Shuya placed his bag near him and leaned over. He lifted Yoshitoki’s body, which was lying down face first. As Shuya lifted him, blood came pouring out of the chest of his blackened school uniform, which was torn in three places, and splashed onto the floor. His lanky body felt incredibly light. Was it because all that blood had been drained out of him?
Holding Yoshitoki’s light body, Shuya’s head cooled down. More than sadness or fear, it was anger that overwhelmed him.
Yoshitoki… I’m going to avenge your death. I swear to you that I will.
There wasn’t much time. He wiped the blood off Yoshitoki’s face with the palm of his hand, then gently closed his eyes. He laid his body down and clasped his hands on his chest.
Then as he pretended to fumble over picking up his bag, he leaned over to Noriko as close as he could and quickly whispered, “Can you walk?”
That was enough to provoke the camouflaged trio to reach for their rifles, but Shuya managed to get a nod from Noriko. Shuya turned to Sakamochi and the trio, clenched his fist for Noriko to see, and pointed his thumb to the exit to indicate: I’ll be waiting. I’ll be waiting outside.
Shuya didn’t look back at Noriko, but out of the corner of his eye he looked beyond Yoshitoki’s desk, where Shinji Mimura stared ahead, faintly smiling with his arms folded. He might have seen Shuya’s signal. Shuya felt all the more relieved. It was Shinji. If Shinji’s on our side, we can escape, no prob.
But Shinji Mimura may have been more aware of their situation than Shuya was. He might have been saying with that grin, “Well, this may be adios amigos, Shuya.” The thought didn’t occur to Shuya at the time though.
He continued to walk. He took a moment to think before he received his black day pack, and he did the same as he approached Fumiyo Fujiyoshi’s corpse, shutting his eyes. He wanted to remove the knife from her forehead, but decided against it.
When he stepped out of the classroom, he felt a pang of regret, wishing he had removed it for her.
7
The hall was unlit. Only the light from the classroom shone on the floor planks. The windows on the side of the hall were also sealed with sheets of black steel. They provided protection against attacks from rebellious students like Shuya who might decide to escape the game. Of course, as soon as they were off, this area would already be forbidden.
He looked to his right. There was another room, then another, both identical to the room he’d just exited. And then at the end of the dark hall there was what looked like a double-door exit. At the end of the hall there was another room on the left.
Was it the school’s faculty room? The door was open and the lights were on. Shuya looked beyond the door, where a legion of Special Defense Forces soldiers were sitting on steel folding chairs behind a wide desk. Twenty or thirty? No, there were as many soldiers as there were students.
In fact, Shuya was hoping that if his day pack came equipped with a gun (it was possible—along with “knife wound” and “choking,” “gunshot wound” was listed as a cause of death in the Program reports), or if some of the others waiting for him were equipped with guns, then they could use them against Sakamochi and his men before everyone departed, in other words, before the school became a forbidden zone. But this hope was immediately extinguished. The three men with Sakamochi weren’t the only soldiers accompanying him. Of course, that wasn’t at all surprising.
One of the soldiers tilted his head and glanced up from the mug in his hand at Shuya. Like the faces of the trio in the classroom, his also lacked any expression.
Shuya took to his heels and hurried to the exit. He rushed impatiently. So now… now the only thing they could do was unite. But… maybe there were soldiers stationed outside to prevent them from waiting for each other? Still…
Shuya quickly ran through the dark corridor and went through the double doors. He descended several porch stairs.
Under the moon, an empty athletic field the size of three tennis courts spread out beyond the building. There were woods beyond the field. To his left was a small mountain. His field of vision expanded on the right. A pitch-black darkness spread out—the sea. Small points of light twinkled beyond the ocean. It must be the mainland. The Program officially took place within the prefecture of the selected junior high school. Sometimes the location was a mountain surrounded by high-voltage fences, or abandoned prison houses that hadn’t yet been demolished, but for Kagawa Prefecture the Program was usually held on an island. According to the local news reports he’d seen (of course, in each case the location would only be announced after the game was over), every game in Kagawa took place on an island. This time was no exception. Sakamochi didn’t mention the name of the island, but once Shuya checked its shape on the map he might be able to tell. Or maybe a building would reveal the name of the island.
The soft breeze blew in. He could smell the sea. It was cold for a May evening but it wasn’t unbearable. He’d have to be careful when he slept not to tire himself from exposure.
But first…
There was no one. There weren’t any soldiers, but Shuya was disappointed to find none of his classmates there. As Sakamochi had anticipated, everyone was hiding out. Even Hiroki Sugimura wasn’t there. Only the soft breeze mixed in with the smell of the sea came drifting through the athletic field.
Damn it. Shuya grimaced. If we scatter like this, we’ll fall into the government’s trap. It might be all right if you were forming groups with your friends. Sakura Ogawa and Kazuhiko Yamamoto might be meeting somewhere, likewise Kazuo Kiriyama’s gang. But anyone hiding alone would eventually have to confront someone… Who knew what would result from that kind of chaos? Wasn’t chaos essential to the progress of the game?
Well at least I’m going to wait here for the others. First I have to wait for Noriko.
Shuya glanced back at the dark interior of the school building. They were told anyone loitering in the hall would be immediately shot, but the soldiers in the room at the end of the corridor didn’t pay any particular attention to Shuya. They weren’t exactly chatting up a storm. They just sat around, unarmed.
Shuya licked his lips and decided it was best for him to move away from the door. He looked outside again.
That’s when he noticed it.
He didn’t see it last time because he was too preoccupied with the overall view, but this time he saw something that looked like a garbage bag lying at his feet.
Shuya wondered whether it was someone’s day pack, dropped by accident, but then his eyes widened.
It wasn’t a garbage bag, nor was it someone’s day pack. There was hair growing out of one end. Human hair.
It was a human being. Wearing a sailor suit school uniform. The body was in a V-shape, lying on its side, face down. The single pony tail tied with a wide ribbon looked familiar. No wonder. He’d just seen her off only three minutes ago. The stiff body belonged to Female Student No. 14, Mayumi Tendo.
Right beside her lobster-shaped braided hair, a dull, silver, twenty-centimeter stick poked out of the back of her uniform, diagonally, like a transistor radio antenna. There were four tiny flaps resembling a fighter plane’s tail at the end of the stick.
What the… hell was this?
What he should have done was immediately seek cover. Instead Shuya stood there, stunned.
He recalled Sakamochi’s reply to Kiriyama, who asked when the game began: “As soon as you leave here.”