Baki Hanma Now

Outside, the Tokyo rain washed the subway dust from his jacket. He wasn't stronger than before. But he was wiser. And sometimes, that's the same thing.

The table shook. The fourth son carried out a covered dome the size of a manhole cover. He lifted the lid. Steam rose, forming a terrifying mirage: the silhouette of the Ogre, Yujiro Hanma, roaring. Underneath was a massive, perfectly grilled T-bone steak, but the meat wasn't beef. It was a genetic crossbreed—aurochs and extinct dire bull—cooked rare. The fat was the color of molten gold. And it was seasoned with a single tear from a defeated sumo champion. This was the test of pure ego. The steak was arrogance made flesh. Baki took a knife and fork. With each bite, his own demon whispered: You are weak. You are your father's shadow. You will never be him. Baki chewed slowly. He didn't try to deny the voice. He agreed with it. Yes. I am his son. That's my problem. And my power. He finished the steak, then picked up the bone and cracked it open with his teeth to suck out the marrow. The demon's whisper fell silent. Baki Hanma

Chef Ryumon bowed his head. The four sons stood and applauded silently. "You have passed," the old man said. He slid a scrap of parchment across the table. "The master's name is Ogasawara. He lives on a mountain in Hokkaido. He never taught Yujiro to fight. He taught him to cook . Yujiro failed this very meal, you see. He broke the table on the third course. He called the stew 'weakness.'" Outside, the Tokyo rain washed the subway dust

A platter of glistening white fish arrived. It looked like fugu, but the texture was wrong. Chef Ryumon’s eldest son leaned forward. "It's not the fish that cuts you. It's the knife." The sashimi had been sliced with a blade forged from a shattered piece of Miyamoto Musashi's actual katana. Eating it, Baki felt a phantom slash across his psyche—the ghost of the legendary swordsman's killing intent. It wasn't physical pain; it was the terror of being cut. Baki’s imagination conjured the image of his own severed head. He grabbed a piece with his chopsticks. A ghost can't kill me. My father is real. He ate the entire platter in three bites, the spectral cuts healing as he swallowed. And sometimes, that's the same thing

It was a humid Tokyo night when the letter arrived. No return address. Just a single, thick sheet of black paper with silver kanji that read: "You are invited to the Last Supper. Come hungry."

Placed before him was a single, glistening, raw oyster. But it wasn't normal. It was alive, and its shell had been fused with a minute amount of pufferfish venom . Not enough to kill, but enough to send the nervous system into a panic. The second Baki put it in his mouth, his tongue went numb, his throat tried to close, and every nerve screamed stop . His hands, which had crushed skulls, trembled. Baki closed his eyes. He remembered the quietest moment in the Hyper-Grappler Arena—the silence before a death blow. He forced his body to ignore the alarm, chewed once, and swallowed. The numbness spread, but he smiled. Pain is just information.