Shogo answered as he surveyed the flat land, “Yeah.”
Shuya moved his shoulder to give Noriko better support. “Won’t that hinder our escape?”
Shogo chuckled with his back to Shuya. “Nope. Not at all. Don’t worry.” Shogo looked over the flat land again and said, “Let’s go back to where we were.”
He continued, “A common strategy players in this game take is to show up anywhere they hear some action. That’s because of the 24-hour deadline. Because of that limitation, they kill when they can. And the fact that they’re on a killing spree means they’re on their own, so they can’t afford to sleep much. So the match has to be kept short. If something happens near them, they go there, and if there’s a fight already going on, they sit back and then they finish off any survivors. That’s why we should stay somewhere we can avoid confrontations. If we get mixed up with someone who’s panicking then one of the top players is bound to show up. If we go back where we were it’s unlikely we’ll meet anyone. Since Tatsumichi Old and Kyoichi Motobuchi, who’d been hiding there, are no longer around, that area is pretty much uninhabited.”
“But Hirono ran in that direction.”
“No, I doubt she’s gone that far. It wouldn’t be necessary.” Shogo pointed to the flat land with his thumb. “But we’ll avoid this mountain where she might be hiding. We’ll take a different route.”
Shuya lifted his brow. “Is it safe for us to move through the flat land?”
Shogo smiled and shook his head. “The moon may be shining, but this isn’t daylight. I think we’re safer there than in the mountain, where there’s too much cover.”
Shuya nodded. Shogo took the lead and began descending the slope. Shuya held the SIG-Sauer tightly in his right hand and followed Shogo as he supported Noriko.
The trees turned into a field of short grass. The first farm they came across had a field full of squashes. Beyond this field there was a wheat field. This island was so small these probably weren’t for domestic consumption. Of course the Republic of Greater East Asia was incessantly issuing orders to promote national self-reliance, so even a small farm like this might contribute a little to the effort. As they moved along the edge of the farm, the soil under their sneakers felt dry. Maybe it was because several days had passed since the area had been evacuated. Still, Shuya was struck by the pleasant, rich odor of wheat drifting through the evening air, anticipating the summer.
It was a nice smell. Especially after having smelled so much blood.
There was a tractor to their left. Beyond the vehicle there was a house.
It was an ordinary, two-story house and appeared relatively new. It was probably one of those cheap, mass produced buildings resembling Banana Homes or Vertebrae Houses. Even though it was in the middle of the farm, it was enclosed by a concrete wall.
Shuya looked at Shogo’s back as he moved forward.
Something irked him.
He looked back. Noriko was leaning on his left shoulder as she walked, but he noticed something high above her head in the middle of the sky. Something flashing in the moonlight, tracing an arc. This object came flying at them.
50
What made Shuya such a star athlete in his Little League days was his incredible ability to perceive objects in motion. Even in this dim light Shuya could tell that the object flying towards them right now
resembled a can. Of course, they were in the serene Seto Inland Sea region, so it couldn’t possibly be an empty can falling from the sky from a hurricane. There was no way it was an empty can.
No.
Shuya suddenly released his shoulder, which was tucked under Noriko’s right armpit. He couldn’t even afford to call on Shogo, who must have realized something odd though, because he also suddenly turned around, while Noriko tottered without Shuya’s support.
Shuya dashed out. His jumping ability was quite extraordinary. Just as in the past, during the Little League prefectural semifinals, he could make the ultimate play from any given position, stealing the opponents’ winning home run in the bottom of the eleventh inning.
Shuya caught the ball—no, the can—in mid-air with his left hand. He put it in his right hand, and as he came down he twisted his body and threw it as far as he could.
Before Shuya landed a bright light shined through the night.
He felt the air burst as a sonic boom tore through his eardrums. The bomb blast blew him away before he could land, and he fell sprawling onto the ground. If he’d waited for the hand grenade to fall, he, Noriko, and Shogo would have all been mincemeat now. Although Sakamochi’s crew might have reduced the grenade’s explosive power so that it couldn’t be used against the school, it was more than capable of killing human beings.
He raised his head. He realized, he heard nothing. His ears were screwed up. In this state of silence, Shuya saw Noriko collapsed on his left. Then he lifted his face to look back at Shogo and saw…
—another can flying at them!
Another one! I have to… but it was too late now.
His disabled ears all of a sudden heard a definite but muffled bang, almost simultaneously followed by another explosion in the air. This sound was also muffled, but this time it felt a little further off and Shuya wasn’t blown away. Right beside him Shogo was on one knee, holding his shotgun. He had shot the hand grenade, as if he were skeet shooting, blowing it to bits before it managed to explode.
Shuya ran over to Noriko and held her up. She was grimacing. She seemed to be moaning, but he couldn’t hear her.
“Shuya, get back!”
Shogo waved his hand and fired his shotgun with his right hand. Shuya then heard a different sound, rattling gunfire, and the wheat heads right in front of him scattered into the air. Shogo fired another two shots. In a state of confusion, Shuya pulled Noriko into the shade of the ridge marking off the farm. He got down. Shogo slid to his side, firing several shots as he went. The rattling continued, and the ridge soil blew up, grains flying into his eyes.
Shuya pulled out his SIG-Sauer and looked out from the shade of the ridge. He fired blindly in the direction Shogo was firing.
Then he saw him. Less than thirty meters away, the unique slicked-back hair behind the break in the house’s concrete wall.
It was Kazuo Kiriyama (Male Student No. 6). And although Shuya’s hearing was impaired, he could recall the sound of the rattling gunfire. It was the same sound he heard from far away when Yumiko and Yukiko fell at the northern mountain peak. Of course he might not have been the only one with a machine gun, but even so, Kazuo, who was right in front of their very own eyes, had just tried to kill them without warning, with of all things a hand grenade!
Shuya was certain Kazuo was the one who’d murdered Yumiko and Yukiko. He thought of how they were killed and felt a flash of rage.
“What the… what’s the hell’s he doing!?”
“Stop shouting, just shoot!” Shogo handed the Smith & Wesson to Shuya and reloaded his shotgun.
Shuya held a gun in each hand and began shooting at the concrete wall. (Two-hand shooter! This is crazy!) First the Smith & Wesson, then the SIG-Sauer ran out of bullets. He had to reload!
Having waited for this moment, Kazuo got up. BRRRRATTA. Sparks flew out from him. Shuya ducked, and Kazuo revealed part of his body that was behind the wall.
Shogo blasted his shotgun away. Kazuo’s body once again vanished. The swarm of shotgun pellets blew off part of the wall.
Shuya ejected the empty magazine from his SIG-Sauer and pulled out a loaded magazine from his pocket. He opened the Smith & Wesson cylinder and pushed the rod in the center of the cylinder to release its spent shells, puffed up from the explosions. One of the shells nearly singed part of his right thumb. It didn’t matter. He quickly loaded the .38 caliber bullets Shogo had rolled over his way. Then he aimed at Kazuo’s house.