The individual events were barely related, so looking at them individually revealed little. But if one took a step back and looked at the scene as a whole, something would feel horribly off. It was like the difference between a single piece and the entire jigsaw puzzle.
âA largescale power outage has hit Hokkaido. While running from the police, a driver lost control and ran into a transformer facility. Five elderly residents have died because they were using medical breathing machines at home. The police have said they did the best they could to apprehend the suspect, butâŠâ
âNew-chan > This has completely buried the chairmanâs scandal, hasnât it? I wonder if he caused this trouble to help with damage control.â
No-name blogs and SNS sites were filled with baseless conspiracy theories. And sadly, those useless opinions ended up burying the truth in a flood of information, so no one knew what was really going on. They simply felt a vague sense of unease.
âTown gas in the Tokai region is still shut down. An emergency inspection is being performed after a cyber-attack of unknown origin attempted to rewrite the program controlling the internal pressure of the underground pipes, but the residents are demanding service be restored as soon as possible.â
âEruko > Water, power, gas, internet⊠All the major pipelines of the countryâs infrastructure are being attacked. The sewage system is the one that actually scares me the most. It connects to every house and itâs full of gas and waste. Set it alight and toxic dioxin will burst into every single house. Gas masks are thirty thousand yen at the cheapest, but itâs probably worth that price given the situation.â
Products vanished from convenience store shelves. A man who had created a homemade shelter in his yard was invited onto a talk show. The mysterious turn of events influenced the stocks of corporations that sold disaster prevention and outdoor goods and the nationâs tension gradually grew.
âAn N Alert was sent out in error. Early this morning, a biological weapon alert was sent out to the entire Kanto region, but it turns out it was due to a Ministry of Health, Labor, and Welfare worker who failed to set the system to training mode. This is the third erroneous N Alert this month alone, so the Minster of Health, Labor, and Welfare has sworn he will crack down on any undisciplined workers.â
âPacky > Um, this isnât the Boy who Cried Wolf. If you keep sending out false alarms, no oneâs gonna believe it when something does happen.â
The news was repeated on TV ad nauseam to ensure no one was misled by the false alarm, but that only spread the absurd rumors further. It almost seemed the people living their boring lives wanted to believe the lies.
âIâm worried about this country. Iâve studied abroad in London, Paris, and New York, so I know how great their crisis management systems are. Compared to them, Japan is awfully unprepared.â
âNekosuke > Donât sound so carefree about it, four eyes. ButâŠitâs possible that rumor is true. Yâknow, the one about a huge nuclear shelter for VIPs being prepared in Nagatacho Station next to the National Diet building. Maybe thatâs why they donât seem worried.â
Was that a prophecy based on a sense of smell they rarely used or was it a hope not even they knew they had?
Either way, something was about to happen.
There was no stopping it.
Part 2 (Uchimaku Hayabusa)
Maybe the shipments had been delayed by the spreading panic or some housewife had decided to stock up meaninglessly, but the convenience store shelves were empty and I missed out on eating lunch.
The trains had been stopped for a few days due to signal trouble and small traffic jams had popped up here and there. While I complained in my heart that Tokyo was a real pain in the ass to live in once things went wrong, I made my way to Minato.
Keijou Ijuku University was there.
The campus was filled with school buildings and laboratories, but I visited the big building known as the âHeadquartersâ where the board of directors and management were gathered.
âDetective.â
âWhat is a middle school girl doing on a college campus?â
âOpen! Campus!! Itâs October, remember? The college is open to anyone.â
âExcuse me, this girl is trespassing. Yes, yes. Can I leave her with you? Please get her out of here ASAP. Yes, thank you.â
âHey!! Donât sell me off to that old janitor!!â
The Mystery Freak started assaulting a police officer, but in a cutely sulky kind of way. As usual, she was more or less wearing a swimsuit with a character scarf added on. Just as I was wondering what to do about her, a familiar face approached with a smile.
âLong time no see, Uchimaku-kun. âŠI thought Minori was pulling my leg when she told me, but it looks like a police officer really is dragging around a middle school girl in a swimsuit.â
âPlease donât say that!â
I could tell my future was on the line here, so I immediately corrected her.
The woman was named Tsugawa San. She was a scientist girl with long, wavy chestnut hair. She wore a crisp lab coat over her skirt and her soft and fluffy sweater. That unbalanced look had gathered attention even when we were students. Of course, she was actually a gentle person with drooping eyes.
Whatâs her title now anyway? Assistant professor? Associate professor? It changes so much I canât remember.
She had a complex about her given name, so she got upset whenever someone used it with the â-sanâ honorific. She didnât seem to like being âSan-sanâ.
That was when another old upperclassman of mine, an assistant producer from Hachi TV named Atou Minori, showed up. She wore a rough top, slender pants, a hairpin to hold up her black hair, and a choker around her neck, so her tastes hadnât changed since we were students either.
âHey, Hayabusa-kun. Itâs been a while since you visited the school here, hasnât it?â
âWhat are you doing here when youâve already graduated? Youâll just get in the way.â
âI pop in to help with documentaries on summer break experiments and things like that. But Iâm starting to remember old times with all of us here. WaitâŠold times? Iâm turning into an old lady, arenât I!?â
That was when I heard an odd sound.
I looked over to find the Mystery Freak growling like a fierce dog restrained by a chain.
Tsugawa smiled.
âYeah, we were in different departments, but we joined the same club. I forget what excuse of a name we gave it, but we just used it to go out drinking. We gathered the students from Intellectual Villages around the country. That really was a happy time. And you had the best taste in restaurants and bars, Uchimaku-kun. You never seemed to choose a dud.â
âCâmon, I wasnât that good.â
âBut the best drinks were the bottles you had in your room. The Jinnai Brewery almost scares me! They kept sending you tons of junmai daiginjo good enough for the Ise Shrine! Pretty much every weekend, we hung out in your room getting drunk off our asses until morning!â
Enbi was growling even louder and her face had grown so red I half-expected steam to rise from her head. I didnât quite get it, but it was unusual for her to take so much damage.
âI! Canât! Stand!!! This!!!!â
âCanât stand what, Mystery Fre- ah, thatâs just creepy!! Donât shove that scarfâs severed head into my face!? It looks way too realistic up close!!â
âItâs Suneky the Sunekosuri!!â
Tsugawa laughed.
âUm, miss, youâre never going to win over Uchimaku-kun like that.â
âGrr?â
âHeâs a complete pervert with glasses, a tight skirt, and a garter belt as his Three Sacred Treasures. If you pull on the garter belt so it snaps against your leg, he just canât help but look.â
As I screamed, Enbi pulled out her smartphone and started whispering into it. I didnât even want to know what audio notes she was taking.
At any rateâŠ
âWe can keep talking on the way. Come with me.â
âOh, sure.â
âYouâre a detective, so you already know the basic information, right?â
Tsugawa handed me a large pamphlet as she spoke. It looked less like a proper document and more like an advertisement meant to catch the eye.
I read aloud the caption written next to the smiling elderly man on the cover.
âThe leading researcher into psychic powers: Matsukai Hiroshi, Professor of Human Parapsychology Information Engineering.â
âDonât let that âleading researcherâ part fool you. No other university in the nation has a department as ridiculous as Human Parapsychology Information Engineering. Itâs like saying you serve the original mille crepe ramen.â
Atou Minori jokingly cut in from the side as I flipped through the pamphlet (to double check on the information) while walking.
âHelp from PSI_ver_RAIN (14) was used to gather objective and universal sample data.â
Minori laughed.
âPSI_ver_RAIN is a psychic middle school girl. Or rather, sheâs an online idol that pretends to be one. She wears swimsuits, sings, and bends spoons on video sites and the like. Her supposed psychic powers are all over the place: clairvoyance, telekinesis, healing, etc. Sheâs more convenient than a Swiss army knife.â
Of course, she was better known as someone who danced with 3D models based on Vocanoids than as someone who could bend spoons with her mind.
âSheâs appeared on our show a few times, but based on the fansâ reactions, they see her psychic powers as part of her character instead of something real. Yâknow, like the airheaded idols who claim to be from some other planet or the ones who dress in costumes and claim to be a fruit spirit. Basically, if theyâre cute, anything goes.â
âCan you really use a screenname in a thesis paper?â
âNormally, no. But there have been cases where someone like a national comedian who wrote a book that got translated into fourteen languages eventually published a thesis under a stage name or penname. They forced this through using those precedents.â
My former upperclassmen climbed the stairs with their heels clacking on the steps.
âNot to mention that Matsukai Hiroshi himself is an incredibly famous professor. Itâs to the point that I feel like posting a sign in front of his lab saying âThe Constitution of the Empire of Japan does not apply beyond this pointâ.â
âOkay, Iâll bite. Donât you mean the Constitution of Japan?â
âThatâs just how out-there he is. Itâs kind of amazing he hasnât been arrested. Well, he is talented, so maybe he has someone secretly burying corpses for him.â
That was hardly a laughing matter to a police officer.
AndâŠ
âWho would have thought that eccentric professor would end up sliced in two inside a locked room?â
The strobe light of camera flashes reached the hallway from the open door.
I peeked inside and found the interior covered in red. It was filled with a strange unpleasant odor that was not simply blood. For being a âlaboratoryâ, it was not filled with largescale research equipment. Other than the desktop computer on the table, I couldnât see anything that looked like it could be used for work. Instead of a place filled with the hope of making an earthshaking discovery, it looked like a room meant to hide an eccentric as a way to keep up appearances.
But the center of the room was what mattered most.
The red-dyed star of the scene was lying face up and chopped in two just below the navel. Iâll leave out the details of what was sticking out from the cut, but it didnât look like it had been done with a sharp blade or with any concern for the positions of the bones or muscles. Overall, it seemed to have been done quite forcefully.
I put on gloves and faced my upperclassmen.
âThanks for guiding me here. I can take care of myself now.â
âCan we watch? We wonât step inside.â
âIf you film this on a pen CCD and show it on your show, youâll get sued.â
I held back the Mystery Freak as she nonchalantly started into the room, I warned Atou Minori, and I went inside myself.
The crime scene investigation was still ongoing, but the area around the corpse had been dealt with first so they could get an autopsy done as quickly as possible. The forensics team was at the stage of discussing how to transport the corpse without its âcontentsâ spilling out.
Pieces of evidence had been placed inside clear plastic bags and one of them was a card key.
âThat was in his coatâs inner pocket. Thatâs what makes this a âlocked roomâ,â explained one of them forensics team members.
âDid anything about this catch your interest? Other than the locked room part, that isâ
âHis wallet and the hard disk containing all his research data were untouched, but his belt is gone.â
âHis belt?â
âUm, he was, well, a strange person, so itâs possible he wasnât wearing one to begin with.â
âIâll look into it when questioning people.â
I circled around the corpse and into the back of the room to check around the computer.
Wow, this is pretty old.
It was probably only used for email, writing reports, and to operate the supercomputer located in another room. The somewhat yellowed home computer was connected to a hard disk by a cable, but it wasnât a convenient portable size like a USB memory stick or a data chip. I began to wonder if he stored everything on the cloud.
Then I heard the Mystery Freak sounding bored in the hallway.
âDetectiiive.â
âWhat?â
âShouldnât you be focused on something else instead?â
âYou mean that nonsense?â
âBut now the state-run news is talking about it and not just the talk shows. Some idiot leaked the whole case on a video site, so all the stations are going nuts. But the reporterâs club of Japanese mass media is pretty strong. If they all ignored this, no one would pay any attention to some leaked info. That means the police are half-admitting it already, doesnât it?â
âMinori-san, you arenât secretly recording this, are you?â
âOf course.â
âOf course you are or of course you arenât?â
âGh⊠Sorry, Hayabusa-kun, but of course I am. Iâll be more careful in the future.â
She pulled her cellphone from her pocket, operated it while I was watching, and raised both of her hands in defeat.
After confirming it was off, I started speaking again.
âDo you think a psychic murder is actually possible? Based on common knowledge anyway?â
âWhy not? Packages that include Youkai are used for crimes all the time.â
âYâknow, thatâs a lot like saying little grays must exist because you found a dinosaur fossil. Donât accept this because of something completely different. Itâs a non sequitur.â
âBut theses on psychic powers are starting to be seen as valid evidence in court. Or at least, the prosecution can submit it and the court will allow it.â
âSo theyâre going to conclude that psychic powers have been scientifically established as a deadly weapon, are they? I can already tell this is going to be the worldâs silliest trial.â
âEe hee hee. There are official records in England of people being taken to court over whether a magic cabal cursed them or not or whether some secret ceremony was leaked or not. The judgment papers are still there and everything.â
The problem was the thesis paper on psychic powers published by the eccentric professor lying in two pieces on the floor.
Naturally, society at large saw him as a fraud. They doubted the thesis even more than the theories that video games rotted the brain. But no matter how ridiculous it was, a thesis was a thesis once it was submitted. That status came with a certain power.
Forensic science was pretty well known, but what even counted as âscientificâ?
A lot of people thought it was any objective data that could be reproduced with experiments or that it was never-changing theories and equations someone had calculated out, but that was completely wrong.
In the end, it came down to what people believed was true. In research related to space or particles, the result of a single experiment could overturn everything we thought we knew and the equations used a year ago would become entirely useless. Even though what to research had been determined by those equations and billions of yen of tax money had been pumped into it, no one hung their head at the new discovery. When it came down to it, even fabricated theses were held up as âscientificâ until they were found out.
So-called âabsolute scienceâ changed surprisingly often and people would readily accept ideas that were barely understood but âprobablyâ worked like this or that were âtheoretically soundâ but had not been remotely proven. The same was true of forensic science. And even if it was wrong, it was not considered a crime as long as no one was âmaliciously awareâ of the mistake. It was a lot like a politicianâs apology. As long as you didnât know about it before hand, you were in the clear.
That was the case this time, too.
Once it was placed in the category of âscientificâ any thesis was treated as such.
The thesis was 99.9% bullsh*t, but some idiot insisted that it wasnât 100% disproven. And once that happened, it didnât matter how much everyone else opposed it. In the closed courtroom, a psychic murder was considered possible and the trial had to continue on that assumption. After all, it was a proper âscientificâ thesis, wasnât it? So it had to be perfectly acceptable in a âscientificâ courtroom. From there, the judgment was made. The defendant was guilty of murdering the victim with psychic powers and would be imprisoned for life.
The judicial system? Who cares, right?
âBut to completely eliminate the idea that psychic murders are possible, you would have to objectively prove that psychic powers donât exist.â
âNonsense. Itâs not even worth thinking about. They donât exist.â
âBut, but. Actually proving it is surprisingly difficult. Itâs what you call the Devilâs Proof. Even if you revealed the trick behind all self-styled psychics around the world, youâre done for as soon as someone argues that someone with psychic powers might be living deep in the mountains or something.â
âSo that means the top suspect isâŠ?â
âPSI_ver_RAIN. That psychic middle school girl had a personal connection to the eccentric professor since he got her help to gather sample data. Sheâs currently missing, but that caption might just change to âon the runâ before long.â
My head started to hurt.
Has this country been thrown into some mysterious space where tabloid articles come true?
âSome of the higher ups in the police apparently want to end this case as quickly as possible even if it means false charges.â
âHuh? The rumors I picked up said a politician wants to settle this sensational case to make himself look like a great hero just before the national elections.â
I held my head in a hand as I listened to my former upperclassmen cheerfully discuss the case.
My condolences, Matsukai-san. Your own thesis is dragging us further away from the truth of your murder. Maybe thatâs your own fault, but did you have to make it the policeâs problem too?
Part 3 (Jinnai Shinobu)
The lunch break came to an end and fifth period began.
It seemed like the stupidest possible time for home ec. Especially a cooking lesson.
âOhhh, Shinobu-kun. How do I peel an onion?â
âPotatoes and carrots are one thing, but you canât even do onions, Madoka-san!?â
She wore an apron over her sailor uniform and a triangular cloth on her head even though I doubted anyone ever actually wore one in the real world. Kotemitsu Madoka had transformed into a wonderfully innocent-looking financial monster, but it turned out she was a little too innocent. A kindergartner wouldâve been more help.
Of course, my parents made all my meals, so I couldnât cook for myself either.
My classmate looked like the perfect young wife, but she was pouting her lips and complaining.
âEhhh? But doesnât food just appear when youâre hungry? And with vending machines, you just have to know how to put a coin in. I doubt many people want to know how it works on the inside.â
âOh, no! Madoka-sanâs feminine appeal is dropping fast! And the worst part is she doesnât even realize it!!â
âIs it that bad?â
âYour innermost thoughts are coming right out! You arenât supposed to let guys see that!!â
The dish we were tasked with making was pork cooked in ginger, which seemed way too heavy for the period after lunch.
Our cooking station was oddly clean. The water and ingredients were Intellectual Village-made, but the plates and cooking utensils left at school could never have passed an inspection by a clean freak, so some kind of mystery cleaning squad must have infiltrated the school the night before.
âBy the way, Madoka, what do you eat for a midnight snack? You respond immediately whenever I email you, so I know youâre active late at night.â
âEh? I just make a call to my 24/7 room service.â
âWhoa!! Now Iâm jealous!!â
Madoka frowned as she picked at the surface of the onion.
âThe net idols have been a real pain lately. They donât use an advertising agency but still gather a ton of attention. Ones like PSI_ver_RAIN can get thirty million views on a new songâs PV in less than twenty-four hours. Thatâs more influential than an ad during golden week. Can you believe that?â
âI donât know what youâre talking about, but I have heard people talking about how cute Rain-chan is.â
âOne silly comment about being hooked on Neko Manmaâs Ishikari special and the stocks shoot up! How am I supposed to handle that with an autonomous investment program!? Wars and hurricanes at least have some warning!!â
Based on how angry Madoka-san was, I could guess she had lost a ton of money thanks to this Rain-chan.
I was afraid to ask exactly how much, though.
Nagisa-chan, my childhood friend and one of the worldâs three greatest yanderes, was in top form at another cooking station. She was leaning on her boyfriend Akechi-kun and placing her head on his shoulder.
âEh heh heh. Look, Akechi-kun. You just have to go like this and then like this. See? Itâs shaped like a heart. Isnât it pretty? Itâs a crystallization of our love. Heh heh.â
âY-yes, I suppose so. But youâre scaring me with how smoothly youâre using that knifeâŠâ
âAnd the most important part is adding in a secret ingredient. Eh heh heh heh heh heh.â
âWait, please wait. Donât put that in there. Not your hair. It wonât even dissolve. And I only confessed ten minutes ago, so isnât it a little soon for that!? Waiiiiit!!â
I prayed for his happiness in my heart.
Good luck, Akechi Boy. Nagisaâs love is sweeter than chocolate, thicker than coal tar, and deadlier than tetrodotoxin, but not even I know what awaits you if you stick with it. Letâs see if you can outlast and arrive at that unseen frontier.
AndâŠ
âOhhhh!! Jinnai, help!! I donât know how to deal with Nagisa-chan!!â
âDonât come crying to her ex, you idiot! Donât you have any pride!?â
Part 4 (Uchimaku Hayabusa)
I finished my investigation for the time being and parted ways with my former upperclassmen. As Iâd said before, I hadnât had any lunch because the convenience store shelves were empty. I was starving, so I let another detective take my place, took a break, and used the university dining hall for the first time in forever. They were about to transport the body, so we wanted some police officers to walk around the area and gather attention elsewhere. It was a little late for lunch, so I wasnât going to bother too many students even if I grabbed a bite to eat.
âYou can eat right after looking at a corpse chopped in two with its organs sticking out? Youâre really one of us, arenât you?â
âItâs like being a doctor. Only someone who can get used to it can stick with the job for long. Sad as that is.â
As a young police officer, I had been taught not to get too fixated on the corpses and I had taken that to heart as much as I could. Some said we needed to get angry about peopleâs deaths, but after seeing so many people led to revenge, it all felt so fruitless. It was like reading a single book containing a dozen different short stories about a child dying of some horrible disease. Sure itâs a sad story, but so what?
âWow, you can get a lot of food for cheap here. They even have cutlet curry. Cutlet curry! Not only do you get curry, but thereâs a cutlet on top for only five hundred yen! And itâs got a ton of vegetables too!!â
âI think the best deal is the seafood bowl. They didnât have the beef tongue meal when I was here. Is it a new addition? I guess Iâll try it.â
As we spoke, we made our order and received our trays.
There were a lot of girls in fairly showy miniskirts. Well, it was the end of October, so they were probably freshmen. They had escaped the long, long tunnel of entrance exams, finished their baptism in this new life, made it through their first summer break, and were finally truly fitting into their college life. It was probably the most carefree time for them.
âButâŠâ
I didnât see how I stood out that much, but I was gathering a lot of attention. From the actual college students, it may have been like seeing an old-looking high schooler in your middle school. It made me sad as an alumnus.
âGulp! Gulp!! Damn, this cutlet curry is actually really good! I was expecting the meat to be really tough and the fried coating to come off the second you poked it with your fork!! Munch, munch!!â
âNo, wait. Itâs probably the middle school girl in an inappropriate swimsuit thatâs gathering all the attention.â
âEh? I hope youâre joking. Everyoneâs curious about the police detective in a suit hanging around near the scene of a murder.â
âHah hah hah. Yeah, right.â
My beef tongue was a simple dish sliced thin and cooked in salt, but the flavor wasnât bad. The firmness of the tongue was still there. It was nice enough that I considered adding it to the rotation for when I was tired of the usual pork and ginger or chicken and egg bowl.
âHand me your scarf, Mystery Freak. Youâre going to get curry on it.â
âNn.â
âCâmon, you donât want to ruin thatâŠwhat is it? A Rokuro Dog?â
âItâs Suneky!!â
We continued chatting like that for a while.
âHey, detective, what do you think of this stuff with PSI_ver_RAIN? A psychic murder! A torso bisected!â
âThat nonsense isnât worth the investigationâs time.â
âBut she was here on campus to help with his research today. And she completely vanished after the murder happened.â
âAre you saying sheâs suspicious even if she doesnât have psychic powers?â
âSheâs definitely the murderer, but thereâs no good evidence. So letâs find a way to get a guilty verdict even if it means making up some nonsense about psychic powers. After all, sheâs the murderer either way! âŠSomething like that?â
âThat feels like something someone would do only after exhausting every other possibility. Weâre only in the preliminary stages of the investigation and the autopsy hasnât even begun, so why would the higher ups be in such a rush?â
âHmm.â The Mystery Freak mixed her chopped cabbage into the curry sauce with a spoon. âWhy was that professor even targeted in the first place?â
âHe was apparently a really strange person, so it wouldnât surprise me if heâd caused some trouble here and there. Of course, Iâll admit chopping his torso apart is a little over-the top. I would have expected a strangulation or blow from a glass ashtray.â
âWhat if it was to steal his research data?â
âWeâll investigate that too of course. The psychic research was apparently just a performance to appear on TV and get his name out there. His actual area of study was information engineering, but it must not have been interesting enough to get much research funding. That means he was doing proper research too.â
He was just like the people who appeared on TV as UFO or ghost researchers. No matter what methods they used, the divide between known and unknown was wide. And if you were known, things were a lot easier. Even if that meant playing the fool on TV. A lot of researchers knew that very well.
ButâŠ
âThat doesnât explain why they sliced him in two. It was like the murderer went out of their way to kill him in a more difficult way.â
âDetective, what are the most popular reasons to destroy a corpse?â
âA grudge, to transport the corpse, to send twisted presents to people, or to hide the victimâs identity if itâs the fingerprints or teeth. Theyâll also sometimes gouge out a portion of the corpse to hide a bite mark or a distinctive wound.â
All of the professorâs parts seemed to have been there, so none of them fit but the grudge. Unless, of course, they were chopping him up to transport him and gave up partway through.
âThen how long would it take to destroy the corpse?â
âIt depends on the tool being used. With a single knife, it would take twenty minutes to cut through the torso while putting all of oneâs body weight into it. With an axe, ten minutes if you were careful about the fat that stuck to the blade. With a chainsaw, one minute. With liquid nitrogen, less than thirty seconds I guess.â
âA master swordsman with a katana could do it in one second.â
âAnd could a psychic do it in zero seconds?â
Then again, if the tool they were using was too powerful, they would need something like a giant cutting board to make sure they didnât damage the floor. And the more irregular the tool, the fewer the possible suspects. For example, only a master swordsman would have a top level katana.
Huh? But doesnât that meanâŠ?
âEven if it was done with psychic powers, would a psychic really kill someone with their powers? They might as well leave a note on the scene saying they did it.â
âThatâs true. That was the first thing that occurred to me, but it didnât really lead me anywhere.â
Even if PSI_ver_RAIN had a grudge against Professor Matsukai, wouldnât she specifically choose not to use her powers? It would have been safer to use a kitchen knife or utility knife anyone could get their hands on.
In movies and dramas, psychics would proudly proclaim that they could kill as much as they wanted because the cause of death couldnât be scientifically proven, but that wasnât actually how it worked. Plenty of murderers had been found guilty even with no murder weapon or corpse ever found. The evidence only had to indicate who had acted with the intent to harm who. Just because you were missing a motive, a murder weapon, a corpse, fingerprints, or DNA evidence didnât mean you couldnât establish that a crime had been committed.
Take burning someone to death as an example. Even if you didnât know the exact chemical makeup of the flammable liquid, you could forcibly establish guilt as long as you had evidence showing Person A had poured a suspicious liquid on Person B just before they burst into flames and died. In a court of law, an unclear cause of death was not all that powerful a barrier.
Then again, whether it was a trick or not, I still had no idea why someone would go to the trouble of chopping the guyâs torso in two.
And in times like thisâŠ
âThinking it through in reverse can be surprisingly helpful.â
âYou mean thinking about what would have happened if he hadnât been chopped apart?â
âEven if heâd been strangled, PSI_ver_RAIN still wouldâve been a suspect due to her proximity to the eccentric professor. But setting that aside, what if there was someone else who would have been a suspect if he hadnât been chopped in two? That would make all the work worth it.â
Staying at the scene for so long and getting evidence on your clothes from all the blood was a huge risk. Who had taken that risk to go through with that bisection? Whether it was PSI_ver_RAIN or a third party, it had to benefit them in some way.
âWell, either way, I just have to gather all the information I can.â
âIâm looking forward to it.â
âHow about I start by asking you why you believe any information the police find will end up in your hands?â
While we continued our discussion, I felt a shift in the college studentsâ gazes inside the dining hall. They were all moving toward the window.
The focus on us outsiders had moved elsewhere, so had someone shown up who was an even more obvious âoutsiderâ?
I initially thought of the corpse being transported, but I doubted they would carry it across the middle of the campus.
And when I looked out the window, I spotted a distinctive sailor uniform in the crowd.
Waist-length black hair had just the end dyed red. The white sailor uniform had red lines. The boots rose higher than the knees and they had a plastic-like material on the joint for an overall futuristic design.
âHey, Mystery Freak. You stay here.â
âHm?â
She looked confused with her spoon in her mouth, but I got up from my seat regardless.
âItâs PSI_ver_RAIN. Sheâs on campus for some reason, so Iâm going to capture her. You watch from the window! If she vanishes before I get there, you tell me over the phone which way she went!â
Part 5 (Uchimaku Hayabusa)
I didnât take off running like a scene from a police drama. I remained calm and composed. I left the dining hall, made my way to the nearest exit from the school building, and went outside. I stayed slow while blending in with the crowd. If you made it obvious you were chasing someone, they would start running with all their might. Getting as close as possible and then making a quick dash had the best odds of capturing them.
âŠExcept she noticed me almost right away.
The girl in the sailor uniform turned right around and started running like a sprinter despite her short skirt.
âOh, hell! I guess a suit really does stand out too much!!â
This required a bit of a change of plans. I started running in my suit, despite how it looked. I had to catch up to her. This really did look like a scene from a police drama, so I could tell cellphone cameras were pointing my way from all over. I almost crushed some kind of RC helicopter sitting on the ground for some kind of experiment. We were less than two hundred meters apart, but there was still a risk of losing sight of her when she ran around a corner.
AndâŠ
âOopsie daisy.â
â!? Kyah!!â
The Mystery Freak suddenly rushed out from the side and tried to hit PSI_ver_RAIN with a janitorâs pushcart she had found somewhere. The fleeing girl just barely managed to dodge it, but she lost her balance as she kept running.
I chased after her and shouted to the Mystery Freak as I ran past.
âThis is dangerous, so stay back!â
âDetectiiiive, donât forget that I just kept her away from the nearest exit from campus.â
Is that what you were after? You are so not cute.
PSI_ver_RAIN had her hands full running, so she accidentally ran into an alleyway at some point. The narrow space was located between the concrete wall of a school building and the wall that surrounded the entire campus. It was apparently a nice storage space for the students because all the bicycles gave us even less room to move and trash bags full of crushed cans were piled up further in.
Simply put, it was dead end.
When the girl saw the pile of trash twice her height, she hesitated, but she frantically turned around when she heard my approaching footsteps. Her legs were covered by futuristic boots that rose above the knee and her eyes were covered by colored mobile glasses. She wore a pink hat that looked perfect for an unrealistic police officer costume. Even the heart-shaped paint tattoo below her eye had to be a part of her character. I was in the middle of a criminal investigation, so I didnât like being the target of those glasses that could switch between recording and transmitting.
For some reason, PSI_ver_RAIN spread her arms and pointed them toward me.
Hm? Thatâs not quite a sign of surrender???
âS-stay back!â
âI am a police officer. I see no reason to follow your orders.â
âDonât you know?â Her lips were trembling. âI am PSI_ver_RAIN. I have a special power that can tear apart steel. Take one step closer and youâll regret it!â
âŠHmâŠ
I scratched at my head and checked the time on my watch.
â2:10 PM. Suspect confessed to possession of a deadly weapon.â
âEh? What?â
âOh, deadly weapons donât have to be a knife or something. Training in martial arts or a dangerous pet can count too. Itâs more about the situation than the physical evidence.â
As I spoke, I reached into my pocket.
When she saw what I pulled out, PSI_ver_RAINâs pupils grew as large as possible.
âAnd now that youâve threatened me with a âdeadly weaponâ, I can respond in kind. For example, pull out my handgun as a warning. You yourself admitted you intend to harm me with a tool capable of killing me.â
âEh!? Ehhh!? B-but my psychic powers are⊠Eh? Donât tell meâŠyou actually believed this farceâŠâ
Over the course of a few seconds she went from wanting me to believe her to wanting me to not believe her.
This is what happens when you use a pathetic bluff to make your getaway.
And so I had decided to settle this in the most ridiculous way possible.
â2:11 PM. Shifting from voluntary questioning to forced arrest. Apprehending the suspect on charges of threatening a police officer and attempted murder. âŠTurn around and put your hands on your head! Slowly kneel on the ground! Hurry!!â
Part 6 (Uchimaku Hayabusa)
A fair number of uniformed police officers would still be on campus to manage the scene of the crime, so I decided to leave PSI_ver_RAIN with one of them.
âI didnât do it.â
âThen you shouldnât have run. Back at the voluntary stage, you could have refused my request for a testimony or questioning.â
We spoke to each other as I walked her handcuffed across the campus.
âI had no reason to kill the professor. Just having him attach electrodes to my head was enough to increase the value of my brand name as a psychic middle school girl.â
âWe can talk about all that at length.â
âHis belt.â
She suddenly said something more interesting.
âHis belt was missing, wasnât it? Look into that and youâll know I didnât do it.â
ââŠ? What are you talking-âŠ?â
I trailed off because the Mystery Freak popped out from around the corner of a school building. She waved me over with a uniformed police officer on either side of her.
âDetectiiive, I brought the police.â
âGood job, civilian. This is the first time Iâve felt like praising you.â
One of the police officers gave me a light nod.
âSorry weâre late, Uchimaku-san. I am Katou and this is Arisaka. Nice to meet you.â
âHi. This girl is the suspect.â
âUm, can we take over since this area is under our jurisdiction?â
âOf course.â
I gave a light push on PSI_ver_RAINâs back while she was still handcuffed. We had finally taken the first step. A university professor had been found in his locked lab with his torso chopped in two and it was supposedly a psychic murder. No matter who this crime benefited, this girl was almost certainly near the center of it all. Had she killed him or had someone else framed her? Even if it was the latter, anyone who took the time to frame her was probably closely related to her.
But just as I thought that, something came over me.
It was truly just a whim, but I spoke up anyway.
âKatou-san.â
âYes?â
âYou can take over if you want, but, well, could I have the handcuffs back? I can always have them sent back at a later date, but then my department chief might take the shipping fee out of my pay.â
âYouâre kidding, arenât you? Sheâs a murder suspect and weâre outside. We canât remove her restraints.â
âYou just have to place your own handcuffs on her and then remove mine.â
ââŠâ
âCanât you do it?â
Something I could not quite pinpoint was bubbling up inside me and urging me onward.
âIs there some reason why you canât remove my handcuffs? That would be strange. Unlike a house key, handcuff keys arenât unique. They should open no matter whose key is used. âŠAssuming youâre really using a handcuff key issued by the Metropolitan Police Department, that is.â
He was quick to react.
The police officer going by the name Katou immediately pulled a revolver from the holster at his waist. But before he could raise his arm, I swung my collapsible baton and hit the back of his hand. As he dropped the gun, I swung the baton back to strike his jaw from the side.
With a solid sound of impact, he fell to the ground.
That left Arisaka. It seemed he hadnât simply been fooled like me. He must have determined PSI_ver_RAIN was too far away because he reached for the closer Mystery Freak. He pulled her close, wrapped an arm around her neck to use her as a shield, and pressed his revolver to the side of her head.
I had already thrown aside the baton and drawn my handgun.
We were three meters apart.
âPut the gun down, Arisaka!!â
âYou hand over Amagoi Haruka! Then Iâll release the hostage!!â
Amagoi? Oh, he must mean PSI_ver_RAIN.
âDo you really think I can do that?â
âThen let me tell you something neat. My gun has no rifling, so it doesnât leave rifling marks on the bullet it fires.â
Arisaka raised the handgunâs hammer with his thumb. Tension raced through my gut, but a moment later, he did something I didnât expect.
He moved the muzzle away from the Mystery Freakâs head, aimed toward Katouâs head on the ground, and fired.
With a harsh gunshot, the collapsed form gave a large twitch and then never moved again.
âArisakaaa!!â
âAnd are you familiar with laser processing technology? Itâs the opposite of a 3D printer, so the material is cut away according to a program. That can add any rifling marks you want to a bullet. For example, the rifling marks of the gun youâre holding right now.â
âWhy do you want PSI_ver_RAIN that badly?â
âAfter that gunshot, a crowd is going to gather here before long, Detective Uchimaku. We are everywhere. Getting our hands on a bullet submitted by the coroner will be easy.â
âYouâre willing to go that far to make this look like a ridiculous psychic murder!?â
âIf you donât like it, then hand over Amagoi Haruka. Weâll leave you alone then! If you donât want to ruin your life, then make a compromise here!! You worthless government worker!!â
I breathed in and out.
And then I spoke.
âLike hell Iâll do that.â
âI see. Thatâs too bad.â
âThatâs my line. Listen, Arisaka. Youâre holding a gun and you have a hostage. Youâve even proven that itâs a real gun. That leaves me with no reason to hesitate.â
âI might be worried if this was Los Angeles, but itâs Japan. Youâre going to shoot me in the head in a country where you have to write a report explaining even a warning shot? What if you hit the hostage? Well!?â
âYeah, if this was a movie, maybe Iâd shoot you in the shoulder or skillfully shoot the gun from your hand. But this is reality. People can still move their fingers after being shot in the heart, so Iâll shoot you right through the head to make sure you donât even make any involuntary movements.â
âPut your gun down, Detective Uchimaku! All youâre going to do is accidentally kill the hostage!â
âThis is your final warning, Arisaka. Slowly lower the gun! I donât want to kill you!!â
A fireworks-like smell reached my nose with a hint of a rusty odor.
The man using the Mystery Freak as a shield wobbled to the side. Strength left the arm holding Enbi and a dark red hole had appeared in the center of his forehead.
Like a marionette with its strings cut, Arisaka â no, someone going by that name â collapsed to the ground.
He did not even have a chance to scream.
I put the gun away, approached the collapsed victim, crouched down, and placed my index and middle finger on his neck. â2:20 PM. Suspect is dead.â
âAhâŠahhâŠahhhhâŠâ
PSI_ver_RAIN had grown pale and groaned quietly in a sitting position.
Meanwhile, the Mystery Freak rubbed her neck and scarf that had been held.
âYou didnât have to go that farâŠâ
âI was worried about you.â
âEh? Ah?â
The Mystery Freak grew flustered as I ignored her, crouched down, and gave a heavy sigh. How I would be treated didnât matter. I hadnât done anything wrong and something else mattered more.
âI was right. Itâs fake.â
I checked through the corpseâs pockets, pulled out the police badge, and checked it over. The ID looked legit at first glance, but it didnât have the hologram or other counterfeiting countermeasures. And I could only tell because I had a police badge of my own. The average person on the street would never notice.
âThe uniforms are the same. Police uniforms are made by famous designers with registered designs to prevent counterfeits. This is like a brand-name bag made in a counterfeiting factory. It looks the same, but something looks off when you take a close look at the stitching.â
âDetective, could you get inside a police station with that?â
âI saw through it at first glance, so not a chance. That talk about getting a bullet from the coroner was a bluff. They arenât that skilled.â
Even if I got my hands on a school uniform, I would never fit in at a high school. This was the same. Someone from âoutsideâ might be fooled, but anyone on the âinsideâ would immediately treat them as an outsider.
âI donât know who they are, but I guess you can ensure Rain-chanâs safety by getting her to a police station.â
âYeah, but we canât have someone else do it. Any police officer on the street could be one of them, so weâll have to do it oursel-âŠâ
I trailed off and closed my mouth.
I had realized something, so I asked.
âMystery Freak, when you called them here, did you use my name?â
âNo. What about it?â
âBoth Katou and Arisaka were calling me Detective Uchimaku from the start. They already knew my name and what I was doing.â
I brought a hand to my forehead when I realized the most likely possibility.
âThe cellphone. They might be intercepting the signal.â
âThen do you want to put in a dummy SIM card? Iâve got one for emergencies.â
âNo.â
I looked to PSI_ver_RAIN who was still sitting on the ground.
âDo you have a cellphone or smartphone other than those mobile glasses?â
âN-no! This thing is convenient, so I can use it for phone calls, emails, and everythingâŠâ
âThen letâs swap SIMs.â
âWait! Then what about you, detective!?â
âMystery Freak, Iâll trade for your smartphone.â
âOh, so thatâs it. But thatâs not fair! Youâre taking all the best parts for yourself!â
I didnât have time to argue.
I could hear footsteps approaching after the two gunshots. Were they students, police officers, or âthemâ? I pulled the handcuffed PSI_ver_RAIN to her feet by the arm and the Mystery Freak and I turned our backs on each other.
âIâll prepare a safe line afterwards, so donât throw away that smartphone.â
âI canât guarantee your safety anymore. If things get too much for you to handle, get out of here. Understand?â
With that said, we ran off in different directions.
PSI_ver_RAIN looked back several times as we left.
âH-hey! Should you really be leaving them like that!?â
âOf course not! But getting you to safety comes first. I donât know whoâs on our side, so I canât just throw you into a group of police officers we find walking around!!â
I didnât have time to explain the situation, so I couldnât complain if someone misinterpreted this. I would be treated as a police officer who had shot and killed a civilian â even if they were dressed as a police officer and extremely suspicious â and then left the scene without explaining myself or preserving the scene.
And at the same time, I would be an armed fugitive on the run with the top suspect of another murder case.
âFor now, we need to get to my home ground. They canât get in my workplace with their counterfeit equipment. Iâll probably be arrested at the entrance, but donât worry about that. Iâll explain the misunderstanding and ensure your safety.â
âY-your workplace?â
âThe Metropolitan Police Department.â
Part 7 (Hishigami Enbi)
I made a run for it.
I couldnât let myself get caught. If one of those âpolice officersâ caught me with no one else around, it could easily end up like that previous situation.
So I chose routes full of people, ran inside a school building, and made my way to the main office.
After slamming the detectiveâs phone down on the counter, policemen rushed down the corridor from both directions.
âFreeze!!â
âPut your hands on your head!!â
âWah, wah, wah! What? What is this!? I just came here to drop off a lost phone!!â
I did as I was told and glanced at the police officers surrounding me.
Hm, I canât tell which ones are real and which ones are fake quite as well as the detective could.
âŠThat means I need to get rid of them all.
I breathed in and shouted loud enough to be heard inside the office.
âStop!! This phone is an important piece of evidence! I secretly filmed exactly what you were trying to do to me after shoving me into the cop car!! Thatâs why you want the phone, isnât it!?â
âWha-?â
I swung my Suneky scarf around in front of the flustered police officers(?).
âWahhhhh!! What happened to college autonomy!? All I did was visit for the open campus, so why are a bunch of perverted police officers after me!?â
The door next to the counter burst open.
The usually docile-looking office workers rushed out with fiendish looks on their faces.
âAnd you call yourselves humaaaaaaaaaaaaaaan!?â
âSimply letting you in our school was bad enough, but now this!? Itâs the 21st century and youâre still using your authority to act like kings!?â
âEh? Wha-? No! Wait! I-if you interfere with our work any furtherâŠâ
âThatâs not about to stop us, you horny policemen! Donât underestimate college autonomy!â
Good, good.
Even now, universities tended to hate interference from the government. If some government workers were strutting about like they owned the place and trying to have their way with some poor girl, the university was going to riot.
My diversion proved effective and the detective and PSI_ver_RAIN had probably escaped at about the same time.
I could have left his phone behind, but I collected it to be nice. I turned it off and removed the SIM to make sure it couldnât be tracked and then I snuck away from the scuffle.
Now, then.
Unlike the detective, I didnât have to run around all over the place. I wasnât good at that either. If I wanted to help them, I needed to hide in one of my secret bases and use the internet for logistical support.
I think the closest one is in Roppongi.
Part 8 (3rd person)
Hachikawa Tomoe and Tsumada Mio lived in neighboring apartments.
Tomoe was an active girl who excelled at sports while Mio would have looked more at home flipping through a book of poetry in a secluded room. Except that was only the impression she gave those around her. While she looked like a Japanese doll with her long hair, her best subject was dance and she could get quite fired up singing all of an idol groupâs songs at karaoke. Recently, she had finished mastering the choreography of the famous net idol PSI_ver_RAIN. She just happened not to let anyone see this side of her because she found it embarrassing.
âWho would have thought this would happen?â
It was 2:30 in the afternoon on a weekday, but the two girls were watching TV in an apartment living room. They had eaten lunch a bit ago, but they were already reaching for some cookies.
The TV was still talking about the trains stopped due to signal trouble, warning about the possibility of dirty water coming from the pipes due to problems with the water purification equipment, and everything else that was going wrong.
There had been frequent infrastructure issues lately, but it seemed to have crossed a line today. Their school had cancelled classes for the day because it could not guarantee the safety of the path to school. Those celebrating the day off were bound to fail because, without lessons at school, the students needed to maintain their motivation and study on their own. While realizing there was a good and bad side to everything, Tomoe enjoyed the post-lunch break they were taking.
âIt sure is scary outside. I can see why they donât want us going to school.â
âYeah, just look at that chaos. Iâd lose sight of you right away in that crowd, Mio.â
âY-you would not.â
Tsumada Mio sat with her legs to the side. She had waist-length black hair and a plain white long-sleeved sailor uniform. Both the black stockings covering her entire legs and the fact that she was wearing her uniform on a day off pointed to her diligence. Her only piece of fashion was the hairclips on her bangs.
She had been placed at the center of an incident involving a Jinmensou.
After being exposed to one hundred, one thousand, or even more Jinmensou â which were symbols of lies â her presence would fade to the very limit.
Even so, she had returned to her normal life.
And it was all thanks to the detective who had arrested the despicable man who had killed Tomoeâs real father and tried to take her best friend from her.
âTomoe-chan, what are you going to put on that form?â
âOh, the one for what I want to be when I grow up? Honestly, canât they wait until weâre third years? Itâs as embarrassing as an essay in elementary school, so my hand stops whenever I try to write something.â
âEh heh heh. Youâre going to be a police officer, arenât you?â
âWha-!? Wait! I never said that!! And you donât get to decide what Iâll be!!â
As they were arguing, the image on the TV suddenly changed.
âWe will be interrupting this program for some breaking news.â
â?â
There had not been any proper program playing in the first place. It had been nothing but information about the stopped electricity or water. The girlsâ apartment complex had been miraculously spared those inconveniences, though. At any rate, this breaking news had to be something with even more impact.
As they looked to the screen with that in mind, the announcer read off the news.
âAt just past two this afternoon, there was a shooter at Minatoâs Private Keijou Ijuku University. The suspect is Uchimaku Hayabusa. He is a detective with the Tokyo Metropolitan Police Departmentâs Investigation Division 1, so he is carrying a handgun and is on the run along with the suspect of a different murder. The suspect has shot and killed one victim and his connection to another body found nearby is under investigation. If any nearby residents see him, please do not approach him. I repeat, at just past two this afternoonâŠâ
They did not understand.
It may have been from his driverâs license, but a picture of his face was displayed next to the announcer. It looked eerily unhealthy and seemed horribly wrong to anyone who knew him.
What was this?
What had happened?
Tomoeâs mouth flapped opened and closed as she wondered those things and she finally turned toward her best friend.
ââŠHuh? Mio???â
At first, she thought Tsumada Mioâs âpresenceâ had vanished again.
But that was not the case. Not even Hachikawa Tomoe knew the exact rules or conditions, but Mio only ever vanished in a group of people. She doubted the girl would vanish this easily when they were alone together.
So was she really gone?
But where had she gone?
âMio!!â
Part 9 (Jinnai Shinobu)
After the cooking lesson in home ec, math class began while the food weighed heavily on my stomach. Surprisingly, having your stomach this full actually kept you from feeling sleepy.
In the next seat over, Akechi-kun had his forehead pressed to his desk, but that wasnât because he was sleepy. It had more to do with the ridiculous amount of the pork and ginger meal (Nagisaâs love-filled special recipe) he had eaten. It was a mixture of pain, resignation, and (for some reason) ecstasy. The food had gone in through his mouth, but he had the face of a guy who had taken it up the ass. The fool hadnât learned to empty his mind when eating Nagisaâs cooking. The flavor alone was perfect, but thinking about what was inside it would kill your heart. He had just taken another step toward adulthood.
An unrestrained knock came to the classroom door.
When all of the bored students looked over, the door opened and our nervous homeroom teacher poked her head in.
âU-u-um⊠Is Jinnai-kun in here? Could I have him come with me for a moment?â
Tarou and the Love King were the first to react.
âJinnai⊠Has your love life finally gotten to the point that even our teacher is calling you out?â
âIâve heard heâs been visiting the upperclassmenâs third floor zone lately.â
âShut up! That rumor about the student council room being used for supplementary lessons in love is a complete lie! That scary student council president is just forcing odd jobs onto me, dammit!!â
As we argued, I did as our homeroom teacher said. But this was indeed odd. I couldnât imagine why she would be calling me out. My best guess was it had to do with Madoka or Nagisa rather than me directly.
As soon as I stepped out into the hall, our homeroom teacher held up the tablet computer she used to keep roll. She used it as shield so we could speak in private. This naturally meant she moved her face in close.
âU-um, this is a first for me, so Iâm, uh, not really sure how to handle itâŠâ
âSmooooch.â
âWhy are you trying to kiss me all of a sudden, Jinnai-kun!?â
Tch. I tried to disguise it, but sheâs surprisingly clever. I was so close, but I was missing something. I need to research this some more.
âSo what exactly do you want to talk about? If itâs about the destroyed elementary school during that Oomukade business, I thought I already explained how that was a misunderstanding.â
âW-well, weâll discuss this more in the student guidance room, but can you look at this first to get you up to speed?â
I didnât like the sound of discussing something in the student guidance room, but she didnât seem all that angry. Wondering what this could possibly be, I watched on as she held out her tablet.
It was displaying a news program a TV station was transmitting as streaming video.
âI repeat, the suspect is on the run with a fourteen-year-old girl who goes by the name PSI_ver_RAIN and who is the suspect in another murder case. His name is Uchimaku Hayabusa and he is a detective with the Tokyo Metropolitan Police Departmentâs Investigation Division 1. He is carrying a handgun and he has killed at least one person at Private Keijou Ijuku University. He is considered extremely dangerous. If any nearby residents happen to see him, do not approach him for any reason.â
âYouâre kiddingâŠâ
âU-um, it seems to be real. I doubt there will be an immediate panic thanks to the name difference between Jinnai and Uchimaku, but the students are bound to find out before long. So if you want to leave school early, Iâll help you out and secretly-âŠâ
âYouâre kidding!? My uncleâs going on a survival date in the big city with Rain-chan!? Câmon, give me a turn! Can he just do whatever he wants!?â
âThatâs what youâre interested in!?â
Well, what else would I be interested in? That uncle was the kind of incarnation of justice you only saw in dramas. He wouldnât kill someone without a good reason.
And it was even more obvious when he was on the run with Rain-chan who was the suspect in another murder case.
Part 10 (Hishigami Enbi)
You might not guess it, but I was part of the so-called Hills Tribe.
And so there I was stepping inside a room in a high-rise Roppongi apartment. I switched on the desktop computer and pulled out a headset for an internet phone. I quickly secured a line with my information source.
But that information source was not just a single expert.
There were plenty of people who heard all sorts of daily conversations as background noise: people handing out fliers, taxi drivers, waitresses, etc. And sometimes those people wanted to work for the good of the world but didnât know how.
So I connected them together and gave them a place to speak together.
Each individual one was an extremely small online community that gathered people from a similar genre. But when I aggregated and managed the data there, it became a massive monitoring system for all sorts of data. This was how I had so much police and hospital information. I had plenty of helpers such as vending machine workers or cleaning ladies.
âPhewâŠâ
I couldnât get my brain up and running without my usual smartphone with me. It was really convenient for taking handwritten memos and organizing information. Feeling empty-handed, I started squeezing the face of my Suneky scarf.
At any rate, I mentally went over what I wanted to ask about.
Next, I had to determine the most effective person to ask those questions.
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