VISION GRID SYSTEM: THE COMEBACK OF RYOMA TAKEDA - Chapter 387: The First Real Offer

Chapter 387: The First Real Offer
Nakahara slides the office door shut, careful not to let it slam. The sounds of the gym dull immediately, reduced to a low steady thrum; gloves hitting pads, Sera’s voice cutting through.
“Please,” Nakahara says, gesturing to the sofa. “Have a seat, Fujimoto-san.”
Fujimoto lowers himself into the sofa without comment, hands resting loosely on his thighs. He doesn’t scan the room. Doesn’t catalog trophies or conditions. Not that there are any trophies to speak of. He simply waits.
Ryoma joins them, pulling one stool instead, and takes a seat.
Nakahara smiles, warm, practiced but genuine. “I heard your grandson was quite taken with today’s training. He watched very seriously.”
“Yes,” Fujimoto replies. “He has been talking about it all the way here.”
Nakahara nods. “If he’s interested in joining, we can arrange trial sessions. Fundamentals only. We’re strict about safety with junior high students.”
“That would be appreciated,” Fujimoto says.
Nakahara continues, encouraged. “We’re happy to have young people interested in boxing for the right reasons. Discipline. Structure. Confidence.”
“Yes,” Fujimoto says softly. “Those are important.”
Ryoma watches Fujimoto’s mouth as the words form, already trying to judge the old man. But there’s no tightening at the corners of Fujimoto’s mouth yet, no hesitation disguised as courtesy, only acknowledgement.
He’s done this with Kirizume and Logan before. But he senses something different with this old man.
A brief pause settles over the room. Fujimoto remains reactive, listening rather than steering, allowing the silence to stretch.
Nakahara senses the shift and searches for a new topic, already weighing what might come next.
But before he can speak, Fujimoto adjusts his posture, the movement small but deliberate.
“To be honest,” he says evenly, “there is something else I wanted to discuss today. Something more important.”
He meets their eyes.
“A business matter.”
The atmosphere in the room shifts, not sharply, but decisively, like a door closing somewhere else in the building, and new one has just opened.
Nakahara blinks once. “Oh?”
“I didn’t intend to be misleading,” Fujimoto says. “The opportunity simply presented itself.”
Ryoma’s Vision Grid engages fully now, layering subtle data over Fujimoto’s stillness.
***
[Vision Grid Scan Update]
Breathing: steady.
Pulse visible at the throat: unchanged.
Eyes: direct, not probing.
No hook. No pressure.
***
“I wanted to see the gym,” Fujimoto says. “Not the facilities, but the people. How you speak when you don’t know you’re being listened to.”
Nakahara lets out a small, uncertain laugh. “I hope we passed.”
Fujimoto inclines his head politely, but his gaze moves to Ryoma.
“And I’ve also seen your fights, Takeda-kun,” he says. “Everyone has. What interests me more is what surrounds them.”
Ryoma doesn’t respond. Silence has always been a useful filter, a way to let intentions surface on their own without interference.
“There are many stories told about you,” Fujimoto continues. “Some flattering. Some… convenient.”
A faint crease appears between Fujimoto’s brows, not concern for image, but dissatisfaction with the idea of it.
“That kind of narrative,” he says, “usually benefits someone.”
Ryoma catches the microexpression and cuts in before the conversation can drift.
“This is about sponsorship, isn’t it?” he asks.
“It is,” Fujimoto says, without cutting him off, without softening it either. “Aqualis Labs is interested in you.”
Ryoma doesn’t react. He lets the words settle, watches what follows.
“I won’t dress it up,” Fujimoto continues. “We are considering you as a long-term brand partner. Potentially our primary ambassador.”
Ryoma’s Vision Grid flares, not at danger, but at the absence of it. Fujimoto’s posture doesn’t tighten after saying it. His breathing doesn’t change. No anticipation of pushback.
“I came myself because I don’t believe this is something my staff should decide,” Fujimoto says. “And because I don’t believe trust starts with paperwork.”
The door slides open quietly. Hiroshi enters with a tray of tea and neatly wrapped snacks. He bows once, sets them on the low table, and leaves. Steam rises between them, thin and steady.
Fujimoto picks one cup, wraps his hands around it but doesn’t drink.
“I’m offering a five-year contract,” he says. “Primary ambassador. Seventy million yen per year, guaranteed. Performance bonuses tied to titles, defenses, and international exposure.”
Nakahara doesn’t speak, already calculating consequences and timing, while Ryoma maintains a detached expression, revealing nothing. No interest, no refusal, no crack to read.
“If your career grows the way it’s trending, the total will be significantly higher. And of course, there will be more opportunity for us sponsoring your further event, just as we did before at Ota. What I’m trying to say… our partnership will open more opportunities for Nakahara’s gym as well, maybe for the other fighters too.”
Now that the numbers are laid out plainly, Nakahara’s posture stiffens despite himself. To most boxers, it might sound like a generous but ordinary sponsorship. To him, it isn’t.
In decades of training fighters and promoting bouts, he’s seen plenty of deals, plenty of promises dressed up as opportunity.
But none of them have ever happened here in this gym. None of them have ever been offered this early, this cleanly, to a fighter who hasn’t even reached his ceiling yet, much less from a company owner sitting across the table.
“We would also cover recovery support,” Fujimoto says. “Hydration, nutrition, medical coordination. Not as advertisements. As part of your preparation. You use what you want. We adjust if it doesn’t work.”
Ryoma watches him closely, noting the steady cadence of his voice; Fujimoto neither accelerates nor drags his words, speaking with the same unhurried pace throughout.
“In return,” Fujimoto says, “we expect category exclusivity. You don’t promote competitors; hydration and recovery products, supplements. Publicly and professionally. That’s standard in this kind of partnership.”
He shrugs lightly, unapologetic. “I’m not interested in controlling how you speak, who you argue with, or what kind of boxer you are. Frankly, if you started acting differently because of us, I’d consider that a failure.”
The line lands without being pushed, stated as fact rather than persuasion. Ryoma lets a brief pause pass, and then lifts his eyes again, tone even as he asks, “And after five years?”
Fujimoto exhales through his nose, almost amused. “After five years, we see where we are. If it worked, we continue. If it didn’t, we stop. I don’t believe in trapping people with contracts they regret.”
He looks at Ryoma plainly. “I’m not asking for an answer today. I wanted to see you in person, say this to your face, and let you decide whether it’s worth talking further. If you’re interested, we’ll discuss details properly. Another time. Another place.”
There’s no implication in Fujimoto’s words, no pressure tucked between them, only a straightforward statement delivered without expectation or leverage.
Ryoma studies him across the table, not with suspicion this time, but simply as another man speaking plainly.
“This won’t be quick,” Ryoma says at last. “And I won’t change how I do things.”
“Good. I’d be disappointed if you did,” Fujimoto replies without hesitation.
The silence that follows isn’t tense or weighted. It settles naturally, the way it does when nothing more needs to be said.
“Then,” Ryoma says, nodding with a small smile, “we can talk again.”
Fujimoto’s lips curve faintly, as if that outcome had been enough from the beginning.
“I’ll wait,” he says.


