The Moment Before the Kill
Under the pale light of the moon, Kenshin stands over Udo Jin-e, his sword raised for the final strike. The scene is silent except for Kaoru’s faint breaths in the background. Jin-e looks up, amused, and asks coldly, “Why do you hesitate? You know that if you don’t kill me, she’ll die choking on her own breath.”
Kenshin’s eyes waver. The killer inside him—the Hitokiri Battosai—wants to finish it, but the man he has become refuses. Finally, he answers: “I have no desire to kill you. But if it’s the only way to protect her… then I’ll become the Hitokiri once more.”
He steps forward, ready to strike. The wind stills. His sword descends.
The Voice That Saved Him
Just before the blade reaches its mark, a voice shatters the spell: Kaoru screams—“No! Don’t go back!” Her desperate cry, full of fear and love, breaks Jin-e’s hypnosis and brings her back to consciousness. Kenshin freezes, horrified, realizing how close he was to losing himself.
He runs to Kaoru’s side, catching her as she collapses. “Kaoru-dono, please wake up!” She opens her eyes weakly and smiles. “You’re speaking like you usually do,” she says softly. The Battosai fades from his face, replaced once more by the gentle wanderer she knows.
Jin-e, wounded and trembling, watches them from a distance. With a bitter grin, he mutters, “So… she broke my hypnosis. I must have gotten soft.”
The End of the Assassin
Jin-e approaches, clutching a short wakizashi in his left hand. Kenshin warns him to stop. “It’s over, Jin-e.” But the assassin shakes his head. “No… there are still things to be settled.” Kenshin turns sharply, expecting another attack—but instead, Jin-e plunges the blade into his own chest.
Blood spills down his robe as he laughs, his voice hollow. “Loose ends,” he whispers. “Can’t have the politician traced back to me.” He looks up one last time, eyes gleaming with dark satisfaction. “You fool, Battosai… you really thought this new era could exist without men like us?”
He smirks faintly. “That fight… it was fun. I’ll be watching from hell to see how long you can keep pretending to be human.” With that, Jin-e exhales for the last time, his body falling limp under the moonlight.
The Ribbon and the Dawn
Kenshin stands quietly for a moment, then lowers his sword. “Let’s go home, Kaoru-dono. The police can handle the rest.” As they walk back to the Dojo, Kaoru thanks him for saving her. Kenshin smiles softly. “No… I should be the one thanking you.”
She looks puzzled, but he continues, voice barely above a whisper. “You saved me—from becoming a killer again.”
The blue ribbon she gave him still hangs from his hand, stained with dust and moonlight, fluttering gently as the night finally gives way to dawn.
Final Thoughts
This act isn’t about victory—it’s about redemption. The battle between Kenshin and Jin-e ends not with blood, but with choice. Kenshin’s humanity is tested, and Kaoru’s voice becomes the only thing strong enough to bring him back from the edge.
Jin-e dies satisfied, believing violence will always define the world. Kenshin lives, believing love and compassion can change it. Between those two beliefs lies the heart of Rurouni Kenshin—a story not just about swords, but about what it means to live with the weight of your past.
All images are personal captures taken from my own physical copy of the manga.