Takamura Raizen
New member
He sensed the shift before he understood it.
Not the heartbeat. Not the returning power.
The air changed—
a tightening, a distortion that coiled behind him like a fist closing.
Then the world exploded.
The punch striking his forearms shattered them both, the force hit him before the sound.
A sound like the sky cracking in half tore through him—
CRACK!!—
and the force seized his ribs, spine, lungs, everything at once,
and hurled him downward with murderous simplicity.
There was no counter.
No angle.
No time.
Just downward.
Straight into the molten hell blooming below.
The storm inside him convulsed, lightning sputtering through his vision. The fall ripped a ragged cry from his throat—more breath than voice—before even that was stolen by the pressure crushing his chest. His arm flayed anew, bones screaming with every violent spin in the air.
He had felt pain before.
He had tasted death before.
But this—this was the moment he understood what it meant to be outmatched.
A Captain’s strike.
That was the weight behind it.
And he was only Shikai.
Only 5th Seat.
Only the man his own Vice-Captain deemed too weak to live.
The humiliation burned hotter than the magma rising to swallow him.
He refused.
The last dregs of his Reiatsu snapped outward—
not a roar, not a storm, but a single desperate pulse of manipulated pressure.
Air folded beneath him, compressing sharply, violently—
a gust born of stubbornness more than technique.
It bucked under the strain, shattering the moment it saved him,
but it was enough to throw his body sideways.
He didn’t land so much as collide.
A rooftop took him in an uncontrolled arc, his shoulder slamming stone first, momentum rolling him across fractured tiles.
Tiles broke.
Ribs cracked—no broken, he couldn’t tell—
and then his back struck the wall of a collapsed structure.
Debris surrendered.
The world folded over him.
And darkness fell like a curtain.
His blades slipped from numb fingers as rubble crashed down across his torso, dust engulfing the faint crackle of his fading storm. The taste of iron thickened on his tongue. His breath hitched shallowly beneath the weight pinning him.
Somewhere above, the Espada continued his assault.
Somewhere above, miracles were returning.
Somewhere above, war still burned.
But Takamura lay half-buried, consciousness flickering, the storm inside him reduced to weak, twitching sparks that danced uselessly against stone before fully sputtering out his shikai deactivated.
Yet still—
beneath all that ruin, beneath blood and dust and shame—
one thought pulsed with a stubborn heat that refused to die:
You don’t get to look past me.
The rubble did not answer. As black was all he would see now.
Not the heartbeat. Not the returning power.
The air changed—
a tightening, a distortion that coiled behind him like a fist closing.
Then the world exploded.
The punch striking his forearms shattered them both, the force hit him before the sound.
A sound like the sky cracking in half tore through him—
CRACK!!—
and the force seized his ribs, spine, lungs, everything at once,
and hurled him downward with murderous simplicity.
There was no counter.
No angle.
No time.
Just downward.
Straight into the molten hell blooming below.
The storm inside him convulsed, lightning sputtering through his vision. The fall ripped a ragged cry from his throat—more breath than voice—before even that was stolen by the pressure crushing his chest. His arm flayed anew, bones screaming with every violent spin in the air.
He had felt pain before.
He had tasted death before.
But this—this was the moment he understood what it meant to be outmatched.
A Captain’s strike.
That was the weight behind it.
And he was only Shikai.
Only 5th Seat.
Only the man his own Vice-Captain deemed too weak to live.
The humiliation burned hotter than the magma rising to swallow him.
He refused.
The last dregs of his Reiatsu snapped outward—
not a roar, not a storm, but a single desperate pulse of manipulated pressure.
Air folded beneath him, compressing sharply, violently—
a gust born of stubbornness more than technique.
It bucked under the strain, shattering the moment it saved him,
but it was enough to throw his body sideways.
He didn’t land so much as collide.
A rooftop took him in an uncontrolled arc, his shoulder slamming stone first, momentum rolling him across fractured tiles.
Tiles broke.
Ribs cracked—no broken, he couldn’t tell—
and then his back struck the wall of a collapsed structure.
Debris surrendered.
The world folded over him.
And darkness fell like a curtain.
His blades slipped from numb fingers as rubble crashed down across his torso, dust engulfing the faint crackle of his fading storm. The taste of iron thickened on his tongue. His breath hitched shallowly beneath the weight pinning him.
Somewhere above, the Espada continued his assault.
Somewhere above, miracles were returning.
Somewhere above, war still burned.
But Takamura lay half-buried, consciousness flickering, the storm inside him reduced to weak, twitching sparks that danced uselessly against stone before fully sputtering out his shikai deactivated.
Yet still—
beneath all that ruin, beneath blood and dust and shame—
one thought pulsed with a stubborn heat that refused to die:
You don’t get to look past me.
The rubble did not answer. As black was all he would see now.