Chapter 141 [Latecomer. (3)]
SSS-Class Suicide Hunter
Translator: thursdays Editor: Yahiko PR: LightBrin
â .
Therefore.
Let us talk about my defeat.
The position of the protagonist.
It is the first time I, who had only played the heroâs role, became a villain who had to be knocked down.
I had never tolerated a defeat thus far.
Any defeat would have been disastrous.
If I had been defeated, all of Harlem would have been burned to the ground.[1] My defeat meant the fall of the empire. My defeat meant the end of the land of rivers and lakes. And it meant⦠My defeat meantâ¦
Now, for the first time, my defeat wouldnât lead to devastation.
This is the story of my downfall.
It is a story that would only end when âIâ am defeated.
[Currently, your immersion rate is 100%.]
My consciousness.
But âIâ am strong.
âIâ am a manipulative and shrewd person.
I donât know how you all will remember your school days. Were you happy? Did you enjoy yourself? The classroom, which was small enough to be painted with the excuse of the ignorance of childhood. Are the scenes that occurred there colored with a beautiful sepia filter?
It isnât for âme.â
âIâ am a little more subtle than you guys. I am cunning. Maybe there was nobody like me in your school. Or maybe, you simply donât remember. But âIâ was definitely here.
A person who framed his classmate.
A person who has plotted and manipulated evidence to slander someone.
A person who intimidated classmates to keep them quiet.
If you share these memories, âyouâ must be my colleague. âYou,â at least, will fathom my existence, and if Iâm lucky, youâll even understand.
Thatâs right. While the other students were defenselessly playing in their childhood, their so-called [school days], âweâ easily hunted those foolish minnows.
Our hunting was furtive.
Thatâs why people donât remember.
Most people understand our skillfully hidden hunts the wrong way. Students are too [immature]; theyâre not smart enough for high-level hunting.
Not smart enough? Who? âUsâ? What a ridiculous delusion.
They canât even remember what happened under their very noses.
Iâll first confess to those people the secret method to hunting.
This is a story that happened before âIâ became possessed.
âThere are two ways a studentâs rank is decided at school. First, there are the students who study well. But you have to work hard to get good grades. Students hate working hard more than anything.â
On the other handâ¦
âIt is easy to ignore or laugh at others.â
It took no effort.
âSince mocking someone is effortless, any student can join in. This is the crucial difference between [study] and [ridicule]. Whatâs the difference? Just a matter of how many students can easily participate.â
You had to study for 10 minutes to raise your score by 1 on an exam, but it took less than 10 seconds to tease someone.
âItâs much more fun to be [better at making fun of others] than it is to be [better at studying]. Itâs much easier. Accordingly, it is much more powerful. Unlike studying, anyone can handily jump into the game. That is why [ridicule] is standard at all schools.â
Here are the mechanics of bullying.
âFirst, the victim has to be conspicuous.â
Are they noticeably richer than the other kids? Or noticeably poorer? Do they have a face that anyone would say is weird? Does it smell strange when they pass by? Is their speech severely incoherent? Are they overly sincere? All of that is good. The particulars donât matter.
Ridiculing is powerful because itâs easy.
The victim of the ridicule must be easy to make fun of.
âKim Yul.â
There is a good reason why Kim Yul was selected as the prey of the hunt.
âHeâs poor.â
Obviously so.
âHeâs distinctively poor. Thereâs a bad smell when he walks around.â
Oneâs poverty could not be covered up with the monotone school uniforms. The awful thing about poverty is that it shows. Everyone could tell that Kim Yul was poor. Anyone who got close knew that he smelled bad.
He is easy for anyone to ridicule.
âHey.â
So it is easy to begin.
âIt might be a bit harsh to say this, but when you go near that guyâ¦â
âOh, yeah. He did smell a little. Poor guyâ¦â
Level 1.
Go lightly at first.
âYouâ probably know, too, that you shouldnât reveal your hand at the beginning. That would be dumb.
âDid he enter on a financial aid?â
âIâve known Kim Yul since middle school, and even thenâ¦â
Idle talk.
Itâs enough to use the prey as a simple topic in conversation.
âShould I tell you guys a secret? Actuallyâ¦â
Gradually increase the number of students who participate in the small talk.
âHe lives there? Wow. Thatâs a literal dump.â
âI heard his dad is the trash collector.â
âHuh. Could that be the same guy who picks up the waste at our house?â
âHey. No wayâ¦â
Like this, gradually brighten the spotlight on him.
The initiator, here, must be careful to never reveal his malice. Not yet! âYouâ know it, too. It isnât time for that yet.
Look.
âIsnât Kim Yul kind of annoying?â
Instead of saying that, say:
âOh, wow. Itâs true. The trash collector for our house is Kim Yulâs dad!â
This is much smarter.
âWhat, really?â
Of course, itâs a lie.
âHow did you find out?â
âI was also skeptical at first. But on Sunday, the man came to pick up the trash, so I asked, [Are you Kim Yulâs father? Iâm his school friend]. He acted a little embarrassed, but then he asked me to take care of his son.â
âDudeâ¦â
âReally?â
Lies are the bases of âourâ accomplishments.
Even as they doubted me, my classmates looked at me with twinkling eyes. Those gazes, that interest, are the proof of your success. Youâve succeeded in drawing people to the subject of [Kim Yul].
âKim Yul! By any chance, does your dadââ
âHey, hey. Why are you asking that? Shut up.â
âWhy not? Did you lie?â
âNo, but anyway. Sorry, Kim Yul. Itâs nothing.â
ââ¦â¦â
Level 2.
The observation phase.
Malice snowballs well enough on its own from here.
âPft.â
There isnât anyone in the world who does not make mistakes. Students make plenty of them. Now that the class is paying attention to Kim Yulâs every move, they view his mistakes like they are looking through a magnifying glass.
âHahaâ¦â
Then, they laugh.
He missed the volleyball in gym class and had to run a little farther.
He fell asleep in fourth period and didnât wake up even during lunch.
He stuttered a little when the teacher asked him a question.
âHaâ¦â
It doesnât matter how trivial the mistake was.
Easy and conspicuous.
Always remember the mechanics of [ridicule].
âYou know, he always goes behind the school for lunch. Thatâsâ¦â
âIs he feeding the chickens? Seriously?â
âGo to the window and look. Iâm serious.â
Something that anyone can see easily.
Something that anyone can partake in easily.
âKim Yul! Look up here!â
âWhat, heâs really looking here.â
âIs he trying to get the chickens for free once theyâre grown?â
âEww.â
Eventually, a game that anyone can join in.
âYouâ probably know, too, that most bullying ends here.
Up to this point, it can happen naturally. There doesnât need to be a clear ringleader. There doesnât have to be any accomplices. You can get up to [Level 2] with just sympathizers.
Level 2 bullying corresponds to the following:
Mild violence once every two weeks. Group assault once every three months. A public beating once every six months. One small scar that cannot be removed on the body. If itâs short, one semester. If itâs long, three years. Sometimes a few students lead the violence, but there isnât a long-term culpritâ¦
But as âyouâ probably know.
âHey.â
âWeâ do not stop there.
âLetâs test it.â
We take one step further.
âWhat?â
âLook. I bought these shoes, so theyâre brand new.â
If you have successfully brought others to this point, âyouâ must certainly be good at lying. Now, you had to perform a small magic trick for your classmates.
âIâll draw some stars on the sole of the shoes with a marker. See? You guys saw it, right?â
âYeah. So what?â
âIâm going to throw it away with trash in front of my house.â
ââ¦What are you talking about?â
âIdiot. Kim Yulâs dad is the waste collector for my house.â
Of course, itâs a lie. The trash collector for your house is not Kim Yulâs father, actually. But that doesnât matter. You know what paths Kim Yulâs father usually took.
âWill that mister give Kim Yul a present if he sees new shoes being thrown out? Why wouldnât he? So, look. If Kim Yulâs father really is the trash man, then Kim Yul will wear these shoes tomorrow.â
âUhâ¦â
âI guess?â
âI bet that Kim Yul will come to school wearing these shoes tomorrow.â
Now.
Youâve privately prepared a second pair of shoes.
âThere we go. Iâll leave it here. You all saw, right? I wonât ever touch it.â
One pair, you threw out with the trash at your house in front of your friends.
âOkay.â
The other pair had already been placed on the route Kim Yulâs father walked the day before.
Needless to say, both pairs have a â on the soles.
You want to show your friends some magic. So, you pretend to draw the â in front of them. If youâre cautious enough, you can also establish a perfect alibi by hanging out with your friends for the rest of the day.
âHey, check the shoes!â
It is lunchtime on the following day. We are in the classroom.
âWhat if someone catches us?â
âJust look quickly!â
âWeâre just sneaking a peak. It doesnât matterâ¦â
While Kim Yul is gone, having headed down to the cafeteria, we gather. Kim Yulâs desk. There is a bag holding the shoes hung on the hook.
The studentsâ eyes sparkle. Giggling to show that [itâs only a joke], we lift up Kim Yulâs shoe bag. Then, we take out shoes that are cleaner than normal.
âWow.â
Naturally.
âI-itâs real!â
A â is drawn on the bottom of the shoes that Kim Yul brought.
âOh, sh*t. Then, Kim Yulâs wearing what you threw outâ¦â
âYou didnât plan this with Kim Yul, did you?â
ââCourse not. Heâs been with us all day yesterday and today.â
âThen, itâs actuallyâ¦â
The students look at you. Those eyes have just witnessed a fascinating magic trick. At this point, you can choose from a number of lines. It depends on your personality and preferences. âDidnât I tell you I was right?â is one of the options. Or, âThatâs kind of unpleasant.â You can slowly reveal your ill will.
âWow.â
But I recommend this line.
âSo itâs trueâ¦â
Bury yourself in your surroundings.
âI mean, that old man could have lied that heâs Kim Yulâs dad.â
Feign ignorance.
âSo I wasnât 100% sure, either.â
Laugh like you donât get it. Check the shoes again, acting like youâre seeing something unbelievable. Then, refine your tone like youâve realized some new truth.
âBut wow. To think it was realâ¦â
And take back one step.
âAh, whatever. I donât know. Iâm calling off the bet. I donât need it. You guys, just pretend you donât know. This is something between just us. Letâs call it quits. Anyway, I donât know.â
Inexperienced leaders always try to do everything themselves. As âyouâ know, this is stupid and impatient. You feel impatient because you know that the evidence and magic you concocted is sloppy.
Thatâs why you have to perform the magic perfectly from the beginning.
âWhatâs happening?â
Just in time.
The other students return to the classroom one by one from lunch.
âHey, Kim Yul is actuallyâ¦â
âHuh? Tell me, tell me!â
Of course, you deliberately set lunchtime as the setting for your magic show. You canât waste your magic during a mere break.
At lunchtime, the class returns to the room in twos and threes. There is enough time. Itâs perfect for whispering about and spreading the âeventâ that just happened.
âNo way.â
They look at Kim Yulâs shoes.
âThatâs crazy. Itâs real?â
âAs if.â
You sit in the back row, pretending to be asleep.
Youâre cautious.
You can never spread the story yourself. You canât get ahead of yourself. You have the virtue of a lion, which does not monopolize its hunt and shares its prey with its pride.
âWhat are you guys talking about?â
âCome over here.â
âWhat about Kim Yulâs shoes?â
Let others have the fun of spreading rumors. Plant the illusion that they âdiscoveredâ the âtruthâ themselves. Allow them to gorge themselves on the bloody chunk of meat.
âUgh. Is he picking up other things and using them, too?â
Trust in humanityâs malice.
âYeah. Keep it quiet, but Kim Yulâs dad is actually the trash collector. We went to the same middle school. We once had to talk about our parentsâ jobsâ¦â
Trust in the power of ridicule.
âThatâs pretty nastyâ¦â
Trust in the magic of â .
âWow. Then, is everything he owns recycled?â
âItâs recycled, I tell you.â
âPfft.â
â .
âI feel sorry for him, but heâs disgusting. Really.â
âOh, gross. I can smell his feet. Werenât these shoes supposed to be new?â
â .
âHey, the recycling man is here. Hide it.â
â .
âKim Yul. Did you come back from feeding the chickens?â
âYour shoes look pretty clean today!â
âHeh.â
â .
ââ¦â¦?â
After school.
You all form a pack and head down to the front gate to go after Kim Yul. Kim Yul tilts his head because he doesnât know the reason, but he doesnât care.
The moment Kim Yul takes his shoes out from the bag and changesâ
âPfft!â
â is complete.
âPft, hahaâ¦â
âHey, Kim Yul! That over thereâ¦â
âThose are the shoes Eunseo threw away at his house yesterday!â
âLook at the soles!â
The young beasts are immersed in the pleasure of exposing the âtruthâ that Kim Yul doesnât know. He is a dirty child. Itâs pointless even if he denies it. We have âevidence.â
ââ¦â¦â
The truth is that Kim Yulâs father found a new pair of shoes and gave them to his son. The truth is, Kim Yulâs father picked up the shoes, carefully examined them to see how new they were, and thought it was all right, so he gave them to his son. The truth is, Kim Yul knew everything, but he silently received the gift from his father. His fatherâs concern, his silent expression, and Kim Yulâs muted eyes are the truth.
But beasts didnât have the imagination to think of that.
They didnât even try.
ââ¦â¦â
Because ridicule is much easier.
With the proof you fabricated, the beasts easily feasted upon â .
âDo you have that much free time?â Kim Yul said expressionlessly. âIs it fun?â
He is composed.
âIf youâre bored, do your own thing. Stop bothering others.â
Then, he turns his back and leaves.
âUhâ¦â
ââ¦â¦â
The students remain silent for a moment.
If someone says anything, like âHey, this isnât funny. Letâs stop,â things may end. âWeâre in high school. Why are we bullying people?â You have to drive away that atmosphere. As âyouâ know, it takes courage to say something like that.
âWhat? Whyâs he acting like that?â
âWe were just jokingâ¦â
When nobody is saying what they should.
âBastard.â
âEven though heâs walking around wearing trash.â
âI didnât know he was that kind of guyâ¦â
Level 3.
Violence against the scapegoat is allowed.
âHey, someone buy indoor shoes and throw them away. Letâs see if heâll wear those, too.â
I donât know how you all will remember your school days.
âHe leaves his bookbag behind at lunch. Put this pencil case in there while heâs gone.â
âYouâre a really bad guy.â
âWhatever.â
Were you happy? Did you enjoy yourself?
âHuh? Isnât that the pencil case I threw out yesterday?â
âWhat? Kim Yul, were you recycling again?â
âPft.â
The classroom, which was small enough to be painted with the excuse of the ignorance of childhood. Are the scenes that occurred there covered with a beautiful sepia filter?
âUgh. The milk spoiledâ¦â
âHide it under his desk.â
âQuick! Class is gonna start!â
It isnât for me.
ââ¦Where is the strange smell coming from?â
âYou smell it too?â
âYeah. It kept stinking all through math class.â
âWait a moment. Iâll look for it. Sniff, sniff.â
âI think itâs coming from the back row.â
I am a little more subtle than you guys.
I am cunning.
âYul, why do you bother washing the rags? A ragâs a rag no matter how much you wash it.â
âHow sad. Maybe he sympathizes with the ragâ¦â
Maybe there was nobody like me in your school.
Or maybe, you simply donât remember.
[Currently, your immersion rate is 100%.]
But I am definitely here.n/o/vel/b//in dot c//om
ââ¦â¦â
In this city.
In this school.
I am sitting in this classroom, holding a mechanical pencil.
âClass Pres, what are you looking at?â
The class president looks at me with strange eyes.
ââ¦Gongja.â
âHuh?â
ââ¦â¦â
The class president trembled. It was very slight. He seemed to be disgusted with something, or maybe he was lamenting something. But his weird attitude soon lifted.
The class president cleared his throat and said, âNo. Itâs nothing. I just couldnât remember your name all of a sudden. What was it, again?â
âWhat? Class Pres, do you have dementia this young? Iâm Hwang Eunseo.â
âAh. Thatâs right,â the class president murmured, saying, âThatâs the name.â
That kid usually didnât interact with our group.
âI heard your girlfriend is running for student council.â
âYeah. Why?â
âI think I will, too. Please tell her I look forward to working with her.â
âWhat? You wanna be the student council president? But all you ever do is study, Class Pres.â
âI need recommendations to enter Seoul National University. They say itâs easy if you become the student council president.â
Is that so? Seems like it.
Itâs kind of funny how he wants to join the student council to go to Seoul National University. Well, itâs the class president. Heâs an honest guy. I decide to let it pass.
âCool. Good luck, Class Pres. Iâm voting for my girlfriend, but anyway, fight on.â
The class president nods his head with a blank face.
âAll right. Thanks.â
I am strong.
I am a manipulative and shrewd person.
Therefore.
ââEven if you didnât say it, Iâm going to try my best.â
Let us talk about my defeat.