GhoulBunny
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Yūgure didn’t respond to the Bankai question. Not a first. A soft “Hm” curled from her lips instead, accompanied by the faintest tug of amusement at the corners of her mouth. She lifted her teacup and took a sip—calm, deliberate—like she hadn’t heard the question at all. But of course, she had.
That question had nothing to do with concern. Nothing to do with shared strategy. It was posturing, plain and simple—like a child running laps around a courtyard, shouting “Look how fast I am!” Her golden eyes, half-lidded and sharp, didn’t leave her cousin’s face as she set the cup back down with a soft clink.
“Bankai, cousin?” she repeated, as though tasting the word in her mouth. “I don’t know… have you finally decided to report to the 9th about your suspicions and your little witch hunt?”
Her voice was velvet—smooth, polite. But there was an unmistakable edge hidden beneath the silk.
The book. The one marked with their family crest. The one tied to some imagined betrayal. He’d been sitting on it. Keeping it to himself. And in all that time—not once had he brought it to her. Not once had he consulted the Ninth.
And if anyone in the Gotei 13 had a right to know about threats to the Seireitei, it was the woman in front of him. The Ninth Division literally was there to keep the Gotei safe. So for Hideo to keep that from her? It wasn’t just careless. It was insulting.
Still, she smiled. Sweetly.
“If you were really so concerned about treachery… you’d have come to me first. Unless, of course, you were worried I’d see right through it.”
Her hand returned to the cup, resting lightly on its rim, fingers poised as if deciding whether to sip again.
“The Shihoin are already on thin ice,” she went on, the tone never rising. “It doesn’t take much to make that crack.”
Her gaze shifted now, casually, to Suzume.
“I imagine you’d agree, wouldn’t you, Suzume? One misplaced whisper. One rogue theory. And suddenly Shihoin are painted as enemies of the Seireitei. Again.”
She tilted her head ever so slightly, the warmth in her smile never reaching her eyes now. Suzume’s earlier words about infighting rang in her memory, and Yūgure nodded, ever so slightly.
“She’s right. The Seireitei is fractured. And while the Arrancar unify under one banner, we bicker over which division failed first. Which noble house deserves the most blame.”
Her eyes returned to Hideo now, expression sobering.
“So no, cousin. I haven’t been chasing family ghosts through dusty books.”
Her hand withdrew from the cup.
She sat back slightly, the lines of her shoulders perfect in posture, unflinching, regal in the way only a Shihoin trained from birth could be.
“My squad has been on alert since the first whispers of the Espada surfaced. We’ve doubled our drills. Looking at every gate. Make sure the Gotei is safe.”
She could feel the faint pulse of her own reiatsu rising, though she kept it contained. Controlled. It hummed beneath her skin, tightly wound, like a string on the edge of snapping.
“And while you were tracing mochi recipes,” she said with a wry smirk, “we’ve been making sure we don’t die.”
She let that hang in the air for a moment.
“This war is coming,” she continued, voice softer now. “And we can’t afford to be seen as relics of the past. Not when we’ve only just clawed our way out of disgrace.”
A pause. Then, she leaned forward, ever so slightly, golden eyes fixed on Hideo with unblinking precision.
“I thought we were working toward the same goal. Restoring the Shihoin name. Showing the Gotei we’ve changed. That we’re not some whisper of nobility hanging by threads of old glory.”
She tapped her fingers once against the cup. The sound was soft, but intentional.
“But maybe I was wrong.”
And just like that, the smile returned. Subtle. Controlled. It softened the blow, even as the blade still turned beneath it.
Yūgure picked up her cup once more and took another sip, letting the Darjeeling warm her from the inside out.
She didn’t want to fight. But she wouldn’t tolerate anyone disgracing the shihoin name. Not even her own cousin.
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