There was a non-zero part of me that was deeply unnerved to wake back up in the Wild Wild Pussycat's guest room. Mama y Papa should have been done moving in by now, damnit- it had been nearly a month! Opening up my laptop, I groaned as a letter fell out of it.
Querido hijo,
Si estas leyendo esta carta, tenemos graves problemas. Tu madre no salio de Japon sin hacer enemigos, y temo que uno de ellos esta conspirando contra nosotros. Ten cuidado de no llamar la atencion de los Yakuza, creemos que alguien llamado 'Overhaul' esta detras de su resurgimiento. Aqui en casa es poco probable que corramos peligro pero cuidate mucho, que seas estudiante de UA probablemente sea lo unico que lo impide de actuar contra ti.
Te amamos mucho, Tu Madre y tu Padre
Nota finale- Ryuko-san esta tu guardián legal hasta nos volvemos con un trabajar terminado o sies mesos.
Fucking thanks, guys. Just yeet me into a familial apprenticeship with no damn warning. I get that Overhaul- probably a code-name so that if the letter was intercepted nobody would be able to figure it out- was dangerous. Half the time I was with tio Hector was because there were heroes or villains sniffing too close to one of our operations.
I was still pissed, just like every time I got a letter setting up what would happen if my parents didn't make it back in one piece. This time, though, it was more than impontent adolescent rage at my pride being snubbed at being left out. I had grievances now- we'd left home explicitly to avoid this shit! Schooling my face, I threw on a pair of sweats and went over to the Pussycat's gym. It might have been shortly after midnight, but I didn't care as I went to the weight bag. Wrapping my fingers, I tied over the tips tight enough to keep my claws in, and went into the punching bag as hard as I could.
My right was enough to crack against the canvass, and my left wasn't much weaker. I was throwing jabs and crosses, rattling the chains and putting dust in the air. Ever since I could remember, I had been learning how to do this- first from Papa to be willing and able to hit someone, to be comfortable in my own skin when it was touching something else. Then it was Mama, technique and precision and style. Numbers, banking, double bookkeeping and double blinds; all of it fell away when it was me, a mat, and a man. This canvass stand-in would work well enough as I wore myself out. Changing my lead foot kept the burn fresh, and soon enough I was throwing in upercuts and looping hooks as I wore myself out.
Finally, after what felt like about an hour, I flopped back away from the sweat- and blood-stained bag. I'd split a knuckle, foam coating my fur, with a red line dripping down the floor.
"Well well well well." A voice behind me said. "Looks like the kitten worked out his temper at least!"
It was Shiretoko- or Ragdoll, if you used her hero name. She wasn't dressed well or made up though, smiling quietly at me while tapping her fingers together as she sat on the deadlift bar. Bowing, my mind spun.
"My deepest apologies if I woke you, Shiretoko-san." I apologized formally. "I read my parents letter, and it disturbed me greatly."
"You don't need to try and hide what's hurting you so deeply, you know!" Shiretoko said, smiling as she stood up. "Don't you remember what my Quirk is?"
"Search." I replied. "You can find and track one hundred people at once, and know their status. A strong Psionic quirk for a rescue hero."
"Mmmm. Something was lost in translation then." Shiretoko said, pacing around me like her namesake cat. "Status is such a broad word. Location, of course, but other things too. Like weaknesses."
I blinked surprise, turning towards her, pivoting like
my namesake. Her fast pace kept me moving, kept the room turning, the lights from the hallway and the office flashing in the corners of my vision.
"Some weaknesses aren't just physical, no no." Shiretoko said, coming to a dead stop and forcing me to lose track of her in my spin. "Just because you can't taste the poison doesn't mean it's not there. Just because the wound isn't on your body doesn't mean I can't see the scar. A hero is more than their Quirk or their desire or their will, you know. It's in us the power for greatness from all these things, but it is the bonds we forge together that define us!"
"Shiretoko-san, where are you?" I asked, spinning back. I'd lost her- and I couldn't find her now, either. Retinal echoes flashed across my eyes, and my balance was off from the exhaustion of an intense day previously and an intense workout not three minutes ago. "Shiretoko-san?"
"Nya, can't the kitten find his way? Isn't that what he was trying to do?" Shiretoko asked from someplace I couldn't pinpoint, her voice echoing about the small gymnasium. Then the lights cut out, and I stopped like a marionette sans strings. Dropping into a crouch, I tried to breathe through my disorientation. Steady, Arsenio. Steady yourself, find your core-
"That won't work, no no no no." Shiretoko said, from what sounded like it was above me? How could she-? "There's no running away right now, not when you need yourself the most like this!"
I felt the wraps on my hands, abused from an hour of slamming into a mat, start to tear. It was the thumbs that gave out first, the reamnets of my claws there wearing the other wraps down until they gave and I sunk everything I had into the floor to hold my balance.
"I'm not running away!" I yelled, tail straight out. "I need to collect myself! I need a plan! And most of all, I need time to think without my mind filled with this damn fog!"
"Tsk tsk tsk tsk."
"Estoy intenando pensar!" I growled. "I need… I need…"
"Help?"
"Sí! Necesito ayudar!" I spat.
"I have to lead a cat to wisdom, but can I make the kitten think?" Shiretoko asked herself rhetorically. "Did you consider… asking?"
I tried to think, my head pounding. Had I? No. It was late at night. They'd never notice me in the gym, right? Had I woken Shiretoko up? Was that why she was fucking with me?
Trying to focus, I grumbled. "No."
"And we have a winner! Tell me, little pussycat, how do you feel?"
"Delirious." I muttered. "Like I need water."
Momnets later, I finally heard something concrete; a plastic bottle hitting the ground. Hauling my claws out from the ground, I moved towards it slowly, drinking it in sips so I didn't make myself throw up.
"Do you need a minute?" Shiretoko asked. My ears swivled, pinpointing her voice naturally. "I'm sorry about playing with your head, kitten, but you were in the madness place. This Pussycat is a lover, not a fighter."
"Were you jamming my hearing?" I asked.
"Yes and no, but mostly no." Shiretoko said. "You have a deaf spot, and I did have a noisemaker to help. Dehydration makes it hard to focus, and you were in the madness place. I couldn't do anything until you left, you know. I tried to get Yawara out of it once, when she was having a fit."
Finally, I managed to see Shiretoko, standing in the doorway. Her hand went down to her hips, and the habitual smile she wore turned bitter.
"Mistakes, yes, mistakes were made. I still have the scar."
I didn't try and look. Once I had finished the water, I stood up, and slowly moved out of the gym. One long look came from the Pussycat in front of me, before I felt myself get wrapped in a gigantic hug. I stopped dead. Trying to choke everything back down to where it was safe, I gulped.
"You don't have to-"
"Stop, stop stop." Shiretoko muttered into my sweat-covered shoulder. "Do you know? Do you know how many flaws I see? Do you know how rare it is to see one I can
fix? Let me do this."
I stopped talking, and let her hold on to me. After what felt like an eternity, she let go, and I walked back to my room to fall into a dreamless slumber.
-/-/-/-/-/
The next week was unremarkable in it's mundanity. I practiced my Japanese, exercised with Chatora, and recieved my acceptance letter to UA. As I expected, my test scores were trash, but looking over my essay there was a note attached.
Mr. de la Veracruz
As expected from someone with your family's rough history with maintaining legality with their heroic actions, your essay contains material that we here could consider to be pro-vigilantism. While normally a strong mark against students, a cursory reading of Lucerne and El Bronco's heroic careers reveals that actions of your home government may have soured you on their involvement in the field for the justice process. We hope to rebuild your trust in central institutions during your time at U.A; and wish for you to know that any concerns you bring to the administration will be handled confidentially.
Best Regards, Principle Nedzu.
As ominous as that was, my combat test score was much better. Twenty-one combat points for destroyed robots, plus eighteen rescue points; thirty-nine total. Included in this was my Uniform Requisitions and my Costume Requisition, both of which I filled out and had ready to mail in a few hours.
Finally, it was time to go to school. The school opened at 0700, and homeroom was at 0730, which given the school's relative location to me meant I'd have to jockey two trains for an hour out. Great, so I had to be at the train station at 0620, which meant getting up at 0530 even. The only good news was that Chatora's 24-hour combi meant I could get breakfast on the run before I hit the train station.
Before I knew it, the first day of school was here. Get my uniform on in the morning, out the door. Hit the combi for a sandwich, call the counter girl an angel for being up at this ungodly hour and tip her for telling me not to forget my coffee, get to the train station. Bolt everything down waiting in line, hit the train for forty minutes, transfer to the blue line. Walk into school property.
Aside from the UA building proper being a gaudy as fuck glass monstrosity, it wasn't that bad. My classroom was on the fourth- excuse me, double-second- floor, with this beautifully massive door. Sliding it open, I moved in, sighing. Nothing like that new classroom smell to try and put you to sleep-
"Hey, delaVeracruz-san!" a familiar voice yelled. Looking over, I laughed.
"Kaminari-san, no surprise to see you here!" I called back, walking over to grab his hand in a massive shake. "Who's the mountain next to you?"
"This is Kirishima, a fellow man of culture." Kaminari said, leading to us exchanging semiformal bows. Grinning, I settled into small talk, chuckling as more people filtered into the room. There was Mr. Rules are the Rules over there, a cute chick with earlobe jacks I vaugely remembered from the exam, parsley-hair talking to a bubble of a girl with a brown hair in a bowl cut, and flushing like a fire truck during it, and then I saw
her.
Now, you have to understand, I was a man of culture. I had seen girls of every type before, and despite five years of going steady I had enough mental armor against beauty to avoid having my jaw drop. Six sisters had immunized me to background boobs as a mental radiation, and I was seasoned, versed, practiced even at every form of dance that was important. Even waltz, god help me. I was not a lunk!
"Holy…" Kirishima muttered.
"Mother of…" Kaminari gulped.
"God." I whispered.
As one we turned to each other. "That chest!" Kaminari gulped.
"Those hips!" Kirishima gulped.
"That hair." I muttered reverently. The other two looked at me.
"Wait a minute." Kirishima said, looking at me. "That wonderful, ten in ten, S-rank example of a girl comes through the door, and the first thing you notice is her hair?"
"Well, yeah." I said unashamedly. "Listen, look at me. If I didn't know what good hair care looked like, they'd have sent me off to the orphange for being a stray cat."
Hearing a muffled chuckle from a few desks over, I raised an eyebrow. "Besides, the teacher will be here in a few minutes. Be a shame if he overheard us, eh?"
Kirishima and Kaminary slowly filtered off, and I shot a Look to the girl with the earphone jacks. She just smirked at me slyly, and I took the bait to come over. After a few seconds of silence, she finally deigned to speak.
"Good job not getting starstruck there, buddy." she said. "I'm Jiro Kyoka."
"Arsenio de la Veracruz." I replied, smirking. "I will say, though, that's a hell of a star."
"Yeah." Jiro muttered. "You're telling me."
"Eh, I don't think you've got too much to worry about it." I said, flapping a hand around as
that wonderful hair- I mean, the beautiful girl sat down. "Think of it as a free sorting of the class- see who falls into the orbit and where, you know?"
Jiro pursed her lips. "Then where do I fall into that orbit- or you, for that matter?"
"We wait, and we watch, and then we make our own stars." I said, smiling. "First impressions last a lifetime."
"H-hey!" Parsley-hair spoke up outside his whisper-mutter for the first time. "Who's that in the door?"
A maniacal laugh came off the dwarf in the door. "It is I, Mineta-"
"Behind you, dipshit." a lazy drawl came from my left, punctuated by a dangerous shift. "Unless class is taught by some kinda caterpillar?"
"No." the caterpillar said, coming upright and slipping off it's yellow fluffy coccoon. "I'm your Homeroom teacher. My name is Aizawa Shota. Now, time for roll call."
After it was confirmed that everyone was in fact somehow present, Aizawa grinned slightly. I just winced; it was obvious that the man had last been introduced to conditioner back when he had been getting his teaching certificate, and the bags under his eyes were loaded to the brim with sleepless nights.
"Normally, UA students go through an orientation with the principle on their first day; however, the information present is easily accessible in your student manuals and documentation that you read. Since I believe that you are all responsible individuals who did your preparation, I think we can skip that and hit the field a little early for a more rational exercise."
"Shouldn't we attend the meeting with the principle, however?" asked Rules-are-Rules, and I rolled my eyes.
"At UA, the heroics course homeroom teachers are given a great deal of flexibility due to the nature of our curriculum and professional talents." Aizawa explained, eyes narrowing. "Every one of you- with one minor exception- has completed the same standard metric tests of physical ability, performed without your Quirk's 'interference'. This fear is irrational- you are heroic students now. From the moment you enter school grounds, you are allowed to use your Quirk to its fullest."
Now my homeroom teacher was grinning, and I could smell the trap under his too-long scarf. "Today, you'll do those tests one more time- with your quirk. Go above, Plus Ultra. Meet me at the open air training field in gym uniform in eight minutes."
As he walked out, everyone stood around, stunned. Finally, one of my classmates- and the only other guy to have a tail- spoke up, "So, does anyone know where the locker rooms are?"
As everyone started digging through their desks for their school handbooks, I eyed Jiro sneaking towards the door, using the cover of a pink-skinned girl talking to hide her sounds. Moments later, the rather… attractive, I could say attractive in the privacy of my own mind, right? girl followed her. As Kirishima and Kaminari got to talking shop, I waited. Plus ten seconds of the girls leaving and the stunty little purple kid coming to talk to them, and I scrammed too. Shortly behind me were Parsley-hair and Bowlcut, and I was fairly certain the class would file out in ones and twos after them.
Meanwhile, I had a job to do. Swiveling my ears, I caught the hints of Jiro talking, so I followed at a very brisk walk to catch up. Running, after all, was probably forbidden. I say probably since, while I had read the student conduct book, it was writen in kanji and I still might have had some trouble with it. Especially at 0200 in the morning.
Catching up to the pair, I smiled slightly up at them. Now that we were both standing, I realized that I actually had two or three centimeters on Jiro, while the other girl had at least ten or fifteen on me. Well then!
"Oh, hey Veracruz-san." Jiro said, face even-tempered. "You realize the teacher wasn't gonna help either?"
"Anyone who uses the word 'rational' in a sentence describing a formulaic procedure is probably about to try and do something to dunk on you with their improved version in about twenty minutes." I said, shrugging. "Anyway, I don't believe we've been introduced, señorita…?"
"Yayorozu Momo." the beautiful girl said with a smile. Yayorozu Momo. I would
remember that name. "If you don't mind me asking, what type of cat are you heteromorphic with?"
Oh, now that was a loaded question and a half. A lot of quirks had heteromorphic
traits- see the pink-skinned girl with horns- but a fully and completely heteromorphic quirk was massively dependant on what you were heteromorphic with. Technically, someone like me of the frog girl were "transformación animal del cuerpo" or a Full Body Animal Heteromorph. People could get very picky about it, and there had been more than one asshole back on the plantation we'd had to diabuse of the notion that there were 'better' and 'worse' heteromorphs. I had fun beating those assholes up.
Still, here and now, it wasn't the worst thing she could have asked, and let's face it: I was willing to give a gorgeous girl like her the benefit of the doubt. "Ocelotl." I explained simply. "Or jaguar, if we're being more comprehesable about it."
"One of the big cats?" Yayorozu asked, eyes sparkling faintly.
"Yep." I popped.
"Betcha he'd purr if you scratched him behind the ears." Jiro joked, and my hand twitched fast enough to unsheathe a claw. She didn't know- and again, it's not like they were trying to make problems with it.
"One, if you get to petty the kitty, the kitty gets to pet you." I said straightfaced. I could save the much more lewd version of that little truism for much later, or if Miss Pinky tried to pet me. I saw those acid hands of hers at the sports festival, and that would mean having a singed coat for
weeks. "And two, I can't purr."
"Really?" Jiro asked.
"It would make sense." Yayorozu said offhandedly. "The vocal structures to purr or to roar are mutually exclusive, although heteromorphic normalization might make that a bit interesting to observe."
"I'll leave it to the doctors." I said easily, and the conversation shifted to more feminine topics after that. It was a short elevator ride down to the changing rooms, and as I entered I saw an… interesting… note.
TO: CLASS 1-A
THIS IS YOUR LOCKER ROOM FOR THE NEXT THREE YEARS. DO NOT WRECK IT.
FROM: ISHIGAMI YUU; MAINTENANCE HEAD
Shrugging, I picked a locker close to the door, and set up the lock fairly quickly. That done, I then went to a cart in the center of the room full of gym uniforms, grabbed one in my size, and checked my phone.
When I was done, I noticed a few of the others trickling in, and I sighed. Might as well get changed. Blazer and tie off first, then the collar shirt and slacks. The pants weren't too bad, and the uniform stuff was decent. I had to question the logic of issuing blouses for a gym uniform instead of a pullover, but since I could leave it unbuttoned I was happy. My fur was a good thermal layer down to about eight degrees, so clothes were generally extra that just got me sweaty.
"You really not gonna button that up?" Kirishima asked when he got there, filling out his locker without any trouble.
"Dude.
Fur." I groused. "I already have to keep it artificially short in spots, and it's still uncomfortable with a lot of things."
"Eh, fair." Kirishima said, shrugging. "I know I'm gonna go through a few of these uniforms."
"Oh?" I asked.
Holding up a hand, Kirishima activated his Quirk, making it stony and solid. "Hardening, man. Which also means, unfortunately, abrasive as shit!"
"You know, if there's a reason for it, you can fill out a form to request a uniform modification." the block-head who waved his hands said. "Heteromorphic quirks usually get accepted easily."
"Right right." I said, shrugging.
"If you need help, I'm familiar with the UA paperwork." he offered. "What's your name?"
"Arsenio de la Veracruz." I said, shrugging as I pulled out a roll of linen. Most people would use this to wrap their hands, but I took it to my feet, binding the arch and spaces between my toes. I had tough foot-pads from both my Quirk and my hatred of shoes, but there were still spots I needed to protect.
"Good to meet you, de la Veracruz-san."
Looking up, I blinked. "Holy shit, you got my name right. What's yours?"
Blockhead pushed up his glasses. "Iida Tenya."
"Well, good to meet you Iida-san." I said, grinning as I finished up my feet. "You know what these 'standard metric tests' El Oruga was talking about?"
"Who?"
"The homeroom teacher." I said, starting the next foot. "You know, from that giant sleeping bag."
"Oh, that!" Iida said, smiling. "Fifty meter sprint, grip strength, standing long jump, side steps, ball throw, situps, sitting toe touch, and a kilometer run."
"Nothing too bad, then." I replied, grinning. "Sounds like farm work, except stupider."
"Your family owns a farm?" Kaminari asked, chuckling. "Where are you from, anyway?"
"Ectapec." I said, chuckling as we walked out. "And we own plantations, plural. The family business is growing avocados, after all. Well, that and heroing, but when the cartels keep going after your shit it pays to have some friends with the long arm of the law."
"A rather… mercantile… reason for heroing, I suppose." Iida said, rubbing his chin.
"Makes sense to me!" A gir's voice chipped in while we gathered around the training field. "Sponsorships can really rake in the cash. Know if they'll be looking for help?"
"You need to get a Mexican hero license since they're not part of the UE hero accords, speak fluent Spanish and a little Tzeltal wouldn't hurt, and have a reference from someone in the family, probably me." I shrugged. "Ask me again in three years, and we'll see what happens."
"Okay! Oh!" the girl- bowl-cut- said. "I'm Uraraka Ochaco!"
"And I'm surprised to see you putting the moves on someone already, Veracruz-san." Jiro joked. "Leave some fish in the sea, alright?"
"C'mon, I'm not putting the moves on anyone!" I protested jokingly, holding up my hands. "It's a frame-up, you've got the wrong cat!"
"Good. God forbid we have to deal with one of the perverted ones- I could hear everything coming out of the other changing room."
I shuddered. "I am sorry for your loss."
"Yeah, well, you and me both." Jiro grumbled. "C'mon, the teacher is about to begin explaining this mess."
As I settled back into Yayorozu's orbit, Aizawa started talking.
"Since junior high school, you all have conducted these exercises to develop an average of what you could theoretically do." Aizawa said, voice as dead as his eyes. "That average is a lie, because you are forbidden to use your Quirks."
What the fuck? That was dumb. Seriously, we had basic quirk lessons when we were in elementary school back home! Admittedly, this was mostly so we didn't kill each other in a playground fight by accident or burn down the school because one kid was literally spitting fire at the walls, but still! Knowing what your Quirk was only made half the battle!
"However, you are learning to be heroes. That, explicitly, means using your Quirks to determine a baseline, a level you will grow from." Aizawa said. "I don't care what you do; you know your Quirks better than I. The only rule is that you use them."
"Ah man, this'll be a piece of cake!"
I facepalmed hard enough to let my claws start sliding out. You jinxed us, dumbass. Whoever you are, I hope you die. I hope you die in bed from pneumonia, unable to breathe another single fucking word of mentally damaged temptation to our lady Fate and the God above that keeps us safe from morons and jackasses like you. Please God, watch over everyone in that damnfool's splash radius, amen. I'll even light a candle for him at his funeral if I find out who it was.
As a smell of burnt cordite started drifting towards me, I smirked. I sure as hell wasn't getting between explosion-head and him, though. Death by immolation would work too.
"Easy, then?" Aizawa asked. "Probably. Being a Hero is never easy, though, and anyone who takes this lightly won't hack it. Lackidasial attitudes won't cut it here. Life isn't fair- and neither am I."
Ah shit here we go.
"Eighteen of you proved your mettle to get here. Two were avowed by others. Nineteen people will come back to the classroom so Present Mic can try and blow your eardrums out with English class later."
As the class started doing finger math, I squinted my eyes and hissed slightly. Someone was getting shot- and the best option I could think of was that there was a Judas Goat in the crowd. Expelling students from high-pressure courses wasn't too odd a thought to me since it happened all the time in my non-curricular lessons like first aid, criminal law, and knife fighting, but this was a school! As someone tried to argue with the teacher, I started planning. The 'smart' thing to do would be to sabotage someone so they came in last, and as tempting as it was to punt perverted stunty over there out of the course with the benefits of rocks in his shoes or something, I didn't have the time or tools.
That left only one option: to do my best, go above and beyond, and perform as per the motto of the school- Plus Ultra.
This was gonna suck, wasn't it.
///
AN: please, if you like this story and want to see more,
visit my Ko-Fi and chip in with a note saying what you liked!