âHey, the estimated budget sheet is nowhere to be found. I canât ask for permission without it.â
âUmmmâŠâ
After Big Sisâ declaration, the student council office grew a bit more noisy compared to before. Todoroki-senpai, still not showing any desire to actually work, slowly pushed up his body from the desk. Hanawa-senpai looked around his close vicinity and on the PC, but this estimated budget sheet was nowhere to be found.
âHmmâŠmaybe it still hasnât reached us? The culture festival execution committee might still have it?â
âOh yeah, we didnât get many reports from them compared to last year.â
âWeirdâŠIt doesnât seem like something that would take so long.â
ââŠHuh.â
A conversation bloomed with Yuuki-senpai and Hanawa-senpai as the center. Listening to this, Big Sis let out a bothered sigh. Leaving her aside, when I see them interact like this, I really canât help but see them as a hottie squad, and nothing more valuable. We even have one sleepy hottie here.
âWataru, go and grab it.â
âWha?â
What? Did she just throw a bone at me? I turned towards the place she looked at as she raised her chin. Iâm not a dog, the hell are you on about. Have you finally gone mad? Did the steamed buns take over your brain?
âWhy are you looking at me like a shocked chicken? Iâm telling you to head to the culture festival committee and get the data weâre lacking. In particular, the one I just mentioned.â
âAh, yeah.â
âHere, your armband. Theyâll think of you as a suspicious intruder otherwise.â
âI still am a student here, you know.â
A crude treatmentâthat is my daily life. No matter how much I get pushed and sent around, I canât complain. Once sheâs home, Big Sis wonât work no matter what. If I just show the bare minimum like I am, it makes me feel like a tsundere. In a way, itâs brainwashingâŠThat damn Big Sis, sheâs trying to raise me as a corporate slave with my life on the line.
After putting the student council armband on my arm, I headed to the temporary office of the culture festival execution committee. What if they say something like âThat guy was part of the student council?â. If I just say my name and state that âI am a pet dog of the student councilâ, everything should be fine, right? Though, I donât know how I should feel about getting the data. Itâs basically asking for the results of unfinished work. Oh yeah, Sasaki and Natsukawa are in there as wellâŠAhh, what a pain. I arrived in front of the door, and took a deep breath.
ââExcuse me.â
Entering inside, the attention of all the students gathered on me in an instant. Leaving aside the first-year students, I hesitated to walk further inside a bit, since there were other seniors present.
âEhâŠW-Wataru?â
âSajouâŠ?â
The first two people to speak up were Natsukawa and Sasaki after all. Leaving the guy aside, Iâm happy that Natsukawa actually reacted at all. But, they seem to be confused as to why Iâm here. Let me see, are they actually doing their workâŠEhh? Why do they have such a mountain of files in front of them? They sure have a lot of responsibility despite being first yearsâŠ
When I checked in during summer break, they didnât seem nearly as busyâŠWell, it was enough that Sasaki had to take some more work with him, I guessâŠBut, is it that much every year? Yuuki-senpai said it pretty much is, soâŠI guess they are just doing their part. At that moment, the female senior sitting at the long table next to the blackboard called out to me.
âUmâŠIâm sorry?â
âAh, hello. I came here from the student council, my name is Sajou. Are you the execution committee president Hasegawa-senpai?â
âY-Yes, thatâs me, butâŠSajouâŠare you actuallyââ
âAh, yes, I am the vice council president Kaedeâs younger brother.â
ââŠI see. So, how can I help you?â
She seemed gentle-mannered, wearing silver-rimmed glasses, and had her hair in two-sided braids. From my first impression, she seemed quite diligent of a senior. I thought she was a good person, but the fact that she showed caution when Big Sis was brought up had me wondering. Hey now, canât you make things worse than they already are?
âWellâŠcould I have a moment with you?â I asked.
ââŠOkay.â
What Iâm trying to do here is to simply collect something. Not being stared at for too long by Natsukawa is a personal preference of mine, but what Iâm about to be discussing with her isnât something everybody should hear. As long as I tell the representative, it should be fine. Donât care about Sasaki either. While feeling both their strong gazes, I took Hasegawa-senpai with me, out to the hallway.
After walking a bit, I stopped, and turned around towards her. WeirdâŠEver since she brought up Big Sis, her gaze seemed a lot sharper. Just what did you do, Big SisâŠBut, this isnât the time to worry about that, so I immediately got into the main topic.
âIâve come here to talk about the data planned for you to hand in to the student council. Iâm sorry for the itemisation, but there are several things we would requestâŠWithout such, the work from the student council will be delayed as well. Is that possible?â
ââŠâŠâ
It was a crude explanation, but it should have gone through despite that. On top of that, I handed her a small memo I received from Yuuki-senpai. Looking down on that, more and more wrinkles showed up on Hasegawa-senpaiâs faceâŠAh, I have a really bad feeling about this.
ââŠHold on a second.â
Hasegawa-senpai temporarily returned to the room, telling the students inside something with quite the loud voice, which caused a lot of noise. They seemed to bring something to her, which presumably was the data I asked for. Or, rather than dataâŠthey were documents? Judging from what Yuuki-senpai said, this should be simple data, and not on paper, butâŠI guess not? After being forced to wait for a solid ten minutes, Senpai came back to greet me.
âIâm sorryâŠthis is about all we haveâŠâ
âEhâŠ?â
Being handed the bundle of paper, I let out a baffled voice. I could tell they were proper documents, but that wasnât the problem.
âUmâŠWhat? Are all of theseâŠhandwritten?â
ââŠâŠâ
This is far too analogue if you ask me. Would you actually write documents by hand in todayâs time? Met with this surreal reality, I couldnât not ask. In return, Hasegawa-senpai awkwardly averted her gaze. I thought so, she clearly has a high sense of responsibility on top of being diligent. She doesnât seem like the type of person who canât do her work. Rather, I found it hard to believe she would rely on writing documents by hand.
There, the sense of discomfort from back when I saw Sasaki working in the classroom came flashing back to me. They had large mountains of files and documents next to me. The other committee members werenât an exception either. I could hear the sounds of their pens running across the paper. Only a few people in the back were actually touching the computers. Now hold on a second.
âUmâŠSenpai? I donât mean to waste anybodyâs time here, butâŠare you writing all your documents by hand?â
I originally didnât plan to ask that question. I may have experience at helping the student council and public morals committee, but most of the time we only did a few documents by hand, and then moved on with a computer to put it all into actual data. As for the culture festival execution committeeâŠthey got a lot of handwritten documents from outsiders, right? I believe that many of the documents Iâm carrying right now might be related to that, butâŠ
ââŠâŠâ
âUuuumâŠâ
Hasegawa-senpai was clearly feeling awkward, as she went silent. Itâs like sheâs affirming my suspicion without even answering. Eh, what is this about? Why? Do you not have any students who can use the computers? Or do you not have enough computers? But, this school should be pretty rich with enough money at their disposal. Or, are there other circumstances not allowing them toâŠ? Ehhh? Either way, I should probably take these documents back. Not like me analyzing this situation would do anybody any good. Not like itâs my job either.
âFor now, Iâll take these documents with me, okay?â
âAh, w-wait!â
âYesh!?â
Right as I wanted to make my way back to the student council office, my arm was grabbed. It was quite the forceful hold, which scared me. I almost dropped all of the documents in my hands. I looked back at Senpai, who gave me a terrified expression.
ââŠYouâre going to tell them, right?â
âWellâŠI have to. Youâre late with the results after all.â
ââŠI seeâŠâ
I knew I must have sounded harsh, but this wasnât anything I should hesitate with. If I donât take this seriously, Big Sis will beat me to a pulp. Itâs me or you here. I know I might sound cheeky as a mere junior and pet dog of the student council, but I didnât feel like becoming an ally of the culture festival execution committee just because Natsukawa was there. Seemingly hurt, Hasegawa-senpai let go of my arm. I felt like I was some kind of debt collector. I know that it canât be helped sometimes, so itâs not like I was completely cold towards this situation.
ââŠâŠâ
âŠJust to make sure, I looked inside the classroom again. Immediately after, I felt a sensation of âSomething is bad hereâ. If this was an actual big problem, I should confirm it on top of getting the documents, or Big Sis would give me steamed bun punishmentâŠWhat the hell even is that? I explained the circumstances to Hasegawa-senpai, and entered the room. After looking at everybody present, I went to talk to the two people I know, attempting to gather some kind of intel. The female senior next to them gave me a dubious gaze, but I ignored that.
âYo, Sasaki, Natsukawa.â
âSajou, when did you join the student council?â
âRemember that the gorilla is the vice president? Sheâs sending me around again.â
âG-Gorilla?â
ââŠWataru, are you talking about your older sister?â
âEh.â
Natsukawa explained it to Sasaki, and gave me a sharp gaze. Oh crap, sheâs angry. I was careless to insult Big Sis like that, at least with Natsukawa in front of me. Seems like sheâs not awkward with me at allâŠTo think Big Sis would make Natsukawa her ally.
âAh, wellâŠyeah, her. Iâm helping Big Sis.â
âO-OhhâŠâ Sasaki gave a somewhat confused reaction.
Gotta get back on track, I didnât come here for some idle talk.
âCould you let me take a look at your documents?â
âEhâŠ? But, this isnât something an unrelated person shouldâŠâ
âIâm a representative of the student council, so Iâm very much related, remember?â
âAhâŠâ
I picked up some two documents they had in their hands. One said âClass topic listâ. Must be the attractions of all classes gathered into a list. The other document seemed to be the list of outsiders participating. Painfully enough, it was all handwritten as well.
ââŠDid you not talk about doing this with a computer?â
âComputer? Eh, I thought youâd do this by hand.â
ââŠâŠâŠâ
The way Sasaki said thatâŠwas it all handwritten from the very beginning? But, why? It looks like the third-years are trying to pull them along with the computers, and just because one person struggled didnât mean that everybody else had to proceed by writing everything with their hands. This is high school, you know? Not middle schoolâŠNot to mention that this technically counts as an elite high school with a lot of sponsors.
ââŠWataruâŠ?â
âAh, noâŠâ
My doubts must have shown on my face, because Natsukawa gave me a worried gaze. So cuteâŠWait, now is not the time to be entranced. It pains me to say it, but I donât have any time to talk with Natsukawa. Quickly returning to the student council office was probably my best bet here.
*
Upon entering the student council office, Big Sis and Hanawa-senpai stopped me with their hands, like they had been waiting for me. Just as I anticipated, they showed dubious gazes as they ran their eyes along the documents. Big Sis looked at me like an idiot who canât do this work properly, so I explained myself.
ââThatâs what happened. I canât say that the committee was making much noteworthy progress.â
ââŠThatâsâŠâ
ââŠâŠâ
I only brought about half of all the documents we needed back with me, which led to Big Sisâ mood dropping drastically. No, it hasnât droppedâŠitâs like I poured oil into a fire. I can feel the waves of pressure coming from her. I need to give her steamed buns to save my lifeâŠ!
ââOdd.â
ââŠRight.â
âEhâŠodd?â
It seemed like Yuuki-senpai couldnât fully accept my words. Same goes for Hanawa-senpai. Yuuki-senpaiâs usual smile had disappeared, as they both were lost in thought. They both turned into the cool-type hotties now? Should I join?
âIf that is true, then why is the committee not reporting this to us? Leaving aside the actual work, any kind of work environment involves the student council, and thatâs our condition.â
âWhat if they are not actually in such a stressful situation?â
âProbably not? If that was the case, they wouldnât show such a pathetic sight to their juniors.â
âPhewâŠHarsh.â
Kai-senpai apparently had his own thoughts, but Yuuki-senpai immediately denied that. Todoroki-senpai threw in a comment as well, showing a bitter smile. Nobody got angry at him for that. This most likely was a daily occurrence for the student council. If this was me, I probably would have kicked that guy.
ââProbably a problem of capacity. Thatâs what they get.â
âBig Sis.â
âWataru, thatâs enough. You can go home now, weâll take care of the rest.â
âEh?â
Eh, are you sure? In the middle of this trouble, Iâm allowed to go home just like this? Woah, I feel like Iâm working at a white company for once. Is this what itâs like to go on time during a busy period? Thatâs no joke. Whatâs even worse is that Iâm not even an actual member of the student council. This wasnât white at all, theyâre forcing an outsider to work. I decided to abide and head home, when Yuuki-senpai put his hand on my shoulder.
âWait, Kaede. Why donât you have Wataru help us as well?â
âHuh? Why? Heâs an outsider.â
Says the person who kept pushing more and more work on said outsider? I donât like being buried with work, sure, but that way of phrasing it didnât sit right with me either. Go on, Yuuki-senpai, tell her.
âItâs way too late to say thatâŠJudging from what Wataru said, he has acquaintances in the execution committee. We need these kinds of connections. We are too distanced from the average student.â
âIâm saying that I donât want him to get wrapped up in something he has no connection with.â
âHeâs your younger brother, right? Whereâs the proof that the younger brother of Sajou Kaede will be able to stay out of this forever?â
That sounded quite profound, alright. At the very least, he didnât seem like he wanted to hide it from me. Big Sis clearly seemed disgruntled about thatâŠI have a very bad feeling about this. Almost like Iâm about to be wrapped up in something big.
âUmâŠKai-senpai, what are they talking aboutâŠ?â
I carefully asked Kai-senpai. With things like these, hitting the closest person to you is always the best idea. Him being close in terms of age is a big factor as well, and he didnât seem as passionate about the student council itself.
ââŠUntil November last year, it was a general role that the student leadership management was composed of students supported by the schoolâBasically, students of the West side .â
âAhhâŠSo?â
âTrouble and quarrels were a constant occurrence. In the midst of that, a certain person coincidentally from the East side aggressively rose to power, pulling the people togetherââ
âTakuto. Annoying. Shut up.â
ââŠYes. Iâm sorry.â
ââŠâŠâ
Big Sisâ voice immediately silenced Kai-senpai. You donât need to be so strict towards himâŠKai-senpai is something like my family already. What a waste of hotties here. Kai-senpai prefers blunt sadistic tendencies more than anythingâŠAhh, what a waste of a hottie with glasses.
Big Sis said that she had no plans of âinvolvingâ me. Basically, the reason she tried to suddenly push me away from this situation is because this entire problem could revolve around the âEast and Westâ conflict. Judging from what I heard just now, the majority of last yearâs culture festival execution committee was composed of students from the West. But, what does that have to do with the current problem?
âKaede. I donât plan on getting Wataru involved, you have to believe me.â
ââŠâŠHeâs not related. A first-year who doesnât know anything is simply helping out. If something happensâHayato, I will not follow your lead.â
ââŠYeah, thatâs fine.â
âŠYep, thatâs totally alright withâWait hold on. What about my personal opinion? As of right now, I just helped out because itâs not that big of a deal, butâŠWait, arenât I already being wrapped up in something messy?
ââYou two. We should look into this as quickly as possible, and figure out the differences compared to last year.â
âYeah, youâre right. We need to begin right away. Wataru, thatâs enough for today. If we have more miscellaneous work, Iâll call you over. Iâll pay you back for this another time.â
âEhâŠEh? Ah, yesâŠYes.â
I was still confused, but excused. Guess Iâm still going to get dragged into something bothersome. Only mysteries around here, can I just get my reward? I see? Iâm basically an agent now? With an odd sensation befalling me, I left the student council office behind me. I somewhat understood that the reason I got kicked out was because things will become even more annoying from now on. I guess they, including Big Sis, were only trying to be considerate of me. I just realized way too late. If I could wish for one thing, then please donât ask me to help you at all anymore.
*
I walked down the hallway, aiming for the front entrance. In the meantime, I kept thinking about what happened in the student council office. I donât know if Iâll still be involved with the management of the culture festival, but if I had to say one thing I was worried about, then that would be the fact that Natsukawa is part of the committee. I just hope that Natsukawa doesnât get any unnecessary burden from thatâŠMaybe I should go check it out.
ââAh?â
The second I took the corner, an odd sight opened up in front of me. Two female students left the execution committee roomâtogether with one boy. That handsome face, thereâs no way I would mistake it. Itâs Sasaki. One girl had her arm around his shoulder. The heck is thisâŠ
âSeriously, I canât deal with this. To think theyâd let us work this much.â
âWellâŠI guess.â
âThe superiors arenât taking their job seriously, so thereâs no need for us to care either.â
I checked the time on my phone. There was still some time until lock-up. The committee members should still be in the middle of working, and yet Sasaki and the other two had their bags on their shoulders, walking away. This faint discomfort I was feeling soon turned into an awful premonition.
âYouâre kidding.â
I didnât want to believe what I had just seen. I hurriedly moved ahead, peeking inside the classroom. The amount of files and documents had not gone down in number. In the back of the classroom, in the corner of the second-years, I saw two empty seats. Next to them was the place where Sasaki sat, no more documents to be found. The desk next to it was still riddled with analog documentsâalmost like all the work was just pushed onto Natsukawa. Before I realized it, my body already moved.
âExcuse me.â
Everybody present in the room turned towards me. Why, I thought to myself. I didnât mean to open this door. I didnât want to get this much attention. Even Hasegawa-senpai gave me a shocked gaze, her face completely pale.
âUmâŠis there something else?â
âClass 1-C. Iâm here to take over for the boy who just left. This is unrelated to the student council.â
âEhâŠO-Okay.â
She probably couldnât follow my intentions. This makes total sense, as I was the bad cop before, now suddenly acting like the good cop.
ââEhâŠ?â
Without even waiting for her permission, I just walked to the seat Sasaki should be sitting on. Naturally, Natsukawa was bewildered at my arrival. She probably is wondering why Iâm here. Donât worry, I donât really know myself.
âW-WataruâŠ?â
âNatsukawa, could you tell me where to bury all of this paper?â
âUmâŠSasaki-kun wasnât skipping on his work or anythingâŠ!â
âAh, yeah, I figured as much.â
From what I could see, the girl that had her arm around Sasakiâs shoulder was a second-year, so he probably couldnât say no. Although she was a simple girl, brushing her away would only bring more trouble. Since he can be very diligent, leaving behind all of this work to leave surely wasnât his real wish. I understand him being unable to disobey. But, there was not a single ounce of sympathy I had for him.