Whoever that red-headed woman was, she along with Ryoba had swept Ember aside and she could not catch up to them. Sure, the schemer tried to do her best to ask around, tracing the rulekeeper’s steps, but there was a massive gaggle of students that blocked everything. Or several massive gaggles. The whole school seemed to be strange today, come to think of it. First, there was the incident with the three names. Then the red-haired woman whom Ember had never seen before, claiming to be a teacher. Then the crowd.
There was no pattern she could spot. But there had to be something she missed. The first thing that came to mind was Ryoba not recognising her, which she immediately dismissed. And then… there was nothing else.
Ember sighed. She would keep an eye out for more strange occurrences. Until then, she had all the time in the world to think of another approach. Maybe she could grab Kiyo at lunchtime, to see if she noticed anything amiss. They should be able to put their heads together to figure it out, should they not? Yes. If it was Kiyo, she would have definitely noticed whatever Ember missed.
As usual, the classes were a breeze for Ember, even if she was forced to acknowledge that the red-haired woman was a teacher. So much that she practically found herself in front of the lunch room, watching out for the Detention Club… there!
Now if only her feet were willing to move.
It almost felt as though something had glued to the floor and no matter how many times she tried to lift her feet, the only result she got was that the lump in her throat grew bigger. Or her stomach got tighter. Why? This had not been the first time she had been brushed off like that. Nor would it be the last. And yet, a part of her could not help asking the question: What if not even Ember recognised her? What if they thought she was trying to stir up trouble again?
This was not like her. This was not like her at all! And despite Ember telling herself that, the doubts kept surfacing. She may have messed up irrecoverably with Sylvia. She did the wrong thing with Ryoba, too. And maybe she also wronged Hotaru. So what if her approach was wrong yet again?
She ruminated on that for a few moments before she settled on taking a page out of Hotaru’s book, directly approaching the table as she flashed her magic. A spectral gauntlet appeared around her right hand, along with two horns on her forehead for a split second to cue Kiyo in on who she was. Except, she stopped dead in her tracks as she saw that instead of gold, the gauntlet around her hand left behind red embers of magic.
Hotaru spent her classes glaring at both the teacher and the rest of the Club. After all, she had not gotten answers - she had not even been brushed off. Instead, a flood of students interrupted their conversation at the worst possible time before they were forced to go to class. But at least now she could talk more with Kiyo to see what she had to say. Or at least she could have talked if Ember had not decided on the very same thing, even going as far as to flash her magic in a public space that could be filled to the brim with magical girls.
It was something the warrior would have done.
Sneering at what was, in all due likelihood, a subtle insult to her way of thinking, Hotaru decided to ignore the display and sit down beside Kiyo and that other girl anyways, owning the space to the left of Kiyo like it had always belonged to her. With her confidence so solid, there could be no doubt about who the true Shuuko was in this situation, and it sure as hell was not the one who just flashed their red magic in open air in an attempt to join the conversation.
”Hello!” she waved to the unknown girl with a smug grin on her face. ”I’m here to join my bestie.” And she all but wrapped her right arm around Kiyo, pulling the Detention Club’s smartest member close to her. Their eyes met, Hotaru’s gaze reflecting an unspoken question: Just who had joined them? And could they talk openly about Club business around her?
The day could not have turned worse. Not only did Sylvia get tangled up in someone who looked like they were disgusted by her, she could not even squeeze in an apology before classes started up again and that made it impossible to focus. She could not even remember what sort of classes they had, which teachers held them or really, where she went; she followed wherever the crowd took her even as she went over her apologies dozens upon dozens of times, only to be thwarted by the sheer scale of the school.
Of course the protector could not find the one whom she harmed. Naturally, she would not be able to make up for her mistake. She would carry this, too, the rest of her life - like everything else. Their words. Their lies. Their behaviour. Even if Haruna had spoken true, how would she go about finding friends? The light girl seemed to believe that she along with Roche were just that. Someone Sylvia could place her faith in, rely on. But if the gods had lied… Then what was to say she did not lie, either?
The protector’s thoughts kept spinning around her parents, her past and her comrades, finding only doubt and depressing darkness. It felt as though she were trying to make her way through a room without any windows, its floor filled with all manners of traps she could not see. Every step lead to bleeding feet. Even if she tried to feel the obstacles with her hand, her fingers could be snapped or her hand could be broken. All in all, it was no surprise that Tsubomi picked up on her disastrous mental state and kicked her.
It had not been a forceful kick. And yet Sylvia found the ground giving beneath her all the same. She fell forward and barely caught herself at the last second, the world along with Tsubomi’s words coming into sharp focus.
”Tsubomi?” she asked, her voice hollow. ”Why did you… never mind.” Surely, the emotionless girl kicked her because she deserved to be kicked.











