Chapter 1: Whose dog’s name is Shuchiin?
The day I was born, newspapers and broadcasters were flooded with stories about me.
They called it, âThe birth of a next-generation sports star inheriting the DNA of the century!â
Itâs understandable why.
My father was a soccer player from Real Madrid, a national team veteran of over a decade, hailed as the âeternal captainâ and ânational treasure striker.â
My mother was the undisputed greatest volleyball empress of her time, a national hero who led a golden era, winning gold medals at the Olympics and Asian Games every time she competed.
But despite my parentsâ achievements, I hate sports.
Around the time I finished elementary school, I quit sports entirely.
Instead of attending a prestigious sports academy, I enrolled in an ordinary middle school in Tokyo, far from my hometown in Gifu Prefecture.
It felt nice to take it easy, but the passion I once poured into sports had nowhere to go.
It wandered, then evaporated.
Days passed, and laziness seeped into my bones.
I became the master of energy conservation, avoiding unnecessary tasks and finishing essential ones as quickly as possible.
Except when hanging out with the few friends I had, I was always buried in novels.
My grades were neither good nor bad, always hovering in the middle.
It was a gray, uneventful middle school lifeâneither exciting nor particularly flawed.
Back then, I thought high school would be the same, just coasting through an ordinary humanities track.
ButâŚ
âNext! Number 931!â
ââŚYes, sir.â
At the examinerâs booming call, I stepped forward.
Why am I standing in the testing hall for Shuchiin High Schoolâs elite sports program?
The story goes back about a month.
***
Middle school was nearly over, and it was time to choose a high school.
One day, while sucking on an ice cream at a convenience store bench, I asked the guy next to me.
âWhere are you applying for high school?â
Miyuki Shirogane, a boy with a sharp gaze and cold demeanor that often got him mistaken for being aloof, sighed deeply at my question.
âItâs gotten a bit complicated.â
âWhat happened?â
âI was planning to apply to a decent public school, but my d*mn father submitted a scholarship application to Shuchiin behind my back.â
A scholarship application sounds like a bonus, so aiming high makes sense, but thereâs a limit.
Shuchiin?
âYouâre set then. Youâll probably fail, so just focus on other schools.â
I said it with the tone of someone stating the obvious.
Miyuki, his pride clearly stung but unable to deny it, muttered back.
ââŚWhat if I pass?â
I couldnât help but scoff.
âNot funny enough to laugh that hardâŚâ
Miyuki bristled, but reality is harsh.
I decided to snap my friend out of his delusional hopes.
âYour grades arenât bad, sure. But theyâre not Shuchiin level, are they?â
âUgh, hard to argue with thatâŚâ
Even Miyuki, considered a top student at our middle school, lacked confidence for a reason.
Shuchiin is a prestigious academy, originally founded to educate aristocrats and samurai heirs.
Even now, after the abolition of the aristocracy, itâs a school for the wealthy elite, grooming future leaders of the nation.
Most students are âpurebreds,â those whoâve climbed from Shuchiinâs elementary and middle schools.
For âmixedâ outsiders like us, the cutoff is insanely high.
Youâd need to be in the top 0.1% academically to even stand a chance.
A school where even the top student from a prestigious middle school barely makes it?
Miyuki, whoâs scraping by as second or third in our class, thinks he can get in?
Unless the additional admission cutoff miraculously tanks this year, itâs impossible.
Thinking heâd fail anyway, I tossed out a casual remark.
âNo way thatâll happen, but if you get in, Iâll apply as a sports candidateââ
âSeriously?!â
Before I could finish, Miyuki lunged at me.
It was just a throwaway comment, but his reaction threw me off.
âWhatâs with you?â
âIsnât it obvious? I know about your past, and Iâd love to see you get back into sports.â
His voice carried a mix of hope and concern.
Heâs the only friend who knows my full story.
I appreciate the sentiment, butâ
âYou know Iâm done with that. I only said it becauseâŚâ
I needed to shift the mood back, so I cleared my throat and continued.
âItâs to show how slim your chances are. Besides, Shuchiinâs sports program is practically a sham.â
Shuchiinâs sports candidate exam has had zero successful applicants since the schoolâs founding.
Every year, athletic prodigies from across the country flock to it, but not a single one passes.
Itâs Shuchiin, after allâa school where only the top 0.1% get in.
The bar for athletic admission is absurdly high.
The requirement is an A or higher in all ten physical performance categories.
I remember a TV show where last yearâs pro soccer rookie of the year said he got five Aâs in middle school and still failed Shuchiinâs sports exam.
Even someone with the potential of a pro sports rookie only scored half.
There are reasons why athletic prodigies keep applying to Shuchiin.
The special exam is held a month later than regular admissions, so it doesnât take up an application slot.
Thereâs also the allure of being the âfirst-ever sports candidate to passâ and the connections to pro teams, generous athletic department funding, and top-tier facilities.
Plus, modern sports value intangibles like mental strategy and discipline, which Shuchiinâs reputation guarantees.
Pro teams reportedly prioritize Shuchiin athletes for these reasons.
Of course, the catch is that those truly aiming for Shuchiinâs athletic program donât bother with this impossible exam.
Most admitted athletes are top-tier in both academics and sports.
Miyuki knows this, but he smirked, goading me.
âOh? Scared? Itâs been, what, three years since you quit sports? Youâre basically washed up.â
âWashed up? Me?â
Fine, if thatâs how he wants to play.
âShuchiinâs sports exam is still just sports. Thereâs no way Iâd fail.â
âThen prove it by taking the test!â
Got him.
âBut if I do this, Iâm the only one losing out, right?â
âWhat do you mean?â
âIâve got no reason to go to Shuchiin. If you pass, Iâd have to follow through, but I get nothing out of it.â
âHmm, trueâŚâ
âSo, if you fail, you should put something on the line to make it fair.â
He realized things were spiraling, but it was too late.
âWait, youâre the one who said youâd go if I passedââ
âScared?â
ââŚFine, I accept your challenge.â
Miyukiâs eyes gleamed with determination.
Thatâs more like itâour usual dynamic.
âSo, whatâs your stake?â
âUhâŚâ
He asked, but I hadnât thought that far ahead.
What would really get under his skin?
Oh, perfect.
âHow about introducing me to your little sisterââ
âYou wanna die?!â
The moment I mentioned Kei, he grabbed my collar.
Wow, what a siscon.
Iâll admit Keiâs cute, but sheâs not my type.
I know her well enough that if I were interested, Iâd have made a move already.
Still, riling him up is too fun.
âHigh schoolâs a big deal for me. Canât you at least set up a meeting? Just once.â
âUgh, thatâsâŚâ
He flinched at my logic.
Time for the finishing blow.
âNo confidence?â
âD*mn it, donât back out later!â
Smack!
We slapped hands, sealing the deal.
If Kei saw this, sheâd probably yell, âWhat about my opinion?!â
Donât worry, Kei, itâs your brotherâs fault for being so fun to mess with.
I tossed my empty ice cream stick in the trash, stood up, and grinned.
âLooking forward to it, brother-in-law.â
Before I could finish, I bolted.
âIâm gonna kill you!â
After a thirty-minute chase, I took a few hits.
Whatever, Iâll win this anyway, so itâs no big deal.
Little did I know, that careless promise would flip my life upside down.
***
One week later
âWhat⌠is this?â
My hand trembled, clutching a piece of paper.
âCanât you tell?â
Miyuki, grinning smugly, leaned in and whispered.
ââŚMy Shuchiin acceptance letter.â
No way.
âForging official documents is a crime, Miyuki. You did a good job, though.â
I desperately searched for signs of fraud, but it was real.
I heard the cutoff was lower this year, but this guy actually got into Shuchiin?
âHey, my memoryâs a bit fuzzy. What was our deal again?â
My hands started shaking.
God, why let a guy like him into such a great school?
ââŚIâll take the test.â
âWhat was that?â
âI said Iâll take the d*mn test!â
I stood up, fuming.
Miyuki flashed a grin and gave me a thumbs-up.
After parting ways, I checked my phone.
âOne month to goâŚâ
I pocketed it and stretched.
âBeen a while since I worked up a sweat.â
I hadnât broken a sweat since quitting sports.
Just one month.
Iâd give it my all.
***
Shuchiin Gymnasium
The gym was packed with athletic prodigies, some recognizable to anyone following middle school sports.
But the Shuchiin examiners werenât impressed.
They shook their heads, stamped âfailâ on applications, and dismissed candidates without mercy.
âNumber 36! Two-point deduction, fail!â
âFail! Faaail!â
The word âfailâ echoed everywhere.
âAnother bust this yearâŚâ
Tetsuo, the head of Shuchiinâs athletic department, sighed.
Shuchiinâs sports candidate test is divided into ten stages.
Itâs not that they want to fail everyone, but Shuchiinâs founder decreed that athletic admission requires near-perfect physical ability.
The cutoff is an A or higher in all ten categories.
Shuchiinâs A is pro-level, so itâs no easy feat.
There was talk of lowering the bar to passing half the categories, but the chairman shot it down.
Apparently, dozens of students hit that mark every year, and compromising would tarnish Shuchiinâs prestige.
A student entered Tetsuoâs office, holding a document.
His office is the final checkpoint, only reachable after passing all subjects.
Heâd never seen a candidate make it this far, except those who got lost.
âYouâre in the wrong place, kid. What subjects do you have left?â
âThey told me to get a stamp here.â
âNo need to explain a fail stamp; theyâll handle itââ
Then it hit him.
Thereâs only one reason someoneâs sent here for a stamp.
âNo wayâŚ?â
Tetsuo grabbed the document, his hands shaking.
And there it wasâ
âNo⌠wayâŚâ
All Aâs in physical evaluation.
In nearly ten years of overseeing Shuchiinâs sports exam, heâd seen all kinds of prodigies, but never this.
He rubbed his eyes in disbelief, thenâ
Bang!
[Pass]
The boy, unfazed as if it were expected, turned to leave.
Tetsuo leapt up, stopping him.
âHey, you!â
âMe?â
âWhatâs your name?!â
The boy glanced at the paper, as if to say, âIsnât it written there?â
ââŚHotaro Suzuki.â
With that, he walked out.
Tetsuoâs hands trembled.
âA monster has entered Shuchiin. A monster whoâll shake the sports world!â