Already over?
The assistant coach turned back toward the field with genuine confusion written across his face. Two teams were still on the diamond. Players were still in their positions. The game had one out remaining.
On the mound, Tanba stood with the full awareness of what he was one pitch away from completing. The Seido players around the infield were tight with the specific tension of proximity to a conclusion, their voices carrying across to each other and into the dugout.
"Two outs, two outs!"
"Let him hit it. We'll take care of the rest."
"Tanba, you've been untouchable today!"
The energy in the infield had a quality that was hard to replicate in practice, the compressed alertness of players who could see the end and were doing everything they could to stay focused rather than rush toward it. A two-out situation in the bottom of the fifth with a ten-run lead was as settled as a baseball game could be without being officially concluded, and everyone on both sides understood that.
In the Seido dugout, a separate conversation was running quietly alongside the game.
Two performances across two games had planted a question that was becoming more interesting with each inning. On one side, Zhang Han had shut out his opponent completely in five innings of left-handed pitching in his debut, showing flashes of a different kind of presence on the mound alongside the obvious immaturity still embedded in his delivery. On the other side, Tanba had just delivered the most convincing game of his high school career, the high-breaking curveball landing with authority, his fastball sharper than it had been at Koshien, his temperament holding up across a full game in a way that his previous outings had not demonstrated.
The third-year seniors were gone. Hidezawa's graduation had closed a chapter. And now, without that established hierarchy in place, the conversation about who would carry the Ace role forward had two legitimate participants rather than one obvious answer.
That was a problem worth looking forward to.
At the plate, Akai stood with everything the afternoon had deposited in him.
Ten runs given up. A hitless Hakuzan lineup. The full weight of both outcomes his to carry as the team's pitcher and the person who had rejected the prestigious school invitations and built his high school career on the belief that environment mattered less than dedication.
The belief had not survived contact with this afternoon.
He had trained hard. He genuinely had. The commitment was real and had been sustained consistently. But the players across from him had trained hard inside a structure that accelerated development in ways his environment simply could not match. The opponents they faced week to week, the coaching they received, the level of competition that calibrated their abilities daily, all of it had compounded over the same period of time into a gap that honest effort from his side could not close.
The most uncomfortable part of it was the specificity. It wasn't just that Seido was better. It was that the players who had been his peers coming out of middle school, the ones who had gone to those schools while he stayed close to home, were now operating on the other side of a gap he had not seen forming. Two or three years ago, he had been the one with the better numbers. At some point between then and now, the positions had reversed, and he hadn't felt it happening.
The environment and the opponents you faced determined how fast you grew. He had understood this as a concept. He had not understood it as something that would be demonstrated to him this concretely, from this specific angle, on this field.
His father's cold shoulder. The month of silence. The accusation of having no ambition.
Would it have been different if he had listened?
The thought arrived in the middle of a pitch sequence, uninvited and distracting, and his body did what years of repetitive practice had trained it to do: it reacted anyway.
The swing came before his mind had finished deciding to swing. The mechanics were there in outline form, the muscle memory accumulated through thousands of solo practice sessions, but the details of it were slightly off. The speed, the angle, the smoothness of the motion all had small frictions in them that didn't show up during private workouts and appeared immediately in live game situations against pitching at this level.
"Ping!"
The bat found the edge of the ball. Contact, but barely. The kind of contact that produces a high fly rather than a line drive, carrying less energy than the swing intended because the sweet spot had been missed.
In the Seido dugout, Zhang Han sat up from where he had been resting, stretched, and began gathering himself.
Isashiki looked at him.
"What are you doing?"
"Getting ready. It's time to say goodbye."
The ball climbed, hung, and began its descent toward the second base position. Kominato Ryosuke had started moving in anticipation, reading the trajectory, prepared to make whatever kind of play the landing point required.
The landing point required nothing. The ball came down directly over his head. He raised his glove.
"Thwack!"
"Out!"
Akai was already running when the ball hit the glove. He had started moving before the catch, before the out was called, running simply because standing still was not something his body could manage at that moment. The thoughts that had been accumulating through the inning needed somewhere to go, and his legs provided the only available direction.
He ran past first base and kept going.
The umpire called it.
"Three outs. Game over."
Seido High School Baseball Team had defeated Hakuzan High School ten to zero, the game concluding in five innings.
Two games, two early endings. Two opponents shut out in five innings. It was not entirely unheard of in Koshien competition, where the talent gaps between certain programs could produce those outcomes with some regularity. In the Fall Tournament's official bracket, where the field had been reduced to the strongest quarter of all Tokyo programs, back-to-back five-inning mercy rule wins were considerably rarer.
The result spread quickly and made an impression.
In the stands, in the dugouts of other programs watching from their own vantage points, and in the conversations that followed the final out, the name Seido High School Baseball Team reattached itself to a specific kind of attention. The summer had made them famous. The Fall Tournament was making them something slightly different: a presence other teams were going to have to solve if they wanted to advance.
The dark red jerseys that had already moved toward the exit before the final out had made their assessment before most people in the stadium had arrived at the same conclusion.
It had already been over for some time.
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