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80.48% Roshidere : Alya Sometimes Hides Her Feelings in Russian / Chapter 66: Pride and Stubbornness

Chapter 66: Pride and Stubbornness

"Let the sixty-sixth Autumn Heights Festival begin!"

With the president of the school festival committee's announcement, Seirei Academy's

much-anticipated event began. Since the first day was for Seirei Academy students only, it

wasn't going to be total chaos for the school festival committee…or at least, that was what

they naively believed.

"Kuze! The next performers aren't going to be ready in time!"

"Where are they?"

"They haven't even arrived!"

"How long do we need to stall?"

"Uh…"

"Please check and get back to me as soon as you can. I'll handle things here. Host, once

these performers get off the stage, I need you to buy us some time. Can you do that? Thanks."

There were three stages set up for performances: the gym, the auditorium, and the

schoolyard. For the most part, each stage was run by the school festival committee, the

broadcasting club, and the drama club. In addition, the president of the school festival

committee specifically put Masachika in charge of making sure everything went smoothly

in the auditorium. Of course, they were working in shifts, so there were still two others who

would take his place when he was on break.

"Kuze, I talked to the performers, and they need two more minutes."

"Roger that. Host, try to buy us three minutes just in case. Cut the stage lights, leave

the audience's seats as is, and shine the spotlight on the host. This stalling is cutting into the

next break as well, so I need the next props master to switch out with the current one while

the host is buying us time."

As he checked the task schedule and time schedule, Masachika used a transceiver to give

instructions to the other auditorium workers, who quickly responded.

Although most of the others were older than him, there wasn't even the slightest hint of

disrespect in any of their voices, which was a testament to the trust that he'd built with them

during multiple rehearsals. Although they ran into a few bumps along the way, thanks to his

direction, the auditorium's stage plans went smoothly, until it was time for their break.

"All right, I'm going to start my break. I'm counting on you."

"Sounds good. Enjoy."

After one of the third-year school festival committee members took over his shift,

Masachika quickly washed his hands, then headed straight for the stage in the schoolyard.

The stage area in the schoolyard was partitioned off with traffic cones of various colors, and

there were around a hundred metal folding chairs set in front of the stage for the audience.

Even though there were a few empty seats here and there, Masachika decided to stand behind

them, close to the traffic cones. Shortly after that, two sets and a lectern were brought out

onstage and set up before two familiar faces eventually stepped onto the stage.

"Thank you all for coming to watch the quiz research club's very own quiz show!"

The final person to join them onstage was the quiz research club's leader, wearing a

silk hat and all. Masachika watched from afar as the club leader introduced the show, but it

wasn't like he was forced to stand so far away. This was a choice Masachika made himself

so he could immediately take action if an emergency arose, since there was no telling what

was going to happen on such a secretive trivia show. Ayano seemed to feel similarly…or

at least, that was the conclusion Masachika came to when he suddenly noticed her standing

as still as a statue nearby.

"Without further ado, allow me to present today's two contestants!"

After introducing himself as the host, the quiz research club's leader held out his hand

toward the two competitorssitting in the center of the stage. A close-up shot of Yuki appeared

on the screen above.

"Born into a well-known family that cultivates foreign relations, this young woman has

the brains to become a diplomat herself one day! Politics, economics, pop culture, subculture

—you name it! She knows it! But will she be able to utilize this extensive knowledge of hers

during today's quiz?! Give it up for Yuki Suou!"

The instant Yuki waved at the audience with a smile, the crowd erupted into cheers and

whistling, which gradually attracted the attention of other students in the vicinity.

"Next up, we have the top of her class—a girl who has gotten the highest grade on every

exam since she transferred to this school! There isn't a single soul here who can deny that she

is talented! She has both brains and brawn, and she is just getting started! Will she continue

being the undefeated prodigy after this show?! Give it up for Alisa Mikhailovna Kujou!"

"Damn, he's good," commented Masachika as a close-up shot of Alisa was suddenly

displayed on the screen. Alisa bowed slightly with a serious expression on her face. Her

reaction was, in a way, the opposite of Yuki's, so although she was welcomed with cheering

and a warm round of applause, the audience did seem less enthusiastic.

Hmm… I was honestly expecting there to be a distinct, bigger difference in support…

but maybe they liked her indifferent reaction. Some people like it when celebrities are cold

and blunt, after all. Anyway, I'm glad I was wrong.

Masachika was pondering the audience response while clapping when he noticed the

influx of spectators was starting to die down a little. It was already a huge crowd, perhaps

because two of the most beautiful student council presidential candidates at school were

about to duke it out, but the fact that it was lunchtime seemed to help as well. In fact, most

students in the crowd had some sort of snack in hand, as if they wanted something to watch

while enjoying their meal.

There's not an empty seat left. Counting the people standing in the audience and those

outside the venue peeking in, then you'd have around 130 people watching.

In other words, a little under 20 percent of the entire student body was currently here.

While there was no way all of them were going to watch the entire show, there were still

more than enough people here for details to quickly spread to every single student in school.

"Now, let the game begin! This competition will contain elements related to the election

as well as elements you'd usually see on good old-fashioned quiz shows. So while most rules

follow what everyone's used to, there will be some rules like you've never seen before, too.

Of course, our two contestants aren't the only ones who can play. Everyone here is allowed

to participate. All the questions will be multiple choice, and there will be no free response

questions, since free response questions would be wayyy too hard to judge."

The host added a playful note in his voice when explaining their reasoning, then

continued:

"You get ten seconds to think after I read the question, then you have to give us an

answer! There will be six topics with five questions per topic and a final question at the end,

making a total of thirty-one questions. Whoever gets the most points wins. We have a very

nice prize for our winner tonight, whether or not they are one of our two contestants, so give

it everything you've got. Now, the question is: How do you participate if you're not one of

our two contestants? However, before I tell you all that, there is something important we

need to discuss first."

The host waited a beat before raising his voice loud enough for everyone in the venue

to hear.

"Of course, this should go without saying, but I need everyone to be quiet during the

show. You are not allowed to give the contestants any hints or answers, and if we find anyone

cheating, they will be immediately kicked out of the venue. If that happens, we will have

to start over and ask a new question. Is everyone fine with that? I'm counting on you all to

keep quiet."

The audience gradually got quieter until the area was completely silent, making the host

smile with evident satisfaction.

"Thank you all so very much! Now, I need everyone to take out their phone and scan

the QR code on the screen. This will take you to an answer sheet we made just for the show.

We also have a few signs set up at each corner of the venue with the URL and QR code, so

please use those if you need to."

Masachika took out his smartphone just like those around him and scanned the massive

QR code displayed on the screen.

Thisisreally impressive… I can't believe they did all thisjust forthe show… What the—?

The web page that came up made him raise an eyebrow. Who do you think is a better

fit for student council president? Under that question were the names Yuki and Alisa, which

you could select as an answer.

The hell is this? Some kind of survey? Is this going to be used during the quiz? Are our

votes going to be added like bonus points to their score?

When Masachika surveyed his surroundings, he noticed there were numerous others

curiously looking around as well.

"Since I'm sure most of you are still opening the web page, I will use this time to explain

the special rules for only our two contestants here. As I mentioned earlier, this quiz will

contain elements related to the election. For example, our contestants' partners, Ayano

Kimishima and Masachika Kuze, will be able to participate as guests!"

Suddenly hearing his name made Masachika immediately look toward the stage.

"Each candidate pair is allowed to 'phone a friend' one time. One pair being Ms. Suou

and Ayano Kimishima, with the other pair being Ms. Kujou and Masachika Kuze. I know it's

self-explanatory, but 'phoning a friend' means they are allowed to ask their partner for help.

Therefore, if you ever want to phone a friend, you need to raise your hand and say, 'Help.'

After that, you are allowed to talk to your partner on the phone for ten seconds tops. Oh, and

you need to put your phone on speaker so that everyone can hear."

Yuki promptly raised her hand. After the host acknowledged she had a question, she

spoke into her microphone with a well-projected voice and asked:

"I have two questions. First, how does the time limit work when we phone a friend?

Furthermore, if we put our phone on speaker, wouldn't the other contestant also be able to

hear the advice that was meant for us?"

"Oh, my apologies for being unclear. When you phone a friend, your rival's answer will

already be locked in. In other words, the ten seconds for answering the question have already

passed. However, if you phone a friend, you get an additional ten seconds to receive help

from your partner, then you get another ten seconds to answer the question."

"Interesting. What happens if we both phone a friend about the same question?"

"Only one person may phone a friend per question. In other words, if one contestant

declares first that they would like to phone a friend, then the other will not be able to call

their partner anymore."

"That makes sense. Thank you very much."

"No, thank you for your wonderful question. By the way, it is against the rules for either

of your partners to give you hints during the duration of this quiz with the exception of when

you call them, but I'm sure that much was obvious. Please be careful, though."

Hmm… So I only get one chance to help Alya if she gets stumped. Then again, if she

doesn't know the answer to something, I really doubt I would…

Masachika thought about the rules while shifting his gaze back down to the second

choice on his phone screen.

Of course, I'm going to choose Alya.

After he tapped on Alisa's name, another page popped up with the words please wait

while the page was loading.

"Last but not least, I would like to explain how the point system works. Not all questions

are worth the same number of points, and the general percentage of people who get the

question right will affect the score."

"What?"

When Masachika looked up, the host had just taken his eyes off the contestants and

shifted his gaze toward the crowd.

"I'm sure everyone here has watched a trivia-based game show at least once before,

right? Ordinary people are asked several questions, and then the show checks the average

percent of correct answers that they had. Put simply, the more people who get the answer

right, the easier that question is. Fewer people answering a question correctly means the

question is harder. We, the quiz research club, have the technology to use our own personal

surveys to calculate the percentage of correct answers. Normally, trivia shows have ten easy

questions and twenty hard ones, but we will be using the formula one hundred minus the

general percentage of correct answers equals the number of points! Put simply, if eighty

percent of people answer a problem correctly, then the problem will be worth twenty points.

However, if only five percent of people get the correct answer, then the question is worth

ninety-five points!"

"That's, uh…? I don't know about that."

In other words, easy questions were worth next to nothing, but difficult questions could

create a massive gap in the score between the contestants in the blink of an eye. To make

matters worse, it was a multiple-choice test…

You could make a lucky guess on an extremely difficult question and instantly getseventy

points. If all the other questions are painfully easy ones that 90 percent of people get right,

then there would be almost no way to ever catch up. It's a scary thought…but I'm sure they

worked on balancing the game before making it.

This point system seemed to be one of those unique rules the host mentioned earlier.

All right, to sum things up… There are thirty-one questions, and you get ten seconds to

answer each question. Each question is worth a different number of points, which is based

on how many individuals get the correct answer when they're surveyed. Furthermore, both

Alya and Yuki are allowed to phone a friend for help but only once.

Other than the scoring system, there wasn't anything special about the rules for the most

part and that included phoning a friend. The audience appeared to think so as well, seemingly

getting sick of listening to all the rules. However, the host was not oblivious to this and

proceeded by asking the contestants if they had any final questions. After they both shook

their heads, the host faced the crowd once more and spread out his arms.

"Sorry to keep you all waiting. Anything goes in this battle between two student council

members! Let the game begin!"

The host then moved to his lectern, where he began to use the opened laptop lying there.

"Your first topic is…social studies! First question!" shouted the host while the question

was simultaneously displayed on the screen.

"Out of the Seven Summits, which of the following has the lowest altitude?!"

What the…?! Who the hell knows that?!

But despite his bewilderment, the multiple-choice answers were promptly displayed on

the screen.

"One, Vinson Massif. Two, Kilimanjaro. Three, Aconcagua. Four, Kosciuszko. Your

ten seconds starts now!"

"Oof! Seriously?!"

In the midst of his astonishment, a ten-second countdown appeared in the top-right of

the screen, prompting Masachika to immediately rack his brain for ideas.

Uh… Okay, Kilimanjaro is definitely not it, and I've never even heard of Kosciuszko.

The hell isthat? Wait. Hold on. The Seven Summits are supposed to be the highest mountains,

so size-wise, the smallest ones are somewhere like Australia or Antarctica, right? Wait.

Antarctica is deceptively huge, isn't it? Which leaves Australia… I'm pretty sure Aconcagua

is in the Americas somewhere…but where is Vinson Massif again…?

Not even two seconds went by as those thoughts flew through his brain. But when he

directed his gaze back to his phone…he froze.

"…? What's this?"

Because there was something he was not expecting to see. Displayed on his phone's

screen under the timer in the top-right corner were the question and multiple-choice answers.

This much was no different from what was displayed on the screen above the stage. However,

there was something else displayed above the question on his phone that was nowhere to be

found on the main screen. There were two square frames with Alisa's name written above

one and Yuki's name written above the other.

Uh…? Oh, does this have something to do with that vote from a few moments ago?

Masachika tried tapping on the box and Alisa's name, but nothing happened. The

ambiguity even caused him to forget about the quiz itself for a moment. But when the timer

reached the four-second mark, the mystery naturally solved itself.

"Hmm?"

The number 4 suddenly appeared in the box under Yuki's name, followed by another 4

written in Alisa's box one second later.

Wait. Don't tell me these are their answers…

A wave of bewildered grunts stirred the crowd, provoking the host to tell everyone to

settle down, which immediately silenced the audience.

This must be one of the features of the game… Anyway, I need to answer before time

runs out. I guess I'll go with Kosciuszko, wherever that is. Seems suspicious.

Seeing Yuki and Alisa choose the same answer gave Masachika the confidence he

needed to tap the fourth multiple-choice answer. Another second went by, bringing the

countdown to zero and locking in the answers.

"Time's up! Now, let's get straight to it! The correct answer was…number four!

Kosciuszko! Congratulations to both of our contestants for getting it right! Furthermore,

sixty-eight percent of you all got the correct answer, which means each contestant will receive

thirty-two points!"

…? Don't they usually check the contestants' answers before telling usthe right answer?

Oh! Right. The contestants don't have a screen in front of them, so I guess there's no way

to show their answers to the audience.

The two contestants had ordinary classroom desks in front of them, which were covered

with a tablecloth to keep their tablets from getting scratched. It was an extremely simple

setup, with the cloth hanging down in front of their desk, which was common with trivia

shows, and there was no screen displaying their answers, either.

The questions and answers displayed on the main screen were likely made in advance,

so they probably have no way of showing the contestants' answers. That must be why they

went with this answer form to show the contestants' answers… But still, something feels off…

Although the next question was announced, most of Masachika's focus was on the quiz

research club's puzzling solution to displaying the answers. It felt extremely unnatural and

obtuse, which made him think there had to be something else he wasn't seeing. So he decided

to follow his gut and began racking his brain.

Common sense would tell me that this just allows everyone to base their answers on the

contestants' answers, right? But giving the audience such big hints only takes away from

the fun of the game, right? Is this a feature where you're supposed to just choose the same

answer as the contestant you like? So the survey in the beginning was— Wait. No. If that

were the case, then why show both contestants' answers? Why not only show the answers of

whomever you chose in the beginning?

"Time's up! We have an incorrect answer this time! The correct answer was number

two! Ms. Kujou got it right! Number three, which Ms. Suou selected, was unfortunately the

symbol for steel cans."

Masachika suddenly looked up when he heard the host's announcement. It appeared that

Alisa had already taken the lead.

Good job, Alya. You learn that from one of those trivia books?

There was no way Alisa would lose to Yuki when it came to knowledge that could be

found in simple textbooks, but Masachika knew this wasn't enough to win a trivia show.

Therefore, when he had stopped by the quiz research club to discuss the trivia game, he

casually memorized all the names of the trivia books he saw lying around. He then got copies

for Alisa to study at a later date, which she ended up using to memorize every single fact in

them like a sponge, exceeding even Masachika's expectations.

They most likely pulled a decent number of problems from those trivia books… I'm sure

they modified some of them, but it's nothing Alya can't handle!

Simply watching his dependable partner lifted his mood tenfold; he gazed at her with

praise and support. Alisa, however, didn't notice his stare, since she had her eyes glued to

her tablet and wasn't planning on letting her guard down for even a second.

…She still looks pretty tense, though. I really hope she can remain focused until the very

end…

A bit of anxiety clouded Masachika's heart when he realized that he missed how many

points the last question was worth. Wondering how much of a lead Alisa was in, he

immediately looked down at his phone…and discovered that their score wasn't displayed.

What the…? Their score isn't written anywhere onstage, either. Dammit. Is this going

to come back and bite us in the ass?

He panicked somewhat until the host announced their score.

"All right! That does it for our first topic. The current scores are Ms. Suou, 148 points!

Ms. Kujou, 192 points! It looks like Ms. Kujou has a slight edge over her opponent!"

"Oh, wow. She has an even bigger lead than I thought."

Masachika honestly didn't believe she would already be in the lead after the first five

questions. Unexpected but greatly appreciated, he thought, but it was still soon to get

comfortable yet because depending on the next topic, there was always a high chance of Yuki

taking the lead in the blink of an eye. Alisa was especially ignorant when it came to subculture

and pop culture, so all Masachika could do was pray nothing like that ever came up…

"Let's move on to our next topic! Our next topic for the day is…"

Masachika naturally tensed in fear as the host began to announce the next topic.

"…cuisine! Here is your first question!"

After breathing a sigh of relief, Masachika returned his focus to the curiously displayed

answers of the contestants, since he was sure that Alisa could handle the quiz itself without

him.

This show contains elements related to the election…which means people can use the

contestants' answers to cheer on their favorite candidate. That seems like the most natural

reason for doing this. So would that mean the survey in the beginning was to let the audience

know this was to cheer on their favorite…? But wouldn't this just motivate the audience to

give their favorite candidate a hint if they end up selecting the wrong answer…? Then again,

that is against the rules, so…

Or was it only against the rules if they got caught? Still, the issue here was that it was

unlikely that either of the candidates had realized this mechanism even existed. Plus, the tensecond clock made it hard to have any sort of effective system set up for cheating.

On second thought, if you did manage to tell a candidate about this system, then it would

be an easy enough system to abuse. The candidate could just slowly choose each answer

until their accomplice in the audience gave them a nod when they picked the right answer.

That should work, and it would be subtle enough for someone to pull off without anyone

noticing, right?

A little cheating during the election race wasn't a problem as long as you got away with

it. You could even be kind of obvious about it if you left no evidence. In fact, it could improve

your reputation if you did pull it off without the other person finding out how you did it.

But how am I going to tell Alya all this? That's the issue. Plus, the problems are honestly

really hard, so this might actually not help her at all.

Masachika had been making sure to look up each question until now, but most of them

didn't seem like they were something you could look up online and find an answer in under

ten seconds. In reality, the accomplice would probably have only a maximum of five seconds

to find the right answer online.

Hmm… I guess it wouldn't really be feasible.

But even then, he turned his focus to Alisa onstage, since he figured letting her know

about this was still better than nothing. Having said that, she was still completely focused on

her tablet, never glancing even once in his direction.

…Alya?

A seed of anxiety and panic began to grow inside Masachika when he realized that she

clearly wasn't paying attention to what was going on around her.

Hold up. Relax… How is panicking going to solve anything? If Alya is nervous, then I

need to be the calm one.

He shook his head, shifted emotional gears, and looked back down at his phone.

I should keep an eye on Yuki first. If she's already cheating, then there has to be some

kind of hint of it within her answers.

Once he reached that conclusion, Masachika peered hard at Yuki's answer while

glancing a few times at Ayano to see if they really were up to no good, but neither of them

seemed to be doing anything suspicious.

They aren't acting any different from how they were acting earlier… Besides, I doubt

Ayano has it in her to cheat.

Maybe she could do it if Yuki gave her the orders, but Ayano wasn't the kind of person

who would even get the idea to cheat, let alone be able to pull it off. She was far too pure

to do something so dirty.

"That does it for our second round. The current score is Ms. Suou with 304 points and

Ms. Kujou with 390 points! Ms. Kujou is still in the lead!"

"Oooh!" Masachika exclaimed when he heard the host's announcement. He immediately

looked over at his partner with genuine admiration in his eyes, but Alisa was still far too taut

with tension to notice.

Meanwhile…

I've answered every question correctly so far. All that studying has paid off. I can do

it. I can beat Yuki all by myself.

The extremely short ten-second period for thinking, in addition to the subsequent anxiety

and relief felt once the answer was announced, ended up being far more mentally draining

than Alisa had imagined. The fact that this was only a third of the entire show made her

slightly less confident that she would be able to focus until the very end. Nevertheless, she

fought through her fears and focused on the questions before her.

…That is, until the host announced the next topic.

"Our next topic is trends! Here's your first question!"

Alisa was suddenly overwhelmed by a sense of danger that was almost immediately

proved to be well-founded.

"Last year, the TV show Detective Family Holiday took the world by storm. Your

question is: What did the protagonist famously say in episode eight during this scene?!"

…! I have no idea!

Although she had heard of that TV show on the news before, she had absolutely no

idea what it was even about. At the very least, she thought she could guess which line was

right based on the scene, but all the choices were extremely similar. The only difference was

vocabulary used and the order of the words, but all the lines essentially meant the same thing.

Whoever wrote the question expects us to have a general idea of what the protagonist

said, so the question is simply testing if we remembered it correctly… I basically just have

to go with my gut and guess!

The option to phone a friend did cross her mind, but Alisa immediately ruled that out.

I'll be fine. I can beat Yuki in any ordinary topic. Even if she gets the lead on me this

round, I can still pull ahead in the later rounds.

She convinced herself of that while going with her gut to pick an answer, but when the

time came for the host to announce the answer…

"The correct answer is…number one! Oh nooo! Ms. Kujou got her first answer wrong!

Ms. Suou is catching up, folks!"

She got it wrong. The fact was like a heavy weight in her stomach. It was emotionally

devastating whether or not she wanted to acknowledge it, but her iron will wasn't going to

allow her emotions to get in the way.

I'll be fine. I have a one-in-four chance of getting the answer right, so even if I guess

every time, I should still get at least one or two of them right. In addition, if I do get two

of them right, there's almost no way Yuki will outpoint me, even if she does answer every

question correctly.

"Question number two! This mascot has been a huge hit on social media lately! But what

city and prefecture is he originally a mascot of?"

It's okay. Just two questions. As long as I get two correct…

"Question number three! This hot product is used for what?"

It's okay. I can still…

"Whoa! Would you look at that?! Ms. Suou has finally taken the lead!"

Just one more question. If I get this one correct…

......

"That does it for round three! Ms. Suou is now in the lead with 496 points, with Ms.

Kujou still with 390 points! I bet everyone was as shocked and upset as I was to see Ms.

Kujou getting every question wrong this round! This is major! Anyway, that does it for the

first half of the game, so let's see how our contestants are feeling! Let's start with you, Ms.

Suou. That was one impressive comeback."

"Thank you very much. I was quite surprised by how difficult these questions turned out

to be. Are the trivia questions you ask one another in your club always this difficult?"

"No, these questions are actually…"

Even though the host and Yuki were speaking, Alisa hardly heard a word. Her unfocused

eyes stared at her tablet, and she gritted her teeth. Being stubborn ended up only putting her

far behind in points, and it was going to take more than one right answer to catch up. Despite

being prepared for a bad round, Alisa couldn't help but curse her poor intuition after getting

every single answer wrong.

"I try hard to keep up with trends in order to stay informed about others' interests…but

trends are seemingly unimportant to Alya. If I were her, I would have phoned a friend…"

Hearing Yuki call her out snapped Alisa back to reality. She looked up from her tablet

and turned to face Yuki, who was staring in her direction with a very ladylike smile.

"Did you not phone a friend out of pride, even though you knew the topic would be

difficult for you? Or perhaps you only plan on phoning a friend if I do so first?"

Pride… It was pride, but it wasn't her rivalry with Yuki that made her too stubborn to

ask for help. Alisa was doing this for herself, and her pride wasn't going to let her back down.

"…Why did you agree to do this show?"

Yuki blinked in confusion, as if Alisa's question had caught her off guard, but before

she could even get a chance to reply, Alisa continued:

"I agreed to come on thisshow to demonstrate what I was capable of. I want to prove that

I am fit for running for student council president and that I am fit to stand by Masachika's

side. And that's why…"

Alisa grabbed her smartphone off the desk in front of her, then flipped it over as if to

show that she wasn't planning on using it.

"…I don't plan on getting Masachika involved in this. Whether I win or lose this battle

depends solely on me."

Her determination was awe-inspiring, still shining even in the face of despair, and it was

this great pride of hers that captivated the audience.

"I will not rely on anyone but myself to defeat you, no matter what."

The perfectly still audience swallowed their breath when they heard just how determined

she was. Even the host was speechless for a few seconds. Of course, Masachika was no

different as he watched over Alisa from afar.

"Alya…"

He unconsciously muttered his partner's name as she shone so brightly that he wanted

to squint.

Heh… She's so cool.

And he meant that from the bottom of his heart. She was putting everything she had into

improving so she could become the ideal version of herself. Masachika truly felt that her

single-minded pursuit was not only beautiful but admirable as well.

Ha-ha… I guess we don't need to cheat…

He lowered his smartphone with a bit of shame. All he could do now was believe in his

partner, trust that she could turn this around for herself, and watch over her.

Anyway…I had no idea she felt that way.

Masachika himself seemed to be the cause of Alisa's unusual tension lately. In other

words, although he hadn't really taken what Yuki said seriously at the time, she turned out

to be right.

I was only trying to help her with the election, since I have experience, but it looks like

I might have ended up only making her feel cornered.

Looking back, he did feel like he might have been helping her too much. Perhaps his

overprotectiveness made Alisa believe he didn't trust her. Perhaps it made her feel like she

wasn't good enough to do anything on her own.

But you have nothing to worry about… You're always going to be walking ahead of me

and going farther than I ever could.

Masachika gazed at his partner onstage with a hint of sorrow in his heart. She was a

brilliant star in the night sky, and he was but a single spectator watching her from the ground.

It was as if this were some kind of metaphor for the future to come, which drained his heart,

leaving him with a strange sense of loneliness.

"Now, let's move on to the final half of the show!"

The audience erupted with passionate cheers the instant the host announced that they

were resuming the show. There was probably not a soul left in the crowd who saw this as

merely an attraction for the school festival anymore. This was a serious match with two

student council presidential candidates' pride on the line, and the passionate cheers from the

crowd were proof of that.

"Our next topic…is math! Here's your first question! Which of the following is the

correct geometric net for this three-dimensional object? Timer starts now!"

"Whoa?!" exclaimed Masachika at the strangely difficult question. This was obviously

not something you could solve within ten seconds, no matter how you looked at it. Maybe

you could put two of the nets together in your head if you were quick enough. As a result,

both Yuki and Alisa punched in their completely different answers almost simultaneously

when there were only two seconds left to go.

"Time's up! The correct answer is number three! …Oh no! This is the first time both

contestants got the answer wrong!"

"Yeah… Not much anyone could have done about that," said Masachika with a bitter

smirk.

It was essentially a luck-based question, after all.

"Incidentally, only eleven percent of people got the answer right! I guess ten seconds

was a little too short, huh?"

"…What?"

Masachika's smile fell.

Wait… What did the host just say?

A chill ran down his spine, and the clearly unusual comment instantly put Masachika's

slowly drifting brain into overdrive.

Only 11 percent of people got the correct answer? That doesn't seem right. Probabilitywise, you have a one-in-four chance of getting the answer right. But if we assume there were

at least a few people who actually knew the answer, then wouldn't at least 20 percent be

more realistic? There's no way only 11 percent of people got the answer right… Unless…

Unless the people answering were influenced by Yuki's and Alisa's incorrect answers.

"…!!"

The instant it hit him, Masachika's heart began to race. He couldn't even breathe as

something similar to fear shot through his body.

Wait, wait, wait. Then that means…

There was no time to worry about how the quiz was going any longer. Masachika placed

a hand on his chin, getting lost in his own thoughts.

The percentage of correct answers from non-contestants wasn't something they

calculated beforehand after surveying strangers. They're using the audience's answers to

calculate the percentage. In other words, the audience can manipulate the score. But that

sounds like it would be pretty pointless if Yuki and Alya kept getting the right answer… Wait!

How stupid am I?!

There was an obvious way to manipulate the scores to one's advantage, and it was right

under Masachika's nose.

So that's why they have the answers displayed here!

Although an extreme example, what if everyone here copied Alisa's answer? If she got

the answer correct, then the general percentage of correct answers would be 100 percent. In

other words, she would get zero points. But if Alisa got the answer wrong and Yuki got it

right, then the general percentage of correct answers would be a whopping 0 percent, which

would instantly give Yuki a hundred whole points in the blink of an eye. And if that were

to happen, then there would be no way for Alisa to catch up, no matter how many questions

she got right.

Ha…ha-ha… This is a feature of an election. Each answer the audience gives is a vote

that directly influences how many points Alya and Yuki get.

There were probably not that many people in the audience who had realized this…yet.

But what if people started to catch on? How many people in the audience were fans of Yuki?

At the very least, she had far more people who would vote for her over Alisa. Which meant…

I need to get as many people on my side as possible and have them copy Yuki's answers!

That should at least prevent her from getting a huge advantage! There's one more thing I

need to do—

Masachika sprang into action, pulling out the contact list on his phone while turning on

his heel to leave the area.

…Masachika had the right idea, but he made a huge mistake in his calculation… There

was already someone who had caught on to this point system long before he did.

"Sorry, Kuze, but I need you to stop right there."

"Huh…?"

Once he started to walk away, a familiar female student suddenly appeared right in front

of him. Immediately, another familiar face appeared on his left and yet another right behind

him.

"You guys are…"

They were friends of friends, so he had met them a few times before, and there was only

one reason why they would prevent him from leaving.

"I am deeply sorry, Master Masachika, but I must ask you to stop what you're doing."

Right when he heard yet another voice coming from his right, someone grabbed his right

wrist tightly, stopping him from using his smartphone. He immediately looked down to find

a very familiar girl looking up at him with her usual blank expression.

"You… Oh."

Masachika wasn't the first person who realized how the scoring worked, but it wasn't

one of the hundred members sitting in the audience, either.

"I am well aware of how disrespectful this is of me, but I am doing it all for Lady Yuki's

victory. I am not letting you go until this trivia show is over."

It was Yuki's partner, Ayano.


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