Chapter 130: Just One More Miracle - I Died on the Court, Now I'm Back to Rule It - NovelsTime

I Died on the Court, Now I'm Back to Rule It

Chapter 130: Just One More Miracle

Author: IMMORTAL_BANANA
updatedAt: 2025-07-06

CHAPTER 130: JUST ONE MORE MIRACLE

The tension in the air was subtle, like a storm brewing behind the clouds.

Friday—the day the exam results would drop. The line between freedom and extra classes.

After that... summer vacation would begin.

But today wasn’t about rest. Not yet.

Once again, the Horizon basketball team gathered in their home court—dust motes swirling in the shafts of afternoon light, the faint squeak of sneakers on the polished floor echoing in the stillness.

At the front stood Sayaka stood in her PE uniform, marker in hand, in front of a dusty blackboard.

She turned, locking eyes with Dirga for a second.

That look—sharp and unreadable—made something twist in his chest.

She knew. Somehow, she always knew.

"Okay, listen up. This summer—it’s not just vacation. It’s war."

She wrote on the board in bold strokes:

2009 National Tournament

"Twelve teams. Eleven from each of the major regions, plus one wild card team. That wild card tournament will be held in Tokyo, from Wednesday to Friday next week."

She underlined it with a snap of her wrist.

National Team List

Hokkaidō: Sapporo North WolvesTōhoku: Sendai Seiryu HighKantō: Tokyo Kousei AcademyChūbu: Nagoya Raijin HighKansai: Toyonaka Horizon HighChūgoku: Okayama Ironcrest HighShikoku: Takamatsu Wavefront HighKyūshū: Fukuoka Yamabane HighOkinawa: Naha Southern Drakes HighHokuriku: Kanazawa Sekiryuu HighShin’etsu: Nagano Kurotsuki HighWildcard: To be decided

"The format’s different now," she continued, voice steady and clear. "This isn’t like regionals or prefecture play. This is madness."

She clicked again—two group columns appeared on the board.

"Two groups, six teams each.

Top four from each group advance to the knockout rounds."

The air tensed. Someone sucked in a breath.

"We’ll play one or two matches per day, over three to four days. It’s why the nationals are nicknamed the Week of Madness. You’ll be tested—not just skill-wise, but mentally, physically, and emotionally."

Sweat formed on the back of Dirga’s neck.

It was getting real.

"Next Saturday," Sayaka continued, "we head to Tokyo. Once we arrive, we’ll participate in a live draw—randomized placement into Group A or B."

She looked up from her clipboard, eyes narrowing.

"And Friday, is when exam results drop."

Her voice dropped a note.

"Anyone who fails," Sayaka said, voice hard as steel, "gets stuck in extra summer classes."

She let the words sink in.

"That means—no nationals. No dream. No madness. Just air conditioning, textbooks, and shame."

The entire gym froze in silence. Only the faint buzzing of cicadas outside broke the stillness.

SNAP!

Sayaka shut her clipboard like a gavel hitting a courtroom bench.

"Understand?!"

"YES MA’AM!"

The team roared in unison—sharp, almost military, adrenaline sparking in their throats.

...

Later after that they gathered again in the court. Not for drills. Not for scrimmages.

Just to breathe.

Dirga sat on the bleachers, leaning back with his hands behind his head. The lights above cast a soft amber glow over the polished wood floor.

"So..." he said casually, "do you guys think we passed?"

"Of course," Kaito answered without missing a beat, calm and confident.

Rikuya didn’t say a word—but the slight smirk on his face told the story. The guy was unshakable.

Rei and Hiroki shared a look and gave matching bitter smiles. Not quite confident. Not hopeless either. Just... human.

Taiga and Aizawa?

They burst into laughter and hugged each other like they’d already survived the apocalypse.

Dirga smiled. He hoped—God, he hoped.

...

Friday.

Judgment Day.

The school hallway was a storm of noise and nerves. Students were packed wall to wall, crowding the main bulletin board where the exam results would be posted.

The bell hadn’t even rung yet, and already it felt like New Year’s at a shrine. Breathless anticipation. Desperation. Silent prayers whispered into sleeves.

Dirga squeezed through the crowd, heart pounding like a war drum.

He caught a glimpse of Taiga’s orange hoodie struggling through the crowd alongside Rei and Hiroki.

"Wait for me there," Dirga muttered, and shoved forward.

He made it to the front.

The paper was pinned there like fate itself. White. Sharp. Brutal.

He scanned for his name—finger trembling—

Row after row—

There.

"Dirgantara Renji – Passed"

Middle of the pack.

Not top 10. Not bottom 10.

But he passed.

Dirga felt his knees go a little weak. His heart hit his ribs once, hard.

And then—relief.

He stepped back from the crowd, breathing like he’d just finished overtime.

Now for the others.

He spotted Rei and Hiroki nearby—both of their names, also in black, safely above the fail line.

They caught his eyes and raised a thumb.

Dirga nodded back.

Now... Taiga.

Dirga’s gut twisted. He stopped scanning from the top.

Started from the bottom—where the red names bled down like a wound.

Red. Red. Red.

Dirga’s chest tightened.

He kept scanning... and then—

Right at the border.

One name.

"Taiga Okabe – Passed."

In black.

The name directly beneath it? Red.

Dirga froze.

Then his breath rushed out of him like steam from a pressure valve.

Laughter welled up—sharp, almost painful. He nearly cried. He didn’t care.

Right on the edge. One step from disaster.

But Taiga made it.

The hallway was a storm—bodies pressing, students shouting, some crying in relief, others in heartbreak.

Dirga pushed through them like a swimmer in heavy current. The only thing louder than the crowd was the pounding in his ears.

"Now just Aizawa..."

He turned his gaze toward the second-year board—but the wave of students was too thick.

Too many shoulders, too many faces.

No matter how much he leaned or hopped or tried to peek between heads, he couldn’t see it.

Time wasn’t on his side.

The bell rang.

Class was starting.

He clenched his fist at his side, helpless.

He hadn’t seen the list—but in his heart, he whispered:

Please. Just one more miracle.

Let him pass.

Let them all play.

Class dragged like wet cement. The clock ticked too slow, then too fast.

Dirga could barely sit still.

And the moment the bell rang for dismissal, he was already moving.

The gym doors swung open.

The Horizon court—sunlight beaming through high windows—was already alive with voices.

Dirga stepped in.

There he was—Taiga.

Dancing across the court like a man possessed.

His shoes squeaked like they were celebrating too.

Hands up, head tilted back, spinning like a tornado of joy.

"HE PASSED, HE PASSED!" someone shouted.

Dirga smiled, then looked past him.

Where was Aizawa?

And then—he saw him.

Aizawa sat slumped on the bench. Elbows on knees. Head down.

Dirga’s heart dropped.

He stepped closer—

But then, slowly, Aizawa looked up.

And he grinned.

A huge, idiot grin.

Then—without warning—he leapt to his feet, ripped off his jersey, and let out a primal yell.

"I PAAAAAAASSED!"

He flailed into a wild, offbeat dance, the kind of thing that couldn’t be choreographed in a thousand years.

Taiga, of course, joined in, shirt off, doing a half-cartwheel into a fist pump.

Dirga blinked.

Then laughed.

Loud. Freely.

He didn’t care how ridiculous it looked.

He didn’t care that the janitor was staring.

He didn’t care if they got detention tomorrow.

They all passed.

Every damn one of them.

And that meant—

Tokyo was waiting.

Novel