Through Trials, We Shine!: The Stardust Cup Arc
It’s the start of spring at Hoshizora Academy. Everywhere, trees buzz with girls whispering about the coming Stardust Cup, a famous inter-class challenge.
First-year Yuto moves through the halls fast. He’s got one old backpack. His mind flashes with one picture — holding the big golden trophy that could win cash for a club he cares about: Astronomy. Can you see him pushing past fear to dream big, or is trouble swirling too close already?
Kana, his best friend, greets him at the front gates: “Don’t look so tense! Feeling jumpy about tryouts?” Yuto blushes. They laugh together by the steps, nearly tripping in the rush of students talking about the contest’s three rounds: trivia, performance, then teamwork maze.
“I’ve never joined a contest like this,” murmurs Yuto. Team leader Justice, an upperclassman with an eye patch, stops nearby. “Stick close, and the astronomy club will surprise everyone.”
They train in spare rooms. Paper stars cover every wall. Old notes, charts, debate outlines — each tiny part gets its place. Yuto worries. But Kana gives him some comfort: “No one expects us to win, right? So let’s shock them.”
The first night, kids form cliques. Rival class leader Akira, full of jokes and always with a loud crowd, pushes past. Yuto just nods, while Kana grins. Grass stains cover Akira’s team jerseys from soccer practice — a flash of smiles full of confidence as they walk off.
At the classroom window, Yuto looks up at the real stars. Doubt hits. Why is he in this contest? Because the club needs funds, yes. But isn’t it also about changing how others see him? Did you ever chase something just to stand out?
Practice unravels easy on day one. Science facts spill out fast in training. Yuto stumbles with music tasks. He can’t catch a tune, goes off-key, grumbles. Kana shrugs. “We need soul, not skill.” Surprise guest Ayano, famed for skipping school but acing dramatic readings, offers suggestions. Their club has hardly any showy kids, though. Justice tries one beatbox; everyone cringes. Still, they push on, working till teachers knock for lights out. 
Conflict sizzles on the morning of Rounds One and Two. Teams from arts beat science whizzes with wild reacting, performing scenes about ancient heroes. By noon, the stardust crowd howls for more. Lunches scatter. Students recall past Stardust upsets — when underdog Band Club once beat Debate with a rap about harvest cycles.
Does history repeat? Sometimes. But for Yuto, next comes a part that breaks all old patterns: a visual puzzle set on paper star maps, hidden in a locked case.
Justice hands him the key: “You solve this, you carry us.” Yuto freezes. This isn’t like reading; he hates being watched. As every eye turns, Kana reaches over.
“Trust your gut, Yuto.”
Images break up words on the page — wild lines almost connecting like real stars — and slowly he lines them out. His hands tremble; coach Saito paces behind. Seconds tick past. At last, Yuto clicks three pegs, hands over the puzzle, and lights up the hologram: Ursa Major’s blue bear winking against digital black.
Half the room gasps.
Akira’s team groans; the science club cheers. Yuto drops the parts, sweat pouring, unsure if he’s passing out or about to shout. At his feet, Kana whispers, “He did that in sixty seconds! Even the older kids can’t do it that fast.” Had he expected to be the star?
By dusk, stress stretches the team. The maze is next. Only one club has ever swept all rounds in years past. Can you imagine that joining a contest could take such a heavy toll on young hopes?
Tension spikes: Ayano quits with stage fright. Justice nearly punches a wall. Yet by night, the last test comes: a search for letters scattered across campus gardens, each with riddles keyed to folklore, physics, or poetry. At first, the team dips into arguments over which clues to chase — but Kana thrusts a hand forward: “We’re all lost. Let’s not drift apart.” Do you think her hope helps steady the group as they scramble in the dark?
Together they run, puzzle by puzzle — over a courtyard tangled in plants, inside a dusty shed packed with broken desks, past three teachers grinning over clipboards. All at once, Yuto notices the last key pinned high above, tucked into a barely-seen nest. It’s risky — will he try for it or let his fear win?
Yuto scales a cracked statue base, heart thumping. Wind snaps a straw banner. Kana cheers from down below as he teeters. Literally on the edge, with applause reaching up, he wonders: “Can I stop shaking? Or will the prize slip right through my hand?” 
Lights come on over the field. All teams crowd in. Tiny slips are counted, results written on chalk sheets. The principal stands up to speak — then gets drowned by the cheers, voices, shouts. By now, the crowd can’t sit still. Every kid, every teacher has a favorite rooting. Advisors for the science club look lined-up with stopwatches; rival teams nervously clutch snack wrappers.
Yuto can barely hear through the noise. Justice steps back, mouth tight.
Kana tugs his sleeve and points – this is the moment. Akira catches his eye, offers a slow smile: envy or new respect?
Jurors bring out the prize, a trophy dusted silver, held tight by white-gloved hands. Scores slide onto the screens. There’s a short gasp from the roof. Science is first. Astronomers second. Rival drama team — last.
“We got more than we guessed!” Kana blurts — almost disbelief. Yuto crumples in relief, grinning huge at Justice, who’s started to laugh at last.
But Judge Saito lifts two fingers: tie-breaker ahead. In this mix, every single step has led here — but how do you measure guts, or the shine inside the crew that almost gave up?
Principal holds up a question in a sealed golden envelope. First hand up wins the last challenge — a single shot at lifting the Stardust Cup. Before the words finish, Yuto has already moved, surprising even himself. Everyone sucks in breath.
The words ring out: “Who founded the Stargazer Society — and in which year?” All pause, stunned; it was a footnote in yesterday’s trivia packet no one studied. Who kept this secret ready?
Yuto blurts, “Naoto Inoue, 1994!” Nobody breathes. 
Did he get it? As the clock beats slow, did he stumble, or is a Trophy Moment coming? The answer hangs. Kids in lights, friends linking arms, just waiting…
And that’s where we end — one sentence unread, cheers held on the ledge of what might be glory… 
What would you give to win not just a contest, but your classmates’ real cheers?
Would you have had the courage to try?