The beach was quiet at this hour.
That was the thing Izuku Midoriya had come to love most about Dagobah Municipal Beach Park — or rather, what it used to be called before he and All Might had spent ten months turning a mountain of garbage into shoreline again. In those early morning hours, when the sun was still dragging itself reluctantly over the horizon and the sea mist hung low over the sand, you could almost forget that the world was full of heroes and villains and people with miraculous powers who bent reality to their will.
You could almost forget that Izuku Midoriya had none of those powers.
Had none.
He stood at the water’s edge now, toes just shy of the tide, breathing hard from the morning’s training. His green hair was plastered flat with sweat. His arms ached. His legs ached. His everything ached, in the particular way that only made sense after you had spent the better part of an hour throwing refrigerators.
Behind him, All Might — or rather, the thin, skeletal, sunken-cheeked man the world did not know was All Might — sat on an overturned washing machine and watched him with an expression that was difficult to read.
“You’ve done everything I asked,” the man said. His voice, in this form, was reedy and quiet, nothing like the thundering declaration the world associated with his name. “Every rep. Every set. Every impossible thing I put in front of you.”
“I just did what you told me to,” Izuku said, turning around.
“No.” All Might shook his head slowly. “I’ve told other people to do things. They did some of them. You did all of them. There’s a difference.” He was quiet for a moment. “There’s something I need to tell you, my boy. About One For All.”
Izuku had heard about One For All. He’d heard most of it weeks ago, when All Might had first offered it to him on this very beach. The quirk that was stockpiled power, passed from person to person across generations, growing stronger with each new wielder. The quirk that was All Might’s deepest secret and greatest gift.
The quirk he was about to receive.
“I’ve spent time,” All Might continued carefully, “thinking about how to ease you into it. Most recipients need years to control the power without destroying their bodies. It’s like trying to run at full voltage through a wire that wasn’t built for the current. The wire burns out.”
“Right,” Izuku said. “You mentioned that.”
“I said most recipients.”
There was something in his tone. Izuku tilted his head.
All Might stood — slowly, the way old injuries demanded — and looked at Izuku with an expression the boy had never seen on his face before. It wasn’t the bright, enormous smile. It wasn’t the grimace of pain. It was something quieter and much more serious.
“I’ve been watching you for ten months,” he said. “I’ve watched you move, think, train, push, fail, recover, and push again. And I’ve been consulting, quietly, with the vestiges — the predecessors whose power lives within this quirk.” He paused. “They believe you may be different.”
“Different how?”
“The stockpiled power of One For All is immense. Generations of strength, layered and compressed. A normal body receiving it is overwhelmed. But your body…” All Might seemed to be choosing his words with unusual care. “Your body has been prepared. Not just physically — though the training has done more than I expected — but structurally. There is something in the way your cells have responded to the conditioning. Something in your baseline. The vestiges believe that when you receive One For All, you may be able to access more of it, sooner, than any previous user.”
Izuku stared at him.
“How much more?” he asked quietly.
All Might met his eyes.
“Possibly all of it,” he said. “From the first moment.”
The silence that followed was the kind that had weight.
Izuku sat down on the sand. Not gracefully — his legs just stopped working for a moment in the face of that sentence and he sort of folded. All Might did not comment on this. He sat back down on his washing machine and gave the boy the space to process.
“All of it,” Izuku repeated.
“It’s not guaranteed,” All Might said quickly. “And even if you can access the power without your body breaking down, control is a separate matter entirely. Raw access and precise control are not the same thing. One For All at full power without mastery would be… catastrophic. You could destroy your surroundings. Hurt people. I’m not suggesting you go out and —”
“I know,” Izuku said. He was staring at the water. “I know. I’m not going to do anything stupid.”
All Might studied him. “You’re not scared.”
“I’m terrified,” Izuku corrected immediately. “But being terrified and doing the thing anyway is kind of all I’ve ever done.”
A long pause.
Then All Might smiled — not the enormous, performed smile, but a small, real one that looked somewhat out of place on his gaunt face and was therefore far more genuine.
“Eat this,” he said, and pulled a single strand of hair from his head.
The moment One For All entered Izuku’s body, he understood why it usually destroyed people.
It was like being struck by lightning from the inside.
It was like every nerve ending in his body simultaneously decided they had been living too small and needed to expand to fill the sky.
It was like —
It was like coming home to a house you had never been to before, and somehow knowing every room.
Izuku stood on the beach for a long moment, perfectly still, feeling the power move through him. It wasn’t violent. It wasn’t comfortable, exactly, but it wasn’t violent. It was vast. Like standing at the edge of an ocean and realizing the ocean was inside you.
He raised his right hand. Looked at it.
He pressed One For All into his fingers — just a fraction, just a breath, just testing —
The sand around his feet exploded outward in a perfect circle. A crater six feet wide. The ocean mist dispersed for thirty meters. The washing machine behind him tipped over.
All Might caught it.
He was staring at Izuku with an expression that was difficult to categorize. It contained awe, and a complicated species of relief, and something that looked very much like grief, and then almost immediately afterward, an overwhelming, sunbursting joy.
“It didn’t hurt,” Izuku said, in a voice of absolute wonder.
“No,” All Might agreed softly. “It didn’t.”
“I can feel all of it. Every layer. Every —” Izuku stopped. Pressed his lips together. His eyes were wet and he didn’t bother to be embarrassed about it. “It’s incredible.”
“Yes,” said All Might. And then, after a moment: “Don’t do that again for at least a month. No matter how good it feels. Control first. Power second.”
Izuku laughed — a watery, overwhelmed laugh — and nodded vigorously.
“Yes sir.”
The UA entrance exam was held on a Tuesday in April.
Izuku arrived early, stood in the long queue of applicants, and did not look like someone who was about to change the exam’s recorded history permanently. He wore his middle school uniform. He had his notebooks. He looked, in short, like a nervous kid who might wash out in the preliminary rounds.
He had spent the intervening month doing exactly what All Might told him. No full outputs. Micro-pulses only. He had trained control with the obsessive, meticulous intensity he brought to everything, standing in empty fields and practicing moving a single leaf with precision, a single stone, a single cup of water, without disturbing anything around it.
He was not perfect at it.
But he was far better than he had any right to be after four weeks.
The written exam came first. He finished in thirty-five minutes and spent the remaining time reviewing his answers three times. He was confident about ninety-four percent of them.
Then came the practical.
The robots were exactly as he’d studied — class one, two, and three point varieties, plus the unscored zero-pointer, a city-block-scale mechanical titan designed not to be fought but fled from, its purpose to test decision-making under extreme pressure.
Izuku stood at the starting gate.
Around him, six hundred applicants buzzed with nervous energy, quirks manifesting in small involuntary flickers — flame, electricity, gravitational distortion, the faint shimmer of transformation. Someone behind him was literally vibrating.
The buzzer sounded.
Izuku ran forward.
He did not use One For All. Not yet. For the first three minutes he moved like an ordinary person — a very fast, very well-trained ordinary person — dodging robots, directing other students away from danger, calling out weak points he’d memorized from his research.
Left joint on the two-pointer. The neck coupling on the three-pointer. The knee actuators on the ones.
Other students noticed. A few followed his directions without knowing why. It worked.
Then the zero-pointer appeared.
It was enormous. The ground shook with it. Students fled in every direction, screaming. Izuku watched it lumber forward and calculated the angle of its fall, the blast radius, the impact —
There was a girl with pink hair who had tripped.
She was sitting in the zero-pointer’s direct path with her hand on her ankle, face white with pain, staring up at the machine with eyes that had gone very wide and very young.
Izuku did not hesitate.
He ran toward her.
The zero-pointer raised its fist.
Izuku planted his feet.
He reached inside himself — carefully, precisely, the way he had practiced — and drew out fifteen percent of One For All.
Just fifteen.
He punched the air in front of him.
The shockwave hit the zero-pointer like a freight train made of concentrated sky. It didn’t just stop the machine’s fist. It staggered the entire unit backward on its massive legs, a hundred-ton construct stumbling like a man who had missed the last step of a staircase, its internal systems sparking and shrieking as the concussive force rippled through its chassis.
The exam ground went silent.
Six hundred applicants stared.
The girl with the pink hair stared.
Izuku turned, grabbed her, and vaulted backward out of the zero-pointer’s radius as it overbalanced and crashed to the ground with a sound like a building falling.
He set her down gently. Checked her ankle. Determined it was sprained, not broken.
“You’ll want to see Recovery Girl,” he said, and turned back to the exam before he could think about what he’d just done, because if he thought about it he was going to start shaking.
He scored 77 villain points.
The highest score in the written portion was his: 98 out of 100.
The highest practical score was his: 77 villain points plus an additional 52 rescue points, awarded by a panel of evaluating heroes who had watched the exam feed with expressions that moved rapidly through surprise, disbelief, and something approaching reverence.
Present Mic, announcing the results from a studio across the city, stumbled over his own voice when he read the name.
Izuku Midoriya.
All Might, watching from a distance, sat very still for a long time afterward.
The first day of class at UA was a pageant of introduced egos and carefully cultivated indifference, and Izuku Midoriya sat in his seat and tried not to look like he was cataloguing everyone.
He was absolutely cataloguing everyone.
Row three, window seat: Todoroki Shoto. Half-and-half hair, face like carved marble, sitting with a stillness that wasn’t calm so much as contained. Quirk: Half-Cold Half-Hot. Son of the number two hero. Enormous potential, visible from across a room.
Front row, left side: Iida Tenya. Already the most aggressively prepared student in the room, spine rigid, hand raised before Aizawa-sensei had finished his first sentence. Quirk: Engine. The kind of organized, principled person who made groups better just by being in them.
Back row, center: Bakugo Katsuki. Izuku had known Katsuki since childhood and was one of the few people alive who was neither intimidated by him nor fooled by him. The anger was real. The talent was real. The fear underneath both of them was also real, and Katsuki would have died before admitting it.
And then —
Row four, second from the window.
Yaoyorozu Momo.
Izuku had done what he always did: researched every student who’d passed the written portion before the practical results were posted. Yaoyorozu Momo was one of two students admitted on recommendation rather than through the standard exam, which meant her abilities had been assessed directly by UA staff rather than through the standard process. That told you something. The recommendation track was reserved for students whose quirks and abilities were simply too significant to evaluate through conventional means.
Her quirk was Creation — the ability to produce any non-living material from her body, provided she understood its molecular structure. The ceiling on that ability was, in practical terms, nearly unlimited. It required knowledge, not raw power. It rewarded preparation and intelligence above everything else.
She sat with a kind of natural composure that was different from Todoroki’s containment. It wasn’t distance — she was already speaking with the girl beside her (Jirou Kyoka, earphone jack quirk, recommendation admission). It was more like she simply occupied exactly as much space as she meant to occupy and no more, and was entirely comfortable with that.
She looked up once during Izuku’s observation.
Their eyes met.
He looked away, immediately and with the particular intensity of someone who had absolutely not been staring.
She tilted her head slightly.
He looked back at his desk and made a note in his notebook that said Yaoyorozu – Creation – INCREDIBLE potential and underlined INCREDIBLE twice and then felt embarrassed about that and closed the notebook.
Aizawa-sensei’s first act was to tell them to change into gym clothes.
His second act was to inform them they were taking a quirk assessment test, and that the one who scored lowest would be expelled.
Izuku felt the familiar stomach-drop that came from understanding the actual stakes of a situation, and then felt it followed by something newer and stranger: the awareness that for the first time in his life, the stakes were different for him than for everyone else.
He wasn’t going to score lowest. He wasn’t going to score anywhere near lowest. He had power that, properly applied, would produce numbers that had never appeared in a UA assessment before.
The problem was properly applied.
Standing at the start of the 50-meter dash, Izuku had a brief, fierce internal argument with himself about how much to use. Too little looked suspicious in its own way — his written score was already extraordinary, and a completely average physical performance would create a dissonance that sharp observers (and Aizawa-sensei was clearly a very sharp observer) would notice. Too much would be —
Well. He didn’t know yet what too much would look like. That was the problem.
Control first. Power second.
He ran the 50 meters with what he estimated as two percent of One For All suffused throughout his body — enough to enhance his speed and stride without producing visible light or air displacement.
4.02 seconds.
The previous UA record was 4.15.
Aizawa-sensei made a note and said nothing.
Izuku, for the softball throw, allowed himself a fraction more: enough to deliver the ball with genuine force but without wind impact on surrounding students. He stood in the throwing circle, hauled back, and released.
The tracking system announced: 1,138.7 meters.
From somewhere to his left, someone said, “What.”
From somewhere to his right, there was an extended silence that sounded exactly like Bakugo Katsuki refusing to show that he was affected by something.
Yaoyorozu Momo, three students back in the queue, watched the tracking readout with an expression that could best be described as intensely thoughtful. She had not, Izuku noticed peripherally, looked away as quickly as most of the other students.
When it was her turn, her throw was precise and well-executed, and produced a result in the high hundreds that was genuinely excellent.
When she completed it, she wrote something in a small notebook she produced from her pocket.
Izuku recognized the gesture immediately and with profound personal resonance.
The assessment ended. No one was expelled — Aizawa admitted, with what seemed like genuine if mild indifference, that the threat of expulsion was a logical ruse designed to maximize performance output.
“You wasted a logical deception,” Yaoyorozu observed, from the middle of the group.
Aizawa looked at her.
“Explain,” he said.
“If you expel someone at the start of the year, the remaining students spend the year trying to identify the threshold above which they’re safe, rather than performing maximally. A single expulsion would teach them caution. The threat without the action teaches them that the threat is real and teaches nothing about where the floor is. You get better long-term performance by maintaining uncertainty.” She paused. “Unless your goal was specifically to see how students behave under apparent existential pressure, in which case the results were likely useful regardless of whether the threat was genuine.”
The class was quiet.
Aizawa looked at her for a long moment.
“Both,” he said, and walked away.
Yaoyorozu made another note in her notebook.
Izuku, standing five feet away, did the same.
It was after class, in the lingering warm light of a late-April afternoon, that it happened.
Izuku had stayed to finish some notebook entries — he had three pages on the day’s assessments alone, observations about each student’s quirk output and estimated ceiling and potential tactical applications in hero work. He did this not out of obsession but because it was genuinely how his mind worked, and had worked since childhood. The world was full of systems and he wanted to understand them.
He was almost finished when he realized he wasn’t alone in the classroom.
Yaoyorozu Momo was at the board, writing out what appeared to be a structural formula for a carbon fiber composite. She had apparently been there for the last twenty minutes. She wrote quickly, in a neat hand, checking values against a reference in her phone.
“Carbon fiber for your Creation quirk?” Izuku asked, before he could stop himself.
She looked up. Not startled — she’d noticed him still there, clearly. “Expanding my library,” she said. “I can’t create materials I don’t understand. So I spend time every day on new compounds.” She glanced at his notebook. “You’ve been writing since the end of class.”
“Notes on everyone’s quirks,” he said. He hesitated. “If that seems weird —”
“It doesn’t,” she said. “It seems useful.” She paused. “Your softball throw was 1,138 meters.”
“Yes.”
“That’s approximately six times the previous UA record.”
“I’m aware.”
“Can I ask you something?” She set her pen down and turned to face him with the full, direct attention of someone who was not particularly interested in social padding. “Your result in the practical exam — the zero-pointer. You only used a fraction of your power. The concussive displacement was consistent with roughly fifteen percent of what you showed in the throw. Which means you were holding back significantly during the exam, and you were holding back significantly today, and if you’re still holding back now —” She tilted her head. “How much stronger are you than what we’ve seen?”
Izuku stared at her.
It was, as far as he could determine, the most direct and intelligent question anyone had asked him since he received One For All. It was the question he hadn’t known he was waiting for someone to ask.
“I’m still learning,” he said honestly. “I have access to more than I’ve shown. But access and control aren’t the same thing. I’m working on the gap.”
Yaoyorozu considered this.
“That’s a remarkably honest answer,” she said. “Most people in your position would be more guarded.”
“Most people in my position wouldn’t have someone notice the inconsistency in the first place.”
A brief pause.
“That’s fair,” she said. And then, with what might have been the beginning of a smile: “I’m Yaoyorozu Momo.”
“I know,” he said. “I’m Midoriya Izuku.”
“I know,” she said, with exactly the same inflection.
Izuku laughed.
It surprised him — the ease of it. The way it came out without any of the usual anxiety, without the scrambling calculation of am I being weird, am I saying too much, am I making this strange. It just came out, simple and genuine.
She looked faintly surprised too, in the careful way of someone who was not accustomed to being surprising.
“Your notes,” she said, after a moment. “Can I ask what you think of Todoroki’s left side?”
And just like that, they were talking about quirk theory at a blackboard in an empty classroom, and the sun moved and the shadows lengthened and neither of them looked up until the building’s automated lights clicked on overhead.
Outside the school, All Might was waiting near the gate.
He had been doing this — showing up in his diminished form to walk with Izuku part of the way home, under the cover of being some kind of distant family acquaintance. It was not a very convincing cover but no one had challenged it yet.
“Well?” he asked.
“It was fine,” Izuku said. “The assessment. I used two to three percent for the physical tests.”
“And no one noticed anything unusual?”
Izuku hesitated.
All Might caught the hesitation immediately, with the instinct of a man who had spent decades reading situations.
“Someone noticed,” he said.
“One person noticed the inconsistency between what I showed in the exam and what I showed today,” Izuku said. “She calculated percentages.”
“She.”
“Yaoyorozu Momo. Creation quirk. Recommended admission.” He paused. “She’s very intelligent. I think she’s one of the most analytical minds in the class.”
All Might was quiet for a moment.
“What did you tell her?”
“That I was still working on control.” He looked at the teacher. “It’s true.”
“Yes,” All Might agreed. “It is.” He walked in silence for a while. The city moved around them — evening crowd, the bright commercial noise of a Tokyo street. “Be careful, my boy. The power you carry is a target. The more you show, the more attention you draw. Some of that attention will be from people who want to take it.”
“I know.”
“And some of it,” All Might added, more quietly, “will be from people who simply want to understand it.” He glanced sideways. “That’s not necessarily safer. Depending on who they are.”
Izuku thought of dark eyes and a nearly-smile and structural formulas written rapidly on a blackboard.
“I’ll be careful,” he said.
He thought: but understanding might be the point.
That night, Izuku sat at his desk with his notebooks spread around him and wrote for two hours.
He wrote about the day. About the assessment. About each of his classmates — their quirks, their tendencies, the things they’d shown and the gaps he suspected between what they’d shown and what they could do.
He wrote about Yaoyorozu Momo last. He wrote longer than he meant to.
He wrote: Creation – effectively unlimited upper bound, constrained by knowledge. This means her ceiling is directly proportional to her intelligence and education. She will be one of the strongest heroes in Japan, eventually, provided she has time and support and challenges worthy of her.
He wrote: She noticed the inconsistency. No one else did. She didn’t make it a confrontation — she made it a question. She wasn’t trying to expose something. She was trying to understand something. That’s —
He stopped.
Read back what he’d written.
Closed the notebook.
Opened it again.
Finished the sentence: That’s exactly the kind of person I want to be surrounded by.
He was right about the power.
He was right about the control.
He was right, in ways he couldn’t have articulated at sixteen, about Yaoyorozu Momo.
But all of that was still ahead of him, layered in a future that would require the best of everything he had to offer and then demand more.
For now, he was a boy in a school uniform, walking home in a Tokyo evening, carrying inside him the accumulated strength of generations.
For now, that was enough.
For now, that was everything.
The observation room smelled like new electronics and anxiety.
Twenty students packed into a space designed for comfortable observation of ten, standing at the long viewing window that looked down into UA’s indoor battle complex — an enormous enclosed structure that reproduced urban environments with unsettling fidelity. Fake storefronts. Fake apartments. Fake alleyways between fake buildings, where the dust was real and the concrete was real and the consequences of getting hit too hard were also, unfortunately, real.
The Battle Trial, as Aizawa-sensei explained it with his characteristic economy of language, was simple.
Hero teams would attempt to protect a nuclear weapon prop inside a building. Villain teams would attempt to reach it. Five minutes. Real quirk use, within reason. Injuries treated at Recovery Girl’s office.
The teams had been assigned randomly — or apparently randomly; Izuku had learned already that Aizawa-sensei’s idea of random frequently had a design underneath it that only became visible in retrospect.
Team A, Heroes: Izuku Midoriya and Uraraka Ochaco.
Team A, Villains: Bakugo Katsuki and Iida Tenya.
The rest of the class watched from up here.
Yaoyorozu Momo stood at the far left of the observation window with her notebook open.
Izuku had known this was coming. Not this specific matchup — that had been genuinely random, as far as he could tell — but the general shape of it: a situation that would require him to fight at something approaching real capacity in front of witnesses, against an opponent he knew well, in a controlled environment where the wrong kind of restraint could get someone hurt.
The wrong kind of restraint.
That was the thing no one told you about having overwhelming power. The instinct was to hold back — to keep the power down, to make yourself smaller, to avoid being the thing in the room that everyone was afraid of. It was a generous instinct. It was also, in the wrong situation, a dangerous one. If you held back too much in a real fight, you lost. And in hero work, losing had consequences that extended beyond yourself.
He stood at the building’s entrance with Uraraka beside him and thought through what he knew.
Bakugo Katsuki.
He’d known Kacchan since they were four years old. He knew the way Kacchan fought better than Kacchan knew himself — the aggression that was always also a kind of preemptive defense, the way he committed to an attack line early and then refused to adjust course because adjusting felt like admitting error, the fact that he got faster and more dangerous when he was angry and slower and more predictable when he was furious. The anger was an engine. The fury was a brake.
Iida Tenya.
New. But readable. The assessment data had been clear: Engine quirk, legs, high speed, high impact, channeled linearly. Extremely principled. Would follow rules of engagement more strictly than Bakugo, which meant he’d be more predictable and also harder to rattle.
They were the villains in this exercise, which meant they were inside, which meant they were defending.
“Okay,” Uraraka said, beside him. She was vibrating slightly — not her quirk, just nerves. She had a quality of cheerful determined nervousness that Izuku found both endearing and grounding. “Okay. What’s the plan?”
“Iida is our first problem,” Izuku said. “The corridors in that building are narrow enough that he can’t reach full speed, which is actually more dangerous for us, not less — he’ll be using short-burst acceleration in tight spaces, which means we can’t predict his attack vector the way we could in an open field. We need to draw him into a chokepoint where his speed becomes a liability.”
Uraraka was looking at him with an expression that was approximately forty percent following and sixty percent impressed-concern.
“And Kacchan — Bakugo,” he continued. “He’ll come at me directly. He always has. He won’t be able to help it.” He paused. “I need you to get to the weapon while I’m managing him.”
“Managing,” she repeated. “That’s a word.”
“I won’t hurt him,” Izuku said immediately. “More than necessary.”
“That’s also a word.”
“Uraraka-san.”
“I’m in,” she said. “Let’s go.”
In the observation room, Yaoyorozu Momo was writing.
The first thing she’d written, before the exercise even began, was a structural assessment of the building based on the blueprints displayed on the room’s left monitor. Load-bearing walls. Sight lines. The three positions inside the building where a defensive team would logically place the weapon prop, ranked by defensibility.
The second thing she’d written was a note on each of the four participants.
For Midoriya, she wrote: Output control inconsistent at upper range — see assessment data, compares to exam footage. Maximum observed: ~15% (zero-pointer). Today’s assessment: 2-3% throughout. Why the restraint? Injury risk? Control risk? Both?
She had been thinking about this since yesterday. The numbers didn’t lie, and Midoriya Izuku’s numbers produced a profile that had no comparable precedent in documented UA assessment history. The range between his restrained outputs and what she estimated his unrestrained capacity to be was significant enough that it constituted a genuine strategic variable — for his allies as much as his opponents.
On paper, Team A should lose this exercise. Bakugo’s raw destructive power was enormous, and Iida’s speed created coverage options that should make Uraraka’s approach to the weapon extremely difficult.
On paper, however, had not yet met Midoriya in person.
She wrote: Watch for the moment he decides restraint is no longer viable.
The exercise began.
Izuku and Uraraka moved into the building at a run, splitting immediately at the first junction — Uraraka right, toward the stairwell that would take her to the upper floors and the most likely weapon placement. Izuku left, into the main corridor.
He had moved three steps down the main corridor when the wall exploded.
Not the whole wall. A section of it — about four feet across — detonated in a cascade of crackling orange and the pressure wave hit Izuku in the chest and pushed him back a step.
Just a step.
Bakugo stood in the hole where the wall used to be, palms out, with an expression on his face that Izuku recognized from approximately eight thousand prior incidents in their shared history. It was the expression that meant: now I have your full attention.
“Deku,” he said.
“Kacchan,” Izuku said.
There was a moment that was almost ceremonial — two people who had known each other for their entire conscious lives, standing in a fake hallway in a real fight, recognizing the weight of the moment and then, because they were who they were, moving past ceremony into action.
Bakugo launched forward.
His explosions were propulsion here — angled behind him, burning the floor and ceiling and walls, driving him at speeds that in open space would be genuinely difficult to track. In the corridor, as Izuku had calculated, the geometry limited him. The angles were wrong. The ricochets from the detonations were unpredictable even to Bakugo himself.
Izuku watched the approach and did the calculation and moved.
One percent. Legs only.
The speed enhancement was enough. He slipped left under Bakugo’s leading arm, felt the heat of the detonation that triggered off the wall where he’d been standing, and put himself behind Bakugo in the same motion.
He didn’t hit him. He didn’t need to yet.
Bakugo spun. “Don’t run.”
“I’m not running,” Izuku said. He was standing completely still. “I’m letting you come to me.”
Something in that — the calm of it, the quietness — hit Bakugo somewhere that the explosions hadn’t, and the fury that Izuku had been anticipating arrived on schedule. The attacks came faster. Harder. Less calculated. The corridor began to suffer for it — scorched concrete, stress cracks spreading through the walls, the overhead lighting shorting out in sections as the electrical cabling burned.
Izuku moved. Always moved. Just enough. One percent, concentrated in exactly the right places at exactly the right moments — a shoulder, a hip, a foot — displacing himself from the point of impact by fractions, letting the blasts go past or over or under.
He was not fighting back.
He was also, visibly, not trying.
This was, he understood, maddening.
In the observation room, this was described later by three separate students as “brutal,” which was interesting, because no one had been hit yet.
“He’s not counterattacking,” Jirou observed from the window.
“He’s controlling the corridor,” Yaoyorozu said, without looking up from her notebook. “Every exchange is driving Bakugo further from the stairwell. He’s been redirecting the whole fight without Bakugo noticing.”
Jirou looked at her. Then looked back at the monitor.
Then: “Oh. He’s been moving backward.“
“Since the third exchange,” Yaoyorozu confirmed. “Small steps. Not retreating — redirecting. He’s about twelve meters from the stairwell access point now, and Bakugo is between him and it, which means Bakugo’s position is now protecting the stairwell.” She paused. “From Bakugo himself.”
“That’s…” Jirou searched for a word.
“Strategic,” Yaoyorozu said.
“I was going to say mean.”
“Those aren’t mutually exclusive.”
Four minutes into the exercise, Uraraka found the weapon on the third floor.
Iida was there.
She had anticipated this and prepared for it — she’d taken a circuitous route, moved slowly to avoid the sound triggering his attention, and arrived at the room from a direction that the building’s layout suggested would have lower visibility.
It worked for approximately ten seconds.
Iida was fast. Not just Engine-quirk fast — situationally fast, the speed of someone who had been anticipating threats from multiple angles and had pre-positioned himself to cover the most likely approaches. He came at her from the far side of the room before she could touch the weapon, engine exhausts roaring, and she had to go sideways to avoid a hit that would have taken her cleanly out of the exercise.
She touched the ceiling on her way sideways and went weightless.
Zero gravity, engaged.
She drifted upward, out of Iida’s immediate attack range, and looked down at him as he recalibrated.
“That’s a clever application,” Iida said, and he sounded genuinely approving in the particular way of someone who respected good technique even in opponents. He positioned himself under the weapon. “However, you cannot move freely in zero gravity without a surface to push from. This becomes a standoff.”
“Only if I need to move freely,” Uraraka said.
She touched the wall.
Pushed.
Angled herself toward the weapon.
Iida was there instantly — engine burst, low and linear, exactly the speed she’d known was coming — and she went to the ceiling instead, killed her own gravity with a touch to a light fixture, and fell toward the weapon prop with her arm extended —
Iida caught her wrist.
Professional. Controlled. Clean.
They were frozen in a kind of equilibrium: Uraraka’s hand centimeters from the weapon, Iida’s grip on her wrist, both of them pulling in opposite directions and neither of them going anywhere.
“One minute,” Iida said, checking some internal clock. “You need to reach the target in one minute.”
“I just need him to last one minute,” Uraraka said.
Iida looked at her.
“Him?” he started.
The building shook.
Izuku had been waiting for a specific moment.
It arrived in the form of Bakugo overextending — a forward lunge with both palms firing simultaneously, a move that generated enormous power and left him briefly, critically off-balance. It was the move Kacchan always went to when he was frustrated and needed to end something.
Izuku caught his wrists.
Not hard. Not with power. Just with hands and leverage and eleven years of watching this exact move and knowing exactly when it was coming. He redirected the blast vector upward and stepped inside Bakugo’s guard and put him against the wall — gently, firmly, a controlled deposition.
Bakugo strained against the grip.
“Let go,” he said, through his teeth.
“Listen,” Izuku said. He was looking at his oldest friend with something that was not pity and not condescension and was the particular thing that lived in the space between them — complicated, old, not yet resolved. “I’ve been moving you. You’ve been twenty meters from the stairs this whole time.”
A pause.
“What,” Bakugo said.
“Uraraka-san is on the third floor.”
A longer pause.
“You —” Bakugo stopped. Restarted. “You played me.”
“I moved us to a position where my partner had the best chance of completing the objective,” Izuku said. “That’s the exercise.”
He released Bakugo’s wrists and stepped back.
Bakugo stared at him. The anger was still there — of course it was, the anger was always there, it was load-bearing — but underneath it was something that Izuku recognized as the specific look Kacchan got when he encountered a thing he hadn’t anticipated and needed time to process it.
“You could’ve just beaten me,” Bakugo said. “You were holding back the whole time.”
“Yes,” Izuku said simply.
“Why?”
Izuku considered this.
“Because winning by beating you into the floor isn’t the point of the exercise,” he said. “The point of the exercise is to complete the objective. And I didn’t need to hurt you to complete the objective.”
Silence.
From upstairs, a buzzer sounded.
Team A, Heroes. Mission successful.
The debrief happened in the observation room, where the rest of the class had watched the whole thing.
Aizawa-sensei ran it with his customary efficiency: each student who’d participated gave their read on the exercise, and then the observation team gave their assessment.
“Midoriya,” Aizawa said. “Your approach to Bakugo.”
“Misdirection and positional control,” Izuku said. “He’s aggressive enough that I could direct his aggression. I didn’t need to neutralize him — I needed to occupy him.”
“You used almost no output.”
“I didn’t need output. I needed patience.”
Aizawa looked at him for a long moment. Then: “Yaoyorozu. Assessment of Team A’s performance.”
Momo stood. She didn’t look at her notes — she’d already processed them and it was all in her head now.
“Midoriya’s tactical approach was sophisticated and effective,” she said. “The positional misdirection of Bakugo was the key variable — it removed the defensive depth that Team B would otherwise have had on the upper floors, and allowed Uraraka to operate without Bakugo as a secondary threat.” She paused. “The primary limitation I observed was that Midoriya’s restraint, while strategically sound, represents a variable that will not always be available. There will be scenarios where the objective requires more direct intervention. The question of at what point he transitions from restraint to application is worth analyzing.” She glanced at Izuku briefly. “He seems to have a clear personal threshold. Identifying what determines that threshold would be useful.”
The room was quiet.
Aizawa made a note.
Bakugo, sitting in the back, was staring at the ceiling with an expression that contained several things he was not saying.
“Accurate,” Aizawa said to Momo. “Sit down.” He looked at the rest of the class. “Today’s exercise revealed something that applies to all of you. Power is a component. Judgment is a component. Neither is sufficient alone.” He clicked off the monitor. “Tomorrow, physical endurance training. Eight AM. Don’t be late.”
He left.
The class began to decompress around Izuku — conversations starting, the nervous energy of the exercise releasing into chatter. Uraraka found him and grabbed his arm and said we did it! with the full force of her joy and he smiled and yes, they had.
Over her shoulder, he saw Momo close her notebook.
She looked up and found him looking.
She gave a small, precise nod.
He nodded back.
It was nothing. It was about as minimal a social exchange as was technically possible.
And yet walking home later, he found himself going over it with the same attention he gave to everything else — the angle of it, what it had communicated, what it might mean.
He was fairly sure it meant: good work.
He was also fairly sure it meant: I’m still watching.
He wasn’t sure how he felt about that.
He was fairly sure he felt good about it.
Two weeks into the UA semester, Izuku had a routine.
He arrived early enough to have the training grounds to himself for forty minutes before anyone else showed up. He used that time to work on One For All — not the visible stuff, not the applications, but the interior architecture of it. The understanding of it.
The more he worked with the power, the more complex it became. It wasn’t monolithic — it wasn’t just strength. There were textures to it, layers, and occasionally at the edge of his perception, something that felt almost like voices. Not real voices. More like… impressions. Emotional residue. The accumulated experiences of the people who had carried this before him.
He didn’t mention this to All Might yet. He wasn’t sure how.
He was working through a control exercise — channeling power into progressively smaller concentrations, trying to hold ten percent in his right index finger without the overflow bleeding into his wrist — when he heard footsteps.
He looked up.
Yaoyorozu Momo, in UA training clothes, stopped at the edge of the grounds and looked at him with mild surprise.
“I come here early,” she said. It was not an apology. It was an explanation.
“So do I, apparently,” he said.
She considered the available space. Considered him. Made a decision.
“I won’t be in your way,” she said, and moved to the far end of the grounds, where she began an entirely separate set of exercises — precision Creation work, producing small objects with increasing complexity, materials she was testing and analyzing.
Izuku watched for a moment.
Then went back to his own work.
They trained in parallel for forty minutes without speaking.
It was, Izuku realized slowly, the most comfortable he had been in any space with another person since he could remember. There was something about the quality of her silence — it wasn’t indifference and it wasn’t distance. It was simply the absence of the particular pressure that came from people who needed something from you. She didn’t need anything from him. She was just working, in the same space, because it was a good space to work in.
At thirty-eight minutes, she said: “You’re compensating with your shoulder.”
He looked at her. She was not looking at him. She was producing a carbon fiber rod and inspecting its surface tension.
“Your right shoulder,” she said. “When you’re holding a high concentration. You’re stabilizing with the surrounding muscle group rather than controlling the output directly. It’s a compensation habit — you probably developed it when the power was less precise.”
Izuku looked at his right shoulder.
Tried the exercise again.
Tried it with the shoulder deliberately relaxed.
The control improved measurably.
“How did you —” he started.
“I watch how people move,” she said simply. “It’s useful for understanding quirk mechanics.” Now she looked at him. “Better?”
“Better,” he confirmed. He paused. “Thank you.”
“It benefits both of us if you’re more precise,” she said, in the matter-of-fact tone of someone who was entirely serious and also not particularly good yet at making that sound less blunt than it was. “An uncontrolled output in a shared space is a hazard to everyone nearby.”
“Including you.”
“Including me.” A brief pause. “Particularly me, probably, given where I was standing.”
“Sorry,” he said.
“Don’t be sorry. Just improve.”
“Right.”
She went back to her materials testing. He went back to his control exercise, with a relaxed shoulder, and was measurably more successful.
The sky was turning proper morning colors when Kirishima arrived and then Bakugo and then everyone else, and the quiet of the early hours became the productive noise of a class that was, week by week, becoming something more than a collection of individuals.
That was the thing Izuku hadn’t expected — the us of it. The way twenty people thrown into shared difficulty and shared training and shared meals and shared disasters began to accrete into something. Not a family, not yet, not exactly, but the early load-bearing structure of one.
He was part of it. For the first time in his memory, genuinely part of it.
He found Uraraka in the lunch line and Iida materialized beside them with a tray and strong opinions about the nutritional balance of today’s menu, and Izuku let the conversation carry him and thought: this.
This is what he’d been fighting toward, all those years on the beach with garbage mountains and burning lungs.
Not the power. This.
Across the cafeteria, Yaoyorozu sat with Jirou and Asui and was apparently in a serious discussion about something — the three of them were bent over what looked like a schematic Momo had produced directly from her palm, pointing at sections, debating. Asui said something. Momo laughed.
It was a real laugh. Surprised out of her by something genuinely funny — it changed her whole face, the composed, careful architecture of it becoming briefly and entirely unguarded.
Izuku looked back at his lunch.
Made a note.
Not in his notebook — just in his head, in the internal catalogue he kept of things that seemed important and that he didn’t yet have a category for.
Yaoyorozu laughing. he filed it under: important, category TBD.
That afternoon, Aizawa introduced rescue training.
It was different from battle training in every way that mattered. Battle training had a clear success condition — reach the objective, defeat the opponent. Rescue training had no clear success condition because rescue never did. It had a shifting, horrible calculus of competing needs and imperfect information and the particular cruelty of a situation that kept changing just when you thought you understood it.
The scenario was a building collapse. Twenty “civilians” (support course students in padding) distributed through a structure that USJ staff had partially demolished. Some were injured. Some were trapped. Some were mobile but panicking. The information you had at the start was incomplete. The information you got as you moved through the structure was contradictory. The building, delightfully, was still unstable.
Teams of four. Fifteen minutes.
Izuku’s team: himself, Yaoyorozu, Todoroki, and Tokoyami.
They stood at the perimeter and Izuku did what he always did, which was look at the structure and calculate — entry points, collapse vectors, the secondary failure zones that weren’t obvious unless you understood how load redistribution worked in partial collapses.
“There’s a secondary failure risk on the north face,” he said. “The central support on floor three is compromised. If we have more than two people in the northeast quadrant simultaneously, the floor load will push toward that column.”
Todoroki looked at the building. “You can see that from here?”
“I read structural engineering texts,” Izuku said, which was true and also somehow always made people look at him slightly differently. “Momo —” He stopped. Corrected: “Yaoyorozu-san. Can you produce rope and harness equipment?”
“Already on it,” she said, and was.
Her hands moved and the materials came — she’d studied climbing harness design and high-tensile rope composition as part of her standard library expansion. The rope was produced in a continuous length, coiled and ready, in under ninety seconds.
“Tokoyami,” Izuku continued. “Dark Shadow can cover the spaces we can’t reach physically — the cavities that are too small or too unstable for human entry. If we coordinate on the voice-link, you can serve as our structural scout.”
Tokoyami nodded. Dark Shadow rustled.
“Todoroki — ice for the floor stabilization in the northeast quadrant. If you can reinforce the compromised section before we send anyone in there, that buys us at least another four minutes of safe access time.”
Todoroki looked at him steadily. “You’ve done this in your head in ninety seconds.”
“I’ve been thinking about rescue scenarios since I was eight,” Izuku said, and that was also simply true. “Ready?”
Three nods.
They moved.
Momo, creating materials on the move, was aware of several things simultaneously.
First: the structural read Midoriya had given at the perimeter was accurate. She verified it as they entered, cross-checking his collapse vector predictions against the physical reality of what she was seeing. He was right about the northeast quadrant. He was right about the secondary failure risk. He had read it correctly from outside, in ninety seconds, from a structural engineering knowledge base he’d apparently developed as a hobby.
She added this to her ongoing file.
Second: he was giving instructions without being performative about it. Not listen to me, I’m in charge — just information, delivered as information, leaving the actual decisions to the people best positioned to make them. When they found a trapped civilian in a cavity that Dark Shadow could reach more efficiently than any physical approach, he deferred immediately and completely to Tokoyami’s judgment on the extraction method.
Third: he was worried.
She noticed this because she’d been paying attention since the first day, and she’d noticed that Midoriya Izuku was usually very calm — not the performed calm of someone suppressing emotion but a genuine quietness, a natural-setting baseline that was probably a product of having had to manage anxiety for a long time and developed real tools for it. Today, in this rescue scenario, he was not calm. He was precise and effective and giving good instructions and also, underneath all of that, genuinely worried about getting people out.
Not about the score. Not about the evaluation. About the people.
She had expected to find, eventually, some angle in him — something calculating underneath the apparent sincerity, the way there usually was in people who were both intelligent and powerful. She had not found it yet.
She was still looking.
She was also, in parallel, beginning to consider the possibility that it wasn’t there.
They extracted seventeen of twenty civilians in eleven minutes.
The last three were in the northeast quadrant, where the structural risk was highest. Izuku went in alone for those — not because the others offered to let him, but because he went in before anyone could argue, moving through the unstable space with an economy of motion that used the building’s geometry rather than fighting it, finding paths through the debris that distributed his weight without triggering the failure point.
He got two out.
The third was under a load-bearing element that had partially shifted. Getting her out required moving the element, and moving the element required either the precision to do it without triggering the cascade, or the power to redirect the cascade once it started.
He did both.
Five percent, carefully metered, lifting with the exact counter-force needed to release without destabilizing.
The building shook. Settled.
He brought her out.
The buzzer sounded: exercise complete.
Outside, Todoroki looked at the building and then at Izuku.
“The element you moved,” he said. “If the force vector had been slightly wrong —”
“I know,” Izuku said. “I calculated it.”
“You were confident in the calculation.”
“I was confident in the calculation,” Izuku agreed. “I was not confident in the execution. Those are different things.” He exhaled. “I was lucky.”
Todoroki studied him. “That’s an honest answer.”
“It’s a true answer.”
“Most people would say they had it under control.”
Izuku thought about this.
“I had it under control and I was also aware of how close the margin was,” he said. “Both are true. Neither cancels the other out.” He looked at the building. “Real rescue is never fully under control. The goal is to keep reducing the margin.”
Todoroki was quiet.
Then: “Interesting.”
He said it the way people said interesting when they meant I’m not finished thinking about this.
Momo, standing nearby, wrote in her notebook: personal threshold for risk: higher than expected. Rationale: genuine concern for the rescued outweighs concern for self. Note: this is either his greatest asset or his most exploitable vulnerability, depending on the situation.
She looked at what she’d written.
Added: possibly both simultaneously.
Walking back from training, Momo found herself beside Midoriya by circumstance — Todoroki had peeled off left and Tokoyami right, and the path back to the main building went in one direction.
They walked in silence for a moment.
“You went in alone,” she said.
“You would have come too,” he said, immediately. “That’s why I went before you could offer.”
She stopped walking.
He stopped too, half a step later, and turned.
“That’s —” She tried several sentences in her head and discarded them. “You went into an unstable structure alone to prevent me from going into an unstable structure alongside you.”
“Todoroki’s ice and Tokoyami’s range were better applied at the extraction point,” he said. “And I could —” He stopped. Seemed to be picking his words carefully. “I could manage the risk. For myself.”
“Because of your power.”
“Because of my power,” he agreed. “It’s not heroics. It’s math. The person with the highest margin for error goes into the highest-risk position.”
Momo looked at him.
“That’s not entirely wrong,” she said. “It’s also not how most people think about risk allocation.”
“Most people think about risk allocation from their own perspective,” he said. “I try to think about it from the position of the situation.”
She started walking again. He fell back into step.
“You’re going to be a genuinely terrifying hero,” she said.
He blinked. “Is that a compliment?”
“I haven’t decided yet,” she said. And then, after a pause: “Yes. It is.”
He was quiet for a moment.
Then: “Your Creation work today — the rope and harness design. You had it in your library already.”
“I expanded my materials library this week,” she said. “Climbing equipment, rescue gear, emergency medical supply compositions. Seemed practical.”
“It was,” he said. “It saved time we needed.”
Another quiet stretch.
“You prepared for rescue training specifically,” he said. It wasn’t quite a question.
“I prepare for everything,” she said. “It’s what I do.”
“Me too,” he said.
They had reached the main building entrance.
He held the door.
She paused on the threshold — not because she needed him to hold it, because she absolutely did not, but because the gesture was genuine rather than performed and there was a difference — and looked at him.
“Early tomorrow?” she said.
It was a question, and also not quite a question.
“Early tomorrow,” he said.
That night, Izuku wrote in his notebook.
He wrote about the rescue exercise. He wrote about the northeast quadrant and the load calculations and what he’d do differently. He wrote about Dark Shadow’s coverage radius and Todoroki’s ice reinforcement angles and three things he wanted to research about structural failure cascades.
Then he wrote: She prepared specifically for what the exercise would need. She read the situation in advance and built the tools before the situation arrived. That’s a different kind of power than mine — it compounds with information. The more she knows, the more she can do. There’s no ceiling on it that isn’t a ceiling on human knowledge itself.
He paused.
Wrote: She called me terrifying and then said it was a compliment. I think both were true simultaneously.
He closed the notebook.
Outside, the city hummed its quiet nighttime hum.
He lay on his back and thought about the margin of the northeast quadrant, and Uraraka’s joy after the battle trial, and Aizawa’s measured assessments, and the way All Might had looked at him on the beach when the sand had exploded outward.
He thought about all of it, and underneath all of it, he felt the constant warm presence of One For All — seven generations of accumulated purpose, resting in him, waiting.
I’ll be worthy of it, he thought, not for the first time.
And then, falling asleep: I’ll be worthy of all of it.
The UA Sports Festival was the most-watched live broadcast in Japan.
More viewers than the national baseball finals. More viewers than New Year’s countdown specials. More viewers than anything that wasn’t a major villain incident, and sometimes more than those too, because villain incidents were frightening and the Sports Festival was frightening in a way that felt safe — contained, structured, watched over by professionals, the danger aesthetic without the danger reality.
Or so most viewers believed.
The students of Class 1-A, who had already survived a villain attack at the USJ facility and were operating on a significantly updated understanding of what danger actually meant, were somewhat less sentimental about the Festival.
“It’s a recruitment event,” Todoroki said, at breakfast the morning of. He said it the way he said most things — as a fact, delivered without particular affect. “Pro agencies watch the Festival to identify prospects. Performance here has direct career implications.”
“So we perform,” Bakugo said, from across the table, in the tone of someone who had never once in his life considered not performing.
“The obstacle race is first,” Iida said, consulting a schedule he had already memorized. “Then the cavalry battle. Then the tournament rounds. Statistically, students who perform well across all three stages attract more diverse agency interest than students who excel in only one.”
“Great,” Kaminari said. “Statistically.”
Izuku ate his rice and thought.
He had been thinking, for three days now, about a specific decision.
He’d discussed it with All Might — or rather, he’d raised it and All Might had listened with the serious, careful attention of a man who understood that some decisions had to be made by the person making them.
How much do I show?
The restraint had served a purpose. In the assessment, in the battle trial, in the rescue exercise — holding back had been tactically sound, had protected him from immediate scrutiny, had given him time to develop control without the pressure of constant external evaluation.
But the Festival was different.
The Festival was watched by every pro hero in Japan. By the Hero Commission. By UA’s own staff, evaluating students with an eye toward the heroics course’s advanced track. By, almost certainly, people who were not heroes and did not have good intentions toward people who displayed unusual power.
And it was also watched by the students of every other course, every other school, every other track — people who would become his colleagues and rivals and allies and possibly threats over the course of a career.
If he held back here — genuinely held back, not performed restraint but actually withheld himself — he was starting a narrative about who he was that would be difficult to correct later.
If he showed everything, he drew attention he might not be ready for.
If he showed enough — calibrated, intentional, not everything but not nothing —
He could set the terms.
He could decide what the story was.
The person with the highest margin for error goes into the highest-risk position. He’d said that to Momo a week ago, about structural risk. It applied here too, in a different way. He had more margin than almost anyone. The question was whether to use it.
He thought about the vestiges. The accumulated purpose of seven people who had carried this power before him and chosen, each of them, to stand between harm and the people who couldn’t protect themselves.
He thought about a small boy reading hero encyclopedias by flashlight.
He thought: enough hiding.
The obstacle race course extended out of the stadium and through a half-kilometer external circuit that included a minefield, a bot-obstacle zone, and a narrow passage through an artificial glacier that Todoroki — who had apparently decided the obstacle race was the appropriate venue to make a statement — had frozen solid in the first ninety seconds.
Izuku watched the glacier from three positions back in the pack and thought about it.
Then he ran up the wall of the frozen passage.
Not with One For All — with his own body, conditioned by ten months of training and supplemented by the enhanced baseline that carrying the power had produced in his musculature. He found handholds in the ice surface, moved laterally, reached the ceiling of the passage, moved hand-over-hand across it, and emerged on the far side ahead of ninety percent of the field.
Todoroki, already ahead, glanced back.
Their eyes met briefly.
Todoroki turned forward and kept running.
The minefield was next. Izuku was through the glacier in time to watch the leading cluster of students — Todoroki at the front, Bakugo behind him — hitting the mines, which produced concussive blasts rather than actual explosives, enough to knock students off their feet and scramble their footing.
He saw the mines’ distribution pattern.
He saw, in the same moment, that the safe path through was narrow and slow.
He reached inside himself. Just slightly. Just five percent, focused entirely into his legs, into the spring and extension of each stride.
He did not avoid the mines. He ran over them — touching the ground between detonations, leaping from impact to impact, using the blasts themselves as launch platforms, each explosion a fraction of a second behind his foot as he cleared the minefield in eleven strides.
He landed on the far side three steps ahead of Todoroki.
The stadium, watching on the external feed, produced a sound that was approximately the audio equivalent of a collective sharp intake of breath.
Bakugo, in third, used his explosions to accelerate. His face was a study in something very specific: the expression of a person who is both furious and absolutely alive.
Izuku ran.
He didn’t sprint — not at full extension, not yet. He ran with the measured, relentless pace of someone who had calculated exactly how much he needed to spend and was spending precisely that much. Five percent in his legs. Lungs and balance entirely his own. The ground sliding under him.
Todoroki caught up. They ran side by side for forty meters.
“You ran over the mines,” Todoroki said. He was not breathing hard, which was impressive.
“The timing window between detonation and next trigger was 0.3 seconds,” Izuku said. He was also not breathing hard, which was, on some level, not entirely fair. “The stride interval at that pace cleared it.”
“You calculated that in real time.”
“I calculated it before the race,” Izuku said. “Real time was just execution.”
Todoroki looked at him. It was a complicated look — not unfriendly, not friendly, the particular look of someone who was recalibrating.
Then Todoroki lengthened his stride and pulled ahead.
Izuku let him.
Not yet.
In the stands, Momo had her notebook open.
She had been writing steadily since the obstacle race began, but for the last forty seconds she had not written anything. She was simply watching.
Beside her, Jirou leaned over. “You okay?”
“I’m observing,” Momo said.
“You stopped writing.”
“Some things are better observed without the filter of notation.” She paused. “I’ll write afterward.”
On the track, Midoriya Izuku was running in second place, and it was clear to anyone watching carefully that second place was a choice.
The cavalry battle was a different kind of problem.
The mechanics: teams of three or four, one person mounted on the shoulders of teammates, ten-minute battle for headbands worth points based on obstacle race finish position. Izuku, as second-place finisher, had a headband worth 735 points — second most valuable on the field, after Todoroki’s 10,000,000-point first-place band.
Everyone would be coming for him.
He spent thirty seconds on team formation and came out of it with Uraraka, Iida, and — after a brief, direct conversation — Tokoyami. The logic was straightforward: Uraraka’s zero gravity gave them mobility options no other team could match; Iida’s engine gave them escape velocity; Tokoyami’s Dark Shadow was both offense and defense at range.
What he didn’t account for was Shinso Hitoshi, from the general course, who had a voice-based mind control quirk and who approached Izuku’s team in the sixth minute of the battle and said, very calmly: “You’re going to lose.”
Izuku responded automatically. “I don’t think —”
The world went sideways.
He was aware, distantly, that something had happened — his body was moving without his direction, hands reaching for his own headband, compliant and absent, someone else at the controls. He could see it happening. He was watching himself from somewhere inside himself, shouting at the glass.
Then his hand hit his own face.
The pain was sharp and immediate and real, and it broke the surface of something.
Snap out of it.
One For All pulsed — not output, not external force, just the internal electricity of it, a full-body current that was like being struck by your own heartbeat from the inside.
He came back.
Blinked.
His headband was still on his head. His hand was still reaching for it but hadn’t gotten there.
He looked at Shinso, who was staring at him with an expression that was moving rapidly from confident to uncertain.
“Nice quirk,” Izuku said, sincerely.
Then he called to his team: “Move. Now.”
They moved.
He did not win the cavalry battle. Todoroki’s team took the top score. Izuku’s team placed third — enough to advance to the tournament rounds.
In the break between phases, he found himself at the water station when Shinso appeared beside him.
The general course student was tall, with dark circles under his eyes and the particular expression of someone who had been told they weren’t good enough for the heroics course and had not accepted that information gracefully.
“How did you break it?” Shinso asked. Not aggressive. Just direct.
“I hurt myself,” Izuku said. “Pain interrupts the compliance.” He paused. “Your quirk would be devastating in real hero work. The field assessment just doesn’t score for it well.”
Shinso looked at him. “That’s why I’m not in heroics.”
“Then the assessment system is wrong,” Izuku said simply.
A pause.
“You don’t know me,” Shinso said.
“No,” Izuku agreed. “But I know what I saw, and what I saw was someone who had a crowd of thirty watching him try to control the second-highest-value target on the field, and he nearly pulled it off, and he did it with a quirk that produces no physical output and requires considerable social intelligence to deploy.” He shrugged. “You’d be extraordinary in rescue work. Villain interrogation. Crowd control situations. The things heroes actually spend most of their time on.”
Shinso was quiet.
“You’re strange,” he said.
“Yes,” Izuku agreed.
Shinso walked away.
Izuku drank his water.
Behind him, he heard a pen scratching.
He didn’t turn around. “How long have you been there?”
“Long enough,” Momo said.
He turned around. She was putting her pen away.
“The break is almost over,” she said. “You should know your tournament bracket. You’re matched against Shoji in the first round.”
“I know.”
“And then, if you advance, you’ll face either Todoroki or the general course finalist.” She paused. “Probably Todoroki.”
“I know,” he said again.
She looked at him steadily. “Are you going to keep holding back in the tournament?”
The question landed with the weight of something that had been building for a while.
“No,” he said.
Something in her expression — not quite surprise, not quite anticipation. Something between the two.
“Good,” she said.
The tournament rounds were single elimination, one-on-one, the entire stadium watching.
Shoji Mezo was formidable — his Dupli-Arms quirk gave him coverage and structural options that were legitimately difficult to counter at full extension. He was also disciplined, careful, and technically skilled in a way that rewarded patience.
Izuku fought him for ninety seconds.
It was a genuine fight — not a performance, not a demonstration. Izuku moved at roughly fifteen percent, which was enough to close range before Shoji’s extended arms could leverage effectively, and enough to redirect the grabs that made it through. He didn’t hit hard. He used positioning and momentum. At ninety-two seconds, he had Shoji at the ring boundary with a hold that the referee assessed as clean.
“I yield,” Shoji said. He sounded entirely reasonable about it.
The crowd applauded.
In the booth, Present Mic said something enthusiastic and lengthy. Aizawa, seated beside him, said one word: “Efficient.”
The semifinal was Todoroki.
They stood at opposite ends of the ring and the stadium went very quiet.
Todoroki’s father — Endeavor, the number two hero, a man whose relationship with his son was apparently somewhere between complicated and catastrophic — was visible in the stands, large and flame-haired and very still.
Todoroki himself was looking at Izuku with that particular contained quality that was his default state, but underneath it now was something else. Something that had been building for the whole Festival, probably for longer.
“I’m not going to use my left side,” Todoroki said. “I want you to know that.”
“That’s your choice,” Izuku said. “It’s a bad tactical decision.”
“I know.”
“Against most people in this tournament it would still work. Against me —” He paused. “Half your power is half your power, Todoroki. I’d rather fight you at full strength and lose than win against a version of you that’s already beaten itself.”
Todoroki looked at him for a long moment. Something moved in his face that didn’t reach the surface.
“Then you’d better be worth the full version,” he said.
The buzzer sounded.
Ice came.
It came in a wave — a genuine wave, not the careful measured applications Todoroki had been using all day but something bigger, fueled by something personal and unresolved. The temperature in the stadium dropped fifteen degrees in four seconds. The ring became a glacier. The audience in the front rows reflexively pulled coats and bags closer.
Izuku planted his feet.
He reached inside.
He thought: this is the moment.
He thought: control first. Power second. Both, together, now.
He punched.
Not at Todoroki. Downward, into the ice sheet, forty percent concentrated in that single strike.
The explosion of force vaporized the ice in a twenty-foot radius and sent a shockwave outward that cracked the ring’s boundaries and made the judges scramble backward and produced a sound like a building falling very fast.
The smoke cleared.
Izuku was standing in a circle of clear floor in the center of a field of demolished ice.
The stadium was absolutely silent.
Then it wasn’t.
They fought for four minutes.
It was the best fight Izuku had ever been in. Not because he won — he didn’t, quite, not cleanly — but because Todoroki, somewhere in the second minute, made a choice. A real one, internal and visible in the way he moved: he stopped holding back his left side.
The fire came.
The stadium lost its collective mind.
They met in the middle — ice and steam and fire and wind — and Izuku felt alive in a way that was different from training, different from controlled exercises, different from anything he’d experienced. This was full extension. This was two people testing their real limits against each other in a structured space where the cost of failure was bounded.
This was what it was supposed to be.
The final exchange was simultaneous: Todoroki’s full ice and fire combined, Izuku at sixty percent directed forward. The collision was loud enough to trigger the stadium’s emergency sound dampeners. The ring’s surface cracked down the middle.
They both went out of bounds.
The referee made a call.
Double ringout. Draw. Advancement to the final round determined by prior score.
Todoroki advanced.
Izuku landed on the boundary edge, breathing hard, and felt — not disappointment. Not failure. Something that was in the same family as satisfaction and adjacent to joy.
He looked up at the stands.
Momo was looking back.
She was not writing.
She was just watching him, with an expression that had let something through — not the careful observation, not the analytical distance. Something that was, very simply, moved.
She looked away first.
He looked at the ceiling and tried to catch his breath.
He won third place — the bronze match was against Tokoyami, who was a genuine challenge, and lasted six minutes before Izuku found the counter-approach that Dark Shadow’s light sensitivity opened up. He won it cleanly. He felt, afterward, the particular tiredness that came from spending a lot of yourself on something that mattered.
The medal ceremony was large and loud and Present Mic narrated it with unbounded enthusiasm.
Izuku stood on the third-place step and thought about how he’d spent the day. What he’d shown. What story he’d set in motion.
The Hero Commission was watching. He knew that. Pro agencies were watching. People with intentions that weren’t kind were probably watching too.
He had chosen to stop hiding.
There would be consequences to that.
He was ready for consequences.
Afterward, students spilled through the corridors in various states of exhilaration and exhaustion. Kirishima was loudly processing the day’s events with Kaminari. Uraraka had cried twice and was now aggressively cheerful about it. Bakugo had won first place and was aggressively not processing any emotion about that.
Izuku found a quiet hallway and sat on a bench and let himself be still for a moment.
He had been sitting for about four minutes when footsteps approached and Momo sat down beside him with the particular deliberateness of someone who had walked there on purpose.
They were quiet for a moment.
“Forty percent,” she said. “Against Todoroki. First punch.”
“Roughly,” he said.
“You’ve been showing me two to three percent in morning training.”
“Control exercises. Different context.”
“What’s your ceiling?”
He was quiet for a moment. Then: “I don’t know yet. Higher than today.”
She absorbed this.
“The fight with Todoroki,” she said. “When he used his left side. Your expression changed.”
He looked at her. “What did it change to?”
“You looked —” She seemed to be selecting from several accurate options. “Grateful,” she said finally. “You looked grateful.”
He thought about this.
“He made a real choice,” Izuku said. “About who he wanted to be. In front of everyone. I was glad to be part of what made that possible.” He paused. “Does that make sense?”
“More sense than most things people say after competitions,” she said.
Another silence. This one was comfortable — the specific comfort of two people who had found that they could share space without filling it unnecessarily.
“You stopped writing,” he said. “When Todoroki used his fire. You stopped writing and just watched.”
She was quiet for a moment. “Yes.”
“Why?”
“Because some things —” She paused. Seemed to be deciding how honest to be. “Because some things are worth just witnessing,” she said. “Without trying to analyze them in real time.”
He nodded.
“For what it’s worth,” he said, “when I looked at the stands after, you were the first person I saw.”
It was a simple sentence. He meant it simply. He was not, he thought, very good at being indirect about things that felt true.
Momo looked at him.
She had very dark, very direct eyes, and when she turned them on something with full attention, the effect was considerable.
“That’s interesting,” she said, after a moment.
“Is it?”
“It suggests your attention distribution under stress is uneven,” she said. “You should probably be aware of that for tactical purposes.”
“Right,” he said.
“It could be exploited.”
“Probably,” he agreed.
A pause.
“I’ll keep it in mind,” she said. And there was something at the edge of her voice — not quite a smile, not quite amusement, but in the vicinity of both.
He looked forward, at the corridor wall.
She did the same.
They sat in comfortable silence until Uraraka found them and insisted they join the class dinner, which was loud and chaotic and exactly what a good day should end with.
That night, Izuku wrote:
Today I decided to stop hiding.
The world saw more of what I am and what I carry. I don’t know what comes next because of that — the Hero Commission, the agencies, All For One, whoever is watching. I’ll deal with those things when they arrive.
What I know is this: I fought at something close to my real level for the first time since receiving the power, and it felt right. Not reckless. Right. Like I was finally taking up the correct amount of space.
Todoroki made a real choice today. I was glad to be there for it.
He paused.
Momo stopped writing when it mattered. She just watched. I think that might be the thing I keep coming back to. Not the notebooks or the analysis — though those are remarkable — but the fact that she knows when to put them down.
I don’t know what that means yet.
I think it means something.
He closed the notebook.
Outside, the city was bright and moving, full of people who had watched the Sports Festival and were arguing about it in restaurants and homes and on trains, building the narrative that would follow Izuku Midoriya into the next stage of his life.
He let them build it.
He had things to do.