Baki Hanma ❲8K 2027❳

The station was transformed. In place of train tracks, a long, ancient-looking wooden table sat under a single, bare bulb. Seated around it were five people Baki had never seen before.

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.

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.'" Baki Hanma

A black iron bowl. The broth smelled of ginger, soy, and something deeply, disturbingly familiar. Baki sniffed. His pupils dilated. It was his own mother's recipe—Emi Akezawa’s special winter stew. The one she made when he was five, before the tragedy, before Yujiro. "How...?" Baki whispered. "We have our sources," said the second son. "We extracted the memory from a chef who knew her." Baki lifted the spoon. As the broth touched his lips, he wasn't in the subway. He was a child. Warm, safe, loved. The taste was a weapon sharper than any punch—regret. Tears welled up, hot and unbidden. He wanted to stop. He wanted to stay in that memory forever. Instead, he drank the whole bowl, letting the tears fall into the empty vessel. Strength isn't about forgetting. It's about carrying the weight and still moving forward.

An empty plate. "The final course," Chef Ryumon said, his voice trembling for the first time. "Is nothing. For five minutes, you will sit with an empty plate. No taste. No texture. No sensation. The strongest men go mad from silence. They prefer pain to peace." The four sons leaned in. This was the trap. After four brutal courses, the void would feel like an insult. Baki's hands would itch to destroy. His mind would race. Baki set his hands flat on the table. He closed his eyes. He didn't meditate. He didn't think of training. He thought of the cherry blossoms falling in the park where he and Kozue walked. He thought of the weight of a fly landing on his knuckle. He thought of the absence of a fight—and found it beautiful. The station was transformed

At the head sat a gaunt, elderly man with the calm eyes of a temple monk. He wore a chef’s apron stained with a hundred different sauces.

The challenge was simple: five courses. Each dish was designed to break a different kind of man. If Baki finished all five, he would gain a secret—the location of a reclusive master who had once taught Yujiro Hanma a lesson in humility. If he failed, he would forfeit his title as "World's Strongest" in the underground press. Placed before him was a single, glistening, raw oyster

The world knew Baki Hanma as the "Underground Arena Champion," the demon who survived his father, Yujiro, and who could crush concrete with a hug. But Baki knew a secret. True strength wasn't just in victory. It was in understanding the flavor of a fight.

The location was an abandoned subway station beneath Roppongi. Baki went alone, leaving Kozue with a kiss and a lie about a light workout.

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."