Southwest Seireitei

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Administrator
Staff member
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Yuto

New member
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Seven Years Ago

Although it was a beautiful day, with many people moving in and out amid numerous buildings at Soul Society, this was only the beginning for those who sought to rebuild and restore what once was. It was clear that their intent was to strengthen the Soul Society as a whole—something even the younger students could tell in the culture of the Academy. At least, that was the case for the young Togami, a first-year student. Carrying an Asauchi at his side, he wore the typical attire of the Academy, unaffiliated with any division. Even so, it was clear that Togami harbored a growing interest in the World of the Living, ever since he had first heard of it and had even laid his eyes on a few books—or rather, manga, as they were called. They fascinated him.
Sounds of footsteps and doors opening and closing
creak
....
thud

“Did you hear that we’re going to do the Zankensōki monthly with a captain?!” a voice exclaimed, though it was clear it came from an unaware novice.


Another voice murmured, “It’s not as exciting as you’d think…”


A third added, “Yeah…”


“I’m just a cog…” a third-year muttered, his eyes clouded with darkness, as if he had already accepted his fate within the system.


“But wait—what about the Academy’s Jewel?” another voice chimed in. “Isn’t it true that she’s way more nice to learn from in Hakuda?”

"“Yeah, but you’ve gotta know your shit about the Academy’s Commandments, or else… welp, time for this cog to face true hell.....”" The same third-year continued to add to the conversation, only to end it abruptly as he walked toward what would be a true hell for the unfortunate third-year; undergoing the training of a captain—especially of that division—was not a blessing, but a curse.

"Man, that third-year looked like they've going to a battlefield" The young naive student added.

Several of them nodded in agreement with both the comments about the teachers and the remark about the third-year, a few folding their arms and closing their eyes as they did so. Though it wasn’t particularly interesting to Yuto, he continued to focus on his studies rather than the gossip—though the comments still intrigued him, stirring a quiet excitement for experiences he had never been able to have. It was more or less obvious that he was far more accustomed to being scrutinized through numbers and words—metrics used to catalog his flaws rather than his potential—especially when they came from his own relatives, on his mother’s side.

In the distance, the same third-year screamed aloud, his cries echoing through the training hall as his bones cracked in multiple places, each snap sounding almost deliberate. Perhaps he had failed his training with the Captain, or perhaps this was simply the cost of pushing himself too far—or maybe he had just bumped into the Captain. Either way, the screams lingered for a moment, sharp and jarring, before slowly fading.





Now


After graduating from the Academy, Yuto was now a decorated member of the Tenth Division. Dressed in a standard Shihakushō, it was clear he was trying a bit too hard not to attract attention, avoiding flashy accessories or outerwear such as scarves. He was unmistakably a novice, having only recently joined the Gotei Thirteen.


His uniform was neat—perhaps too neat for a Shinigami assigned to patrol Naruki City—though that impression faded the moment one looked into his eyes. The light within them seemed to dim more with each passing day. “I’m just glad we’re finally done with our thirty-six-hour patrol…” he murmured. His eyes were heavy, dark circles beneath them suggesting he hadn’t had a break in the last two days in the Naruki City. His expression was displeased, though it was little more than a quiet complaint to himself. He stretched, rolling the tension from his body as he extended his arms, a yawn escaping the shorter Shinigami of the duo.
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"You think the Captain pushed us a little too hard… right?"
The young man said it to his taller companion, who was also a member of the Tenth Division. He yawned again—until he was startled by the sudden appearance of several papers, invitations from Tōru Tsunayashiro, causing him to dart behind his partner’s back. “W-what the heck was that?!” His eyes were wide with fear, though the panic slowly receded as he realized what they were. “Papers? …An invitation?” He continued. His face appeared to be troubled, almost as if he was more concerned about the taller companion's reaction than his own. "I-I think it's about time for us to have some break, especially after our patrol... Lot of people to talk to... Especiaaaaaaaallly after our patrol.... It does sound nice to enjoy a good dinner or two... Right... Right?" He continued, though his words suggested something else. Deep down, he hoped his taller companion would refuse—Yuto was uneasy at the thought of the invitation. If he declined but his companion wanted to go, he knew he’d feel guilty. It was almost as if he was eager to hear his companion’s response, hoping for a refusal so he wouldn’t have to feel bad about not wanting to attend the so-called dinner party.

...
...
...

Knowing his companion’s tendency to do exactly the opposite, Yuto found himself heading toward the Tsunayashiro Manor.
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Southwest ➟ Central Seireitei for Dinner Party
 
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IshikawaInuzuri

New member


Seimei Ukitake (浮竹 清明)

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10 YEARS AGO

It had been a bloody day, a day of ruin and red skies. Seimei was lying amidst rubble, broken structures and elements of a destroyed building acting as his blanket and dust was to be his bed. His eyes were barely open as he stared into the sky, merely hearing roaring sounds of death and combat all across. He wasn’t far from dying himself, but his shame kept him alive. The shame of not being able to live up to his duties, and the shame of letting the last memory of her being destroyed. The old house where he grew up with his grandmother. He could’ve easily avoided being in the situation he’s in, but for once, his judgement was clouded by sentiment. Something incredibly rare for someone who’d served the Onmitsukidō for as long as he’d done. Fortunately, none who lived there died. However, merely knowing the building itself was destroyed was too much for him. He failed.


”That monster fled! Dispose of all the Hollows and Arrancar you see!”



Seimei heard a roaring command from just a few dozen metres away as he remained grounded, however relieved that at least the greatest threat had apparently been dealt with. He had no clue how that was achieved, but he was sure that whoever was responsible for it pulled somewhat of a miracle. The relief however killed every bit of stress and adrenaline that kept him alive, and his skyward gaze began to blur ever more. Every bit of life he had lived so far flashed in his mind. From his childhood in Inuzuki, the loneliness he felt in the Shinō Academy to his many tiresome hours of subterfuge, espionage and assassination in the ranks of the Onmitsukidō. He didn’t have much of a story to tell, so dying without witnesses felt like a fine option to him.

However, it seemed like his thread of fate wasn’t bound to be broken just yet. With what his blurry gaze saw, a Shinigami—tall, likely a male—appeared before him and began to clean the rubble off his body.


”I’ll get you to the medics, you’ll live.”



He heard a voice he hadn’t heard before. A voice of a male certainly, and a deep one. He felt that his body was being picked up—the last sensation he felt before his consciousness drifted away. He didn’t know whether he’d live or not. However, his subconscious began to speak in ways it hadn’t spoken before. He heard the voice of his Zanpakutō, his grandmother, his father, mother, and even his uncle. Where would their voices lead him? What did they try to tell him?​

PRESENT DAY

Seimei came back from yet another routine patrol with his companion Yuto—and he certainly loves to play the strings of the rather fragile nervous system that his ”younger brother” possessed. He wasn’t his brother by blood, but Seimei felt the need to take him under his wing when he first saw the little wreck of a boy enter their barracks after his graduation from the Shinō Academy. He reminded him of himself when he was young, in many ways. As such, he wanted Yuto to have something that he himself didn’t have—someone who has his back whenever required. However, that did come at the cost of Seimei pushing the nerves of the youngster at every possible turn. What kind of an older brother would he be if he didn’t do such things? He listened to the boy talk while he maintained his trademark, casual smirk as he walked forward.


”You gotta be kidding me.”


Seimei said with a slight punch of laughter in his words, almost ridiculed by the kid.


”Hard!? If it was up to me, I’d increase our patrol rotation times to seventy-two hours. Kids these days.”


Seimei said with a sigh at the end and a hint of sarcasm as per usual, although he was being honest. During his last ten years in the service of the 10th Division, he’d spent thousands of hours in patrol and had equally guided thousands upon thousands of souls—regardless of what kind of souls—on their right paths. And prior to his days in the service of Gotei 13, he’d spent tens of thousands of hours performing espionage in the service of Onmitsukidō. He had some mileage on him at this point in time, and there was some toughness that came with that mileage. That unfortunately was something he couldn’t teach either. And then he brought up the dinner invitation. In all honesty, Seimei himself wasn’t the most liked person and he was quite the outsider during his days in the Shinō Academy. Therefore, he wasn’t too keen on going. However, he was ready to go merely for the sake of pushing Yuto’s buttons.


”D-d-d-dinner? Yeah we’ll go, just because you’re probably breaking apart just to go there, right?”


Seimei uttered with a fake stutter and a painfully sarcastic tone, but he once more meant what he said—the boy got exactly what he wished, or perhaps not…​

Southwest ➟ Central Seireitei for Dinner Party
 
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Takamura Raizen

New member
10 Years Ago — A Few Days After the Invasion

Raizen left Captain Date’s office with the other seated officers, arms and torso wrapped in visible bandages beneath his modified shihakushō. The door slid shut behind them with a final click that echoed too cleanly for a Seireitei that had bled only days ago. His injuries pulled with every step, tight wrappings protesting across ribs and shoulders, but his pace never changed. “Vanguard again.” one of the seated officers muttered as they walked, voice edged with a grin. “Like we ever stopped being it.” “The Head Captain wants the Eleventh to be the strongest.” another replied. “Guess that means we get to break a few more bones than usual.” Raizen didn’t join the laughter. He didn’t need to. The order had been blunt enough. Squad Eleven would rebuild as the vanguard by expanding its ranks recruiting Shinigami with real melee aptitude and forging them through Eleventh training. Not ceremony. Not reputation. Proof. While the others split off down different corridors, already talking about “tests” and which divisions to raid for bodies, Raizen turned toward the neutral training yards.
“You always move when the talking starts.” the voice murmured in his ear, amused. “Afraid you’ll “say what you really want?” “Quiet.” Raizen said under his breath. The voice didn’t listen. He crossed a Seireitei still marked by the invasion patched stone, scorched seams, courtyards crowded with Shinigami who trained because standing still felt like an invitation for the world to break again. Raizen stopped at the edge of the first yard and watched without announcing himself. Steel rang. Bodies collided. Movements were rough, sharpened by fear and survival. Raizen’s eyes tracked details. Footwork first. Recovery second. Who panicked when clipped, who adapted, who stepped forward instead of back. “That one,” the voice said immediately. “Low stance. She doesn’t flinch.” Raizen watched the woman take a glancing hit, stagger, then adjust and press back in. Messy, but honest. “And him,” the voice added, sharper. “The defender. He hates losing more than he likes winning.” The young man took a blow to the shoulder, stumbled and stepped forward anyway, breaking the rotation on instinct. Strength revealed itself in recovery. Raizen stepped closer. The sparring slowed, then stopped entirely as his presence registered. “You,” he said, pointing at the young defender. The man stiffened. “Me, sir?” “Name.” A beat of hesitation. “Now.” The name came out fast after that. Raizen nodded once, then pointed to the woman. “You. Name.” She answered immediately. Good. Finally, he turned to an older Shinigami whose breathing had gone ragged too quickly. “You.” “I didn’t…” the man started. “You fought in the invasion?” Raizen cut in. The man’s jaw tightened. “Yeah.” “And you’re still alive.” “Yes.” “Then you can still be useful, you’re coming with me.” Raizen said flatly. “I didn’t ask for a transfer.” Raizen stepped closer until the space between them felt like the edge of a blade. “You survived hell. Your preference doesn’t matter. Decide.” The older Shinigami glared at him, pride warring with caution. “Cut him.” the voice purred. Raizen ignored it. After a moment, the man exhaled sharply. “Fine.” Raizen turned and walked. Footsteps followed. By the time they reached Squad Eleven’s grounds, the air felt heavier, louder, and meaner. Laughter mixed with impacts. Someone cheered as another fighter hit the dirt. Raizen faced the three. “This isn’t your old yard,you’re not here to be comfortable.” He stepped into an open ring, took a practice blade then a second. “You have melee aptitude,” he continued. “That’s why you’re here. Aptitude isn’t strength. Strength is what’s left when your body stops pretending.” The older man opened his mouth. Raizen struck him across the ribs with the flat of the blade, hard enough to fold him sideways. The man hit the ground with a grunt. Shock flashed into anger. “Lesson one, you don’t choose when the test begins.” Raizen said calmly, looking at the other two. The woman lowered her stance immediately. The younger man raised his blade, jaw set. “There it is ,that honesty.” the voice whispered, pleased. “Attack me.” Raizen said.They hesitated, Raizen didn’t. He moved cleanly, precise, breaking rhythm, correcting mistakes with impact. A clipped knee. A numbed wrist. A crushed guard. He drove them until pride burned away and instinct took over. When he finally stopped, all three were still upright, breathing hard. “You’re not dead, so you continue.” He said as he turned away bandages darkening, breath steady the storm laughed softly in his ear. “You see? This is what you are.” the voice said, Raizen didn’t answer. He had recruits to forge, and a vanguard to rebuild whether the storm liked it or not.

5 Years Ago — The Storm Stops Waiting

Raizen healed. The bandages vanished one by one, but the scars stayed, pale lines and raised seams tracing his arms and torso like a map of battles survived. He never hid them. Squad Eleven didn’t ask him to. Scars were proof you had been tested and hadn’t broken.
Recruitment became routine after that. Brutal. Efficient. Predictable. Raizen remained at the center of it, training new blood the same way every time, pressure first, correction second, mercy never. But the first three he had dragged in after the invasion never left his side for long. He trained them personally, drilling them until their movements stopped being borrowed and became instinct. They learned when to step in, when to endure, and when to keep moving even as their bodies screamed to stop. “Again.” He said one evening as the yards thinned out. One of them groaned under their breath. Another tightened their grip. The third only nodded and moved. “They learn faster when you don’t let up,” the voice commented, sharp with approval. “Just like you.” Raizen didn’t answer. He never did, in front of others. When the yards finally emptied and Squad Eleven’s noise faded into distant laughter and steel, he returned to his quarters alone. That was when the nagging grew louder. It never stopped, constant bickering, constant accusations. “You’re lying to yourself,” the voice hissed as he sat, twin blades resting across his lap. “You cage what you want most and call it discipline.” “I choose control.” Raizen replied, breathing steadily as his reiatsu compressed inward. “You choose fear!” the voice snapped back. Wind answered before he could. His inner world tore open, the endless ocean below, storm-choked sky above. Lightning crawled across roiling clouds as the storm-wolf formed, larger than before, closer. It didn’t circle this time. It lunged. Not a warning. Not a taunt. Impact, wind slammed into Raizen like a wall, forcing him to brace as waves surged violently beneath them. He met it with calculation, compressing his reiatsu, cutting through pressure with precise strikes. “You’ve had years!” the growl thundered. “Years to accept what you are!” the whisper added. “I’m improving!” Raizen shouted back, holding his ground. The storm-wolf roared and struck again. Sky and sea collided as they fought, discipline against hunger, control against truth. Raizen refused to give ground, but the clash shook the world around them. His eyes snapped open. The physical world answered. Wind exploded through his quarters, ripping papers from walls, splintering shelves, shattering lanterns as a tight, localized storm erupted outward. The door slammed open hard enough to crack the frame. Raizen was on his feet instantly, reiatsu snapping inward as he forced the storm back into containment. The pressure collapsed with a violent snap, leaving wreckage and silence behind. His room was ruined. The blades at his side trembled. Not obedient. Impatient. Raizen stared at them, chest rising once before steadying. “This doesn’t change anything.” he said. The whisper answered softly, cold and certain. “Of course it does.” Outside, the Seireitei slept on, unaware. Inside Raizen, the truth pressed harder than ever: the pressure was escalating, and control alone was no longer enough.

Present Day — A Necessary Request

Raizen dismissed his three favored trainees as the sun dipped low, their bodies bruised and breathing heavy but their stances still firm. “Dawn,” he told them, voice flat. “Don’t be late.” None of them argued. They had learned better. He left the training grounds alone, letting the noise of squad 11 fall behind him, cheers from the outer districts, polished banners snapping in the wind, wood ringing in ceremonial drills. None of it mattered. What mattered was frequency. The spirit’s outbursts were coming closer together now, its constant muttering sharpening into accusation, its talk of self-deception growing angrier, less patient.
“You can feel it, the lie’s cracking.” “Not now.” Raizen muttered. The path toward Captain Date’s office stretched out ahead of him, wooden floor immaculate, lanterns already lit. He slowed, not from fear, but calculation. Raizen didn’t fear his Captain in a simple way. He understood him. To Tarō Date, everyone was a cog—useful until they weren’t, replaceable the moment they disrupted the machine. Raizen had survived because he never malfunctioned. “And now you’re asking to leave the line.” the voice said, almost amused. “I’m preventing failure.” Raizen replied quietly. He needed isolation—distance from the Seireitei, space to either force the storm into order or finally listen and change on his own terms. If it broke loose here, the damage wouldn’t be contained. Raizen walked the long hall, posture straight, breathing steady. Fifth Seat of Squad Eleven. Proven. Reliable. Worth keeping—for now. His hand hovered at the door. “You’re still lying.” the voice whispered. “But at least you’re moving.” Raizen clenched his fist and knocked.
 

Adonai

Administrator
Staff member
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From Northwest Seireitei: 13th Division

Arriving at his barracks, after a fruitful little side trip, Taro returns to see the place spotless of any fliers. Despite what the Commander may have perceived of 11th Division Taro Date has been running a tight ship since he took over as Captain of 11th. What were once thugs and barbarians are now soldiers ready to go to war at a moment's notice. The only thing that has changed is joint training exercises with other Divisions to bolster their fighting strength as well. Visitors from the other Divisions often note an uncomfortable atmosphere, a feeling of walking on egg shells as if they are not wanted there. Their feelings would be correct, the men and women of 11th Division work on a schedule, having to deal with others who know nothing of it disrupts that schedule and dilutes their own training and duties. Naturally, Taro cares nothing for having to bolster the ranks of others. If the Captains, Lieutenants, and seated members of the other divisions are failing at maintaining their own forces then why should he bear the weight of their failures?

As he walks through the courtyard his Division is in the midst of Zanjutsu practice, the ones sitting down to “catch a breather” are obviously visitors from other Divisions. He pays them no attention, in his eyes they don’t exist. As he treads along one of his own Division members approaches him and bows before giving him a report.
”Sir! The fliers have been cleaned up, we made use of the extras from the other Divisions to make sure it was done, our own training was not impeded by the task.”
”Good job, Cog. Is there anything else to report?”
”It appears Fifth Seat Raizen is looking for you, although he appears to be knocking at your office door… We are unsure as to why…”

Taro opens his eyes slightly.
”Surely he knew I was at a Captain’s meeting and wouldn’t be back for some time. If he did not sense my presence here in the Barracks then what could he be knocking for?”

The Shinigami doesn’t know how to answer, he keeps his head down in silence.
”Worry not, Cog, it was a rhetorical question. What of Sameko? I’m assuming she said nothing to remind him. Although she probably didn’t think to say anything assuming as a fellow seated member he would have known of my absence, no matter. Carry on, Cog.”

The Reaper

He waves the man away and the Shinigami wastes no time bowing and returning to his training. As Takamura was waiting for someone to answer the door he felt a presence behind him, a looming shadow of violence hanging over head, an hallucination of a giant scythe moving into position to remove his head. These things are the prelude to his Captain’s arrival, the violent Reiatsu that manifests his killing intent in the form of a reaper. Taro stands down the hall, just staring at him, arms behind his back with the mocking appearance of patience.
”5th Seat Cog, have your wits fled you? Surely something must have happened in the very recent past to have turned you dull. Why are you knocking on a door, waiting for someone, who was not here, to answer? Your observation skills insult me and you insult me even further because I recommended you for the Commander's silly Bankai Aptitude program. Tell me, who were you expecting to answer that door when there is no one behind it?”

Taro approaches him, walking down the hall. As he gets closer the scythe moves closer and closer to Takamura’s neck. It was as if his proximity to Taro made the killing intent that much more palpable and real. The scythe finally slips through his neck and the hallucination vanishes once his Captain is standing right beside him. The very real threat of Taro Date’s presence is much more frightening than any hallucination conjured up by anyone. Now that he is closer Takamura can see the veins bulging on his Captain's face, how he responds to this next question determines how Taro reacts.
”So, Cog, what is it that you wanted?”


 
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Jushiro arrived just outside the tenth division barracks; seemingly appearing out of nowhere. There wasn’t a blur for the untrained and trained eyes to follow. A mere moment ago the space was empty and now it was filled by the Captain’s physical presence. As anyone can expect, the entrance(s) to the barracks were guarded, capable Shinigami placed at each gate. This was a stark contrast compared to times before. Things were no longer lax around the tenth division grounds. Each member knew and understood their role and just what was expected of them. Everyone needed to make themselves useful or be disposed of. Whether its taking turns patrolling Naruki City, completing their duties around the barracks or otherwise.

There are moments when Jushiro allows his squad members to ‘let their hair down’ but all of that was short lived. He did not allow them to become comfortable with mediocrity. The barracks remained clean and orderly and it was maintained with the help of well drilled soldiers. Upon noticing Jushiro as he made his presence known. The guards at the gates straightened up, bowed their heads after greeting the man and opened the gates promptly. Jushiro nodded as he made his way inside, his face hidden behind the mask that was now white in colour with red and blue markings. For how long the mask will maintain this current appearance remains to be seen.

Jushiro could easily have another drink but decided against it. He wasted no time getting to his office, swiftly moving through the halls, not stopping for idle chit chat. For a few moments he was in a reflective mood. The Captain’s meeting left him with many questions. And it made him uncomfortable not knowing the answer. Thinking back on things, it’s been a while since Jushiro visited the thirteenth division barracks. He needed to liaise with them since they performed the same function except in a different place. This was now on his to do list, for now he wanted to hear the latest report from Naruki City. Jushiro lifted his hand and activated his wristlink. A monitor was projected from it, giving him access to the latest reports and who was on patrol. Scrolling through the records Jushiro came across the two names that stood out the most to him.


“Yuto Togami and Seimei Ukitake. Lets see what you two have to report back to me”.

He said out loud but his words weren't directed at anyone in particular. Jushiro starts typing away at the wristlink and soon enough both Yuto and Seimei will receive a message to their Denreishiki. It reads.

“I am eager to hear of your travels to Naruki City. Try not to keep me waiting”.

The message was nothing more than a summons for both Yuto and Seimei to make their presence known to their Captain. In the meantime, Jushiro would ponder some more about the implications of Captain Taro’s words. He wasn’t feeling uneasy, at least not yet. Jushiro found himself staring at the wristlink, scrolling through it, looking for signs of life from Michiya who is apparently of the Senko lineage. He has a few things to discuss with the twelfth division lieutenant.
 

Takamura Raizen

New member
The Eleventh Division did not exist as a place. It existed as an idea enforced by will.

Even now, the barracks obeyed one doctrine: motion without hesitation. Stone, steel, and flesh moved because Captain Date expected them to. The air itself felt disciplined, compressed by schedules, drills, and the unspoken understanding that inefficiency was a punishable offense. The courtyard beyond the hallway thundered with Zanjutsu practice, wooden blades rising and falling in rhythm, strikes counted not by time but by endurance.

Inside the corridor, away from the noise, that same doctrine narrowed into something sharper.

Takamura Raizen stood before the closed office door, posture straight despite the pressure behind him. The illusion of the scythe had faded, but the weight remained—Captain Date’s reiatsu pressing in close enough to prickle the scars along Raizen’s arms. He did not turn. He did not flinch. His breathing remained measured, controlled by habit rather than comfort.

“Yes, Captain,” Raizen answered, voice steady despite the tremor he refused to show. He inclined his head just enough to acknowledge rank without surrendering it entirely. ““I knew you weren’t here at the barracks. I had intended to wait for you here, the knock was habit.”

The silence that followed was tight, deliberate. A test in itself.

Raizen could feel it then—the storm stirring beneath his control, agitated by proximity, by threat, by the simple fact that he stood before someone who would not hesitate to remove a malfunctioning cog. Aramijin Sōga whispered at the edges of his awareness, eager, impatient, amused by the tension.

Careful,[/i] the voice murmured, cold and intimate. ”choose your next words carefully. Cog”.

Raizen swallowed the impulse to tighten his jaw. He kept his eyes forward.

“I came to request permission,”. he continued, choosing his words with surgical care. “Not as a deviation from duty, but in service to it.”.

The hallway seemed to narrow. Captain Date’s presence loomed at his side—close enough that Raizen could feel the heat of it, the restrained violence coiled beneath that mock patience.

“There have been… irregularities,” Raizen said. Nervousness crept into his tone despite his effort, tempered immediately by resolve. “With my Zanpakutō. Escalations in manifestation. I have contained them, but the frequency has increased. Remaining within the Seireitei presents a risk to the barracks.”

A pause. Not permission. Not refusal.

Raizen drew a slow breath and pressed on, defiance threading through the apology he refused to voice. “I am requesting temporary leave to train in isolation. To resolve the issue at its source—either by bringing it fully under control, or by understanding what it is attempting to force upon me.”

The storm whispered again, sharper this time. Say it! Say you’re afraid!

Raizen did not.

“I will return operational,” he finished quietly. “Or I will not.”

The corridor held its breath. The pressure did not lift. The answer—whatever it would be—hung in the air like a blade waiting to fall.

“So, Captain,” Raizen said, finally turning his head just enough to meet the weight beside him, “may I go?”
 

Nohi

New member
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There was the smell of blood; the metallic aroma of rusted copper wafted through the training grounds as the sounds of several other individuals hid away at the lone individual meditating in the corner. Since the zanpakuto mandate, many have undergone Jinzen (刃禅, Blade Zen; Viz "Sword Zen") training. Such was the same case for this young soul, who sat motionless and deeply transcended within the confines of her zapakuto’s spirit world. And in many places, blood seemed to stain the shihakusho and apron that sat so delicately on her body.

There she stood, in the mass expanse of what seemed to be a never-ending lake that was so clear it mirrored the blue sky above. There was no beginning, no end; what simply existed was the vast emptiness, Kosame Sameko, Sixth Seat of the Eleventh Division, and her distorted reflection that only grew more unrecognizable with every step that she took. Her body was covered in open wounds and deep cuts, and even from the vicious state that she appeared to be in, her expression was unmoving, eyes locked and focused on whatever was to come next.

From her right came a blade sprouting from the undisturbed surface and she parried with her own that she gripped so viciously that the callouses on the palm of her hands broke apart. Although searing in burning ache, Sameko swung back to clash metal against metal once, twice, and again to send it back beneath the surface when another sprouted from a different direction. Sameko is just in time to hold her wakizashi in front of her flatly so that the edge of the opposing blade screeches to a halt against the flattened side. This one, too, gets knocked back into the mirrored depths and from below shoots twin blades that clash against the metal bracers that adorn her forearms. Though she is free from immediate harm, the force knocks her back and she does her best to steady her feet on the rippling surface.


“You’ve improved, but even you know that this is not enough. Look at the wounds on your body. I refuse to have a wielder in such a sorry state. You must recover. We can continue this when you are healed.”

Sameko looks down at her reflection, watching as her own distorted image speaks to her in dual-tones. Her dulled eyes are locked onto the deforming image. She says nothing, but a solemn nod in agreement follows and the multi-laugh faceted from her spirit stirs her from her entranced state, and all of the sounds around her come crashing in. Blades clashing as members of the Eleventh busy themselves as the arrival of their Captain sparks even more ambition to prove themselves. Sameko stands to her feet and pulls her zanpakuto from the ground and sheathes it back in its holster, sitting it perfectly behind her. She pulls at her clothes, even despite present company to look at all of the deep cuts she suffered from the inner world training with Hansha.

A gentle exhale escapes and she makes her way over towards the main quarters area for seated members, feeling the presence of Captain Date just as her consciousness came to, the air already stifling with his bloodlust and rage towards a familiar face. He was accompanied by Fifth Seat Takamura Raizen, and she couldn’t help but be curious as to what they may be discussing. Sameko rubs at her eyes, her footsteps rather silent so as to not disturb the conversation between a captain and his seated member. She only catches the end as Raizen asks for express permission for a leave for isolation training. Outside of Jinzen, she isn’t very familiar with isolated training, but perhaps that is due to the Captain’s habits.

Jade eyes rove over the Fifth Seat’s posture and his ticks. Sameko could see the trembling of his hands, and hear the strain of his voice as he fought to ask for what he desires.Though she doesn’t speak, Sameko could only find his presence to be lackluster and a sorrowful sight as the higher seat. In the midst of him stumbling over his own words, Sameko is directly behind him, but visible enough to Captain Date that she bows her head simply out of respect as a greeting. Should Taro acknowledge her, she’d simply pull at her bloodied clothes and hold up the number ‘4’ on her fingers before bidding her farewell.

As she passed by the two individuals, there was bored recognition when her eyes rose to meet Takamura, but said recognition would come to pass by the time he registered that Sameko had left the Eleventh Division to head to Fourth. She had to see the only medic that she trusted to oversee her and her wounds: Shiratori Fuu, a shinigami that had oddly striking eyes that stood in stark contrast to the likes of Sameko's.


Traveling to Northeast Seireitei

 
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Adonai

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Taro briefly looks past Takamura and nods to Sameko, his gaze returns to Takamura, absorbing the words he is speaking to him. Taro sighs to himself, hands still behind his back, as he tries to understand what Takamura is exactly asking of him.
”You want my permission to stop training so that you may… Go train more? 5th Seat Cog, you find me in a particularly good mood today because had this been any other day I’d have Sameko dragging you to Fourth Division with her for asking such a redundant thing. Very well, I grant you permission to do so. However, do leave your location on a note because I am unsure when the Commander Cog will begin holding his Bankai aptitude program and I will certainly not be hunting you down for such a thing.”

Taro walks past him and opens the door to his office. He stands in the doorway briefly, looking into the darkness and thinking nothing of it as he formulates his next words. Believe it or not, it is extremely difficult for Taro to be kind to others who have not earned his kindness, hence the long pause and thinking about what he is going to say next.
”I expect good things from you. The additional training you are putting yourself through on top of the Bankai aptitude training, which should unlock your Bankai, will put you ahead of the other Cogs in this failing military we call the Gotei 13. As always, I do not tolerate failure.”

Taro walks into his office and slides the door closed. He navigates the darkness, lighting candles within to illuminate the space. He finds a note on his desk, he is curious to who could have entered his dwelling without his permission, but upon seeing the Date crest on the back of it he banished the thought. He opens the note, reading it quietly as a small grin spreads across his face. It was a summons, to return to the Date Compound, or rather to the new Date Compound. The Shiba nestled themselves within the Southwest Seireitei but after it was destroyed during the battle with the Arrancar all that remained was rubble. However, during the last ten years the Date began cleaning up the area and building on top of it and under it.

The Date always treated the Shiba like a weak link, always knowing that they would be the first to fall from grace and more than likely the first one extinguished. They will stand atop the bones of the Shiba clan to establish themselves in the Soul Society properly. Their compound does not merely represent moving from one location to another but also their push for power, for control. It represents how they are no longer hiding in the shadows of the Great Nobility and how they will make strides all on their own. The compound’s design conforms to the rest of the Seireitei’s standards in terms of design and layout, the only difference being the rooftops are deep black in color. It’s enough to catch the eye of anyone passing by but also gives a warning to not approach too closely either.

Taro stashes the note within his Shihakushou and leaves his office after extinguishing all the candles he had just lit. He passes by one of his own Shinigami and stops briefly to speak to him.
”Cog, I am heading to the Date Compound, I am unsure of when I will return. Relay this message to those of our division, if someone comes here seeking me, tell them where I am. If they have a functioning brain they will await my return.”

The Shinigami bows and begins making the rounds to tell the rest of the division. Meanwhile Taro vanishes using Shunpo to travel home. He arrives at the front gates where the guards do not hesitate to open said gates for him.

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He walks in to see things are quite busy, well busy by Date standards as the clan grounds are usually still with little to no activity. The activity he is witnessing are messengers coming and going, more than likely seeking out lesser houses to tighten the noose on them as well to keep them quiet and out of the affairs of the Great Clans. He doesn’t return home much since he has no real reason to consider his duties as a Captain often outweigh any meaningless visits he could make. As he walks through the courtyard he is greeted by members of his clan, although they only refer to him as Gihō-ki (技法 器; Technique Vessel). Depending on who you ask it can be perceived as a title or merely seeing him as an object. With the Date one can never tell.

Taro had been called back specifically because of what he is to the clan, the Third Finger of the inner hand. Unlike most clans the Date do not have a single head, instead there exist five members who act as the unified head of the clan. Each one is referred to as a finger ranking from first to fifth. The numbers have no bearing on seniority or authority, they are merely positions given to the most capable members of the clan, Taro being one of them. However, when the Inner Hand needs a spokesman for dealings outside of the clan the members with the least public presence tend to be selected. As such Taro would never be selected to speak with other Clan heads for matters of diplomacy, that would be left to the more secretive ones.

After walking down various hallways and flights of stairs Taro arrives at their meeting room, a circular table with a statue of Mimihagi in the center of it. He takes his seat and greets no one the same way no one greets him. He sits in silence, crossing his arms, awaiting the arrival of the other members of the Inner Hand to arrive.


 
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