F Grade Healer Becomes Strongest Biomancer-Chapter 56: Field Notes

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Chapter 56: Field Notes

Ivory

The girl ate like a war hadn’t started.

Cheddar puffs. Orange dust on her fingers, the remote control. She held the bag in her lap and reached in without looking, eyes on the screen where two actors argued in a hospital room.

Ivory sat beside her on the couch, notebook balanced on her knee. Her pen hovered over the page.

Write something.

She wrote something.

Subject displays no visible distress following separation from Champion. Appetite normal. Fixation on drama programming — sustained, voluntary.

She read it back. It sounded official. Official she could do.

Five words. That was all Gaian gave her. Look at the girl. Report. No further instruction, just five words and that smile — the one Ivory had spent two centuries learning to dread.

She did not ask what to look for. You didn’t ask The One Who Devours to clarify. You nodded, said "Yes, O’ Great Devourer," and figured it out on your own or you didn’t figure it out and she ate you.

Probably. Ivory had never tested the alternative.

The tether story worked well enough. It goes both ways, I think — delivered with the right amount of uncertainty, and Mio bought it. Easier than explaining the truth: that nothing held Ivory here except five words and a smile.

"Oh my god, he’s SO lying." Nana leaned forward. The actress on screen had started crying — beautiful controlled tears rolling down sculpted cheekbones.

Nana’s weren’t controlled. She wiped her face with her cheddar hand and left an orange streak across her cheek.

Ivory wrote that down. Then stared at what she’d written.

Subject cries at fictional stimulus. Empathetic response involuntary. Does not wipe food residue from fingers before touching face.

The actress slapped the actor. Nana gasped and her feet came off the floor.

"Hit him again!"

The actress kissed him instead. Nana shrieked and pulled a cushion over her face.

"Why! He literally just lied to her!"

The cushion had cheddar dust on it too. Ivory wrote cheddar on cushion and crossed it out. Her handwriting was getting worse.

"Ivory-san, you’re missing the best part!" Nana tugged her sleeve.

"I’m watching."

"You’re writing in your weird book."

"I can do both."

"Your handwriting is so bad though." Nana craned her neck. "What language is that?"

"English."

"That’s NOT English."

Ivory tucked the notebook behind her back. "Focus on your show."

A new scene. Hospital roof. The man from earlier, alone, phone in his hand. His thumb hovered over a name he didn’t press. Rain hit the rooftop tiles.

Nana pulled her knees to her chest. Didn’t speak.

Ivory watched her from the edge of her vision. The girl’s chin resting on her kneecaps, her eyes on the man who wouldn’t make the call.

She should write that down.

She didn’t reach for the notebook.

Credits rolled over a piano melody.

"Can you understand what they’re saying? The television people."

"Some of it." The concealment burned low against her skin, translating ambient speech into shapes she could parse. Modern Japanese sat differently in her ears than what she’d grown up hearing through threshold bleeds. "The pretty one should leave the liar."

Nana pointed at her. "SEE? Thank you!"

Ivory laughed. Too loud. She clamped both hands over her mouth.

Nana looked at her. Head tilted.

"What?"

"Nothing." Nana reached into the second bag she’d opened at some point. "You sound weird when you do that."

"The bag." Ivory pointed at the cheddar puffs. "May I try one?" 𝑓𝘳𝘦𝑒𝑤𝑒𝘣𝘯ℴ𝘷𝘦𝓁.𝑐𝑜𝑚

Nana held it out. Ivory took a puff between two fingers, examined it like a specimen, and put it in her mouth.

Salt and something the modern world called "cheese." It dissolved on her tongue and kept going.

"Well?"

She took two more.

"Acceptable."

Nana grinned. "You like them."

"I said acceptable."

"You took two."

Ivory ate them both and reached for another before the concealment flickered. The technique was losing fuel. She pressed it back down through her skin and held it, teeth clenched, until the shimmer settled.

Nana was already scrolling through episodes.

"How many have you killed?"

Ivory’s pen slipped off the page. "Eh?"

Nana didn’t look up from the screen.

"How many bad guys have you killed?"

"Who are the bad guys?"

"You know." Nana waved a hand. "The ones you fight. In the bone place. Monsters, whatever."

"The things I fought weren’t monsters."

"Then what were they?"

"Pointed ears. Tall. Gray skin, some of them." Ivory’s voice went flat. "Elves."

Nana’s head snapped around. "ELVES?"

"Yes."

"Like — bows and arrows and magic forest elves?"

"Some used bows."

"That is SO cool." Nana’s eyes were wide. She’d forgotten about the episodes entirely. "How many?"

Ivory looked at the notebook in her lap. The crossed-out words.

"I killed enough."

"My auntie killed a million." Brighter now.

Ivory stared at her.

A million. The girl said it the way children talked about test scores. Bragging.

"The elves," Ivory started. The words came fast because if she stopped she wouldn’t start again. "They didn’t just fight us. They — my people held the Third Breach, where the threshold ran thin, and when the war turned, the elves needed the corridor cleared. So they cleared it."

Her hands were in her lap. The pen rolled between her fingers.

"The capacitors first. Every mana line feeding the city. Then they cracked the foundation wards." She swallowed. "Oa-Renmei. The whole kingdom came down in nine seconds. It fell in—"

"Shh! It’s starting!"

Nana had pressed play. The opening credits of episode fourteen filled the room. Piano and strings.

Every capacitor. Every ward. Oa-Renmei falling.

Nana tucked her feet under herself and leaned toward the screen.

Ivory closed her mouth.

She picked up the notebook. Read back her own illegible handwriting — the observations, the crossed-out words, the cheddar cushion entry.

She turned to a clean page. Touched the pen to paper.

Didn’t write.

Ivory’s skin prickled.

The air was thinning, warmth pulling toward the door. Her breath came out white.

Someone knocked. Three times. Slow.

Nana’s head whipped around. Ivory was already behind the couch.

The girl got up, wiped her hands on her pajamas, and padded to the door. The hinges clicked.

"Oh, little girl. Look at you stuffing your face." The voice was flat and unhurried. "You took my advice."

"Where is your older sister?"

"Taking a shower!"

Ivory pressed her back against the couch cushions and held her concealment until her teeth hurt.

The hinges again. Footsteps coming back.

She stood there. Cheddar dust on her pajamas, orange streak still on her cheek.

"Ice lady." Nana blinked once. "She’s a predator."

Stasis-sama. O’ Great Devourer mentioned she might come by. Gaian and Stasis were allies once, six centuries ago. But that was the vestiges. Ivory didn’t know the first thing about this champion.

"She said she’ll give Onee-san fifteen minutes."

The K-drama played on. Piano and strings.

Fifteen minutes.

Sweat trickled down her forehead.

"I’m in danger."