Embers on the Blackboard: Midterm Rivalries
Embers on the Blackboard: Midterm Rivalries
The clock hits 7:55. Students stumble into Sakura High’s classroom 2-B. Jun Mizushima, the story’s lead, rushes in, bag flapping on his side. Jun wants to move up the academic ranks. Right now, he’s stuck at tenth, earning only a flicker of notice from teachers. Would you want to be known by your test scores alone?
On the other side sits Miyu Kisaragi. There’s always perfect posture, serious glasses, cold eyes. People say she’s a natural. Jun doesn’t buy it. She studies every night, just like him. Miyu spent weeks practicing geometry proofs in chalk on the roof’s old wall paint, even on holidays.
Ms. Kirino walks in with stacks of papers. She places them on her desk with disciplined care. ‘I don’t want a single word out of you when the test starts,’ she says. No one argues. You could hear a pen drop. That midterm paper holds more weight than just numbers; it’s a badge, a stepping stone, a wall.
Jun glances toward Miyu three seats over. She’s already scribbling something at the top of her page. Every breath feels like it’s cracked open the window a little more. Do you get why competition tastes so sharp sometimes?
The test goes for seventy minutes, every tick in sync with pulses and sighs. Kaito, Jun’s best friend, sits behind him, gnawing at the back of his pencil. He whispers, ‘Miyu never misses. You have to beat her this time, right?’ The words linger while Jun ponders his answer about authors from the Meiji Era. 
The plot thickens when midterms finish. Ms. Kirino posts rankings. Miyu at first. Jun second by half a point. Even at lunch, silence arches between the pair. Some classmates watch backstage, excited to see who’ll make the first move—the usual peeling fruit, bent heads, ten yen bets about the next pin to drop.
That week, assignments overlap. Jun, on his walk home, meets Miyu at the store’s drink case. They both grab cold bottles, hands briefly touching. Neither speaks. That’s not how rivals act, is it? Jun breaks the ice: ‘Can you show me your notes on integrals?’ She nods, escorted by an awkward smile. His voice cracks. ‘We learn best from the ones we’re trying to beat.’
On Thursday, afternoon rain keeps everyone late in the classroom for a big debate assignment. Jun gets paired with Miyu. Ms. Kirino won’t budge, says it’s by random draw. No one buys it. The crinkle in her mouth says she’s watching for more than logic; she wants fire. Jun wonders, ‘If I win this one, does it make up for last week?’
The challenge: are digital tools hurting true learning? Jun’s voice shakes at first as he reads from cue cards. Miyu cuts in, slicing his logic where it’s thin. Nothing soft, no room for error—just the sound of two minds in open clash. 
‘Jun, did you read the homework? Or do you just trust search engines?’ Miyu asks, not raising her tone but making her point land louder. Jun answers, cheeks red, ‘Answers taste best after hard paper and ink.’ The group laughs, pressure breaking for one heartbeat.
The duel goes for twenty minutes. Some peers nod for Miyu, others whisper for Jun. Even Kaito folds his arms, unsure of who he should smile at. When the debate ends, applause swells, split with no winner. Ms. Kirino writes short notes for both, yet holds back on the final score.
Behind the curtains of rivalry comes respect. The two meet in the art room after, grading each other’s comments. Dusty paints around, empty room echoing their words. Jun says, ‘You make me try hard.’ Miyu looks away. ‘Don’t let me beat you by half a mark again.’ There’s a strange energy between them—not hate, but a push, like climbing side by side.
The arc rounds to a cliffhanger next week. Announcements begin for the national contest tryouts. Miyu’s target is set, eyes narrow with new focus. Jun feels caught between glory and risk, torn about trying. Kaito nudges him: ‘The gap’s tiny. Next time it’s yours.’
Now the crowd rocks between hope and challenge. You remember what it felt like to chase, always seeing the finish just in reach? Will Jun pass Miyu, or simply use her bar to climb higher? The last frame freezes with both names circled on the morning signup sheet—half the story, all on the edge of what comes next.
Who earns your hope now?
