The Night Turns to Blood
The silence in Tani’s residence shatters as Kurogasa steps out of the shadows, his eyes glowing with madness. Tani, trembling yet defiant, offers an outrageous reward: five times the promised pay and a military rank to whoever kills the assassin. The mercenaries, blinded by greed, rush forward.
It’s over in seconds. Steel flashes, screams echo, and the room fills with the sickening thud of collapsing bodies. Kurogasa moves like a whisper—efficient, detached, almost elegant in his cruelty. When the survivors try to flee, he smiles. With a single breath, he invokes Shin no Ippo, his paralyzing technique. In an instant, every bodyguard freezes where they stand. Everyone—except Kenshin.
Two Shadows Cross
Kenshin steps forward, his eyes sharp and focused. In a single motion, he leaps over Sanosuke and charges. The two swordsmen cross paths—just once. A thin cut appears on Kenshin’s arm, a token of respect between killers. They stop, facing each other in silence.
It’s a haunting moment. Without a word, they recognize one another—not by name, but by instinct. Kurogasa, whose real name is Udo Jin-e, was a murderer for hire during the Bakumatsu, a man who killed for the thrill. Kenshin, once Hitokiri Battosai, was the blade of the revolution. Now, both stand in the same room, survivors of an age built on death.
Jin-e grins. “To fight the Battosai himself… that’s a dream come true.” But instead of attacking Kenshin, he suddenly turns toward his original target, Tani Jusaburo.
The Awakening of the Killer
Sanosuke reacts first. Snapping free from the paralysis, he grabs a statue and hurls it at Jin-e, shattering his sword—but not his spirit. The broken blade slices deep into Sano’s wrist, and blood sprays across the tatami. Jin-e laughs—a cold, high-pitched laugh that makes the air feel heavier. Kenshin’s calm shatters for an instant as he charges again, his expression unreadable.
The clash is brief but sharp, and Jin-e leaps to the windowsill, now smiling wider than ever. “Forget the politician,” he says with his eyes. “My prey is you.” Then, in one motion, he disappears into the night.
Everyone else begins to move again. Uramura rushes in, pale and shaken. Sano, wounded but alive, insists he’s fine. Kenshin, though, stands by the window, silent. He knew this would happen. He knew the moment he heard the name Kurogasa that the ghost of the old world would come for him.
And yet, what truly unsettles him isn’t the danger—it’s the part of himself that almost welcomed it.
Final Thoughts
This chapter feels like stepping into the mind of both killers. Kurogasa and Kenshin mirror each other perfectly—two men who lived by the sword, but only one who found regret. The tension isn’t just physical; it’s psychological. You can feel Kenshin’s inner struggle, the battle between his vow of peace and the instincts of the Battosai that still linger beneath the surface.
It’s chilling and poetic at the same time. The Meiji Era promised peace, but this encounter reminds us that some ghosts from the revolution still walk among the living—and one of them has just found his next target.
All images are personal captures taken from my own physical copy of the manga.