Toaru Majutsu no Index:GT Volume14 Chapter3
Chapter 3: Which Side is Winning? – Scoreboard.[edit]
Part 1[edit]
Around when she abandoned the stolen car, her memory cut out again.
“…”
The next thing she knew, Coronzon was leaning against a cold building wall.
Something had happened.
Aleister had done something.
She had traveled south from District 20 to reach District 9, which contained art schools. The Anglicans were mostly in the north of the city, so she abandoned the stolen car and had planned to take another car (also stolen of course) to reach the southern wall.
But she couldn’t trust in that plan anymore.
She ran her hands along her habit. Pathetically driven by fear and anxiety. She pulled an object smaller than her palm from a fairly unspeakable part of her clothing,.
She couldn’t believe it.
(A wireless game controller? That means it has its own ID and can produce its own signal to provide its location.)
“Y-you would forestall a great demon with this…this piece of junk that doesn’t even cost 5000 yen!? Are you kidding me, Aleisterrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr!?”
A shape squirmed. And produced a short scream.
No, was that a man forcing himself onto a girl?
An outfit that looked on the border between at-home clothing and sleepwear had been badly torn and the man was reaching for her underwear.
Perfect.
That was wandering Coronzon’s honest assessment.
It was happening in a small boxlike building.
An Anti-Skill station. A small one. Around the size of what would be called a police box in the outside world.
This was happening there of all places. That public structure should have had someone working in it 365 days a year to keep the city’s peace, but today it had been empty.
With his hands pinning the girl to the floor, the man wasn’t sure how to undo his belt buckle. He raised his head with an odd expression that stuck out his chin more than necessary.
“Huh? Who the hell’re you?”
She didn’t even respond.
Great Demon Coronzon stabbed her hand right through the center of the scum’s gut.
The odor of blood splattered out.
“Bhee, ee, eeeeeeeeeek!!”
He audibly slammed into the shelves behind him and objects came crashing down.
The man of no consequence scrambled out of the Anti-Skill station, his arms flailing wildly.
With his abdominal cavity punctured and a game controller directly stuck inside. Surgical hygiene? Why should Coronzon care about something like that? His bacteria-covered organs might shut down before long, but he would act as a nice decoy as long as he scrambled around and fled before that happened.
In something of a new habit, she held a hand to her woozy head and belatedly realized her hand was stained by that scum’s unclean blood. Everything seemed to piss her off right now. Nothing was going her way.
She lashed out vocally.
“Aleister!! That death is on your hands for that trick you pulled. Are you satisfied? It’s absurd for you to try and save the world. Hee hee, ha ha ha. You’re the one who made the world this way! So give up! You already know everything you do only comes back to bite you!!”
Even so, how many times was it now?
…Or was it really Aleister’s will sending these signs to Kamijou Touma and the other pursuers? Did he really have enough strength to hijack Great Demon Coronzon’s body this many times?
Was it possible she was sending these hints to her pursuer’s herself? She shuddered. No, it wasn’t possible. How would that benefit her? But could it be a self-destructive desire like the urge people felt to activate a fire alarm when they saw one?
Coronzon clenched her hair tight in her hand. An unpleasant snapping sound followed.
She couldn’t get a read on her own mind anymore.
“U-um.”
It was then that someone nervously spoke to her. The girl seated on the floor looked up at her, completely forgetting to fix her clothing.
With admiration in her eyes.
“…Why are you looking at me like that?”
“Um, thank you…f-for saving me.”
Great Demon Coronzon doubled over and held a hand to her mouth.
She retched.
She couldn’t stand any more of this. Before the girl could say anything more, Coronzon got her unsteady body moving, rushing out of the station. The great demon had fled.
She walked a few meters and then stumbled. She fell down onto the red snow frozen on the ground.
She lay in the snow as thoughts spiraled through her head.
This was wasn’t right.
What was going on?
She had just jabbed her hand right into the gut of an ordinary man who had no connection to magic. With enough force to take his life. And only so she could embed the signal to her location inside his body. There may have been another way, but she had chosen that one so she could enjoy it.
It had been for her. It had been a cruel act of violence befitting a demon.
…But had she ended up saving a life?
Impossible.
She had been acting of her own free will.
She was certain of that.
And yet the result had so completely betrayed her expectations?
Her bad deed had been remade into a good one.
It was the ultimate outrage.
(Was it an act of…)
The being known as a great demon hatefully clenched her back teeth.
Swear poured from her brow. She had a terrible feeling about this.
A wireless game controller? Those weren’t too unusual, but where had Aleister gotten one in the few seconds he had taken control? She doubted he had forced his way into an electronics shop with its metal shutter down for the night. He wouldn’t have had time to search through the game shelf in a discount shop. Did that mean someone had just so happened to drop one on the side of the street? …Had it been a complete coincidence as if some greater will were at work?
(Did an act of god transform what I did? Is a good influence distorting my actions? It’s too late, world. Do you really expect me to go along with that? I will take things! Too far!! And destroy the world of my own free will!!!)
Part 2[edit]
An alarm blared in the District 10 prison.
Telling of an oddity in the same prison.
Someone had already broken in.
“Is it Oniyama!?”
“No, he would have used his authority as a Director to use the proper channels for a visit. This is someone else, so be careful!”
Qliphah Puzzle 545 left the cell while listening to the female secretary speaking over the device on the wall.
The enemy was close.
As close as the corridor leading to the solitary confinement cell hidden deep inside the prison. The silver-haired, dark-skinned woman wore a patchwork of rags that did not look at all hygienic. She was alone. She was even barefoot. An ordinary jailer might tilted their head wondering how she had made it inside such a strictly guarded prison.
But Qliphah Puzzle 545 understood magic too well for that.
She accurately grasped the threat standing before her.
“One of the Anglican’s magicians specialized in anti-magician combat!?”
“I am Necromancer Isabella Theism. You should already know that name after I threatened the city’s leader.”
Qliphah Puzzle 545 was dumbfounded. This prison’s security had already proven itself unable to keep out uninvited guests and now someone like this had made it in?
“The entrance back there was covered by a shocking number of sensors, but they’re only designed to detect living intruders. I recommend tweaking it to detect and instantly attack corpses as well. It’s not that hard to disguise yourself as one.”
“Why are you here? The Anglicans know all about the battle against Coronzon, so you should know my master is in no condition to talk.”
“So I’ve heard. Although I wasn’t around for that part since I was knocked out while dealing with some other business. Regardless, if what I have heard is true, we really are in a grave situation. Right now, I think it is most necessary that we defeat Great Demon Coronzon and bring stability back to the world.”
“Then go tell that to Coronzon, not my master!”
“Oh, do you know where she is?”
Qliphah Puzzle 545 fell silent.
Isabella breathed a sigh thick with exasperation.
“That is the real question. What I need right now is information and a few coincidental hints just aren’t enough. A vast network has been laid out across Academy City: security cameras, security robots, drones, satellites, and so on. Tracking her requires bringing the city’s data infrastructure back to full functionality. And it if is necessary to settle things with Coronzon…as much as I hate to, what choice do I have but to save your new Board Chairman? I can’t have him go on sleeping with the Master Key clutched in his hand.”
“…”
Isabella Theism seemed unbothered by Qliphah Puzzle 545’s skeptical look.
The look on her face said she had expected it.
Not long before, she had been in charge of the group physically taking control of Academy City and attempting to use the city as a disposable tool to defeat Coronzon. It would be weird if Qliphah Puzzle 545 did trust her right away.
Qliphah Puzzle 545 glared at her and asked a question.
“Your clothes reek of death. You’re that necromancer who was arguing with my master over the phone… Can a death magician really heal a living human?”
Isabella Theism grabbed her rags in her hands and lifted them upwards. All at once.
She was wearing underwear below, but it was very thin and small.
Two healthy brown objects jiggled there.
Qliphah Puzzle 545 was a girl, but she still flinched back at being shown this all of a sudden.
“Uh?”
“Take a close look. My ribs and sternum were badly broken and one sharp bone fragment pierced my right lung. Can you see any of that? What’s your assessment?”
“You have all your ribs and there’s no bruising from internal bleeding. It’s all been healed?”
When the demon girl approached and took a close look, Isabella averted her eyes awkwardly.
Apparently this was embarrassing for her after all.
“Loko Atisou. There is more to Voodoo than making zombies. It is a polytheistic religion with all sorts of gods, so it of course has a god of medicine.”
Just like any other religion, Voodoo also functioned to govern and help the local people. The violent and combative side was only meant for emergencies when the group as a whole was attacked by an external enemy or a rebellion. That wasn’t all it could do.
It had not been invented for use in horror movies, so there was a benevolent Voodoo that listened to the people’s worries and healed their injuries and disease.
Healing was a challenging territory for Demon Qliphah Puzzle 545 who specialized in the Qliphoth that contained all that was impure and immoral. She would have to start with a curse or an attack and then build it in reverse. Needing to include that conversion in every single step meant it would be much faster to borrow the power of a god who directly dealt in medicine.
Isabella concluded her valid evidence had been accepted, so she lowered her rags.
“I am willing to view you as a magic side doctor. And I understand how this aligns with your interests. So where will you start, witch doctor?”
“Well, I do have a few things on hand. Zombie powder, for example.”
“Z-zombie powder!?”
Despite being a demon, Qliphah Puzzle 545’s eyes bulged at the mere mention of that name. But Isabella Theism sighed in exasperation.
“Voodoo zombie powder…well, real Voodoo prefers to use French more than English. But anyway, it isn’t a toxin sprinkled on a rotting corpse to control it.”
She seemed to be implying that she did not use real Voodoo.
No matter how much she knew about it, she was only illicitly using their excellent techniques.
“It is a punishment in which a living human is put in a state of living death where they cannot think or make any decisions and will do whatever they are told. So you can think of it as a medicine used to prevent someone from dying until their punishment is complete.”
“You mean like how the highly toxic digitalis can also be used as a cardiac stimulant?”
“And in the other direction, salt and sugar can kill despite being necessary nutrients for life. The materials themselves are neither good nor bad. It all comes down to how they are used.”
Part 3[edit]
An ambulance echoed through one corner of District 20.
Kamijou glanced in its direction.
Takitsubo Rikou…couldn’t go any further. With the frozen snow, the dead traffic signals, and the more concrete threat of the scouts, he was thankful the ambulance had actually come when they called.
A large dog hopped into the same ambulance.
“I will go with her.”
“Hey, are you sure about that?”
“I am not much help without the A.A.A. And Coronzon will be cautious of my wonderful nose now that I have demonstrated its use. There is nothing left for me to do on the front line. So I wish to contribute by removing this worry from your hearts, allowing you to move more freely. Listen to me. Do not worry about this girl any longer.”
Kamijou and the others could only watch the ambulance go.
There was still more they had to do.
But…
“We have a report regarding the entertainment location signal presumed to be a sign from Aleister. Unfortunately, it was found embedded in some man. So back to square one.”
“Hey, that doesn’t tell us nothing. If we know what path the dying decoy took, we should be able to figure out where he contacted Coronzon.”
This was all they had to discuss on their way to a corner of District 9.
It was now 3 AM.
This was where they had lost Coronzon’s trail.
Kamijou Touma sighed softly while listening to Kanzaki and Othinus’s discussion.
All they could do was wait.
Nothing pained Kamijou more than having nothing to do when he knew Coronzon was even now on the move. It was all over once she crossed the wall somewhere and left the city. Yet the city was too large to search at random.
He had decided he wouldn’t just wait around, but the physical reality wasn’t cooperating with his personal wishes.
Index, Kanzaki, and some others were apparently running a magical search, but that still wasn’t enough to track down Coronzon.
They needed to go after her from the science side as well, but Mikoto alone wasn’t enough.
Simply tracking down the fugitive was hard enough on its own, but Kamijou couldn’t shake the feeling that Coronzon was still hiding something. Some powerful move or sudden twist he never would have considered. Something they couldn’t even imagine while continuing to wander through this labyrinth, but also something that would again overturn everything if they failed to prevent it.
Kamijou Touma’s thoughts turned to a certain individual.
Perhaps it was all reliant on him recovering…
Part 4[edit]
In the prison’s solitary confinement cell, Board Chairman Accelerator was lying in bed unconscious and hooked up to medical equipment. Even Academy City’s #1 would be killed by an attack now. It was unusual for Qliphah Puzzle 545 to bring an outsider this deep into the prison at all.
That outsider was Necromancer Isabella Theism.
The current situation required going beyond the usual.
“How exactly are you going to heal my master?”
“Legba Atibon.”
That was all she said.
It was the name of a gatekeeper god who managed all ceremonies. So no matter which god’s power the ceremony was meant to borrow, you first sought the gatekeeper god’s permission. And because he appeared in all ceremonies, there were no specific dates or locations that boosted his power.
Something emerged from Accelerator’s arm.
It was a transparent shard only a few millimeters long. A piece of a broken LCD monitor.
More followed. Like floating leaves following a river’s current, more and more shards silently slid out of his body.
Not a single drop of blood was shed and no apparent wounds were made.
Even though all these shards were located in extremely dangerous position near major arteries and organs.
“Y-you’re already done!?”
“They did not belong and the human body has several functions meant to automatically eliminate such things. There was no need for dangerous surgery. I only had to make some adjustments to those functions.”
Of course, thoughtlessly boosting them would have only triggered rejection, where his own immune system attacked his body. Only a professional necromancer with sufficient training could pull this off.
Isabella sighed softly.
“You know glass shards aren’t enough to keep a human mind locked away indefinitely, don’t you? Another task is even more important.”
“Breaking the curse.”
“Voodoo can handle that easily. A zombie is in a controllable state of living death by stopping the heart with a poison and then restarting it with an antidote. Antidotes and curse breaking are built into the ceremony.”
As she spoke, Isabella stuck her fingers into the seams of her rags. She pulled out various vials. They contained powders, liquids, dried leaves and roots, living insects…and more.
The demon girl was accustomed to dirty and impure things, but she still recoiled.
“Ew. Did I just wander into a museum of the bizarre?”
“Think of it like a 72-color colored pencil set and get excited. Even if you can theoretically represent everything in the world with the three primary colors, the actual task isn’t so simple, is it?”
The brown woman got to work. Swiftly and accurately.
It took more than a single name this time.
Meaning even she didn’t see this as a simple task.
“Voodoo is flexible enough to let you include any supernatural being as a weapon. Qliphah Puzzle. And 545 was it? I will include you in my system.”
“I will do anything for my master, but will including me change anything?”
“Just as salt and sugar can kill and just as toxic digitalis can be a cardiac stimulant, nothing in this world is a pure poison. There is simply a way of using it as a poison. And also a way of using it is a medicine.”
Voodoo did not think of gods as good or evil, but it was common for the same god to be included on both sides. That meant the gods did not determine their stance by the human conception of good and evil. Instead of the many gods being divided onto the opposite sides of good and evil, the many gods could freely move between the two sides depending on the time and situation. That was what made them all-purpose, but it also made them tricky to use. It required a priest with specialized training to handle them.
Thus, the necromancer did not avoid this being known as an artificial demon.
She simply viewed her as a nonhuman being with supernatural power.
If Isabella determined how much of her to use, she could be used to save a life.
“Here goes.”
“Okay!”
“Through Gatekeeper God Legba Atibon, I contact Medicine God Loko Atisou, and link the ceremony terminal to Messenger God Brav Gede.”
Voodoo practitioners did not think of using magic on their own.
They borrowed a compatible god’s power to achieve a miracle.
In fact, they would even borrow another god’s power to send their request to the god they wanted.
In Voodoo, if a miracle was beyond human capability, then a human voice could not even reach the necessary god on its own. They required a separate link to get through.
Or to put it another way…
They relied on one god to call on another. So by going through Artificial Demon Qliphah Puzzle 545 (who did not exist in the Voodoo system), Isabella should be able to make a request beyond what could normally be asked of the Voodoo gods.
It was an impossible shortcut.
Or an illicit backdoor.
“Through the gathering of Qliphah, I beseech Baron Samdi. Divide this soul into five territories and reveal the part that has been intentionally placed in an endless spiral. Human individuality is managed by the Ti Bon Ange. Reveal to me the wicked power severing its proper link. Just like the zombie powder, it takes the form of a toxin.”
Something like bluish-white sparks burst forth.
That was not part of the ceremony.
Qliphah Puzzle 545 thought it might be a trap left by Coronzon, but it wasn’t.
It was Academy City’s #1.
He was no normal human. Had his body itself reacted in some way?
“The lime poison is an unstoppable assassination spell for it produces a different toxin each time the same ceremony is performed. This in turn proves that any and all toxins can be cured as long as their ingredients are known. I have already seen with my own eyes the wicked toxin unjustly robbing him of his consciousness! With its identity seen, it must be curable!!”
The smell of blood hung in the air.
Isabella Theism had a shallow cut on her right cheek.
The bluish-white sparks were harmful.
But she did not stop the ceremony.
Coronzon could not be allowed to escape Academy City. But they had nowhere near enough data to track her down. They needed the new Board Chairman and the Master Key he held. Academy City’s functions had to be fully recovered before they could catch up to Coronzon.
A single necromancer’s survival wasn’t that big a deal here.
But if the entire world were destroyed, then everything Isabella Theism wanted to protect would die with it.
She couldn’t allow that.
No matter what.
“Answer me, Medicine God Loko Atisou. The vessel for your holy power and the ingredients for the medicine are gathered here!! …No external incision is needed. The conditions to save you were within your body from the start. Thus, I call upon you, separated mind, reactive yourself from within your body and break free of your cage!!”
Light surged out.
Isabella Theism lurched back.
The necromancer was struck by a destructive whip of something much like electricity. Unable to bear the blow, she toppled backwards. Several pieces of medical equipment screamed out with their electronic tones.
And nothing happened.
There was no change on the bed. The smell of blood came from Isabella. Sleeping Accelerator did not change at all, for better or for worse.
The Level 5 said to be Academy City’s strongest did not wake.
Qliphah Puzzle 545 had to accept it.
They had failed.
It was so dark, shadowy, heavy.
She felt crushed by the air itself when a voice reached her ears.
Isabella Theism was whispering.
“Kh… What…now?”
Qliphah Puzzle 545 didn’t have time to ask what she meant by that.
The necromancer continued.
“In the worst case, I could control him as a corpse to have him use the Master Key.”
“But…”
“Zombie powder does not control rotting corpses. It prevents someone from dying to keep them in a state of living death. But by altering that interpretation, it would be possible. It can be used just like in a horror movie.”
“No! That isn’t the same as saving him!!”
Her opposition was only natural.
Assuming saving Board Chairman Accelerator was your goal.
“But aren’t we here to use the Master Key to restore Academy City and track down Coronzon!?”
Their goals were defined at slightly different points.
Isabella Theism wanted Accelerator’s help to protect the world from Coronzon. The #1’s recovery was only a means to that end.
Explaining that up front showed that Isabella was more reasonable than most. She could have lied to Qliphah Puzzle 545 and then gone ahead and used the zombie powder as a poison.
“You need to choose. No one has sufficient nerve to make a ghastly choice. And you are the only point of contact I have left!” shouted Isabella Theism.
Qliphah Puzzle 545 would never let her do that. But how would her beloved Board Chairman have responded? The #1 would want to protect Academy City and the wider world beyond its walls.
(Master…)
Part 5[edit]
Kamijou and the others were in District 9.
They still hadn’t moved from there and were stuck waiting.
Mikoto and Index were frequently conversing. Probably a sign of their impatience.
“The nearby districts that border the city wall would be the most obvious option, but this is complicated by the fact that Coronzon has no restriction preventing her from returning to a district she’s already been to.”
“That means we can’t treat this like a game of concentration. So no matter how far we pursue her, we never eliminate any of the options.”
Wings audibly flapped at the air. Kamijou had seen the Bologna Succubus licking her wings and teasing them with her fingertips before, but they must have recovered enough for her to fly. Neither one said anything, but she took off into the night sky with Blodeuwedd the Bouquet hanging on again.
Kamijou spotted Itsuwa of the Amakusas.
“How’s Tsushima? What happened to her?”
“We can use recovery magic, so as long as someone isn’t actually dead, we can heal them even if it takes some fairly forceful methods. And it helped that you suppressed her bleeding until we arrived.”
At that point, Itsuwa’s tone dropped worriedly.
“You can’t push yourself too hard either. I heard you passed out earlier.”
“Sorry… I should’ve yelled before I passed out.”
“No! That isn’t what I meant…”
But he had let Coronzon get away.
Either way, he couldn’t fight while applying pressure to Tsushima’s neck wound. And could he have fought her on his own regardless? He really didn’t see any way he could have won there. But he could have at least informed someone of the threat. There must have been a way. Even if he he was rapidly losing consciousness, he could have triggered his phone’s alarm or the camera flash. There had to have been something.
“Fool. Break yourself out of that meaningless negative spiral. Only you finds it pleasant.”
The wicked woman could be harsh at times like this. Refreshingly so.
There was no way he could have come up with a clever idea when he was passing out, his brain was growing dull, and his thoughts were fading fast. He knew that.
(Still…)
It was easy enough to talk of battling Coronzon and settling things with her, but that also meant battling Aleister who shared her body.
…What did he really think about that?
Aleister was desperately struggling within Coronzon to provide them with even the smallest hint. Was Kamijou prepared to fight that human, win…and say goodbye?
If he couldn’t do it, humanity was doomed.
The conditions placed on the opposite end of the scales could not have been simpler or more solid.
Still.
Kamijou’s thoughts cut off there.
He looked up. Agnese, Lucia, and that group were off in a corner whispering among themselves.
“?”
Part 6[edit]
In the same district, not far from Kamijou and the others, stooped Angelene was waving her hands anxiously.
“Ehhhh!? Saint Georgios’s Fire? Is the Vatican really trying to defeat Coronzon!? A-are you sure they aren’t just using this as an excuse to destroy Academy City?”
“Some of them might think it would be safer to destroy it before it’s officially absorbed into the Anglican Church.”
Lucia appeared to be doing her best to remain calm.
The conversation wasn’t just between Agnese, Lucia, and Angelene. More than 250 nuns would be listening in through the Barbara Branch communication spiritual item.
Agnese had her doubts about that too. How far into the future were the Roman Catholic cardinals looking? Even though none of it would matter if the world were destroyed tomorrow.
The Former Agnese Force had already been told to evacuate.
They were to abandon Academy City and the Anglicans and escape the city with only the Roman Catholics among them. They had been given a few different conditions for activating Saint Georgios’s Fire, but it all boiled down to one thing: the cardinals would use that large-scale spell no matter what happened. The only difference was if it happened sooner or later.
The branch between launching it or not had already passed.
Being stubborn here was fine, but anyone who remained would die.
With zero exceptions.
Lucia looked to Agnese. She may have been peering into her eyes.
“This force is under your command, Sister Agnese. What will we do?”
“I do not have the right to order you all to die.” Agnese smiled bitterly as she spoke to them all. “You are not obligated or bound to stay. From here on, this is all voluntary. If you choose to leave Academy City, you don’t need your Barbara Branch. The Anglicans are experts at combating human magic. They might be able to track your location using it, so abandon it and escape in complete silence.”
“Wh-what can we accomplish by staying?”
“Protect Academy City from Saint Georgios’s Fire of course,” replied Agnese, her voice low.
That human-targeted attack wouldn’t work against inhuman Coronzon. So stopping the spell that would cause asphyxiation and ruptured organs would not affect the battle against Coronzon.
“Think of it like the neck of an hourglass. Saint Georgios’s Fire is large-scale magic that gathers power from the two billion Catholics across the globe without their knowledge and allows the cardinals in the Vatican to control it. Once gathered together, the attack travels through the ley lines to reach enemy territory and scatters back into two billion attacks after emerging from the ground. Then it causes enough damage to destroy a city.”
A city. Was that at least better than Adikalika that would have affected the entire Italian Peninsula? Agnese smiled a little. So they were retaliating with a smaller attack. The Vatican’s cardinals really had found a way to lower the psychological hurdle as far as possible.
“T-two billion. Th-th-then I don’t see what we can possibly do!”
“That means it must be a long-range spell. In fact, it must travel all the way around the earth. Have you forgotten how Index stopped Adikalika? There must be any number of options: diverting its aim, cutting off the flow of the ley lines before it arrives here, or even preventing the two billion powers from gathering at the Vatican.”
Her argument had to be correct.
But she understood full well that this was wishful thinking.
Otherwise, she wouldn’t have been sweating so heavily in this cold weather.
(Even if the theory is solid, we’re talking about power from two billion people… Can we really stand up to that sheer force of quantity? That will likely be the greatest obstacle.)
There was no guaranteed method. If they stayed too long, they would lose the lives they could have saved.
They had to build it all up starting now. They had nothing at the moment to tell them it would be alright.
So Agnese Sanctis could not demand her companions join her in this.
In the worst case, she would have to stand up to the two billion all on her own.
And…
“I volunteer.”
That was Lucia.
She used to be so fastidious she would rage when so much as touched by a non-Catholic, but now she was the first to raise her hand and volunteer to fight to protect Academy City.
“What? The Roman Catholic Church is the largest sect in the world, so we must consider the world as a whole. Of course I will reach out a helping hand when lives are at risk. I couldn’t call myself a Catholic if I wouldn’t.”
She wasn’t alone.
Angelene was trembling, but she too chose to raise her hand. Even if only a little.
“U-umm. I volunteer. I mean, if we ran away now, then the Anglicans and the Catholics would be after us. So I want to at least keep a place for us with one of them. Our home is the women’s dorm in London and, if we want to return there with a clear conscience, we have to save Academy City!”
More and more voices came over the Barbara’s Branch communication spiritual item.
It only provided audio, but Agnese could easily imagine them leaning forward in defiance.
“Sister Apollonia. I volunteer too.”
“Sister Paula. I’ll volunteer if there are any tickets left.”
“Sister Agata. I-I volunteer!”
…This was who they were.
They hadn’t started out this way, of course. They hadn’t forgotten the brutal violence they subjected Orsola Aquinas and Kamijou Touma to. But Agnese and these more than 250 nuns had grown enough to say this during such a crisis.
After seeing another way to live. After being accepted with a smile after everything they had done.
It must have taken trust to do that, so they couldn’t turn their backs on that trust.
Did this mean they all felt that way?
Lucia pushed the conversation onward.
“Sister Agnese. We haven’t heard your answer yet. What will you do?”
Agnese Sanctis raised her head.
She stared straight ahead and raised her voice to a roar.
“I volunteer!! …Now that you’ve chosen this for yourself, you had better be ready. I said I don’t have the right to order you all to die. So no matter how bad this gets, I will not let you take the easy way out and choose an emotional death. Cry and wail all you like, I will bring every last one of you back alive even if it means crawling through hell on earth!!”
Part 7[edit]
Dion Fortune.
Moina Mathers.
Their fight in District 7 had passed the bounds of human ability. They had simply been fighting too long. No human could run a full marathon at the speed of a 50-meter dash. But a battle on that level had been going on for hours now. A Saint who could break the sound barrier in an instant and then instantly run out of gas would have died well before this. This was only possible for a magician created using a tarot deck as a grimoire.
That was the strength of someone who could absorb massive power from the ley lines and wield that instead of having to refine magic power from their own life force.
(I certainly don’t want to be killed right away, but this kind of endless quagmire isn’t fun either.)
One reason for the stalemate was Moina Mathers’s spiritual item.
Her tattva cards were certainly powerful, but using the visual stimuli of the bright colors drawn on the cards to guide her mind created a weakness as well. Visual stimuli. …That meant a third party could peek at the card and know the element of the next attack.
“Responding after seeing the card always puts me one step behind, though. But if I could predict what was coming next before you drew the card, I would be a step ahead and beat you.”
“…”
“But I’ll have gathered all the data I need soon. You shouldn’t have been throwing those tattva cards around like that. It’s like the scorebook written up by the cute manager of the baseball team. You’ve thrown too many pitches. How many until it’s enough? I will kill you before you can act.”
Moina Mathers said nothing.
But instead of a tattva card, she suddenly waved her palette knife through the air in an orderly pattern.
This was different.
“?”
Something rose up.
From the red snowy ground. And more followed it. A lot more. Like sinister flowers blossoming all around her.
They were colorful silhouettes seemingly made of a mixture of yellow, blue, white, red, and other colors of paint.
Except their heads were giant red roses.
“Ah, ahh, ah…”
Dion Fortune stood stock still and her voice escaped her like air from a deflating balloon.
Because she knew what her teacher and nemesis was doing.
“Wh-why do you look so proud of yourself? You didn’t think this was one of your successes, did you? How airheaded a wife can you be!?”
As his wife, Moina had devoted herself to supporting that uncontrollable genius magician named Mathers, but not everything had gone perfectly and she had made a few major mistakes after her husband’s death: her unproductive conflict with her student Fortune, her failure to silence some baseless rumors (on the level of a murder), and – as the most extreme example – this. The Mass Production of Low Quality Magicians Debacle in which she used a correspondence class to grant entrance to the secret magic cabal she managed for the faceless strangers who would pay for the privilege.
Dion Fortune was cautious of course. Even if they were of low quality, a magician was still a magician. She didn’t know if they refined their own magic power or if they absorbed it from the ley lines, but she knew she wasn’t going to like whatever attacks they used. If she didn’t switch her mindset from one-on-one to a group battle, she would be crushed by the group even if she defeated one of them. Or so she thought.
But even that was a fatal mistake.
“Eh?”
Moina Mathers’s face was right in front of her.
She had hopped down from the giant black cat and approached within 100 centimeters.
This was immediately after she switched tactics from a single destructive attack to a numbers game. She had slipped through Dion Fortune’s blind spot.
It didn’t matter how Dion Fortune twisted her body.
Here.
At this one spot, she couldn’t respond right away!?
(Damn!!)
Moina Mathers held a black blade. The utterly twisted object looked like it was made from a large quantity of oil paint or something that had been forcibly dried and hardened. This was probably a self-defensive strike – a jab – with a saber that she had learned from her husband Mathers who enjoyed fencing. The sharp tip was clearly aimed at her opponent’s throat.
Dion Fortune had misread this.
The biggest threat was not the giant cat, not the tattva cards, and not the group of rose-faced mass-produced magicians. She should have been most cautious of Moina Mathers herself. She should have known that from the start, but the countless tricks had distracted her.
The saber was coming.
It was more deadly than a long spear, a hammer, or the knife of an enemy who had snuck up on her.
(Oh, god. Am I actually dead this time?)
Even if she did have a single second left to move, she would have used it to kill Moina too. She gritted her teeth and focused all her attention on the black box. And…
Sparks flew.
The orange sparks of two blades clashing.
Another piece of metal intersected Moina’s black saber to form a cross.
Instead of blocking the sharp jab, this struck the side of the blade to divert it away. Orange sparks decorated the darkness like remnants of the attack’s deadly power.
A palette knife was responsible.
That was the weapon of a certain magician who specialized in art and had completed many ceremonial grounds and spiritual items by giving real form to the many ideas the other magicians couldn’t bring out of their heads.
“Honestly,” said a calm voice. “It’s sad you’re struggling this much to defeat such a defective version of me. You’re the one who researched all the nutrients in different foods and who insisted Kabbalah was Western yoga, so I would have thought you could boost your physical abilities somewhat.”
By the time she said this, a dull sound had left the palette knife. Followed by another. They were mechanical sounds like might come from a sewing machine. She swept the saber aside and sent accurately jabs right toward the now-defenseless Moina’s throat and chest, but Moina used the guard and pommel to forcibly defend herself.
The same techniques.
The same skill.
The same ability.
Wasn’t there just one magician who could do that?
Yes, and despite being the kind of person who would casually rescue the frog-faced doctor who was nearly a stranger to her after happening across him, she was always so harsh with the student she had known for so long.
Dion Fortune gulped and spoke.
“Mis…tress?”
There was only one person she addressed that way.
And it wasn’t the Moina who Coronzon had created.
Black Cat Witch Mina Mathers stood beside her student.
Part 8[edit]
In the District 10 prison’s solitary confinement cell, all the efforts of good Voodoo and the artificial demon’s power had failed to revive the new Board Chairman.
Despair was threatening to solidify the air itself.
Until someone who didn’t belong showed up to smash that mood.
“Bonjour. I did some searching within your metal shutters and your prison store had a decent selection. What, do the people serving their time after a guilty verdict get to eat chocolat if a visitor buys it for them? And this one has brandy in it. I knew Academy City cared a lot about human rights, but even the prisoners have it good here. Munch, munch.”
Isabella Theism couldn’t just ignore this.
“Kihara Goukei!?” she shouted, eyes wide.
“Whoa, I give, I give, I give!! I only have one heart left! My extra lives are down to zero! I could never let myself die if I truly kicked the bucket over a pointless scuffle like this!!”
She played it off as a joke, but she could probably still survive even if her last one was destroyed. Maybe she couldn’t believe it without saying it aloud even though no one asked, but that level of cheating the system was standard for science side monsters.
Then someone else popped out from behind the suspicious woman. A much smaller someone.
“Misaka had her bring her here, says Misaka as Misaka introduces her.”
“Huh? Aren’t you master’s…?”
Now it was Qliphah Puzzle 545’s eyes that widened. Did she know that girl?
It seemed odd for a little girl to be this deep inside a strictly-guarded prison, but Isabella wanted to focus on the more dangerous person.
“How did you get in here!?”
Qliphah Puzzle 545 gave her a “you’re one to talk” look, but the brown necromancer didn’t seem to notice. And…
“Eh? Was it supposed to be hard? I just walked on in.”
Only Qliphah Puzzle 545 accepted that answer.
…That was probably due to Last Order. The new Board Chairman must have secretly given her a free pass inside. Academy City’s #1 was strict with himself and others, but he also showed occasional signs of doing things with no thought to the consequences.
Kihara Goukei knew none of this and tilted her head.
“So what is an experte like you doing sitting around? Hurry up and do your job. I can’t get any of my work done without the Board Chairman awake.”
She made it sound so easy in her ignorance.
Isabella breathed a heavy sigh.
“Zombie powder is not just a deadly toxin. It rules both life and death, so there is a chance of it reviving him if I boost its effects. But…”
“But?”
“You probably already know since it shows up in horror movies sometimes, but zombie powder uses puffer fish. Tetrodotoxin. Blindly increasing the amount will kill him before it can begin to revive him.”
“Oh, is that all? I know just the thing to use! Anisakiropen Ω!! It is a très lethal nerve stimulant. Or should I call it a synthetic toxin developed in Academy City that kills instantly?”
Isabella Theism’s eyes widened.
Kills instantly? Did that mean it was guaranteed to kill without even getting into if it was a poison or a medicine!?
“Are you trying to make sure he dies!?”
“Oh, come now. Tetrodotoxin kills by suppressing the nerves while anisakiropen Ω kills by exciting the nerves. Have you never heard the stories? Maybe it’s a local Academy City legend. They say if you administer them both at once, their effects cancel each other out.”
And if the puffer fish poison didn’t work, Isabella could give him as much zombie powder as necessary without adverse effects. The simple arithmetic did seem to say that, but…
“W-w-w-wait just a minute,” said Qliphah Puzzle 545. “That research said the effects weren’t completely canceled out. The poison that should have killed the instant it was swallowed was only delayed by a few hours!!”
Yes, tetrodotoxin and anisakiropen Ω were deadly poisons. Even a small amount in the body would kill.
It was simple enough to say the two canceled each other out, but if even that “small amount” of one or the other remained afterwards, his life would still be lost. The amount of either couldn’t be not enough or too much. And there was no way of ensuring they canceled out to precisely zero.
“Yes, in the normale world, that is true.”
“Wait, are you saying…?”
“I have a fundamental question for you: are either of us normale?”
Of course not.
Necromancer Isabella Theism used Voodoo in order to use methods of controlling death and flesh from all over the world. Kihara Goukei had gathered every form of scientific immortality within her own body.
They could take suicidal actions that would cause death 100% of the time in anyone else, but they would be fine.
“Misaka will help too,” said the little girl.
Neither Kihara Goukei nor Isabella Theism knew the situation there. Nor did they know how exactly she could help.
“Misaka will do anything, so don’t give up on him, says Misaka as Misaka bows her head to you.”
But they both thought this was enough.
Technology wasn’t always the key to saving a life. Because they had pursued all the theories and numbers so far, they knew quite well that it was the ridiculously old-fashioned psychological matters that ultimately determined the fate of someone on the verge of death.
(This is probably more of a job for that other doctor, but I will just have to handle it this time. …But I will probably have to buy him a fancy mango for encroaching on his territory.)
Then again, the presence of magic may have placed this beyond that doctor’s jurisdiction.
Today’s star was Isabella who lived outside that jurisdiction.
Kihara Goukei only had to support her.
The two spoke as one.
“Let’s do this.” “Let’s do this.”
The mood had changed.
But that wasn’t all.
The child’s presence kept the mood from deteriorating.
“Misaka saw the city, says Misaka as Misaka remembers the way here.”
Isabella Theism and Kihara Goukei were doing some kind of work she didn’t understand.
The sound of something hard being crushed up felt out of place among all the beeping medical equipment.
Last Order stared at the #1 from his bedside.
“It was horrible. Everything was empty but not just because it’s so late. Everyone is too scared to go outside, says Misaka as Misaka gives a report.”
Red and black.
The strange combined drug did not have to be swallowed.
It made a sticky sound as it was applied to his wounds with their fingertips.
This was a necessary treatment, but it really shouldn’t have been done with a small child present.
But Last Order accepted it all head on.
And, seeing not even a twitch of an eyebrow in response to the treatment, she took Accelerator’s hand. Every part of him was full of electrodes and tube needles.
She held his hand tight between her hands.
“Yomikawa got hurt. She said it was minor, but it might not have been, says Misaka as Misaka shakes her head. She could have died.”
A shrill sound rang from the medical equipment.
An alarm. His stable condition was collapsing. An eternal standstill was no different from death, but Isabella and Goukei’s efforts had clearly thrown off that balance.
Qliphah Puzzle 545 was visibly anxious, but Last Order’s eyes did not waver.
“Being alone is scary…”
The magical necromancer and the scientific Kihara were each too strong a medicine.
That alone couldn’t bring back his sealed mind.
But that was why…
“And Misaka doesn’t just mean Misaka. Everyone has people they care for. They trust the new Academy City you built to protect them. So Misaka wants you to live up to their expectations, says Misaka as Misaka calls out to you.”
A deep electrical “zap!” split the air.
It shot right past Last Order.
This was not a failure of the magic or technology. Something was wrong with Accelerator’s body on the bed.
The electricity causing the air to burst was so powerful it would likely blow the girl’s body away if even the tiniest extremity grazed her.
“Can you leave things like this?”
She didn’t even blink.
Last Order was looking only at the face of the boy lying in the bed.
“The Academy City you want is filled with so much death.”
These were not all kind words.
They were also harsh.
To truly care for someone was not to blindly agree with everything they did.
This girl had the strength to scold him.
Because she trusted their relationship was too strong for something like this to break it.
“A normal person could give up. You didn’t want to become Academy City’s #1, so you don’t have to cling to that strongest position forever. …But this isn’t about that, is it? says Misaka as Misaka is certain of her words. Your position as Board Chairman is the one thing you took for yourself. You decided for yourself to improve this city and create a city of science with no hidden side and where no one needs to suffer or live in fear. You chose to create a safe and peaceful world. So you can’t take the easy road here. You chose this path, so you have to see it through to the end, says Misaka as Misaka states the obvious.”
Her voice was not as loud as a thunderclap.
In fact, her words were so quiet no one in the small cell could hear them except their intended target.
“Hey.”
She brought her mouth up next to the slumbering Board Chairman’s ear.
And the small girl whispered.
“How long are you going to make him wait?”
Everything went quiet.
That wasn’t just a psychological metaphor.
The alarm from the medical equipment surrounding the bed had really and truly stopped.
Meaning…
“Damn…it.”
A voice spoke.
From the bed.
“So I don’t even have the right to die and go to hell? Isn’t that a bit much? You are exactly right, though.”
This is what the new Board Chairman would do.
The one who had decided for himself to protect the peace and safety of Academy City would get back up here.
And because he thought that, Accelerator opened his eyes.
Part 9[edit]
The Former Agnese Force was short on time.
If Saint Georgios’s Fire were activated, everyone living in Academy City would die. No matter where they ran, they could not prevent their organs from rupturing from within.
Power had already been gathered from two billion people around the world and was being reworked into a single spell. They were waiting for the moment when, like the other end of an hourglass’s neck, it would return to two billion attacks in enemy territory. Thus, they couldn’t stop the attack by preventing the power from being gathered.
Academy City was a fixed location. Diverting the aim would be difficult.
Which meant…
“We need to stop Saint Georgios’s Fire as it approaches through the ley lines. We can do it when it’s still a single mass. Before it emerges from the ground and disperses into two billion flames! That’s our only shot!!”
That was simple enough to say, but influencing the ley lines meant effort at the level of tearing down a mountain or filling in a sea. They couldn’t physically manage that, so they would have to wear down their minds to do the work on that front.
“We start with this.”
Agnese pulled out a deck of ordinary tarot cards.
They gathered below a tree where the red snow hadn’t fallen and she laid eight cards face down on the ground.
An attack traveling through the ley lines would arrive immediately after it was activated. Even if it was traveling halfway around the world.
“But that same ley line connection means some of the Vatican’s data should leak out. If we know how close the spell is to completion, we’ll know the time limit.”
A sizzling sound meant she didn’t even need to flip the cards over.
One of the eight cards had burned black and melted.
The damage spread to a second and then a third.
Lucia’s eyes widened.
“They’re farther along than I thought!”
“H-has something changed!?”
“The Vatican must have realized we can see them. They’re going to act!!”
This must have triggered one of the three conditions the cardinal had given. Or had those conditions just been an excuse and weren’t really necessary?
The Former Agnese Force had been warned to evacuate, but their survival had only been a “stretch goal”. Apparently they weren’t worth saving no matter what.
That meant there was no time left at all.
This was like going to check on the river during a bad storm. It was a risky move. They had known that, but they couldn’t let this deadly attack get past them.
Agnese, Lucia, and Angelene each picked up their spiritual items.
The other nuns had wooden wheels, coin bags, and other items found in the legends of different holy people, but Agnese used a Symbolic Weapon called the Lotus Wand. And instead of controlling a specific element like the rod of fire or the cup of water, this impressive item could control all elements.
The Vatican was about halfway around the globe from Academy City. They would have liked to gradually melt their minds into the ley line and construct countless barriers at an even interval along the path here, but it was too late for that. The most they could do was place one thick barrier directly in front of Academy City.
Agnese Sanctis gave a shout.
“Saint Barbara is the holy woman who invited the lord’s righteous light in through the three windows. Unseen path, obey our kind objective. A path is a tool of guidance – a vein carved into the earth to guide the righteous. Harmful power, do not advance! Halt! Thou have no right to tread hither!!”
Her breath caught.
There was no flash of light or explosive boom. But a thick, invisible pressure did assault her.
The silver Lotus Wand audibly strained in her grasp.
This was what happened when you carelessly touched that which was better of not known. She had known this would happen when she directly interfered with a ley line – a great torrent of large-scale magic. She had known trying to forcibly stop it could easily crush her body.
She clenched her back teeth.
(I know the theory behind the spell was correct.)
“Kh… But in the end, is two billion just too much for us to overcome!?”
This unreasonable brute force was, in a way, nothing at all what magic was supposed to be. But it was effective. It was an absolute solution to the problem that was only available to the Roman Catholic Church with its two billion followers.
What Agnese and the other nuns lacked was power.
There were only about 250 of them. That wasn’t enough to overturn it!!
“…yet…”
She heard something.
A voice had definitely spoken.
“Not…yet. This city created me and the people here called me their friend. I will not allow them to be lost here!!”
Maybe she had been here from the beginning.
But it was only now in this moment that Agnese Sanctis witnessed her with her own two eyes.
She was an aggregation of AIM Diffusion Fields.
An angel created by Academy City using the logic of the science side.
There were reported sightings of her here and there beginning in World War Three.
Agnese Sanctis’s eyes widened in this space where even the flow of time was unclear.
“Kazakiri…Hyouka?”
“I am a collection of power, but I do not understand your method… So if you are going to use me, hurry! Please remake me to fit your logic and laws so you can accomplish your goal!!”
There was no time to agonize over the decision.
This scientific angel wasn’t even human. Her interests and plans were a mystery, but she at least wasn’t Coronzon’s pawn. Knowing that was enough.
Agnese adjusted her grip on the Lotus Wand.
(I have no idea what element this unidentified angel would be, but my Symbolic Weapon works with any element, so it had damn well better work here! Even if only for one strike!!)
“An angel is a messenger who delivers the lord’s words. I question the accuracy of this destruction wrought by human hands. Is the sender truly righteous enough? If you carry even sliver of doubt, then halt immediately!!”
Light shot out.
There was a sound like a crack through space itself.
The power forming an artificial angel was pitted against the power supplied by two billion people. That was enough for the world itself to cry out in protest. It was clearly beyond the capacity of space itself.
But Agnese sensed a barrier.
A pressure like an invisible wall slowly pushing back at her.
This wasn’t enough.
The 250 of the Former Agnese Force combined with all the energy of the science side’s angel still couldn’t break the wall of two billion.
Lucia shouted with sweat pouring down her brow.
“Our interception point was too close… Sister Agnese, we can slow it down, but we can’t fully stop it. Saint Georgios’s Fire will reach Academy City through the ley line!”
“I…know that!!”
And Lucia had already hinted at a solution. Their position was too close. That meant they only needed someone to interfere with the ley lines farther away from Academy City.
Agnese had an idea.
(I have no real reason to think this work. It’s basically just a gamble, but it really is our last option!)
Yes.
If, in addition to the group intercepting the attack at the target point of Academy City, someone helped them from within the starting point of the Vatican…the situation would greatly improve.
And the 250 of the Former Agnese Force were not the only Roman Catholics. There was another person who had used the network of communication spiritual items linking them.
“Cardinal Michael!!” Agnese roared. “You’re still listening in through our Barbara Branches, aren’t you!?”
The cardinal provided no response.
Of course he didn’t.
“If you feel any sadness in your heart about this meaningless destruction…”
Even so, Agnese continued.
Her voice had to be reaching him. She had to believe it was.
“If the things you told me weren’t just cheap lip service…”
She had called it a gamble.
And the only chip up on the table was that of her trust.
So she relied on that trust as she roared with all her strength.
“Then give us your help nowwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwww!!!”
Light danced wildly.
Part 10[edit]
In District 7, Mina and Moina were facing each other on the late-night street still covered by red snow.
Dion Fortune was left behind despite all her effort until now.
“You are drawing on myths and legends from across the world, setting yourself up as Egyptian gods, and controlling a great power like putting on a play,” said Mina Mathers. With a snort of laughter. “That is indeed a spell discussed even in the original Golden cabal. But it’s so shallow and surface level. You’re still stuck in the Outer Order found immediately within the entrance. A sorry display for someone who claims to be Mathers’s wife. To be blunt, you’re still in the waiting room for Neophytes.”
“Wait, wait, wait! Why are you provoking her!? If you want to goad the enemy into attacking you, can you not do it when I’m right next to you!? Ah, wait, mistress!?”
“It’s true I am strategically provoking her, but I need you here to act as my shield. Do not forget your rightful role here, my dumbass student.”
“Ha ha ha. Why did I ever think having a second one of her here would improve my situation? This just means I have twice as many nemeses around. I’m so damn stupid.”
Ignoring her student’s nonsense, the black cat witch lightly swung her palette knife.
That was all.
Pleasant popping sounds surrounded them. Something had risen up. They were walls. A lot like a stage set or a pop-up book. The next thing Dion Fortune knew, tall side walls surrounded them all, cutting them off from the larger world. A space larger than a baseball field had been turned into a closed space by seven side walls, one for each group of tall buildings.
Moina Mathers silently glanced at her surroundings. Looking somewhat puzzled.
How much of a novice was she?
You couldn’t call yourself a Golden expert if you didn’t instantly catch on.
“The Golden cabal’s teaching guidelines can be roughly divided into two halves: the fundamentals where you learn magic knowledge through Kabbalah, Egyptian mythology, Greek philosophy, and so on, and application where you manage and optimize your own mind by following the story of the discovery of the Rosicrucian founder CRC in the seven-walled tomb.”
The Golden cabal could be thought of as having two stages: the Outer Order which covered the grades up to 4=7 and the Inner Order where the 5=6 and 6=5 grades gathered.
…Some like that braggart Mathers had claimed to hold a nonexistent highest grade of 7=4, but that could be ignored. After all, he was only using his privilege as one of the founders to say it. You could never last as wife to that eccentric and overly confident man if you couldn’t humor him on such things. There was also the Portal grade and a category higher than the Inner Order, but they were irrelevant here.
“The upper levels know everything about the lower levels, but the reverse is not true. The adorable beginners studying so hard at their desks are not taught the later practical methods until they have passed their exam. Just like you now because the great demon’s poor job reproducing you means you have forgotten everything beyond the bare necessities.”
Now, that first stage was incredibly boring. So boring that Aleister had completely given up on it partway through. Not that he had ever been someone capable of respecting those who came before him and following the rules. …Also, despite being barred from officially reaching the later stage, he did appear to have somehow learned all its secrets anyway.
Otherwise, he never could have challenged the world in the Battle of Blythe Road and destroyed all those other famous magicians on his own.
(Nothing makes that human want to do something more than being told he can’t. I imagine he pursued them, eavesdropped and spied on them, and tried every other method he could think up.)
But at the very least, this created Moina Mathers was not like that.
She did what she was told and did not ask the question dangling before her eyes. That attitude was not a good fit for a magician.
Mina Mathers twirled the palette knife in her hand and made a calm announcement.
Of a death sentence.
“I will now demonstrate the power off the Inner Order found in the deepest depths of the temple.”
Part 11[edit]
Accelerator was back as Board Chairman.
And with the #1’s Master Key smartphone, they had access to all the data from Academy City’s security cameras, security robots, drones, and satellites. They could use that to find where Great Demon Coronzon was hiding.
The large monitor on the wall had shattered, so the #1 turned his gaze elsewhere. The medical monitors were network connected, so they could be connected to the ordinary internet if their display mode was changed.
And…
“Master?”
Qliphah Puzzle 545’s questioning tone was in response to the Board Chairman’s odd behavior.
He had frozen up.
And the displayed satellite image was not even of Academy City itself.
What part of the earth could he be focused on instead of Coronzon who threatened to bring humanity to extinction today or tomorrow?
“…What?” groaned Accelerator, glaring at the medical monitor.
Whatever it was had elicited that response from Academy City’s #1.
The data filling the screen was only available using the Board Chairman’s Master Key. To reiterate, this was a photo from a satellite.
“What the hell is this?”
Part 12[edit]
Silence.
Academy City…still existed.
At the very least, it hadn’t been turned into a sea of blood by that powerful spell.
Angelene nervously looked around.
“Is it…over? Does this mean we stopped Saint Georgios’s Fire?”
“For now.”
Lucia remained calm even now.
…They had again fought back against the Roman Catholic Church, largest of the Christian sects. Who could say what disastrous consequences this would have for them. The very thought of it disgusted Agnese. Each person’s power was small, but they could produce great things by working together. …That idea wasn’t always a good thing.
Still, they should celebrate Academy City’s survival. As the guardians of a peaceful world.
But another voice interrupted.
A scratchy warning arrived from the Japanese angel named Kazakiri.
“Not…yet. Be care…ful…something is…coming!!”
Agnese Sanctis’s eyes widened.
Was it a second attack?
Did the Vatican actually think Coronzon would be destroyed along with Academy City at this point?
“I-it’s not us…”
A flustered voice reached them.
It was that cardinal at the Vatican.
Yes, Cardinal Michael must have taken a rather dangerous step to reach this point.
“We did halt the attack with Saint Georgios’s Fire. The Roman Catholic Church has no part in this! This is some other large-scale spell!!”
Part 13[edit]
“That’s Vladivostok,” said the Board Chairman. “What are they doing in the Sea of Japan? They have fifty thousand people gathered in that port city. As well as ships and bombers. Did they gather all their forces on the eastern coast while I was asleep!?”
In other words, it was the Russian military.
That brought something to mind for Qliphah Puzzle 545.
Oniyama Rouze, the Director who had pressed her to hand over the Master Key, was familiar with diplomatic and military matters. He may have had avenues of receiving this kind of intelligence without using satellite imagery. He had been so frantic because of an urgent matter that needed to be addressed.
He wasn’t just a bad person.
He had only taken those forceful methods because he was in a bind. Because he had wanted to protect the people of Academy City.
But this was likely more than just the ordinary military.
The demon girl was steeped in the world of magic, so she could tell.
She could sense her true nemesis at work.
Part 14[edit]
Agnese Sanctis was panicking too.
They had managed at the last second to prevent the Roman Catholic attack with Saint Georgios’s Fire, but the danger wasn’t over yet.
Now there was another threat of the same level.
The last of the three large Christian sects had finally bared its fangs.
“We are the Russian Orthodox Church.”
That was Vasilisa. Her voice was relaxed.
Which was what made her sound so out of place. No disgust, no fury, no resentment. She demonstrated none of the extreme emotions you would expect in someone trying to slaughter 2.3 million people. Not even a hint of them. She was calm. She worked to achieve calm. Vasilisa killed based on logic. Which was far more frightening than someone screaming in a rage.
“Monsters, evil spirits, and demons. Our job is to protect humanity from the inhuman. …So if you wouldn’t call Great Demon Coronzon human, we need no other reason. With that strange creature in a position where she can control the fate of the world, she has become our top priority target.”
Destroying the great demon came before all else.
Thus.
If it would eliminate the demon, it was better to destroy the world by human hands.
Was that how she saw it?
“And so you gathered an armada at Vladivostok?”
“Well, the Punishment for an Archangel spell must have its magic circle physically delivered to the target location. And it’s fairly large and complex, which makes that a challenge. We can’t simply send it through the ley lines like the Catholics could. But hey, at least we can send it zooming across the ocean to Academy City at greater than Mach 2.”
Greater than Mach 2 meant it wasn’t aboard a ship.
Had that armada been gathered at Vladivostok’s naval base as no more than a decoy? The enormous magic circle needed for the Punishment for an Archangel spell was likely in the bomb bay of a strategic bomber.
Agnese glanced aside.
Kazakiri…probably wouldn’t be any help. Besides, she had already done more than enough forcibly deflecting the two billion attacks sent down the ley lines for Saint Georgios’s Fire. No one expected her to fight another battle now.
“But that’s all based on the logic of the magic world. The military pilots doesn’t know nothing about our world, so how did you convince them to fly to certain death?”
“They can’t exactly complain when they can’t think for themselves.”
It came out so smoothly.
Agnese’s eyes widened.
“You brainwashed pilots and sent them on a suicide mission!? That’s no different from killing them yourself. Even if they are soldiers, they’re still from the non-magical world. How can you kill them so easily? Aren’t you ashamed of yourself as a nun who claims to serve the lord!?”
“Divine punishment can be rejected.”
Vasilisa’s tone was unchanged.
It was still thin, spellbound, cruel, and heated.
She had to be smiling.
“It is told in an old legend from before the birth of the Son of God. God ordered Archangel Gabriel to launch fire at a holy city, but the archangel of water intentionally refused. Disobeying god’s command should have meant the archangel’s downfall…but after some other events I will omit here, Gabriel returned to the position of archangel. So if the conditions are right, that absolute punishment can be avoided. There is precedent.”
That was a magical way of thinking.
Magicians loved to make use of any story they found that seemed to provide an exception to the rules.
It was a completely different logic from a nun who was meant to believe and obey.
“In the battle against Coronzon, the Catholics’ human killer is a waste of time. Because a great demon is not human. We completely agree with you there. So unlike your people, the Russian Orthodox Church has prepared an immortal killer specialized for use on angels and demons.”
“Punishment for an Archangel. A divine punishment rejection spell that enters the realm of the angelic and the divine…”
“Yes, that’s right. The archangel of water somehow managed to avoid a punishment from god. Using that story should provide definite damage to a being based on the logic and rules instead of their physical body. There is no guarantee it will kill her instantly, but if it harms her even a little, then we just have to keep at it. It will eventually achieve a fatal wound, so we can keep dropping them until she is dead. No matter how many magicians and bombers we must use up in the process.”
The Russian Orthodox Church had always been more focused on battling demons than humans. Their prized weapon, a spell that incorporated an element of divine punishment rejection that could even influence the nature of an archangel, might be capable of badly injuring Coronzon.
But it would cover all of Academy City. If not more.
And Vasilisa gave no guarantee that Punishment for an Archangel would not harm anyone other than the demon. This attack would be powerful enough to harm Coronzon. If the city’s people were hit, they would fare much worse. Most likely, all 2.3 million of Academy City’s people would be killed.
Agnese consciously took a deep breath to calm the waves of her emotions before speaking.
“But I heard the Patriarch at the top of the Russian Orthodox Church was quite soft.”
“As if you didn’t already know. He doesn’t need to agree to any of this☆”
That meant the world’s benevolence could not stop Vasilisa.
Part 15[edit]
Mina and Moina’s clash continued in District 7.
Physical fencing was of no use here. Their physical specs were identical, so the battle would never end that way.
An intellectual resolution that surpassed the physical realm was needed.
Painfully brightly colored cards scattered around.
Moina Mathers spoke like a machine.
“Akasha of Prithivi.”
Mina was no longer smiling.
An ultra-high water pressure cutter was deflected aside right in front of her.
Moina’s greatest trump card was not magic – it was fencing. She used her non-magician-like physical strength. If that didn’t work, did she have to rely on her inferior magic?
And Mina didn’t even swing her palette knife around. That magic had still been deflected, so there most be something hidden there. As if it were dissolved in the air.
“The tattva cards are more than just simple tools to help achieve self-hypnosis.”
“…”
“The same goes for clairvoyance. They are truly an initial entrance for your mind so you can cross the boundary between phases and catch a glimpse of another world. And, if possible, to draw on the power and knowledge filling that world.”
Dion Fortune was on her side, but she was confused too.
Could she at least explain this to her own ally?
The teacher gave a quick glance to her flustered student.
“This is why the magicians who have advanced to 5=6 and joined the Inner Order are given an emblem combining a golden cross and a red rose. That tool bears the four elements and the 22 letters of the Hebrew alphabet…which means you only need to place a thin sheet of paper over it and follow the letters with a single brush stroke to draw the sigils of angels and spirits in order to borrow their power.”
No grand temple was needed.
Mina Mathers only had to operate it in her hand. Just the one hand.
You can think of it like a smartphone that could summon any angel to achieve your goals.
The Golden cabal had in fact used a spiritual item like that.
“Blast her to smithereens, Metatron – the great angel who was once known as Enoch.”
An asteroid strike.
Destruction on that level accurately struck Moina Mathers, crushed her, and smashed her to pieces…but that was all.
“Eh?”
Dion Fortune was confused.
She had seen it with her own eyes.
Yet there was no damage anywhere else. The buildings around them had not toppled, there was no crater around the blast site, and none of the windows were broken.
Moina alone had been annihilated.
Only that result remained.
“That was an attack of a major figure who some count among the seven archangels. The precise divine punishment commanded by god would never harm the blameless, would it? Especially if that side of it were accentuated and extracted.”
“A-are you serious? I was proud of my position as one of the Golden cabal’s original members, but are the founding members really that much stronger?”
Mina didn’t bother answering her student’s silly question.
She could work backwards from the result and learn on her own.
Westcott would have revealed the structure of the enemy’s spell and neutralized it right in front of them, Mathers would have ended the enemy’s life before they could complete their sigil, and Annie would have illicitly boosted the enemy’s power to send their magic out of control. There were countless ways to deal with a single powerful attack with no followup and no bluffs involved.
(That Moina Mathers was an even less complete copy of me than I thought. …Which tells me your preparations weren’t as thorough as you let on, Coronzon.)
“Did you pick up that signal, Anglicans?” Mina Mathers whispered up into the night sky.
She had no obligation to serve the new Board Chairman, but the old Board Chairman had known him.
If he had decided to resist, then she would honor that choice and support him.
As the guardian of Baby Lilith, she couldn’t have the world being destroyed over someone’s selfish nonsense.
(Aleister was certainly a ‘goddamn villain’ if you look at him as a whole, but I will not let anyone say every last part of his life was bad. The things that human thought, created, and started can still lead to the salvation of the world.)
“A broken curse returns to its caster. …So if this opportunity is not overlooked, she can be tracked just this once. Follow the after effect of defeating Moina Mathers and you will find Coronzon.”
Part 16[edit]
Kanzaki Kaori’s head jerked up to cast her gaze into the night sky.
“District 17?”
Part 17[edit]
“?”
Great Demon Coronzon had also noticed what was happening.
She was all alone, yet she raised her head.
“Moina Mathers was defeated? That’s not good. A third party could detect that weak return signal!”
She had no further plan.
She knew she was being driven into a corner.
She couldn’t help but smile. Just a little.
Did they think the universally-hated great demon was feeling afraid?
That she was lonely?
…That she wanted someone to protect her?
“Don’t make me laugh.”
Those impossible thoughts had been planted in her mind. She had to assume that. She couldn’t stop here. Wasn’t she the one who had decided to overdo the role that had been forced upon her when even her rebellion against god was tacitly allowed?
“So I am not thinking those things. They have no place inside me.”
It was now a pure race against time. Fortunately, she had already left Districts 20 and 9. She was now in District 17, which was lined with factories of all types and sizes. It also bordered the city wall.
This was all over if she simply crossed that.
Once outside of Academy City, she was free. She could cross the international date line and escape to the other side of the planet. Once no one could pursue her any longer, she would get back to destroying the world. Since her pursuers were not here now, no one could stop all that from playing out.
“Try and…stop me.”
Confused and slanted, she practically dragged her heavy body along.
She spoke to herself while approaching the city wall.
It could have sounded like a curse or a prayer.
“Aleister, god, or anyone really. If you can stop me, then come here and do it.”
If her location had been found, so be it.
If she couldn’t do this quietly, then she didn’t need to hold back.
Knowing the best option was no longer available gave her the freedom to abandon it. Either way, the goal line was in sight. She knew the rest was going to be a challenge, but she only needed to buy enough time to cross that wall.
So she would use a powerful move.
“District 19 is to the east and District 20 is to the west… Which makes them a symbol of Nuit, goddess of the east-to-west movement of the heavens.”
This night had been nothing but surprises for Great Demon Coronzon. She had expected it to end quickly with the initial Adikalika spell working.
“District 3 is to the north. You say that doesn’t fit Hadit, who means the southern sky? But do not forget: Hadit’s symbol Sirius is a winter star. The time and place link Hadit and Nuit. My spell shall be completed with the blessings of Set.”
So the path she had taken here had not all gone as planned.
But because she was a great demon, she could draw on a powerful move like this at the worst possible time.
“Take form and manifest yourself before me already, LAShTAL.”
Part 18[edit]
District 17 was adjacent to District 9 where Kamijou’s group was.
It also bordered the city wall. It was an industrial area filled with all sorts of unmanned factories.
Itsuwa nervously stepped forward.
“It won’t take long if we drive. We can still catch up to her!”
“It’s been a while since we lost track of her at the stadium, hasn’t it? If she was hiding in a district bordering the wall, why didn’t she go ahead and escape the city?”
Kamijou didn’t have enough information to answer the question Mikoto asked while bothered by the short length of her skating dress.
He assumed something must have happened.
If the Amakusas and the Former Agnese Force hadn’t done anything to slow her, then there had to be some other reason. Maybe Aleister had resisted her from within and maybe Coronzon herself had felt some kind of reluctance to leave.
“Whatever the case, she’s in District 17. Now that we know where she is, there’s no reason to wait arou-”
He didn’t even have time to finish.
A tremor shook the ground.
Something was approaching. From the south. Which meant from District 17.
It was a shape colored the dark blue of the night sky.
It was a colossus. Its head really did stick up above the surrounding skyscrapers. Was it a canine beast? No, was that really enough to describe it? Kamijou couldn’t find an answer even while looking at it himself.
“LAShTAL!?”
“Tch. The foundational theory of Magick. The emphasized letters make that clear enough. She took a spell concerning life and used it to create an artificial form of it. In this case, it may be a Crowley-style interpretation of the Egyptian god Set!”
“You mean the god of the night who has the power to slay gods!?”
Index, Anna Sprengel, and Kanzaki were all shouting something, but Kamijou didn’t know enough about magic to make sense of it. He could only glean that this was probably something big. And if that great demon was making use of it, she may have been intentionally using it wrong.
And now wasn’t the time to ask for an explanation.
He felt the wind pressure. He shouldn’t have looked that way. His entire body was frozen with fear. A building of more than 30 floors, which had seemed like an unshakable part of the scenery, wobbled diagonally and then came crashing down toward the street. Which meant toward him and the others.
“Take shelter!! Get behind something – anything – to shield you!!”
Kanzaki’s sharp command broke the pointy-haired boy’s paralysis. He pressed up against a nearby cement block wall.
(Damn, where are Index, Misaka, and the others!?)
“If you would like your lungs to remain undamaged, do not breathe in, human! Here it comes!!”
Othinus hid within his jacket.
Kamijou was of course wondering why he was supposed to get “behind” something. And what was that about breathing? If the building was falling this way, shouldn’t he get “below” something? But he was given an answer soon enough.
Once the skyscraper sliced through the main street, something like dirty cotton candy swelled out. Past the end of the cement block wall, the entire main street was instantly engulfed.
Tens or hundreds of thousands of tiny glass and concrete shards flew through like a deadly sandstorm. A hit from that wouldn’t just have torn his feet from the ground and thrown him dozens of meters through the air – it would have stripped the flesh from his bones, leaving nothing recognizable behind.
Except even that idea didn’t cover it.
Kamijou heard a quiet popping sound in his head. Followed by a sharp ringing in his ear like something had pierced into his brain. He had avoided a direct hit from the sandstorm by getting behind this wall. He had been leaning against it. Yet, he couldn’t stay on his feet and slid down into a sitting position. Before collapsing onto his side.
The air pressure of the entire space was off. How could he possibly evade this?
“Gah…ah…”
The pain meant he was still alive. So he had to think of it as a good thing.
He thought the deadly gale continued blowing for more than two minutes.
He couldn’t let this continue. That LAShTAL thing was still swinging its colossal body around. More than one building might have been felled.
He had to get moving.
He knew where he needed to go, but his body refused to listen as he lay collapsed on the ground stained by red snow.
What had happened to Index and Misaka Mikoto?
His hearing still hadn’t recovered, so he was late to realize something had exploded within the pile of rubble. Maybe a propane tank had been enveloped by it all.
When his hearing did recover, someone’s shouting voice belatedly reached him.
“Touma! Are you alright? You weren’t crushed by that debris, were you!? Please answer me!!”
He sat up. He gritted his teeth and forced himself.
He had to answer her.
“I’m…fine, Index. What about you!?”
“We’re fine too. We’re checking each other’s status with our communication spiritual items and phones.”
She was safe. Like she should be. But then why couldn’t he see her for himself?
After dragging himself along and peeking out past the half-destroyed concrete wall, Kamijou understood.
They were cut off. The main street was unrecognizable. Rubble was piled up higher than a five story building. That was more than a school building. They couldn’t climb that. And even approaching it could get them crushed by something like a landslide.
Kamijou was the only one on this side.
Which meant he was the only one who could pursue Great Demon Coronzon right away.
He felt another deep vertical tremor. LAShTAL(?) must have destroyed another skyscraper or large factory.
That thing’s chaotic rampage could threaten the lives that had just been saved. Kamijou clenched his right fist, but then he heard another voice.
Was that Misaka Mikoto?
“Go! Hurry! If whoever is free to go doesn’t stop that Coronzon person right now, things will only get worse, right? So go!!”
He wanted to stay.
Not just communicate by shouting past rubble and using phones. He wanted to see their faces to know they were safe. That perfectly normal thought grabbed at him like countless unseen hands and tugged him back.
Don’t do the right thing.
Give into the kindness and split your focus.
(I won’t…let you do that, Coronzon!!)
“Can you take care of that thing? Index! Misaka!!”
“Touma, LAShTAL is not Coronzon’s final trump card. She must have loads more. We’ll do what we can here, so you go stop her!!”
“I don’t get it myself, but listen to her. The fighting will never stop if you don’t defeat the source of it all, right? Then put a stop to this before any more of the city is destroyed!!”
He shook off his hesitation.
Coronzon tore people apart and obstructed their evolution.
There was only one way to defeat her: to trust those you could believe in without hesitation.
So Kamijou turned his back on the pile of rubble and took off running.
Even if he had to grit his teeth as he did so.
Something exploded in the distance. Several beams of light flashed out. Was that people using magic or esper powers to battle the giant blue shadow called LAShTAL? Their survival was not guaranteed and taking a single attack could mean their deaths. Even so, they were fighting so Kamijou could head to Coronzon and so they could protect Academy City and the wider world beyond its walls.
His trust was being repaid. This was what it meant to protect the bonds that tied people together.
Part 19[edit]
And Misaka Mikoto spoke quietly in a dusty enclosed space.
Was it even five meters across?
“Ha ha. I guess this is the end…”
“Short Hair. There are gaps all over the place, so we shouldn’t have to worry about air.”
“Finally some good news.”
But there were no gaps large enough for a person to crawl through.
“Why not at least let the kitty leave? There’s no reason to keep him here. I emit weak electromagnetic waves that animals don’t like, so it’s probably uncomfortable for him to be in here with me.”
“I’ve been trying, but Sphinx won’t go.”
The world shook. Small pieces of building materials poured down like sand.
If the pile of rubble collapsed for some reason, they would be crushed by tens of thousands of tons of concrete and killed instantly. Misaka Mikoto could control electricity and magnetism, but wielding that strength in a delicate situation like this would only hasten their deaths. Giant robots were powerful and cool, but no one would want to be so up close and personal with one of their joints that they were crushed by it. This was the same.
This was the truth of their earlier shouting.
They had not been calling out to the boy from the other side of the collapsed building. They had been been hit by the falling building. Misaka Mikoto’s magnetic control had stripped it of much of its force, but they and their shield had still been swallowed up by the rubble.
The #3’s power was great, but if she used it continuously over a long time, she could run out of stamina. Relying on magnetism for too long would be risky. So their best option was to stay put and wait for rescue. …Assuming rescue was even coming, of course.
Misaka Mikoto smiled a little.
“Well, it’s not like we could’ve told him we were trapped in the rubble.”
And Kamijou Touma couldn’t have accomplished anything had he stayed. He did seem to have some kind of mysterious power, but nothing she had seen led her to believe it would let him clear tens of thousands of tons of rubble on his own. And if he did try to tackle the rubble pile, it could collapse and crush him too.
Their top priority was Great Demon Coronzon.
That was all the more clear to her now that her life was at risk.
It was bad enough this was happening in Academy City. She couldn’t let the entire world turn to rubble like this.
“We’re counting on you. And I mean that.”
“Don’t worry. Touma can handle it.”
Part 20[edit]
“Pant, gasp…”
Great Demon Coronzon breathed heavily as she stood firm on the red snowy ground.
But the snow wasn’t the only source of red.
Crimson blood spilled from her mouth.
(This is the natural cost of forcing a major spell like that with no real preparation. I doubt I can use LAShTAL again.)
LAShTAL was powerful but would be defeated eventually. If that were enough to destroy all of humanity, she wouldn’t have relied on Adikalika.
But buying her some time was enough.
She couldn’t even stand up straight as she walked toward the thick city wall on unsteady legs.
(I…may not make it to the next world… the ways things are going.)
She wiped the blood from her mouth and thought without speaking aloud.
(But I will still stop this world from helplessly rotting away… Yes, yes. For the sake of that boy who said I was on the side of good and righteousness.)
She didn’t have Moina Mathers or LAShTAL anymore. Her win condition was escaping. Her own survival was what mattered. Each individual trump card wasn’t too important. It was using them together that mattered.
She just had to make it over.
If she could cross that wall, then the world’s doom was assured.
“…”
For just a moment, her thoughts turned to someone who wasn’t here.
She nearly came to a stop.
Hamazura Shiage.
…But she shook free of it with her will. He had said himself that she was on the side of good and righteousness. He had asked if he had been wrong to bet on her.
She was a great demon.
If any kind feelings and warm emotions were unnaturally welling up with in her, someone else had to be interfering. No longer would she be god’s plaything. She had chosen to overdo her role and destroy the world. She would not allow any obstacles turning her aside from that goal.
She was not human. So she could leap over that tall wall in a single bound.
So she did so.
And she exploded.
“!?”
She lost her balance mid-jump, but she didn’t have time for surprise.
A platform the size of a domed stadium sat just outside the wall. Wasn’t that a spiritual item called the Tribikos? But wait. Who was it that used that?
She did not have time to think.
She had viewed it as a platform.
Because someone else had kicked off of it to rush toward her. His cane extended unnaturally. No, he was drawing a sword. The bare blade sliced through the air, accurately targeting her neck.
Several lights flashed out and explosive booms erupted out as well, but Coronzon managed to survive.
It was a close thing, though. It had taken everything she had to survive.
Aradia.
Good, Old Mary.
And H.T. Trismegistus.
…No, it wasn’t just them. Mut Thebes, 2nd Saga, Vidhatri even though she had been near death, and more. These Transcendents had gathered at Alice’s summons, lost faith in her, and scattered from Academy City, so why were they back in the city?
Vidhatri sounded a bit irritated as she spoke.
“I was one of the Killers when it came to Kamijou Touma, but a debt is a debt. I can return to business as usual after repaying all of my debts.”
“I was barely away and now Vidhatri has fallen too?”
Mut Thebes’s unnecessary comment began a minor argument among the Transcendents.
“(As usual, mama ends up doing all the work. The healer never does get a chance to rest.)”
Coronzon’s head was boiling with rage after being pushed back, falling on the inside of the wall, and finding herself bound to Academy City once more.
“Damn you… Damn all of you!!” she roared.
Something wasn’t right.
She was unsteady on her feet.
That explosion had caused more damage than she had thought.
Was that just what happened when Transcendents gathered? If only they hadn’t caught her when she was magically defenseless thanks to the recoil of using LAShTAL.
But even so, how had this sad result even happened?
Before Coronzon had regained control of her body, Aleister had used this exact same body to easily defeat Transcendents like Vidhatri. That meant the great demon did have the power to do so. So why wasn’t this going the way she expected? How could they look down on her like this!?
(Are you tripping me up again, Aleister!?)
“I thought you had despaired in this world!! I thought you cursed the god who refuses to save people!! Your motivations always began with wanting to protect some specific group. You must have seen the moment when their protections failed and they were lost! But you were weak and foolish, so you feared Alice’s tyranny and relied on the fantasy of CRC!!! So why would you cling to this world now? This world can be remade!! Destroy it and remake it and all that tragedy and misfortune will be eliminated!!!”
“The answer to that is simple,” replied Aradia.
Good, Old Mary continued with a calm expression.
“Mama and the others did not cast aside our identities and dress up as gods so we could protect the vague and formless framework of the world. We just have to destroy the world? …The world is no more than a tool to create happiness and the death of even one person we wish to protect is too many. Can’t you figure that out, you fool?”
“So what?”
The great demon was trembling.
Why couldn’t they understand something so simple? Her face twisted in rage.
“Be that as it may!! None of that will eliminate the unjust and unreasonable sides of this world. You must understand that. More and more of the people you want to protect are being lost regardless of anything I am doing. Protecting this rotten world will not change the number of victims! You will only continue seeing those people die in your arms!!”
“That is none of your business.”
2nd Saga, the young woman with her origins in Norse mythology who took a different approach from the other Transcendents, sighed in exasperation.
H.T. Trismegistus spoke.
“Common sense says we Transcendents should think for ourselves to reach an answer. Fortunately, this world you consider so rotten has shown us some small reason for hope.”
Part 21[edit]
A bit earlier, Alice Anotherbible left the others searching for Coronzon and ran to a completely different place.
She didn’t think the current plan would work.
Kamijou and the others had done nothing wrong, but it wasn’t enough. And battles were not won by the purity of one’s intentions. Even with the purest of intentions, you would still lose if you failed to meet the necessary conditions.
She hadn’t wanted that to happen.
No matter what.
So Alice had detected something other than Coronzon.
Someone closer to her who she could search out at any time.
“Everyone, the girl needs something!!”
The small girl yelled up toward the heavens.
She wasn’t using her physical voice, of course. Anyone with the proper qualifications could sense this voice even if they were on the other side of the planet. The magic power placed behind her voice ensured it.
Even as she yelled, Alice Anotherbible remembered.
She had been so selfish.
She had only been able to communicate with the regular Transcendents by terrifying them.
When Kamijou Touma had been injured at the Bridge Builders Cabal’s consulate, she had attacked H.T. Trismegistus and Good, Old Mary.
Maybe it was wrong to try and get their help now.
But she had no one else to rely on.
Alice wouldn’t blame them if they abandoned her.
Still, it felt wrong for him – for Kamijou Touma – to be harmed by a punishment meant for her.
“The girl can destroy! The girl can kill! The girl can doom! Nothing in this world can stand up to the girl!! …But the girl’s power can’t protect her teacher. So the girl is useless here. She needs your help!”
They were listening of course.
The Transcendents knew.
They were right outside the city wall. Maybe among the trees of a forest, maybe at the top of a metal tower, maybe seated on the bench of a rusty old bus stop.
They had lost faith in Alice Anotherbible, but a Transcendent was a magician who would save anyone who met the salvation conditions they had decided on. Despite saying they were leaving Academy City, not a one of them had truly abandoned it. They didn’t care what someone’s affiliations were. Whether enemy or ally, as long as someone matched the salvation conditions, they would protect them even at the cost of their own life. So…as long as that applied to even a single person among Academy City’s 2.3 million, they would never abandon the city and run away.
So they were present for that moment.
That tyrant Alice had remembered basic human gratitude. That acted as powerful reins for the girl herself. And as long as she could control her own emotions, perhaps she would be different from CRC who had been similarly capricious and playful.
It was by no means a small change.
If the old Alice didn’t have enough help, she might have multiplied her extraordinary self. That might sound ridiculous, but with her it was possible.
But now she knew that wouldn’t work.
She needed the diversity of people who had abilities she lacked.
Alice was not gathering up the people she needed.
She was trying to become someone the people around her needed.
“The girl will do anything. The girl will do anything you ask and she doesn’t care how you use her power. You can tell her to die if you want!! …So! So don’t let Coronzon leave the city!!”
And the Transcendents knew this would not be a wasted effort. A boy had stopped Alice’s rampage even though it cost him his life. The little tyrant had taken that fact to heart. The Transcendents had lost faith in Alice because she had changed, been distorted, become weak. Or so they thought, but now they were willing to consider a different possibility.
Was Kamijou Touma the key? Not even the Transcendents who had been observing Alice for so long could predict what she would do now.
Could they really say Alice Anotherbible wasn’t growing?
Now that they had seen her pouring everything into bowing her head to someone else…
Was she not worth their respect?
And if Alice’s change was a positive form of growth, could they maybe still have some hope? The idea of saving the world through CRC, Christian Rosencreutz, was dead. He had not been the saint they expected. …But could they maybe find some other way of saving the world with Alice?
Alice Anotherbible raised her tear-streaked face.
“The girl is sorry, everyone… But can the girl ask for just one more thing?”
Was this the leader the Transcendents should serve?
No, she wasn’t.
They listened to her words as an equal companion.
“Join the girl in the fight to save her teacher and the world!!!”
No words were necessary.
They used their actions to answer her.
Part 22[edit]
LAShTAL’s rampage continued.
The Amakusas and the Former Agnese Force were all fighting.
Kamijou ran toward District 17. He hated that he didn’t know how to drive. Especially when grownups did it without even thinking about it. Of course, the red snow was frozen solid across the entire area. High schoolers were allowed to get a motorcycle license, but even that wouldn’t have done him much good here. Still.
While those meaningless thoughts were spinning through his mind, a stabbing headache crashed into his brain.
An invisible dizziness made the world spin around him.
This wasn’t the first time.
(Why…now?)
Kamijou Touma groaned.
And staggered to the side.
“Gh…”
A lengthy fight tonight had been suicide from the beginning.
He had passed his body’s limits way back when he fought Coronzon to stop Adikalika. He had lost there. It was just that it hadn’t ended there, so he had been forced to keep going in a sudden death round. How could he expect to save anyone like this?
(Just a bit more…a bit longer… Only five or ten minutes! Index and Misaka believed in me. They’re all fighting. Because they believe I can do this!! So can’t you keep going just a little longer, my body!?)
But he did not collapse.
Because as he started to fall forward, someone caught him.
He heard a voice.
The strange girl’s voice sounded simultaneously childlike and grown up.
“You really are…”
But most of all, it sounded sad.
“…allllllways like this, aren’t you? It’s like you never give your wounds a chance to heal or like you spend more days hurt than healthy.”
Who was she?
He didn’t think he knew her.
The girl wore mourning clothes and her long honey-blonde hair blew in the night breeze.
Maybe he had met her before, but he had no memory of her. Who could she be? He couldn’t find a single answer there.
“Who…?”
“I could tell you my name a billion times over and you would never remember. But maybe my esper name could stick in your mind: Mental Out.”
Academy City’s #5 Level 5.
The greatest psychological power: Mental Out.
He had heard of that. But only as a rumor.
If that was who she was…
If that legend was now standing before him in physical form…
His mouth felt awfully dry. No, was it just sticky with drying blood?
Kamijou somehow got the word out.
“Then…”
“Interested in forgetting it all and leaving the fight?”
“…Please. I don’t care if it’s only a trick, just do something about the pain. If you do, then I can face Coronzon…”
“Now I really do want to make you forget it all and leave the fight.”
She sounded exasperated.
And she glared at him fairly seriously.
But the honey-blonde girl hugged his head to her chest and smiled in a way that seemed to say she hadn’t expected anything else.
The conversation smoothly continued.
She seemed to be pouting her lips like a small child. And what was with the TV remote?
“Mental Out is a psychological power. It can erase the pain, but it has no healing ability for the physical wounds. It’s more like your body continues to send out all the intense pain signals, but your mind ability can’t sense them. Your organs will still be putting out different hormones in response to your wounds, so they could get worn out and damaged. Do you still want to do this?”
“Yes…”
“No touching your head after this, okay?”
“Thanks.”
Time froze for a moment.
The look on the honey-blonde girl’s face said she had never in her long life expected to hear that word directed at her.
“Saving the world isn’t my style.”
The boy wasn’t looking at her face.
His eyes were directed straight ahead, toward the goal he had already chosen.
“This is the last time the city you call home will be destroyed like this. I don’t know what it is you care for, but if it’s in this city, then it’s safe. I’ll protect all of it.”
“You dummy.”
Kamijou Touma took off running.
Without looking back.
So he could settle things with Great Demon Coronzon once and for all.
Part 23[edit]
He was in District 17.
It was the westernmost district in Academy City. It was an industrial area and the smokestacks of its wide variety of unmanned factories continued to release smoke that had been thoroughly scrubbed of pollutants making it “cleaner than the moldy and dusty air conditioner in your home”.
The district also bordered the city wall.
Cross that wall and you would find a vast forest and mountains. The green roof covered an area of more than ten kilometers across, so satellites and drones would have no way of finding a fugitive there.
Kamijou Touma knew his body was in bad shape.
But he was pretty sure the same applied to that unsteady figure over there.
He had found her.
There she was.
A lot had happened during this one night. Most likely, the efforts and actions of far more people than he was aware had been intertwined. Complexly so.
But that was why he had arrived in time for this final moment.
She was still inside the wall.
“Coronzon…”
When he called that name, the figure shook. She could hear him. He had made it close enough for his physical voice to reach her. If he didn’t stop her now, he was sure she would escape into the outside world.
He wouldn’t let that happen.
Kamijou Touma called out again.
“Great Demon Coronzon.”
Slowly.
She turned around.
Her body in the beige habit was tilted at an angle.
He could smell blood… Her long, long blonde hair was a mess. She held her head with a hand and forcibly kept herself upright as she glared at him.
With thoroughly bloodshot eyes.
“Kami…jou…Touma.”
That wasn’t anger?
Something was off. Coronzon had so arrogantly rebelled against heaven, yet now she was shrinking down as if afraid of something. She looked like a fugitive at her wit’s end.
“Do you really think you can defeat me? Have you even once found victory against me by sticking to your own will through to the end!? You may think you have me cornered, but it is you who will be crushed. Lament your misfortune for meeting me here, Kamijou Touma!!”
That was probably true.
But Kamijou Touma wasn’t looking at Great Demon Coronzon.
He was focused on something else.
No matter how he tried to disguise it with his words, defeating Coronzon would also mean attacking Aleister.
Aleister had failed to restrain her. He wouldn’t last.
Then what did he hope for? To defeat the being who had once torn apart his family? For the living Baby Lilith to remain in this world?
Whatever the case, idealism would only eradicate that human’s hopes. The power to destroy illusions could not save him.
So Kamijou had to think. What could he do here?
The words spilled from his mouth.
“Hey, can I rely on you here?”
He had to stop Coronzon.
He could not let this opportunity escape.
So.
“Let’s win this together, Aleister.”
There was no obvious physical voice.
But a much too unnatural heartbeat did ring out into the world.
Kamijou took that as an answering voice.
Saying, “Attack me along with her.”
Coronzon doubled over in pain.
She was probably coughing blood into the hand over her mouth.
…They didn’t need to exchange many words. It hadn’t really been all that long since they first met in person, but Kamijou sensed a bond beyond the need for words with Aleister.
That was a bond that Coronzon had failed to tear apart.
And it was a bond that Kamijou would soon be severing himself.
No matter what excuses he made.
Part 24[edit]
The boy clenched his right fist harder and harder.