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Chapter 578: When Kasumi t Akane

She didn’t just tell

about the life she’d lived—she unfolded it, like a blade dragged slowly across skin. A life of violence. Of survival. Of becoming sothing that stared back at her from mirrors with hollow eyes.

A killer. Not the kind born from malice, but the kind forged in necessity, in the crucible of a world that had long since stopped offering choices. She spoke of the first ti her hands didn’t shake when she pulled the trigger.

The first ti she watched the light leave soone’s eyes and felt nothing. Not triumph. Not guilt. Just the cold, clinical understanding that it was done.

And then—because dreams have a way of unraveling the things we bury—she told

the truth about her mother.

I listened. I listened. And for the first ti, I understood.

SERA had given

the outline: Yuko’s return, the blood, the plea. But the truth was ssier. Darker. More human.

Yuko had co ho in pieces—her body a map of wounds, her knuckles split, her ribs bruised from a fight that had nearly ended her.

Kasumi found her like that, collapsed against the doorfra of their childhood ho, her breath ragged, her clothes stiff with dried blood. And when Kasumi demanded answers, Yuko—who had spent years lying to the world—finally broke. She told her mother everything.

The killings. The missions. The way her soul had calloused over, layer by layer, until she barely recognized herself.

Kasumi’s response wasn’t anger. It was grief. A mother’s grief, the kind that carves canyons into a person’s face. She didn’t scream. She didn’t weep.

She knelt beside her daughter in the dim light of the hallway, her hands hovering over Yuko’s injuries as if she could will them away. And then she said the words that would shatter everything:

"Yuko, Leave this life."

Just like that. As if it were that simple.

But Yuko laughed—a sound like broken glass. "You don’t understand. This is my life now."

What Sera hadn’t told —what Yuko now confessed in a voice thick with old betrayal—was that Kasumi hadn’t stopped there. She had looked her daughter in the eye and said, "Then let

et the woman who did this to you."

Yuko had refused. Begged. But Kasumi was immovable. "If she cares for you at all, she’ll listen."

So, Yuko, cornered, had no choice but to arrange it.

The eting took place in a backroom of an izakaya in Kabukichō, the air thick with the scent of nicotine and cheap whiskey. Akane arrived like a shadow, her presence making the room feel smaller.

Kasumi didn’t flinch. She didn’t plead. She looked at the woman who had turned her daughter into a weapon and said, "Thank you for saving her life."

Akane’s expression didn’t change. But sothing flickered in her eyes—sothing like regret.

Then Kasumi dropped to her knees.

"Please, let her go," she begged. "No more missions. No more blood. I don’t want to lose her."

Yuko had scread at her mother after. "You had no right!" But Akane had only watched her, quiet, before turning to Yuko with a sadness that felt like a verdict.

"Yuko, when I took you in, I thought you were like ," Akane said. "Alone. Broken. With nothing left to lose. But I was wrong, you can still return to a normal life." Her gaze flicked to Kasumi, still kneeling.

Akane’s voice was quiet, but it cut deeper than any blade Yuko had ever felt. "You have people who love you. Who would die for you." Her exhale was slow, controlled, like she was unclenching a fist she’d held too long. "This life doesn’t end well, Yuko." Her dark eyes flicked to Kasumi, still kneeling on the tatami, her hands trembling in her lap. "Live with your mother. With your sister. I’m leaving."

Yuko’s breath hitched. "Master—"

"And don’t try to find ." Akane’s lips curled, not in cruelty, but in sothing worse—pity. "You should know that by now. Unless I want to be found, no one can."

The words landed like a knife twist. Yuko’s vision blurred. "Master, don’t—!"

But Akane was already turning away, her silhouette dissolving into the shadows of the izakaya’s backroom. The door clicked shut behind her.

Yuko spent the night tearing through Tokyo’s underbelly, her rage a living thing, her bla a blade pointed at Kasumi’s heart. She searched every bar, every alley, every place Akane might have gone.

But Akane was a ghost when she wanted to be. By dawn, Yuko was hollowed out, her fury curdling into sothing colder. Sothing that looked a lot like hate.

The next morning, Yuko moved like a ghost through the house, her movents chanical, her face a mask of carefully constructed indifference.

She packed a single bag—clothes, a knife, a photograph of Haruna as a child—and woke her sister with a shake of her shoulder.

Haruna, still half-asleep, blinked up at her in confusion. "We’re leaving," Yuko said, her voice hollow. "Now."

No explanations. No goodbyes.

Kasumi found them at the door, her face pale with dawn’s first light. "Yuko—" she started, but Yuko cut her off with a look so cold it could have shattered glass. "Don’t." The word was a blade. "You’ve done enough."

The flight to Germany was a blur of silence. Haruna, sensing the storm inside her sister, didn’t ask questions.

Germany beca her new hunting ground. The streets of Berlin, the neon glow of back-alley bars, the weight of a pistol at her hip—it was all familiar, all easy.

She threw herself into the violence like a penitent into flas, as if each kill could burn away the mory of her mother’s betrayal.

And then—this dream.

The silence between us was a living thing, thick with the weight of everything she’d just confessed. Her body trembled not from cold, but from the terror of what ca next. Would I look at her differently now? Would I flinch? Would I—

"Yuko."

She flinched at the sound of her na, as if she’d expected

to call her sothing else. Monster. Murderer. Liar.

I kept my voice deliberately light, my confusion feigned. "What are you talking about? You and your mother—you’ve always been close. She loves you."

Yuko’s laugh was a broken thing, more breath than sound. She shook her head, her fingers twisting in the fabric of her sleeves. "It’s just a dream," she whispered, as if that explained everything. As if that made it hurt less. "None of it’s real. Not her. Not you."

The air between us was thick with the weight of her confession, so heavy it pressed down on my chest. I watched the way her fingers twisted into the fabric of her skirt, her knuckles whitening as if she could tear the cloth apart. Her entire body was coiled tight, her shoulders hunched forward like she was trying to make herself smaller, less visible. Less there.

"You must hate

now," she whispered, her voice so fragile it was almost swallowed by the silence. Her eyes remained fixed on the floor, as if looking at

would make it all real. "After everything I just told you..."

I stayed silent. Let her sit with it for a mont.

She swallowed hard, her throat working. "I wouldn’t bla you. If you did. If you..." Her voice cracked, and she took a shuddering breath. "If you wanted

to leave."

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