Hero Trainer: Choke Me With Those Thighs! -
Chapter 54: The Legacy in the Shadow
The U.A. cafeteria was a hive of noise and energy. During the lunch break before the final round, the finalist students were replenishing their strength, but the atmosphere was charged with a palpable electricity. At the center of it all, like the eye of a hurricane, was Team Midoriya's table.
"I still can't believe it! We did it! We really did it!" Toru exclaimed, gesturing with a stick from her chicken skewer. "Nobody knew what to do! Monoma's face when Bakugo stole his headbands was absolutely epic! I wish I had a picture!"
"Our strategy succeeded due to 97.3% perfect execution," Momo declared with her usual, serene analysis as she sipped her tea. "The remaining 2.7% was pure luck that Bakugo-san's personality made him susceptible to Monoma's provocation at the opportune moment."
"Luck or not, that was awesome!" Kirishima's voice cut through the analysis. He, Kaminari, and Sero approached their table, trays in hand and admiring smiles on their faces. "Seriously, guys! That trap for Iida was pro-level! Nobody saw it coming!"
"Yeah, how did you know he'd use Recipro Burst?" Sero asked, scratching the back of his neck. "That's his secret move."
Izuku, who had been in a corner of the table, absorbed in his analysis notebook where he was already mapping out possible matchups for the final tournament, looked up for the first time.
"We didn't know for sure," he admitted, though his eyes shone with a half-truth. "But it was his only viable option for a high-speed attack capable of breaking our formation. It was a high probability, and we had to have a countermeasure prepared for the worst-case scenario."
"Dude, you think of everything," Kaminari said, shaking his head in amazement.
The camaraderie was genuine. For the first time, Class 1-A didn't see them as oddballs, but as formidable contenders. Their victory hadn't bred resentment, but a new level of respect.
It was then that a shadow fell over their table. The conversation died down. Shoto Todoroki stood beside them, his presence so cold it seemed to lower the air temperature. He ignored the others, his bicolored eyes fixed on a single person.
"Uraraka"—his voice, calm and glacial, cut through the festive atmosphere like a knife—"I need to speak with you. Alone."
The tone allowed no argument. It wasn't a request; it was a summons. Ochako, surprised, looked up from her plate of mochi. There was no fear in her gaze, but a direct curiosity. Her eyes met Izuku's for an instant. He didn't tell her what to do. He simply gave her a slight nod, a gesture that said, "I'm here. I trust your judgment."
Ochako stood up, leaving her dessert half-eaten. She barely reached Todoroki's shoulder, but she stood tall, unintimidated.
"Alright, Todoroki-san."
They both walked away from the noisy cafeteria, heading toward one of the quieter, more secluded service hallways. Izuku watched them go, his brow furrowed with worry. His analyst's, his protector's, instinct flared.
"This is weird," he muttered, more to himself than to the others. "I don't like it."
Momo looked at him, her expression intelligent and understanding.
"Todoroki-san's motivation is a variable we haven't been able to quantify. His fixation on Ochako-san is… atypical."
"I'm going to see what's going on," Izuku said, closing his notebook. "Just to make sure everything's okay. From a distance."
And with that, he slipped away from the table, following the trail of the festival's two most unexpected rivals.
The hallway was deserted, bathed in the dim light of emergency lamps. The cafeteria's bustle was a distant murmur. Todoroki and Ochako stood face to face, the silence between them heavy and expectant. Hidden around a corner, Izuku strained to listen, his heart pounding with an apprehension he couldn't explain. And from another angle, awkwardly concealed behind a vending machine that didn't offer enough cover for his explosive hair, Katsuki Bakugo was also watching, his curiosity overcoming his pride.
"I was defeated," Todoroki said finally, breaking the silence. His voice was flat, a simple statement of fact. "My strategy, my power… your coordination surpassed it all. It wasn't a defeat from lack of strength, but from a lack of… cohesion."
He looked at Ochako, and for the first time, Izuku saw something beyond the cold indifference in his eyes. He saw a hint of begrudging respect.
"At the USJ, and again today, you showed a power that isn't born from elite training or a perfect lineage. It's born from an overwhelming conviction. You fight with everything you have, for the people you care about. I don't understand it, but I respect it."
"That's why," Todoroki continued, his voice dropping a tone, becoming more personal, rawer. "Because I consider you my true rival in this festival, you deserve to know why I don't fight with everything I have."
There it is, Izuku thought. The core of the problem.
"My father, Endeavor, has an obsession," Todoroki began to recount. "To surpass All Might. He has always lived in his shadow, and that frustration consumed him. Since he couldn't achieve it himself, he devised another plan. A plan that included me. He arranged a Quirk Marriage. He bought my mother's family to get his hands on her ice Quirk, all for the sole purpose of conceiving a child who would inherit both powers. A child who could achieve his ambition for him. I was that child. For as long as I can remember, I have been trained, or rather, forged, to be a tool. His masterpiece. His legacy."
Izuku felt a chill. This was so much worse than he had imagined.
"My mother… she hated my left side," Todoroki said, his hand rising instinctively to brush the scar that covered his eye. "She said seeing a reflection of him in me was unbearable. His abuse, his obsession… they broke her. One day, she called me unbearable and… threw boiling water on my face."
The confession hung in the air, brutal and horrifying. Ochako choked back a gasp, bringing a hand to her mouth.
"And I… I agree with her," Todoroki admitted, his voice a broken whisper. "This fire power isn't mine. It's his. And I have sworn to reach the top without ever using it. I will repudiate his existence, and his, by winning only with the power I inherited from my mother. I will prove to him that I don't need his damn power to fulfill his stupid ambition."
I get it, Izuku thought from his hiding spot, his analytical mind connecting the pieces. It's not arrogance. It's self-loathing. The conflict isn't with his rivals; it's with half of himself. He's fighting with one hand tied behind his back, not for strategy, but out of principle. That doesn't make him weaker. It makes him dangerously unstable.
From behind the vending machine, Bakugo's reaction was very different.
Daddy issues? he thought with a sneer. How pathetic. Whining about your past instead of using all your damn power. But… interesting. So that's your weakness, you half-and-half bastard. Your pride is a cage. Now I know exactly where to press to shatter you.
Todoroki looked at Ochako again, his expression once more a mask of cold determination.
"To prove to my father that I can win without his legacy, a simple victory isn't enough. I have to defeat the opponent who has shown the strongest will and the most explosive power. In this festival, that's you, Uraraka."

In a bright hallway in the VIP stands, All Might, in his muscle form, ran into Endeavor.
"Endeavor. That was an impressive battle," All Might said, his smile a little more forced than usual. "Your son fought admirably. His control over his ice is exceptional."
Endeavor didn't even turn to look at him. His face was a mask of contained fury, his flames burning with greater intensity.
"He fought like a fool," he growled. "He was outmaneuvered tactically and lost control. In the end, he used my power out of pure rage and frustration, and still couldn't win. He's a disgrace. I don't need your empty compliments, All Might. I just need my creation to stop being such a monumental failure."
He strode away, leaving All Might with an expression of deep and genuine concern for young Shoto.

Back in the hallway, Ochako had heard the entire story, her expression shifting from surprise to a deep, painful empathy. But there was no pity in her eyes. There was understanding.
"Todoroki-san…" she said, her voice soft but incredibly firm. "I… I had no idea. I'm so sorry, truly, for everything you've had to go through." She took a moment, choosing her words carefully. "But you're right about one thing. We're all fighting for something here. For our dreams, for our families… or to free ourselves from the chains others put on us. Your fight is your own, and it's valid. But so is mine."
Todoroki looked surprised by her response. He had expected tears, or perhaps fear. He didn't expect that quiet strength. The silence stretched between them as he processed her words. Finally, as if there was nothing more to be said, he turned to leave.
"Wait!" Ochako's voice stopped him.
When he turned back, the empathy on her face had been replaced by a warrior's fire.
"I'm not going to pity you in the ring, Todoroki-san. I'm not going to hold back because you have a sad story. That would be an insult to both you and me."
She took a step forward, her stance defiant, her chin held high.
"So I'm going to defeat you, too! And I won't do it to repudiate your story, but to prove the strength of mine! I'm going to use all of my power, and all the strength my friends have given me! I will show you that the power born from trust and support is a thousand times stronger than one born from hatred and obligation!"
The challenge echoed in the silent hallway. It wasn't a promise to save him. It was a promise to defeat him.
Todoroki looked at her for a long second, and for the first time, a complex and unfamiliar emotion crossed his face. He left without another word, but Ochako's challenge had been seared into the air.
Izuku remained hidden, processing the immense emotional weight of what he had just heard. He understood the true stakes of the tournament. This wasn't a competition. It was a battle of ideologies, of broken legacies and hearts fighting to be free. And his friend, his teammate, the girl who had become a formidable force, was right in the center of the storm.
His role as a friend and a strategist had just become much deeper, and much more personal.
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