Central Seireitei


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The immediate aftermath of the battle saw the Gotei forces frantically scurrying about to restore their pride. There was devastation all over, some areas were hit worse than others. The death toll kept rising, the moans and groans of the injured and helplessness compounded their apparent failure. The tail end of the confrontation which took place in the Central Seireitei was a warning. Where others saw relief and respite from the onslaught. The silver haired Captain took heed of the inevitable. This. Wasn’t. Over.

It didn’t take central 46 to mobilize and take action. Part of Izanagi wished that they were wiped out completely. A bit pointless seeing as more would rise up to take their places. A never ending supply of cockroaches, surviving even when you don’t want them to. Regardless of Izanagi’s feelings towards the situation. He knew that something needed to be done as the Gotei squads were extremely vulnerable at the present moment. This is why the summons which required his presence at the first division grounds wasn’t surprising.

The Captain made his way there, curious to see what would transpire. His fellow Captains were already gathered in the meeting hall. The masked one stood silent awaiting the ceremony to begin. Then entered the one responsible for the meeting. And oh what an entrance it was. The lights dimmed as some degree of darkness fell over the room. Izanagi had a sudden thought.

“Org…y? Four guys, two girls?”.

Izanagi did the maths, however this wasn’t that kind of party. The mood changed quickly, Baldy's display poured holy water on his impure thoughts. Izanagi was his usual self, relaxed with a smile adorning his face which projected itself onto the mask. As Yuichiro made his way past the Captain, the man decided to reverse instead of continuing on his journey. And then it happened, the violation of his personal effects. A way to set the tone for the rest of the meeting. Izanagi’s gaze met Yuichiro’s as intended, both were unflinching. Izanagi moreso as he pondered the reasons behind such a move. The sound of the mask breaking echoed across the hall, brittle, final. For a moment Jushiro Izanagi did nothing. Then he laughed, not loudly, not mockingly, but softly with a breath of amusement, like a man who had just witnessed something…interesting.

His eyes never left the new commander’s. No anger there, no shock, no submission. Only curiosity.

“Careful my liege, I hear your type don’t survive too long around here”.

Making reference to Yuichiro’s predecessors in recent times. His words were loud enough for everyone to hear. It was clear to Izanagi what Yuichiro’s mission was on this day. He wanted to assert himself and he did not care how his peers might perceive it. A risky move and Izanagi applauded the boldness. However, asserting dominance without compliance is a fool’s errand.

From that point on, the maskless Captain cared very little for Yuichiro’s words. Too busy thinking about billing the commander for his mask and the potential improvements Michiya could make to the next edition of his mask. Things finally clicked back into place as the new Sotaicho addressed Izanagi for the third time. This time dishing out orders on what needed to be done. No response from the Captain, he was once again zoning out. In between all this, a lot had taken place, demotions and verbal spankings.

Curtains on the Past

The Present

A decade went by since the Arrancar invasion into the Seireitei. The immediate aftermath was amusing to say the least. Once again, they were summoned to the great halls of the first division. And like his fellow Captains, Izanagi too was present as they all walked in one after the other. Izanagi arrived maskless for now and with a cup of herbal tea. A wonderful brew that he was sipping on. A pair of earrings dangling from his earlobes as he took his position. A brief exchange of pleasantries between himself and the commander took place. It was a little less tense compared to the first time they shared the same space.

Looking around the room, Izanagi laid eyes upon the new 9th division Captain and was quite frankly shocked. The man shook his head and a mischievous grin formed. Captain Senko of the 2nd vision started things off by giving a rather detailed report. Only for the 4th division Captain Itaku to interject. Izanagi glanced over at both before taking a sip of his tea.

“This is gonna be good”.

The man thought. And it was. Izanagi was left feeling amused by Itaku’s relaxed nature and demeanour as he delivered his own report. The thumbs up from Itaku rounded everything up perfectly. The 9th division Captain was next up, not that she was present ten years ago. None of that really mattered now.

“Bro? I see how it is”.

Izanagi’s smile of mischief remained the same, awaiting his turn to address his peers. After Captain Yugure’s report, there was a moment of silence as it was now Izanagi’s turn to address the room. A quick and audible slurp of his tea took place before a clearing of the throat. Leaning forward and adjusting his shoulders to face the commander’s direction. Jushiro Izanagi, Captain of the tenth division had to address something. The injustice which took place a decade ago.

“Sotaicho, ya ain't gonna say nothing about our sister sporting a mask in these halls? I mean its a half-face mask covering but that ain't the point.

Is this like one rule for thou?” he said pointing at himself “And not the same for thee” he asked with a finger directed at Captain Yugure. There was a certain degree of seriousness behind his comical reaction.

At the same time his own mask began to materialise, only covering half his face. The mask covering was vertical as opposed to Yugure’s which covered the bottom half of her face. A single bull’s horn protruded from the mask as it completed its manifestation and contortion. Izanagi’s way of saying what he thought of the situation without saying much else. The technology afforded to him by the 12th division proved to be very useful in concealing his mask until it was needed.

Things felt awkward for a moment before he continued. “Oh I see how it is”. His words were followed by a snicker and a chuckle to the point of almost spilling his tea. The Captain soon straightened up and sighed before proceeding to give his own report.

“In other news, things are progressing as per your request. Increased patrols and the balance of souls within Naruki City is being maintained. It’s been quiet, even still my squad members remain at the ready and are reporting on any and everything no matter how random it may seem”.

Izanagi proceeded to raise his cup in the commander’s direction before proceeding to take any sip of his warm beverage. He may have broken all protocols, it's just one of those things Commander Yuichiro will have to get used to when dealing with Izanagi. He will do whatever makes him happy despite the potential backlash. There he was now with a innocent look on his face, ready for the potential earful he was about to receive. A glance in Captain Yugure's direction and a wink showed he harboured no ill-will towards her.
 

Adonai

Roleplay Coordinator
Staff member
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Silence and a smile, that is all Taro has given this meeting thus far as each of these “Captains” make their reports. In his eyes they bring utter disgrace to the Haori they wear, each and every one of them, of course he absolves himself from such criticisms. One by one they speak, some droning on and on, others making light of the situation while one is so new and fresh to her station that she has nothing to contribute to this meeting whatsoever. A garbled mess of flawed and incorrect Cogs, forcing the machine to work and push onward, this is all borrowed time at best. He doesn’t bother trying to speak out of turn, he waits for his turn simply out of respect for the chain of command that the rank of Captain Commander has and not the man holding it. Taro is not some barbarian, he doesn’t speak without critically thinking about the things he says so when he does get his turn he plans to cut deep with his words.

Taro Speaks
”Members of the Shihoin clan, need I remind you of your place? You both stand in positions of power within the Gotei Thirteen. A place where you should not have any considering what catastrophes your Clan brought to the Soul Society as a whole with the Tsunayashiro clan. Instead of reassuring us and Central Forty Six that the errors of the past will not happen again you are moving along as if nothing has happened. But that’s fine, the Date will always be here to remind you and know that your secrets are not safe with us, your humble shadows.”

Taro seeks to knock the wind out of their sails since they are both flying rather high assuming there to be no obstructions. He says all this with a chastising smile on his face. In this moment, the two people he is targeting are no longer seen as Captain’s in his eyes, himself included. This was a direct political threat to both of them, to let them know they are being heavily watched and not just by him. The Date only came out of their shadows due to the mess the Great Clans left in the wake of the Civil War and their greedy grasp at control over Soul Society. It seems like these two, in particular, have forgotten that.
”That aside, I don’t have much to report. My seated members and Lieutenant have fanned out, training Shinigami who show great aptitude for combat across various Divisions, as you ordered. I have also been making my rounds in the Academy, however the recruits are subpar. Their lofty aspirations and dreams blind them to the reality of our world. We are getting fodder at best out of the Academy, I alone cannot overturn the degradation of our future generation. Coddling will only make the Scrap Metal weaker.”

That final sentence was a jab at Inpei and her teaching style. Taro looks around at his fellow Captain’s, his chastising smile ever present on his face as if he is looking at insecurities to poke at. He doesn’t need to work hard, he knows where to hit each and every one of them, he decides to look forward and targets the big fish in the room, Yūichirō Shihōin.
”Academy Cog, you tread on thin ice. Your humility as a dean seems to have been lost in transition when you became Commander. Allow me to bring you back down from Heaven to Earth. Waving idle threats about us is meaningless, as you can see, three out of the five of us do not take this seriously. Ten years ago you threatened to kill us if it suited your means…”

Taro chuckles to himself, shaking his head as he recounts the words and every detail of that first meeting. He slowly begins opening eyes, the green iris revealing the monster that Taro truly is.
”I cannot speak for these other Cogs but do not threaten me so casually or else I will remind you that your rank is just that, a rank, not a measure of your strength. I’ve dealt with enough fools who threaten my well being while forgetting to keep themselves safe. At the end of it all, all they had were words, nothing more. Throwing your rank around is a bad look, Shihōin.”

He speaks their clan name like it's a slur. There is venom and bite to it and not a shred of respect behind them. He closes his eyes, looking forward once more and only brings silence to the room before gesturing towards the Commander himself.
”I believe it is now your turn to speak, Commander Cog.”


 

Frea

New member
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It felt like only yesterday that Ishiko had graduated from the academy and was immediately placed into the first division, at the recommendation of Captain Commander Shihoin. Of course, naturally, Ishiko was trained under Yuichiro during her time in the academy. It was her determination and wit that impressed him, hence why he requested her in the first division. Of course, naturally, she was very much honoured to take a place, even if it meant that she was just an average unseated officer. After all, she wouldn’t be able to handle the capabilities of being a seated officer, especially after just graduating. Though, despite getting in the most respected division, at least in her eyes, it didn’t mean she was skilled, and that be it - no. She is far from being a master, let alone an expert in many things, but that didn’t stop Ishiko from achieving those goals; in fact, she merely requested that her captain continue training sessions, but in the current time, it’s been someone else.

She did request a training session earlier from Captain Shihoin; however, being a captain commander and all, he was busy and currently in a meeting with the other captains. Ishiko understood this and instead went to see another reliable source, Hyoroshi Iwamura, whom she felt was the most applicable. Hyoroshi Iwamura. Yes, the big, scary dog-man whom some of her squadmates fear due to his size. Though despite the incredible height difference between her and Iwamura, she wasn’t scared. She knew how it felt to be terrified of her because she is so abnormally tall for a woman. When she did ask him, politely, he couldn’t be happier to help out with training, Zanjutsu training.

Heavy breath was heard in the room, the blistering cracks of wood colliding with the wind, also filled the walls of the training room, clacking, whistling sounds also echoed. Ishiko took heavy breaths between collisions to catch her breath, her arms bent backwards over her head, ready strike another blow towards Hyoroshi. Lunging forward, striking the bokken towards Hyoroshi’s broad and muscular shoulder. Though the bokken never landed directly upon his shoulder, there was a gust of wind moving his soft white fur, and she cracked a smile in delight. She at least made some progress, though to her dismay it was just a gentle gust of wind from the open shoji screens of the training room.

“Not enough. Again,”
-
-
“Until you can knock me into the wall.”


She heard his voice, it was gruff and flat, he wasn’t asking but rather a gentle demand. She nodded and restarted her position, her feet gliding across the wooden floorboards to the desired destination. Her arms raised once again in a position she resumed, and she took in the breeze that was coming through. She took a deep breath as she briefly closed her eyes to compose herself. If he wanted her to knock him off his feet or even make him go into the wall, she could certainly try; if she failed again, she wasn’t going to give up that easily until she could do so. Her hands gripped the bokken tightly, her shoulders were relaxed, showing her upper compsture, her eyes were fixated on him, like she wanted to tame him, perhaps her eyes were wanting to say “sit boy” in a demanding tone, her quads tightened, becoming hard to the touch, and tension was built up in them showing her anxiety seeping through.

For her, this was the best she could do, the best position she could come up with. There was an uncomfortable atmosphere in the room, not because of the words that were said, but rather it was her stance that told him to come and correct. Ishiko’s eyes followed her 4th seat’s movements as he walked around her, twisting her head to the right side to watch him position himself to fix her mistake in her stance. She felt his large hands grasping her arms. She flushed a little at the fact of how incredibly soft his hands were. Well, it was to be expected, as he was full of fur. His voice pierced through her ears, making her snap out of her little thoughts and snap her head back around to pay attention. She took note that it wasn’t her stance that was the problem; it was the fact that it was lacking a critical element. Her reiatsu concentration was lacking. She took a moment to adjust her position and focused on building up the reiatsu within her arms, which stood at attention as her arms were raised at the right angle above her head. Her arms helped her guide. Ishiko’s eyes closed as she concentrated more of reiatsu in her arms.

“Swing!”

She didn’t notice that Iwamura returned to his position as she was too busy focusing on her buildup. It was only when she heard his shout of telling her to release, which she did as her eyes opened, that her arms swung down in a fast-paced motion, cutting through the wind, making a large gust of wind of its own. Her maroon reiatsu released with the force of the wind that was directed towards the fourth seat, her peer. It wasn’t the most powerful as it could be, but it was a start on gaining a technique for her. At most, the technique would just move the higher-up a little - perhaps knocking him off a peg or two. She had a wide grin of happiness at the fact that she achieved something during the exercise, even if it was something small to begin with. She went towards the upper seatsman and bowed in great respect and spoke up.

“Thank you, Iwamura-san”

They continued the training for roughly an hour. Focusing on the same technique he just taught her. Each time, the strength would get better and more powerful as she got used to how to prepare the stance, focusing and concentrating on building up her reiatsu in the much-needed areas, but also, they went back to basics a few times just to freshen up Ishiko’s mind. Hyoroshi was not just teaching Ishiko tricks and techniques but also discipline, valuable lessons at that, during their session.

The training continued until they had a break, during which she noticed how Hyoroshi stood to attention and strolled outside, which piqued her curiosity. She followed him, seeing how there was paper floating down everywhere in the sky like snowflakes, rain. She bent her knees to pick up the closest pamphlet she could find. She studied the text and tilted her head at the same time as Hyoroshi did. A dinner hosted by the Tsunayashiro clan… huh, interesting, she heard they were a great noble family, why would they want to invite just anyone to the dinner party? It piqued her suspicions about this. She gently folded the paper into quarters and placed it in her sleeve. Ishiko heard her superior’s voice mumbling out his thoughts and gave her two cents towards him, as she met his gaze.

“I agree that it would be useful for members of the first division be there, perhaps if we could go together with Captain Shihoin? Maybe he wants to go as well.”

Though he reminded her that she still had duties to fulfil, so did he. She thought about his words on the dinner party, like an extra “break” for them, especially after training. She noticed his little nod and soft grin, which she returned.

"Hyoroshi-san, I’d love to take a walk with you there; Though i do wonder if Commander Captain Shihoin will attend?"

Once she finished talking, he started to go off towards the direction of going to wherever the dinner party. Ishiko stood for a minute or two to compose herself, and she decided to wait a little longer, to consider where and what to do. She didn’t want to disrespect her captain, but at the same time, she didn’t want to disrespect Hyoroshi either. Not to disappoint her captain, she had decided to go with Hyoroshi instead, after all, Yuichiro would understand that they did not want to wait. She gracefully jogged up behind Hyoroshi and followed him.

Eventually, the pair arrived at the estate, Ishiko being close behind Hyoroshi, almost hiding behind him as she wasn’t used to such social situations. Though from her looking towards within the room Hyoroshi was entering, she saw a few guests, A very tall male who looked like he was the one who was hosting the dinner, A woman who was slender yet formed in the right places next to them, a male with similar hair colour to hers, a boy with bluish-purplish hair that looked too young to be a shinigami and there was two others she couldn’t quite see as the doors just shut in front of her.

Of course, she looked confused. The way the flyers spread around made it seem anyone was welcome, and she just followed Hyoroshi blindly, as she wasn’t used to social interactions and being new compared to the others, it may seem that she had disrespected the person. Which she hoped she didn’t do. What was this tsunayashiro like? What were the others like? Maybe so, she looked down and sighed softly towards herself, not knowing what do next, she started to walk back to the waiting room. All she hoped for was that Hyoroshi was having a good time and not have horrible experience; she also hoped he would gain intel and relay it back to their captain.

As she entered the waiting room, she went into the furthest corner she could think of. Her anxiety easily filled the room, unknowning what punishment she might require, though she was overthinking. Trying to calm her nerves, she lifted her right hand and started to bite her thumbnail.​
 
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HankMoody

Member
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“Kagi Senkō, Captain of the Second Division. Commander‑in‑Chief of the Onmitsukidō.” began the Captain of Division Two. He then carried on with the following report.
“Regarding the assignment issued to the Second Division concerning the disturbances in the World of the Living, the matter was delegated through the established chain of command without delay, as operational efficiency required immediate response and the maintenance of all ongoing internal duties. Vice‑Captain Kinko received the directive through secured channels and executed the appropriate protocols, selecting Third Seat Nairaishi as the field operative due to his prior reconnaissance experience, his familiarity with the region, and his demonstrated capacity for silent engagement under pressure.

Nairaishi entered the World of the Living without incident, maintained full concealment throughout the operation, and conducted a systematic survey of the designated sectors, confirming that the spiritual imbalance originally reported had not escalated beyond localized anomalies. He identified no hostile entities of significant threat level, neutralized minor disturbances without collateral exposure, and ensured that no civilian awareness was triggered at any stage of the mission.”
He paused fairly briefly before continuing on.

The commander adjusted his posture as he spoke, cupping his chin and mouth with his left hand.
“All intelligence gathered was transmitted through encrypted channels and verified against existing records, confirming that the instability was environmental rather than orchestrated. No foreign interference, no Hollow congregation patterns, and no signs of coordinated activity were detected. The mission concluded with zero casualties, zero collateral damage, and zero deviation from protocol.” he finished. The commander was rather impressed with the exact detail of the report, and quite enjoyed the thoroughness of the Captain's zeal. It was clear he was looking to reassert himself after a poor showing some years ago in battle.
“In summary, the assignment was completed t--” “Yes yes, nothing notable was discovered and they reported everything to who they needed to report to. Excellent." The violet-haired visored had quickly interjected, evidently bored of the ‘long and dragged out’ report to, in his eyes, essentially feeling as though they informed them all of nothing.

Throughout the disruption, he upheld a proud grin upon his face, clapping his hands together and ‘excitedly’ going to give his own reports—albeit in a manner that was non-uniformed and rather informal. It appeared comical to an outsider looking in, particularly to Jushiro Izanagi who casually sipped his cup of tea before the interjection carried.
“Hey everyone! Seems I’m next!” he says, batting an eyelash. The commander’s gaze lazily shifted towards the ‘beacon’ among his lighthouses, hands still covering his mouth where the corners seemed to sharpen not out of annoyance, but surprise at the rather bold declaration of what followed. "We at Fourth got some new competent members! Yay for us right? Now, regarding those med stations you wanted built at each division, I....didn't do that, teehee."

Playfully gesturing as he proudly declares he disobeyed a direct order from his new commander-in-chief. The room went rather flat, almost as if whatever life that dwelled there amongst the combined weight of their enormous reiatsu instantly died or gave up. The commander's eyes never shifted, wavered nor intensified upon the hearing of that information, instead what happened was his index and middle finger were propped up to support the long side of his head as he awaited the rest of the explanation of the use of his time.
"While I understand the reasoning in theory, in practice it's too risky. Especially as the past invasion has proven how incapable we are on a large scale threat. While having members there would be good, their presence there is meaningless if they die before they're able to treat anyone because those they're meant to treat are incapable of protecting them." he followed. The air returned and thus, some level of calm. For now. The Fourth Division Captain then continued on—sighing before shrugging his shoulders. “Instead, I've had the ambitious Fuu and our newbies to coordinate with the respective divisions of the Gotei 13. During training sessions members of the Fourth are dispatched there so that the squad members of that Division can train as hard as they can and want! Those from the Fourth on scene will treat them allowing them to continue training and once training is complete they return to the fourth to coordinate and pool what has been learned from our fellow Shinigami! It also allows us to swap those who are dispatched so everyone can get a turn and experience." he seemed to finalize.

The commander couldn’t help but realize how young he was, even younger than his own sister who had only recently become a captain in her own right. Could this behavior have been the result of that immaturity? He was surprisingly bubbly for someone who housed a hollow within them, maybe there was a reason for that. Before addressing his altered orders, Fourth’s Captain appeared to have one final word on the matter.
“This has helped in keeping us active and dare I say busier at the Fourth, but has also allowed us to further train and hone our Kaido and Reiryoku Control! That's all from me!"

The commander’s gaze still didn’t waver. The dean was used to being tested, believing that everyday presented all forms of life with tests and forced alternative thinking in one way or another. The students he taught—even the ones he didn’t, their instructors, the other shinigami, seated officers, lieutenants and even Captains. They all were tested at one point or another and the commander was no exception to that rule. He watched as Itaku rocked back and forth playfully, and eventually broke into a small grin himself. One thing that wasn’t lost on him, is that to them—he is an unknown, unproven commodity chosen to oversee them without them having any say in who ultimately was chosen to lead them. He hadn’t earned the respect of the room yet, not in its entirety. But that was fine. He intended for them to get to know him, as they may be unaware that he is silently auditing them all individually, categorically and intimately.

Moving on, naturally his gaze fell to the next Captain in line for a report, one that he particularly cared about as it would be her first. Curiosity and pride filled within him, as his sister was now due to address the commander and her new peers. He could tell she was nervous, instinctively beginning to call her brother as she did when she arrived. He didn’t mind, though he was glad that she was quick to ‘code-switch’, quickly correcting herself to say ‘Captain-Commander’ instead.

“Yūgure Shihōin,” she said flatly. Catching the attention of her leader, she continued. “Captain of the Ninth Division. As I am new to my post, my report is limited to current operations. The Ninth Division has been active in the development of invasion response strategies, with the intent of ensuring we are not unprepared in the event of another large-scale incursion.” Letting the words settle, she carried on.
“Our plans prioritize layered engagement. Frontline suppression to halt initial advances, followed by rear containment to prevent flanking or internal collapse. Rapid redeployment units are designated to respond to shifting threats without delay.” she said. “In upcoming rotations, I plan to select representative squad members to serve in these units based on specialization and adaptability. Kishō Date will be positioned at the front lines, acting as primary force output. Kuwashii Hakunetsu will be assigned rear control, ensuring containment integrity and communication stability. The Ninth Division maintains open channels with all squads. Casualty reports are logged and updated continuously. Dead, missing, and absent without leave will be accounted for with no exceptions.” she finished. “That is all.” She then stepped back into place, allowing silence to fill the chambers once more.

His gaze remained fixed on her. Not out of disappointment or critique, but hidden love and admiration. “Well done, Captain Shihōin. I am very proud of you,” was all he thought. However, all that left his lips were…
“Excellent Captain Yūgure. Worry little about the length of the report, but the content it harbors. Small, medium or large—all information is welcomed.” he said to her directly.

A greatly audible ‘slurp’ broke the room, coming from Jushiro himself who appeared to gear up to give his own report as prescribed.
“Sotaicho, ya ain't gonna say nothing about your sister sporting a mask in these halls? I mean it's a half-face mask covering but that ain't the point. Is this like one rule for thou?” pointing to himself as the primary example, “And not the same for thee?” he asked while directly pointing towards his sister.

While appearing to be an attempt at light humor, he knew there was a level of seriousness that existed within the minor absurdity of the question—watching the Tenth Division captain re-adorn a rather ugly rendition of his new mask than the one he destroyed a decade ago. A single raised eyebrow came from the commander, and much like Itaku before him, he disobeyed an order.
“In other news, things are progressing as per your request. Increased patrols and the balance of souls within Naruki City is being maintained. It’s been quiet, even still my squad members remain at the ready and are reporting on any and everything no matter how random it may seem.” he finished with his teacup raised as if in solidarity with his commander before taking a healthy sip as he finished his very brief report.

The dean sighed, palming his face. He didn’t think that a shinigami would cause him this much trouble, then again—he thought back to when he asked Jaakuna to be the Hakuda instructor and how many teeth that endeavor alone required to be pulled before making certain assurances in her favor.

He soon lifted his head, and his gaze sailed down the aisle, finally landing on the most volatile and fairly particular Shinigami amongst the ones in his employ—Captain Tarō Date. While the two did not know each other personally, the grudge and discontent the Date harbored towards the newly named Shihōin commander was palpable and weighty. While he may have been indifferent or rather uncaring to his naming of becoming commander, the Date’s feelings regarding the former Captain of Twelfth Division and her removal from that role may have sparked animosity or anger found within the Eleventh’s Captain. He was the only one who appeared visibly unsettled upon Shibuya’s demotion, despite his care to conceal it—the Date clansmen whether he had a deeper relationship with his former peer clearly revealed that he is far more than meets the cruel man that he portrays himself to be.

Without any baited breath, Captain Date began his rather stinging soliloquy.

”Members of the Shihoin clan, need I remind you of your place? You both stand in positions of power within the Gotei Thirteen. A place where you should not have any considering what catastrophes your Clan brought to the Soul Society as a whole with the Tsunayashiro clan. Instead of reassuring us and Central Forty Six that the errors of the past will not happen again you are moving along as if nothing has happened. But that’s fine, the Date will always be here to remind you and know that your secrets are not safe with us, your humble shadows.” he boldly began.

The commander and the fox’s gaze met. Yūichirō was unflinching at the declaration—unfazed was the proper term. Yūichirō remained largely outside of clan affairs for many, many years. He has deferred responsibility to those of his clan, more so his sister as he pursued more academic goals regarding the school system of Shinigami. He even allowed his cousin (as misguided as his intentions and actions may be) to have a part in the familial ecosystem, and he never regretted doing so—even now. With his promotion to commander, and Yūgure’s to Captain, he had much less concern or need to play an active role within the family outside of being an advisor. Regardless of any perceived reputation that the Date may have of the Shihōin, that perception was likely to change with Yūgure stepping up to take the reins of the family. He allowed Tarō to aggressively threaten him without a failure in beat.
”That aside, I don’t have much to report. My seated members and Lieutenant have fanned out, training Shinigami who show great aptitude for combat across various Divisions, as you ordered. I have also been making my rounds in the Academy, however the recruits are subpar. Their lofty aspirations and dreams blind them to the reality of our world. We are getting fodder at best out of the Academy, I alone cannot overturn the degradation of our future generation. Coddling will only make the Scrap Metal weaker.”

“Recruits are subpar…or are you merely beating them into such uselessness and deeming them to be ‘scrap metal’...?” he thought.

He was very aware of the teaching style that the Date had employed as of late, and while he found value in the harshness of the instructor's methods—as there was truth in his words. The nurturing aspect of being a teacher was very lost on him. He had received countless complaints of his rather angry and bold teaching style from both instructors and students alike. He was monitoring the situation closely whether the Date knew it or not, and he wasn’t impressed with his rather brutal methods. The commander saw this exactly for what it was—classic noble insolence and arrogance masked as begrudging adherence to duty and ‘holier than thou’ behaviour. He’s seen it before. He continued to allow the fox to whine and wail, like a petulant baby.

”Academy Cog, you tread on thin ice. Your humility as a dean seems to have been lost in transition when you became Commander. Allow me to bring you back down from Heaven to Earth. Waving idle threats about us is meaningless, as you can see, three out of the five of us do not take this seriously. Ten years ago you threatened to kill us if it suited your means…” he chuckled before he carried on, recounting the words spoken to them many years ago before continuing on. ”I cannot speak for these other Cogs but do not threaten me so casually or else I will remind you that your rank is just that, a rank, not a measure of your strength. I’ve dealt with enough fools who threaten my well being while forgetting to keep themselves safe. At the end of it all, all they had were words, nothing more. Throwing your rank around is a bad look, Shihōin.”

The commander kept staring at Tarō, still unfazed and unamused by his threats. He gave him some more time on stage to perform his stand-up set before he decided to address the room of his constituents.
”I believe it is now your turn to speak, Commander Cog.” He finished

Yūichirō then raised himself from his seat and began to slowly make his way down the aisle as he did some years ago.
“Very well. Thank you for the floor, Captain Date. If I required threats in place of discipline, I would have asked for them. You were instructed. You complied. That is all that is required of you. Do not confuse that with endorsement, do not mistake compliance for influence, nor obedience for immunity. Remember your station—and your function within it. Let us move on.”

He then made his way down the aisle to address each Captain individually, stopping short of Kagi.
“Thank you for the detailed report Captain Senkō. Continue operations as currently directed, and continue funneling reports to central command. The diligence of Squad Two has been noted,” he said, nodding to the raven-haired captain as he moved onto the handsome emerald-eyed visored. As he observed him, and his shit-eating grin, he closed his eyes briefly and shook his head. “Captain Ōhei. You identified a flaw in execution, that much I acknowledge. You did not have the authority to discard the directive, however, the structure you’ve implemented is functional. Should the data support that structure in the future, I will defer all matters regarding medical approach rightly to you. For now, you will continue as you are. Your model will remain in place, however I want quarterly reports from each shinigami stationed in those places. This is not approval, this is observation.”

He nodded to them both before moving on to the newcomer amongst them, his sister. He stopped just short of her, towering over her slender frame much like he once did when she was younger.
“Captain Shihōin.” He did well to hide it, but he gave her a small wink while he removed the light black fabric from her mouth before he continued speaking. “Your report is accepted. However, do well to avoid this in my hall.” he said as kind as he could. He grinned as he moved towards Jushiro Izanagi, whose mask was once again clad on his face.

“A rather ugly one this time around….” the commander thought.

Immediately he removed it from his face as he had done years ago, but instead of breaking it, he took the captain's palm and gently placed it back into his possession with a raised eyebrow.

“Captain Izanagi. I will remind you that leadership is not a performance conducted for the benefit of those watching. Posturing alongside louder voices does not strengthen command—it dilutes it. You were not appointed to echo the room. You were appointed to guide it. When captains begin measuring themselves by the noise of the room, leadership dies quietly. Strength is not found in puffed chests or borrowed resolve. Ask yourself plainly: are you here to follow the temperature of the hall, or to set it? A captain does not need permission to stand apart.” and without another word, he walked away from him—hopefully sparking some individuality in his mind.

He then walked down to Tarō, their gaze never missing each other. While neither were afraid of one another, and it was clear respect was only tied to his rank and not his individuality as a Shinigami. He didn’t care if he was liked, or hated. He just required them to listen when he spoke, and despite the open threats made towards him and his familial house, the commander chose to remain on task.
“Captain Date. You’ve made clear that you disdain the role of instructor, despite the cultivation you have provided the academy the last decade, I must remind you—your job was to nurture the souls that walk into that building. Not grind them down into something unrecognizable or ‘useless’. As of today, I am relieving you of your duties as instructor at the academy. You are still to recruit the most apt students from the academy, however your direct presence on campus is no longer required. Maybe now you’ll have time to find ‘useful’ machinery elsewhere.” he said. He let that hang in the air for a moment before breaking his gaze and proceeding back down the aisle to continue his address.
“Now that leaves my own report. Over the last decade, we have managed to safely conduct our affairs and keep conflicts on the scale such as the last to a minimum, and for that you have my thanks. As you all know, with the death of Shizukana Kurayami, the Lieutenant of Fifth Division, Oyuki Gekka and Lieutenant of Twelfth Division, Michiya Senkō have been searching for the arrancars Estarossa Sangrados and Emilia Laurena Kastile within Hueco Mundo for the last several years. I never told you the purpose of this mission originally but I feel the time is now upon us.” he intoned.
“I have reason to believe they hold more information on the parts belonging to the Soul King. It was revealed that the invading hollows army harbored pieces from the Reiō. I intend to find out how they came into their possession and what that may mean for their existence and our own. Furthermore, the activity of the hollows has dwindled greatly over the last decade. While that is a boon, and indirectly tied to our own efforts—it remains just that, indirect. I wish to investigate that further upon the return of the Lieutenants. For now, you are all to continue your given directives and await further command.” he said. He had now reached back to the end of the hall, standing just before the chair in which he previously sat.
“Lastly, I need your recommendations for the Bankai Aptitude program. As it currently stands, Hyoroshi Iwamura is the only candidate signed on for instruction, recommended by Shizukana herself before her passing. I will receive those names now, if there is no one you have chosen, then I will grant you an additional three months to decide. It is important that you all recommend capable shinigami, not your favorite one.” he said flatly.

He allowed a pause in case one or all of them had their recommendations in mind already. If they didn’t then he would move on to his final remarks.
“While the improvements that have been implemented have benefitted us greatly, there is still far more work to be done. Peace is just uncertainty before battle, we must always be ready for both it and violence. Train your squads well, nurture that strength and shape it into a weapon worthwhile of your caliber and my own.” he said.

He meant every word—he needed them to understand that while the peace they lived in was good, they had no idea when the tides of war would shore themselves up again, and when it happens, the commander would like to not be caught with his pants down as the saying goes.
“If there is nothing else, then you are all once again, excused. But not dismissed. I believe you all received invitations to the dinner party at the Tsunayashiro residence. If I do not find myself busy then I will be attending, assuming that you are all going—then I will see you there,” he finished.

And with that, he released them to do whatever it was they wished to do. Unusually taking his leave first, by walking down the aisle past them all and leaving them alone within the captains hall. The door closed behind him with a thud and soon breathed in deeply, taking in the crisp air in contrast with a stuffy room. Exhaling softly, his eyes flicked across the courtyard towards his office and began to make his way towards it.

Seemingly instantaneously, he appeared directly before the large double doors, opening them and leading him to the open concept, balcony-esque head office of the First Division barracks. He had to check his desk for any paperwork Kobashigawa may have found for him to sign during his brief absence. Fortunately, there was none which allowed the commander a very short reprieve from the throes of leadership. He looked out from the balcony down towards the rest of the Seireitei. It was in these moments of solitude, that he found himself asking a specific question: Had he earned the sunset?

The answer was always the same. Everyday.

“Not yet, but I will.”

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KagiSenkō

Member
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The Meeting Where Shadows Took Note


“He must have been proud of avoiding the battlefield. Proud of doing nothing. He had to be proud of surviving by stepping aside while others bled.” Kagi inner thoughts about Itaku



“I will remember this.”


The captain stated those last words more quietly in his subconscious, Kagi stands perfectly still, his posture straight and composed, the kind of stillness that feels deliberate rather than rigid. His hands remain loosely at his sides, fingers relaxed, never curling or tightening. His breathing stays slow and even, the rise and fall of his chest almost imperceptible. When Itaku interrupts him, Kagi does not turn his head or shift his stance, but there is a subtle change in the air around him, the kind of quiet tension that feels like a room cooling by a few degrees. His eyes remain forward, but there is a moment where they narrow by the smallest fraction, a gesture so slight that only someone watching him closely would notice. He listens without blinking, without sighing, without giving any outward sign of irritation. The only visible reaction comes when Itaku finishes speaking. Kagi lifts his chin a little, not in arrogance but in acknowledgment, as if silently marking the man in his mind. Then the stillness returns, calm and unreadable, like a room where every sound has been carefully locked away. It is the kind of silence that does not simply fall over a person but rises from within them, shaped by long hours spent behind closed doors where even the faintest breath felt too loud. For a moment, the atmosphere around him carries the same muted weight that once filled his barracks during the months he refused to leave it, a quiet so complete it seemed to swallow the world outside. The memory of that confinement lingers in the way his presence settles now, not as a retreat but as a controlled withdrawal, a deliberate sealing of whatever stirs beneath the surface. It is the silence of a man who learned to fold his thoughts inward until they no longer echoed, the silence of someone who once lived in a space where nothing moved unless he allowed it to. The room seems to absorb that quiet, as if the walls themselves recognize the shape of it, and for a brief moment the air feels as though it has been pressed flat, leaving no trace of the tension that flickered through him only seconds before.

Kagi did not move when Yūgure stepped forward, yet something within him shifted in a way that never touched his expression, a quiet internal tightening that settled beneath the surface of his composure. The silence he carried remained sealed around him, held with the same deliberate care as a room that had been closed for years, a space where every sound had been tucked away until nothing remained but the weight of stillness itself. It was the same kind of quiet he had lived in during the long months he had confined himself to his barracks, when the world outside had felt distant and unreal and every breath seemed too loud for the narrow space he inhabited. That memory lingered now, not as a wound but as a reminder of how easily he could fold inward when the moment demanded it, how naturally he could retreat into a silence that belonged only to him. As Yūgure began to speak, he allowed his gaze to settle on her without turning his head, the movement so subtle it barely disturbed the air around him, yet beneath that stillness something older and colder stirred, a reflexive tension shaped not by her words but by the bloodline she carried. The Shihōin name had carved too many fractures into the Gotei for him to ever hear it without feeling the faint pressure of old distrust pressing against the edges of his thoughts, and her ascension to captaincy had only sharpened that instinct. He did not doubt her discipline, nor did he question her capability, but the knowledge of her lineage placed a thin, invisible distance between them, a quiet barrier he had no intention of lowering. Even so, as her voice carried through the chamber with a steadiness shaped by years in the shadows of the Second, he felt a faint echo of recognition, a reminder that she had once moved under his command with the same silent precision she carried now. It was not nostalgia that stirred in him but acknowledgment, a quiet understanding that she had learned to survive the same muted spaces he had once shaped with his presence, yet the distrust remained, coiled deep and unmoving, a reminder that the Shihōin legacy had cost him too much to ever be taken lightly again.


He listened to her report with the same calm he had held during his own, yet beneath that calm something tightened, not with irritation or judgment but with a more intricate feeling that settled deep in his chest. Itaku’s interruption still hovered at the edges of his thoughts, not because it had bruised his pride but because it had reminded him how easily the authority he once carried could be brushed aside with a careless voice and a bright smile. Hearing Yūgure speak now, measured and composed despite the nerves she hid so carefully, stirred a faint sense of contrast within him, a reminder that some captains still respected the structure they served, still understood the weight of the moment, still carried themselves with the quiet discipline that once defined the Gotei he remembered. His eyes lowered slightly, not in disapproval but in contemplation, as if he were weighing the shifting currents of the room and the captains who stood within it. Yūgure’s presence steadied him in a way he had not anticipated, her restraint and her deliberate control reminding him of the order he had once upheld with unwavering precision. It was a quiet reassurance that not everything had changed in his absence, that some threads of the old world still remained intact.


He felt it in the way the room breathed around him, in the way Yūgure’s gaze had paused on him earlier, in the way Itaku had spoken over him without hesitation, and he accepted it without resistance. He allowed the silence inside him to settle deeper, smoothing over every flicker of emotion until nothing remained but the calm he had mastered long ago. His posture did not shift and his expression did not change, yet the air around him grew steadier, as if he had anchored himself more firmly to the floor beneath him, grounding his presence with the same quiet certainty that had once defined him. He listened as Yūgure concluded her report, and when she stepped back into place he let his gaze rest on her for a heartbeat longer than necessary, not enough for anyone else to notice, just long enough for him to acknowledge privately that she had carried herself with the discipline he remembered, even if the name she bore would always keep a measured distance between them. Then he returned to stillness, the kind that held its own gravity, the kind that made it impossible to tell whether he was reflecting, observing, or simply waiting for the next moment to unfold, a presence so controlled that it felt as though the silence around him had settled into its final shape.

As Izanagi spoke with his usual irreverent ease, sipping tea and tossing comments into the chamber as though the Captain‑Commander’s hall were nothing more than a casual gathering, part of him recognized the man who had once stepped between him and death without hesitation, the captain whose intervention had saved the lives of his officers when Kagi himself could no longer stand. That memory carried weight, a silent acknowledgment that could never be erased. Yet another part of him observed the theatrics with a restrained detachment, noting the casual disregard for protocol, the playful jabs, the mask materializing in open defiance, and felt a familiar tension settle beneath his ribs. Jushirō’s levity was not something Kagi despised, but it was something he could never fully understand, a temperament so different from his own that it felt like watching a flame dance in a room built for shadows.


He did not judge him for it, but he measured it, the way he measured everything. He watched the grin, the wink toward Yūgure, the exaggerated complaint about masks, and he felt the faintest echo of something like exasperated acceptance, a quiet understanding that Izanagi would always move through the world with a looseness Kagi could never emulate. Yet beneath that acceptance lay a deeper thought, one that remained unspoken but settled firmly in his mind. Jushirō had earned the right to speak as he pleased, but the Gotei was not the same as it had been ten years ago, and Kagi could not help but wonder how long such behavior would be tolerated in a world still trying to rebuild its structure. Even so, he listened to the report itself with care, noting the stability in Naruki City, the readiness of the Tenth, the diligence behind the humor, and he felt a quiet reassurance that beneath the theatrics, Izanagi had not abandoned his responsibilities. It was enough for Kagi to let the moment pass without reaction, holding his silence with the same controlled calm he had carried since the meeting began, a calm that neither Jushirō’s antics nor the shifting dynamics of the room could disturb.


Kagi would not move, not even by a fraction, but the moment Taro turned his attention toward the Captain‑Commander and spat the Shihōin name with that venomous edge, something inside Kagi would tighten with a slow, deliberate pressure that never reached his face. He would remain exactly as he was, posture straight, gaze forward, hands resting loosely at his sides, yet the silence around him would deepen in a way that felt almost physical, as if the air itself had thickened in response to the hostility filling the chamber. He would not look at Taro, nor at Yūichirō, nor at Yūgure, because he did not need to; the weight of the words was enough to stir a quiet, measured awareness behind his eyes, a recognition that the room had shifted into a far more dangerous register.


Inside, however, his thoughts would move with a slow, controlled precision. Taro’s aggression did not surprise him. The Date clan had always carried their own brand of ruthlessness, and Taro’s willingness to bare his teeth in front of the Commander was simply another reminder that the Gotei was still a fractured organism pretending at unity. What caught Kagi’s attention was not the insult itself but the way it echoed something he had long kept buried, a truth he had lived with far longer than Taro had been bold enough to speak aloud. The Shihōin name had earned its share of resentment, and Kagi felt no urge to defend it, yet hearing it weaponized so openly stirred a faint, cold ripple of calculation within him. Taro was not wrong, but he was reckless, and recklessness in a room like this had a way of dragging everyone into its orbit.
He let that thought settle without judgment, observing the tension with the same quiet detachment he used to study an enemy’s stance before a strike. Taro’s words were sharp, but they were also revealing, exposing the fault lines beneath the surface of the captains assembled here. Kagi understood those fractures intimately. He had lived through the consequences of clan arrogance, political maneuvering, and the kind of pride that tore the Gotei apart from within. Watching Taro throw those accusations into the open did not unsettle him, but it did sharpen his awareness, reminding him that the room was full of captains who carried their own grudges, their own loyalties, their own thresholds for disrespect.


He remained silent, letting the moment unfold without offering even the smallest reaction, because he knew that anything he revealed now would only feed the tension already coiling through the chamber. His stillness became a kind of anchor, a quiet refusal to be pulled into the storm Taro was stirring. Yet beneath that stillness, a single thought moved through him with the calm certainty of a blade sliding into place. The Gotei was changing, and the captains within it were beginning to show their true shapes. Taro’s outburst was not the beginning of conflict, nor was it the end. It was simply another reminder that the past had not finished with any of them, and Kagi, more than anyone, understood that silence was often the only shield worth raising in a room where every word could become a weapon.


He would not react outwardly when the Commander approached him, nor when he acknowledged the diligence of the Second, but the recognition would settle inside him with a quiet weight, not pride, not satisfaction, simply a confirmation that his division’s discipline had not gone unnoticed. It was a small thing, but it mattered, because Kagi had rebuilt the Second from silence and shadows, and hearing it affirmed without embellishment aligned with the way he believed respect should be given: plainly, without theatrics.


As Yūichirō continued down the aisle, addressing each captain with a precision that cut through the lingering tension Taro had stirred, Kagi would observe the room without shifting his gaze, letting the Commander’s tone reveal more than the words themselves. He would note the firmness behind the reprimand to Itaku, the quiet correction offered to Yūgure, the pointed lesson delivered to Izanagi, and the decisive removal of Taro from the academy. None of it surprised him. Yūichirō had always carried a certain severity beneath his noble composure, a willingness to impose order even when it meant stepping on the pride of those around him. Kagi did not admire it, nor did he resent it. He simply recognized it as the kind of leadership the Gotei needed in a time when the captains were fractured by history, ego, and the ghosts of a war that had never fully ended.


When the Commander spoke of the arrancars, the Soul King’s fragments, and the dwindling Hollow activity, Kagi’s attention sharpened in a way that did not show on his face. He had long suspected that the quiet of the last decade was not peace but a pause, a breath held by forces they did not yet understand. Hearing Yūichirō confirm that suspicion stirred a faint, cold awareness inside him, a reminder that the world beyond their walls was shifting in ways that would eventually demand blood and resolve. He did not fear that future. He had lived through worse. But he understood that the Gotei was not ready, not truly, and the Commander’s words only reinforced what he had already known: the captains would need to be stronger than their grudges, their clans, their histories, and their pride. And beneath that realization, another thought moved with a quieter, sharper edge, one he kept buried beneath the calm of his expression. Yūichirō was a Shihōin, bound to a legacy that had already fractured the Gotei once, and Kagi could not help but wonder whether this man was the leader they needed or simply another name destined to fall in his own halls, undone by the same arrogance that had consumed his predecessors. It was not a hope, nor a prediction, merely a possibility he refused to ignore, a reminder that trust was a luxury he had never afforded the Shihōin and would not begin offering now


As the Bankai Aptitude program was mentioned, Kagi remained silent, already knowing he would not offer a name lightly. Bankai was not a reward. It was a burden, a responsibility that could break a soul long before it strengthened it. He would choose carefully, and only when he was certain the candidate could withstand the weight of the Second’s expectations. The Commander’s reminder to avoid favoritism did not apply to him; Kagi had no favorites, only those who survived his standards. One name came into mind, but he would not speak it, not yet.


When the Captain‑Commander’s footsteps faded beyond the threshold and the heavy doors sealed the hall in a lingering hush, Kagi remained exactly where he stood, his posture straight, his expression unreadable, his presence as still as the air before a storm. He did not move toward the exit, nor did he join the subtle currents of motion around him. Instead, he waited, letting the others drift into their own thoughts, letting the noise of their minds fill the silence while he observed without appearing to observe.


Itaku was the first to stir with any real intention, his easy grin still lingering as if the tension of the hall had never touched him. Kagi’s eyes passed over him for the briefest moment, a glance so slight it could have been mistaken for nothing at all, yet the mark was made in the quiet space behind his gaze. Itaku’s unpredictability, his levity, his disregard for structure, all of it settled into Kagi’s awareness with the cold precision of a blade sliding into its sheath. He did not call attention to it. He did not shift his stance. But the decision was already made.


A shadow near the far column stirred, almost imperceptibly, with the reverence of someone who had been there longer than the moment suggested. Whether they had followed Kagi from the Second division or had been waiting in the shadows long before he arrived was impossible to tell. No footsteps. No breath. No trace of reiatsu. Only the quiet certainty that they were there because he allowed them to be. and Kagi gave the faintest tilt of his head, a gesture so small it could have been a trick of the light. The operative understood. They would follow Itaku when he left, not aggressively, not intrusively, but with the vigilance required for someone whose actions could ripple outward in ways the Gotei could not afford to ignore. The order was silent, but it was absolute, and the operative melted back into the dimness without a sound.


Kagi’s attention then drifted toward Yūgure, who stood among the captains with her hands folded behind her back, her posture composed, her expression calm, though he could sense the faint tension beneath it. She had not moved to leave yet, and he did not approach her immediately. Instead, he allowed the moment to stretch, letting the others begin their slow departure, letting the hall thin just enough that a conversation would not become a spectacle. He watched her with the same quiet precision he had used to study her report, noting the steadiness in her breathing, the way she held her shoulders, the way she kept her gaze forward as if refusing to betray even a flicker of uncertainty.


Only when the room had loosened, when the captains had begun to drift toward the doors in small clusters, did Kagi shift his weight by the smallest fraction, a movement so subtle it barely disturbed the air. He stepped just close enough that his presence would be unmistakable to her, yet not so close as to draw the attention of the others. He did not speak, not yet, but the intention was clear in the quiet gravity of his posture.
“Captain Shihōin, I require a moment of your time. Should you choose to forgo the party, meet me at Sōkyoku Hill.” Kagi words came off slightly colder yet so formal when addressing a private audience with Captain of the 9th.​


Sōkyoku Hill was not chosen for sentiment, nor for comfort, but for the clarity it offered, a place where the wind carried no whispers and the stone held no loyalties. Kagi preferred it for conversations that required distance from the politics of the Seireitei, a place where the shadows of the divisions could not cling to the edges of a discussion. The hill’s vast openness stripped away the noise of rank and lineage, leaving only the truth of the person standing before him. It was a place where he could measure intent without interference, where the weight of the sky pressed evenly on both speaker and listener, and where the silence was honest enough to reveal what words tried to hide. For someone like Yūgure, whose bloodline carried both history and suspicion, Sōkyoku Hill offered a neutral ground, a space where he could observe her without the walls of the Second or the legacy of the Shihōin shaping the air between them. It was not a place of trust, but a place where trust could be tested, and that was all Kagi required.


 
Falling from grace was probably the least painful part of A certain pink haired shinigami's Descent. Words, looks. They means nothing from faces that held no reminder in the eyes of Fuyuko Munetoshi. She had been out of action for a long while in her mind. She could remember being in her office on that day. a ritual of two tea cups even with only one present. That was till the one became two then three. those words of the second was still true in her ears. The offer...She never gave a true answer to it. Still to this day she knew the offer was open. The shadows were always open to her. They even before since the first day she became one of their ranks so long ago and she believed even beyond the day she would close her eyes, the shadows will still await an answer.

Family and unspoken obligations was the only ones who kept her within the light of her descent. years upon years of recovery, regaining parts she lost. The cracking...The snow. It all might now be gone but to her. they were still there. That growl and the forever movement of her without a single thought and that damnable nickname. It was the moment to her that caused her downfall.

She allowed her blade of her heart to dull. Her sins were hers to carry alone and bear in silence. They could live rent free in her head. At some point she will set them within a frozen frame and store them in a dark recess of her soul. The question she had for herself was why hadn't she? What was stopping her. Was is the massive storm of a man? the cracking of her started change?

Its been so many years now and time blurred for the now unseated officer of the 1st. She had been in the medical bay in a coma for ages. She didn't blame anyone for their decision. It was direct and fitting. She wasn't there for her squad. For the choir of old faceless men and women who thought they understand the true meaning of power and control. She deserved all that happened from her. She was still a Shinigami and while she might never had a ghost of a chance to regain what she lost. It was never fully out of her grasp. Her future wasn't written nor was she in the ground yet. All she needed to do was refind the her that was once handled a war. She needed to refind the Fuyuko Shibori seemed to actually acknowledge with respect not the one who the unruly spirit was more unwilling to even breath her way.

Today was not so different for her. The captains were to meet with the new commander. She knew some of the roster. There was only one she was more familiar with then the others but history was the reason she was even known by that shadow. She was sure most of the other captains knew nothing or her. That was fine in her book, less connections meant less cracks to form. Fuyuko had finished her usual morning meditation within her usual stretch routine. Nibbler and quick was always a comfort to her. couldn't let up now.

Even now she walked around the barracks in silent thought. Her steps, her presence, barely crossing anyone's being. If she was needed all any would need to do is say their point. she might feel like a outlier but this was her own penitence and slowly she was determined to regain the years lost in that coma, regain the trust and faith that had been placed on her and complete the promise long ago.

She stopped seeing the double doors of the captain hall open. She watched in distant silence of all that came from within, not a ounce of her presence moved from where she stood. She made note of other unfamilar faces that were her squad mates and the acknowledgement that the Shihōin lineage that had rose and claimed many ranks. It was a good thing in her book. A family on the brink of extinction now taking back control. it was inspiring for sure. If it was a sign for anyone....it was definitely for her.

Fuyuko closed her emerald eyes as she took a step forward, then another as she continued her journey that soon was stopped infront a door. She had stopped for a second opening her eyes before lifting her left hand tapping her knuckle against the door two times awaiting a response

upon receiving one to enter, she did so. It had been forever since she had been back in this office. She didn't even use it when she was the head lieutinent. It wasnt her place, nor did she earn it after the last one fell. She stilled her mind as she ventured in

" Fuyuko Munetoshi. I have been fully cleared for duty...Captain.."

She spoke. It was only fair to get reintroduced to having an actual singular commander and not a choir of them once again. She wasn't a lieutenant or held a seat. it was best to start at basics and climb that way. retrace and fix where she went wrong before.​
 
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Hyoroshi Iwamura

New member
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Hyoroshi's nose twitched faster than his eyes could flick to the gathering entourage in the front lobby. Like the rainbow-spectrum of their hairstyles, the other guests' scents varied to the point of tasting like nothing and everything in particular; observing them with a quick, placid slant of the eye sparked no note of recognition within him. Despite his size and the lingering looks he could sense on his tingling neck hairs, Hyoroshi was all but perturbed.

And there was Ishiko, her unease radiating like heat off scorching pavement.
“Good morning my sweet guests~! I’m delighted to see you all found my invites and came to see what the deal was!”


Hyoroshi's lips pressed a fraction of an inch firmer. He'd heard stories of this man that had now just glanced at him with an obtusely playful grin, but as his gangly legs carried him to the young purple-haired boy, he was brushed by a sense of impartiality. The rumors had been too vibrant, too saturated--though Toru Tsunayashiro was lanky to the point of comedy and blatantly conniving (for better or worse, Hyoroshi couldn't judge yet), he yet seemed unremarkable, in a strange way.
Ooooh.. Welcome Beastkin, I wasn’t expecting one of your kind to come, but you’re welcome just as the others are! Please step through.”

So this is what it’s like huh? I’ve never felt such a thing before, at least not during a handshake. Curious little guy."


Hyoroshi's ear twitched as their hands were still firmly clasped. It was not the muttered observation he'd honed in on. His jaw set, his courteous demeanor picked up a twinge of flabbergast.

"I'm the only one like this here. As far as I know."

But Toru was already off to the flamboyant Kazahuna, a man he had seen in passing but had yet to formally speak with. Hyoroshi watched the calculated greeting for another second before he turned to Ishiko. She hadn't moved an inch.

For another second Hyoroshi stood there floating in his head, deciding. Toru had finished his rounds and was leading the other guests to the dining hall.

All Ishiko could perceive was a sudden rush of wind followed by the front of her Shihakusho pressing up against her torso.

"BAHAHAHA! Can't hide from me!"

Before the group could cross the threshold, the sudden triumphant bark from Hyoroshi would collectively twist their heads. Standing with knees bent, free arm cocked downwards and with an exaggerated open smile on his face, Hyoroshi stood in the center of the lobby. In his opposite hand, like a velvet-red briefcase, Ishiko Mori dangled by the neck of her Shihakusho several feet off the ground.

"This is Ishiko Mori, a member of my Division, and she'd love to get to know you all! Right?"

Hyoroshi glanced down at Ishiko and wiggled his nonexistent eyebrows, then wordlessly jostled her around in the air should she have hesitated. Once she provided her answer, however she would go about it, Hyoroshi nodded once.

"Let's make this a productive meal", he said with an earnest warmth.

Although his expression settled into a rough baseline of before, with the only change being a pleasant grin pulling at the corners of his lips, it wouldn't be until the group entered the dining hall and Toru shut the door that Hyoroshi would finally place Ishiko down on her feet again. Hyoroshi strode to one end of the dining table to the last chair in the row, pulling it out and settling in with a conscious tenderness--cognizant of both his weight on the chair and the sheer volume he takes up. One of his knees pressed with mild discomfort into the table's underbelly while the other leg was bent outside of the table leg. Nevertheless, to Ishiko he beckons over, offering her the seat next to him.

Only once she too is settled does he take a moment to absorb his surroundings, though this lasts for but a blink as Toru is already out with the menus. Hyoroshi takes one, opening the miniscule thing in his massive hands and scanning the text. He hummed to himself, before:

"Two orders of the Bulgogi, please, with hot tea."

After returning his menu to Toru, Hyoroshi's attention once more shifted to the other Shinigami, observing and waiting.

For a blink there was benign weariness in his eyes, reflected off the lights overhead. Then it was gone, crushed beneath one of his heavy red-and-gold steel boots.​
 

Dioclea

New member
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The quiet did not leave the room politely.
It was taken.

Yūgen felt the shift before he properly registered the sound of it, the way one sensed a brush’s bristles bending before ink ever touched paper. The air itself seemed to tighten, stretched thin by the host’s presence. Yūgen rose, prompted more by motion than by instruction, the ledger beneath his arm instinctively pressed closer to his side, as though it too wished to remain unremarkable. Toru was suddenly there, and Yūgen found himself ushered forward by a hand that moved too quickly for etiquette to catch up. A figure that did not ask for space because it had never learned the language of refusal. Words spilled easily from him, bright and careless, welcoming in tone but sharp in observation, until one remark landed with unexpected precision.

“Welcome, welcome! You seem like a distinguished guy—”
The words came easily, tumbling over one another, followed by the observation that truly mattered.
“You smell of ink.”

The comment drew a fleeting pause from Yūgen, surprise registering not in posture but in the slightest hitch of breath he failed to fully conceal. Had he been afforded the courtesy of response, he might have offered something measured, something polite and carefully incomplete. Instead, Toru’s attention had already moved on, and Yūgen was guided through the threshold with the same brisk finality as the others.

The dining hall unfolded into a length of subdued grandeur, its design deliberate in a way that suggested both wealth and intention. The long lacquered table reflected the overhead light in soft, controlled bands, the seams of gold inlaid across its surface evoking elegance. Yūgen took his place along the side of the table with quiet care, smoothing the fall of his robes before settling, his contemplating eyes moving through the room with scepticism. Jaakuna’s presence was impossible to miss, warmth and appetite coexisting without apology, her engagement with the food already a small riot against formality. Nearby, Seimei carried himself with practiced composure, while Yūto’s attention wavered between the menu and his own indecision, the latter weighing visibly heavier. When Hyoroshi entered, the room itself seemed to adjust, furniture and presence alike bending subtly around the weight he brought with him, his movements careful despite the space he occupied.

When the menu was placed into Yūgen’s hands, he accepted it with a small inclination of his head, the glossy pages cool beneath his fingers. He did not open it immediately. His attention lingered instead on the rhythm of the room, on the way Toru moved through it with an ease that bordered on ownership, on the layered currents of reiatsu that spoke more honestly than conversation ever could. This gathering was not merely a meal... It had quite the selection of people, could it be a test disguised beneath hospitality? When at last he glanced down, his eyes skimmed the menu while the others made their orders, waiting on the opportune moment.

“Grilled white fish, please. Seasonal vegetables, and a clear soup.
Warm sake as well, if it is not an inconvenience.”


His choice was made without hesitation, and when he voiced it, his tone was low and precise, careful not to intrude upon the overlapping exchanges around him.

The earlier remark returned to him then, uninvited but persistent. Ink. Yūgen let the thought settle, then set it aside. This, after all, was the reason he had come. His fingers eased from his sleeve, and when he spoke, it was not to claim attention but to offer presence. His voice carried just far enough to reach those nearest him, calm and even, as though he were addressing a room already inclined to listen.

“Yūgen Kazahuna,” he said, inclining his head slightly toward the table. “Eighth Division. Cultural preservation.”

It was a simple introduction, deliberately unadorned. He allowed a brief pause to follow, enough for names and faces to find their place beside it. His gaze settled first on those nearest to him. Jaakuna, who embodies warmth and appetite in equal measure. Seimei on the other side, sat with an ease that bordered on casual, though Yūgen could sense the vigilance beneath it, it is a kind that never truly rested. He considered them both for a moment…

He turned slightly toward Jaakuna, his tone gentle and unassuming.
“I’ve heard the Academy has been… lively of late,” he said, a faint thread of quiet humour running beneath his words. “You see the future of the Gotei more closely than most of us. ...Does it still surprise you?”
The question was left open, an invitation rather than a demand.

Then his attention shifted, measured and calm, to Seimei.
“And you,” Yūgen continued, voice even, “you observe as much as you speak, if not more. I’m curious what drew you here this evening.”
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Souris

Community Manager
Staff member

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To Rokka's surprise, the attendees of the party were a lot more varied in personalities and appearances than he expected. On one hand, it was an open invite occasion - anyone an everyone could roll up to experience the festivities. Though on the other, what motivation would just anyone have for attending a soiree hosted by a noble in the current climate? Was the end game goal to most just simply to eat? Maybe it was politically motivated in some way. Or were they starved for social interaction that they took the first chance to obtain it? Maybe there was more to it or maybe it was just that black and white. A unifying event after a long period of reconstruction driving both stomachs and minds to attendance.

Rokka didn't quite understand the draw of social interactions without a firm intent. It wasn't that he was incapable of being socially sound or even that he may feel discomfort from such interactions. He just had always been the type of soul to be so caught up in work and results that the idea of sparing much time for leisure often eluded him. A reality that often led to lectures from his parents and even his sister. They'd constantly remind him that he may be fueled by his own unique brand of determination but even with that spark he needed to rest. His sibling, Mina, would often go as far as tricking him in their youth into doing 'work' only to end up at some gathering or other social obligation.

He eventually grew privy to those illusions but often found himself wondering if he truly had an issue with those recourses. The contemplation though would never last as duty would rope him back into his old ways of being performance driven. An addiction of his, much like others find at the bottom of a bottle or from the smoking maw of a pipe.

The detective quietly observed those around him, taking in every detail he could. While he wasn't here under any objective that directly involved the party or its guests - it was in his nature to pay attention none the less. He viewed everything from the ways they held their stances - to the ways they navigated interactions. His eyes flicked between guest to guest, to the room around them, and even to spaces unoccupied by anything.

The Kyōraku's busy mind soon enough snapped back as their host began to greet and direct each and every guest individually. The train of interactions seeming somehow both polite yet also a bit off. As Toru moved from person to person it was evident there was an absence of boundaries but not born from any innate awkwardness. It didn't even feel like there was some underlying intent. The mannerisms were simple just that, his mannerisms. Something that Rokka soon directly came to experience as the host took hold of his hands and spoke.
"Welcome, my dear guest. You seem a little intense for a dinner party don’t you? Regardless, welcome in and I hope you get to enjoy your meal soon enough!”

He wasn't wrong.

Observation wasn't only in the hands of Rokka.

"Thank you for the hospitality. I guess I'm just not used to this all. My apologies. Let's call it nerves."

He spoke while trying to draw out a smile that ended up looking a bit half baked in quality. His response was direct but also quick, as not long after he was just as swiftly hurried off to the dining room. The words he spoke were honest, yet, also deliberately not trying to detract from the mood of the gathering. Granted... peculiarity would likely blend in more than normality.

As he had been ushered towards the dining room, he magnetized to the first available seat he saw, not expressing any preference in the surrounding company or orientation at the table. Every single one of the souls present were strangers to him, so it mattered not who he gravitated towards. Instead, his seating was wholly practical.

After reviewing the menu given to them, he'd interject his order between the requests of others.

"I'll have Tonkatsu with Curry Rice. As for a beverage, some Green Tea."

A simple meal for a simple man. Hearty, warming, and naturally flavorful. Having so many options was an opportune time for trying something more fancy or at least elaborate, but that didn't appeal to him. A staple home meal that just also so happened to be his favorite. A perfect pairing with whatever conversations would dance across the table during the party. Where it was unlikely that Rokka would instigate any particular conversation, he'd remain responsive. He was curious about those around him and deep down liked the idea of potentially making new bonds. Yet not enough so that it'd break his habitual state of social catatonia. At least not yet.

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Adonai

Roleplay Coordinator
Staff member
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“Captain Date. You’ve made clear that you disdain the role of instructor, despite the cultivation you have provided the academy the last decade, I must remind you—your job was to nurture the souls that walk into that building. Not grind them down into something unrecognizable or ‘useless’. As of today, I am relieving you of your duties as instructor at the academy. You are still to recruit the most apt students from the academy, however your direct presence on campus is no longer required. Maybe now you’ll have time to find ‘useful’ machinery elsewhere.”

Taro continued to smile, whether he was told to stay or leave the academy mattered very little. Yuichiro wanted soldiers and Taro exposed them to the cruel realities of what being a soldier is all about. Apparently shock therapy is not the approach he wanted. With the silence between them hanging for a moment the Captain could only sigh, thinking about how in the course of ten years nothing has changed, the coddling shall continue and the Shinigami will lose their way in terms of being an effective fighting force. Everyone in this room forgets that they all dangle on political strings, regardless of how uninvolved they may think themselves to be. Needless to say, Taro did not reply to the Commander, it was clear that what he said needed no reply.
“Lastly, I need your recommendations for the Bankai Aptitude program. As it currently stands, Hyoroshi Iwamura is the only candidate signed on for instruction, recommended by Shizukana herself before her passing. I will receive those names now, if there is no one you have chosen, then I will grant you an additional three months to decide. It is important that you all recommend capable shinigami, not your favorite one.”

By now Yuichiro should understand that Taro has no “favorites”, so when he speaks the name of his candidate it should bear a greater weight of honesty than most may give the Commander.
”Takamura Raizen.”

Taro is heavy handed in his approach to things, blunt, direct, and without care for how another person will respond to the things that he says. But he is no liar, liars have things to hide, are fearful and cowardly, Taro is none of these things.

The Plotting Begins

Once the Captains were dismissed Taro wasted no time leaving the stuffy atmosphere of the meeting hall. He breezed past any other Shinigami waiting outside of the hall, not caring to spare them even a glance or acknowledgement of their existence. As he walked along a Jigoku kuishinbō buzzes towards him, the beating of its wings are sickening, enough to make anyone’s skin crawl and those who are fearful of bugs may outright cower or shriek at its presence. Taro holds out his palm, allowing it to land and relay its message to him. He lets out a chuckle before letting the creature take flight into the air once more.
”Oh dear, Commander Cog, you will learn how to earn respect the old fashion way, once your clan’s sins are brought to the forefront. Involved or not, you will learn that bearing that name of yours with such pride comes at a cost.”

Taro notices one of the fliers for this dinner party that wasn’t cleaned up. He stares at it for a moment, looks in the direction of the Tsunayashiro compound and scoffs slightly. He continues walking Northwest while commenting to himself about it.
”I don’t trust that clan, I trust that Tsunayashiro in particular even less. Can never be too careful around those Twelfth Division Cogs.”

He grabs the hilt of his Zanpakuto, ready to partially draw it to summon an ink fish to ride upon. He remembers the rules set in place by the Commander. He frowns and lets go of his blade and opts to use Shunpo instead. Of all the reasons to hate Yuichiro on a personal level the rule of not drawing or releasing Zanpakuto outside of training situations is the only one that triggers Taro’s direct ire at Yuichiro himself. Denying him the privilege of being with Kurogane on a daily basis feels like a crime in itself. While covering distance with his Shunpo his mind slowly shifts away from personal plights and refocuses on the grander scheme of things. He seeks out the only Kuchiki he has had an interaction with, one that he insulted during the war and will more than likely insult again.
”I do wonder how the Kuchiki Clan will react to learning that it was the Tsunayashiro and Shihoin that ordered the culling of their clan. Surely they had their suspicions, but having confirmation will be even more damning. Time to reveal some truth that's been hidden by the great shadow of Mimihagi.”

While Mimihagi’s actual involvement in this is merely metaphorical, everything else Taro stated is not. This may seem like he is sewing the seeds of chaos within the Gotei 13 but he is merely acting as a tool for his Clan. The Date are staging a political move that will upset the balance of nobility, but through this upset they may very well help the other great houses reclaim their old power, should they choose to cooperate with their shadow.



To Northwest Seireitei: 13th Division
 
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