JJK: I Was Cast as Gojo Satoru, but My Powers are Real!

Chapter 158 158: Toji's Redemption!



Chapter 158 158: Toji's Redemption!

The alleyway was too narrow for the kind of fight happening inside it.

Debris from the earlier battle had narrowed it further. Steven Grant's Megumi was working with what the space gave him - white rabbits flooding every opening, technique deployed not to win but to restrict, to complicate, to buy the fraction of a second that the difference in raw ability between them demanded.

It wasn't working.

Andrew Stone's Toji moved through the fur and the chaos like it wasn't there. The rabbits that survived contact with him did so because he hadn't specifically noticed them. Megumi had trained for years against opponents with cursed energy, against domains and techniques and the entire vocabulary of the sorcerer world. He had no training for this - a man who operated outside that vocabulary entirely, whose threat came from somewhere that the tools he'd built didn't address.

"If I don't find the exact micro-second," Megumi's internal monologue said, "I'm dead."

The opening came - small, manufactured through desperate geometry. He got a hand on Toji's shirt and swung his blade in a wide arc. The angle was right. The timing was right.

Toji leaned back. The blade passed an inch from his throat. His expression registered the near-miss with approximately the same level of concern as a man ducking a low branch.

Megumi gritted his teeth.

Then Toji stopped.

Not a tactical pause. Not a feint. Something had reached through the puppet - through the instinct and the seance and the killing efficiency and interrupted it. His eyes, which had been operating on pure predatory autopilot, went somewhere else for a moment.

The flashback arrived without music.

A younger Toji Fushiguro. A room. A business arrangement described in the matter-of-fact language of someone selling a horse.

"You know my brat? He's totally got it all. I wouldn't mind leaving him in your care once his technique manifests at age five or six. Depending on how much you'll pay, of course. I'll take eight if it's a hereditary technique, and seven for anything else"

"I'll pay you ten if it's the hereditary technique."

"That place might've treated me like trash, but it should be a little better for someone talented."

"Not that I care."

"I don't care anymore."

A rainy street. The echo of his wife's voice.

"Take care of Megumi, okay?"

Andrew Stone looked at the young man across the alleyway.

"Hey, you."

"What's your name?"

The question landed in the middle of a fight. Megumi, who had been preparing for a blade, received this instead. He kept his stance. Didn't lower his guard.

"Fushiguro," he said.

Toji went still for one second.

"Not Zen'in?"

The corner of his mouth moved. Something that, on Toji's face, required identification as a smile because nothing else in his expression had prepared the audience for it - a genuine, unhurried, quietly proud smile.

He raised Playful Cloud.

And drove it into his own temple.

"Good for you."

The screen held the image for three seconds - Toji's body sinking to the alley floor, the seance ending, the killing puppet with its strings cut and the global audience sat with the specific stillness of people watching something they had not expected to feel.

[He died happy. That's the whole story. His son kept his name and he died happy.]

[Andrew Stone just delivered the most complete arc in the season in about few minutes of screen time. How.]

[Megumi has no idea. He's standing in that alley right now not knowing he just watched his father choose him. I cannot process this.]

[The smile. The SMILE when he said "Good for you".]

UCLA School of Theater, Film and Television.

The multimedia lab had gone very quiet.

Chloe Vance had both hands over her mouth. Ava, sitting beside her, was staring at the screen with her lower lip pressed between her teeth. Lucas Miller, who had been watching from the back row and knew what was coming, had looked at the floor for the last thirty seconds so he didn't have to watch anyone's face when it happened.

Nobody spoke for a while.

On the screen, the atmosphere was different.

Lucas Miller's Sukuna had been given a deal and a sparring partner, and was experiencing something in the approximate vicinity of a good mood.

Jogo threw everything he had. Magma floods. Volcanic pressure. The specific fury of a Special Grade spirit who had spent years being the most dangerous thing in any room and was now being used as entertainment.

Sukuna dodged with a yawn. Literally. The camera caught it - a small, genuine yawn, the gesture of someone whose boredom with the gap in ability had crossed from condescension into something almost affectionate.

He grabbed Jogo by the face and dragged him down the side of a fifty-story building. The concrete surface of the building shed a layer of material from the friction. Jogo's volcanic head left a groove in the glass.

"The moonlight is truly bright," Sukuna remarked, holding Jogo at arm's length over the rubble. "It lets me see your pathetic state so clearly."

He released him.

"Try a little harder. Before I get bored, keep playing with me."

Something unexpected happened in the live-chat.

Not fury at Sukuna. Not fear. The audience - which had just watched Andrew Stone die quietly in an alley, which had watched Nanako and Mimiko be killed for asking the wrong question, which had watched Nanami reduced to a dream of a Malaysian beach - looked at this volcano spirit getting demolished by a god and felt something that took a moment to name.

[GO LITTLE JOGO]

The phrase multiplied before anyone had consciously organized it. Within two minutes it was the top comment by volume on the Netflix watch party stream, a rolling chant from people who had no rational reason to root for a creature that had burned three sorcerers to charcoal earlier in the episode and who were doing it anyway.

[He can't win. He knows he can't win. He's going anyway.]

[I've never cared so much about a monster in my entire life. What has Leo Vance done to me.]

[Little Jogo is working so hard! He's giving it everything!]

UCLA.

Chloe Vance had recovered enough from the alley scene to be on her feet.

Lucas Miller watched from the back, grinning at a reaction he genuinely had not predicted. Leo Vance had written a monster into something the audience would mourn. He had done it without changing who the monster was.

On screen, Jogo roared.

"MAXIMUM TECHNIQUE: METEOR!"

The sky above Manhattan turned orange. A massive, flaming rock - the size of a city block, rendered in the specific high-fidelity detail that distinguished every Celestial Peak production from everything else currently airing, manifested in the upper atmosphere and began its descent.

Sukuna looked at it. Looked away. Teleported to a rooftop where Panda and a sorcerer named Kusakabe were standing, paralyzed.

The sheer pressure of his presence made movement feel like a privilege he hadn't yet granted.

"From now on," Sukuna said, with the pleasant tone of someone announcing a minor policy change, "nobody around here moves a muscle until I say so. If anyone dares to twitch- " he smiled- "I'll kill you without mercy."

The camera pulled back.

The fireball was still coming.

The rooftop figures stood completely still.

The episode cut.

[The meteor is FALLING. He's STANDING THERE. He told them not to move and the meteor is FALLING.]

[Sukuna isn't worried. Sukuna is never worried. I am worried for both of them.]

[The next update is in six days. SIX DAYS.]

Plz Drop Some Power Stones.

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