Alus enters his classroom the next day, and just like yesterday, is showered with rude stares. The chattering voices that could be heard up until he opened the door fall silent. This, however, is only limited to the male student body. The female students have a better awareness over where their priorities should lie. Itâs a striking manifestation of the difference in attitude towards magic between men and women. Either way, this is much better than having to deal with outright harassment. Tesfiaâs eyes are also mixed within the glares, but Alus ignores it. Not having her enmity is already a good harvest.
Alus is hopeful in wishing for the present atmosphere to be nothing more than his imagination. Regardless, he doesnât deviate from his pace. He remains unperturbed by everyoneâs glares and begins studying.
The dayâs lessons mostly consist of classroom work. He, however, isnât interested in the lectures. Furthermore, shifting classrooms at the end of each lesson is tedious. Therefore, he selected his classes in a way that keeps him from transferring rooms as much as possible.
The third lesson, itâs the lesson before lunch, should Alus consider himself fortunate or unfortunate? Definitely unfortunate. Every class so far has been shared with Tesfia and Alice. During them, Tesfia would glance, chira chira , at him. Each time, those glances pierced through the line of students between them.
Alus isnât bothered by the severity of her glances, but he is getting irritated.
âHey!â The teacher unfortunately misunderstands Alusâs reaction to Tesfia for himself. Itâs a very unfortunate connection. His eyes drop down to the register of names as he says, âYou⊠youâre Alus-kun⊠I believe.â Convinced with his conclusion, he points to the liquid crystal display and adds, âWell then, Alus-kun, your answer?â
Lectures related to mamono are conducted by reproducing their grotesque appearance on screens. Alus, having not paid attention since class began, canât even guess the question. At any rate, this class covers the basics of the basics.
This situation isnât a problem for him with his abundance of knowledge. From what Alus can surmise, the lecture revolves around the emergence of mamono and the danger they present. He places a bookmark in his book as he stands and says, âMamono suddenly appeared 100 years ago. Despite the various theories in regards to their origins, mankind has not been able to acquire positive proof for any of them. Weâve only recently become able to deal with the mamono invasion with magic. As a result, the magic military division has been able to strike back against the mamono invasion. The strength of mamono is classified through 8 ranks, F â SS. The SS rank was only confirmed 50 years ago.â
Alus, not knowing the question, assumes his response is enough for beginners and sits down. The teacher, however, is dissatisfied and says, âThatâs insufficient.â The projection on the liquid crystal screen changes to depict several different types of mamono. Included at the end of each picture is a subjugation title.
Alus sighs. Anything more would be too difficult for beginners to comprehendâŠÂ The teacher shouldnât be losing control of the lessonâs progress.
The teacher is no longer instructing students, but is instead focused solely on Alus. Within that teacherâs heart burns a belligerent attitude.
Alus continues in a tone lacking in respect for his teacher.  âThe military dispatches double digit, triple digit, and quadruple digit magicians to subjugate mamono depending on their rank. The standard squad is almost always composed of at least four members. That number is hypothesized to be the minimal amount required for responding to unpredicted situations. When against an A rank mamono, the majority of the squad will consist of double digit magicians. B and C rank mamono are often assigned squads of triple digit magicians with a double digit magician as a commanding officer. Lower ranked mamono are typically dealt with by triple digit magicians.â
His classmates stare at him with rapt attention. Theyâre dumbfounded by his open disrespect.
Only the teacherâs cheeks twitch as he [1] grinds his teeth. âWell, what about the single digits? Please tell us the criteria needed for the deployment of a Singles Magician.â
No one can tell whether the teacher is frantically trying to preserve his dignity as a teacher or is just venting his frustration. Information regarding Singles Magicians is concealed from the public. Not even the military is privileged with such information, much less students. An active Singles Magician, however, wouldnât have any trouble answering.
Tesfia directs a gaze full of curiosity towards Alus. Alice also turns her body towards him in hopes of hearing his reply.
Alus says, âOnly the governor can exert command over Singles Magicians. Furthermore, there are only 9 Singles Magicians and each one is considered to have the ranking of a general. Since subjugation missions are wasted on them, they are treated as a commando unit thatâs allowed to move freely. When they are deployed, itâs for subjugating mamono of S rank or higher. Another discrepancy is that Singles Magicians are tasked with the duty of expanding the countryâs territory.â
The teacherâs gapping mouth prove to Alus that his explanation is faultless. He then directs his gaze to the mamono rankings being displayed on the screen and continues, âIn regards to what you asked earlier, mamono consume mana [2] to increase their strength. As a result, they target humans with mana. Furthermore, mamono also possess the ability to generate their own mana. Cannibalism amongst themselves isnât rare.  Now, as mentioned, mamono are said to be ranked according to 8 stages, but there are special mamono that are given a mutation rank.
âThese mamono are created through the assimilation of two or more mamono. In rare cases, they can also be born through cannibalism and the consumption of humans. Giving these mamono an accurate rank is difficult, therefore, a conjecture is calculated by adding up the ranks of the combined mamono. In other words, an injured mamono will be consumed by another mamono to raise its rank.â
Alus continues, now adding extra detail. âLow ranked mamono continuously partake in cannibalism to absorb mana and change their rank. High ranked mamono are not wary against the protective wall.  [Babel] stands at the center of the seven countries and prevents mamono from invading them by maintaining the protective wall, yet with each passing year, the wall weakensâŠâ
The slip in Alusâs lecture garners the attention of everyone in the classroom. Thatâs probably a secret that not even teacher knows about.
Alus says, âSensei, is this enough?â
ââŠYe- yeah, please have a seat.â
Alus maintains his usual composure as he reseats himself. Astonished voices can be heard leaking out around him.
Babelâs protective wall which prevents a mamono invasion gets weaker every year. The wall enlarges in proportion with the expansion of new territory. The outcome? The protective wall weakens.
Weak mamono have long since been unable to approach the wall. Now with the wall gradually wilting, B rank mamono have been appearing. That report is one with which very few people in the military are privileged. Granted, not a single magician hasnât noticed the increase in their dispatches, but no one talks about it.
Alus only revealed half of that information before stopping. Those unfamiliar with him can brush off his revelation as a joke. As for those familiar with him, Tesfia and Alice pale. Even though Alusâs gaze suggests that leaving the subject alone and letting it work itself out is fine, Tesfia grabs his sleeve once the lesson ends and drags him to the rooftop. Alice too clings to him from behind. SOme of the girls watching let out, Kya kya, fufufu,â as they watch from the side. This development [3] is nothing more than another quarrel between Tesfia and Alus.
Tesfia forces the rooftop door open and drives Alus ahead. She and Alice stand with the door to their backs to keep him from escaping. They are lucky to have gone to the rooftop immediately after class ended because it is empty.
Tesfia says, âWhat did you mean by that earlier?â
Alus isnât frustrated despite being forced to come to the rooftop. Itâs the consequence of him talking too much. âWhat did I mean on what?â
âBabel, earlier you said its protective wall is weakening.â
Alus gets a headache just as he anticipated. His only option now is play dumb. âI said such a thing?â
Tesfia throws back her shoulders as she says, âYou did!!â
Alice says, âAlus-kun, is that true?â
âSupposing it is, it still doesnât have anything to do with you.â
Grief washes over Aliceâs face. Alus tried to blur the conversation, but she was still able to get her answer. Her chestnut colored hair sways with the breeze as she takes a gallant step forward and says, âWe arenât unrelated. Our aim is to become magicians who battle against mamonoâŠâ Sorrow laces her words as she continues, âDonât speak in such lonely way.â
Aliceâs remark towards the unmet and unknown is reckless. She lacks experience, knowledge, and acts with fleeting enthusiasm. But itâs too late to it back.
Alus adopts a harsh tone to make her drop the idea.  âAnd? It isnât a problem either of you can do anything about at the moment.â
âYes, butâŠâ
Tesfia can only clench her teeth. There is nothing she can do now that she knows Alusâs true strength. Regardless, âThatâs wrong!â She isnât recklessly picking another fight, but she does reject his way of thinking.
She points a finger at Alus and adds, âIf thereâs no time, then leisurely spending three years at this academy makes us a disgrace to magicians. Shouldnât we spend every moment polishing our combat skills?â
In other words, sheâs frustrated. What she said wouldnât be a problem if she had the skill to back it up, but sheâs only seen mamono on paper. Her worry is a virtue born from not having her awareness poisoned through an encounter.
Tesfia says, âThatâs why, letâs fight the mamono together.â
âNo way.â Â Alus replies on reflex.
âââ â â â!!ââ
An onlooker might think that Tesfia said something impressive, but that isnât how people ask for favors. Since she chose that method of asking as a way to hide her embarrassment, Alus rejected her without a trace of hesitation.
Confusion fills Tesfiaâs eyes. The term baka~n [4] is the perfect adjective for her.
Alice says, âAlus-kun, please!â
â⊠Thinking about it, the chairman did ask.â
Tesfia jumps at how Aliceâs reply leaves room for consideration while she was flat out rejected. ââ â â â!! Hey! Whyâs Aliceâs different!?â
âYouâre an aristocrat. Donât you know the proper way to ask for favors?â
Tesfiaâs spirit douses at being reprimanded on her etiquette. âUhhâŠâŠâ Her reaction is proof that she doesnât take his words as an insult to her nobility.
âFirst of all, Iâm sacrificing my time for you!â
Tesfia and Alice are the top two students of their grade, but not even that is enough for them to talk back to a Singles Magician.
Aliceâs upturned eyes water as theyâre struck by dazzling sun shine. She says, ââŠBut, the chairman would find outâŠâ Her strangely gentle approach is quite crafty.
ââŠâŠ.â What she said about the chairman is correct. I should have considered the ramifications of this task more before accepting it.
Alus says, âYeah⊠I did say that⊠well, fine.â He adheres to Aliceâs request, and then turns to the red-haired girl whoâs puffing her cheeks. He wants a redo. âNow then, what about you?â
âHa!?â Tesfia corrects her posture a beat late. Her cheeks redden as she glances to the side. She then places a hand upon her chest and takes a breath, â fuu~ â Then, as she exhales, she draws in a leg and lowers her head. âWould you please accept me..?â She then looks up and stares at him with glittering, upturned, eyes.
Alus stares at Tefia without any emotion on his face. ââŠâŠ.â
What a farce. It feels like something terrible is brewing. Tesfia glances to the side and turns red after tens of seconds. Is this wearing her out or is she getting embarrassed.
Tesfiaâs mouth trembles, waru waru , as she hesitates on whether she should say something or not. Yet, upon seeing Alus scratch his cheek while making a wry smile, she decides to hold her tongue.
Her watery eyes arenât enough for Alus to throw her a lifeboat. Instead of keeping his amazement sealed, he says, âYour sense of pride is pathetic.â
Tesfia lifts her head with a, baa , and with little shame, shoots him a death glare.
Alus says, âKiddingâŠâ
âYou, youâreâŠâ
âWell, I said Iâd watch over the two of you, but Iâll be prioritizing my research. There is a limit to how useful youâll be as magicians after all.â
Alusâs unilateral remark is a heartless judgment for the two girls who are aiming to be magicians. Alice forces a smile as she scratches her cheek. âHahaâŠâ
Tesfia is too willful to accept the comment.  âWhatâŠ?â A more accurate statement would be that sheâll never be able to calm down unless she retorts. âWe wonât know that until we try it. Weâll become strong enough to stand alongside you!â A weak question mark drifts at the end of her sentence.
Alus believes heâs grown a bit from his previous experience and wonât be as heavy handed this time. He doesnât hold back, and praises them by saying, âThat isnât what I meant. The two of you are excellent magicians.â
No greater honor could be given to Tesfia. â⊠Of course we are.â Such self-confidant words are normal for the usual Tesfia, but the magician before her stands at the summit as number 1. His criticism shaking her self-worth is only natural.
Alus releases a sigh at Tesfiaâs assertion and adopts firm and clear tone.  Indescribable anxiousness is laced among his words. âThat wasnât what I meant. Being an excellent magician doesnât mean youâll be useful in actual combat. Neither of you have seen a mamono, right?â
Tesfia and Alice have seen mamono in educational materials, but that isnât what Alus means. They canât not understand that and therefore, they both nod.
Their responses are also natural. They apply not just to them, but to all the students in the academy. When looked at from this perspective, all the boy and girls there are nothing more than hatchling magicians.
Defeating one mamono is enough to be considered a full-fledged magician. Actually, just getting to that point is a perilous journey in of itself. Defeating mamono isnât the only duty magicians have. This isnât something I should be thinking about right now.
He says, âSome are unable to wield magic upon actually encountering mamono. Once that happens, functioning as a magician becomes difficult.  Therefore, even if I train you, the increase in your ranking will be limited.â
Tesfia smiles as she says, âHaaâŠÂ I donât care about stuff like that. Besides, we wonât know until we try.â
Alusâs limited experience with comrades is skewed towards one from combat. Therefore, he remains silent to keep from stepping on the same mistake. He also doesnât care for how his words are taken.
Alice, unlike Tesfia, accepts them without a complaint since they come from the number 1 magician.
Magicians like Tesfia with high expectations of themselves are troublesome to deal with while those like Alice who lose before even fighting are useless.
Although this isnât a case about one being better than the other, the former are the ones who tend to die early.
Tesfiaâs arbitrary decision, âLetâs start today!â gives Alus a headache. She deserves first place for that ability. My timeâŠ
Tesfia then says with some hesitation, âAlus, Alice.â She sounds the words out as she repeats them to herself a few times and then says, âTheyâre too similar.â
What is that red haired girl going on about? Alus gets the feeling that he should return to his room as soon as he can, but he canât. The door before him is being blocked. He can only remain silent and hear what Tesfia has to say.
âChange your name. You and Alice are too easy to mix up.â
Tesfiaâs request is unfathomable for people whoâve, at best, only known each other for two days.
Even Alice is taken aback. Her mouth hangs open in shock. She then makes a bitter smile and apologizes with her eyes. Even if I did concede 100 steps, Alice should be who changes her name if one is needed, not me.
There isnât much Alus can say. Actually, rather than mediating the conversation with logic, heâd rather ignore the entire situation.
Tesfia says, âSay something.â
Even just responding is a pointless effort. Theyâve flipped positions.
Tesfia cups her chin as she ponders over the issue.
Iâm getting a bad feeling about thisâŠ
Tesfia says, âThen, how about Al? Since youâre Alus, you can be Al.â
Alus is troubled on how to respond. âEven if you ask howâŠâ No one refers to him through a nickname, although there was someone who did once. He was also called by his number during his time in the military, but his name was used a lot as well.
Alice says, âYeah, I like it. Al-kun sounds a lot friendlier.â
âThen, itâs settled.â
Aliceâs liking it was the deciding factor? Alus canât help but wonder if his presence was even necessary. Regardless, Aliceâs comment ends the topic. He says, âAlice, you donât have to refer to me with honorifics either.â
Aliceâs face relaxes with a smile. None of the stiffness from yesterday is present. âGot it.â
Alus mouths, âAl⊠huh?â in voice so soft, neither Tesfia nor Alice hear it. Only one syllable was removed, but the emotion invoked is indescribable. The feeling is both vexing and uncomfortable, and something heâs never felt before. Is it because weâre the same age?
Whatever the feeling is, he hates it. Still, he doesnât fully reject it. Is it possible to say that the solemnity of being number 1 was lost? Thereâs a good feel to that. Only Tesfia and Alice will be using that name.
Even though a lot of time doesnât seem to have passed, Tesfia spins for the doorknob while saying, âAh, lunch!!â She then looks back and adds, âTha- thanks, Al⊠looks weâll be troubling you.â
Her voice is far from being cheerful, the flow could be improved with practice, and she got embarrassed saying the abbreviation she came up with. Not using it at all would be fineâŠ
Tesfia looks forward again before anyone can comment and rushes through the door.
Alice puts her heels together, and with a face filled with joy, gives Alus a bow. She says, âThank you, I guess weâll see you after school, Al.â
âAlice, whatâs taking you? Youâre going to miss lunch if you donât hurry up!â
Alice follows after the voice with an, âIâm coming!â
Alus is left alone. âWhat a self-centered girl.â Willfully pushing ahead until she achieves her aim.
If one were to have only seen how Tesfia and Alice left, that person would have, guaranteed, misunderstood the situation.
T/N: Fight, Gandire, fight! You can totally translate this series! That said, this chapter ends the first volume. This might be the fastest Iâve ever finish one. Granted, I did only translate two chapters. Also, one or two more chapters and weâll be ahead of the manga! Say, Iâve got a question. Whatâs the name of the technique where you cut out characters from one anime and then paste them onto something else?? Is there a special program for that sort of editing?? It isnât something I plan of picking up any time soon, but Iâve been curious as to its name for a while.
-Gandire Alea
[1] Sex of teacher is never specified. The manga showed a man, so Iâm just going to keep it consistent until told otherwise.
[2] The kanji translates into âmagical power,â but mana fits better here. Iâll be translating it as such unless the situation forces otherwise.
[3] Itâs a katakana onomonopia I canât figure out. It goes, âkyakkyaufufuuâ. ćăăèŠăă°ăăŁăăăŁăŠăăăăȘć±éăȘăźă ăăăăăăčăăŁăąăšăąă«ăčă§ăŻăŸăæăäșăăšæăăăăăšă ăăă