Hidden Strings: The Talent Dorm Arc
At Himawari Academy, where youth is loud and dreams start bright, the spring term has a new twist: the Secret Talent Tournament. Every homeroom gets signed up. The challenge: each team must surprise the rest of the school with a hidden skill, something even their friends don’t know about. When have you last kept something about yourself a secret when you join a new group?
Kazuki Minohira, a soft-spoken first-year with classic dark hair and oversized sweatshirts, nearly blends into the school crowd. He’s anxious about groups, avoids limelight, and murmurs in clubs. But hidden in his old duffle, behind his maths books, sits his pride: a weathered deck of playing cards and a skein of red silk string. He’s the school’s quietest sleight-of-hand artist, though no one’s ever seen his tricks. And he’s scared of messing up under the gaze of his teasing classmates.
The call comes at roll, all hands up. “Who’s joining this contest?” Class rep Ayumi beams. “Don’t be shy! Got something cool? Secret origami? Competitive staring? Robot whistling?” The class snickers and one brash guy tries showing off his eyebrow wiggling. Kazuki just looks down at his battered sneakers. But then, across the room, outgoing banter queen Moeka (wears frog clips, always cheers others) slides him a note. On it: ‘You must be good at something weird. If you don’t tell, I never stop bothering you.’ Someone always watches, right?
Turns into a dare: “Fine,” Kazuki says. “Come to the club room after six. But laugh and I’m done.” Ayumi, Moeka, and the spaced-out sports ace Yu (who says little, but it’s always sharp) meet him in a dusty corner full of old desks. He sets up two chairs, cards, string, and nods. “Watch close,” he says. Moeka gapes as cards spring between his fingers. Ayumi jumps as a bright coin appears out of nowhere. Kazuki knots his red silk, statues still for a tough moment; one breath, the knot’s gone. He sweats. “That’s nothing,” he stammers, but they’re silent—and smiling. How do you practice when no one cheers?
“It’s magic!” Moeka yells. Ayumi snaps out, “With skill we can win!” Yu, ever the skeptic, orders: “Show us the hardest trick. I’ll trip you up.” The next days, they become a very weird group. Kazuki leads drills, they plan an act, swapping wild ideas. What if Yu juggles, Ayumi narrates, Moeka distracts? In the library, odd looks follow—playing cards flick past history tomes, fits of stage-giggles make librarians shush. Do you ever worry who will laugh when you put yourself out there?
As the deadline nears, Kazuki nearly chokes at each run-through. Misplans his moves; that old doubt crawls back. Night before the event, Moeka finds him in the club room, hands shaking, not meeting her eyes. “What if they’re bored, or boo me off? Everybody has their stars already.” Moeka is blunt: “Your tricks? They’re not like the jugglers or cosplayers, but those never got a wow out of me. Hey, if you bomb, it won’t matter—do it for us. I’ll fall over on purpose before you even start.” Kazuki laughs—a short hard sound. Maybe it’s enough. When was the last time you risked failing for your friends?
The tournament’s first round is noisy, but their group wins giggles, loud gasps, scattered claps. Still, the rival group—Ryota’s Dance Remixers, a second-year team with a school idol—gets the loudest roars so far. More stress. They draw last slot in the second round. Yu frowns: “High spot or hard crash.” Ayumi jokes: “Let’s knock them out of their pompadours!” Well, prepping in the green room, Kazuki almost runs. Sweat rolls down his collar; he stares down at his hands, willing them steady. Can pure grit push you past old nerves? 
Lights hit the gym stage. The crowd quiets. Moeka hands out fake confetti. Ayumi takes the mic, launching a made-up legend about “The Phantom Card of Himawari—and a red thread of fate.” Yu pretends to snooze behind the curtain. Kazuki, squinting into the lights, lets his cards tumble shuffled into Ayumi’s lap, threads Moeka’s hand with string, and lifts the deck for the best effect he’s ever pulled—a sealed card behind transparent silk. The ref pulls it out; it’s the exact card the idol picked before the show started. The crowd gasps, then bursts. Kazuki rubs his eyes. “That… wow, that worked?” Moeka fake-faints, Ayumi shouts: “That! That’s our ace!”
Standing ovations don’t last; the show moves on. At results, the runner-up goes to the Dance Remixers, but the speaker lets the drama stretch. Then: “Grand winners—Team Card Thread from Class 1-A!” The group hugs, more stunned than loud. Ryota grins: “Guess kids win the roses.” Kazuki’s still shaking as reporters shove mics at Moeka, Yu sits up straight, Ayumi dabs away tears.
Before Kazuki can vanish, a senior from the Magic Club hands him an envelope. It just reads: ‘Audit tomorrow. Invitation only.’ Below: ‘We’ve seen your hands. Are you rare… or just gutsy?’
Kazuki stares at Moeka, the others. They’re all beaming. “New round starts now, huh?” he sighs. Is his hidden talent enough for the big leagues? The last shot: Kazuki holds up the red thread between his fingers. It twists into a fresh knot. Does anyone ever know how strong their secret skills can really be?