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Infinite Dendrogram - Volume 7 - Chapter SS2




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Side Story: The Case of the Unknown Murders — The Solution 
Lost Heart, Rook Holmes 
A few hours had now passed. I was having dinner at a popular restaurant. There were many customers here, but I was eating alone. 
Kasumi and I had parted ways soon after I’d found the culprit, while Babi was out following my orders. 
On top of that, Marilyn and Audrey were in my Jewel, so the only company I had right now was Liz, who, as usual, I wore as an article of clothing. Since it had gotten warmer over the previous month, she was a jacket, rather than a coat. 
Ever since leaving the apartment building, I’d purposely stayed exclusively in crowded places. No matter how hopeless she was, Gerbera had powerful concealment abilities, and I wasn’t neglecting to be wary of them. 
Given that, I figured she wouldn’t attack me if I was in an area with many Masters. After all, things would become quite dire for her if someone had an Embryo that could trace her. 
I assumed she’d wait for when I was all by myself, and since I hadn’t been attacked yet, I was probably correct about that. 
Of course, she might currently be observing me with her Guardian, but nevertheless, I was glad to know she wasn’t careless enough to attack with so many people... around... and... 
“...Huh?” 
The thought that “Gerbera wasn’t careless enough to X,” had just passed my mind, and now that I’d actually talked to her directly, it made me consider a question that had never came to mind before: 
Just how much of an idiot is she? 
Though it sounded like a casual insult, it was an actual question — I wanted to know the extent of her stupidity. 
What I’d said before leaving was the equivalent of telling her, “I already know that you’re the criminal.” And yet, although my words had greatly enraged her, she hadn’t chased after me when I left. 
It wouldn’t have been surprising for her to attack me in order to silence me, abate her anger, or because she believed I was already preparing to get her on the wanted list and to either arrest or defeat her. 
The fact that she hadn’t done that could only mean that she was trying to keep her identity as the culprit a secret. 
Indeed — she actually believed that she was still unexposed. 
It wasn’t logical for her to stay unaware despite all I’d said, but in all honesty, she certainly did seem like an idiot foolish enough to stay clueless. 
But now that I knew she had enough discretion to not attack me in public, it left me with a new question. 
“Did the extent of her stupidity change...?” 
She was certainly a careless idiot, and I was more than confident that the disgraceful behavior she’d shown me in person was no lie or act. 
However, that wasn’t quite enough to explain her excessive naïveté when it came to perceiving the situation as it was. 
There was also her Embryo to consider. 
The crimes committed made it safe to assume it was a Guardian specialized in concealment, and that was most likely based on the Master’s personality, as was the case with most Embryo abilities. 
Could the Embryo have truly developed into what it was if she was just an excessively careless idiot? 
Of course, the relationship between a Master’s personality and an Embryo’s powers wasn’t absolute, but considering the immense strength of her craving to stand out, it was pretty curious for her Embryo to have ended up having abilities that seemed like a direct opposite of that. 
“The result is the same... but the equation is different,” I muttered. “That’s the impression this is giving me.” 
Both “2 divided by 2” and “2 times 0.5” result in 1, but the nuance of those equations is entirely different. 
Her actions were careless and foolish — no doubt about that — and they brought about fitting results. However, I might’ve made a mistake while deducing her thought process leading to them. 
“Let’s think about this a little...” 
The case had already been solved. There was no need for me to make any further deductions about that, so this was nothing but a superfluous extra — a deduction for the sole purpose of understanding her character. 
Thankfully, I still had time until the moment she would attack me, so I immersed myself in thought and used all the information I’d gathered to re-assess the nature of the Master known as “Gerbera.” 
 
Dead Hand, Gerbera 
It was a few hours after sunset. Through Alhazred, I watched that guy slowly walk over from the other end of the street. 
He was the dumb, shitty weakling whose only plus was his pretty face. He probably didn’t even realize it, but I’d known him before our meeting today. 
I’d seen him when I was investigating the KoD before starting the murders, so I knew the inn he was staying at, and could easily ambush him — like I was about to do right now. 
Through Alhazred, I looked at him while standing in the middle of the road, and that shitty weakling didn’t even realize I was here. 
My Alhazred was the strongest Embryo, after all. 
Completely focused on concealment, he couldn’t be noticed by any of the five senses, and even skills like Danger Sense and Killing Intent Perception had no effect on him. He couldn’t be caught by machine or magic sensors, either. 
No one could ever know that Alhazred was there. 
He could sneak in anywhere and kill anyone, so, obviously, if he wasn’t the strongest — no one was. But for some reason, my clan members couldn’t see that. They really needed to have their eyes checked. 
Remembering them made me a bit angry, but whatever. I had a plan to get back at them. 
For now, I just had to wait for when the KoD left jail and then commit another murder. I’d keep framing him and lowering his reputation over and over until he became so angry that he’d stop caring about appearances and go out to search for the true culprit. And then, I’d gladly battle him. 
He’d be crazy with rage, so he wouldn’t care and would fight me here in the city — where he couldn’t use his full power. 
If my Alhazred had a flaw, it would be his weakness to random attacks that covered an area so wide that it didn’t matter if they knew where he was or not — and those were the KoD’s specialty. So, if I wanted my Alhazred to kill him, I had to limit his firepower. 
He couldn’t use his wide-area attacks in the city, because if he did, he’d get on the wanted list. I wouldn’t mind if that happened — it’d still be clear that I was the one who’d pushed him to that point. 
Anyway, if he wouldn’t use his firepower, he’d only have his stupidly high strength. He’d be useless, and I could easily kill him with my Alhazred. No matter which one of those happened — the fact would remain that the KoD would be defeated by my planning and my Embryo’s power. That would surely make my clan members rethink their opinion of me. 
“Before that, I have to crush this annoying, shitty weakling,” I muttered. 
My unnoticeable Alhazred started walking towards him. 
First, I’d slowly tear off his limbs, and when he started to bawl, I’d cut his face into pieces. My heart danced as I imagined that moment, and then I made my Embryo run forward. 
But when he was only about 50 meters away, the shitty weakling jumped away from Alhazred. 
He was wearing the same metal slime he’d wore while training with the KoD. It grew tentacles that hit the ground and launched him to the other direction. 
It almost felt like he knew my imperceptible Alhazred was here and was trying to escape him. 
“It’s just a coincidence!” I snarled. 
He just couldn’t have avoided what he didn’t know was there. 
I went after him again and attacked from a completely different angle. Alhazred’s Resources were focused on stealth, so his speed stayed below the speed of sound, but it was good enough to catch up to this shitty weakling. 
I quickly got close, and... 
He jumped in the opposite direction right before I could attack, just like he’d done the first time. 
“Again?!” 
It wasn’t just a coincidence. He was actually perceiving my imperceptible Embryo. 
But how...? I thought. And even if he knows my Alhazred is there, how did he expect to be attacked by an invisible enem— Huh?! 
“Gh?!” 
Suddenly, my vision changed from Alhazred’s to my own avatar’s back in my apartment. 
I came back to find the room on fire. The window was broken, and next to it, there was a red-haired devil — the shitty weakling’s Embryo. 
“Little Flare! Petrifying Breath! Grand Dash!” She launched skill after skill, not holding back at all. She was clearly treating me as an enemy. 
Wait... does he actually know that I’m the culprit?! 
How could he have realized that just from our talk?! The way I’d answered the questions and controlled the conversation was perfect! 
Is the shitty weakling actually some sort of genius?! 
 
A Few Minutes Ago, Lost Heart, Rook Holmes 
It was a few hours after sundown. The sun’s warmth had already faded from both the air and the ground. 
I finished gathering my thoughts about Gerbera and made my way back to the inn I was staying at. 
There was no one nearby, so I was walking this nightly street all by my lonesome. 
“Hm...” I murmured. 
I presumed that Gerbera would only attack me when I was all alone, and this seemed like a great opportunity. 
“Liz,” I whispered my slime’s name inside my mouth, making sure to not make it audible, and she responded with a single tap on my arm inside my sleeve. 
So there’s nothing yet, then... I’d prefer it if she attacked me before I reached the inn. Breaking it would trouble those working there. 
As that thought ran through my mind, Liz tapped my arm twice. It was a code we’d decided on ahead of time, and it meant “Something invisible is closing in.” 
A moment later, Liz jumped to the side opposite of whatever was approaching us. She was moving the same way she had when fighting that young lady during Franklin’s Game — by hitting the ground with tentacles she extended from her jacket-like form. 
However, they weren’t the only thing that were reaching out from her. She’d also used the part of her that didn’t make up the jacket to spread out countless thin and shiny threads all over the surrounding area. 
Mithril Arms Slimes like Liz were capable of turning themselves into armor as well as weapons, and in this case, she’d turned herself into threads. 
Of course, the focus on thinness and length came at the cost of attack power and endurance, making them break upon the slightest touch. However, that was intentional. Their purpose was to detect, and breaking was how they did it. 
I’d determined that Gerbera’s Embryo was a Guardian focused on concealment, and based on the... better parts of her performance as a murderer, I’d made a guess that it was also invisible, soundless, and odorless. Considering the absurdity of Superiors, it was also likely that you couldn’t be aware of it even if you touched it. 
That was why I’d made Liz spread out a number of weak, easy-to-cut threads. Even if she couldn’t see it or feel it by touch, Liz could still notice when she lost parts of herself. 
This could only be done because Liz was a slime — a creature that could change shape and didn’t seem to feel pain. 
But the fact that I was able to counter that wasn’t the actual crux of the matter. The very fact that I was even capable of thinking of such a countermeasure made it clear that Gerbera had already made a grave mistake. 
An invisible Embryo was no doubt a scary concept. No one could defend against a creature that you couldn’t even feel by touch. However, that only applied if the target didn’t know of its existence. 
Gerbera had committed crimes that were thoroughly based on an extremely high concealing and stealth abilities, and that was exactly what had allowed me to guess her Embryo’s powers. By giving me the information that I was “fighting against an enemy with a perfect stealth ability,” she’d made it possible for me to develop a functioning counter. 
Such a power would lose half of its value if the target merely knew that it was there, and that was Gerbera’s greatest error — even greater than leaving all the evidence I’d found. 
She so confidently believed in her Embryo’s “unknowability” that she’d effectively made me aware that an “unknown” entity actually existed. It was as though she’d colored everything surrounding something colorless, making its shape stand out. 
If she’d tried to assassinate someone without trying to stir any sort of murder-mystery drama, her Embryo would have been able to accomplish that without a flaw to name. Even the likes of royalty would’ve been easy targets. But now, the “colorless” existence was no longer imperceivable. 
“Babi should be attacking her right now,” I muttered. 
After the questioning, I’d asked her to do two things. One of them was to observe Gerbera, which was easily done with the Optic Camouflage skill she’d gotten from a monster by using Drain Learning. 
Babi was to observe the apartment building, follow Gerbera if she left, and be on standby to attack her if she attacked me using her Embryo. 
Even if it was Superior, the fact that it was a Guardian meant that it had a certain unavoidable weakness: its Master. No matter how tough and strong the Guardian, it couldn’t protect its owner if it wasn’t at its side. 
Due to this, Gerbera and I were tied now. 
However, I had the advantage in the fact that I’d predicted her attack, while she hadn’t even considered that could happen. 
“Now, it’s just a matter of which Embryo defeats which Master first.” 
Naturally, in terms of overall battle potential, their side was far above ours, but due to the excessive focus on concealment, her Guardian’s speed and power weren’t particularly great. By running away as I was, I could keep buying time for a decent while longer. 
The only thing we actually had to worry about now was... 
“...whether or not Babi can take care of Gerbera in time,” I murmured. 
She, too, wasn’t a particularly powerful Guardian. Due to dedicating her Resources to charm, drain, learning, and the merging power, her base stats were lower than that of other Guardians in their fourth forms. 
As an incognito employee, Gerbera might currently have jobs such as Carpenter, Architect, and Swindler, but even so, she was a Superior, and it was highly likely that she was max level. 
It was a gamble whether Babi would be able to defeat her... In fact, it was best not to expect that to happen. 
Babi’s attack wasn’t the main part of the plan. 
I was suddenly overcome by a mild shock. Liz had just touched me in a way that said, “It’s not coming after us.” 
The Guardian had probably returned upon realizing its Master was in danger. 
That reaction was only natural, and I’d hypothesized that it could happen. 
So now, to switch to the main part of the plan, I made my way to Gerbera’s apartment. 
Upon arriving there, I found her standing there with wounds covering her entire body, and on the floor next to her, there was a broken Brooch. 
Looks like Babi did a good job cornering her, I thought. 
“Mrrgh!” 
My Embryo kept on attacking her, but all her attacks were stopped by something invisible standing before Gerbera. Apparently, the Guardian was focusing on staying in one place to protect its Master. 
Even the way Gerbera used her own Embryo seemed to be greatly flawed. Gerbera should’ve simply made it drop defense altogether and just defeat Babi. 
“So you’re here... ‘Rook,’ was it?” she said while looking at me through her invisible Guardian. “I don’t know how you did it, but you found out that I’m the true culprit.” 
“Yes...” I replied. “You’re the one behind the serial murders here in Gideon.” 
Somehow, I could accept that she’d still believed she wasn’t found out yet, but the fact that she didn’t even know why I’d found her out had me at a loss. 
No, wait. She was merely acting as if she didn’t know. 
In her mind, she already understood the reasons. 
“Yes. That’s right,” she continued. “I am Unknown — the one behind those murders.” 
That certainly doesn’t seem like a nickname you would use to refer to yourself, I thought. 
Nevertheless, I now had the culprit’s confession. My work as a detective was done. Case closed. 
“It seems unbelievable, but did you also actually find out my Superior Embryo’s... Alhazred’s power?” she asked. 
So the invisible Guardian was called “Alhazred,” eh? Also, though I’d expected this myself, she’d actually just revealed that she was a Superior. 
“Yes,” I nodded. “It probably cannot be perceived by the five... no... the six senses.” 
“Exactly. Alhazred is an Embryo that only I can feel... Heh heh heh heh heh.” Gerbera began laughing for some reason. Her smile was... ridiculously unpleasant. “You completely exposed my plan... You must be a real genius.” 
Though it sounded like it, she wasn’t praising me. In fact — it was the exact opposite. 
“Even if you raise me up, it will not change the fact that you were outdone by a newbie,” I declared. 
As long as she couldn’t consider me a genius or something else outside the norm, it would make her consider herself inferior. 
My words made her face, still displaying that unpleasant smile, turn stiff. She didn’t speak a word in response. 
Yes. Of course you’d react like that, I thought. I’d already developed a decent grasp of her mentality, the extent of her thoughtlessness... and the essence of the very core of her heart and mind. 
“During this investigation, I considered you not just as a criminal, but as a person, as well,” I continued. “When I visited you here today, I said that the culprit was an idiot. But now...” 
I hadn’t been mistaken, but that assessment wasn’t quite complete, either. 
“Now... I see that you’re more than just a thoughtless idiot.” 
I’d arrived at a single conclusion that answered everything there was to know about her person. 
It was the reason behind her excessive carelessness, the naïveté behind her evaluation of Shu, the mistakes in her cryptograms, the lack of caution in her words, and the fact that she hadn’t realized that I’d found her out even when I’d basically spelled it out for her. 
All of that stemmed from a single problem. 
“You only see the world how you want it to be.” 
She stared at me, still not saying a word. However, something in her eyes had changed. 
“You don’t think you will fail, so when you do, you don’t understand the reasons why,” I said. “You don’t want to believe that others are better than you, so you evaluate them as inferior to yourself. You think your targets will fall for your schemes, so you don’t even try to confirm whether you’re off the mark or not.” 
Yes, in order to see more value in herself as she appeared in her own mind, she averted her eyes from reality. 
Of course, there was some actual idiocy in her, as well, but most of her failures had their roots in the fact that she always turned away from her own absurdity. 
Because of this, others always saw her as an abject idiot, her plans always ended up being sloppy, and her behavior was always thoroughly thoughtless. 
I was certain that she couldn’t even listen to others without warping their words beyond recognition, and it was probably so bad that even the most reasonable of warnings seemed completely off base. 
“However, your evaluation of me was correct,” I continued. “I am certainly below you, and it’s fair for you to see me as a weakling.” 
Gerbera hadn’t warped reality when it came to me — I was, no doubt, inferior. But that was exactly why the truth-filled tirade directed at her had delivered such a powerful effect. She’d taken the words into her mind without warping them in any way, and they had become like venom to her. 
She’d then hastily tried to mend her image, convincing herself that my words were absurd and warping them to conclude that I hadn’t yet figured her out. 
“You tried it just now, as well,” I said. “You’re cornered by someone far below yourself, so you tried to convince yourself that I’m actually not below you.” 
It was all for the purpose of keeping her perceived reality in line with her ideal. Gerbera wanted to be free to believe that she hadn’t failed or made a mistake — she’d just encountered a really bad enemy. 
That was how she functioned, and it even showed in her Alhazred, which was based on her personality. 

“That’s why you are the only one who can see your Embryo. You only see the world as you want it to be, so your Embryo became a creature that can only be seen by you alone.” 
It was a being that only lived in the vision of one person — much like an imaginary friend. And yet it followed her whims and influenced the world like a sort of phantasmal beast. That was what her Guardian was, and there was much to be said about a mind that could birth it. 
“That is the truth behind your Embryo... and you yourself,” I declared. “You’re no ‘Unknown.’ You’re merely someone who avoids her own truth, senses, and even the nature of her mind. In other words — an immense idiot.” 
If words could truly hurt people, then what I was saying was a double-edged sword, for they hurt me, as well. I, too, was avoiding my own truth and path in life. But even so, I spoke those words to her. 
“Eh... No... I... That’s... not...” 
Gerbera was unable to refute what I’d said. 
She swallowed all the responses she tried to speak. Although she was trying her hardest to ignore the inconvenient reality as she’d always done, my words were like a wedge keeping her from escaping it. 
Unveiling the truth behind her heart made it impossible for her to subconsciously avert her gaze from her failure, stopping her every time she tried it. 
The words had now been carved into her mind, and she would remember them every time her escapism made an attempt to take over, forcing her back to reality. Having heard my words, her brain was correcting her every time she tried to avert her gaze. 
For all I knew, she might even be remembering the many failures she’d committed throughout her life. Those were surely memories she’d rather have forgotten. 
“Aaahh, aaahh, AaAAhHh!” Gerbera wailed as she strongly covered her eyes with her palms, as though to say that she didn’t want to see this reality. 
But alas, her mind had already seen it — her heart had witnessed the truth. 
She could no longer convince herself that she was the greatest, or that she’d never failed. 
“...AHhhH.” Gerbera suddenly moved her hands from her face, and her eyes looked directly at me. They showed no emotions I could easily read — all I saw was an amalgam of countless feelings. However, they all converged into a single emotional vector, which was best translated into “I have to erase him.” 
She now had a strong will to eliminate me. 
“Who... a...m... I?” she asked. The words had a meaning, but it didn’t feel like was actually talking to me... or anyone else, for that matter. 
“You’re Gerbera, no?” 
“N o,” she shook her head. “I a m U n k n o w n.” 
A moment later, she began losing parts of herself. 
Not bleeding a single drop, she gradually vanished as though eaten by the air itself. No — she was actually becoming impossible to see. 
Like the mad wizard her Embryo was based on, she disappeared as though she was eaten by an invisible monster. 
“Total Eclipse of the Flesh — Alhazred.” She spoke the name of her ultimate skill. The process was now complete, and Gerbera was nowhere to be seen. 
I silently gasped as I realized the skill’s effects. It was akin to Babi’s Union Jack — the merging of Guardian and Master. It made Alhazred take in Gerbera’s only weakness — herself — and make them both imperceptible. 
“Babi! Liz!” I shouted, giving them the order to attack the place where she’d just been. 
Liz’s threads had already been spread out around the room. 
None had been cut yet, meaning that Gerbera was still there. 
If she tried to evade, I would simply refocus the attacks to where she moved. 
She had no means of escaping this. 
“Huh...?!” 
And yet, it didn’t seem like any of the attacks were landing. 
In fact, it was as though... 
“Is this more than just imperceptibility?!” 
[I am Unknown], [I am Unknown], [I am Unknown], [I am Unknown], [I am Unknown], [I am Unknown], [I am Unknown], [I am Unknown], [I am Unknown], [I am Unknown], [I am Unknown], [I am Unknown], [I am Unknown], [I am Unknown], [I am Unknown], [I am Unknown] 
Before I realized it, the surroundings had completely changed. 
The walls were now covered in carved writing, all saying just “I am Unknown.” 
The term was repeated countless times, and it felt as though she was trying to assert the words to me, or perhaps even to persuade herself. 
It was no exaggeration that the words appeared “before I realized it.” 
I hadn’t seen the moment the words were carved, nor had I heard the sound of it happening. 
Additionally, all of Liz’s threads had been cut as if they’d never been spread out. 
“The concealment power is even greater than before...!” 
Originally, it’d only concealed Alhazred, but now, it extended to anything it influenced, making it impossible to perceive the moment it changed something. 
This was the apex of concealment. It affected the world and prevented anyone from noticing any changes made. 
“Good grief...” I muttered. 
It was clearly among the most troublesome Embryo abilities I’d ever seen. 
However, despite displaying such power, Gerbera was still being herself. 
After all — there was no need to carve any letters on the walls. 
Gerbera could’ve easily given me the death penalty and escaped this place, yet she was wasting time on this meaningless nonsense. 
It was a testament to just how strongly she was clinging to her old self and wanting to get back at me. 
She was asserting her presence while trying to imprint the “ideal Gerbera” back into her subconscious, which I found... terribly pitiful. 
“Ah...!” 
Suddenly, I realized my left hand had a laceration on it and was covered in blood. 
It had obviously been inflicted a few seconds ago, yet I’d only noticed it just now. 
“What’s going onnnn?!” Babi, too, was being tormented by wounds that increased without her even realizing it. 
Babi and Liz were indiscriminately and randomly attacking the surroundings, but I couldn’t even tell whether the attacks were hitting or having any sort of effect. 
Although it focused on concealment, we were facing a Superior’s Guardian that no doubt had its stats increased due to the merge with its Master. We, on the other hand, weren’t a particularly powerful group. There was no hope of winning for us if we didn’t focus our firepower, but we couldn’t do even that. 
I momentarily considered using Union Jack to become a Metal-Devil-Man, but I realized the situation wouldn’t change in the least — in fact, I wouldn’t even be able to use it. We simply couldn’t win this. 
“Looks like this is it,” I silently spoke. There was nothing more I could do. 
Before I realized it, my Lifesaving Brooch shattered and fell from my neck. 
Looks like she had enough messing around and decided to end it, I thought, realizing that it was over. Still, there’s one thing I can say here... 
“You truly are careless.” 
The very fact that she’d actually taken the time to corner me meant that she’d done the worst thing she could have. She might’ve been able to use her increased stats and concealment power to instantly kill me and run away. 
But instead, she’d wasted precious seconds on me... giving him enough time to make it here. 
“Sorry ’bout that, kiddo,” said a voice coming from the outside. “I took the shortest path, but it still took longer than I thought.” 
A moment later, the wall facing the road was pulverized, and someone human-sized jumped into the room. 
I knew full well what... no... who it was. 
Today, I’d asked Babi to do two things. 
One of them was to observe Gerbera, while the other was... to deliver a message. 
She’d told it to Elizabeth, who’d then passed it over to the authorities, and it went: “I will expose the true culprit, so please release him once I’m done.” 
I looked through the window — or, rather, through part of the wall where the window was — and saw a flying eyeball with bat wings growing out of it. 
It was a Broadcast Eye — a communication monster first created by Franklin, now salvaged and used by Gideon. 
Through it, the authorities at the knight offices would’ve seen and heard our entire exchange here, so the investigators should already know that Gerbera was the true culprit. 
She was probably already on the wanted list, and more importantly — Shu had been released and was now here. 
“And so... the star of the show enters the stage,” I said. 
“Yep,” he replied. “Kept you waiting, huh?” 
The moment I’d considered the possibility that Gerbera might be a Superior, I’d entrusted this incident’s resolution to him. For that, it had been necessary to prove that Gerbera was the true culprit, so I’d gotten her to confess to it. 
The preparations were now complete. 
A detective’s job is to expose the truth — not to arrest or defeat the culprit. 
That role belonged to Shu — the real Unknown. 
“I heard about ya through both the eye’s feed and the Telepathy Cuffs,” he said. “You’re still here, aren’t ya, Miss ‘Unknown’?” 
He was not in his bear costume, but in the “Godcloth” he’d worn when fighting Franklin back on that day. It was proof that he was ready to fight with his full power — as both a Superior and the King of Destruction. 
Thus, this would be exactly what had happened during Franklin’s Game — a Clash of the Superiors. 
“As you clearly know, I’m the ex-‘Unknown,’ Shu Starling.” 
There was no response to those words, and I couldn’t tell whether it was because we couldn’t notice it or if she actually wasn’t doing anything. 
Still, it was obvious that she was listening. If she’d been the type of person to escape with Shu’s appearance, things wouldn’t have gotten to this point in the first place. 
“I got tons of things to say to you, but it doesn’t look like we can have a conversation here, so I’ll just say one thing,” he pointed at his neck with his thumb. “I won’t run or hide, and I’ll fight you right here, so just bring it on, will ya?” 
It was no mere provocation — he was completely honest. 
And those words signaled the start of the battle. 
Since Gerbera’s ability was perfect stealth, the thing she had to be most wary of from Shu’s arsenal was the battleship focused on wide-scale attacks. Because he couldn’t use it here in the city, this was probably the very situation she’d been yearning for. However, she didn’t attack him once even after a whole minute had passed after his words. 
Did she escape? I thought. No, that can’t be it. 
“Oh, right,” I said. “She’s actually being cautious.” 
Gerbera was wary of how Shu could counter her attack. Although he was focused on STR, a single attack from her wouldn’t be fatal, and even if it would be, he still had his Brooch. She, on the other hand, would die from just a single lucky hit by him. 
For Gerbera, who’d already lost her Brooch, that wasn’t a gamble she could take. 
“Oh, you’re worried about this?” Shu said while pointing at his Lifesaving Brooch. He too, realized the reason why she wasn’t making her move. 
He then took the Brooch in hand and... 
“There.” 
...crushed it to pieces. 
“I just have one life now. So come on, don’t be shy. Kill me and take the ‘Unknown’ title.” 
A destroyed Brooch couldn’t be replaced for the next 24 hours. With this, Gerbera and Shu were on even ground. 
Part of his face was hidden by bear fur, but you could still see him crack an indomitable smile as he said, “Bring it.” 
Those words seemed to work as a trigger, since the situation visibly changed, even if all I could see were Shu’s movements. 
The left hand he’d extended suddenly became a blur, and the next moment, it was tightened next to his neck. 
“There you are.” 
His whole body became filled with vigor as he performed a Kodachi — the roundhouse kick I’d seen him do many times during training. 
From my perspective, it didn’t look like he’d grabbed anything or kicked something. 
Suddenly, the scene drastically changed again. 
Blood began gushing out of Shu’s neck, a large hole opened up in the wall, and I could hear someone’s — most likely Gerbera’s — scream coming from far in the distance beyond it. 
After that, there was nothing. 
He didn’t follow after Gerbera, nor did anything else break. 
“Ow ow ow,” Shu lightly groaned, and that was the sole notable thing about the situation. 
As I silently watched, I could make a conjecture about what had just happened here, but it was difficult to understand and accept that as the reality behind it all. 
The wound on Shu’s neck had come from an attack by Gerbera. 
The hole in the wall had been made by Gerbera when he’d blown her away with his kick. 
And the scream had been Gerbera’s voice after suffering so much damage that the Master-Embryo merge was undone. 
Basically, Shu had perceived the attack on his neck, stopped it with his hand, and defeated her with just one hit. 
As for how he could perceive the imperceptible... his groaning was an excellent hint. 
“You turned on your pain?” I asked. 
“Yeah,” he answered. “I already heard that she had powers that made her hard to perceive, and I could somehow tell that she also hid her influence on other stuff, so I tried to see if that worked on pain, too, and sure thing, it hurt like hell.” 
Pain was something that most of us Masters had turned off, and we couldn’t experience it here in Infinite Dendrogram unless we willfully turned it on. I hadn’t known just how bad the pain could become until I’d gone through the hellish training, and I was quite sure that Gerbera had never known any in-game pain, either. 
It was quite reasonable for Alhazred — an Embryo that could only be felt by Gerbera — to be unable to conceal pain — a sensation that she couldn’t feel. 
“How did you know that pain was still there?” I asked. It was the only thing I still didn’t understand. 
It would make sense for him to turn on pain and confirm whether it was there after some time into the battle or after getting a scratch, but Shu had just arrived here, and he hadn’t suffered any damage until the final attack. 
Liz couldn’t experience pain, so not even I had known about the fact that it was still there. His knowledge of this had me curious. 
“I have a bunch of reasons... but they all boil down to intuition and experience. Rules of thumb and all that jazz,” he answered, not giving a single proper detail. 
I looked at him in silence. This was a man who’d turned on his pain to fight an enemy he couldn’t perceive, gambled that it would work on her, and actually succeeded as though it was nothing. 
He really is Ray’s brother, I thought. They’re very alike in just how absurd their methods are. 
“Heh heh,” I chuckled. All the thinking I’d done on this case suddenly seemed exceedingly comical. 
“All righty then!” Shu said as he switched from his Godcloth to the bear suit. “The culprit’s blasted off, so let’s go get some chow! I’m beary hungry fur some non-prison food!” 
“Ah, but I just ate, and—” 
“Rooook...” said Babi while looking at me with lots of resentment in her eyes. “I haven’t had aaany dinner yet... And I worked sooo hard observing her... Nom nom!” 
And thus she chomped at my head. 
Err, I would prefer it if you didn’t bite into my head. You remind me of Nemesis. 
“Let’s go eat.” I gave in. 
“Hell yeah! It’s on me! Come on, I’ll take you around fur a while! I couldn’t bear not to take you! Let’s go where I usually go whenever I eat out!” 
From Shu’s voice, it was easy to tell he was enlivened. No one could fault him. The man was tasting freedom after being in a cage longer than a day. 
Anyhow, all’s well that ends well, so... ah. 
“May I ask you something?” I said. 
“Hm? What?” 
“Just what, would you say, are those holes on all those buildings?” 
Beyond the wall he’d broken through, I could see countless structures with holes similar to the one we had here. It seemed as though something human-sized had moved here while breaking through every wall in the way, and it felt like it continued all the way to the offices in the first district. 
“I was in a rush, so I went straight here.” 
Well, he had mentioned using the shortest path. Though breaking walls slowed down most people, Shu was on such a level that they were barely a hindrance. 
Merely by looking outside, I could tell he wasn’t lying about having come straight here. I also saw the people in the now-holed buildings start to evacuate. 
“Sh-Shu Starling!” roared one of the investigators who’d just rushed in through the apartment’s door. “Y-You’re under arrest for property damage!” 
“Gyaah! It was an emergency! Sbear meee!” 
...It appears that he will stay in jail for now, I thought. 
Alas, this was a case I could do nothing about. 
 
A short while later... 
Due to no one being injured, some mediation by Elizabeth, and the fact that it had been for the purpose of taking care of the culprit, Shu had ended up only having to pay for the damages. 
I could recall him shouting, “This is gonna cost me all my bearnings!” as he continued vigorously selling his popcorn. 
Thus, the curtain fell on the serial murder case that had shaken Gideon. 
Although, it was still a mystery who, exactly, Gerbera had been trying to show off to by creating this incident. 
 





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