"Strike!"
"Strike!!"
"Strike!!!"
"Strikeout!!"
"Strikeout!!!"
"Strikeout!!!!"
Despite the two consecutive balls that had interrupted his rhythm earlier, Zhang Han had moved through Seisenji's first three batters without allowing a single one of them to reach base. All three went down on strikeouts, clean and unambiguous.
For a moment, the entire stadium felt like it had doubled in size. A thousand fans created the sound of many more, and the dozen or so female supporters near the first-base line were doing the work of several dozen on their own.
In the Seisenji dugout, the mood had dropped sharply.
None of them had genuinely believed this was going to be a comfortable afternoon, but there was a meaningful difference between expecting difficulty in the abstract and standing in the box while a left-handed fastball arrived faster than your eyes could process. The abstract had become very concrete, very quickly.
Two claps broke through the quiet.
Every Seisenji player turned toward the sound.
Nishikawa stood at the front of the dugout, looking at his teammates with the same unhurried composure he brought to everything.
"Offense was never our strength. It's certainly not going to be our strength today, against these people. Stop worrying about it. As long as we can put a run on the board before the final out, that's enough. Now change your thinking, because it's our turn to play defense. Let these powerhouse players see what Seisenji is actually made of."
The effect was almost instantaneous.
The players who had been sitting deflated moments before straightened up. Something moved through the dugout, a collective exhale followed by a collective refocusing, and by the time the fielders were picking up their gloves, the team looked like a different group from the one that had just watched three of its batters go down in sequence.
They responded quickly to disappointment. They also recovered quickly. That was part of what made them what they were.
Nishikawa's framing was correct and everyone knew it. Scoring runs against Seido was never the plan they were banking on. The plan had always been to limit damage on defense and find the one moment on offense where something opened up. Nothing about that plan had changed. They only needed to execute it.
Seisenji's defense took the field with visible energy, which was a contrast sharp enough to draw attention from the stands.
Coach Kataoka watched them take their positions and noted it.
"Their previous three games combined for one run allowed, and that came from a fielding error behind their pitcher," he said to the Seido players gathered near the dugout. "Their offense may be limited, but their defense is genuinely something."
He let that settle for a moment, then shifted his tone.
"For most of you, this is the first time you're taking the field in an official game wearing this uniform."
Nobody spoke.
"Think about your training. Think about what it cost you to get here, every early morning, every session that went past the point where you wanted to stop. Don't bring shame on this team, and don't leave here today with something you're going to regret."
He paused.
"Go."
That was it. No specific instructions. No tactical breakdown of how to approach Nishikawa's pitching. Just a reminder of the foundation and a door held open.
Zhang Han looked at his teammates, waiting for the understanding to arrive that apparently everyone else seemed to have accessed immediately. The other players were nodding, expressions settling into focused determination, as though the message had landed with complete clarity.
He looked at it again. He still wasn't sure he had what the Director was going for.
For a moment, he genuinely questioned himself. His IQ was not a number he had ever had reason to doubt, and yet here he was, apparently missing something that the rest of the room had understood without difficulty.
Then he glanced sideways at Kuramochi.
Kuramochi's expression of deep, knowing comprehension lasted about three more seconds before it became apparent, to anyone watching carefully, that it was a mask over the same confusion Zhang Han was experiencing.
Zhang Han made a quiet mental note to appreciate that kind of performance when he saw it.
It didn't ultimately matter whether the words had been parsed correctly. What they carried was a feeling, and the feeling had reached everyone in the room. These players had given up a great deal to be standing in this dugout wearing this number. They weren't going to waste the moment by playing small.
Bottom of the first inning. Seido's offense took the field.
The leadoff batter was Kuramochi Yoichi, the player who had edged Zhang Han out for the shortstop position, stepping into the box as a left-handed hitter.
Kuramochi had, in fact, spent a portion of the previous evening thinking through the various poses he might strike on his first official plate appearance in a Seido uniform. After extended consideration, he had reluctantly set that line of thinking aside. This wasn't the environment where creative self-expression at the plate was likely to be rewarded. The shortstop position wasn't securely his yet, there were others watching it from a distance, and Coach Kataoka was standing in the dugout with full authority over every roster decision.
Better to be well-behaved. For now.
Kuramochi settled into his stance.
On the mound, Nishikawa took one look and felt something tighten in his thinking.
Left-handed batter. New to the First-string. First year. Playing shortstop for Seido.
He had no information on this player. None. And the way the player was standing in the box, the specificity of his stance, the quality of attention in his posture, all of it communicated that this was someone who had already decided what he was going to do before walking up to the plate. Players like that were more dangerous than players with superior raw ability, because they were already operating from a plan rather than reacting to one.
Against an unknown quantity with that kind of preparation, the only reasonable first step was to gather information. Test him with a pitch, see how he responds, and build from there.
Nishikawa made up his mind and delivered.
In the box, Kuramochi let the replay of Coach Kataoka's pre-game breakdown run through his head. The assessment had been clear: Nishikawa's pitching looked ordinary on the surface and wasn't. The pitch speed wouldn't trouble most hitters, but the movement and placement were built around traps. Batting normally against him meant walking into something that had been arranged in advance.
Kuramochi watched the ball coming in, couldn't detect any specific trickery in the flight path, and decided to trust the coaching staff's read rather than his own eyes.
He shifted his grip and bunted.
At 120 kilometers per hour, the contact was never in doubt. Kuramochi put the ball on the ground with precision, rolling it out toward the mound.
Nishikawa had seen the bunt shift coming from the moment Kuramochi's hands changed position. He was already moving forward as the ball left the bat, his feet covering the ground between the rubber and the ball's landing point before the sound of the contact had faded.
The ball rolled directly toward him, perfectly placed. He had the play.
In the stands, someone began a sigh of sympathy for Kuramochi.
They didn't finish it.
What they saw instead was a blur of blue moving at a speed that made the geometry of the play irrelevant. Kuramochi had already passed first base by the time Nishikawa's throw arrived. The footwork, the acceleration down the baseline, the complete absence of any deceleration between the box and the bag, all of it came together into something that made the throw useless before it left the hand.
"Safe!"
No outs. Runner on first.
Kuramochi had beaten it out on pure speed. Nothing else. The bunt had been fielded cleanly and thrown on time, and it still hadn't been enough.
For a moment, neither dugout said anything.
Then both of them started talking at once.
************************************
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