#calling him Shocky-kun and all that
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Yeah another traumatized
Shockwave would hate humanity even more. đ€Ł
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Burning Hearts and Burning Souls a.k.a Shiba Fever
For days his skin had felt like it didnât fit rightâtoo tight and too loose, sunburnt, and freezing all at the same time.
âI am sorry, Ichigo, but I cannot find anything wrong with your human body. Even your iron levels are good, and you know how we had to fight that with iron pills after you hit puberty and had that first growth spurt. You were constipated for monthsâŠâ
Ichigo pulled his shirt closed as his father dropped his stethoscope.
âI thought weâd agreed never to discuss that again.â He growled the words out over Isshinâs embarrassing catalog of his childhood illnesses. âYouâre sure I donât have a fever?â He rubbed his hand over his forehead. It didnât feel hot, but every other symptom just screamed fever.
âAh my son, I know you have very little faith in my abilities as a physicianâŠâ the drama king was at it again, and Ichigo was tempted to add to the list of things about his father that he had little faith in, âbut even I can take a temperature. Unless youâd prefer I try the rectal thermometer?â
Ichigo scooted back violently and held up his hands in defeat. âNo, no thatâs okay. I believe you. Itâs not a fever. Not a fever.â
He slid off the exam table and finished putting his clothes back in order.
âThanks for checking me out,â he said, sighing. âI just canât figure out whatâs wrong with me.â
Isshin hesitated a moment. âWell, Iâve taken several blood samples and sent them off for testing. Â We will keep watching, and hopefully weâll figure out whatâs causing this discomfort sooner rather than later.
Ichigo nodded and grabbed his bag. Heâd promised Chad theyâd meet up at the gym.
âIâll let you know if anything changes. Iâm going to be over at Chadâs this afternoon. We may get dinner. Iâll call and let Yuzu know if Iâm not going to be back in time to eat with you all.â
With that and a wave, he spun on his heel and headed out the door, into the sunlight.
Isshin reached for his phone and dialed a number he hated. âKisuke? I think Ichigo has a problem.â
***
Ichigo pushed open the door to the boxing club. The smell of leather and rubber and sweat was strangely pleasant, and it was nice to hear the healthy sound of fighting without the accompanying panic of having to win or die.
âHey Ichigo,â Chad called from the ring in the center of the room, and then lashed out in a sharp one-two punch, knocking his opponent off-balance. âBe there in a minute.â
He watched the big man square off against a smaller but much quicker opponent, and a wave of dizziness threatened to bring him to his knees. His skin was on fire, and swirling gray encroached on his view of the black and red ring.
 Heâs fast.  Damn heâs fast.  STAND AND FIGHT LIKE A MAN! Whatâs he even doing here.  He isnât Shiba. Looks like one ofâŠ.
âIchigo.â A deep voice called him back from the edge of unconsciousness, and then there was a cracking sound and the terrible smell of ammonia. âYou with me, man? Come on, shake it off. Â Take a deep breath. Yeah, thatâs it.â
Ichigo grabbed his stomach trying to stop the bleeding, grab the black handled tachi that had sliced him in half, to keep his insides inside⊠but there was nothing there. No tachi. No blood. Just the ghost pain from the vision and the searing image of the face of the man whoâd killed/not killed him.
Sweaty arms held him propped against a bare chest. Chad. Just Chad.
The bright lights hanging above him looked like multiple suns, each one surrounded by a halo of color that slowly faded as his vision came back to normal.
He sat up and the little trainer next to him pulled his eyelids back in a cursory examination. Â He grunted and nodded to Chad. âShould be good. But he isnât fighting today. I wonât clear him for the ring.â
Ichigo could feel Chadâs agreeing head shake as an earthquake through his chest. âThatâs cool, Hoda-sensei. Iâll get him up and feed him. He forgets to eat sometimes.â
The trainer looked at Ichigo and the redhead shrugged and pushed himself. âBeen fighting off an inner ear thing. My balance is all screwed up. Sorry for the trouble, Hoda-sensei.â
It looked like the little man was going to say something else, but a head shake from Chad stopped him and he looked between the two men a moment before coming to some decision.
âOkay, Kurosaki-kun, if you say so. Â Have your dad look you over if it doesnât get better, yeah?â Â He looked at Chad. âYou need to get your rub down and your shower. Youâre going to lock up if you sit here and let your muscles get cold. Kurosaki-kun, you can sit in the locker room while Yasutora-kun finishes up. Now get going.â
He pulled Ichigo to his feet and watched as Chad rose smoothly behind him. âNext time, donât just cold-cock your sparring partner when your friend goes down, Yasutora-kun. Itâs hard enough to find someone willing to let you beat up on them regularly.â
Chad just rumbled something agreeable and the trainer made a frustrated sound. âFine, fine⊠ locker room. Now.â
With that the little man wandered back to the ring-side and starting barking directions at another pair of fighters warming up.
âYou good to walk, Ich?â Chad picked up his gloves from the floor where heâd apparently thrown them.
Ichigo rolled his head from side to side, but the swirling gray didnât reappear. âYeah, I think Iâm good. The dizziness is gone at least.â
They made their way to the outside of the mats on the wrestling area floor and headed to the locker rooms in the back.
âWhat happened?â Chad asked.
Ichigo shook his head, still feeling a little discombobulated. âI donât know. One minute I was watching you take on that little guy, and then the whole world got weird. The ring and the gym were gone, and I was outside with some little guy in black attacking me. He stabbed me in the stomach⊠it was⊠bad.â
âBad, huh?â Chad didnât say anything else. He didnât have to. For Ichigo to say something was bad, it had to be really bad.
âYeah.â Ichigo pulled a deep shuddery breath and pressed his hand again his abdomen. He could still feel his intestines, hot and slippery, as he tried and failed to hold them in. He could feel the blood dripping through his fingers. Hear the scream of someone else in the distance and see the satisfied face of his killer. âBad.â
He pressed a hand to his own forehead, but even with the shocky feeling making his fingers cold, he didnât feel any hotter than before. This was just crazy.
âYou talk to your dad about the fever? You said you were going to.â
Chad had argued that he check in with Isshin for a while, ever since the sensitivity had started, but heâd refused until now.
âYeah.â He sighed and followed Chad further into the locker room. âHe canât find anything wrong. No fever. Nothing obvious. Â He did take some blood samples and is going to send them to the lab. If he doesnât find anything there, I donât know what Iâm going to do. This is getting crazy.â
Chad splashed around for a few minutes before coming back out, towel slung low on his hips, and hair dripping long down his back.
âYou scared me, Ich. Your face lost all its color. You were looking at something, but I couldnât tell what.â Chad didnât push, but Ichigo knew he would wait until he got an explanation.
âItâs like I told you before,â he said. âDifferent person this time, though. And I saw who killed me.â
Chad grunted and put a hang on Ichigoâs shoulder. âYou didnât tell your dad about that part, did you?â
Ichigo flushed a little and looked away. âIf it turned out to just be a fever from some human disease, there was no point. Â He wouldnât need the details of my hallucinations to treat whatâs causing them.â
Chad pulled his street clothes out and got dressed in silence. It comforted Ichigo to know that he would always be there, supportive and strong without feeling the need to manipulate. He didnât put up with lies or shitty behavior, but he wasnât a hypocrite about it, unlike most people Ichigo had worked with over the past few years.
âIf the blood tests come back negative, youâre going to have to talk to him, you know.â Ichigo sighed and banged his head back against a metal locker, the sound a strangely appropriate punctuation to what he wanted to say to that. âI know.â
Chad pulled him into a loose embrace and patted his back. âYou wonât have to face him alone, though. Promise.â
Ichigo pressed his forehead into the clean smelling corner of Chadâs neck and shoulder and breathed deeply. âThanks.â
***
Kisuke flipped another page and frowned.
âAnd he hasnât explained these to you?â Accusation laced his question and Isshin had the grace to look embarrassed.
âHe doesnât know I found them. You know I havenât always been the most⊠attentive parent. I donât think he ever expected me to notice.  But the drawing started about the same time he started complaining about feeling dizzy. Then the fever symptoms started, and he was drawing more and more. Last week he made the trip into Tokyo to pick up better pencils and a couple of sketch books.  He shoved these old notebooks into the drawer when he got those.â
Kisuke frowned. âYou really shouldnât have brought them to me without his permission. This is Personal Space Violation 101, Isshin-san. Plus, you donât know for a fact that theyâre connected to whatever this illness is. It could just be coincidental.â
Isshin reached out and snagged one of the spiral notebooks that Kisuke hadnât gotten to yet.
âHeâs getting better. The drawings look less like Rukia trying to make battle plans, and more like actual people.â He opened the slim book and flipped through a few pages before finding what he was looking for. He slid the open notebook back across the table.
Kisuke froze.
âWho told him about this?â he asked.
Isshin shook his head, âNo one. It isnât something that just comes up in dinner conversation, you know.â
Kisuke nodded faintly. It wouldnât. The assassination of the children of a clan, dead before they could even begin to understand why they were targets, was something that couldnât be forgotten, but couldnât be treated lightly.
Ichigo had understood that.
The drawing was rough. Ichigo wasnât trained, but that didnât matter. Â Heâd caught the scene in its entirety. Bodies scattered in the darkness, the only light the flames rising behind them, but the buildings were unmistakably the Shiba compound. And there, scattered like abandoned toys, were six children that would never fulfill their potential as scions of the Shiba clan. Theyâd been pulled from their homes and schools and brought to the Shiba compound as a protective measure when it became clear that for whatever reason the Shiba were becoming targets for both violence and gossip.
The compound had become their killing ground.
âThere were six children.â Kisuke said and Isshin nodded, unable to look at the picture on the table. He had been on assignment for the Gotei 13 when the killing happened, and heâd never forgiven himself for not being able to stop it.
âSix.â Kisuke was staring at the drawing. One long finger traced the outlines on the page and Isshin huffed.
âYes, you morbid bastard. Six of them. The oldest was eleven. He was supposed to start at the Academy that year.â
Kisuke hummed. His finger trailed across the cheap lined paper, careful not to smudge the pencil lines, until it landed on what looked like a hand reaching out from the space outside the picture. Â Reaching forever for the others lying across from it.
âThere are five in this picture.â Kisuke tapped his finger on the outstretched hand. âAnd this is drawn from the perspective of the sixth. Like he watched it happen.â
Isshin looked at Kisuke and frowned. It made no sense.
âThereâs no way for him to have seen it, Kisuke,â he said, âit happened almost fifty years ago.â
Kisuke slowly flipped more pages and shook his head. âSomething is going on, Isshin-san, and if this is any indication, Kurosaki-san is right in the middle of it.â
Isshin sagged in his chair, the painful memories of his clan nothing compared to his worry for his son.
âAgain.â
***
Heâd fallen asleep between Chad and Orihime about halfway through the movie. Uryu turned the volume down a little so they could talk without waking him.
âHeâs lost more weight.â
Orihime nodded. âI tried to heal him of whatever this isâŠâ she waved an impatient hand, âbut nothing changed. Again.â
Sheâd been trying to reject whatever was plaguing the redhead each week, but except for solving some of his exhaustion, it hadnât changed anything.
Uryu shook his head. âHis body isnât the problem. Â His reishi levels are getting higher every time I see him. I donât know how, but it has to be whatâs causing his symptoms. His soul just isnât designed to hold so much.â
Chad shifted and wrapped his arm around Ichigoâs shoulder. âCan you teach him to bleed some of it off? Can he focus it like you do with the arrows?â
Uryu shook his head. âNo. The problem is that it isnât just about the reiryoku around him, or the reishi in him. Itâs become part of him and is exerting its own spiritual pressure. He was strong before, but thisâŠâ his voice faded. âIâve never seen anything like this.â
Orihime glanced back and forth between the three. âHave you seen the new sketches?â
Chad shook his head, âNo, but he collapsed at the gym earlier. He didnât want to worry you, so thatâs why he didnât mention it. He has, apparently, talked to his dad about it finally. Shiba-san canât find anything wrong. He drew blood for some tests, but I can tell Ichigo doesnât think heâs going to find anything.â
Ichigo groaned sleepily and rolled away from Chadâs hold. âIf you wanted to know, you could have just asked me. You didnât have to wait until I was out for the count before discussing things.â
Orihime rested her hand on his knee. âYou needed your rest, Ichigo-kun. We were just talking.â
Ichigo covered her hand with his own and gave it a squeeze. âYeah, well, the time for denial has passed. Even Goat Face thinks so.â
Uryuâs lips twisted. âI could get you in to see Ryuuken. Maybe he could figure out whatâs wrong.â
Ichigo snorted. âYeah, thatâs about a mile past my last resort, Uryu. But thanks for the offer. Â Really.â
They all settled deeper into Chadâs immense sofa and turned the movie back on as Ichigo sighed in resignation.
âTime for a visit to the ShĆten.â
***
Ichigo thrashed in his bedding, fighting the blankets as if they were trying to kill him.
âIchigo,â Uryu reached out and touched the redheadâs shoulder. âYouâre okay. Itâs just a dream. Â Try to calm down.â
It didnât help. A well-placed elbow caught Uryu in the jaw with a crack, and he saw stars. He knew that if he didnât calm Ichigo down, that was going to be the least of his injuries.
âWhy are you doing this, Rin-chan?â The high-pitched cry pierced the dark room, far from Ichigoâs normal voice. âYou said you wanted to speak to my father. You said you wanted me toâŠâ
Ichigo screamed, and Uryu had never heard anything more terrifying. Ichigo didnât scream. Nothing frightened him. Nothing.
âIchigo,â he pushed across the cushions separating them on the makeshift futon where theyâd crashed a few hours earlier and shook the redhead hard. The earlier elbow was accompanied by flailing legs and a sharp right hook that Uryu barely dodged. It would be easier if Ichigo knew what he was doing, but he couldnât fight someone who was so helplessly caught in the maze of his own mind. âWake up, baka.â He gave his friend a sharp slap, just enough to cut through whatever nightmare was running his body at the moment, and Ichigo sat bolt upright in his blankets.
âOtĆsan! No!â The high-pitched voice faded as consciousness crept back into Ichigoâs eyes, the foggy amber brightening as he came back to himself.
âShit,â he hopped to his feet and ran for the bathroom, retching into the sink, the afterimages burning themselves into his memory. Blood from a beautiful mouth, and an unfeeling face behind a deadly dagger thrust up through a white chin. The knowledge that a beloved father was next on the devilâs hit list and guilt that she was the one who opened the door for him.
He came back out of the bathroom to see Uryu waiting patiently, one of his new sketchbooks in hand, holding it and a pencil out.
âGet it out, Ichigo,â he said gently. âIâll keep watch for a while.â
During the war theyâd watched each otherâs backs like that, and deep inside he knew that if Uryu was standing guard he didnât have to. He nodded gratefully and flipped through until he found a blank page, the pencil and paper becoming the focus of his whole world.
There was no fire this time, just silent death, efficient in its betrayal of a womanâs trust and heart. Â So many hopes snuffed out with that life.
He sketched the womanâs kimono, the garden, the blood on her fingers as she touched her face in disbelief, but mostly he focused on the killerâs face. Â It was one heâd seen countless times. The same man wielding a black blade that held not only death but utter destruction for any soul it touched. A man intent on destroying the Shibas, not just in this generation, but forever.
Who he was Ichigo had no clue. At first, heâd hoped it was just an over-active imagination, a savior complex suffering with no one to save, but the face hadnât faded. Instead, it had become so clear that he felt like he could smell mint tea on his breath, and the peppery scent of his hair oil.
It took an hour for him to wind down, another fifteen minutes for him to put a few more details on the image so he could be certain he wasnât missing anything important. Uryu sat with his back to him, their feet barely touching, as Ichigo hunched over the kotatsu, the Quincy making certain that nothing would disturb his friend while he couldnât defend himself.
âFinished?â He asked when he sensed Ichigoâs movements slowing.
âYeah,â the redhead cleared his throat. âNever been female in one of these before.â
Uryu glanced over his shoulder and down at the sketch. Definitely a womanâs point of view.
âThatâs the same guy you drew yesterday,â he said. Ichigo nodded.
âHeâs been in a lot of these dreams. I donât know who he is any more than any of the others, though.â
They put away the drawing supplies and straightened the blankets again, the warmth from the kotatsu a pleasant contrast to the rest of the cool apartment.
âAll good?â Chadâs voice came from the door to the bedroom and they could see Orihimeâs shadow in the hall to the tiny guest room waiting to hear the all clear. Ichigo couldnât imagine going through this without them.
âYeah, I think so. The worst is over. Just a little tired now.â
âIchigo-kun?â Orihime asked quietly. âWould you like me toâŠâ
He smiled at his friend but shook off her offer. âThanks, but I think this time Iâm just going to roll with the tiredness and see if I canât fall asleep.â
Orihime pushed a strand of hair behind her ear and gave him a hard look. âOkay, but if you canât get comfortable, or if you have another vision, wake me. I can at least take the physical pains away.â
They shared a smile and she headed back down the hall with a little wave to the others. He hated how heâd become a burden to his friends, but theyâd made it clear that after all the time heâd spent saving everyone else, it was their turn to take care of him.
***
Kisuke didnât think of himself as an artist, but after a few centuries of life before cameras one developed certain skills. Â
âThis is what he drew?â
Yoruichi had one hand outstretched, and Kisuke could feel how much she didnât want to touch the sketch pad but couldnât keep her fingers from reaching for it.
âItâs a fair representation. It doesnât have the power of the original, but the details are pretty much there.â
Kisuke didnât say it didnât feel like the artist was screaming, or that it was missing the sheer hopelessness behind that other outstretched hand, small and uncalloused by life. He couldnât find the words.
âHe isnât going to appreciate you having this, even if it is just a copy of what he drew. This is Ichigo, Kisuke. You need to be careful you donât push him too far.â
He knew. There was enough between him and Ichigo already. He was trapped again, though. He couldnât do what he needed to do without doing things that he really, really shouldnât be doing.
Again.
Yoruichi shivered, still looking at the sketch book. âI knew a couple of these kids. They were a lot younger than KĆ«kaku, but we looked out for them occasionally. Played with them sometimes. The littlest, Ai-chan, didnât like being at the compound. She wanted to go home so badly, but her parents were certain sheâd be safer there.â
Kisuke sagged in his chair. Heâd done things he would never be able to reconcile with, but there was always a reason. There was no reason for this. Â
âWhat happened to them, Yoruichi? And why?â
Long dark limbs dropped into a chair across from him, and his friend sighed deeply.
âI donât know, Kisuke. KĆ«kaku doesnât talk about it much. She gets so angry and sad.â Her voice hardened. âI canât imagine it happening to the ShihĆin. I wouldnât stop until Iâd killed everyone responsible or died in the attempt.â
Kisuke nodded. He had no problem imagining that outcome, and if something like this happened again the Shiba Clan head would no doubt shove her Kakaku HĆ up their collective asses and shoot off every firework in the Seireitei. But KĆ«kaku had been young when the Shiba had been targeted, and back then she wasnât nearly as blood-thirsty as her ShihĆin friend.
Isshin had been with the Gotei 13 already, although in retrospect heâd been sent on many missions that were better suited to others, and his absence meant that there was less force behind the Shiba outcry that they were being targeted. Kaien⊠well, Kaien had done what he could.  Heâd been constrained by the rules of the Gotei 13 as well, but as the head of the Shiba Clan he was forgiven for some of his outbursts.
âKaien was convinced there had to be someone in the Central 46 targeting the Shiba. He couldnât prove it, but he told KĆ«kaku not to trust anyone from the Gotei 13 or Central 46 until he could dig a little deeper. Â Unfortunately, he was killed before he came up with any proof of his suspicions.â
Unfortunate indeed.
Kisuke pulled the sketch pad across the table, once again focused on the faceless hand reaching out to his cousins.
âI think Ichigo is having visions of these killings.â
Yoruichi stilled, her little self-soothing movements stopped like a cat catching view of prey.
Long slender fingers picked up a pencil and sketched a small image on the corner of the pad.
âAll of his drawings are from the victim'sâ point of view. And this.â He pushed the pad towards Yoruichi. âIt was on several pages of his sketchbooks, even as far back as his earliest drawings.â
The twisted emblem marked only a few items in Seireitei, and there was no reason for Ichigo to have ever recognized the significance of it, even if he had once seen it etched into the side of the SĆkyoku.
Ichigo had made sure that Twinned Punishment was destroyed, but there were other, smaller items that could destroy a soul without the burning power of SĆkyokuâs phoenix. It was only the most powerful souls that needed its sun-hot scourge.
âYou donât think someoneâŠâ Yoruichi started, but she didnât finish the thought. âTch. It would have to be, wouldnât it?â
Kisuke nodded. There were only a few places a shinigami could find a soul-destroying weapon, and the Onmitsukido was by far the easiest.
âIt looks like someone was using the Onmi, or at least the Onmiâs weapons, in their attack on the Shiba clan. It doesnât get us any closer to why, but it might explain whatâs going on with Ichigo.â
Yoruichi raised an eyebrow, invitation enough for Kisuke to launch into his favorite pastime.
âI have a theoryâŠâ
***
âInoue-san.â Tessai didnât blink but it was clear he was surprised to see the young woman standing in the ShĆten.
âTessai-san,â she said, bowing deeply. The two had developed a deep bond during the fighting for Karakura Town, and Orihime had great respect for the quiet man.
âIs Urahara-san in?â She was proud that her voice didnât quaver. Even after a year without seeing the man, it was hard to say his name. âI would like to speak with him if it would be possible.â
Tessai stood a little straighter and Orihime could feel the weight of his silent questions bearing down on her, but as much as she would love to share her problems with him over a cup of wasabi-liquorice tea--it really was wonderful for headaches--as they had done during the dark days, today she had to be strong. For Ichigo.
âPlease.â
It must have settled an unspoken concern in the man. He nodded once with a short bow of his own and silently moved towards the back of the store.
He was gone for a few minutes, no more, but to Orihime it felt like an hour. An hour for her to reconsider the wisdom of bearding the lion in his den, and start shaking in her mary janes.
âInoue-san,â Tessaiâs voice calmed her and she turned to face him. âUrahara-san is in the kitchen making tea. He asks that you join him.â
Orihime nodded. âThat is very kind of him, Tessai-san. Thank you.â
She forced herself to put one foot in front of the other until she reached the beaded curtain that separated the shop from the living space, and then, with a deep breath, she pushed through.
It looked exactly the same. The shelves were still cluttered with everything from half open boxes of stock for the shop to exotic bottles of ingredients Urahara used in his experiments, and the kitchen smelled of curry powder, matcha, and incense.
âInoue-san! Such a pleasure to see you.â
Orihime jumped and blushed. âHello, Urahara-san.â She bowed. If it was a little less respectful than the bow sheâd given Tessai, well, Urahara wouldnât know. âIt is very kind of you to allow me to visit without an invitation.â
Urahara tsked and waved his lotus fan. She hated that fan. âYou are always welcome, Inoue-san. Â I had hoped you and the others would know my door was never closed to you.â
Orihime fumed at his careless tone, the total glossing over his betrayal of Ichigo threatening to bubble up and choke her, and she forced herself to focus on the matter at hand. It wouldnât help anyone if she let her feelings get the better of her now.
âYou are gracious as ever, Urahara-san.â She moved toward the burner where the kettle had begun to boil. âMay I?â
Urahara waved his permission with that damned fan and she set to pouring the water over the tea leaves heâd already spooned into the blue porcelain pot. Â She breathed the steam in, the slightly astringent smell of green tea an instant relaxant for her overwrought nerves.
The green-robed man moved to his normal perch, a ratty old cushion on the floor next to the kotatsu, his bare feet tucked under the edge of the blanket there. His eyes were hidden under the edge of his hat, as usual, but somehow Orihime felt like she had more of his attention than sheâd ever had before.
âHere we go.â She brought the tea tray to the table and started pouring. âThe tea smells wonderful. Thank you for allowing me to share it with you.â
Urahara nodded, the fan disappeared in some deep pocket for the moment, his hands using the teacup as his camouflage instead.
It was ironic that the scars that lined his face were never the reason that he hid from the world. Â No. Heâd hidden his true feelings the whole time sheâd known him. The scars just gave him a new excuse.
âHow are your studies, Inoue-san?â The blond always insisted on chit chat. For once, she didnât mind. It gave her time to get her thoughts in order.
âI am happy to say that I will finish my degree next term.â She inclined her head briefly. âIt is amazing how much focus one learns through surviving conflict. It made university⊠much less intimidating.â
She didnât point out that she was two years ahead of schedule. That sheâd doubled up courses whenever possible. That the extra work soothed her during the nights when she couldnât sleep, or the days when every crowd supplied showed her faces of people that she knew were dead. âI am supposed to start my practical rotations at the hospital after that. Dr. Ishida has guaranteed me a place.â
Uryuâs father was a terrible parent, but he cared greatly about the hospital and its patients. Working with him would allow her to use her spirits when she could, without all the explanations that would be necessary when dealing with someone who was unaware of the spirit world.
Urahara nodded slowly, following the unsaid messages easily. He knew how Ryuuken worked better than most.
âI thought perhaps you would go to work for Isshin-san at the Kurosaki Clinic.â
Orihime held her face blank, the calm visage covering the fierce frown that wanted to make itself known.
âNo.â She gently placed her cup on the table, the careful motion a necessary focus. âI decided that was not the best fit for me.â
It had been her dream. Sheâd imagined a life rolled into the rambunctious embrace of the Kurosakis. A life where she and Ichigo married and, if they were lucky, had children that were just as honorable and awkward and wonderful as Ichigo was. When it became clear that he didnât return her feelings, she thought sheâd shatter with her dreams, but she realized fairly quickly that she didnât have to grieve the loss of Ichigo. He loved her, it just didnât take the form of her childhood dreams. That said, the constant reminder of what might have been didnât sound like the best way to put the past behind her, so when Ryuuken had approached her with his offer, sheâd accepted with no regrets. Shiba-san had known how she felt, and when she informed the collected Kurosaki/Shiba/Yasutora/Ishida/Inoue family over one of their group dinners that she was going to accept Ishida-samaâs offer of a position, heâd met her gaze with a seriousness he rarely showed and told her he was happy for her, and that if things didnât work out she should come back to him because sheâd always have a place at the clinic if she wanted.
It was good to have family.
She looked up from her tea and caught Uraharaâs eyes. Urahara didnât understand that. Didnât understand what he threw away. Baka.
The blondâs ever-present bucket hat was tilted back far enough to show dark circles under his eyes. He looked older, which made no sense. Not only was he shinigami, but he was in a gigai. Still, there was a bone-deep weariness about him. Â
Was it wrong that she was happy to see it?
âWhat about the others? I saw that Yasutora-kun won another of his matches. I told Tessai-san that I wouldnât be surprised if he was chosen for the Japanese Olympic boxing team.â
Orihime wasnât sure, but she thought Urahara was babbling. That couldnât be right, though.
âI donât think Chado-kun would feel comfortable with that. He says professionals are even paid for losing, so if he wins it isnât as if theyâre suffering unduly. He is very aware of his talents, and how some might feel he has an unfair advantage.â
She tapped a pale pink fingernail nervously on the tabletop, took a deep breath, and jumped in.
âI know youâre wondering why I came to see you today.â
One green shoulder rose a fraction. âFriends are always welcome at the Shoten, Inoue-san, but if there is something I can help you with, I do hope you wonât hesitate to ask.â
Her teeth were instantly on edge. That answer that wasnât an answer thing he did was so frustrating. He was such a coward.
She was looking around the room trying to calm her thoughts again when her eyes fell on a sketchbook open on the shelf beside Urahara. It had several things stacked on top of it, but there was an edge visible. With a hand. A hand sheâd seen before. A hand she cried over.
âHow did you get that?â
All thought of politeness fled. He would tell her how he got that picture, if she had to use her spirits to take him apart and put him back together over and over again, his Crimson Princess be damned.
âInoue-san,â he said placatingly, but she wasnât going to let him run this time. Not this time.
âTell me.â
Sparks haloed her head, her Shun Shun Rikka practically vibrating at her temples, and Urahara bowed his head and shifted to pull the sketchbook off the shelf.
âShould have made a more thorough effort to put this away, but as you can see,â he waved a hand in her direction, âI wasnât exactly expecting company.â
Orihime grabbed the book and pulled it closer. âIchigo didnât draw this.â
Urahara hummed in agreement. âNo. I did.â
Brown eyes flew up to pin him in place, and her voice dropped dangerously. âAre you saying that you sent these visions to Ichigo?â
If possible Urahara looked even more tired.
âI know you and your friends have issues with me, Inoue-san, but in this let me reassure you. I do not know why Kurosaki-san is suffering through these visions.â His voice was as bland as rice porridge, but there was a glint in his eyes that hadnât been there before. âI didnât even know they were happening until Isshin-san called upon me yesterday. That is when I saw the picture I copied.â
Orihime snorted. âShiba-san was snooping through Ichigo-kunâs belongings I suppose. Not a huge surprise, and not his best choice of action, but at least heâs trying.â
âWe are all trying, Inoue-san. Kurosaki-san has earned our efforts a hundred times over.â He shifted on his cushion and turned the sketchbook to where the symbol heâd drawn was foremost. âI believe this has something to do with what is happening. I noticed it on several of the drawings Isshin-san showed me.â
Orihime translated the kanji entwined in the little cartouche. TamashÄ« Mekuri. âSoul Stripping.â
Urahara made a disapproving sound and nodded. âOne of the forbidden inventions of the KidĆ Corps. Tessai-san outlawed its use when he was promoted.â
Orihime just happened to be looking down when it happened, or sheâd never have noticed Uraharaâs hand as it fisted along the inside of his thigh.
âWhat does it do?â She was almost afraid of the answer. If the KidĆ Corps had forbidden it, it couldnât be anything good.
âIt does exactly what it sounds like. A soul is stripped from its consciousness and cast out. It dissolves into mindless reiryoku and has no chance at reincarnation. It is a final punishment for souls that are determined to be irredeemable. Polluted. Whose consciousness would poison the whole of the cycle if it were allowed to remain intact.â
Orihime considered this for a moment, horror beginning to dawn. âLike the SĆkyoku?â
âNot exactly.â The blond sat back on his cushion and gave another little half shrug. âIt doesnât have that kind of power behind it.â
He didnât come out and say It doesnât summon an enormous phoenix to destroy everything in its path, but he didnât need to. That kind of thing got noticed, and whatever Urahara was chasing was more subtle than that.
âFor Kurosaki-san to be seeing it in his visions, it has to be connected. There are only a few still living in Seireitei that know this spell, and even fewer weapons that have been imbued with its power. It is, at least, a place to start.â
âCan you help him now? While youâre chasing whatever kidĆ casting phantom is out there?â
The tiredness was back, and Urahara shifted awkwardly until he was almost curled in upon himself.
âI do not believe Kurosaki-san is interested in whatever aid I might provide.â He flipped open his fan, but not before Orihime saw the frustration on his face. âI will do what I can through Isshin-san. Dragging him here against his will would only add to his burden when he is already so clearly suffering, and I refuse to be a party to that. He has enough bad memories of this place already.â
For a year Orihime had struggled with her feelings about the man across from her. Sheâd practically hated him at times, but now⊠she admitted sheâd been denying something all this time, and it was time to stop.
âIchigo-kun collapsed yesterday.â She dropped it into the middle of the conversation with an almost audible clang. âThatâs why Iâm here.â
All pretense of disinterested calm drained from the shopkeeper, and he leaned forward against the tableâs edge, her words bringing him to total attention.
âCollapsed?â he asked.
âYup,â she picked up her tea cup and sipped the cooled brew. âHe was watching Chado-kun spar, and then *bang* out for the count.â She watched the blond intently. âIt took almost ten minutes for them to bring him around, and then he was wiped out all evening. Uryu-kun says his reishi levels are rising at a dangerous rate, but he canât figure out how to make it stop.â
The blond was always pale, but he got noticeably paler as she shared more details about Ichigoâs declining health. His fists clenched reflexively, and his breathing was a little faster. If she wasnât mistaken, and after four years of training as an ER nurse she felt fairly confident in her skills, he was on the edge of a panic attack. Â
The mighty Urahara Kisuke, panicking over Ichigo. It was about time.
âHe is okay now, I assume? No lingering effects of the collapse?â his questions were practical, but the tone in his voice was personal, and Orihime decided to be merciful.
âHe was fine when he went to sleep last night. Iâve been using my Shun Shun Rikka to make sure that whatever is affecting his spiritual pressure levels doesnât harm his body, but I canât stop the images from affecting how he feels, or what he thinks.â
Silence fell between them for a moment.
âIf he is somehow reliving these events, I can only imagine the toll it must take.â
It wouldnât take too much imagination, Orihime thought. Urahara had his own demons, his own visions of death to deal with, but he had always been the killer not the victim, and so he made peace with his visions through guilt. It was a miserable peace, but it was more closure than Ichigo had, and Orihime figured he knew that, too.
âHeâs coming here this afternoon.â She put the tea down and looked straight at the older man. âHe needs your help Urahara-san. Will you turn him away again?â
Urahara stiffened. âI never turned him away, Inoue-san. Never.â
The sneer on her face was even more powerful because it was so rarely seen. âYou can lie to yourself, Urahara-san,â she snapped, âbut I saw what he was like when you sent him away the last time. I held him as he cried. Chado-kun had to be stopped from coming here and shoving that striped hat up your ass where your head was. You broke his heart, and then you told him to come back once heâd gotten over his adolescent hero-worship.â
She stood, too angry to remain any longer. Â Understanding that the feelings between Urahara and Ichigo werenât as one-sided as sheâd thought only made the hateful way the older man had pushed her friend away even harder to swallow.
âHow could you?â she whispered. âHe loved you. Loves you, still. And here you are, pretending it doesnât matter, letting him suffer alone. Again.â
She wiped away a tear. âYouâre both fools.â
âI have been called worse, my dear,â he said, âand truly. However, if Kurosaki-san wants to come and let me examine him, I would be happy for the chance to help him. Please tell him that.â
She started walking for the front of the shop and flipped her hair back over one shoulder as she sent him one last look. âTell him yourself. If you want to help, get over your pride or your shame or whatever is causing you to be like this and help. He needs you, and you owe it to him.â
And with the clicking of the beaded curtain she was gone.
***
âKurosaki Clinic, how can I help you?â
The bright voice cut through the line like sunshine, and Kisuke smiled. Nothing would ever change Yuzu.
âAh, Kurosaki-kun,â he smiled into the phone, putting his best foot forward, âit has been a long time. This is Urahara Kisuke. Iâm trying to reach your brother.â
The phone dropped its connection and he was left speaking into dead air.
He dialed again.
âKurosaki Clinic, how can I help you?â
âKurosaki-kun,â he started again, âIâm sorry, I had a problem with my connection. I am trying to get-â
âIt was no problem at all,â she said, overriding him. âI hung up on you. And Iâm going to do it again. Goodbye.â
And she did.
Kisuke didnât dial the clinic again. He, instead, called Isshin directly. âHello, Shiba Isshin.â
âIsshin-san,â he said, his tone a little less cheerful than it had been for Yuzu. âI do hope you donât intend to hang up on me.â
Isshin grunted. âWhy would I hang up on you?â
âI donât know, but apparently your daughter had a reason.â
It didnât matter. It really didnât. He knew that when he refused Ichigoâs advances there would be sides taken. It was just⊠unexpected.
âAh, Yuzu,â Isshin made understanding noises. âYeah, she hates your guts. Pretty sure Karin does, too.â
Kisuke didnât pretend to be surprised. Karin had always been the volatile one of the twins. If Yuzu had shut that door on him, Karin would have slammed his foot in it given the chance.
âWell, regardless of my standing with your daughters, I am actually calling about your other offspring. I need to get in touch with him, but it seems the phone number I have for him no longer works.â
There was another uncomfortable silence. âYes, about that⊠Iâve been thinking. You were right when you said I shouldnât have gone through Ichigoâs things, and I think that unless youâve already got some idea of what is going on, we should put this whole thing on the back burner until I get the results from the blood tests back from the lab. We really ought to rule out any--â
Kisuke cut him off. âInoue-san came to see me this morning.â
Apparently, that news was as surprising to Isshin as the event had been to Kisuke. The other man sputtered and coughed into the phone.
âShe what? She swore sheâd neverâŠâ Isshin realized what he was saying and tried to dial things back but it was hopeless. âI mean⊠ oh hell, Kisuke, you know what I mean.â
He knew.
âNevertheless, she came to see me. She told me Ichigo collapsed yesterday.â
âCollapsed!â The worried parent voice would never sound normal coming from Isshin, but it happened often enough now that Kisuke didnât look for the lie in it. âHe didnât say anything to me. After promising to let me know!â
âCalm down, Isshin-san. Iâm sure he will tell you, he just needs time to recover. However, if he is physically unable to deal with the strain of these visions⊠if he is collapsing from them⊠I donât believe we have the luxury of waiting and seeing.â
He thought about the next words carefully. âInoue-san indicated that he meant to visit the ShĆten this afternoon.â
This time Isshin didnât burst out with denials. âThings must be worse than he told me.â
The implication that only something extreme could drive Ichigo to the ShĆten was a bitter truth, but Kisuke couldnât deny it. He remembered the look of utter betrayal on Ichigoâs face from their last meeting. He lived with the memory of it every day.
âIndeed,â he agreed. âThat is why I wanted to contact him first.  If meeting him someplace like the clinic would make it easier for him⊠Well, Tessai-san and I can take readings anywhere.â
Kisuke swallowed the lump that was trying to block his throat. âYou know Iâd do whatever necessary to help him, Isshin-san.â
A rough voice sounded behind him. âIt was never your help I wanted, Kisuke.â Ichigo laughed bitterly. âAnd I guess I shouldnât be surprised that you and Goat Face are conspiring behind my back, again.â
His arms were too thin. Muscles from years of sword work were still there, but there was nothing but a layer of skin covering them. His face was drawn, too, amber eyes dull and huge in his face, and Kisuke ached to see the pain in them.
âKurosaki-san,â he said. Â âAs a matter of fact, I was trying to contact you. I tried the clinic first, but Yuzu-kun refused to speak to me. So, I called your father.â
Ichigo crossed the small living room and placed a key on the table. Â Heâd had it all this time but had never used it.
âOrihime told me she came to see you this morning.â He was looking around the room like he didnât know what to do, and it hurt almost more than the lost look on his face. Â Once, heâd considered this almost more a home than his own, but Kisuke had taken that from him, too.
âShe did.â The shopkeeper disconnected his call and laid the phone on the shelf beside him. âI spoke to your father yesterday, though. Â He was worried about what was happening to you and thought I might be able to help.â
Ichigo chose Tessaiâs seat and lowered himself onto the pale pink patterned cushion, moving slowly and carefully like someone more than twice his age.
âWell, for once Iâm glad people are doing all the talking for me. Â Makes this whole reunion thing a little less awkward donât you think?â He smiled, but it was a stiff and unnatural thing. âSee the thing is, I almost didnât come today anyway. Â Probably wouldâve chickened out if Uryu hadnât threatened to jab me with his sewing needles if I didnât.â
Kisuke understood. Â Heâd been avoiding this moment too, but time for avoidance was past. Â Ichigo needed him, needed him in a way he could actually give him, and nothing was going to stop him now.
âWell, I will have to thank Ishida-san the next time I see him.â Â He moved closer to the redhead and sat on the floor in front of him and spoke softly. âI am very glad to see you, Kurosaki-san.â
He took Ichigoâs hand in his and just held it for a moment, letting his own skin warm it, and he felt the faint tremor that shook the fingers.
âKisuke,â Ichigoâs voice cracked. âI know I shouldnât be here, butâŠâ he raised his eyes to the blondâs and swallowed thickly, âI think Iâm going crazy.  Iâve fought wanna-be gods, and killed monsters, but I canât fight this.  I donât even know what it is.  Please.â
Kisukeâs fingers were crushed in a painful grip but he didnât try to pull them back. This little bit of pain was nothing compared to what heâd tolerate if it meant he was helping Ichigo.
âStop that.â He said firmly. âYou are not going crazy, and we will find a way to fix this.â He wrapped his free hand around the two clenched ones and squeezed encouragingly. Â
âTessai-san!â He pitched his voice in the sing-song that cut all the way through to the shop, but he knew Tessai was just in the next room waiting. Â He knew his kidĆ skills were going to be an important part of fixing whatever was haunting Ichigo. âWe have work to do.â
The large man appeared silently in the doorway and he bowed.
âWelcome back, Kurosaki-san.â There was a world of quiet emotion in those three words, and Ichigo nodded at the big man.
âGood to see you, too, Tessai-san.â He started to say something else, but the words garbled in his throat, and the little bit of color in his face drained away.
âKisuke--â he whispered. Then he fell.
***
 The little man in black swung his tachi with a vengeance, his face a rictus of hate. The weapon flashed in the low light and the young man fell, blood spurting across the frost covered ground, the redness fading to black as it melted into the grass. Miyake-sama. Master. He did nothing. Let me call for the healer, maybe he can⊠ No. No!  You canât!  Please!  PLEASE!!! The shield he summoned wasnât fast enough, and he felt the burning bite of the tachi shatter his focus and the spell unraveled around him.
The metallic smell of blood faded with the screams in his head, but Ichigo couldnât move. His body was as frozen as the corpse heâd just been.
âKurosaki-san,â Kisukeâs arms were wrapped around him but he could barely feel it. Â His skin was cold, so cold. âKurosaki-san!â Kisuke was getting louder, his fingers checking his pulse and tapping his face sharply, but Ichigo was still too far away to respond.
âIchigo!â Â Kisuke picked him up as if he weighed nothing and carried in through the mini-maze of the living space until he reached the sleeping quarters, and then Ichigo was lowered to a futon and covered, the soft gray blankets the same color as Kisukeâs eyes.
âMiyake-sama,â he forced the name through stiff lips, convinced it was important. âHe killed me. Killed the others, too.â
âShhhhh, Ichigo, Iâve got you,â Kisuke murmured the words of comfort as he started setting a pair of kidĆ seals at the head and foot of the futon. âJust another minute. Â Just stay with me. Please. Just another minute? You can manage one more minute, canât you. Â Just one more.â
Then he was yelling for Tessai, the large man moving around in the hallway doing something Ichigo couldnât see, but he could feel the wall of reishi that was being raised. Â It felt like the shield that Hachi placed around the Visoredâs warehouse, but smaller. Â Tighter. A dome around this room, and him, and Kisuke.
Ichigo shivered as goose bumps raced across his skin, the feverish feeling was almost overwhelming, but he focused on Kisukeâs voice, that voice heâd dreamed of, calling his name, asking him to stay.
âKisuke.â He fought the vision for control, and he could feel it receding a little. Then, just as Kisuke finished setting the second kidĆ seal, the hold it had on him disappeared in a flash.
He was himself again.
His throat was raw, and he realized he mustâve been screaming again, âI hope the neighbors didnât call the cops when I started screaming.â
Kisuke shook his head at the redhead. âDonât worry about that. Â If they havenât called the police about Jinta and Ururuâs battles royale, a little screaming wouldnât cause them to blink an eye.â
Ichigo was so tired. Â He tried to focus on Kisuke, but his eyes had other ideas. âWhatever you and Tessai did helped. Â I could feel it.â
Kisuke looked at Tessai still standing in the doorway and they exchanged some silent kidĆ master information and Ichigo sighed. He just wanted to sleep.
âCan I just rest here for a little bit?â He tried not to sound pathetic, but he was comfortable for the first time in months, and the feeling of something scratching at his reiatsu was gone. âI promise I wonât stay long. I donât want to be a bother.â
And if he heard Kisuke whisper he could stay forever if he wanted to, well⊠ apparently, some hallucinations were better than others.
***
âI think heâll sleep for a while, Tessai-san,â Kisuke quietly joined his friend in the hallway. Â âItâs fairly clear that our theory of Ichigo being the center of a confluence of conscious reishi was right. Â Hopefully, that also means that the seals will keep him protected from it,â he sighed.
âDid you notice the barrier he was summoning?â Tessaiâs voice was dark. âKurosaki-kun doesnât know that spell. Â That had to be something he was acting out from the vision.â
âYes,â Kisuke said. âIâm lucky he didnât manage to finish the spell. Â I was close enough it would have done quite a bit of damage.â
âAlso, I heard what he said. Miyake-sama killed me.â Tessai looked down, a rare expression of anger on his face. âThe Miyake family has deep roots within the KidĆ Corps. Â I personally trained two of them before our escape to the living world. Â They didnât have the focus to become great, but they had impressive natural talent. There was nothing to prevent them from reaching officer level if theyâd wanted it.â
That made a sort of sense. âHave any of the Miyake ever been members of the Second?â
âNot as far as I know,â Tessai shook his head. âThey had no connection to the ShihĆin. The men I knew were very proud of their samurai ties. They claimed that their grandfather remembered his life before Seireitei, and that he was so deeply tied to his honor that the knowledge of that past couldnât be erased by anything short of the SĆkyoku itself.â
The shopkeeper walked down the hall to the kitchen and lit the fire under the kettle.
âSo, we have a kidĆ wielding family talking about honor and the SĆkyoku. Sounds like perhaps someone decided to use their skills to take their revenge against the Shiba, and somehow, through whatever misbegotten method they were using to try to destroy the connection between the Shiba and their soul particles, theyâve left them wandering loose in some sort of limbo, unable to re-enter the reincarnation stream, but still aware. Â Still Shiba.â
Fifty years of only being able to remember what was lost. Â To remember the betrayal of death. The fear.
Tessai agreed. âKurosaki-kun must be acting like a beacon for them. Â Drawing them to him, as only an incredibly powerful Shiba force could.â
Kisuke laughed under his breath as he scooped matcha into the teapot. Â âWhy am I not surprised? Ichigo has always been a neon sign in the darkness calling to the lost.â
He had called to Kisuke, pulled him from the shell heâd built around himself. Forced him back into the light. Back into life. Even Benihime sang his praises, and Kisuke wasnât foolish enough to argue with her.
âIt doesnât explain how the particles are entering his personal reishi pool and affecting him physically?â Tessai frowned. âNor does it explain why the Shibaâs were targeted in the first place. Â However, our first priority is to stabilize Kurosaki-kun and prevent any more damage.â
***
When Ichigo awoke, he wasnât alone.
âIchigo-kun!â Orihime excitedly moved to sit beside him on the futon when he shifted. âYou look much better!â
âI feel better,â he said, and it was true. Â The echoes in his head were gone, and the raw feeling under his skin had faded almost completely. âA lot better, actually.â
He sat up and rubbed the back of his neck, the last echoes of the vision of being killed much farther away than usual at this point. Â âI collapsed again, didnât I?â
âTechnically, no,â she said, pushing a piece of hair behind an ear, making one of her hairpins glint in the low light. âUrahara-san said that you were exhausted after the last vision, but that you didnât lose consciousness due to the changes in your reiatsu.â
Uryu was sitting by the window. âThe shinigami was able to stabilize your reiryoku. Â There are some interesting protections weaved into the walls of this room already, but I think the kidĆ seals they placed around you were the real key. Â They effectively stop any reishi from entering this space, so while your reiatsu isnât affected, thereâs nothing extra bombarding you.â
Ichigo remembered Tessaiâs mad dash to raise the shield just as he was about to collapse again, buried under a reishi-slide too powerful for him to handle. Â It was a close call, and he didnât want to think of how long it would have taken him to recover if he hadnât managed it in time.
âSo, youâre basically a boy in a bubble.â
He looked around at the room, littered with Kisukeâs personal things and sighed. A sandalwood incense, and Kisuke scented bubble. Â Why couldnât the Universe just kill him already?
He mustâve made some sound because Uryu let out a little snort of laughter. Â âYeah. Â Someone out there loves fucking with you, Kurosaki.â
Another laugh rumbled in the distance. Goat Face. Of course.
âYour dad got here just before we did.â Orihime grimaced. âApparently he panicked when Urahara-san hung up on him. He told Yuzu-chan to close the clinic and shunpoâd over here. Heâs already received one JigokuchĆ since he arrived. Â Iâm assuming itâs for breaking the shinigami laws of concealment, but I didnât ask.â
His dad was many things, but restrained and logical in the face of trouble was nowhere on that list. He had to admit, though, that it was nice to finally feel important to his old man, even if it did mean he had a brand new helicopter parent in his life at twenty-three.
âAt least he hasnât run in here and tackled me.â
Orihime grinned. Â âHe tried. Â Apparently Urahara-san put a little extra anti-Shiba kick in the shield. Â He canât get in.â
âAnd the best part, is that because the problem youâre having is directly connected to Shiba energy, thereâs nothing he can do about it.â Uryu said.
Ichigo burrowed back into the blankets, sucking up every ounce of comfort he could.
âShiba, huh? Â So the visions?â
A dainty hand reached out and patted his arm, and he knew Orihime was trying to find a way to tell him what he needed to know gently.
âItâs okay, Orihime,â he said. âJust tell me. Canât fight it if I donât know what it is.â
Uryu saved her. âThatâs just it. Â Weâre not sure itâs something you can fight. When we got here we saw that youâd dropped your pack by the back door, so we pulled your sketchbooks out and let them look at them. Â All three of them recognized someone in those books, and every single vision was the murder of a Shiba.â
Ichigo had often wondered what had happened to his fatherâs clan, but it wasnât something Goat Face was comfortable talking about. Â He carried as much guilt over it as Kisuke did over what heâd done for the OnmitsukidĆ, or during the wars against Aizen and Ywach.
âDid any of them recognize the killers?â he asked.
âTessai-san.â Orihime looked solemn.  âThey were students of his at one point apparently.  He was most⊠disturbed.â
âI can imagine.â Â Ichigo had only seen Tessai lose his cool twice during the war against Aizen, but heâd been a demon in the fight against the Quincy. Â The big man did not take kindly to betrayal, and he would destroy anyone who attacked an innocent. Many of the Shiba heâd seen killed were innocents.
His stomach growled and he realized he was hungry for the first time in weeks. âAm I really stuck in this room?â he asked. âIâm starving.â
Orihime beamed. âThis is the safest place for you, but Tessai-san told me they set up a slightly less intense barrier around the building. Â You should be safe as long as you donât leave, and I know for a fact that thereâs a big pot of Yuzuâs curry out there keeping warm on the stove.â
Yuzuâs curry and Kisukeâs bedroom. Ichigo could think of worse ways to recuperate.
***
âSo, as much as I hate to admit it, I am partially to blame for Kurosaki-sanâs current state of disability.â Urahara said, voice heavy with guilt. âThe sword used to return his powers to him during the conflict with Ginjo, was designed to allow many different types of power to be absorbed into his soul, recharging it. Â It had to open a pathway for the reishi to travel and the spells I worked into its surface acted almost like the drugs used in a human organ transplant surgery. Â I had to make sure the new energy wasnât somehow rejected by his soul before it could be absorbed and accepted as Kurosaki-sanâs own.â
Uryu caught on quickly. âAnd that pathway is still open?â
Kisuke nodded. âIt seems likely, yes. Â Tessai-san is going to examine Kurosaki-san more closely now that he has rested and there is no foreign reishi clouding the readings, but that is my best guess.â
The room was crowded, and it felt almost like the old days. Everyone focused on solving a problem, brought together by conflict, but kept together by something stronger. Â That something had almost always been Ichigo. Â It didnât seem wrong that he was again the reason that the ten of them were once again around his table. Â It felt even more normal to realize that his mistake was what caused part of the problem in the first place.
âStop blaming yourself, Kisuke,â the redhead said. He was sitting slouched against Chadâs side, his burst of energy from earlier waning as the discussion progressed. Â He would need to be forced to rest soon, but from the look on Orihimeâs face that wasnât going to be a problem. âEven if youâd told me at the time that this was a possible side effect I would have grabbed that sword with both hands and stabbed myself if I had to.â
He probably meant it, but that didnât mean it was the wise choice, or that he knew what heâd have chosen if heâd had the choice. Â Ichigo was too ready to just gloss over the details.
âRegardless of what caused the path, what is this energy that is attacking Ichigo-kun through that path. Â You keep saying itâs Shiba energy, but unless Iâm mistaken souls that have that much awareness reenter the reincarnation cycle, and the ones that donât just become reishi.â
Tessai spread his big hands. âThe kidĆ corps has invented many spells over the ages that affect reishi and reiryoku. Â It allows shinigami to perform the konso that releases souls to come to Soul Society, and on the other end of the spectrum it is used to restrain a soulâs spiritual pressure, or even destroy it in cases of capital punishment.â
âThe SĆkyoku.â Ichigo said it like it left a bad taste in his mouth, but Tessai nodded.
âYes, the SĆkyoku had several different spells embedded in it, one of which was TamashÄ« Mekuri. The symbol of which is scattered throughout the drawings youâve made over the past few months.â
âSoul Stripping.â Isshin ground the words out. âI thought that had been made illegal by Central 46.â
Tessai shrugged. Â âI am the one who declared it illegal to teach to the KidĆ Corps, and Central 46 supported my decision, with a few noted exceptions. But, that doesnât mean that the skill disappeared. Â There were many who already knew how to cast it, and several weapons that had it embedded in them.â
âLet me guess. One of which was a black tachi with a white tassel on the pommel and that symbol stamped in the side of the blade.â Â Ichigoâs voice was perfectly flat, but Kisuke could hear the pain in it. Heâd seen what the weapon could do up close and personal, and there was nothing that would make that less horrific.
âYes.â Tessai didnât dance around with his answers. âSomeone used it to not only kill the Shiba living in Seireitei, but attempted to destroy their spirits completely, preventing them from reincarnating, and thereby removing their power from the Shiba forever.â
Yoruichi pounced onto the important part of that sentence. âAttempted?â
âYouâre saying theyâre still conscious out there.â Isshin sounded appalled, and Kisuke couldnât blame him.
âYes. Â The killers didnât have enough reiatsu to activate the full effect of the weapon. Â It takes a particular kind of person to be able to completely destroy a soul. Â There can be no question in their mind, or they wonât be able to completely strip the consciousness from the energy.â
âInstead of destroying the Shiba energy, they just sent it into limbo, and it has been there ever since. It has coalesced into a metaphysical stream of reishi that identifies as Shiba, and it is still picking up any stray bits of soul that survived the extermination.â
âBecause Ichigo has so much Shiba energy of his own, heâs acting like a magnet. It wouldnât matter except for the hole we punched through his souls protective outer layer. It started as just a trickle, so it wasnât noticeable. Now that the stream has started moving, though, it is continuing to gain strength as it pours into him. Â That is why his reishi levels were rising so rapidly for no reason, and if we donât close the pathway it will keep happening, until finally it overwhelms his own soul particles.â
âWhich I would really like to skip, if possible.â Ichigo sat up, eyes glassy. âBut if we close the pathway, what will happen to them?â
âThem who, Kurosaki-san?â Kisuke asked, but he knew the answer.
Ichigo yawned a jaw-cracking yawn and leaned forward on his elbows. âDonât play dumb, Kisuke. Â The souls that are hitching a ride with me. Â What will happen to them?â
Kisuke sighed, he knew this was where Ichigo would get stuck. Â âNothing. Â They will remain as they have been since they were killed.â
Isshin shifted uncomfortably, and Yoruichi hissed under her breath. Â No one liked the answer, but that didnât change it.
âTheyâll just stay⊠ lost?â The young man looked like the bottom had fallen out of his world, and Kisuke wished he didnât always have to be the voice of doom.
âWithout an anchor, the energy will continue to move through the currents of reishi that flow around us.â
Ichigo pushed himself up, sleepiness gone and a determined look on his face. Kisuke couldnât help but smile; it was exactly the reaction heâd predicted to Tessai that afternoon.
âWell, screw that.â
***
Kisuke rubbed his eyes and bent back over the table where he and Tessai had God knows what spread out. Â It looked like parts of a gigai, and a whole lot of I-have-no-idea-what-that-is.
âBut if we open the pathway with the same set of spellsâŠ.â
He let the actual words fade out. Theyâd been at it for a couple of hours, and Ichigo didnât understand any more of it now than he had when theyâd started. Â It was just nice to hear them in the background, that familiar sound that he hadnât realized he depended on for peace of mind until heâd lost it.
Everyone but Yoruichi had gone home after the meeting, although getting Isshin to leave had been a struggle. Â He seemed to think that his presence would be soothing. Â Chad and Uryu had frog-marched him out the door with Orihime close behind to make sure he didnât bolt. Â They were good friends.
He closed his eyes and drifted.
 Shiba-san. Can you hear me now, Shiba-san?
The voice was small and melodic, tickling the back of his mind like a distant whisper.
 Please, Shiba-san.  Please try to listen.
Ichigoâs eyes were so heavy, but he couldnât ignore the voice in his head. If Iâm not dreaming, he thought, then I can hear you.
He could almost feel the relieved laughter that burst in the back of his head. I donât believe youâre dreaming, but after all this time I feel like I must be. Â
Ichigo groaned. Â Now his imagination was talking to him instead of just showing him horror movies on the back of his eyeballs.
 Not your imagination, Shiba-san, and I am very sorry that youâve been subjected to so much unpleasantness recently.
Unpleasantness. Â Well, that was one word for it.
Who are you? Ichigo thought loudly, and the voice tittered a cultured little laugh. You do not have to shout. Â I can hear you perfectly well.
Fine, he thought again. Who are you?
And she told him.
***
âShe says she is Shiba Shiori. Â She married into the Shiba clan about the time my dad was born. She was Yamamotoâs niece or something. Â I didnât really follow that part.â
Kisuke sipped his tea. Â If this got any more convoluted, though, he was going to shift to sake.
âShe said she found me first, and the others followed her.â
Tessai grunted. âA relative of Yamamoto-soutaichou would probably be quite powerful in her own right. Â It would make sense that she would have a greater chance of surviving the soul stripping process.â
âShe said the reason I can hear her now is because thereâs no more new reishi coming in, and she seems to be the most⊠ coherent of the souls there.â
They might be able to use that. If Shiba Shiori was this successful with contacting both Ichigoâs conscious mind, and the soul fragments clinging to him, she could be a gathering force. Â That would solve the problem he and Tessai were having about how to separate Ichigoâs reishi from the foreign parts.
Yoruichi stretched out on the low couch next to them. Â âHer name rings a bell, but Iâm sure KĆ«kaku would remember her.â
Ichigo laughed. âShe remembers both of you. Â And all the trouble you caused.â
Yoruichi just grinned. âYouthful exuberance. Nothing more.â
That was it! How could he have missed it!
âWe need to go to the Shiba compound. Â Send a JigokuchĆ. Â We need Isshin-san, KĆ«kaku, and Ganju. Â Tessai-san? Â Gather up the gigai we were working on, and bring that, too. Â Oh, and we should probably send a message to the Soutaichou that thereâs a pair of murderers in the KidĆ Corps, but we can deal with that later.â
He stopped and looked around. Â Everyone was staring at him.
âWhat? Havenât you ever seen genius in action before?â Â He snapped his fan open and shooed everyone into action.
Ichigo didnât move. âYouâre sure this is a good idea?â It was clear he was nervous about leaving the protection of the sealed Shoten.
Kisuke looked him square in the eyes. âI promised I wouldnât lie to you again, Kurosaki-san. Do you really want an answer to that?â
Ichigo sighed. âThis is really going to hurt isnât it.â
âProbably.â The blond nodded, but reached out a hand and patted his shoulder lightly. âHopefully, it will be the last time, though.â
Yoruichi stood up and stretched. âFamous last words, eh, Kisuke?â She wrapped her arm around Ichigoâs waist and herded him towards the senkaimon in the training area. âAt least weâll all be here to tell him I told you so, Ichigo-kun.â
Ichigo brightened a little, and the blond hid his smile behind his fan. Â It was good to see that he still had a sense of humor, even if it was at Kisukeâs expense. Â
Time to work.
***
âSo, I want you three to focus your reiatsu into the ReishĆ«kaku.  Focus as much as you can, without blowing it up, of course.â  With KĆ«kaku, that last part was sometimes necessary.
Isshin and Ganju stood on either side of the glowing orb, their faces works of concentration, and when KĆ«kaku added her reiatsu, there was a noticeable rise of temperature in the room. Â
Shibaâs really had more reiatsu than was good for them. Â Or anyone, as they were discovering.
It only took five minutes for the three to begin sweating and shaking from the effort of pouring more reiatsu into the Reishƫkaku, but Kisuke waited until he could feel the surface of it start to vibrate before he called a halt.
âThat should do it.â KĆ«kaku handed the cannonball back to him, and he frowned. Â This was the tricky part. Â Or one of them, at least.
âTessai-san, if youâd do the honors?â he asked, stepping away from the gathered Shiba.
Tessai silently nodded and then set to work, raising two interlaced shields that would protect those in the area from both physical and spiritual damage.
âItâs ready, Urahara-san,â he said, and the blond bowed a little in thanks.
He hadnât focused any of his personal energy into the reishĆ«kaku because it was important that it contain nothing but Shiba vibrations.  This part, however, was just a matter of wrestling it into shape.  Kisuke didnât have a huge amount of reishi to work with like Ichigo did, but he was very good at using what he had.
ReishĆ«kaku typically were enlarged after being filled with reiatsu.  This time, though, Kisuke was going to collapse it in on itself.  He needed it small enough to fit inside the gigai heâd constructed.
âBe careful Kisuke,â Yoruichi was standing next to KĆ«kaku, not touching, but comforting. âYouâd be hard to replace.â
Kisuke nodded once, but this wasnât about him. Â It was about Ichigo, and he would be much harder to replace.
There, he thought finally. That should be small enough. Plus, nothing had exploded, which was always a good sign.
âTessai-san,â he said, holding the now palm-sized orb up. âI think itâs safe to take the shields down now.â
***
Ichigo felt like he was going to throw up. Â The feverish feelings were back and worse than ever. Â His head was pounding like heâd drunk too much sake the night before, and the day before that, and the day before that. Â He wasnât sure he was going to make it through this.
It had been bad in the living world, the constant scratching at his soul, but here in Soul Society it was hundreds of times worse. Â He supposed that made sense, though. Â There would be weaker soul fragments that were never able to leave the area where they were killed, and now that he was there, right next to them, they, too, wanted to join the party.
Isshin notice him swaying on his feet. âHold on, Son,â he said, slipping a hand under Ichigoâs elbow to steady him. Â âNot much longer now.â
Ichigo laughed, a strangled sound. Â Not much longer now. Thatâs what Isshin said to women delivering babies, or when he was putting in stitches in an emergency when he didnât have anesthetic nearby. But what choice did he have.
Kisuke glanced over at him, concern clear on his face, but he didnât stop what he was doing.  Tessai had placed the gigai in a chair, a gaping hole in the chest where the soul-chain of a real human would be. That was where they were going to put the reishĆ«kaku.
âTessai-san,â he said, holding the now palm-sized orb up. âI think itâs safe to take the shields down now.â
Ichigo let out a breath he didnât realize he was holding. Â Heâd been scared that something would go wrong with this step and Kisuke would be hurt, but he didnât have any other suggestion of what to do, so heâd just tamped the fear down into the box he kept all his Kisuke related feelings in.
Pretty soon he was going to need a bigger box.
âOkay, letâs see how this works.â Kisuke covered the distance to the gigai in a few steps and gently tucked the glowing ball of spirit into the opening. Â Ichigo had never watched the animation of a gigai before, but he knew the basics. Â This didnât look like the basics.
The opening tightened on its own, pulling the not-skin together like a zipper over the reishĆ«kaku, and the skin began to warm, but where a normal gigai would change to reflect the reiatsu powering it, this one didnât take on any of the physical characteristics of the three Shibas that contributed to its activating force.
âTabula Rasa.â Kisuke stood and watched the process for another long minute, before deciding it was safe to move to the next step.
Another wave of nausea and dizziness hit him, and Ichigo fell to his knees.
 Why? How could you? You killed him! I love you, please donât do this. Please, no... Betrayer! Youâre a weakling! Stand and fight like a man! Nii-san! Help me⊠ please help me⊠ someone.  Someone! Anyone!
The voices hammered at his mind, a hundred strong, every one trapped as they were calling out, pleading, dying.
âHurry up, Kisuke,â he gritted out. Â He didnât know how much longer he could take it. Â Gray was already encroaching on the edges of his vision.
The blond was busy finishing up whatever arcane crap he had to do, but he still managed to snark back at him.
âYouth. Always so impatient.â His voice was light and sing-song, but his face was transfixed on the gigai he was working on. âYou must exercise restraint, Kurosaki-san. You can manage one more minute, canât you. Just one more.â
Ichigo gritted his teeth against the disorienting feeling, and clung to the memory of Kisuke saying that to him before, holding him in his arms, carrying him to his bedroom, protecting him, the way heâd always protected him.
He loves you, you know. Shiba Shioriâs voice cut through the whispering roar. He thinks heâs protecting you. Â Keeping you separate because separate is safe. Â We did that with our family. Â With our children. Â We were wrong.
Ichigo rubbed his face. There were tears, squeezed out between tightly shut lids, and he could only suck in short panting breaths. He clenched his fists, trying to hold his body together against the strangling force of the Shiba power around his soul, and heard Kisukeâs voice.
âFocus your reiatsu, Kurosaki-san. Pull it tight into yourself. Â Focus.â Strong arms lifted him to his feet and supported him as they brought the gigai next to him, and he looked around for Kisuke.
He was there, standing behind him. Â His arms were the ones holding him up. Â He always did that. Â Maybe thatâs why Ichigo wanted those arms around him all the time.
âHey Kisuke.â It didnât sound like his voice. âYou know that hero worship thing you told me to get over?â
Kisukeâs grip tightened but he didnât say anything. Â
âThis isnât the way to convince me Iâm wrong.â He coughed, and felt something suspiciously like blood on his lips. âShiori says youâre wrong by the way.â
Kisuke grimaced, and Ichigo laughed a little. Â Bastard was terrible with emotions. But that was okay. He loved him anyway.
âIs the gigai ready?â He gripped Kisukeâs hands so tightly he was surprised the blond wasnât complaining. That wasnât his way, though.
âYes. Â Are you?â Gray eyes bored into his and he thought, now or never.
âAlways. Â You know that.â He tried to smile, but his mouth wasnât cooperating.
One of the hands holding him pulled back, and reappeared with a white handled tachi, a black tassel on the pommel and another symbol stamped on the side.
âIâm sorry, Ichigo,â Kisuke whispered, and then a white hot pain sliced through the world.
âYou need to work on that.â Ichigo leaned in and pressed a kiss against his pale cheek, and let go. Â He would convince him he was wrong later.
Much later.
***
âSorry for the invasion, Shunsui,â Ichigo tried to push himself up from the cot HanatarĆ had procured for him, but between his dad and Kisuke that idea was squashed pretty quickly. âBut I get the impression that if we didnât deal with this sooner rather than later, there wouldnât have been as positive an outcome.â
Remembering the swirling chaos that had overcome him at the end still set his teeth on edge, and it would have happened whether heâd stayed in the living world or not. Â It just wouldâve taken longer for it to destroy him, and they might not have been able to help Shiori and the others.
âI have summoned the Miyake brothers as requested, but remember, the KidĆ Corps is not actually under my jurisdiction.â
Yoruichi stepped forward. âSuĂŹ-FÄng has been informed of the charges being brought against them and will oversee this questioning. Â I am certain that after all the facts are laid in front of her the the Commander-in-chief of the Onmitsukido will know what to do.â
When the Captain of the Second appeared, she had two tired looking KidĆ Corps members in tow.
âI have brought the men as requested, Yoruichi-sama, KyĆraku Soutaichou, but I must insist on an explanation. Â This is most irregular.â
Ichigo laughed and Isshin patted him on the shoulder.
âThe assassination of a clan is quite⊠ irregular, indeed.â  His voice held none of its normal geniality, and Ichigo recognized the steel that was required for him to have achieved the rank of Captain of the Gotei 13.
âYouâre saying that these two,â she pointed at the men who were now kneeling in front of Tessai, neither arguing or defending themselves, âkilled the entire Shiba clan?â
âWell, their father started it, but yes.â Isshin stepped forward, his shihakushĆ, stark against the red in his neck and face. âTheir father was proud to a fault. Â He was convinced their ties to the Miyake samurai made them special, more honorable. More valuable.â
Ichigo hadnât seen his father this upset since Aizen had been unmasked as a traitor.
âThe truth was, that just made them vulnerable to Aizen, back when the bastard was setting his chessboard for taking over Soul Society. Tell me,â he spoke to the two men, âwhat did your father tell you? Â That the Shiba had offended his honor in some way? Â What?â
The two men barely turned their heads, but the larger of the two spoke.
âHe was betrayed. The woman he loved, who had promised herself to him, was convinced to marry a Shiba instead. She humiliated him, and it was all for a Shiba.â
The second man moaned and dropped his head into his hands.  âAizenâŠ.  Aizen told him that the Shiba were trying to destroy his honor. The honor of all of Soul Society.  He said theyâd infiltrated the Gotei 13 to prevent law enforcement from being able to stop them, and that they were forcing women to marry into their clan against their will. Every sin against the soul was laid at their feet, with examples and proofs and a constant stream of inflammatory discourse until my father snapped.  He begged Aizen to let him help excise the cancer in Seireitei, to allow us to help, and Aizen was more than happy to agree.â
A hand reached out from one brother to the other, a clear attempt at comfort.
âIt wasnât until after,â the dark little man whose face had haunted so many of Ichigoâs nightmares looked like he was going to be sick, âafter Aizen was defeated that the lies started to fade from our minds, and we became aware of what we had done as his puppets.â
They dropped their foreheads to the grass and prostrated themselves in front of the remaining Shiba.
âWe have been living with the guilt of our actions since Aizen was defeated. Our father could not face himself after he realized that he had killed the very woman heâd loved, all because of his hurt pride and willingness to listen to Aizenâs lies.â
âWell, your family wasnât alone in being fooled by Aizen,â Ichigo snorted. âThe whole Central 46 paid for it, too.â
KĆ«kaku sucked on her pipe a little harder but didnât say anything. Â She didnât have to. Â Anger radiated from every line of her body, and Ichigo knew it was taking every ounce of her control to prevent her from pounding the two little men into so much KidĆ Corps Dust.
âIt makes sense in a way,â Kisuke said, his tone as noncommittal as ever. âThe Shiba were the keepers of the gate to the Soul Kingâs palace. Â If he could destroy the clan--or get someone else to do it for him--it would remove one more of the barriers to his end goal.â
Isshinâs fingers were so tight on Ichigoâs shoulder that he was certain he was going to have a bruise.
âHow many did you kill.â
The brothers looked at each other and then back down at the ground. Â
Ganju asked again, the pain in his voice undeniable. âHow many did you kill?â
âIâm sorry.â The Miyake looked at him, shame in every line of their bodies. âItâs just that we donât know for certain.  Our father was a madman.  He killed every Shiba he could get alone.  He slaughtered⊠ children.  My brother and I didnât have his conviction. But from what he said, I would estimate twenty-four or five.â
A strange warbling voice piped up from behind them. âThirty-one.â
Shunsui turned so quickly that his pink kimono flared. âWhoâs there?â
A woman--or almost woman--stepped out from behind Tessai. Â Her hair was long and black, pulled back in the style of many ages past. Â Her face was smooth, but her eyes held the weight of age.
âGreetings, KyĆraku-Soutaichou,â she said, bowing deeply. âI am sorry to have interrupted, but the answer to the question Shiba Ganju-san asked is thirty-one.â
Shunsui took a few sliding steps towards the newcomer, and Ichigo could tell that he was trying to assess what or who the woman was.
âI am afraid you have me at a disadvantage,â he bowed low, a rakish smile offsetting the weighing glance. âYou know my name, but I do not know yours.â
Kisuke moved forward and held a hand out to the woman. âThis is, Shiba Shiori, and others, but Shiba-san is the strongest soul present in the gigai, so she is who the body attuned itself to.â
âA gigai?â Shunsui looked surprised. âWhy would one need a gigai here?â
It was a good question. Spirits had no limitations in Soul Society, but Shibas were always difficult like that.
âIf I could ask Miyake-san one more question, it might make the explanation of the other factors of this situation a little clearer.â
The Soutaichou nodded his agreement, but SuĂŹ-FÄng frowned. Â âI donât need any more information. Â These men have already admitted to mass murder, to the attempted destruction of a noble house.â
Kisuke hummed and the tiny woman vibrated with annoyance. Â Ichigo had a little sympathy for her. Â No one could annoy quite like Kisuke when he was in a mood.
âThat is true, yes.â The blond had dragged his fan out from somewhere and was lazily waving it back and forth. âThe devil is in the details, though. Miyake-san. Â Would you please tell the Soutaichou how you committed these killings?â
The older man sat back into his seiza, back straight, eyes forward as if he was braced for what came next.
âAizen gave my father a tachi. I believe he stole it from the armory of the Onmitsukido. Â Nobody but the Punishment Corps has needs for that type of weapon.â
Shunsui stilled. âWhat type of weapon?â
âA Soul Stripping weapon.â The man seemed to collapse in on himself with the admission. âWe didnât just kill them. Â We destroyed them. Â Everything they were. Â Everything that was Shiba.â
Shiori laughed, a tinkling bell-like laugh that hid the edge of a knife. âSuch ego. Â Your father had it, too. Â He couldnât believe that I would choose someone other than him to share my life with. Â Couldnât believe that his samurai legends wouldnât be enough to lure a woman with twice his power into his bed. Â The fool.â
She held her hands out, and the long blue sleeves of her kimono spread like wings. âHe tried to destroy us, but he made the mistake of the egotistical. Â He didnât understand that he was dealing with a power greater than any of his samurai ancestors knew. Â He was dealing with Shiba. Â My husband was a good man. Â Our clan--my clan--has honor and power even after being targeted so shamefully.â
Tessai raised a hand. âSoul Stripping was one of the kidĆ that I outlawed in my time as Commander of the KidĆ Corps. Â It was only to be used as the most extreme of punishments doled out by the Punishment Corps. Â Aizen took advantage of his access and liberated a few of the spelled weapons, including the one he gave to Miyake Rin.â
Shunsui and SuĂŹ-FÄng  shared a look.  âWhere is this weapon now?â
âIt is buried in the courtyard behind the main house of the Miyake compound. Â It has been buried there since my father killed himself with it.â
A low gasp was heard. Â Heâd killed himself and destroyed his own chance of reincarnation because he couldnât face what he had done, leaving his two sons to live with both his death and their own dishonor.
Shiori spat on the ground. âEver the coward. Â Condemning his own children with his poison, and then taking the easy way out himself.â
KĆ«kaku walked over and stood shoulder to shoulder to the woman who wasnât a woman. âYou put it well. Â He was a coward, and if destruction was what he wanted, then that was what he deserved.â
The two women looked so much alike it was uncanny, even with KĆ«kakuâs wooden arm and Shioriâs unnaturally still face. Ichigo tried to imagine what it would have been like coming to a Soul Society full of Shibas. It would have been a much different place. Â He couldnât imagine Rukia or the Visored being condemned to death. Â He couldnât imagine them putting up with a lot of things. Â That was probably as much a reason why theyâd been targeted as their role as gatekeepers.
âSo, Aizen killed Kaien and Miyako, and then arranged the murders of all these other Shibas.â Ichigo watched the faces around him as he summed up what they were all thinking. âAnd since heâs back in Muken for another 20,000 years, that kind of puts a damper on the whole find the bad guy and punish him thing.â
The Miyake brothers were still kneeling in the center of the crowd, and Ichigo waved a hand in their direction.
âThese guys werenât even in their right minds when they were involved. Â I mean, Aizen managed to screw with everyoneâs brains even after we knew he was a bastard. Â Two mid-range KidĆ Corps members? They didnât have a chance against him.â
SuĂŹ-FÄng looked outraged. âAre you out of your mind? They slaughtered a noble house!â She looked at the Soutaichou. âSurely you see they must be punished.â
Shunsui shifted his straw hat and looked at the surviving Shiba. âWhat do you all say? Â Is Ichigo right? Â Were they not responsible for their actions?â
For a moment Ichigo thought they were going to fight him, but in the end they didnât disappoint.
âI once said that if the shinigami that killed my brother said one word of apology for their actions I would forgive them. She had much more control over her situation than youâve had over yours.â KĆ«kaku chewed the end of her pipe and stared at the men on the ground at her feet. Â âI donât like it, and I canât say I like you, but I donât blame you. Aizen is to blame, and perhaps your father for being an easy target to begin with, but not you.â
Ganju frowned at his sister and thrust both hands in his pockets. âKilling you wonât bring them back. Just donât ask for more than that from me. Â Iâm not as forgiving as she is.â
Isshin stood there. âI think I would like to hear what Shiba Shiori-san has to say.â
The gigai turned to him and bowed before answering.
âWe Shiba fight. Â Face to face. With honor. Â Killing you would bring no honor. Â You are weak, but you are not our enemy. Â Aizen is our enemy. Â I look forward to the say that his soul is scattered to the ends of creation so that the Universe can make something better of the power he has wasted.â
âSo,â the Soutaichou arranged his cherry blossom kimono carefully, âit seems to me that without the Shiba clan calling for blood, we really donât have anything to pursue.â
Sui-Feng looked like she could bite through nails.  Ichigo expected her to stomp her foot in anger. âAs Soutaichou you have toâŠâ
Shunsui cut her off. âAs Soutaichou, I have to follow the laws handed down to me by Central 46, and do what I believe is right in situations where there is no clear law in place. And, as far as I am aware, you are not in a position to contradict me, Taichou.â
The Captain of the Second clenched her fists and inclined her head. âAs you say, Soutaichou.â
Yoruichi sauntered over to the younger woman and put a long arm around her shoulders.
âCome along Little Bee,â she said, steering her protege away from the group with a smile. âLet us spar like we used to. Â I will let you exorcise some of your blood lust.â
She took two steps forward. âBut you have to catch me first.â
Yoruichi disappeared in a flit of shunpo, and after a second of being clearly torn between staying and arguing with KyĆraku Soutaichou and chasing after her mentor, she gave into the inevitable and shunpoâd away as well.
The Miyake brothers stood shakily, and wiped tears from their faces.
âWe can never undo the damage we have done to the Shiba. Â We know that. Â Your decision to allow us our continued freedom is worlds beyond anything we had a right to hope for.â
KĆ«kaku turned her pipe over and knocked the ash out against the heel of her sandal violently. âIf you make a fuss about it, we might change our minds. Itâs best if you just accept it and move on. Â I donât want to stew in this sorry pot of misery any more than I already have, and I canât believe any of the others do, either.â
Shunsui motioned the men to stand next to him. Â âI will escort these two back to their compound and retrieve the sword they described.â He tilted his head in a nod to Tessai. Â âI agree that such a thing should not be easily accessed. Â Or accessed at all. Â But that is a question for another day.â
He turned to Kisuke. âWill Shiba Shiori-san be staying with us? Â Or perhaps returning to the living world?â
Ichigo snorted. Â The man was a terrible manipulator. Â He quite admired that about the new Soutaichou. Â It made the maze of Seireitei much easier to navigate.
âShiba Shiori-san has graciously agreed to allow me to konso her and the other souls with her. Tessai-san and I have altered the kidĆ necessary and we believe it will free them all to enter into the reincarnation cycle. Â They are Shiba, but some of them have been tied in a loop of suffering for fifty years now. Â They are tired and wish to find peace.â
The Soutaichou bowed deeply to the Shiba-spirit entity. âIn that case, please allow me to say that it has been a pleasure knowing you. Â You have proven yourself to be as noble and as honorable as I know the Shiba to be.â
When he left, the gigai allowed itself to sag a little, and Kisuke led it to a low chair. âIs the reishi getting to you Shiba-san?â
The dark head nodded. âI am beginning to feel my grip slipping. Â I believe that if we are to make the konso successful, we need to do it now. Â Iâm not sure I will be able to free the others if we wait any longer.â
Tessai stepped forward and handed Kisuke the white tachi, and with a minimum of fuss and a maximum of gentleness he touched the pommel to the gigaiâs chest, right over where he had inserted the reishĆ«kaku. And then, the gigai lost its features, sliding back into the blank slate it began as.
Shiba Shiori and the others were free.
Ichigo wasnât ashamed to admit his eyes werenât dry, but then no one elseâs were either.
***
âHey! Â Can someone come hold the door for a minute? Â My arms are full!â
Kisuke heard Ururuâs light steps as she ran for the back door. âKurosaki-kun!â She sounded excited. Â She had missed Ichigo. âI didnât know you were coming. Â Urahara-san didnât mention it.â
Ichigo pushed in through the open door, a box in his arms, and toed off his shoes in the genkin. âI didnât tell him. It was a surprise.â
A surprise? Â It most certainly was. Â After the trip back through the senkaimon Ichigo had collapsed, the exhaustion of it all finally catching up with him, but heâd headed home the next day and Kisuke had settled in to re-accustom himself to a quiet ShĆten without Kurosakis and Shibas and even ShihĆins for a while.
âAre you going to hold the door for your old man, Ichigo, or just leave me out here on the step like yesterdayâs trash?â
Isshinâs voice boomed through the partially open door, and Kisukeâs eyes widened. Â What were they both doing here? Â Was something wrong with Ichigo again?
âKurosaki-san,â he said lightly, coming around the corner to see the two men and Ururu wrestling with two bags and a large box. âHave you had a setback in your recovery?  I have sent Tessai-san out for a few things, but he should be returning any time now and can run another diagnostic scan of the wound pathways.  If we havenât managed to seal them properly, we can tryâŠâ
âOh yeah, Tessai knew I was coming. Â He said heâd pick up pork for two more, since Goat Face was helping me bring some things over and weâd be here for dinner.â
Tessai knew Ichigo was coming and was making extra dinner.  That was⊠ unexpected.
âAnd just what are these things youâve brought?â he asked, trying to figure out what was happening.
âOh books, clothes, my computer⊠ you know, regular things.â
Ichigo carried his box down the hallway past Kisukeâs room until he reached a little store room at the end of the hall.
âIâm afraid I am still at a loss, Kurosaki-san.â He followed Ichigo into the small room only to realize that it had been cleaned out and a single futon folded in the corner. Â Apparently Tessai had kept more than just todayâs extra dinner shopping from him.
âDonât try to argue with him, Kisuke. Â You know what heâs like when he gets hold of something. You canât change his mind no matter how hard you try.â
The blond looked at Isshin who had come up behind him and shook his head in confusion. âI am familiar with Kurosaki-sanâsâŠâ
âIchigoâs.â The redhead interrupted.
âIâm sorry?â he asked, flustered.
âMy name. Â Ichigo. Â Youâve used it before. Â No sense in stopping now.â He turned back to the room, stacking his few things on a low table against the wall. âIâm going to have to get a rod to hang my clothes on. Â Iâm terrible with an iron. Â Easier if I just hang things out of the dryer.â
Isshin made a noncommittal noise. âI donât know. Â A rod takes up a lot of room. Â It isnât like youâre going to have to iron much. Â You only brought two pairs of trousers. Â The rest are jeans and t-shirts, and even Yuzu doesnât iron those.â
Kisuke pinched himself. Â No. Â Not dreaming. Maybe he was having a stroke.
Ichigo caught a glimpse of the look on his face and took pity on him.
âKisuke, itâs like this.â He moved to stand in front of the taller man. âLast year when I told you I had feelings for you, you made it very clear that I should get over my case of hero-worship before I came back. So, I have.â
Isshin had dropped the two bags he was carrying in the corner and slid past the others standing in the doorway. He patted Kisuke on the shoulder as he passed and gave him a look of commiseration.
âYou have?â Kisuke latched on to the last thing Ichigo had said.
âYup,â the young man nodded. âTotally over the hero-worship thing.â
Kisuke felt oddly disheartened by that. Â Heâd wanted Ichigo to move on, he just didnât realize how even just hearing the words would hurt.
âSo, I am assuming youâre looking for a room to rent and Tessai has volunteered the ShĆten?â
He hated feeling like he was missing something, but he definitely felt like he was missing something.
Ichigo moved closer and Kisuke imagined he could feel the warmth of him even at that distance.
âNot really,â he said, his voice a little softer. Â âItâs true that Iâm over the hero-worship thing, but thatâs only part of what I felt for you. Â A year hasnât made that go away. Â Hasnât faded it at all, actually. Â And, to top it off, this last catastrophe just reminded me how time can be stolen from us in the most bizarre ways. Â I donât intend to let that happen to me. Â To us.â
Ururu appeared in the doorway with another small box, and Ichigo took it with thanks and put it on the table with the other things, before turning back to him. His expression was wide open, and Kisuke could see the intensity there, the sheer determination to make him understand, and he shivered a little at knowing he was that important to this amazing man.
âI know you.â Ichigo looked him in the eye until he had to look away. âNot Urahara Kisuke the hero. Not someone Iâve stuck up on a pedestal. Just you. Â Urahara Kisuke mad scientist, shinigami, and handsome candy store owner. Â And you know what? Â I love you. Â So, until you convince me that Iâve made a mistake, or I convince you that youâre wrong to not give us a chance, Iâm moving in. Â Iâve arranged with Tessai to pay rent, and I am on the chore schedule for dinner twice a week and whatever random errands need to be run. I donât intend to push you, and if it becomes clear Iâm not wanted, I am reasonable enough to understand. Â I know that just because they labeled me savior of three worlds, doesnât mean I appeal to everyone.â
Kisukeâs mind was spinning. Â He couldnât mean this. Â Moving in? Â His father would kill them.
âIsshin, surely youâŠâ he started but the older Kurosaki cut him off.
âI told you. Â You canât reason with him when he gets this way. Â He could give stubborn lessons to a mule.â
Kisuke laughed in spite of himself. Â âTypical Shiba, hmm?â
Isshin shook his head. âShiba? Â No way. Â This is Kurosaki through and through. Â Masaki could make a grown man weep with frustration when she got an idea in her head, and did, on more than one occasion.â
âSo⊠youâre alright? With this?â He waved a hand at the room, and the boxes, unable to find the words.
âKisuke,â the big man was serious for once. âI have watched you save Ichigoâs life. I think I can trust you with his heart.â Then he patted the blond enthusiastically on the back and grinned. âPlus, as an older more experienced lover you can teach him a few things in the bedroom Iâm sure.  I will have to buy a nice big bottle of that lovely almond oil Masaki used toâŠâ
Ichigo moved between them and punched him. He laughed.
âMy son! So strong in defense of his love! Your mother would be so proud.â He winked at Kisuke and then turned back to Ichigo in time to ward off another right hook. âI think that was everything you wanted to bring over. Â Send me a text if youâve forgotten anything.â He tried to hug the redhead, but he just got a friendly cuff on the ear for his efforts.
âThanks Goat Face,â Ichigo said, and he clearly meant it. Â âTell the girls Iâll be back for dinner on Saturday, okay?â
Isshin agreed and let himself out, with a loud, âDonât do anything I wouldnât do!â
And then it was quiet.
As soon as the door closed, Ichigo lost some of his bluster. âLook. I know this seems sudden, but after the whole thing with Shiori... I needed to take this chance.  Do you remember when I first came back? It was crazy. I was so miserable, but walking through that door, listening to you talking to Tessai, hell, sleeping in blankets that smelled like you⊠ I realized I hadnât been that happy in a year.  I donât want to go another year denying what I feel.  If that makes you uncomfortable, if you truly canât see a future together, Iâll take my gear and go.â  He laughed a little sheepishly. âThatâs why I only brought one box of books.â
Kisuke looked at the little room, and then back to the man in front of him. It was time to stop hiding.
âI sent you away once. I told myself it was for your own good, but it was still the hardest thing Iâve ever had to do.â Â He leaned in and dropped the lightest of kisses on Ichigoâs lips, letting him feel how just that little act left him breathless and shaky. He stepped back and looked down into wide amber eyes. âI think we can make room for a few more boxes of books. Ichigo.â
Ichigoâs smile blazed at the sound of his name, and he slid his arms loosely around Kisukeâs waist. âThatâs good. Â I have a lot of books. Â It may take some time to move them all in.â
Kisuke kissed him again and pressed their foreheads together, his heart more at peace than it had ever been. Â âThatâs okay. Â We have time.â
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