Rukongai

Itami

Member

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Jinnosuke sat in the booth across from Omoni, his hands folded on the table as he waited for her to say something—anything. The heavy silence between them was unlike the usual, explosive interactions he was accustomed to with her. It was unsettling. The rowdy atmosphere of the bar did little to fill the void of her glaring stare. She wasn’t just mad—she was thinking. And that, more than her usual wrath, was what made him nervous.

A bead of sweat rolled down the side of his face before he suddenly flinched, practically launching out of his seat as though she had jumped him. “Alright! Alright! I get it, I screwed up in Naruki City! I should have been more careful! I should have—” His hands moved in frantic gestures as he spoke, before he quickly dug into his pockets and produced a small pouch. He tossed it onto the table with an exaggerated flourish, the bag of coin spilling open just enough to reveal its hefty contents. “There! That should cover at least four rounds. Five, if we play it right.”

He huffed, slouching back into his seat with his arms crossed, waiting for her response. Though his usual confident smirk was absent, there was still a trace of mischief in his green eyes as he watched her, half-expecting her to scold him further.

The murmurs around them continued, a mix of distrust and curiosity from the locals who had yet to decide if the two Shinigami were a threat or merely another part of the Rukongai’s chaos for the night. But Jinnosuke’s focus remained on Omoni, waiting for the inevitable storm—or, maybe, something different this time.




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ARRIVING FROM THE SOUTHWEST
>>>>>Posting Order: Omoni -> Jinnosuke -> <<<<<
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Takamura Raizen

New member
The deeper Raizen walked into Rukongai, the less it resembled anything connected to Seireitei. The buildings sagged with rot. Smoke curled from half-burnt roofs. Eyes watched from the shadows, but no one met his gaze.

Perfect.

This was the kind of place where law stopped applying. Where no one asked questions when blades got drawn.

Raizen wasn’t on patrol because of an order.

He was here because he needed something to break.

A low whistle cut through the street ahead. Raizen’s eyes flicked up, catching movement. A dozen men spilled out from an alley and collapsed building—lean, ragged, and armed with chipped weapons and overconfidence.

“Well, look what we got here.” The leader grinned, resting a dented axe on his shoulder. “Another stray mutt from Seireitei.”

“Lost, Shinigami?”
another jeered, flipping a rusted dagger between his fingers. “Or just stupid?”

Raizen said nothing. His hands rested lightly on the hilts of his zanpakutō. His gaze moved across the group like they were already dead.

The leader’s smile faltered.

One of the thugs stepped closer. “You deaf or just rude?”

Raizen answered by drawing both blades in one smooth motion.

"You talk to much."

The first man lunged. He never finished the swing. Raizen’s right blade slipped through his neck, and the corpse dropped before the others processed it.

Then he was moving.

A club came down toward his skull—Raizen weaved to the side, drove his left sword through the attacker’s ribs, twisted, and kicked the body into two others. He pivoted, slashing through a spear shaft and cutting deep into the man’s collarbone behind it.

They panicked. Fumbled. Screamed.

Raizen didn’t.

His blades never stopped.

Blood painted the ground as he moved through them like water through cracks. A heavy-set man tried to grab him—Raizen severed both arms at the elbow, then finished him with a clean upward slash.

Two thugs turned to flee.

Raizen watched one run, tracking him.

He let him go.

The other didn’t get far. Raizen’s blade flew end over end and buried itself into his spine. He retrieved it in stride.

Twelve had tried.

None stood.

Except the one now crashing through a nearby tavern door, screaming for help.

Raizen exhaled slowly, flicked blood from his blades, and followed.



The bar was noisy. Not wild, but constant—glass clinking, hushed arguments, barked laughter, the kind of hum that masked tension. Omoni’s glare cut across the table like a drawn blade. Jinnosuke’s out burst had earned a few stares and half a smirk from one drunk, but otherwise went ignored. Rukongai folk didn’t care much for Shinigami.

Their momentary standoff was broken when the door slammed open.

Not pushed. Not kicked. Slammed—like it had been hit with the wind behind a war.

A man stumbled in.

Bleeding, shaking, crawling backward as soon as he hit the floor. His face pale. Eyes locked on something behind him.

"He’s coming," he gasped, to no one in particular. "He’s killing everyone—I didn’t even see—"

The bar stilled. The background noise fell to a hush.

The door creaked again.

And Takamura Raizen stepped inside.

His black uniform clung with dust and blood—none of it his. His twin zanpakutō hung in his hands, both blades streaked red, tips dripping as he walked. His eyes swept the room once, unreadable. Patrons froze. Some gripped chairs. Some shrank back. Others didn’t move at all.

He didn’t seem to notice Jinnosuke and Omoni or just didn't care.

His focus was on the man crawling away from him, now pleading.

"Please—I give up—I was just following orders—"

Raizen didn’t break stride. His pace didn’t change.

"You ran."

The man whimpered something incoherent, hand raised in defense.

"Too slow."

One flash of steel. A sharp exhale. The man collapsed with a dull thud, a wide gash across his chest already pouring dark into the floorboards.

Raizen didn’t linger. He wiped the blade clean on the dead man’s ragged coat and sheathed both swords in a slow, practiced motion.

Then, without fanfare, he turned to leave.

The door creaked as he opened it again, stepping into the warm air—but he stopped in the frame. One hand holding the door open, he glanced back at the silent bar behind him. Behind him, in the street, the pile of corpses lay where he left them—blood pooling around limbs severed and slumped bodies lay.

"Anyone else thinking of trying their luck?" His voice was low. Calm. "Like him... and his pals?"

No one moved.

No one spoke.

Raizen looked over the room one more time, eyes sharp, voice flat.

"Didn’t think so."

He stepped outside, the door closing slowly behind him.

A pause.

Then, from the other side of the wall:

"Still bored."




Posting Order: Omoni -> Jinnosuke ->Takamura ->???
 

Lovely Lady

Member

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“Alright! Alright! I get it, I screwed up in Naruki City! I should have been more careful! I should have—”

Damn right he screwed up! Cause he wanted some stupid sense of glory he’d not only completely abandoned her plus stomped all over her fateful battle but he'd also pissed away centuries of their training together. Training they did that’d be so great that if it’d been applied correctly, it could have turned the tide of the battle altogether! She flashed her grumpy leer at the clattering of the coins now scattering slightly on the table between them and her glare narrowed as if he’d done another thing to insult her.

“There! That should cover at least four rounds. Five, if we play it right.”

Was that all he was thinking about? It wasn’t all that Omoni was thinking about. Omoni was thinking about all of the humans that had died because of this blunder or the next and about how the humans had lost their home. How she had…lost her home. Omoni had never liked her home in the soul society and ever since she’d gotten a taste of the living world, she decided she’d end up somewhere that made it so she’d never have to leave it again. If it meant she would be charged with protecting those humans who shared it with her then that was what she’d do. She lived there, she had her own little hovel on that side of the world and now, it was all gone. For a moment, that woman felt something other than anger; she felt sorrow.

For that moment and only that moment. Then, the nearby tavern door they’d previously come in through flung itself open, or rather it had been swung open by a mewling man blathering something about killing and dishonoring that by crying for help. For a minute there she had thought she was already drunk considering that she was in fact a very light weight when it came to her consumption of alcohol.

Omoni had swigged down about half of her first beer at this point and was in the process of taking another as she and the rest of the bar looked on and stilled but then she lost interest in the situation and refocused her unnerving stare at Jinnosuke. He was not only responsible for ruining the fight she’d waited so long for, he was also just as responsible as she was for destroying her home too.
He OWED her.

Her anger was rising by the second the more she thought about it but thus far she’d been able to keep her cool. In a backwards way, she HAD invited him out for drinks after all.

Her hand lowered her cup to the table.

In the background, the scene played as it was intended.

"You ran. Too slow."

Then she went to pick her drink back up and noticed discoloration in it’s liquid. The usual yellow of the ale was stained by something infuriatingly familiar. As she watched the red become a twisted orange, Hageshi’s brain began processing.

"Anyone else thinking of trying their luck? Like him... and his pals?"

And processing,

"Didn’t think so."
"Still bored."


This lasted for exactly as long as it took for the strange soul reaper to close the door behind him before Omoni was storming through the wall beside her as if it had been made of paper instead of brick and mortar. THIS action horrified the patrons who were regularly exposed to things as vehement as public murder. The fact that a woman, a shinigami, was capable of and ignorant of her pulling off such a feat. This was normal for this woman who had turned the drawn blade that was her blazing stare upon the fool who had gotten blood in her beer.

"HEY!”

She didn’t stop there. She didn't care about who he was or what squad he was with she was pissed and she was pissed at HIM.
The tenth division operative then stomped over to Takamura and thrust her hand directly at his chest. Nothing happened. It was just a hand, her scarred hand wide open as if expectant of something and then the bristling brunette grunted something again.

“Ya got blood in my fuckin’ beer, wasted one a’ my- Yamazaki’s rounds!”

The hands fingers then straightened out and folded inward so as to provoke a response from him by using her body language.

"Pay up.”


POSTING ORDER: OMONI -> JINNOSUKE -> TAKAMURA -> ???
 

Itami

Member

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Jinnosuke’s mouth stayed half open as he watched Omoni’s eyes narrow at the scattered coins. His words hung there between them like a cloud of smoke in a room already filled with fire. He could feel it. That tension just beneath her skin—the kind of pressure that came right before a mountain decided to erupt.





And then she said nothing.





She just stared. Her glare never softened, never blinked, and yet behind that perpetual scowl was something else. Something deeper. Something that made Jinnosuke’s grin falter for a fraction of a second. He’d seen that look before. During training. After battles. When things didn’t go right, when the world tilted too far one way.





He sat back, keeping his mouth shut for once. Let her speak first. Let her crack the silence.





But then came the storm.





A sudden crash from the tavern door. Some poor bastard practically fell through it, blabbering nonsense about killing, about dishonor, about mercy. The entire bar froze, still as statues, all eyes fixed on the man. Jinnosuke, beer half-lifted to his lips, turned just enough to watch.





But Omoni didn’t care. She stared straight through the chaos, her gaze locked on him, like a cannon prepped and primed.





He didn’t flinch, not yet. But he knew the moment had passed—whatever sliver of sorrow she had let surface, it was gone now. Buried.





She looked down at her drink.





Then she looked back up.





And then she went through the wall.





Jinnosuke blinked, beer now fully abandoned as he slowly leaned to the side to peer through the gaping hole she’d just made. Patrons screamed, scrambled, scattered—but he didn’t move. He just sighed.





“…Damn,” he muttered, standing up and brushing off his uniform.





By the time he caught up, Omoni had already confronted the poor sap—some unfamiliar Shinigami, probably from a squad that liked to run their mouths. Blood in her drink. That was the last straw.





Her hand slapped against the man’s chest with force that might’ve launched a lesser soul through another wall, though it wasn’t a strike—it was a demand. Fingers open, palm flat, and her words came out like fire through gritted teeth.





“Ya got blood in my fuckin’ beer, wasted one a’ my—Yamazaki’s rounds!”





Jinnosuke finally stepped up beside her, arms crossed, expression unreadable but gaze sharp.





“Better cough it up,” he added, voice calm but edged. “She’s not cheap when it comes to her punches nor I my drinks.”





He let the words linger, his stance casual but ready. If this fool so much as breathed wrong, Jinnosuke would be right there beside her—not to stop the fight, but to make sure it finished right.
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In the Rukongai
>>>>>Posting Order: Omoni -> Jinnosuke -> Takamura <<<<<
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Takamura Raizen

New member
The wall erupted behind him with a roar of brick and fury.

Takamura didn’t flinch. Didn’t turn.

Not until the voice came.

"HEY!”

That got his eyes.

He turned slowly, just in time to see a woman storming toward him—scarred, furious, and shoving past the dust cloud like it owed her money. A walking fuse with no interest in defusing.

She came to a stop in front of him and shoved her hand into his chest—not with force to do harm, but with purpose. Her tone was sharper than the steel he’d just cleaned.

"Ya got blood in my fuckin’ beer, wasted one a’ my—Yamazaki’s rounds!"

Takamura looked down at her hand, then up at her eyes.

The bar behind them buzzed with tension. Broken wall. Scattered furniture. One corpse on the floor. All of it background noise.

Her fingers curled into demand.

Then another presence arrived beside her—calmer, but carrying his own edge. A tall Shinigami, arms crossed, voice cool.

"Better cough it up," he said. "She’s not cheap when it comes to her punches nor I my drinks."

Takamura’s gaze shifted between them.

It was then he felt it—subtle at first, but undeniable.

Their reiatsu.

He read it the way others might read posture or tone: practiced, exact. There was pressure behind both of them. Heavy. Focused. Controlled. His instincts didn’t signal danger. Just data.

They were stronger.

Much stronger.

He didn’t tense. He didn’t posture.

He calculated.

"You broke through a wall for beer?"

His voice was level. Dry.

"Could’ve just shouted."

He reached into his uniform, pulled a pouch, and dropped it into her waiting hand without ceremony.

"One round. That’s what it’s worth."

He paused mid-step, eyes still half-lidded, bored.

"You two seem like you got a rhythm. Try not to waste it."

He walked off.

Didn’t rush. Didn’t look back.

The light overhead filtered down through broken rooflines and drifting dust. Somewhere in the distance, voices stirred again. The tension in the bar would settle soon enough—but the weight of their reiatsu stayed with him.

Not fear.

Just recognition.

"Still not the fight I’m looking for."
The moment the words left his mouth, the pressure hit him—violent, electric.

YOU WALK AWAY?!

The voice didn’t just echo—it crashed through his skull like thunder, layered and discordant, a storm of fury given shape. The skies in his soul darkened instantly.

YOU FELT THEM. YOU FELT THEIR POWER. THEY WOULD HAVE TESTED US!
AND YOU TURNED YOUR BACK?!

The wind whipped around him unnaturally. His coat shifted. Dust spun in tight spirals at his feet. The air thickened—not with heat, but with raw pressure.

He stopped.

Slowly turned.

His hand wrapped around one hilt.

DRAW ME!

The voice was a command. No patience. No reason. Just the storm’s hunger, clawing at its vessel.

YOU DO NOT CHOOSE THE STORM! YOU *ARE* THE STORM!
NOW CUT!

Takamura’s Reiatsu began to rise—slow, methodical, but impossible to ignore. The air choked around him. The ground vibrated. A haze of storm-gray spiritual pressure coiled at his feet and began to rise, silver arcs of energy flickering through it like lightning in a brewing sky.

The street dimmed as if the sun itself backed away.

Pressure surged outward in pulses. Compressing. Tightening. The kind of weight that paralyzes—not through fear, but through inevitability.

Inside the bar, anyone still standing would feel it. Not just power—**certainty**.

A storm was coming.

He was the storm.

His knuckles went white on the hilt.

Then—Takamura exhaled.

And pulled back.

The pressure stopped building—but it didn’t vanish. It folded inward, restrained. The storm collapsed into silence, held at the edge of detonation.

His hand loosened from the hilt.

His eyes remained forward.

"Not yet."

The voice hissed in rage. Snarled.

YOU DENY ME?!

"I control you."

No response. Only the low rumble of discontent in the back of his soul.

Takamura walked again. Not with peace—but with control.

The storm didn’t vanish.

It waited.


Posting Order: Omoni -> Jinnosuke -> Takamura​
 

Lovely Lady

Member
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"Better cough it up, She’s not cheap when it comes to her punches nor I my drinks."

"You broke through a wall for beer? Could’ve just shouted. One round. That’s what it’s worth."


Omoni stood still while the money clattered into her open palm which then closed over top of the meager amount she’d been given. It felt like the right amount but she wasn’t going to bother checking to see if it was even though she’d made quite the show in her attempt to get it. The brute’s glower remained focused on Takamura almost as if she were sizing the man up before he ultimately chose to walk away.

"You two seem like you got a rhythm. Try not to waste it."

He left Omoni and Jinnosuke with a pack of last words that utterly confused and disrupted that woman.

“Did that guy say I suck at dancin’?! TCH- bastard!”

A flare of anger nearly caused Omoni to crush the sturdy coins still clasped in her fist but she thought better of it in the end.

“Just ‘cause it's true don’t mean he gotta say it!”

Once she turned back to begin to head back to the establishment did she finally notice the disgruntled employees currently losing their minds about the missing section of their building and though they were afraid of her, their outrage did not allow them to hide their feelings or their words.

“Monster! You’re better off dead, don't ever come back here!”
“Yea! You and your boyfriend aint' welcome!!!”
“Go off and die somewhere! That’s all you death gods are good for!”


The cruel shouting from the crowd didn’t matter to Hageshi, hell, she could hardly comprehend what they were saying but she did understand their tone. The fury in their faces, the way they held themselves and their volatile tones told her everything that she needed to know and that was that she needed to leave. The expression on her face was hidden by the shadow of her bangs and she turned her back to Jinnosuke likely before he would have been able to see it.

“I gotta get back to my post. Later, Jinno.”

Once the woman had said her farewell, she pulled out her phone and tapped its shattered screen until it lit up and responded to her prompting. A few buttons later and she pulled up the Denreishiki’s GPS system. From there, just as she reached the edge of town and vanished into the busy street, she selected the location of the Senkaimon she had arrived from so that she could return to Karakura City and continue the long process of working through the aftermath of the Arrancar’s invasion. Once she got to the gate, she would return.​

Posting Order: Jinnosuke -> Takamura
 

Itami

Member

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Jinnosuke didn’t move when the storm cracked open.

The pressure rolling off the unfamiliar Shinigami wasn’t just heavy—it was deliberate. A storm coiled in a man’s skin, barely leashed, every thrum of his reiatsu a challenge pressed into the air. And still, Jinnosuke didn’t so much as blink. He stood beside the splintered wall, arms crossed, his expression calm, his spirit still.

He could feel it—oh, he could feel it.

The way that guy’s spiritual pressure flared like lightning caught in a thunderhead, flickering along the edge of something feral. But it wasn’t the power that held Jinnosuke’s attention. It was the restraint.

The sword never left the sheath.

The moment passed.

The man walked away.

And for the first time, Jinnosuke’s smirk faded into something else. Thought. Curiosity. Maybe even—just for a second—respect.

But it was Omoni’s voice that cracked the mood again.

“Did that guy say I suck at dancin’?! TCH—bastard!”

He let out a dry chuckle, finally relaxing his posture as she continued to rant.

“Just ‘cause it’s true don’t mean he gotta say it!”

“You stomp like you’re marchin’ throughd hell,” Jinnosuke muttered under his breath with a grin, but he didn’t dare say it loud enough for her to hear. He knew better. He liked his ribs where they were.

Then came the crowd.

Angry voices. Accusations. Insults hurled like stones at their backs.

“Monster! You’re better off dead, don’t ever come back here!”
“Yeah! You and your boyfriend ain’t welcome!!!”
“Go off and die somewhere! That’s all you death gods are good for!”


Jinnosuke’s eyes lowered. He wasn’t shocked. Not really. But it hit differently when it came from people you were trying to protect.

He turned his head toward Omoni, ready to offer one of his usual one-liners, something dumb to distract her or make her throw something heavy at him just to cut the tension—but she was already turning away.

The shadow of her bangs hid her face.

“I gotta get back to my post. Later, Jinno.”

She didn’t wait for a response. Just walked, shoulders heavy, steps quiet. That wasn’t like her.

He watched her until she vanished into the crowd, her figure swallowed up by the motion of Rukongai life. The last thing he saw was the faint blue glow of her GPS as she tapped her Denreishiki, charting her path back to Karakura.

Back to the wreckage. Back to duty.

Jinnosuke looked down at the crushed wall beside him.

Then to the coins still on the table inside.

Then finally, toward the place where the storm had walked away.

He sucked at his teeth, let out a slow breath, and turned to leave in the opposite direction.

“Tch… Not the fight I was lookin’ for, either.”

Jinnosuke would use shunpo to head back towards 10th Division and finish sweeping up the gate.

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LEAVING TO THE SOUTHWEST
>>>>>Posting Order: Jinnosuke -> Takamura <<<<<
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Itami

Member

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Tracking Takamura had taken no time at all.

Yūrei knew the route, the whispers, the report. The Rukongai had its pulse, and he moved through it like a shadow on its bloodstream. The dense crowds and wandering souls did little to hinder him. His reiatsu remained hidden, folded tightly against his body, impossible to sense. Even the earth beneath his feet seemed to forget he had stepped there.

He found Takamura where he expected: in the fractured heart of the outer district, where broken walls and rusted roofs met the simmering tension of division politics. The Fifth Seat was already engaged, entangled in some volatile exchange with two Shinigami from the Tenth. Yūrei did not interrupt. He watched. Studied.

Takamura’s demeanor was unbothered. Calculated. His words sharp. But it was when the pressure built—when the storm flared within him, nearly breaking loose—that Yūrei’s interest sharpened.

The control. The denial. The restraint.

Yūrei said nothing. Did nothing. He simply watched the storm fold back in on itself.

When the Tenth Division Shinigami took their leave, Yūrei moved.

He had watched from the shadows, his presence a phantom in the Rukongai air. Concealed reiatsu, silent step—there had never been any doubt that he would find Takamura. Tracking him was nothing. Evaluating him... that had taken longer.

Now, the storm had passed. Not gone—contained. And Yūrei had seen it all.

The blood hadn’t yet settled in the streets. Dust still hung in the air like ash. Yūrei stepped from a narrow alley into Takamura’s path without sound, without ceremony, as if the very world had made room for him. One moment the street was empty—the next, he was there.

No words. No posture. No theatrics.

Just stillness.

His silver gaze settled on the Fifth Seat’s form. Unblinking. Silent.

It wasn’t judgment that Takamura would feel—not from Yūrei. What he would feel instead was pressure: not from spiritual energy, but from expectation. Yūrei's expression gave nothing away, but his presence filled the street with unnatural weight. Not oppressive, not suffocating—inevitable.

He stood motionless, hand resting lightly on the hilt of his Zanpakutō. A soldier returned from an audience with his god, now sent to pass sentence.

The silence between them stretched long, but not uncomfortably so. It was a silence that carried the full weight of Eleventh Division discipline.

Takamura knew why Yurei was here.

He didn’t need to say it. He never would.

One subtle shift in his stance—an unspoken question:

Will he stand? Or will he fall?

Yūrei waited.

As always—not for permission.

But for answer.


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Arriving from Southwest Seireitei
Posting Order: Yūrei Tsukikage →
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Takamura Raizen

New member
He had barely walked twenty steps before the air changed.

Not with sound. Not with pressure. With absence.

One moment, the path ahead was empty. The next—Yūrei stood in it.

Takamura didn’t flinch. He stopped, eyes lifting to meet the gaze of his lieutenant. The dust hadn’t settled behind him, blood still clung to his boots, but now the stillness in the street belonged to someone else.

This wasn’t a check-in.

It was judgment.

Takamura understood that immediately. Yūrei’s presence didn’t shout. It waited. It didn’t threaten. It decided. And Takamura knew exactly what decision he was here to make.

His answer came without hesitation.

Reiatsu surged from his body, not wild, but suffocating in its precision. The air around him compressed, coiling tight with storm-gray pressure as silver arcs of energy flickered across his form like lightning clawing its way out of a sealed sky. The wind howled to life at his feet, kicking up dust and shattered tile as the street dimmed beneath the weight of his presence.

Within his soul, the voice returned—no longer whispering.

YES! FINALLY! STRIKE HIM! TEST HIM! HE WILL NOT BREAK EASY!

LET ME CUT HIM! LET ME SHOW HIM THE STORM’S TEETH!


Takamura stepped forward. Once. Then again. Slow, steady, unhurried. His hand fell to the hilt at his waist, not drawn, but ready. His expression didn’t shift. He didn’t grin. Didn’t posture. He simply looked Yūrei in the eye, calm beneath the spiraling gale.

"I see." His voice was quiet, but the wind carried it.

"Then come, Lieutenant."

The storm inside him howled with glee, Sōga surging against the walls of his restraint like a beast clawing for release.

YES! YESSS! BRING HIM DOWN! TEAR HIM APART! BREAK THE SKY IF YOU MUST!


Posting Order: Yūrei Tsukikage →Takamura Raizen​
 

Itami

Member

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There was no ceremony in Yūrei’s response.

No flare of spiritual energy. No prelude. No drawn-out stare.

Only motion—honed, practiced, and absolute.

He moved. And when he did, it was without the aid of reiatsu or reiryoku. Not a single thread of spiritual power was spent to augment his body. No flash step, no pressure spike. Just hardened muscle, instinct, and years of relentless, unrelenting discipline.

His foot struck the stone once.

Then he was there.

Takamura would feel the strike before his senses caught up to it—a crushing force aimed low at the knees, precise and mirrored by a simultaneous elbow strike toward both arms. The aim was not to knock him off balance.

It was to break.

Yūrei had moved with surgical clarity, his entire form a weapon of simple destruction. He didn’t posture or shout. He didn’t explore his opponent’s strength.

He eliminated it.

Every angle of the assault was honed to remove mobility and retaliation in a single second. There was no wasted effort. No dramatic technique. It was the bare-knuckled, unforgiving doctrine of the Eleventh Division executed with mechanical efficiency.

And should Takamura withstand it—should he respond with resistance rather than collapse—then Yūrei was prepared.

In that single breath, that single exchange, the Lieutenant held back none of his attention. His senses mapped Takamura’s body, his stance, the swell of his reiatsu.

If this Fifth Seat wished to test the storm—

Yūrei would show him the silence that came after.

The moment resistance was detected, the full weight of a seasoned Lieutenant would descend. Not in warning.

But in execution.
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Arriving from Southwest Seireitei
Posting Order: Yūrei Tsukikage →
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