The Transfer
The late March air in Kyoto still carried a wintery bite, a crispness that clung to the stone pathways and seeped through the fabric of the standard-issue Gakuran uniforms. For the students of Kyoto High, the noise of the second-floor corridor was a familiar symphony of hurried footsteps, slamming lockers, and overlapping gossip, a chaotic buffer before the first bell’s tyranny. But inside Class 2-B, a different kind of order reigned. It was an atmosphere thick with the stale scent of chalk dust and fear, an oppressive silence curated by the girl standing atop a teacher’s desk as if it were her personal dais.
Haruna’s shadow fell long and sharp across the linoleum floor, swallowing the smaller, trembling form of a boy named Kenji. Her long, black hair was immaculately styled, a stark contrast to the wild, almost predatory gleam in her dark eyes. She held a stack of papers pinched between two fingers, dangling them over his head like an executioner’s warrant. The rest of the class—some thirty souls—were frozen in place, a gallery of statues pretending to be absorbed in textbooks or the smudges on their desks. Eyes were averted, breaths were held. To look directly at Haruna during one of her sermons was to invite the blaze of her attention, a fate no one dared to risk.
“I don’t think you understand, Kenji,” Haruna’s voice was deceptively sweet, a coating of honey over a blade of steel. She tapped the papers against his forehead, each tap making him flinch. “I asked for my history report. I gave you four days. Are you telling me that a simple, five-page essay on the Meiji Restoration was too much for your brilliant little mind to handle?”
“I... I was busy, Haruna-san,” he stammered, his voice barely a whisper. His knuckles were white where he gripped the straps of his schoolbag. “My mother... she wasn’t well.”
A collective, silent wince rippled through the classroom. A foolish move. Pity was a currency Haruna did not trade in; she saw it only as a weakness to be exploited.
“Your mother?” Haruna’s smile widened, but it held no warmth. It was the baring of teeth. “How unfortunate for her. And now, how unfortunate for you. Because now, you not only have to finish my history report by lunch, but you’ll also be handling my math homework for the rest of the week.” She leaned down, her face inches from his. “Am I making myself clear?”
Kenji gave a jerky, desperate nod, his eyes swimming with unshed tears. “Yes... Haruna-san.”
It was at that precise moment of absolute, suffocating tension that the classroom door slid open. The sound, normally innocuous, cut through the silence like a tearing sheet of silk. Every head, including Haruna’s, snapped toward the entrance.
He stood there for a moment, silhouetted against the bright light of the hallway. The first thing they noticed was his hair—long, raven-black, and meticulously gathered into a high top knot, secured not by a simple band, but by a glinting silver cord that seemed to drink the light. His face was a mask of cold neutrality, features sharp and well-defined but utterly devoid of expression. His eyes, dark and heavy-lidded, swept over the room with a slowness that felt less like observation and more like a languid dismissal. He wore the same uniform as everyone else, yet it looked different on him, sharper, as if tailored for a soldier rather than a student.
This was Jin, the transfer from Tokyo. Rumors had preceded him, whispered tales of expulsions and brutal fights that painted him as some kind of urban demon. Looking at him now, at the unnerving stillness in his posture, the rumors didn’t seem so far-fetched.
His gaze drifted over the students, their fearful faces, Kenji’s pathetic, hunched form, and finally, it landed on Haruna. She was still perched on the desk, a queen on her throne, momentarily thrown off balance by the interruption. She expected a reaction. New students were supposed to be easy marks, intimidated by the social landscape, eager to understand the hierarchy. She expected him to show fear, confusion, or at the very least, curiosity.
Jin gave her nothing.
His eyes met hers for a fraction of a second. There was no flicker of interest, no shock at the scene he had walked into, no acknowledgment of her dominant posture. It was the same look one might give a crack in the wall or a scuff on the floor—a brief registration of an object’s existence before moving on. He blinked once, slowly, and the contact was broken.
Then, with an unhurried, almost silent gait, he began to move. He ignored the open seats near the front, his path taking him along the edge of the classroom, his footsteps making no sound on the worn floor. The students in his path seemed to shrink away, pulling their bags closer, leaning instinctively away from the cold aura that radiated from him. He walked past Haruna’s desk, not even sparing her a second glance, his focus solely on the one empty seat in the entire room: a desk by the window in the very last row.
He reached the spot, slid his bag from his shoulder, and placed it on the floor with quiet deliberation. He pulled out the chair, the slight scrape of its legs against the linoleum echoing in the tomb-like silence of the room. He sat, his posture ramrod straight, and turned his head to look out the window at the swaying cherry blossom trees in the courtyard, their pale pink flowers a stark contrast to the tension inside. It was a complete and utter dismissal of everything and everyone in the classroom. He had entered their world, witnessed its central drama, and judged it unworthy of his attention.
The act was more profound than any spoken insult. It was a denial of Haruna’s very existence as a power. Defiance would have been a tribute, an admission that she held authority worth defying. Fear would have been a victory. But this... this was nothing. It was a void.
Haruna remained on the desk, her manicured fingers still clutching the homework papers. The sweet, cruel smile had vanished from her lips. Her jaw was tight. She watched the back of Jin’s head, the way the silver cord caught a stray sunbeam, a sliver of impossible brightness in the gloom. The entire class was watching her now, waiting for the inevitable explosion. They could feel the shift in pressure, the calm before a violent storm.
She slowly lowered her hand, her knuckles white. Kenji, forgotten, scurried back to his seat, clutching his bag to his chest like a shield.
Haruna’s eyes narrowed into dangerous slits. A nerve in her cheek twitched. For the first time in a long time, within the four walls of her kingdom, she was not the most dangerous thing in the room. She had been ignored. She had been rendered irrelevant. A low, quiet fire began to kindle in the pit of her stomach, a furious heat that promised to burn. She stared at the unmoving silhouette by the window, and a single, sharp thought crystallized in her mind.
*I’m going to break him. *