Matsushita Yusuke spent exactly three seconds floating in a private vision of himself as the most impressive person alive.
Then he ca back down.
Because there was still soone else in the room and walking around with that expression on his face was going to raise questions.
"Right — thank you for explaining everything, Omaeda-senpai."
"Just Kishinoshin is fine. Surnas put distance where there doesn't need to be any."
Kishinoshin shifted his weight forward, knees apart, a relaxed smile on his face.
"Honestly, we got through this because of you. If you hadn't been there, I'd have been in serious trouble."
Matsushita Yusuke had lived two lives. He was a little sharper than average because of that, and he could generally work out what was actually being said underneath what was actually being said.
Thinking through the noble hierarchy of Soul Society, the accountability structure, and who was standing where when things could have gone badly, it took him about four seconds to trace the logic.
At the sa ti, a familiar window surfaced.
[Quest: Understand what Kishinoshin is really telling you]
[Profile: Every vice-captain in the Gotei 13 brings sothing different to the role. So are powerful. So are proud. Kishinoshin built himself around reading people -- and right now, he's doing you the courtesy of being readable.]
[Rewards: Read the Room 5, Eloquence 3]
Offbeat rewards. But by Matsushita Yusuke's standards, pulling five points in one life skill from a single conversation was genuinely unusual. He'd never seen a payout like that in this category before.
No reason to say no.
He accepted without hesitation.
"You're being too generous. I just did what anyone would have."
He kept his tone modest and his posture open.
This landed exactly where he ant it to.
For soone like Kishinoshin, a man who'd spent decades navigating institutional politics and reading rooms for a living, raw talent was an abstract thing. Impressive in the way a distant mountain was impressive. Not sothing you could shake hands with.
But soone young showing actual social sense? That was sothing he could work with.
This kid is exactly what Yoruichi-sama described. He knows how things work.
"Well said, Matsushita-kun."
Kishinoshin let out a quiet, satisfied sound, then continued.
"The captain was pleased with how you handled yourself out there. She said soone at your level has no business spending years sitting in a classroom. So — have you ever considered joining her personal unit?"
"...Sorry?"
The words landed just as the reward notification rolled through.
[Quest complete... Rewards acquired]
There it is.
Just as he'd reasoned out earlier. Even when the relevant person wasn't physically present, if the right conditions were t and the objective resolved, the reward ca through anyway.
Quest complete.
And he was also starting to understand the quest description at a deeper level than before.
The brief had said to engage actively rather than wait and see. He'd done exactly that, and it had moved the conversation into territory that opened sothing new.
This thing chains?!
That thought was still processing when he pulled his attention back to the room. Kishinoshin was watching him with an expectant expression.
"What do you think, Matsushita-kun?"
Hang on.
Matsushita Yusuke took a few seconds to absorb the offer, then chose his words carefully.
"Could you explain what a personal unit actually is? I don't think the Academy covers that."
Kishinoshin blinked, then nodded a few tis in quick succession, the look of a man who'd just realized he'd skipped a step.
"Fair point, that was my mistake. Let back up."
He chose his pace deliberately, unhurried.
"It's an informal arrangent. No official structure, no formal registration, no institutional backing. It simply ans you've chosen, of your own free will, to be available to Yoruichi-sama when she needs sothing. Because it's organized under her na personally rather than under Squad 2, there's no obligation attached in the conventional sense. When she has sothing that needs doing, sothing only people at a certain level can handle, she calls, and the people in the unit decide whether to help."
Matsushita Yusuke sat with that for a mont.
His first instinct had been: is this just a private squad of hired muscle?
But that wasn't quite right either.
Yoruichi Shihoin was one of the four great noble families. People didn't get recruited into her circle. People queued up and hoped to be considered. Getting a foot in that door without exceptional ability wasn't sothing you could even attempt.
So it wasn't that framing.
He turned it over and landed sowhere more accurate.
More like a retainer arrangent. Benefits, access, goodwill, and in exchange, you showed up when called and used your judgnt about what you were willing to do when you got there.
High autonomy. Low formal obligation. Long-term relationship with a very powerful patron.
Which frad as an investnt made more sense than anything else. Not sothing you'd take if you were chasing short-term returns. The kind of thing only soone with Yoruichi's resources could even offer in good faith.
Co to think of it, wasn't that basically what she had going with Urahara? The two of them had sohow drifted into their particular dynamic through what looked, from the outside, like a long series of shared projects and accumulated trust.
...Actually that comparison might be going sowhere he didn't intend. Moving on.
Matsushita Yusuke had just worked out his answer when Kishinoshin spoke first, smiling.
"I've thrown a lot at you without much warning. Sorry about that. No need to respond right now — take your ti thinking it through."
He stood, gave Matsushita Yusuke a short nod, and stepped back toward the door.
"You've got until the next field rotation to give an answer. That shouldn't be too long — next month's practical assignnt will likely fall to Squad 2 again, barring anything unexpected."
Matsushita Yusuke managed a vague "understood" as Kishinoshin left.
He sat there for a mont after the door closed, staring at the space the man had just vacated.
What just happened?
Classic move. Offer first, walk out before they can say no.
Matsushita Yusuke turned the conversation back over in his head, properly this ti, from the beginning.
And the more he looked at it, the clearer it beca.
Outside of the monts when he'd asked direct questions, he hadn't driven a single part of that exchange. Kishinoshin had been running the whole thing from start to finish. The tone, the timing, the way the offer landed, the way the exit closed the conversation without closing the door, all of it had been managed without ever looking like managent.
That was a level of professional fluency Matsushita Yusuke had to genuinely respect.
So things you just couldn't pick up from a classroom or a stat window. You had to grind them the slow way, in actual rooms with actual people, over years of navigating situations where the wrong read cost you sothing real.
That was an operator in the truest sense of the word.
And Matsushita Yusuke, sitting alone in a bare white room with his new life skills still settling in, thought about that for quite a while.
***
70 advance chapters at patreon/Eatinpieces
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