Captain Senkō’s body struck the corridor wall with enough force to embed him several inches into the fractured stone, the impact sending a muted tremor through the narrow passage as dust rolled down around his shoulders in slow, uneven streams. He remained within the imprint for a brief moment, not out of shock, but because the stillness allowed him to examine the sequence of events with the same measured precision he applied to every engagement. He remembered the parry, the shift of weight as he angled his blade to redirect the strike, the sidestep that carried him past the thrust, and the clean jab aimed toward the elbow that should have flowed naturally into the next motion. The memory held its shape up to that point, each detail aligning exactly as it should have, yet the moment that should have bridged the strike to the impact against the wall was simply absent, not blurred or distorted, but missing in a way that felt as though a single breath had been removed from the flow of time. He stepped out of the cratered stone with controlled ease, brushing dust from his sleeve as the faint ache in his ribs registered only as information to be acknowledged and set aside, his expression steady even as a quiet, analytical surprise settled beneath the surface at the unexplained gap in the sequence.
“So something slipped past me.”
Soft footfalls approached from the far end of the corridor. Additional Stealth Force operatives emerged from the shadows, their uniforms marked with dust and debris from the earlier shockwaves. They halted the moment they saw their Captain standing amid the imprinted wall, awaiting instruction without a word. Kagi’s gaze swept over the injured first. The ones still conscious were disoriented, their footing unsteady, their focus fractured. They would be liabilities if they remained in the immediate radius of the confrontation. The first part of the containment plan had already collapsed the moment the Hollow’s power tore through the formation, and keeping them close would only feed the chaos. He addressed them with the same calm authority he carried into every operation, his voice steady and unhurried as he issued the order to remove the wounded and pull them out of the line of fire.
“Remove the wounded and expand the containment zone. Go ahead and remain on standby for phase two. Keep your distance and wait for my order.”
The arriving operatives moved instantly, lifting their injured comrades with practiced efficiency and withdrawing down the corridor in staggered formation. Kagi continued speaking, his tone unwavering, his eyes never leaving the hollow wearing Itaku’s face as he instructed the remaining operatives to expand the perimeter and maintain distance. They obeyed without hesitation, vanishing into the deeper shadows of the corridor, spreading out into a wider formation that kept them present but unseen.
Only once they were clear did Kagi finally address the creature before him, his words delivered with a cold precision that stripped the title of any respect as he accused the hollow of wearing a Captain’s haori without earning the right to it, of surrendering its will and calling it strength, of disgracing the position it pretended to hold.
“Captain Itaku… is this truly all you are now? A passenger in your own body while a THING makes your choices for you? You surrendered your will, and now it wears your strength like a trophy. You disgrace the haori you wear.”
The creature’s laughter echoed through the corridor, sharp and delighted, its crimson wisps curling lazily around its frame as if savoring the destruction it had carved into the space. Kagi’s expression did not shift. His blade lowered only enough for his fingers to subtly adjust along the smooth, guardless hilt, a small, controlled motion that carried no flourish, only intention, as the air around him tightened with a faint pulse of reiryoku that rippled outward, subtle at first, then deepening into a quiet pressure that settled over the space like a held breath.
For the briefest moment, that shift of his grip sent a faint tremor through the tendons of his hand, not from strain, not from fear, but from the memory of what it meant to hold this blade again after nine years of refusing to touch it. The sensation was so slight it barely registered, a tightening across the knuckles that felt like the echo of a wound long healed. He remembered the weight of those years, the way he had locked himself away with a sword he would not draw, pretending the silence between them was something he could endure. He remembered the moment he finally faced Chiba again, the cold disappointment in her voice, the fight that stripped him down to the truth he had buried, the way reclaiming her had felt less like regaining power and more like being forgiven. And now, as the pressure around him deepened, that memory folded seamlessly into the present, not as hesitation, but as clarity, a reminder of the man he had chosen to become again. The tremor faded, replaced by a stillness that felt earned.
The drifting leaves responded immediately, their movement slowing as if suspended in thicker air. The glow along the flat of his blade intensified, the obsidian outline sharpening as the deep orange‑red at its center brightened into a steady, restrained burn. The release was not loud, nor did it need to be, because the shift in the atmosphere alone was enough to signal the change. The leaves multiplied in silence, appearing at the edges of Kagi’s presence and drifting outward in widening layers. They moved with deliberate slowness, each one settling into the air as though testing the space before committing to it, and the corridor dimmed beneath their growing density, the world beyond Kagi’s silhouette reduced to fragmented slivers of visibility.
The hollow’s earlier cero, the one Kagi could not remember, had long since ended, its destruction carved into the corridor around him. Now, with the beam gone and the blade twirling in smooth, ribbonlike arcs, Itaku’s posture shifted into something far more controlled. Something deliberate. Something potentially dangerous. Kagi’s eyes narrowed as the leaf storm thickened around him, drifting in slow spirals that masked the subtle shift of his stance. His next breath drew in with a steady, measured calm, and the leaf storm shifted in a way that seemed almost organic, its drifting layers folding and parting until several currents peeled away from the center, each one slipping through the corridor in its own quiet path. One drifted into the space before the Hollow, another wandered through the shadows behind him, and a third curved along a wider arc that brushed the far wall, their movements slow enough to appear incidental yet dense enough to obscure whatever might have been moving within them. His real movement slipped out of the heart of the field with a precision so clean it left no trace, no sound, and no shift in pressure beyond the faintest whisper, and by the time the leaf trails converged into the position they were meant too, the Silent Flash had already reappeared far off to Itaku’s right flank, angled and distant enough to force the creature to turn his body if
it wished to track him. From this vantage, the truth revealed itself when Genriron crossed a particular tilt and the blade caught the light in a way that allowed a faint, hair‑thin glint of red to shimmer along its path before vanishing as quickly as it appeared. Something was moving with the blade, something subtle.
"What is it trying to accomplish? And what is that red line?" Kagi steadied his breathing as the realization settled into place. He would not rush directly, nor would he approach from the front, not until he understood the mechanic behind that unseen threat. He would not give this thing the opening it wanted.
The leaves continued to drift in layered sheets, their movement slow and unhurried despite the destruction around them. Every so often, a cluster shifted in a way that suggested a body passing through, the pattern bending for a heartbeat before settling again. Another cluster parted as if brushed aside, though no figure emerged from the gap. The field held only the drifting foliage, the fading silhouettes, and the quiet suggestion that something was moving through the space faster than the eye could follow, leaving behind impressions that vanished before they could be understood.
A faint disturbance rippled through the drifting leaves as several silhouettes flickered at the edges of the hollow’s vision, each one half‑formed and wavering as though caught between shifting layers of light and shadow. One appeared near the opening created by the creature’s overextended swing, another lingered along the far wall, and a third hovered in the narrowing space behind him, yet none held long enough to confirm whether they were real or merely the eye struggling to follow motion it was never meant to track. The clusters of foliage around them shifted with the same quiet uncertainty, some parting as if brushed aside, others folding inward a heartbeat too late, their movements offering no clarity about whether a body had passed through or whether the storm itself was playing tricks on the senses. The pressure in the corridor tightened almost imperceptibly as the drifting leaves continued to settle into new patterns, closing the space around the hollow without ever revealing intent or direction, and the dome of Chiba (千葉,
“Thousand Leaves”) drew in with a slow, unhurried inevitability that made it impossible to tell where the real Captain stood within its density. The leaves continued their slow, unhurried movement as the silhouettes faded into the shifting density of the corridor, and the narrowing of space around the hollow occurred so gradually that it never appeared deliberate. By the end of it all, without realizing, the original containment zone was now made into a dome.