciate you being so thorough. The Nightblades must really be
desperate for this to work.”
 He’s probably not lying.
  All of a sudden, her odds of surviving look a whole lot worse. Christina didn’t
expect the Nightblades to devote so many resources to this.
  “Laugh while you can. The Nightblades are unshakable, even now. This here is
just a father looking out for his son.”
  “That would make you Earl Haushold Hedd, then. I thought I recognized your
son’s voice.”
  “I don’t have any idea who that is,” Haushold Hedd lies, then gives the order.
“Kill them.”
 The men in black surge forward.
 The one in front slashes at Christina.
 “Rgh…”
  But she hasn’t given up yet. She dodges the man’s attack, then tries to
reposition over to Kanade before she gets surrounded.
 However, her plan gets interrupted before it can even get off the ground.
 With a shupp, the body of one man in black shifts.
 “Huh? Wha—? AHHHHHHHH!”
 He lets out a scream as his torso slides right off his legs.
 “Ahh… H-help…!”
  With a feeble moan, he reaches out his hand. He’s already beyond saving,
though.
 “How did you do that?!” Haushold Hedd glares at Christina. “That man was
one of the strongest dark knights in his city-state!”
 The men in black warily inch away from her.
 “No, no, that wasn’t me.”
  The thing is, Christina didn’t do anything. She dodged his attack, but that was
all. He’d been cut in half before they even clashed. Christina isn’t nearly
powerful enough to cleave a talented dark knight in two without anyone even
noticing.
 “Then who else could’ve done it?! What are you hiding—?”
 Haushold Hedd’s eyes go wide as he trails off mid-sentence.
  The two dark knights attacking Kanade have just been bisected in exactly the
same manner.
  “Wait, huh? Am I awakening? Is my secret true power finally coming into
bloom?!”
 Kanade sounds a smidge excited about the prospect.
 “That’s impossible. How did you…? Wait a minute. Your sword.” Haushold
Hedd notices something. His gaze falls on Kanade’s weapon. “Why isn’t there
any blood on your sword?”
  “Huh, there isn’t.”
  Sure enough, Kanade’s sword is completely clean. It’s obvious to everyone
present that she wasn’t the one who did it.
  Then they hear the whoosh of fabric rustling.
  Everyone’s gazes snap toward the source of the noise.
  The sound is coming from Cid Kagenou’s bed. However, Cid has long since
fled.
  Now there’s someone new in his bed.
  The figure is lying there with its back to them, lit only by the moonlight.
  “A clown drenched in blood…,” someone whispers.
  The clown rolls over to face them. His red-stained mask is smiling.
  Dunder Hedd shrinks away. “Eek…”
  Haushold Hedd, on the other hand, remains calm. “I take it you’re Jack the
Ripper,” he says, then gives an order to his men before turning back toward the
bloody clown. “The way you showed up, it’s like this was exactly what you were
hoping for. I always knew you were an assassin working for the Hopes.”
  “H-he isn’t!” Christina cries. “We don’t use assassins!”
  However, Haushold has no interest in anything she has to say. “How much are
they paying you? Whatever your rate, they’re definitely getting their money’s
worth. You’ve cost us a lot of men.” He looks around at the corpses of the
brutally slaughtered dark knights. “Each of them was a respected member of
the underworld. I find this all a bit hard to believe, but I guess this is where we
stand…”
  Haushold Hedd lets out a weary sigh.
 All the while, the bloody clown just keeps lying on the bed with that same
smile plastered on his mask.
  “I have to accept the reality of the situation. The way I see it, standing against
you would hardly be a wise course of action. Even if we fought you and won, we
would still suffer tremendous losses. And you’re in the same boat. Not even you
can go up against the Nightblades and walk away unscathed.”
  The bloody clown’s shoulders quiver slightly in laughter.
  “It’s in both of our interests to strike a deal here. I’ll pay you triple. You don’t
need to fight with us; all I ask is that you walk away. I’ll make sure no harm
comes to your reputation from this. What do you say?”
  The clown’s shoulders shake harder.
  He’s laughing under his breath.
  “…What’s so funny?”
  The shaking comes to a sudden stop.
  Then the clown gradually sits up. Slowly but surely, he points his finger at
each assailant in turn. It’s almost like he’s making some kind of choice.
  The finger stops on one attacker in particular.
  The man in black gives the clown a puzzled look. “What are—?”
  The clown snaps his fingers.
  A moment later, the attacker’s head goes flying.
  “How did he do that?!”
  Blood gushes up like a fountain as the beheaded attacker falls limp.
  Dunder Hedd drops to his hands and knees and begins crawling away.
“Eeeeek! F-Father, I want to go home!”
  However, the bloody clown has already started searching for his next target.
His finger glides past Dunder and lands on the assailant next to him.
  “W-wait, don’t!”
  Although the dark knight lets out a panicked yell, he’s experienced enough to
immediately take evasive action as he does. Tragically, though, it’s not enough
to stop the top half of his head from exploding when the clown snaps his
fingers. The mouth still connected to his torso flaps open in an attempt to say
something, but all that comes out is a bloody froth.
 Next, the bloody clown points his finger at Kanade.
 “Huh, me?! But why?! AHHHHHH!”
  However, he stops on her for only a brief moment before sliding his finger
over to the attacker behind her. Then he snaps his fingers.
 “Ah…”
 The man’s dumbfounded head flies off.
 All that remains now is the father and son, Haushold and Dunder Hedd.
  Dunder clings to his father’s legs. “Eeeek… Father, Father, we need to get out
of here.”
  Haushold Hedd has just witnessed four of his dark knights get massacred in
the blink of an eye, and he can’t conceal his shock, either.
  “So…no interest in negotiating, then?” he says. “No, perhaps the fact that you
intentionally left me alive means you wanted to make a show of force to secure
yourself a better bargaining position. Perhaps we can still talk this out.”
 The bloody clown offers no reaction.
  “First of all, let me apologize. I clearly underestimated your talents. I have no
idea how you managed to attain such strength, but it truly is a sight to behold.”
 A bead of cold sweat trickles down Haushold’s face.
  “But the thing is, I have this manor surrounded, and I just sent the signal to
my men. Before long, the team besieging the manor will be here to back me up.
That group includes not just the finest of Viscount Shinobi’s and Marquis Jet’s
men, but also the Sword Devil, a master of the White Tiger style. You may be
talented, but not even you could face such a force and emerge—”
  The bloody clown interrupts Haushold’s speech by leaning down and rustling
around in its blanket. When it does, it becomes clear that the bed is oddly
lumpy and stained a dark shade of red.
 Eventually, the clown retrieves a pair of heads.
 “Wha—?” Haushold recognizes their faces. “That’s Viscount Shinobi…and
Marquis Jet, to boot…”
 The two heads have been impaled with a four and five of spades, respectively.
  “You’re telling me you took out the entire siege team?! That’s impossible.
You’re just a single man!”
 That’s enough to push Haushold all the way over the edge.
 “What the hell even are you?! What is it you’re after?! What do you want?!”
 Spittle flies from his mouth as he yells.
 The bloody clown leisurely pulls out a single playing card.
 It’s the six of spades.
 “Eek… EEEEEEEEEK!”
  A single glance is enough for Haushold Hedd to realize who that card is meant
for. He takes cover behind his cowering son and uses the younger man as a
shield.
 “A-are you serious, Father?! Let go of me! Let gooooo!!”
 “EEEEEEEEEEEEEK!”
  As Dunder Hedd tries to shake off his father, the clown draws back his arm to
lash out with the six of spades.
  Then the sound of glass shattering fills the room as a lanky dark knight leaps
in through the window.
 “Heh-heh-heh… There you are, Jack the Ripper,” the newcomer says.
   His voice is calm, and his presence is intense. When he pulls his naginata from
its sheath, it glints in the moonlight.
 “W-wait, you’re…you’re the Sword Devil!! You’re still alive?!”
  Life returns to Haushold’s voice. He pokes his head out from behind Dunder
and grins.
   “Here I was, thinking I could enjoy a heart-pounding fight to the death for the
first time in ages, when all the weaklings around me drop dead and this guy
runs off. What a disappointment.”
 As the Sword Devil speaks, his gaze doesn’t leave the bloody clown for an
instant. After all, he gets it. That clown’s strength is on par with his own…
  “Who even is the Sword Devil?”
  Christina shudders at how sleek the man’s magic is. He must be one of the top
dark knights in the world.
 “It’s little wonder you haven’t heard of him,” Haushold explains. “He’s a
martial master from the distant land of Wakoku.”
  “A martial master?!”
  Christina is familiar with the term.
  Across the sea, there’s a land of carnage called Wakoku where people hone
their combat skills. Over there, the people who stand as the pinnacle of
strength are called martial masters rather than dark knights. Wakoku is closed
to foreigners, so information on the country is scarce, but every so often, a
martial master comes to Midgar on a journey to grow stronger, and they’re
always a force to be reckoned with.
  “What’s more, he made such a name for himself in one of Wakoku’s four
great schools that he was slated to become the youngest assistant instructor of
the White Tiger style in history. However, he slew nine disciples in his quest for
power and got excommunicated.”
  “Hmph… That’s all in the past. Things have been a bit boring since I arrived in
this nation, but to think I would get to face off against a martial master as
strange as you…,” the Sword Devil says as he readies his blade.
  “Bwa-ha-ha-ha-ha, Jack the Ripper!” Haushold roars. “I bet you’re so terrified
of the Sword Devil, you want to flee! What happened to all your confidence
from before?!”
  The Sword Devil lowers his center of gravity. “Here I come.”
  Kanade gulps audibly.
  The clown snaps his fingers.
 The moment he does, the Sword Devil’s body blurs as he dodges something. A
hole explodes in the wall behind him.
  “Flicking, huh…?” the Sword Devil mutters in delight. “Impressive that you’re
able to muster such strength with so little windup. Against anyone else, that
would have ended the fight right there.”
 Jack the Ripper seems a little surprised. The Sword Devil fixes his gaze on his
opponent like he’s trying to gauge his strength.
  “But that won’t work on me. I don’t need to see when your presence tells me
everything I need to know…”
 With that, the Sword Devil closes his eyes and readies his weapon.
 “Come at me, Jack the Ripper. None of your strikes will find purchase on—”
 Before he can finish the sentence, an anticlimactic pop rings out.
 “What…?”
 The Sword Devil’s head goes flying.
  Now headless, his torso slowly collapses to the ground, and blood gushes out
from his neck hole. Meanwhile, his head tumbles across the floor and blinks up
at Jack the Ripper in confusion.
 “Hah…”
 With a small exhale, the clown readies the six of spades.
 “Th-that’s impossible…”
 Haushold Hedd scuttles backward.
 “Eeeeek! Stop, stop, stop! I-I’ll have you know that we’re being backed by a
powerful force. The mighty Cult of Diab—”
 The six of spades cuts him off by sinking into his forehead.
 “But…why…?”
 At long last, Haushold Hedd breathes his last.
 After making sure his target is dead, the bloody clown turns his gaze over to
Christina and Kanade.
 An odd tension permeates the silence.
 Kanade trembles like a newborn fawn. “This is the part where he kills us…
Where he gets rid of all the witnesses…”
  Contrary to her predictions, however, the bloody clown simply walks away.
His footsteps squelch as he goes.
 “Wait!!”
 Christina calls out to him.
 His power is transcendent, nigh divine, and she yearns for it.
 “Wh-what are you trying to achieve?! You’re the one who left Shoddi Goodz’s
documents for me, aren’t you?!”
 The bloody clown stops in his tracks.
 “Why me? What is it you want me to do?”
 He offers her no answer but turns his mask’s ever-present smile her way.
 “Hee-hee-hee…”
 A small laugh escapes his mouth.
 Then he hurls a card.
  Christina instinctively brings her sword up to block it, but the card simply
grazes her cheek on its way to impale Kanade in the side of her head.
 “HYEEEEEK!”
 “Kanade?!”
 Kanade collapses, blood trickling from her wound.
 “Hee-hee-hee!”
 The clown leaps out the window. However, Christina can’t give chase.
 “Are you okay, Kanade?! Talk to me!”
 Not when Kanade’s life is in danger.
  Kanade is a friend she can speak her mind to without having to worry about
family politics. Christina has never had one of those before.
 “Kanade! Kanade!”
 Kanade has a pulse. She’s still breathing.
  I just need to make the bleeding stop…!
  “Oh… Christina…”
  “Pull yourself together, Kanade!”
  Kanade lays her trembling hand on top of Christina’s. “It’s fine… I’m already…
too far gone…”
  “No you aren’t!”
  “I know my own body better than anyone else…”
  “No, you don’t know anything. Hang in there. You’re going to be fine!”
  “Please…I have a dying message I need you to hear…”
  “It’s not going to come to that!”
  “Please, Christina.”
  Kanade looks at Christina, her gaze dead serious.
  “Okay,” Christina says. “It’s not going to come to that, but if it’ll make you feel
better, I’ll hear you out. If the worst comes to pass, I’ll make sure to convey
your message to your parents back in your hometown.”
  “Thank you, Christina. But I have nothing to say to them.”
  “Huh?”
  “My dying message is this!” Kanade’s eyes snap wide open. “It’s for that
traitor Cid Kagenou! You’re dead freakin’ meat, buddy!! Get ready, ’cause I’m
gonna put a deadly curse on you!!”
  With that, she gently closes her eyes.
  “Kanade! Kanade! You have to wake up!!”
  Kanade doesn’t so much as twitch.
  “I need to clean up the bodies in here, so you can’t just go to sleep!”
  Christina grabs the playing card affixed to Kanade’s head and wrenches it
free.
  “Ow!” Kanade yelps.
 “This blood isn’t yours.”
  “Huh…? I’m alive?” Kanade reaches up and touches the side of her head in a
daze.
 “It’s fine. There isn’t a scratch on you, Kanade.”
 “What? But…but the card was stuck right in my head…”
 “It was stuck on with blood.”
 Kanade leaps to her feet, her face bright red. “D-damn you, Jack the Ripper!”
 “Wait, hold on. There’s something written on the card.”
 “Huh? Lemme see, lemme see!”
 The card Christina’s holding has a poem written on it in blood.
 “WELL, HELLO, YOU BOASTFUL NIGHTBLADES
 HERE’S TO KILLING ALL THE NAUGHTY BOYS AND GIRLS
 I COUNT AND COUNT AND COUNT
 THAT’S ALL I EVER DO BUT
 EVERY SO OFTEN I LIKE TO PLAY MY LITTLE GAMES”
 “I wonder what it means,” says Christina.
 “He went out of his way to leave it for us, so there must be some sort of
meaning to it…”
 Then the door to the room slowly swings open.
 “Hey, guys! Glad you survived!”
 In comes an unremarkable dark-haired boy sporting an oddly disingenuous
smile—Cid Kagenou.
 Christina breathes a sigh of relief. “Thank goodness you’re okay.”
  Kanade, on the other hand, begins threatening him like a common street
thug. “Hey, hey, hey, Ciddy-boy! You’ve got a lotta nerve, waltzin’ in here after
that heinous betrayal you pulled!”
 “Hey, for the record, I nearly died.”
  “Oh, you did, huh? We almost bit the dust ourselves ’cause of the way your
coward ass hit the bricks! We’d have been goners if our good buddy Jack the
Ripper hadn’t come.”
 “Oh, wow, Jack the Ripper was here?”
 All of a sudden, Kanade sounds like her normal self again. “Yeah! He showed
up all heroically like zip, zing, zoom! It was mega-awesome!”
 “Well, that’s good.”
  “It totally was! Oh, and then he took out this Wakoku martial master in a
single… Freakin’ hell, that ain’t the point! We’re talkin’ about your punk ass
here, Cid Kagenou.”
 “Oh, right.”
  “All traitors can eat shit! How dare you make a run for it and abandon me to
die!”
 “Sorry about that.”
  “You think an apology’s gonna get you off the hook, asswipe?! Time for you to
get…the pummeling punishmeeeeent!”
  With that, Kanade tackles Cid’s legs, hops astride him, and begins punching
him all over.
 “How ya like them apples?!”
 “Oh nooooo. Please stoppppp.”
 The pummeling punishment continues for some time.
                                      Chapter 3
 The morning sunlight streams into the Hope manor bedroom as the Knight
Order conducts their on-site investigation.
 “I see, I see. You’re saying that Earl Haushold Hedd, Viscount Shinobi, and
Marquis Jet all conspired together to attack the Hope family.”
 Gray, chief of the Knight Order’s criminal investigation department, is
questioning Christina and the others.
  “Then this blood-drenched clown Jack the Ripper shows up. He kills all the
attackers but leaves without laying so much as a finger on any of you… How
very convenient.” He gives Christina a skeptical look.
 “But it’s the truth,” she replies.
  “You understand that the most obvious deduction there is that Jack the
Ripper is an assassin-slash-bodyguard in the employ of the Hope family.”
 “He isn’t! If he was, I wouldn’t make it so obvious.”
 “Maybe you made it obvious on purpose to throw off suspicion.”
 “Can you please be serious? The important thing here is that Earl Haushold
Hedd, Viscount Shinobi, and Marquis Jet all tried to attack us. Isn’t it the Knight
Order’s job to follow up on that?”
 Gray smiles and narrows his eyes. “Well, at the end of the day, that’s nothing
more than the Hope family’s position on the situation.”
 “…Meaning?”
  “That you lured the three of them here to frame them. It’s another perfectly
legitimate way to view things.”
 “Excuse me?! That’s absurd. They came armed and wearing masks!”
  “These were some clever men, and wary ones at that. They saw through your
plan and had their guards wear masks and wait close by. It was a smart decision
on their part…though sadly one that didn’t pay off for them.”
  “But Earl Hedd was wearing a mask himself! And besides, what proof do you
have that the Hope family was planning anything of the sort?!”
  “We’re still investigating that. And besides, I merely proposed it as a
possibility. Jack the Ripper is the talk of the capital right now. Who he is, what
his goals are… And people suspect you, the Hopes, most of all.”
 “You’re going to treat us like culprits over a couple of dumb rumors?”
  “Oh, perish the thought. I’m just saying that the rumors are out there, that’s
all. However, I can’t completely ignore public opinion, either. They’re afraid that
Jack the Ripper will turn his violence on them next. Nights in the capital are
quiet these days. Stores turn off their lights early, and the streets are empty.
Everyone’s too afraid of Jack the Ripper to go outside. If this goes on and the
unrest keeps growing, we’re going to have a witch hunt on our hands. That’s
what we’re trying to avoid.”
 “That’s horrible…”
  “I’m not asking you to see things our way, but we’re in an awkward position,
too. I spent all of last night getting asked why I didn’t investigate the Hope
family sooner and getting shouted at to just lock you all up.” Gray gives her a
pained smile. “Now, I have some work to get back to. Kanade and Cid, was it? I
might need to talk to you separately at some point to get your testimonies, so I
hope I can count on your cooperation. One truth prevails!”
  After striking the signature pose from Case Clawed, he flashes Kanade and Cid
a grin and leaves.
  Christina slumps her shoulders, and Kanade goes over to console her.
“Christina…”
 “At this rate, they’re going to end up treating my family like criminals.”
 “That’d be bad,” Cid Kagenou says as he gobbles down his expensive tea cake.
 “The Nightblades are definitely going to try to pin the blame on us. I just hope
we can prove the Hope family’s innocence…”
 “By the way…Jack the Ripper left behind a message, right?”
 “Oh, you mean this?”
  Christina pulls a note out of her pocket. The Knight Order confiscated the
original card as evidence.
 “WELL, HELLO, YOU BOASTFUL NIGHTBLADES
 HERE’S TO KILLING ALL THE NAUGHTY BOYS AND GIRLS
 I COUNT AND COUNT AND COUNT
 THAT’S ALL I EVER DO BUT
 EVERY SO OFTEN I LIKE TO PLAY MY LITTLE GAMES”
 However, she had the forethought to copy it down, and she reads it aloud.
  “There’s gotta be some meaning to it,” says Cid. “Consider how he left it
behind and all.”
  “The ‘WELL, HELLO, YOU BOASTFUL NIGHTBLADES’ line means that he’s
definitely targeting the Nightblades,” Christina insists.
  “And the ‘HERE’S TO KILLING ALL THE NAUGHTY BOYS AND GIRLS’ line means
that Jack is going to kill them all,” Kanade says proudly.
 Christina shakes her head. “I can’t make sense of the last three lines, though.”
 “Yeah,” Kanade agrees. “I don’t get what ‘I COUNT AND COUNT AND COUNT’
means. ‘THAT’S ALL I EVER DO BUT’? What is he even counting?”
 “That’s a good question. Maybe dead bodies?”
  When Cid says that, Christina comes to a realization. “Jack the Ripper is using
the numbers on the playing cards to count the dead Nightblades!”
  “In that case, is he saying that he usually counts the bodies with his playing
cards, but ‘EVERY SO OFTEN I LIKE TO PLAY MY LITTLE GAMES’? As in, leaving
these messages is a game to him?” Kanade asks.
 “I think you might have cracked it,” Christina says.
 Kanade lets out a disappointed sigh. “Well, that’s boring. I thought there was
gonna be some sort of super-important hidden message.”
  “But it is important. Now we can be sure that Jack the Ripper’s goal is to kill all
the Nightblades.”
  “Bo-ring.”
 As the two of them talk, Cid appears to notice something. He points at the
note. “Oh, wow, gosh. The message can be read vertically, too.”
  “Huh? Really?!”
  “Let me see.”
 The other two peer at the message and come to the same realization in
unison.
  “‘WHITE’?” says Kanada.
  “Could he be talking about Earl Korrupt White?” Christina wonders.
  “Who’s that?”
  “The leader of the Nightblades. He’s the one who owns the White Mansion,
that huge manor on the capital’s outskirts.”
  “Whoa, that place is so fancy.”
  “The point is, Jack the Ripper’s next target is Earl Korrupt White. This card is a
calling card. I’m impressed you noticed that, Cid.”
  “Oh, you know, we all have our moments.”
  “F-for the record, I was halfway toward spotting it myself!” Kanade says,
sounding oddly competitive.
  “Good for you,” Cid replies. “But that isn’t the only meaning Jack the Ripper
left for us in his message.”
  “What?! It isn’t?!”
  “Jack hid another clue in the card itself. As I recall, it was the ten of spades.
Spades can symbolize winter, and the number maps to the week. In other
words, that card was pointing us toward the tenth week of winter. And today
just so happens to be the ninth day of that tenth week.”
  “That makes tomorrow the tenth day of the tenth week of winter,” Christina
remarks. “That’s double tens. There’s no way that’s just a coincidence.”
 “So, uh, you mean Jack’s going to make his move tomorrow?” Kanade asks.
 “To sum it all up, Jack the Ripper is going to attack Earl White in the White
Mansion on the tenth day of the tenth week of winter. Now that we know that,
we can make some preparations of our own.”
 “But why would he tell us that?”
 Kanade’s question is a perfectly reasonable one.
 “It’s…strange, yes,” Christina agrees.
 “Right? Doing that kind of stuff is how you get busted.”
  When the two begin giving the matter some serious thought, Cid loudly clears
his throat.
   “A-ahem. I think Jack the Ripper is wiser than we can possibly fathom, and
after considering every possible option and outcome from his vantage point on
high, he decided that this would be the optimal solution. I doubt normal people
like us could ever understand his true goals, no matter how hard we think about
it,” he says at top speed.
  A serious look crosses Christina’s face. “I think it’s possible…that Jack the
Ripper is trying to tell me something.”
 “What kind of something?”
 “That, I don’t know. It just this odd sense that he is…”
  “The important question is, Do we tell the Knight Order and Nightblades
about the secret message?” Cid says. “If the Knight Order tells the Nightblades,
then they’ll be able to come up with countermeasures. Like, they might gather
up all their forces so they can all attack Jack together or something. If Jack the
Ripper still shows up, it should clear the Hope family from suspicion.”
 “But if we do that, then what’ll become of him?”
 “He’ll get killed, probably.”
 “Is he really our enemy, though? He could very well be another one of the
Nightblades’ victims.”
  The light of conviction burns bright in Cid’s eyes. “Whatever his reasons, what
Jack the Ripper is doing is murder. We can’t just stand by and condone that!”
 “But… No, you’re right. We should tell them.”
  With a dejected look on her face, Christina goes to tell Gray, chief of the
Knight Order’s criminal investigation department.
 Alexia sips her fancy coffee in the Hope estate drawing room.
 “So that’s why the Knight Order was in such a panic…”
 She takes the note with Jack the Ripper’s message on it and hands it back to
Christina.
  “I assume they’re going to be joining in on the plan to capture Jack the
Ripper?”
  Alexia shakes her head. “They’re forming a perimeter around the White
estate.”
 “Huh? They’re not going inside?”
  “The Nightblades have their reputation to uphold. They want to capture Jack
the Ripper themselves. Actually, they probably won’t be satisfied unless they kill
him. They’re scrambling to gather up all the forces they can. Tomorrow, the
White estate will be full of the best dark knights from both polite society and
the underworld.”
  “This has gotten way bigger than I expected… Is Jack the Ripper actually going
to go there, do you think?”
   “No one would be stupid enough to attack Earl White, not with the defenses
he’s mustered. It’s possible the message was a bluff, and the Ripper’s objective
lies somewhere else entirely. It’s the obvious move, and the Knight Order is
actively taking that possibility into account.”
 “But Jack the Ripper’s strength is on a whole different level,” Christina says.
  “You did tell me about how he completely overpowered that Wakoku martial
master. Without exception, every martial master who’s journeyed here has
been strong. If Jack the Ripper was powerful enough to trounce one that
thoroughly, he must be supremely confident in his skills. Maybe he will go after
all.”
 “Oh…”
 Christina lets out a small exhale.
 “You don’t seem happy about it.”
  “I know that Jack the Ripper is a vicious murderer, but is this really the way
we want things to go? I just can’t help but wonder if he has some tragic past
that made him into the killer he is… I think he’s been trying to tell me
something.”
  “How about this, Christina? Tomorrow let’s go to the White estate. They
won’t let us inside, but we’ll at least be able to watch over things outside with
the Knight Order.”
 “Can we really?!”
  “The Nightblades won’t be happy about it, but being a princess has its perks
sometimes. This way, we’ll be able to see things through to the end.”
 “Thank you so much.” Christina smiles.
 Alexia takes another sip of coffee, then quietly sighs.
  “If I may,” Christina begins, “you don’t seem too happy, either, Princess
Alexia.”
 “Maybe not. I’ve had a lot on my mind lately. And Claire still refuses to wake
up.”
 “Is she going to be okay?”
  “Her doctor says her life isn’t in any danger, and that she’ll wake up on her
own sooner or later. There’s something sketchy about that Mu woman,
though.”
 “I don’t know. Cid says he trusts her.”
 “Yeah, and he’s a terrible judge of character.”
  “I think this has been harder on him than we might realize. She’s his only
sister. He was so worried about her, he didn’t even want to stay at my house.”
 “He really cares about her that much? I never realized…”
 “He does. I’m jealous of how close they are.”
  “And here I’d written him off as heartless. Perhaps I should buy him some
nice sweets from Mitsugoshi.”
 “I’m sure he would be delighted.”
  “I should certainly hope so. It would be a present from me, after all.” As
Alexia’s expression softens, she abruptly gets down to business. “I spoke with
my father yesterday.”
 “With King Midgar?”
  “I talked to him about everything that’s happening, and the stuff that
happened before… I’d like to share this with you. It’s too much for me to
shoulder all on my own.”
 Alexia proceeds to tell Christina about her conversation from the day prior.
  Alexia runs her conversation from yesterday back through her head as she
lays everything out.
  Once she’s finished, Christina sips her coffee and takes a deep breath. “That’s
kind of a lot.”
  “That’s where things stand. That’s how I know Father isn’t going to stop me
from getting involved in the case. That said, he isn’t going to offer me any help,
either.”
 “But still, you’re free to do whatever you want.”
  “That right. Father can think what he likes of me, but I intend to act on my
convictions.”
 “I think that’s admirable of you.”
 “I’d appreciate it if our conversation didn’t leave this room, by the way.”
 “Of course.”
  “A-and also, on a completely different note…” All of a sudden, Alexia starts
fidgeting.
 “What is it?”
 “W-we’re, um, going to the White estate tomorrow, right?”
 “That’s the plan.”
 “So, um, there’s loads of prep we’ll need to do.”
 “Huh? I mean, I suppose so.”
 Alexia puffs up her chest. “Right? So tonight, I’ll be staying at your place!”
 “I beg your pardon?”
  “L-like I said, we’ve got lots of things we need to plan out, so I’m coming over
to spend the night!”
  Christina glances at the Mitsugoshi-made wall clock. “We still have plenty of
time…”
  “But look, the sun’s already begun setting. It sure would be horrible if
something happened to me on my way home!”
  “I’m happy to prepare a guarded carriage for you. Alternatively, if you got in
touch with the royal castle, I’m sure they would—”
  “That might have been enough under ordinary circumstances. But with Jack
the Ripper running around, it’s dangerous to be outside at night!”
  “That’s…actually a good point. I’ll make up a room for you straightaway,
Princess Alexia.”
 “Oh, there’s no need for that. I’m the one imposing on you, after all!”
 “I’m afraid I don’t—”
  “You know, I just happened to remember that Fido…I mean, Cid Kagenou and
Kanade are staying over as well, aren’t they?”
 “They are, but I’m not sure I follow.”
  “I can just sleep in the same room as them. I’m the one imposing on you, after
all!” Alexia vigorously reminds her.
 “The same room? I could never be so discourteous…”
 “No, no, it’s fine! I’m the one imposing on you, after all!”
 “B-but…!”
 “I’m telling you, it’s fine! I got Father’s permission and everything!”
 Christina is pretty sure the permission King Midgar gave was for something
else entirely, but before she can get too far into that train of thought, Alexia
tugs her arm and rises to her feet.
  “Now, come on, lead the way! I want to see the bedroom!”
  Over in the bedroom, the very first words out of anyone’s mouth come from
Cid Kagenou: “Why are you here?”
  “That’s a difficult question to answer,” Alexia replies. “Why am I here? A
philosophical quandary, to be sure. It was Natsume Kafka who once said ‘I think,
therefore I am.’ The woman gets on my nerves, but that doesn’t make what she
said any less true.”
  “I think, therefore I am…”
  Cid mutters back the quote from Natsume the novelist and grimaces with all
his might.
  “What, did her words strike a chord? The quote is from a lecture she gave at
one of Laugus’s foremost seminars. All the academics raved about her speech,
and I’m told that among their philosophy students, it’s the most popular thesis
topic of the year.”
  “You don’t say.” Cid rubs his temple in resignation. “Well, I’m not asking you
on a philosophical level. I’m just saying I can’t help but wonder why someone as
noble and lofty as the great Princess Alexia would deign to visit a place such as
this.”
  Behind Alexia, Christina’s face twitches. “‘A place such as this’?”
  “Well, would you look at that. You finally learned your place,” Alexia says. “It’s
true that to you, I certainly am a divine being descended from the heavens. I
just thought it might be nice to see what was going on below the clouds for
once.”
  “That’s not an answer,” Cid tells her.
 “There’s no need for you to know what’s going on up above you. Now, get of
my way. I’m taking your bed.”
  “Huh? You’re staying the night?! Wait, then where am I supposed to sleep?”
  “The ground, I suppose,” Alexia says triumphantly, then takes Cid’s luggage
from atop the bed and sweeps it onto the floor.
 Christina quietly hands him a blanket. “I’m sorry, Cid. You’ll have to make do
with this.”
  Cid stares at it blankly. “Can I go home?”
  “You’ll get attacked by the Nightblades.”
  “I have this feeling that if I do, I’ll be able to miraculously survive by a weird
stroke of luck.”
  “Don’t,” Alexia says, her voice stern. “I’m serious.”
  “Fine.” Cid sighs and takes the blanket.
   After sitting down on the bed, Alexia surveys the room. “That said, it sounds
like things have been rough here. To think you got attacked last night in this
very room. I take it that stain there is blood?”
  Her gaze is sharp as she searches for signs of the attack.
  “Actually, it was the room next door that got attacked,” Christina replies.
  “And for the record, the stain is from when Kanade got carried away just now
and spilled her coffee,” Cid adds.
  “H-hey!” yelps Kanade, who’s been hiding in the corner and making herself as
inconspicuous as possible since Alexia walked in.
 Alexia’s cheeks go red. “O-oh. Well, it’s no wonder you’re jumpy, considering
what happened last night.”
  “Th-that’s right,” Kanade agrees. “I was so scared I couldn’t get a wink of—”
 “Kanade was snoring like a log all night long, FYI,” Cid says. “You’d be amazed
how resilient she is. Nothing to worry about there.”
  “Will you just be quiet? I’m trying to be considerate here,” Alexia snaps.
  “If you didn’t keep saying stuff that wasn’t true, I wouldn’t have to keep
correcting you.”
 Alexia and Cid glare daggers at each other.
 “L-let’s all just calm down, okay?” Christina says, moving in to intervene.
  “Anyhow, we need to take another look at the attack from last night and the
moves Jack the Ripper has been making.” Alexia meets the others’ gazes.
“There might be something we’ve overlooked!”
 “That’s a good idea,” Christina agrees.
 “I mean, I guess I don’t have any objections,” says Cid.
  “Then is there anything anyone’s noticed?” Alexia asks. “It can be about the
attack or about stuff from earlier. There are no wrong answers here.”
  “After all this, I really don’t believe Jack the Ripper is our enemy,” Christina
offers. “If he was, it would have been so easy for him to just leave us to die last
night.”
 “The timing does seem awfully convenient,” says Alexia.
 “Right? Jack the Ripper must have been tracking the Nightblades all this time.
When he saw they were attacking us, I think he came to help.”
  “I wouldn’t be so sure about that,” Cid says, pushing back on Christina’s
theory. “Maybe it was just more efficient. He could have figured that rather
than fighting the Nightblades solo, it’d be easier to team up with you all.”
  “That isn’t it,” Christina replies. “You wouldn’t know because you didn’t see
him, but Jack the Ripper’s skills are barely even human. He wiped them out
completely on his own. It was like we weren’t even there.”
 Alexia doesn’t miss a chance to get a jab in. “Well, obviously, Cid Kagenou
wouldn’t know that. Not after he fled midway through the fight.”
  “Yeah!” Kanade says, agreeing with all her might. “He wouldn’t know because
he’s a traitor who ran away!”
   “Y-you know, in a sense, the only reason we were able to withstand the attack
is because Cid drew some of the enemies away…,” Christina adds in an attempt
to come to Cid’s defense.
 “I assure you, that was the furthest thing from his mind. He was just trying to
save his own skin.”
  “I’ll never forget that moment. I gazed into his eyes, and all I saw was
betrayal.”
 Cid gives Alexia and Kanade a weary look. “You two really have it in for me,
huh?”
  Then Christina speaks up like she’s just remembered something. “You know,
there was one thing that baffled me in the report I got just now.”
 “What’s that?” Alexia asks.
  “Apparently, there’s a vase that went missing from the manor. It was here
yesterday afternoon, so it must have been stolen during the attack.”
 “Now, that is interesting. What kind of vase was it?”
  “Are you familiar with works of the potter Da Vinche from three hundred
years ago?”
  “Hwuh, you mean that two hundred million–zeni vase from the hallway?!”
Kanade cries. “That’s the one that got stolen?!”
 “Sadly, yes…”
  “Hold on a second, those vases are national treasures!” Alexia says, fully
exasperated. “They aren’t the kind of thing you just leave in a hallway!”
 “Oh, no, the vase that got stolen was a replica of a Da Vinche vase.”
 “Huh?” Cid says. “The vase was a replica?”
  “That’s right,” Christina replies. “We wouldn’t just leave the real one lying
around like that. But that’s what makes it so strange. Why would the culprit go
and steal a fake vase?”
 “That is odd,” Alexia agrees. “I don’t get why someone would do that.”
  “It was a well-made replica, so I suspect it would still sell for ten thousand
zeni or so, but still.”
  “If they were only after money, surely there were other things they could
have stolen.”
 “Oh, absolutely. The hall was filled with works of art worth millions. I don’t
understand why the thief went for the replica, the least valuable item there.”
  “Considering the timing, it’s probably safe to assume the culprit is either Jack
the Ripper or someone associated with the Nightblades.”
 “Maybe they just didn’t realize it was a replica.”
  “I find that hard to imagine. No matter how good a copy it might have been,
anyone would have been able to tell at a glance that it wasn’t real. You would
have to be a complete and utter peasant without a shred of refinement in your
body not to realize that.”
 “That’s true.”
  As Christina and Alexia continue their discussion, Kanade and Cid exchange a
glance.
 “A complete and utter peasant…”
 “Without a shred of refinement in your body…”
 Their shoulders slump.
 “I can’t make heads or tails of it,” Alexia says. “Maybe there’s another
message from Jack the Ripper in all this.”
  “It’s certainly a possibility,” agrees Christina. “It might be worthwhile to look
into.”
 “I really don’t think so.”
  “Be quiet, Fido. Lead the way, Christina! We have ourselves a clue, and that’s
all we need to crack this mystery wide open!”
 “I told you, you’re wasting your time.”
 “Come along, Fido.”
  The group goes on to investigate the scene of the burglary until well into the
night, but in the end, they come up empty-handed.
  “The White Mansion is just up ahead.”
  ““’Kaaay.””
 I follow Christina through the capital’s high-end residential area. There isn’t a
house in sight that looks like it’s worth less than a billion zeni. Christina’s place
was probably larger in terms of raw square footage, but Kanade and I both find
ourselves gaping vacantly at the raw prestige the neighborhood emanates.
  Behind us, Alexia is walking with bags under her eyes and grumbling about
her fruitless investigation. “It doesn’t make sense. Jack the Ripper must have
been leaving us a message. Maybe I was supposed to wait for the sun’s light to
strike the mirror in the hallway, then decode the message hidden in the
shadows…”
  Kanade turns and looks at me. “I—I feel kind of out of place here.”
  “You could’ve just waited back at the manor.”
  “But it’s safer to stick with the group!”
  “Is it?”
  “Yeah, ’cause I can use Princess Alexia as a shield and survive for sure.”
   Kanade mumbles that final disrespectful remark under her breath, but my
ears catch everything. That said, I live a pretty disrespectful life myself, so I
silently cheer her on.
  “You know, Kanade,” I tell her, “you might end up with your name in the
history books.”
  And not in a good way.
 An unsettling grin spreads across Kanade’s face. “Hwuh? You really think so?
Aw, shucks.”
  “Huh?”
  I always make it a habit to scan the area around me for presences, and right
then, I sense a tremendous magical force approaching at top speed. Whoever
this is, they’re bad news.
  Then I realize it’s Delta.
 “…Oh, this is bad.”
 “Hwuh? What’s wrong?” Kanade asks me.
 “I, uh…”
  If that force of nature shows up while I’m with these guys, I get the feeling I’m
going to stand out way more than a background character ever should.
 “I gotta go take a dump.”
 But the moment the bullshit excuse leaves my mouth…
 “BOSS MAAAAAAAN!!”
 …a therianthrope girl comes bounding at me at full speed.
 “Delta, wait!!”
 “Aww! But I hate waiting!”
  Delta slows down for the briefest of moments, but that’s the longest she’s
able to restrain herself.
  However, that one moment is all I need. With as much speed as a background
character can muster, I step backward and re-chant my incantation at Delta’s
newly accelerating form.
 “Wait!”
 “Aww!”
 She twitches and slows down for a moment.
 Then she immediately speeds back up.
 “Wait! Wait!”
 “Aww! Awwwww!”
 “Wait, wait, wait, wait, wait!!”
  With each twitch, she decelerates a little more until eventually arriving right
in front of me.
 “Awwwwwwww…”
 On the one hand we have Delta, who looks annoyed at having repeatedly
been told to wait. On the other, we have Alexia, Christina, and Kanade, who
look bewildered at the sudden appearance of a strange therianthrope.
  I clutch my head, unsure of how I’m going to talk myself out of this.
  “Um, Fido, do you know her? Her mana is a bit worrying,” Alexia says, backing
off a little. Because of the repeated starting and stopping, Delta’s mana is
brimming like it’s about to burst.
  “Uhh, I guess you could call her my pet? There, there.”
 I scritch Delta’s head to keep her mana from overflowing. If it exploded here,
we’d have a massive catastrophe on our hands.
  “She seems like an awfully dangerous pet.” Alexia shoots me an accusatory
look. “And also, I’m pretty sure they made owning therianthrope slaves illegal.”
  “Oh, shoot.”
  By the time I realize what’s about to happen, it’s too late. Delta’s already
registered that look of Alexia’s as hostility.
  “Hey! Don’t you talk to Boss man, weakling!”
  I scritch Delta’s head as hard as I can. “There, there. THERE, THERE!!”
  Slowly but surely, her expression softens.
  “Did you just call me a weakling? I’m afraid I can’t let that stand,” Alexia says,
throwing oil onto the fire.
  “Hey, whoa, just drop it!”
 What’re you getting all haughty for, Alexia? One flick to the forehead from
Delta, and you’d be a smear on the sidewalk.
  “Bwuhhhgrrrrrr.”
  Delta’s still ecstatic from the head scratches even as she growls at Alexia. I
grab Delta in a headlock and drag her away.
  “Super sorry about all the commotion my pet caused, folks.”
  “Hey!” protests Alexia. “This conversation isn’t finished!”
  “Yeah, yeah, you can tell me all about it later.”
  I have to actually put my back into it a bit to keep Delta restrained as I
separate her from the group.
 “Grrr! That hurts!”
 “Ah, right, sorry.”
  Once we’re safely hidden behind a wall within the posh residential area, I let
her go.
 “You’re so strong, Boss man. And you weren’t even using magic!”
  “I do train, y’know. But more importantly, remember how you’re supposed to
leave me alone when I’m hanging out with normal people?”
 “Huh?”
  “We’ve been over this. The rule is, you have to leave me alone when I’m
hanging out with normal people.”
 “Huh?”
 Delta tilts her head and gives me a look of absolute puzzlement, at which
point I give up.
 “Nah, just forget about it. I can see I’m wasting my time here.”
 “I hate wasting time, too!”
 “Yeah, it sucks. By the way, what’re you doing here?”
 “I wanted to see you, Boss man!”
 “And that’s why you came?”
  “Nope! Hey, Boss man, can I go beat up that girl? She needs to learn her
place!”
  “No beating her up. She might not look like much, but she’s one of this
kingdom’s princesses, so it’d be more of a headache than it’s worth. So what’re
you doing here?”
 “It’s all good! I’ll beat her up and make her shake her butt at you!”
  “No, seriously, what’re you here for? And again, you’re not allowed to beat up
Alexia. No way, no how.”
 “I can’t?”
 “Nope.”
 “But she acts all smug even though she’s weak.”
 “I know she does, but you still can’t beat her up.”
 “Awww… Fine.”
 “So what’re you doing here?”
  “I, uh…” Delta cocks her head and blinks like she’s trying to remember.
“That’s right! I came to look for Felid!”
 “Felid… What, did something happen to Zeta?”
  “Alpha told me to look for her! She said something about, uh, status reports?
And too many blank spaces? I didn’t really get what she was saying, but all I
have to do is beat Felid up and bring her back with me!”
 “Oh, that makes sense.”
  I guess using Delta’s nose is about the best option there is if you’re trying to
track someone down. That said, I find it hard to imagine Zeta actually following
any of Delta’s instructions once Delta finds her.
  Her nose twitches as she gives me a thorough once-over. “Sniff, sniff. You
have a bit of her smell on you, Boss man. Just a little, though.”
 “Yeah, I haven’t run into her in a while. Not since the incident, I think.”
 “This country has a bit of her smell on it, too. But only a little, no matter
where I go. She must have already left.”
 As she sniffs, her expression gradually grows steelier. That’s the face she
makes when she hunts.
 Then I sense a faint presence and turn around.
 “Miss Deltaaaaaa! Wait for meeeeee!”
  It’s an attractive therianthrope girl who’s completely out of breath. She’s got
blue eyes, black-and-white ears, and a tail that matches her ears. She kind of
resembles a Siberian husky.
 “Wait, Miss Delta, is he…?”
  Delta puffs up her chest and introduces me in the most useless way possible.
“Ha-ha! Boss man is Delta’s boss man!”
 “Hey, nice to meet you. I’m Cid Kagenou. Are you a friend of Delta’s?”
 The Siberian husky girl’s eyes go wide. “Wh-whaaaaat?! For realsies?!”
 “So who is this, Delta?”
 Delta gives me a smug grin. “My minion!”
 Delta has minions now? We’re all doomed.
 “Your minion, huh. She got a name?”
 “It’s Pi!”
 “Pi, huh.”
 That’s a Greek letter, which means she must work for Mitsugoshi.
 “I-I’m Pi, hi! I-it’s nice to meet you, too.”
 With that, she flops onto the ground with her belly facing up.
 “Uh, what…?”
 Delta nods in satisfaction. “That’s the submission pose!”
 “I see.”
  I can’t even be bothered to come up with a pithy retort, so I decide to nod
along, too.
 “Ohhh… He despises me… He’s looking at me like I’m a bug…,” Pi whines.
 “I’m really not.”
  Now that I think about it, this seems to happen a lot with therianthropes. I
guess Yukime and Zeta are just the exceptions.
  “Whyyy? Did I do something wrong? I’ll never survive in this pack if the leader
hates meee…”
 “Do you not think Pi’s fit for the pack, Boss man? I know she’s not very bright,
but I promise she’s a good girl!”
 “I’m sure she’s fine.”
 I literally just met the chick.
 “Hooray! Boss man accepted Pi!”
 “You really, really mean it? I’ll work hard for you, Master!”
 Pi leaps to her feet and wags her tail to and fro.
 “Sniff, sniff.”
 Then she rushes over to me and begins picking up my scent.
 “I know your smell now, Master!”
  “Pi’s incredible, Boss man! She’s kinda dumb, but her nose is even sharper
than mine!”
 “Dang, that is incredible.”
 Incredible that Delta managed to find someone dumber than herself, that is.
 “And also, she’s pretty strong!”
 “Yeah, I know.”
  The way she masked her presence when she first showed up was really
something else.
  “Tee-hee-hee.”
 She laughs innocently, but smarts aside, she seems like a force to be reckoned
with.
  “When are you going to take over the world, Master?” Pi asks me.
  “I wasn’t planning on taking it over at all.”
  “So not yet? But Miss Delta and I spend every day thinking up plans to build
the strongest pack ever so we can rule the world.”
  Well, that’s ominous.
  In a rare display of alarm, Delta quickly cuts her off. “The plan’s not ready yet,
Pi! We still haven’t figured out what we’re gonna do after we have Boss man
make ten thousand babies!”
  The two of them steal glances at me as they share a covert exchange.
  “Whaaat? Is ten thousand not enough to take over the world with?”
 “Alpha said we couldn’t! But it’s okay. We can just have him make more and
more, like a million. Then Alpha will definitely agree!”
  “Whaaat? But that’s so many!”
  Delta gesticulates wildly as she explains herself, and Pi gesticulates wildly in
surprise.
  “That’s why I said we should wait until later to tell Boss man about our
perfect plan for world conquest!”
  Yeah, that sounds ominous as hell. All I can do is pray that this plan never gets
enacted.
  “Then we’d better hurry up and finish revising it, huh?!”
  “We can’t! We’re in the middle of a mission to catch Felid!”
  “Oh yeah, that’s right… But I’m allergic to cats!”
  Then I sense Alexia approaching.
  “Hello?! How long exactly do you intend to keep us waiting for?!” she
demands.
 “Ah, sorry. I’ll be right there.”
  I shoot Delta and Pi a signal with my eyes, and they quickly make themselves
scarce. It’s a shame how dumb they are, but it’s nice how quickly they can pick
up what I’m putting down. I guess it’s their dog traits at work.
  After I rejoin Alexia and the others, I apologize and come up with a fake
explanation for the whole thing.
  “Huh. Looks like Jack the Ripper isn’t coming,” one of the Nightblades says
impatiently as he sets to work on his dinner.
 It’s past midnight, meaning that the date’s already changed.
 “Guess he was too scared of us to show.”
 “I got my hopes up when I heard he beat that Wakoku martial master, too.
What a shame.”
  “I say this is a good thing. It’s just proof that when we Nightblades come
together, there’s nobody who can stand against us.”
  “Maybe we pulled together too many forces. It was just too much for Jack the
Ripper to bear.”
 A chorus of mocking laughter rises from the Nightblades.
  “We’ll start spreading rumors when the sun comes up,” says Earl White.
“Soon, everyone will know that Jack the Ripper fled from us and that the
Nightblades are going as strong as ever. That should make sure they never
doubt us again—”
   Before he can finish his sentence, a dim flash appears from the arena. The
light gradually grows stronger, almost like it’s reacting to something.
 “What’s going on?”
 “Perhaps he came after all. The arena is responding to a foreign source of
mana.”
  Light fills the entire arena as the artifact finishes erecting its dome-shaped
barrier.
 It’s unclear when, but a bloodstained clown has appeared at its center.
 “Is that Jack the Ripper, then?”
 “It’s a clown drenched in blood. He matches the reports.”
 “Hmph. He doesn’t look all that strong.”
  “Looks can be deceiving. If nothing else, though, we can tell he’s an idiot. He’d
have to be, to walk into our trap like that.”
  “You can say that again. But hey, if he’s happy to help stave off my boredom,
then more power to him.”
  The Nightblades lean forward in their seats to get a better look at Jack the
Ripper.
  “Hello and welcome, Jack the Ripper. So glad you could stop by this evening,”
Earl White says in a theatrical tone. “But you certainly took your time, didn’t
you? Did it really take you that long to work up your nerve?”
 Jack the Ripper doesn’t so much as twitch.
  “If you have something you’d like to say, the floor is yours. You must have
some sort of business with us Nightblades. Go on, tell us all about whatever
grudge you might hold. Did we kill your parents? Sell your children off into
slavery? Steal away your fortune? Forgive me for not remembering you, but
we’ve wronged so many people I simply can’t keep track of them all.”
 The Nightblades’ laughter echoes through the arena.
  “Too scared to speak up, are you? Well, that’s fine, too. We’ve prepared a
very special game for you. The rules are simple. If you defeat all the contenders
we’ve arranged for you, the barrier surrounding the arena will go down. Then
you might very well get to kill us all like you said you would.”
  Earl White’s expression as he looks down at Jack the Ripper is one of utmost
confidence.
  “And just so you know, the barrier is being generated by a powerful artifact,
one that cost me more money than you could earn in a hundred lifetimes. You
can try to break through it, but you’d simply be wasting your time. No, there’s a
path available to you: defeat all comers!”
 The earl spreads his arms out wide and shouts.
 “Now, let the game begin! Send in the first killer!”
  The arena door opens, revealing a dark knight. It’s a man wearing heavy
armor and wielding a massive sword. He’s a large man, the kind that towers
over people. After giving his greatsword a couple of casual swings, he turns
around and bows to the Nightblades over in the spectator seats.
  “He’s a dark knight from the city-state of Spartan!! The Spartan Colosseum is
said to be the most brutal in the world, and he racked up two hundred fights
there without a single defeat! They call him the Mincemeat Butcher because of
how he uses his mighty blade to cleave each and every one of his foes in
twain!”
   The Butcher lumbers over and looks down at Jack the Ripper. With a smirk,
the dark knight slings his greatsword up onto his shoulder. “What the hell? I
figured I’d be in for a gnarly fight, considering all the nasty folks they’ve got
lined up in the waiting room, but all I get is some dumb clown?”
 “It’s time for the first match!”
  As soon as the starting signal is given, the Butcher swings his sword down. The
arena shakes from the volume and force of the slash.
 “Wh-what a mighty blow!”
  “That Spartan dark knight is something else. If anything, the rumors sold him
short!”
 “It doesn’t look like his attack landed, though.”
 Sure enough, the Butcher’s strike didn’t find its mark.
  However, it isn’t because Jack the Ripper dodged it. He wasn’t even in the
swing’s initial arc.
  “I missed that one on purpose. How’s the audience supposed to enjoy
themselves if I end the fight on the first hit? Dark gladiators who only care
about winning, they’re second-rate. The best ones make sure to give the crowd
a show,” the Butcher says smugly as he hoists his greatsword back onto his
shoulder. “Come at me, clown boy. I have your measure. If you couldn’t react to
that attack, then you’ll never beat me no matter how hard you try. But don’t
you worry. Making bouts against third-rate fighters look good is what they pay
us dark gladiators to durrrrrgh?!”
  The Butcher goes shooting straight up. Blood sprays from his face as his body
splatters against the top of the barrier. Droplets drip, drip down and paint the
clown red.
  The clown slowly lowers the leg he just kicked with.
  “…W-winner: Jack the Ripper,” Earl White stammers.
  A stir runs through the Nightblades.
  “Wh-what just happened?!”
  “That was a kick. An unbelievably fast kick!”
  “You saw it, Earl Battler?”
  “Barely, but yes. I might not look it, but it was my strength that got me this far
in life. And that fight sure was something…”
  “Ah, that’s right. You’re a pretty accomplished dark knight, aren’t you?”
  “Ridiculous. You’re telling me Jack the Ripper ended the fight with a single
kick?”
   “Look, we chose someone we thought he could beat on purpose for the first
fight. We’re still well within expectations.”
  “I think we might want to change up our second combatant. Wouldn’t you
agree, Earl Battler?”
  “I would…”
  Not a single person speaks up in dissent.
  Earl White drinks some wine and calls in the second fighter. “Now, without
further ado, I present you your second challenge!”
  It’s not one dark knight that appears this time, but three.
  “It’s the captains of the legendary White Wolf mercenary group that made
their name in the Velgaltan civil war!! When their client Perv Asshat died in
battle in Oriana, the group fell on hard times. It’s not every day you get
seasoned fighters like them to agree to participate in a match like this, but each
and every one of them could put the Butcher to shame! Behold the teamwork
they’ve honed on the fields of battle, and behold the nerves of steel they’ve
honed by operating in the red!”
  The three dark knights are in their thirties and forties. They wield a sword, an
ax, and a spear, respectively. All of them look calm and composed, and they
give Jack the Ripper a steely set of looks.
 “What do you think?” the swordsman asks.
  “I don’t know. I can’t get a read on his strength at all. But that’s weird in and
of itself,” replies the mercenary with the ax.
  “And here I was, thinking we were in for an easy payday. Don’t blame us for
coming at you three on one, guy,” says the spearman, and the three of them
ready their weapons.
 “Now, let the second match begin!!”
  The moment the starting signal is given, the three mercenaries spread out to
fence Jack the Ripper in. From there, they gingerly try to gauge his range.
 Meanwhile, Jack the Ripper doesn’t move an inch.
  Slowly but surely, the White Wolf captains circle him. Once around, then
twice, then thrice…
 Nothing is changing, and it doesn’t make for a particularly interesting fight.
 “All they’re doing is walking in circles,” says one of the Nightblades.
 A chorus of disgruntled agreements follows.
  The White Wolves can certainly hear them, yet even so, they stick to their
paths and continue circling Jack the Ripper.
 Nothing is happening.
  That’s what it looks like from the outside, at least, but tiny changes start
coming over the White Wolves. Sweat begins dripping from their foreheads in
oddly large droplets, their breathing gradually grows heavy, and their eyes turn
bloodshot from their intense focus.
  An odd sense of tension falls over the arena, and eventually, the complaints
die down. Everything is dead silent.
 Then Jack the Ripper makes his move.
 He takes a single step forward.
  It’s just a regular, casual old step. There’s nothing dangerous or threatening
about it.
  However, the White Wolves react in the strangest way. In the blink of an eye,
they leap to the far ends of the arena. Their breathing is ragged, and their
expressions are strained. The clattering of their quivering weapons speaks
volumes about their mental states. They’re terrified like they’ve never been
terrified before.
 All they’re staring at is a bizarre clown, yet to see the look in those seasoned
mercenaries’ eyes, you would think they were gazing upon the end of the
world.
  One of the mercenaries lowers his sword. The ax wielder and spearman
follow suit.
 “I’m out. It ain’t worth it…,” the swordsman says, his voice trembling.
  “You’re…out? You mean you’re abandoning the fight?! That’s a breach of
contract!”
  “We’re mercenaries,” replies the spearman. “We’re willing to die on the
battlefield if we have to, but I’ll be damned if I go down in some musty
basement.”
   “Cut the crap already! Have you forgotten how much the penalty for a
contract breach is?! As soon as word gets out that their captains fled from a
fight, the White Wolves’ reputation will be in the gutter!”
 “A hundred million, two hundred million—we’ll pay it. And you can spread
whatever rumors you want,” the ax wielder says with a laugh.
 “Wh-what’s so funny, you wretch?!”
 “The fact that you people think you’re gonna live to see tomorrow.”
 With that, the three mercenaries turn away and depart the arena.
  Jack the Ripper makes no move to follow them. He just lets out a small
chuckle from beneath his mask.
 “Grr… Those uncivilized mercenary swine!” Earl White roars, his face flushed.
 “Well, they certainly didn’t live up to the hype.”
  “We need to make sure those idiot mercenaries get what’s coming to them.
Let’s put together a posse to hunt them down.”
 “With captains that cowardly, White Wolf is done for. Hmm? What is it, Earl
Battler?”
 Earl Battler’s face is pallid.
 “What’s wrong, Earl? You coming down with something?”
 “We might need to send in everything we’ve got.”
 “What are you talking about, Earl Battler?”
 “…I didn’t understand any of that fight we just watched,” Earl Battler replies.
  “That’s because all they did was walk around in circles. There’s nothing there
to understand.”
 “The thing is, I know how strong White Wolf and their captains are. Without a
doubt, they’re the strongest mercenary outfit on the continent.”
  The other Nightblades laugh mockingly. “Pretty pathetic, if that’s the best our
continent has to offer.”
  “They ran away without even trying to fight,” Earl Battler goes on. “They fled
their foe, knowing the damage it would do to the White Wolves’ reputation.
They must have had a reason.”
 “What kind of reason?”
  “I think perhaps Jack the Ripper is a greater monster than any of them
anticipated.”
 “Don’t be absurd. Why, I think you’re just trying to scare us for a laugh.”
 “Still, perhaps we should heed Earl Battler’s warning and make sure our next
fighter is up to the task. What do we think about sending in that Velgaltan
master swordswoman?”
  “Yeah, I like that. Hey, we’re changing up the roster.”
   When they tell the butler about their swap-out, he frowns. “About that, sirs…
I believe the Velgaltan swordswoman just left.”
  “What? She left?!”
  “She did. She said, ‘I have a bad feeling about this, boing,’ and took off.”
  “And you just let her go?!”
  “I-I’m afraid so. She returned her payment in full, and, well, she vanished like
the wind, too fast for anyone to follow.”
  “This is outrageous… These bastards think they can walk all over us!” Earl
White’s voice trembles with rage. “Oh, forget it. Send in the demon from the
city-states and the Lawless City legend!”
  “Y-yes, sir. At once, sir!”
  The butler hurriedly rushes off.
  “I swear, this boils my blood.”
  “Come on, Earl, it could be worse. The rabbit didn’t even look that strong in
the first place.”
  “She was good-looking, and it’s not often you see a rabbit swordswoman.
That’s probably why her reputation got so inflated. Dark knights whose fame
outclasses their talents are a zeni a dozen.”
   “Yeah, we would’ve just embarrassed ourselves if we’d sent out a weakling
like her. The city-state demon and Lawless City legend are all we need.”
 “I can’t believe we’re sending out our best fighters when we still have so
many in reserve. And two of them at once, no less.”
  “Well, this is fine. Drawing this out too long would kill the fun in and of itself. I
take it you’re on board with this, Earl Battler?”
  “Yeah…”
 The earl nods, his face still pale.
  It isn’t long before the city-state demon and Lawless City legend take their
spots in the arena.
  When Jack the Ripper fights the city-state demon and the Lawless City legend
at the same time, he drives them both back without breaking a sweat.
  Alexia gasps as she watches the bloody clown fight. “So that’s what Jack the
Ripper is capable of…”
   The battle is completely one-sided. Jack the Ripper’s foes are both expert
fighters, but the clown is dancing circles around them. When the city-state
demon and Lawless City legend turn to flee, he shreds them to ribbons. All that
remains of them is the blood staining the arena.
 “It’s like he’s not even using his full strength.”
  That’s the part that shocks Alexia more than anything. By all accounts, the
city-state demon and Lawless City legend were formidable dark knights, and
they had the skills to back up their reputations. The raw skill required to
slaughter them like that was beyond comprehension. There is only one person
on Alexia’s mind who could have pulled off a feat like that.
 “Shadow…”
  Jack the Ripper’s talent might well be on par with Shadow’s. It’s hard to
believe, but it’s the sole conclusion she can draw.
  What catches her eye most of all, though, is the way Jack the Ripper carries
himself—it so vividly reminds her of Shadow.
 “The way he’s moving… No, it can’t be.”
  The way he fights and the quality of his magic are completely different from
Shadow’s.
  At this point, Alexia finds herself remembering how the War Goddess once
said that all the strongest fighters move in fundamentally similar ways.
 “What should we do, Princess Alexia?” Christina asks in a hush.
 “We should hold tight.”
  “But isn’t this our best opportunity now that everyone’s distracted by Jack the
Ripper?”
 “No, we’ll have an easier time getting around afterward.”
 “Afterward?”
 “Yeah. Once it’s all over.”
  With that, Alexia continues staring at Jack the Ripper over in the arena. She’s
so intent on catching every last move he makes, she forgets to even blink.
  The next set of opponents has arrived in the arena, and this time, there are a
full hundred of them.
  “What a joke. They’re burning their force little by little. It’s right out of the
dying nation-state playbook.”
 “Will Jack the Ripper actually be able to beat that many opponents?”
  Every one of the dark knights closing in on Jack the Ripper is an elite fighter.
The Nightblades spared no expense gathering them, and Alexia can tell they’re
more talented than members of the royal Knight Order.
  “I’ve slowly started being able to pick up on things lately. Things like what
strength really is. Things like how big the gap is between me and the strong.”
 “And what do you make of Jack the Ripper, Princess Alexia?”
 “I would say…”
 She sinks into silence for a moment to find the right words.
 “…he’s in a league all of his own,” she eventually manages.
 “You would really go that far?”
 Kanade audibly swallows. Then…
  “Go forth, my vassal,” Kanade mutters. “Go forth, Jack the Ripper. Kill them.
Kill those idiot Nightblades dead.”
 A moment later, over a hundred dark knights descend on Jack the Ripper.
 “What’s going on here?” Earl White gasps.
   The rest of the Nightblades in the spectator seats have all been struck into
silence, unable to utter a word.
 Losing the city-state demon and Lawless City legend was what first brought
down their moods.
 The city-state demon chipped Jack the Ripper’s mask.
 The Lawless City legend hacked a chunk off Jack the Ripper’s outfit.
  However, that was the sum total of what they managed to accomplish. Jack
the Ripper had promptly seen through their moves and slaughtered them.
 A question rises up from the onlookers.
 “Did we have anyone stronger than them?”
 Nobody answers. The city-state demon and Lawless City legend were the
mightiest combatants on the Nightblades’ roster.
  Terror spreads in a flash. The smug confidence is gone from their faces now,
and they abandon all pretenses and throw every dark knight they have at their
foe.
 The battle is still ongoing, but the writing is on the wall.
  Once all the dark knights are dead, Jack the Ripper stands at the bloodstained
arena’s center and fixes his gaze on the spectator seats.
  “Sorry, but I’m getting out of here! This whole mess is your fault, Earl White.
Figure out how to clean it up!”
  As soon as the first Nightblade rises from their seat, the dam breaks, and the
others follow suit.
 Earl White clings to his fleeing compatriots. “W-wait, hold on! I can still—”
 That’s when a deep, dignified voice booms out.
 “Where are you going, gentlemen? There’s no need to be in such a rush.”
  There’s a new figure in the spectator seats now, a regal man in the prime of
his life.
 “M-Marquis Despoht! I didn’t see you come in!”
 “You people are worthless, so I thought I might intercede on your behalf.”
 Several of the Nightblades grimace at Despoht’s condescending tone, but
none of them say a word.
 “With the way things have gone, is there anything that can be done?”
 “Hmph. Just for you all, I went and got a very special helper from the Cult.”
  With that, Despoht gestures over at the arena. There’s a person in a hood
standing there. Actually, are they even a person?
 “A helper from the Cult? What is that thing?”
  The silhouette the long hood casts is crooked. Whatever creature is under
there, they certainly don’t look human.
  “Heh-heh-heh. Through their human experiments, the Cult has managed to
create the ultimate weaponized life-form. Go on, show them your glorious
form!”
  On Despoht’s command, the creature removes its hood and reveals its
hideousness.
 “Wh-what the—?”
  Beneath, there’s a horrible mass of stitched-together flesh. It’s hard to even
tell what gender it is. Is it a man? No, probably a woman. It has a vaguely
feminine aura, but at the end of the day, what meaning does gender even have
to a mass of flesh such as that? The creature is a monster, barely maintaining its
human form.
 “They call her Experiment No. 227 Millia.”
 “Her? So it is a woman?”
  “She’s one of the Fenrir sect’s old test subjects. They abandoned her when
she lost to the Shadow Garden, but the Loki-sect researchers recovered and
restored her.”
 “She lost to the Shadow Garden?”
 A series of disappointed sighs rise from the Nightblades.
  “Worry not. When the Loki-sect researchers took the Fenrir-sect test subject,
they improved her, taking techniques that were never meant to be used
together and building her into the ultimate bioweapon. They assured me she’s
over ten times stronger than she was before.”
 Despoht strides up to the front row, speaking loudly to raise morale.
  “Now go, Experiment No. 227 Millia! Heed my command and put Jack the
Ripper in the ground!!”
 The battle begins.
  The horrific test subject, Millia, bounds forward like a feral beast. She circles
behind Jack the Ripper, moving so fast her body is a mere blur.
 Then she lashes out with her mighty right arm.
 “Whoa?!”
  A torrential surge of magic rages through the arena. The barrier is supposed
to be unbreakable, yet it begins creaking under the strain.
 “S-such power!”
 The waves of magical aftershock gouge deep chunks out of the arena’s floor.
 “Where…? Where’d he go?”
  After taking a full swing with her arm, Millia is the only one left in the arena.
Jack the Ripper is nowhere to be seen, and it dawns on the Nightblades that
he’s been obliterated without a trace.
 “Now that it’s over, it feels like it went by too fast,” Earl White says from the
now-quiet spectator seats.
  Looks of relief creep across the other Nightblades’ faces as they begin
chatting about their thoughts.
  “I guess that’s the Cult’s ultimate bioweapon for you. I was afraid she was
going to break the barrier.”
 “Ha-ha-ha. The barrier is impenetrable. Though I’ll admit, I did have my
doubts for a moment. The Cult is nothing to be trifled with.”
  “We should consider deepening our ties with them even further than we
already have.”
 “Indeed,” Despoht says. “We lost a lot during these recent incidents, but the
bond we forged with the Loki sect is a great boon we’ve won.”
 He’s greeted by a round of applause from who-knows-where.
 “Everything I do, I do for the Nightblades.”
  Despoht looks around. However, he doesn’t see anyone clapping. Everyone’s
just looking at each other as the crisp applause echoes through the spectator
section.
 One person is trembling, his face as white as a sheet.
 It’s Earl Battler.
 He points a quivering finger at one of the empty seats.
 Despoht gives him a quizzical look. “What’s the matter, Earl Battler?”
 “O-over there…”
 There isn’t anyone there.
 There isn’t supposed to be, at least.
 Unbeknownst to everyone, however, a bloody clown has taken the seat.
 “Jack the Ripper?! H-how are you over here?!”
 The Nightblades scatter like flies as they flee from him.
 “Wh-what happened to the barrier?! What’s going on?!”
  As long as the barrier holds, there shouldn’t be any way for Jack the Ripper to
reach the stands.
 “But how…?”
 Jack the Ripper stops clapping and slowly rises to his feet.
 In his hand, he’s holding the seven of spades.
He gives it a lazy toss.
 It’s as though the world has stopped, as though Jack the Ripper is the only
one moving. Nobody can stop his languid move.
  Shunk.
  There’s a small noise as the playing card lodges itself deep in one of the
Nightblades’ heads.
  “A-agh…”
  The Nightblade crumples forward and twitches on the ground.
  Nobody moves a muscle. The stands are deathly silent as they stare at the
spreading bloodstain.
 Their lives are in this clown’s hands. They can all feel it. He’ll kill them if they
move. He’ll kill them if they scream. He’ll kill them if they do nothing at all.
  Tension rules the air as Jack the Ripper leisurely—so leisurely—pulls out one
card after another.
  The eight of spades.
  The nine of spades.
  The ten of spades.
  The jack of spades.
  The queen of spades.
  The king of spades.
  There are precisely six of them. It’s the same number of cards as there are
Nightblades, and Jack the Ripper splays them out in his hand before drawing
the eight of spades.
  He slowly readies it.
 The selected Nightblade’s eyes go wide as he shakes his head. “E-eek…
Help…”
  As if in response to his cry, magic surges up from the arena.
  It’s Experiment No. 227 Millia. She closes the gap in a flash, then slams her
engorged right arm into Jack the Ripper.
  A violent crash thunders out. Wham, wham, wham, it goes, again and again
and again.
  However, Jack the Ripper hasn’t so much as moved. The only thing
Experiment No. 227 Millia has been hitting is the glowing wall of light
separating the two of them.
  “Th-the barrier…,” someone stammers.
 The barrier is still up and running, and it’s obstructing Experiment No. 227
Millia’s way.
  How, then, is Jack the Ripper outside it?
  Nobody understands.
  As the wham, wham, whams continue shaking the very air, Jack the Ripper
throws the eight of clubs.
  A man dies.
  He throws the nine.
  Another man dies.
  He throws the ten.
  One more death.
 Experiment No. 227 Millia continues slamming on the barrier. Wham, wham,
wham.
 “Th-this is why I said we needed to crush him…with everything we had… The
man is a monster in—”
  Before Earl Battler can finish his speech, the jack of spades buries itself in his
heart. He clutches at his chest with a look of despair on his face before keeling
over.
  “I—I know, the barrier… If we can just lower the barrier… Someone, hurry up
and lower it!” Earl White shouts.
  However, there’s no one left to answer his cry.
  “Someone! Anyone! Anyone! Anyone! Anyone! Anyone! Anyone! Anyone!”
he hollers like a man gone mad.
  Actually, there’s no “like” about it. The light of reason is completely gone
from his eyes.
  “Anyone! Anyone! Anyone! Any—”
  The queen of spades sinks into his throat, and he sputters as he dies.
  Now only Despoht remains.
  Despoht remains glued to his chair. He’s too petrified to move.
  Jack the Ripper holds up the king of spades and spins it around in his hand,
toying with it like he’s toying with Despoht himself.
  “What even are you? What’s a monster like you doing in a place like this?”
  The frailty in Despoht’s voice is wholly unbefitting the leader of the Thirteen
Nightblades.
  “Spare me. I’ll do anything. I can pay you off.”
  Jack the Ripper deftly flips the king around between his fingers.
 “If you want apologies, I’ll give you as many as you want. Please, all I ask for is
my life…”
  Despoht bows so low his forehead scrapes against the ground.
  “Spare me. Just spare me…”
  As he does, the king of spades sinks into the back of his head.
  The Thirteen Nightblades have been completely eliminated.
  The way Despoht dies, it looks like he’s apologizing to everything in the whole
entire world.
 All the while, Millia’s fruitless strikes ring out hollow against the barrier.
Wham, wham, wham.
  Jack the Ripper sweeps his gaze across the bodies in the spectator seats, then
turns back to Millia.
  Millia just continues hitting.
  As she does, Jack the Ripper begins striding unhurriedly toward the barrier.
 Then his arm brushes it. Bluish-purple magic spreads out like smoke, and a
moment later, Jack the Ripper is inside again.
  Millia wastes no time in attacking him.
  “GRORRRR!!” she bellows in delight.
  Jack the Ripper is defenseless, and with a sweep of her right arm, she sends
him flying. He smashes into the wall at an unthinkable speed.
  A moment later, though, he springs back up and fixes his gaze on Millia.
  “GROHHHHHHHHH!!”
  She charges at him like a wild animal.
  The Cult has outdone itself. Her massive frame, physical prowess, and magical
abilities are working together in perfect harmony. She’s an overpowering force
of sheer devastation, and she smashes up the arena and causes the sturdy
barrier to shake.
  Jack the Ripper’s body goes flying like a pinball, tumbling across the arena
again and again.
  However, he doesn’t go down.
  Millia’s strikes are landing, but he’s carefully rolling with the impacts to avoid
taking any lethal hits.
  His gaze is fixed squarely on Millia.
  “GRAHHHHHHHHH!!” she roars.
  Reddish-black fluid sprays everywhere as her flesh begins shifting. Thin
tendrils, too many of them to count, sprout from her back, her chest, and even
her face. The tendrils are sinister in shape and in hue, and they spread outward
in every direction and fill the arena to bursting.
  There’s well over a thousand of them surrounding Jack the Ripper.
  All at once, they impale him.
  There are so many tendrils running him through that, in a flash, they have him
completely engulfed. All that remains of him is a mass of writhing tendrils.
  After shaking the capital to its core and killing the Thirteen Nightblades, Jack
the Ripper vanishes.
  People have all sorts of theories about who he is. They speculate that he’s
everything from a Velgaltan assassin to a legendary dark knight who returned
from the grave as a vengeful spirit, and rumors without a shred of truth to them
spread like wildfire. There are some who even say that Jack the Ripper is
Shadow, but the Knight Order denies that as a possibility.
  In the end, Jack the Ripper’s identity remains a mystery. However, the story
about his killing seven of the Thirteen Nightblades in a single night after they
fortified their defenses with scores of knights both dark and otherwise quickly
attains legendary status, and the popular conclusion is that given Jack the
Ripper’s unnatural strength, he must have been some manner of demon or
ghost.
  I bet that in a hundred years or so, they’ll make a movie called The Shocking
Truth Behind Jack the Ripper! or something and broadcast it across the world.
  In any case, that basically couldn’t have gone better. I accomplished
everything I set out to, and Jack the Ripper will be remembered by history as a
legend.
 “Did something good happen to you?” asks the man sitting across from me.
  If I’m remembering right—which I definitely might not be—he’s Gray, chief of
the Knight Order’s criminal investigation department. At the moment, I’m
currently being questioned in their interrogation room as a person of interest.
  “Oh, I was just thinking about how with people as skilled as you on the Knight
Order, Jack the Ripper’s gonna get caught in no time,” I reply, lying through my
teeth.
 “You can count on that, son. You’ve got a good eye for someone your age.”
Gray nods a couple of times in satisfaction. “Now, one last thing before we’re
done. You didn’t go into the White estate, did you?”
 “Oh, of course not. That’d be trespassing. I was too scared to even go near it.”
  “Princess Alexia is going to be the death of me, I swear. The fact that she went
in there without permission calls all her testimony into question.”
  “A-and, um, what do you think the rumors about Jack the Ripper secretly
being Shadow?”
  “Oh, that stuff’s all bunk. Shadow’s been running roughshod over the capital,
and people just want to smear the Knight Order’s name by saying Shadow got
the better of us again.”
 “B-but Princess Alexia says she saw him…”
  “It was dark, so she probably just mistook what she saw. She was the only
witness, and she’s getting to be that age where she wants to be the center of
attention.”
 “Oh, really?”
  “Yeah, really. Now, I’d say that’s about it for us. Thanks for being so
cooperative. I doubt we’ll need to bring you in for questioning again.”
 “I-I’m glad to hear it.”
 “Take care.”
  I bow to Gray and step out of the windowless room. The guy’s deductive
abilities are garbage, but his skills as a dark knight aren’t half bad. I feel like
they’d be way better served by having him go out and fight people instead of
running investigations.
  I idly wonder if Kanade is the next person they’re gonna question. They did
call her in at the same time as me.
 I walk down the hallway and head for the waiting room.
 As I do, a man I pass catches my interest.
 “Hmm?” I stop and take a look at him.
  “Yes?” He stops and takes a look at me. He’s a tall man with thin, narrow
eyes. He gives me a mild smile.
 “No, it’s nothing.”
 “I see. Are you…? No, it’s nothing.”
  He starts to say something but stops himself midway through. After giving me
another smile, he walks off.
 I walk off as well, feeling out his presence behind me as I do.
 The man heads into Gray’s interrogation room.
 “He seemed pretty strong,” I say under my breath.
 A man steps into the interrogation room and takes the seat across from
Gray’s.
 Gray hurriedly offers him a bow. “I—I didn’t know you were here, sir!”
 “You were slow,” the man says with a sigh.
 “Slow how?”
 “To notice me.”
 “I-I’m terribly sorry. You muted your presence, so I didn’t notice you until you
were right before my eyes…”
 “The boy noticed me.”
 “What boy? You mean Cid Kagenou?”
  “I don’t know his name. He was a boy with dark hair. I passed him in the
hallway just now.”
  “He is a dark knight, but his grades are middling. Could it have just been a
coincidence?”
  “Perhaps that’s what it was. Coincidence can happen at the strangest times in
the strangest places,” the man replies with a smile.
  To him, this is nothing more than idle small talk, and he’ll likely have forgotten
all about the boy by the time tomorrow rolls around. It was a minor oddity,
nothing more.
  “I’m not happy about losing the Thirteen Nightblades,” the man continues.
  “My apologies, sir. We did what we could, but we have so few forces we can
freely deploy here in the Midgar Kingdom.”
   “It is what it is. Thanks to that idiot Fenrir, our influence in Midgar has
plummeted. The Shadow Garden saw that opening and took full advantage of
it.”
  “…Will this affect the plan?”
  “No, we’re all right on that front. The Shadowhunting Jaw will succeed.”
  “Shadow was stronger than we anticipated. According to what I’ve heard,
Experiment No. 227 Millia was completely helpless against him.”
  “That’s within expectations. Everything is just fine.” The man chuckles. “With
the Thirteen Nightblades dead, we have even fewer pawns to use in Midgar. I
might need to put you into play directly, so make sure you’re ready for that.”
  “As you wish, Master Loki.”
  “Don’t let me down.”
  The man vanishes, leaving Gray alone in the windowless room.
                                 Auxiliary Chapter
  For Eliza, the past week has been like one long nightmare. Not only did the
Thirteen Nightblades get slain one by one, but in the end, even her father
joined the ranks of the fallen. From there, the Despoht family assets and
property got seized bit by bit until, ultimately, she was driven from her home.
Now she can feel people and money distancing themselves from her with every
passing day.
  “This is an outright travesty!!” she bellows from her temporary lodging.
  She hurls her half-empty cup at the wall with her face contorted in
indignation.
  “Oh, sure, now you people don’t want to curry favor with me anymore!”
  Why is all of this happening to her? At this rate, she’s liable to be found guilty
in her trial. Countless nobles have already broken ties with the Despoht family.
  “I’m not finished. Not yet…”
  However, that isn’t to say that all of them have. The Nightblade families are
all in the same boat, and the bonds they share aren’t so easily cut. Surely,
they’re all in dire straits with their family heads dead and investigations
knocking at their doorsteps. However, that’s precisely what’s going to bring
them solidarity.
   “It’s high time I got all Nightblade successors together. I won’t let things end
like this. I refuse to!!”
  Things are going to be fine. She still has blackmail material on the Knight
Order and the judge. If the next generation of Nightblades bands together and
lays on the pressure, they can turn the situation around in a snap. Eliza is
certain of it.
 “I’m summoning the Nightblades and holding a meeting! Gather them up at
once!!” she shouts over to her subordinate, who’s staying in the next room.
  No matter how long she waits, though, nobody comes over.
  “Hello?! Is anyone there?”
  She opens the door to the adjoining room with a look of puzzlement on her
face.
  Inside, the room is empty. Its window is open wide, and the cold night air
flows in freely.
  “Perhaps they went to the bathroom or something… I’ll have to punish them
for that later, won’t I?”
  A cruel smile spreads across her face.
  Then she hears a strangely squishy set of footsteps coming from behind her.
  “Well, there you are. Where in the world did you get off—?”
  When Eliza turns around, she freezes.
  Standing there is a clown drenched in blood.
  “Y-you’re…J-Jack…the Ripper…”
  She shrinks back in shock.
  The bloody clown’s feet squelch as it closes in on her.
  “Eeek… S-stay back!”
  She takes everything she can get her hands on and throws them largely at
random. However, none of it is enough to stop the bloody clown’s advance, and
soon, Eliza finds herself forced all the way back to the wall.
  “L-look, I’m sorry… What’ll it take for you to forgive me?” She gives the clown
a twitchy smile as she tries to fawn over it. “Tell me, what is it you want? I’ll do
anything…”
 She’s making puppy-dog eyes, and her voice is downright saccharine. She
nonchalantly lets her negligee slip a little to reveal her fair skin.
  Jack the Ripper stares at her.
  Seeing the clown’s reaction, Eliza lets her negligee slip a little further.
  “Tee-hee…”
  She turns her gaze to her own naked chest.
  There’s a knife planted in it.
  “Wha—?”
  Red droplets of blood roll down her lily-white skin.
  “AaaaaahhhHHHHHHH!! How dare you?!”
  Eliza punches Jack the Ripper with all her might, then falls to the floor and
clutches at her chest wound.
  “How dare you. How dare you…”
  Eliza coughs up blood and glares resentfully at Jack the Ripper.
  Then she gasps.
  “I-it’s you… Why?”
  Jack the Ripper’s mask is off. Eliza’s punch dislodged it, and it has fallen on the
floor nearby.
  “Why is it you…?!”
  Jack the Ripper’s face is that of a student Eliza knows all too well.
  “Answer me, Christina!!”
  There before her stands Christina Hope.
  Christina looks down at Eliza with ice in her eyes.
  Eliza’s expression is one of shock. “Kaff… I—I can’t believe you were Jack the
Ripper all along…”
  The blood spilling from her chest pools on the floor, swallowing up the mask.
  “I wasn’t,” Christina says as she leans down to pick the mask up.
  “What do you mean, you weren’t?”
  “I’m just following in his footsteps.”
 “His…footsteps…?”
 “That’s right. He chose to appear before me, and now I finally understand
why.”
 “What?”
 “He wanted to teach me about his duty. To show me his bloodstained path.”
 “What…are you talking about…?”
  “This country is rotting. The blades of the just run dull. If we want to vanquish
evil, we need an even greater evil on our side. He was asking me if I had the
conviction to become that.”
 With a twisted smile, Christina places the clown mask back over her face.
 “This is exactly what I’ve been waiting for.”
 She grabs the knife embedded in Eliza’s bosom.
 “D-don’t—”
 These prove to be Eliza’s final moments.
 Christina twists the knife, then wrenches it free. Blood gushes everywhere.
 “Gack… Kaff…”
  Eliza’s body goes cold, and Christina gazes down at her and pulls out a playing
card.
 She takes the card and shoves it into Eliza’s chest wound.
 “My name is Jack the Ripper. With an evil blade, I vanquish the wicked.”
 On the card’s face, there’s a joker.
                                  Side Story
 Delta is in a great mood. She got to hunt loads of bandits with Shadow today.
 Might makes right.
 That’s the law of the jungle.
  Hunting isn’t just a way to get sustenance; it’s an opportunity to prove one’s
strength.
 “How was my hunting today, Boss man?!”
  “Huh? I mean, I guess it was pretty good,” Shadow replies as he goes around
in his black longcoat collecting the bandits’ purses.
 “Hooray!! Boss man acknowledged me!”
  For Delta, hunting with Shadow is the greatest stage there is. Being
recognized by one’s superiors is both a great source of pride for therianthropes
and an important way of solidifying one’s position within the pack. Such things
are core to a therianthrope’s values.
 Shadow points at a therianthrope corpse. “By the way, what do you wanna do
with the body?”
 “Who’s that?”
 “Your brother. Did you forget already?”
  Delta cocks her head and thinks back. Sure enough, she vaguely remembers
an unpleasant conversation with some weakling.
  “Should we at least bury him or something? I dunno how therianthropes
handle these things.”
 “Don’t worry about it!”
  “I mean, if you say so,” Shadows says, then goes back to rummaging through
coin purses.
 “Hrmm.”
  For some reason, looking at the therianthrope corpse dredges up an unhappy
memory for Delta. It’s a recollection from long ago, back when she still went by
Sara.
 “What’s up?” Shadow asks her.
 “It’s nothing!!”
 And she was in such a good mood, too.
 Delta leaps onto Shadow’s back and starts marking him with her scent.
 “Hey, get off!”
 “I don’t wanna!”
 “Also, cut it out! I don’t want to stink of dog!”
 “I’m not stinky!”
  When she covers herself in Shadow’s smell, the old memories slowly grow
fainter. It feels like they do, at least.
 Nighttime came.
 After waiting for her mother to fall asleep, Sara quietly snuck out of the hut.
  The grassland was supposed to stretch all the way to the horizon, but now the
whole thing was painted over with an inky black. Even so, Sara’s eyes could
reach far off into the distance.
 “They’re over there, thank you.”
 Her nose sniffed.
 “And there, too.”
 Her ears twitched.
 “And there, too. Loads of them.”
 Sara had the sharpest eyes, the sharpest nose, and the sharpest ears in all her
family.
 “I just have to learn how to hunt.”
  However, she was too young for anyone to take her out hunting with them. It
didn’t help that she was a girl, as girls generally weren’t invited to hunt until
well after boys were.
 The problem was, she couldn’t afford to wait.
 Sara took a step out onto the darkened grassland.
  Her legs were trembling. The fear she felt when her brothers hit her was
nothing compared with this. Ral and Ren had already started training in how to
hunt, but Sara hadn’t even gotten that far yet. She didn’t know the first thing
about hunting.
 “I’m gonna become strong…”
 She strode across the plain, her legs quivering ceaselessly.
  After a little while, she came to a stop and used her eyes and nose and ears to
take in her surroundings. Then she did it again. Advance, then search. She
repeated that process until she was a long ways away from the pack’s
settlement. A group of magical beasts went right by her, but she held her
breath and waited for them to pass.
 “I’m the best at hide-and-seek.”
  None of the other kids in the pack had ever found her, and even the adults
had a hard time tracking her down. Those same skills worked against the
magical beasts.
 Her legs stopped trembling.
  There was no one in that grassland who could find her. Realizing that gave her
confidence.
 “Places with lots of them are no good.”
 She used her eyes and her nose and her ears to select her prey.
  She focused her eyes to fix her gaze far off into the darkness. She sniffed with
her nose to catch the faintest scents traveling on the wind. She strained her
ears to listen for their footsteps and even the sound of their breathing.
 It all made sense to her. She didn’t know why, but it did.
 “That one, please.”
 There was a huge leopard hiding in the grass.
  Leopards were one of the strongest things on the plains, and going after them
was usually too dangerous to be worth it. However, Sara could tell that it was
feeble. That it was weak.
 She slowly approached it from downwind. The closer she got, the stronger the
putrid scent of death grew. She was right.
 The leopard smelled exactly like her mother.
  In that moment, Sara’s concentration completely broke. When she processed
the thought that had just gone through her head, she was struck aghast.
 “N-no, that’s wrong!”
 It wasn’t.
  Her mother’s death and the leopard’s death overlapped in her head, and she
had looked down on both of them as weak.
 “No!!” she cried, completely forgetting where she was and what she was
doing.
 “Grrrrr…”
 Before she knew it, the huge leopard was right in front of her.
 “Ah…”
 Its sharp fangs and gaping maw bore down on Sara.
 “Ahhhh…”
 Realization dawned on her.
 What a weakling.
  It was just before daybreak when she came to her senses, and she was still
standing on the grassland plains. The morning sun’s hues were creeping into the
distant sky, and the leopard lay dead at her feet.
 “Snff…”
 Sara cried.
 Her body was covered in blood, and she let out a quiet sob.
 There wasn’t a single wound on her.
 None of the blood was hers.
 “Wahhhhh…”
 She understood.
 It was so clear to her now.
 There on the grassland, being weak was the greatest sin there was.
  Sara sneakily carried the dead leopard back home. After stowing it in front of
the hut where no one would find it, she quietly snuck into her mother’s bed.
Her mother was still sleeping.
 Sara loved her mother’s warmth.
  She decided to keep it a secret that she was the one who’d killed the leopard.
The pack’s rules forbade someone as young as Sara from going out and hunting,
and she didn’t want her mother to worry about her. However, that wasn’t her
real reason.
 It was because she understood now.
 She knew that being weak was a sin on the grassland.
 The weak were stolen from. The weak were tormented. The weak died.
 “Mom isn’t weak…”
 She was scared of becoming stronger than her mother.
  As long as she stayed weaker, she felt like she could keep wrapping herself up
in her mother’s warmth forever.
 It didn’t take long for her to fall asleep herself.
  From that day forth, Sara began sneaking out and hunting on the plains from
time to time.
  She made sure to only go for small prey so as not to draw attention to herself
and to make sure her mother could dress them. Her brothers stole some of
what she killed, but she didn’t care. She’d gotten to the point where she could
hunt whenever she wanted to.
 Her mother taught her how to dress her kills. Sara was clumsy at first, but she
worked hard to learn the steps. She had little choice. It wasn’t long before her
mother lost the strength to dress even the smallest of game.
  Over time, her mother started smelling more and more strongly of death.
Sara could tell in her bones that her mother didn’t have long left to live.
 “Mom…”
 As her mother lay on the floor, Sara grasped her withered arm.
 “Sara… You’re such a kind girl…,” her mother rasped.
 “Mom, I hate this, please. We’re supposed to be together forever and ever.”
  “Sara… You’re the kindest girl there is. I’m so proud to have given birth to
you.”
 “Snff… Snff…”
 Tears rolled down Sara’s cheeks as she buried her face in her mother’s chest.
 “You’re such a kind, kind girl.”
 “You ate all that meat, but it didn’t make your sickness go away.”
 “It’s fine. I’ve lived a full life. Thank you for everything, Sara.”
 Her mother ran her hand through Sara’s hair.
 Sara stayed motionless and basked in her mother’s warmth. For the next little
while, they simply stayed like that, together.
 Her mother’s breathing gradually grew shallower.
 Eventually, with one final pained gasp, her mother spoke.
 “The meat you brought me was delicious, Sara… Thank you.”
 With that, she breathed her last.
  Sara spent the rest of the night sobbing in her mother’s arms, then buried her
in the plains when the morning came.
 She didn’t tell anyone else where.
 It was a grave just for her mother, and just for her.
  Beta and Lambda station themselves by the side of the training area and wait
for the match to start.
  “Might I ask who you think will win?” asks the dark-skinned elf Lambda. She’s
in charge of training the Shadow Garden’s new recruits.
  Beta narrows her blue eyes and offers Lambda an ambiguous laugh. “I’m
afraid I don’t know enough about Number 711 to say.”
  “She’s been here for half a month. She’s still our weakest member, but in
terms of raw talent, she might well be the best we have.”
 “That’s rare praise, coming from you.”
 “The girl is a prodigy. That said, she has a rebellious streak…”
 “She’s still a child. Once you train her up, I’m sure that won’t be a problem.”
 “Of course, ma’am.”
 “Who do you think is going to win, Lambda?”
  “My knowledge about the black-haired girl is similarly lacking, but…there’s
something different about her magic. I take it she’s the one you brought back
with you?”
  “That’s right. Her name is Akane Nishino…although I’m certain Master
Shadow called her Akane Nishimura.”
 “Then surely she must be Akane Nishimura. If our lord says it, it must be so.”
 “You’re right. Her name must be Akane Nishimura.”
  “Well, Akane Nishimura’s magic is fascinating…but I believe Number 711 will
be the victor.”
 Beta immediately concurs. “I agree.”
  Over in the middle, Akane and Number 711 are squaring off with their swords
at the ready. The moment Lambda gives the signal, the battle will begin.
  Suddenly, the door to the training area swings open to reveal a petite elf girl
wearing a tattered lab coat. She rubs her sleepy eyes as she comes Beta and
Lambda’s way.
 “What do you want, Eta?” Beta asks with a hint of wariness in her voice.
   The short elf is Eta, the seventh member of the Seven Shadows. Her main job
is researching Shadow Wisdom.
  “I came…to check in on the test subject,” Eta says sleepily. She has terrible
bed head; her long dark hair is sticking out in every direction.
 “You mean Akane Nishimura? Did you get permission from Alpha?”
 Eta averts her gaze. “…Of course.”
  “I’m going to confirm that with Alpha once we’re done here. I don’t want you
laying one finger on her until I do.”
 “You don’t need to do that. You’d just be wasting your time.”
 “Not one finger, you hear me?” Beta says, repeating herself to stress the
point.
 “Hmph,” Eta pouts. “We need to be researching her irregular magic as fast as
we can.”
  “May I begin the fight?” Lambda asks them. Beta and Eta nod. “Then you may
commence!”
 On Lambda’s signal, Akane and Number 711 swing their swords.
 The hallway outside is made of stone, with gorgeous masonry, a tall, arched
ceiling, and gentle indirect lighting. It’s exactly the kind of hallway you’d expect
to see in a fantastical foreign world, Akane muses, but if that’s the case, then
what was up with that room she first woke up in? For whatever reason, it
reminded her of modern-day Japan, as if Japanese technology had been re-
created there in the fantasy world.
  “Did something catching your eye, Number 712?” Beta asks as she walks in
front.
  “No, I was thinking about how different everything is here. I guess it really is
another world.”
  “Well, that’s good. That last room was infirmary. If getting hurt, will take you
there. This here is the can.”
  “You mean the bathroom?”
  “Is the can.”
  “Okay, sure, the can.”
  Beta seems oddly taken with the turn of phrase.
   When Akane peeks inside, she finds a private room with big tiles on the floor.
It’s got a big mirror, a sink, and surprisingly, a flush toilet.
  “You have flush toilets here?” Akane asks.
  “Is newest technology,” Beta says proudly.
  Akane’s suspicions deepen. That toilet wouldn’t look a smidge out of place in
any bathroom in Japan.
  “Who built it?”
  “Building it were Eta.”
  “Eta?”
  “The short white-coat elf. Was watching fight with me.”
  “Ah, her.”
  Akane does remember seeing an elf wearing a lab coat come in right before
the fight started.
  “But original knowledge not coming from Eta. Is from someone else.”
  “Who?”
  Beta gives her a meaningful smile. “Is secret.”
  There’s that “someone” again.
 That someone clearly brought Japanese technology into this world. However,
Akane still can’t be certain it’s the person she’s thinking of yet.
  “This here is cafeteria.”
   Next, Beta brings her to a wide, open atrium. Mealtime is over, and the space
is deserted, but it’s large enough to comfortably seat a few hundred people at
once.
  “Wow…”
  Akane finds herself awed at the huge space and the decorations on its walls
and ceiling.
  “Are hungry?”
  “A little bit, yeah…”
  “I’ll go grabbing something.”
  Beta shows Akane to a seat, then goes off to get some food.
  The table Akane’s sitting at and its chairs are all of incredibly high quality. The
table is a single glossy slab over thirty feet long, and the chairs are intricately
engraved and pleasant to sit in.
  Wait—isn’t this design the same as that famous interior designer’s…?
  “The similarities are striking.”
  The renowned chairs Akane is familiar with don’t have that engraving, but the
shape is a perfect match.
  Armed with this newfound knowledge, she turns a skeptical eye to the rest of
the room’s design. Could there be something in the lighting? In the plates?
Everywhere she looks, she searches for his shadow.
  “I have to stop.”
  She’s taking in only the information that suits her hypothesis. She forces
herself to calm down. There’s only so many ways to build furniture for person-
shaped beings, and there’s a good chance the similarities are just
happenstance.
 “What am you looking around for?”
 “Oh, it’s all just so novel, I couldn’t help myself.”
  When Akane looks back, she discovers that Beta has returned and is sitting in
the seat across from her. An elf and a therianthrope who appear to be her
subordinates lay food down in front of them.
 “Wh-what’s going on?” Akane stammers.
 “What is matter?”
 Everything in the meal she’s just been given is unmistakably Japanese food.
 “Why do you have Japanese food here?”
 “I eating same food back in Japan.”
 “O-oh, of course.”
  That’s right. Beta lived in Japan under the name Natsume for a while. It makes
perfect sense that she would try to re-create the cuisine she found there. But at
the same time…
 “There’s miso… And even soy sauce…”
  Is she implying she managed to reproduce Japan’s seasonings so quickly?
Akane supposes there’s a chance that Beta simply brought them back from
Japan with her.
 “This is tasty.”
 The miso soup tastes of fancy skipjack dashi.
 “I’m glad you liking it.”
  Beta deftly handles her chopsticks as she eats her food. Akane quickly cleans
her plate as well so as not to draw suspicion.
 “Meal was tasty.”
 As they finish eating and sip on some post-meal coffee, a familiar-looking girl
pops up behind Beta.
  “I got permission from Alpha.”
  As Akane recalls, the girl’s name is Eta. She’s got sleepy eyes and a white lab
coat, and she approaches Beta and starts talking in this world’s language.
  “Did you reeeally, now?”
  Beta gives Eta a dubious look, and Eta hands her a document.
  “Well, this is certainly a permission letter from Alpha. It says you’re to be given
full authority over matters relating to Akane Nishimura.”
  Akane’s ears twitch when she hears the name Akane Nishimura.
  “And there you have it.”
  Eta dips under the table and swiftly moves to retrieve Akane.
  “Hold it right there! That’s certainly what the letter says, but there’s two
things I find suspicious about it.”
  Beta grabs Eta by the collar, and Eta’s gaze darts around. “L-like what?”
  “Even if Alpha did sign off on something like this, there’s no way she’d give
you unilateral authority. I’m absolutely positive she would assign someone to
supervise you.”
  “Uh… This just goes to show how much trust I’ve built with her through my
deeds and actions.”
  “Then there’s the other thing. The handwriting doesn’t have any flow to it. It’s
almost as though somebody wrote this by painstakingly copying something
Alpha actually wrote.”
  “I—I have no idea what you’re talking about…”
  Eta breaks out into a cold sweat.
  “Eta, we both know you forged this.”
  Beta glares at Eta, and Eta gives her a twitchy smile.
  “I hope you’re ready to face the consequences. I’m going straight to Alpha,
and—”
 “Oh, forget this,” Eta says, coldly cutting Beta off. “It’s time I used force.”
 The next thing Akane knows, her field of vision is doing a one-eighty.
 “Wha—? AHHHHHHHHHHHH?!”
  There’s black slime binding her and hanging her upside down in the air. She
struggles with all her might, but the slime is tough and doesn’t so much as
budge.
 Akane tries to summon her magic, but it feels as though it’s being sucked
away.
 “What do you think you’re doing, Eta?!”
 Beta and her subordinates are bound in the exact same manner.
  “Resorting to force. Trying to reason with laypeople is a waste of time,” Eta
says bluntly as she begins making off with Akane’s inverted body.
 “Get back here this instant!!”
  Beta tears off the slime, then manifests a jet-black sword and surges toward
Eta.
 “Hmph.”
 Eta narrows her eyes a little and manipulates her slime into the shape of a
massive shield.
 Beta’s sword and Eta’s shield clash.
 A low, dull crack reverberates.
 “Wh-what’s the deal with this shield?!” Beta cries.
  Beta’s sword has failed to inflict so much as a scratch on it. To the contrary,
the shield is sucking the sword in.
 Beta hurriedly wrenches her blade free and backs off.
 “It’s my new tech. It reacts to magic by absorbing it,” says Eta.
  “Why is this the first I’m hearing about this?! You’re supposed to report all
useful inventions immediately!”
  When a sword and a shield are both strengthened with magic, the sword wins
out. It’s a basic matter of area. For a sword, all you have to strengthen is the
edge, whereas with a shield you have to strengthen its entire surface.
Empowering a shield takes over twice as much mana as empowering a sword to
the same degree. That’s why there are so few dark knights who even carry
shields.
  “Uh… I’ve haven’t put it through safety testing yet, so I figured I’d write my
report afterward.”
 “You were never planning on doing that testing, were you?!”
  All through their conversation, Beta continues throwing shockingly elegant
strikes at Eta. Akane is bowled over. She can barely even follow Beta’s
movements.
 “Sh-she’s incredible…”
  Now Akane understands why people in this organization hold someone as
sketchy as Beta in such high respect. Even Number 711’s moves seem
downright infantile in comparison to hers.
 “Stop getting in my way.”
  Her opponent, Eta, possesses unimaginable talent as well. She manipulates
her slime freely, forming it into shields and swords and spears to intercept
Beta’s blows with. Her moves aren’t exactly those of a martial artist, but they’re
the moves of someone who’s honed their technique in a whole different way.
Her fine control over magic and her ability to hold multiple thoughts in parallel
are next-level.
  The two combatants seem just about evenly matched…but it’s hard to tell,
considering that neither of them is using their full strength yet. They’re
straddling the razor’s edge of making sure not to hurt each other. Also, Akane’s
gut is telling her they both have trump cards they’re keeping hidden.
 “Enough already!”
 “Hrgh…”
 Beta’s attack sends Eta flying.
  As Eta maneuvers her shield into position to protect herself, she deftly
manipulates her slime in midair to catch herself. However, she nonetheless
breaks into a grimace. Beta’s subordinates have just moved in with weapons in
hand to surround her.
 “Really, now?” Eta says.
 “It’s time for you to face the music,” Beta announces triumphantly.
  “Forgive us for our impertinence, Eta, ma’am, but we’re going to be detaining
you now.”
 Nu, Lambda, Chi, Omega, and several of the Numbers are all gathered there.
 That’s enough to darken even Eta’s expression. “Hmph.”
  Beta inches toward her and lays on the pressure. “If you throw down your
weapons, surrender, and offer us a sincere apology, I’m prepared to lighten your
punishment.”
 “I heard a big commotion. What’s going on in here?”
 Then a beautiful girl with hair the color of a still lake shows up.
 It’s Epsilon the Faithful, fifth member of the Seven Shadows.
  “Two of the Seven Shadows and a bunch of extra backup,” Eta mutters. “This
could be bad.”
   Several people frown at having been referred to as just “extra backup,” and
it’s hard to blame them. Everyone there, without exception, is an absolute
powerhouse. They’ve all assumed combat stances with their weapons at the
ready and their mana primed, so it’s easy to tell just how strong they are. To
Akane’s great shock, every last one of them is far stronger than she is. These are
people with pride in their skills and confidence in their training. It’s no wonder
they take umbrage at being reduced to a mere afterthought.
  Despite their displeasure, though, not a single one of them speaks up in
protest. They all know that at the end of the day, it’s true.
 “Perfect timing, Epsilon. Come help us put this idiot in her place.”
 “Fine. But you owe me one, Beta.”
  The two of them are quick to reach an understanding. Epsilon is well aware
that whatever’s going on, it’s almost certainly Eta’s fault.
   Beta and Epsilon pincer Eta from the sides, and the extra backup covers their
flanks.
 “All right, all right. I get it.” Eta raises her hands in defeat.
  “You’re surrendering?” Beta asks. Nobody there is stupid enough to let their
guard down. Eta still hasn’t relinquished her weapons, and they know her too
well to believe she’d really give up that easily.
   Eta’s next words are all but unthinkable, coming from someone who’s
completely surrounded and has her hands in the air. “To all the fine people
trying to persecute me, you get one warning. Stand down now, or you’ll regret
it.”
  “Do you seriously think I’m going to surrender?” Epsilon asks Eta, approaching
her with extreme caution.
 “Yeah. Is no one backing down?”
  Eta looks around to check. Everyone’s on high alert, but none of them are
giving up.
 “I see. Looks like negotiations have failed,” says Eta.
 “Negotiations have failed, all right,” Beta agrees. “All forces, secure Eta by any
means necessary!”
 Everyone bursts into action at once.
 A moment later, everything melts.
 “What—?!”
  The girls’ magic goes haywire, and their clothes and weapons begin to
dissolve.
 “What the hell’s going onnnnnnnnnnn?!”
  Beta narrowly manages to keep her equipment intact, but the extra backup is
left half-naked and hardly in any state to continue fighting.
 “This is the Field That Disrupts Magic (Except Mine) that I made using Shadow
Wisdom jamming waves,” Eta explains.
 “This is the exact kind of thing you’re supposed to report once you invent it!!”
Beta hollers.
 “The setup conditions are strict, so it can only be used in limited circumstances
—”
  “Oh, forget it!! It’s up to the two of us to deal with her, Epsilon!” Beta calls
over to her trusty teammate.
  However, Epsilon is nowhere to be seen. All that remains of her is a hastily
jotted note sitting on the table.
  “I just remembered I have an important mission to get to, so I have to head
out. —Epsilon”
 “E-EPSILOOOOOOOOOOON!!” Beta howls.
 “You’re wide open.”
  Beta’s outburst leaves her vulnerable, and when Eta takes that opportunity to
strike, Beta passes out and abruptly keels over.
 With that, Eta carts Akane away.
 It smells of trees.
  As the leaf-filtered sunlight streams in through the window, Alpha looks up
from the documents she’s organizing. She stands up and heads over to the
windowsill. There are trees next to the road outside, with the buildings of the
capital spread out beyond them.
  Fall is coming to an end, and the wind carries with it the scent of the trees all
decked out in their resplendent autumn hues.
 Back then, that mellow, woody aroma was their constant companion.
 Alpha closes her eyes and reminisces about the past.
 She thinks back to when they all used to live together—back to that nostalgic
smell.
  Back when the Shadow Garden was just Shadow and Alpha, Alpha lived in the
forest, spending her days alone in the cabin he built for her.
  The cabin always smelled of wood. He chopped down trees and constructed
the cabin from the ground up. That was how Alpha learned about the “two-by-
four” method of building.
 At first, all she could do was watch him, but eventually she started helping
out, and she put nearly all the finishing touches on by herself. The two of them
built it together, and for her, the cabin was full of memories. It was a simple
building, and honestly kind of shabby, but Alpha loved that cabin and its
wooden smell with all her heart.
  He was only able to come visit her during the night, and every day, Alpha
waited in excitement for night to fall. During the daytime, she practiced her
magic and her swordplay and went out to harvest edible plants and hunt small
animals with snares. At night, he would bring bread and meat, and she would
cook it. Then, while they shared a dinner for two, he would regale her with all
sorts of stories.
  “You know, steam has the power to move massive pieces of metal,” he said
one day while he was eating the stew Alpha made. Alpha took a good, long look
at the steam rising from her bowl.
  She found it hard to imagine something so weak harboring such hidden
strength.
  However, every bit of knowledge he’d shared with her previously, no matter
how outlandish, had all turned out to be true. Alpha had been incredulous
when he insisted the world was a sphere rather than flat and when he said the
world revolved around the sun rather than the other way around, but in the
end, he was right about it all. Because of that, Alpha was sure that steam must
have had amazing power just hiding away.
 “How do you draw that power out?” she asked Shadow.
  As Alpha gobbled up her stew, he sank into silence for a bit. He always took
great care in figuring out which things he was and wasn’t supposed to share.
  “When you heat up water, it becomes steam. That creates a massive source
of power. Here’s a hint: It has to do with, uh…pistons and turbines, I think.”
 His smile was laden with significance.
 He never told her everything. He always gave her hints and made her figure
out the rest for herself.
 “That’s not enough to tell me anything,” Alpha says.
   That one was a lot harder than usual. She was planning on getting started
researching steam tomorrow, but it would take her too long to find the answer
if that was all she had to work off.
 “If you take that steam power and apply it, you can move vast metal cars and
ships made of iron.”
  What he gave her next wasn’t a hint, though, but rather some examples of
use cases.
  If steam could really do that, then that would be huge. And if he said it could,
then it had to be true.
  “In other words, you’re saying that mastering steam power is worth the time
investment it will take…”
  All he did was give her another cryptic smile. He always wanted her to work
for it. That was the way he passed on his wisdom and trained her ability to think
and solve problems. That had developed her talents by leaps and bounds, and
she had several times more knowledge than back when she was in her nation’s
gifted education program.
 The ability to fight was a powerful skill. However, knowledge was even more
powerful still.
  Alpha always thought of herself as a smart child. None of the other kids in her
hometown could keep up with her. Yet here he was, the same age as her yet so
much wiser. No matter how good you were, there was always somebody
better.
 Alpha looked over and gazed at him with reverence.
 “Huh? What’s up?” he asked.
 “…Don’t worry about it.”
  After they ate their stew, Alpha had him give her some coaching on her
swordsmanship and magic, then saw him off right before the sun rose.
 Every day, she kept on waving until he was fully out of sight.
 For her, those days were bliss.
 The season’s passing marked the end of their time alone together. That was
when Beta, a silver-haired girl with a mole under her eye, joined their ranks.
  Beta was shy, and she was so scared of Shadow that she always hid herself
behind Alpha. Alpha had known Beta and vice versa since their time in the
homeland. They hadn’t been friends or anything, and their interactions had
been limited to exchanging pleasantries at social events, but having the same
circumstances thrust upon them did wonders to break the ice.
 It wasn’t long after that that Gamma and Delta joined, and the lonesome,
empty cabin became rather bustling.
 Using the skills he taught them, the girls expanded the cabin into a proper
house. It was a happy house, one that always smelled of the woods.
  Then, one day, he wrapped up Delta and Gamma’s lessons early and gathered
everyone together. Delta looked down on Gamma with pride, and Gamma
glared back at her with tears welling in her eyes. It was a commonplace sight
there.
 “I’m stronger!” Delta crowed.
 “I-I’m older than you, you know… And I’ve been here longer… Snff…”
 “Yeah, but you’re still Gamma.”
 “Hey, s-stop it…”
  Delta pushed Gamma down and leaped on her back. That, too, was a
commonplace sight.
 Apparently, sitting on people was how dogs liked to establish hierarchies.
 “All right, all right, break it up,” Alpha said as she separated them.
  Delta did exactly as instructed. For better or for worse, she was loyal to the
pecking order. That was why it bothered her so much that Gamma had more
authority than her despite being weaker. And Gamma, for her part, couldn’t
stand how much of a meathead Delta was. The two of them were constantly at
each other’s throats.
  “There are other strengths than just physical,” Shadow said. “It’s those with
knowledge who end up ruling the world of man.”
 “Boss man?”
 “Master Shadow…”
  Delta and Gamma gazed up at him—Delta in bewilderment, and Gamma
seeking salvation in his words.
 The wind carried with it the smell of the trees.
  “Let me tell you knowledge can make a single gold coin multiply countless
times over. A technique that allows you to manipulate money and control the
world economy…”
  From there, he went on to explain the sensational concepts of banking and
credit creation.
 “Whoa…”
  The cry of amazement that spilled from Alpha’s lips was that of a small child
basking in wonderment. She shuddered at the sheer scale of the concept, and
at how wise he was for thinking of it.
 Behind her, Beta shuddered in fear of Shadow.
 Delta shuddered in her sleep from the cold night air.
 And Gamma shuddered with passion.
 Her eyes had been feeble and gloomy, but now strength returned to them.
 “Master Shadow, I…I’ve found the path I need to walk.”
 All he did was nod.
  That day marked a change in Gamma. She greedily sought his knowledge,
even going so far as to sacrifice sleep so she could study more. Alpha and
Gamma began talking a lot more, and once Beta got involved, the three of them
sketched out their vision for what the organization would eventually become.
 Eventually, Epsilon joined them as well, as did Zeta, and finally Eta.
  Epsilon was self-assured and determined, and she had the skills to back her
confidence up.
 “I’m going to be the best in no time!”
 She started out aggressively competitive, but it didn’t take her long to mellow
out and fit in with the others. She still got competitive with Beta to this day, but
Alpha decided that was fine.
  Zeta was a therianthrope with little in the way of cheer. She didn’t talk much,
and she kept the others at arm’s length. However, Alpha knew Zeta’s history, so
she made sure to give Zeta little pushes and help her build relationships with
the group. It was slow work, but Zeta slowly started opening up. She was still on
bad terms with Delta, but apparently, that was just how therianthropes were.
There were times when all it took them was a single look at someone to know
they were never going to get along.
  Meanwhile, Eta was an oddball from day one. She was constantly doing the
weirdest things and causing problems, but the quality of her inventions more
than made up for it. She had little ability to function on a basic level, but Epsilon
took care of her, Beta and Gamma ended up somehow serving as her test
subjects, and Delta and Zeta would play tag with her. Before the girls knew it,
they’d become a precious family to each other.
  They were happy, there in that house surrounded by the smell of the woods.
  Ever since that day, Alpha’s been running. She’s lived a life too hectic to stop
and smell the trees.
  The sunlight filtering through the leaves casts the room in a gorgeous shade
of red.
  “It’s time, Alpha.”
  She hears a knock on the door, and Gamma comes in.
  “Do you remember? The way we used to talk, surrounded by the smell of
trees?” Alpha asks her.
  “The smell of trees?” Gamma walks over to Alpha’s side and takes a look at
the large roadside trees. When the wind carries in their scent, Gamma inhales
deeply and squints fondly. “I haven’t thought about that in ages.”
  “The dream we talked about back then is becoming a reality. But we aren’t
there yet.”
 “We’re on our way, though.”
 “We’ve chosen a path we believe in, and now we just have to keep running.
We can’t show mercy to anyone who gets in our way. Now, let’s get going.”
 “Right behind you!”
  Alpha’s time alone with him may have dwindled. However, the scent of those
trees will remain within her forevermore.
                                Afterword
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