Chapter 6 â The school festival of destruction and rebirth
Part I
And so the day finally arrived.
A Friday late in November, the first day of the longest three-day period in Toyogasakiâs calendar.
The Toyogasaki school festival.
With the opening ceremony in the gymnasium finally out of the way, the various classrooms rang out with the sounds of good business, and the entire compound seemed to be at once consumed with a bustling atmosphere.
Toyogasaki prides itself on its status as an in vogue private institution and its culture of relative liberty, all of which attracts plenty of visitors from the city and other schools to a festival famous for its liveliness.
The pandemonium only ends with the folk dance on the last day.
âHey, Tomoya! Whenâs your screening starting? I canât find it anywhere in the pamphlet.â
âDidnât I tell you I wasnât doing anything this year? Sorry, but Iâve got to go.â
Within the maelstrom of activity I found myself running down the corridors while paying scarce attention to all the commotion around me⊠well, actually breeze-walking in strict accordance with the school rules.
With my eyes swollen red and skin puffy from four daysâ worth of sleepless nights, I wasnât in any condition to enjoy the festival.
I had other things to attend to anyway.
Thereâs someone I absolutely must find by today, talk to by tomorrow and satisfy by the day after⊠only that same person that had me running around the school all morning was nowhere to be found.
Unreachable by phone, unresponsive to my texts, and absent from my classroom.
Itâs as if sheâs disappeared completely.
âOh, Ota-Tomoya? Megumiâs not with you? I havenât seen her at all todayâŠâ
âShe must have escaped when you werenât looking, as usual.â
Just saying, but the person Iâm looking for isnât Katou.1
That aside, Iâve already wasted half a day and have every right to be feeling frustrated and exhausted. Despite wanting to meet her so badly, I still found myself unbelievably calm.
Itâs because I know Iâll definitely meet her when the timeâs right.
I wonât enjoy it when it happens, but Iâll still have to settle things then, once and for all.
Iâm just a little early.
Sheâll come, even if itâs a rerun.
Thereâs no way sheâll miss her baby on stage.
*Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â *Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â *
Quarter past three, the gym.
The building in intermission was buzzing lightly with commotion, but you could sense the pregnant enthusiasm even in the lull.
It was the overbearing expectation of the next item.
âIs this seat taken?â
âYes⊠by you.â
While unable to find a seat at the first performance of the day, I was more fortunate this time around as I spoke softly to the long haired girl in the adjacent seat.
âItâs been a while.â
âIndeed.â
As we conversed, fast-paced preparations began on the set for the imminent performance.
Faithful to the original concept of a cultural festival, all the stage items of the day thus far had featured the pride of their respective cultural clubs. None reeked of the triviality typically found in this kind of self-organized concert.
âItâs really only been two weeks, but it feels like so much longer.â
âIndeed.â
Starting momentarily would be the most highly-anticipated main event, the performance by the Theatre Club.
âSpeaking of whichâŠâ
âHmm?â
âWe watched this together last year as well, huh?â
âHmmâŠI suppose we did.â
Then, as the build-up abruptly concluded, all the lights in the building went out, drawing the attention of the audience towards the stage now basking in the spotlight.
The MC began narrating the start of the performance right on cue.
âLadies and gentlemen, thank you for your patience. The play ăHarmony Rhapsodyă brought to you by the Theatre Club will be commencing shortly. The script of this play was written by Kasumigaoka Utaha, productionâŠâ
You guessed it.
The play which drew such great adulation at its inaugural run during last yearâs festival â even receiving prizes for scriptwriting at certain competitions â also happened to be Utaha-senpaiâs first and only attempt so far at theatrical scriptwriting.
The novelist who wrote this legendary drama in her spare time now sat in the seat next to mine and watched the stage expressionlessly.
*Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â *Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â *
While my anime marathon screening ran for most of the three days at last yearâs festival, there was a brief two-hour pause starting from 3 PM on the first day called at the organizerâs discretion.
I was in this same place together with the same person watching the same drama then.
âWow, I can already feel the tension at the very beginning, just like the last time.â
âIf I recall correctly, the script was so thick and the lines so numerous it brought the president to tears.â
ââŠI donât think that was the only reason they were crying.â
To my considerable misfortune, I had already gotten to experience the terror of working with Utaha-senpai â or perhaps more accurately the author known as Kasumi Utako â in advance of the festival.
Those three hours of rehearsals I had observed at the Theatre Club covered only about 10% of all the scenes in the play, but I will never forget how the devil-scriptwriterâs reserved, yet tempestuous whispers of âcutâ presaged almost thirty re-takes in those five minutes of actual stage time, and eventually forced three club members to flee in desperation.
Utaha-senpai never did anything as pretentious as raising her voice or making the exaggerated gestures of a conceited director.
Adopting a nuanced approach and managing subtle changes in tempo, she relentlessly enforced training until the end product was exactly as she had envisioned it to be.
Utaha-senpai never once apologized for her obsession with detail or her stubbornness, the latter of which inevitably incurred the wrath of the club members. She never once made concessions for bad acting, a cosmetic appreciation of the script, or a clear lack of talent right from the outset; she would only softly, meticulously, venomously and unceasingly grind away like a blade of pure ice.
Those were only amateur actors and high-schoolers, hardly deserving of having their hearts broken repeatedly by the vocabulary of a Best New Author.
âStill, the scriptâs just as fascinating no matter how many times I watch.â
âThat should be attributed to the skill of the actors. You should praise them if youâre going to praise somebody.â
Acting in the play theyâve now had a year-long relationship with, we should definitely commend these maso- I mean, elites for having made it through the hell of training.
At the same time, I would also like to compliment myself for sitting through an additional three hours of listening to the devil-scriptwriterâs complaints after the end of that training.
And perhaps also a certain main heroine for surviving Utaha-senpaiâs roughing on devil mode.2
ââŠAnd so?â
âYes?â
âWasnât there something you wanted to tell me?â
âAhâŠâ
âI trust youâve come to see me with an answer?â
ââŠYes, but right nowâs a littleâŠâ
The excitement in the building was increasing palpably as action erupted. Tensions flared and lines fired rapidly back and forth across the stage.
The play was always good to begin with, but the new and improved product of a yearâs worth of additional refinement had the other members of the audience completely captivated.
To turn away now would be an unforgivable waste of the spectacle unfolding in front of our eyes.
âItâs all right, weâve seen it enough times.â
ââŠReally?â
So why have you been here since the first show?
âBesides, I wonât be able to concentrate until Iâve heard Ethics-kunâs answer.â
âEh?â
Taken aback, I turned to catch Utaha-senpaiâs profile.
Preoccupied with my own affairs, I had completely failed to notice her flushed cheeks, the thin film of sweat on her forehead and her rigidly alert body until now.
Add in the characteristic pointed tapping of her foot3Â and itâs apparent that sheâs obviously nervous about something.
âItâs alright, Iâm prepared. If itâs a death sentence you have for me⊠deliver it swiftly.â
ââŠDeath sentence?â
But I instantly realized that Utaha-senpai was clearly not exaggerating.
Because while senpai had put all her effort into creating those two scenarios, one of them was about to be erased into oblivion.
As a creator, seeing something you created unable to come into being may be as painful as losing as a part of yourself.
âWhich did you choose, Ethics-kun? The original? Or the second?â
ââŠâ
Now sheâs even more agitated than before.
Though I had long since come to terms with the weight of the decision I made, I found myself slowly assaulted by an intense pressure as I began to consider the now-likely possibility of Utaha-senpai reacting more adversely to that decision than I initially anticipated.
âDid you choose Meguri? Or perhapsâŠRuri?â
I certainly hope not, but even though senpaiâs prepared herself to this extent⊠I might still end up wounding her deeply.
Itâs because my decisionâs more gutwrenching than choosing either one of the two â a rejection.
âMy decision is to do a retakeâŠto redo it over again.â
Not a death sentence, but forced labour.
ââŠâ
ââŠâ
Claps and cheers erupted universally across the gym.
The shock from the abruptness of the end of the first act and the immediate expectation of the second conspired to produce an air of almost abnormal tension.
Amid all the excitement, there were only two people in the gym passive and unsmiling.
ââŠWhy?â
âUtaha-senpaiâŠâ
I only heard Utaha-senpaiâs soft whisper after the cacophony from the surrounding seats died down several minutes later.
âWhat was unacceptable? Which parts of the scenarios were bad?â
âThey were godlike. Both.â
And incredibly riveting.
The original was fun, interesting, refreshing â the quality of entertainment was awesome. And Meguri was very cute.
The second was tear-jerking, painful, gut-wrenching â truly an amazing read. Ruri was heartbreaking.
âSo⊠so why?â
âWell, the thing is⊠both are fundamentally unsuited to being made into games.â
3Interesting aside for Western readers: The expression for tapping oneâs foot in Japanese is âèȧäčæșăăâ which translated literally is something like âshaking your money awayâ. An Oriental superstition.
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