Naruto: This Genius is Somewhat Ordinary-Chapter 438
Living World, 1999. Karakura Town Hospital.
Three people and one cat stepped into the hospital.
It was the kind of group that naturally drew attention without trying. Unfortunately for everyone else, none of them cared in the slightest. They walked straight down the corridor and stopped outside a private room. A knock sounded.
"Come in."
Isshin Kurosaki’s voice answered from inside.
The moment they entered, it was clear that both parents and child were already in good condition. They must have waited until things stabilized before notifying Urahara.
Isshin paused when he spotted Fujimoto Tōma, then laughed.
"You guys got here fast."
"Of course," Urahara replied with a grin. "A former captain settling down and having a kid in the Living World is unprecedented. Curiosity got the better of us."
"I’m not a shinobi anymore," Isshin said, scratching his head. "I’m basically just a normal guy now."
Urahara only smiled. Power could fade, but essence didn’t change that easily.
Masaki Kurosaki looked over from the hospital bed and beamed when she saw them. These were the people who had saved her life. That alone was reason enough for warmth.
Tōma found himself quietly acknowledging Isshin’s luck. Losing his power, yet gaining a wife like this. Fate had its own strange sense of balance.
Urahara’s gaze shifted to the crib.
The baby lay quietly inside, a few strands of orange hair standing out against pale skin. No crying. No fussing.
"So this is him?" Urahara asked.
"Yes," Isshin replied. "His name is Kurosaki Ichigo."
At that moment, the black cat leapt effortlessly onto the edge of the crib.
Yoruichi studied the baby closely.
Then, without warning, another figure appeared beside the crib.
Yoruichi’s pupils shrank.
She recognized it instantly.
Tōma’s blade spirit.
But how it had arrived, she couldn’t tell. No movement. No transition. One moment it wasn’t there, the next it was. Space itself seemed to have skipped a beat.
So that’s what a spatial-type ability looks like... she thought.
The Moon Sprite stared at Ichigo for a few seconds, frowned, and looked mildly offended.
Wrinkly. Loud-looking. Kind of like a monkey.
With visible disinterest, it hopped back onto Tōma’s shoulder.
Tōma chuckled and gave it a light pat. Babies all looked like that at first.
He turned his full attention to Ichigo.
His perception focused completely.
Ichigo, for his part, showed no fear at all. Faced with a black cat, a strange little spirit, and several unfamiliar adults, he simply laughed.
"A solid kid," Tōma said calmly. "Even without everything else."
Isshin puffed up proudly. "That’s my son."
Tōma’s eyes narrowed slightly.
Interesting.
The shinobi power and the corrupted power were almost impossible to distinguish. Not layered. Not separate. Perfectly fused.
So seamless that, at first glance, they almost vanished into each other.
That level of integration was impressive.
He sensed no archer-blood power yet, but that wasn’t surprising. That aspect belonged to Ichigo himself. It would awaken later, if at all.
Tōma had already seen what he came to see.
He was satisfied.
Urahara, meanwhile, was practically glowing.
To him, Ichigo was a miracle. A living proof of theory becoming reality. Even as the one who set everything in motion, he hadn’t expected such a flawless balance.
"Tōma," Urahara asked suddenly, "interested in becoming his teacher?"
The room went quiet.
Masaki hesitated, but Isshin gently stopped her.
Tōma considered it briefly, then shook his head.
"No. You’re better suited for that. I don’t stay in one place long, and I’m not cut out for teaching."
Especially not with Hueco Mundo on his mind.
"I see..." Urahara said, disappointed but unsurprised.
Isshin cleared his throat. "Honestly, we just want Ichigo to grow up quietly. No shinobi. No corrupted beings. Just... a normal life."
Urahara froze for a moment.
Then he laughed softly. "That’s on me. I overstepped."
"I get why you’re interested," Isshin said cheerfully. "No hard feelings."
With that, the visit ended.
Outside the hospital, Urahara sighed.
"Having a child really does change people."
"Some things don’t change just because you wish them to," Tōma said, glancing back at the building.
Urahara nodded. "Still, they’ll probably have a peaceful decade or two."
"Sounds about right," Tōma replied, recalling the future he remembered.
Back in the room, Masaki looked at Isshin.
"Do you think we can really live peacefully?"
"We will," Isshin said, though his confidence wasn’t absolute.
Someone had ambushed him that night. Someone unknown. Someone who ensured he couldn’t use his full strength.
It hadn’t been Urahara. It hadn’t been Tōma.
Which meant there was someone else.
That uncertainty lingered.
Still, Karakura Town had been unusually safe. For a spiritually dense area, the number of incidents was abnormally low.
Isshin suspected Tōma’s presence played a role. Not total suppression. Just balance.
Which was, ironically, exactly how things were supposed to work.
Tōma didn’t return to Urahara’s shop.
There was no reason to. He didn’t feel like sparring with Tessai, and his training no longer required guidance.
Instead, he went home.
Games didn’t hold much appeal anymore. His reflexes made even the hardest settings trivial.
In another life, he’d struggled. Here, everything bent too easily.
As he stood there, a dimensional gate opened inside the house.
Unohana Retsu stepped through.
"Yo, Captain," Tōma greeted casually. "Long time."
"Living comfortably, I see," Unohana said, glancing at the consoles.
"No one breathing down my neck helps," Tōma replied.
She sighed. "The Commander-General wants you back. Your assignment is over."
Tōma raised an eyebrow. "Central Council isn’t worried I’ll punch them?"
"Can’t you just... not?" Unohana said tiredly.
"That depends on whether they provoke me," Tōma replied, then added, "How’s Akiyama Kenpachi?"
Unohana paused. "Some improvement. Not much."
"Then don’t hold back," Tōma said lightly. "Beat him down once in a while. He’ll live."
"...Perhaps," she said quietly.
Tōma studied her for a moment. There was something unresolved there. Something old.
"Why are you staring?" Unohana asked.
"No reason," he said. "I’ll come back."
She blinked. "You will?"
"My position still open?"
"Yes. Kotetsu Isane’s handling duties for now."
"She’s fine," Tōma said. "Better than me, honestly."
"So... now?"
"Now."
Tōma had questions that required answers.
And those answers were waiting in the Soul Society.







