VISION GRID SYSTEM: THE COMEBACK OF RYOMA TAKEDA - Chapter 411: Terms And Conditions

Chapter 411: Terms And Conditions
January 4, 2017.
Hakurei Training Lodge, Karuizawa, Nagano Prefecture.
This is where Hirobumi Sagawa and Shinichi Yanagimoto have joined their training camp.
Karuizawa sits higher than most places in Japan, far enough from Tokyo that the air feels thinner and quieter, but close enough that people with money and purpose still come here to disappear properly.
The training camp is tucked deep into the forest on the northern edge of the town, where the road narrows and the trees close in, cedar and birch pressing so tight the sunlight filters through in long pale bands.
Hakurei Training Lodge occupies the slope with measured restraint; dark wood, stone, and glass arranged with the precision of a place long accustomed to hosting people who already know why they are there.
For Noya Fumihiro, the silence at this place has already become familiar.
Not the absence of sound, but the absence of intrusion. It’s the kind of quiet that settles in after a few days and starts to feel intentional.
“This place…” he says again, more quietly this time, not finishing the thought.
Daisuke Yoshizawa walks a few steps ahead of him, hands in his coat pockets, pace unhurried.
“Good, right?”
Inside, the order of the lodge no longer surprises him, but it still presses in. The hallways are wide and evenly lit, the light hidden, the lines clean.
The floors stay warm no matter the hour. The air carries the same restrained scent of wood and faint resin, like the forest has been allowed inside under strict conditions.
The boxing hall sits at the heart of the compound. One ring, surrounded by state-of-the-art equipment, conditioning platforms, and recovery stations arranged with deliberate precision.
The canvas is pristine, stretched tight, its surface unmarked. The ropes are new, firm, and bare. Everything here exists for one reason, and nothing distracts from it.
Sagawa steps onto the apron and presses down with his foot, a small nod following.
“We’re good,” he says.
“Then let’s work,” Fumihiro replies.
Fumihiro raises the mitts and calls the count. Sagawa moves on instinct; jab, cross, hook, step out, breath steady, feet light.
The impact is sharp but measured, nothing rushed, nothing wasted. It’s a sequence they’ve run often enough to need no explanation.
***
The conditioning wing feels even more unreal.
Machines arranged by movement. Platforms designed to absorb impact instead of echo it. Screens displaying metrics Fumihiro only half understands.
Two men work near the center, both American, both licensed, each moving with the quiet authority of someone responsible for his own fighter.
“Again.”
“Shorter step.”
“No. Reset first.”
Their English is clipped, efficient. When they demonstrate, it’s quick and exact, like they resent wasting motion even while teaching.
Sagawa sweats early, not from exhaustion, but from correction. Every inefficiency is caught and erased until his feet land cleaner, until his shoulders relax at the right moment.
Shinichi trains a few meters away, calm and methodical, switching stances without announcement, his rhythm smooth enough that it’s almost hard to tell when he’s changed.
His fight comes later than Sagawa’s OPBF title fight. So the day bends toward Sagawa anyway, and Sinichi doesn’t complain.
***
Late morning brings the special warm-up.
Two lower-level boxers enter the ring together, no introductions needed. They apply constant pressure, sparring Sagawa two-on-one, crowding him from alternating angles to simulate the uncertainty of McConnel’s switch-hitting offense.
“Don’t rush, Hirobumi!” an assistant coach calls out. “Keeps your guard compact, focus on your defense first. Read their timing carefully.”
One boxer steps in with a jab. Sagawa slips and turns, only to feel the second already there, gloves flashing from the side he’s just exposed.
And that’s the point; no clean lines, no predictable rhythm. They come in staggered bursts, forcing him to read intent instead of technique.
Sagawa is forced into constant adjustment. Stance, foot placement, balance, all need to be recalibrated every time. His steps shorten. Angles come earlier than he prefers. Any space he creates is minimal.
From ringside, Fumihiro watches his fighter adapt in real time. This camp isn’t making Sagawa stronger. It’s making him sharper.
***
Early afternoons, lunch arrives plated like something from a hotel, every portion measured, every color deliberate.
Evenings end in the onsen. Steam drifts up into the cold Karuizawa air, the mountains beyond the stone walls dark and unmoving.
Fumihiro lowers himself into the water with a careful breath. One of the assistants eases in beside him, shoulders tensing, then relaxing despite himself.
“This can’t be right,” the assistant says. “I feel like I should be paying extra for this.”
Sagawa settles in across from them, arms resting on the stone edge. “If someone starts bringing towels folded like animals, I’m leaving.”
Fumihiro snorts. “You’d complain the whole way out.”
The assistant shakes his head, glancing around. “My place had a shower that only worked if you kicked it.”
Sagawa smiles, small but genuine. “When I win the OPBF, I’ll send a guy to fix it.”
Fumihiro and the assistant share the laugh, both aware that titles are never handed over so simply.
For a while, no one talks about training, or belts, or February. They just sit there, three men quietly unsure how they ended up somewhere like this.
What none of them knows… is that luxuries like this are never offered without reason.
Daisuke Yoshizawa is not a man who mistakes generosity for charity. And comfort, however quietly given, always arrives with an expectation attached.
***
By the twelfth day, routine settles in. The sparring session begins without ceremony.
Sagawa and Yanagimoto touch gloves, first round, controlled pace. Two assistant coaches stand at opposite corners, towels folded, eyes sharp.
Fumihiro stands beside Yoshizawa, a bit away from the ring.
“I don’t know how to thank you,” Fumihiro says quietly, eyes still on the ring.
Yoshizawa smiles. “You already are.”
“No. I mean…” Fumihiro gestures vaguely. “This place. The trainers. Even having Sinichi here. Switch hitters like him aren’t exactly common.”
In the ring, Sinichi shifts stance mid-exchange, slides just out of range, taps Sagawa lightly before pivoting away.
“Hard to find,” Fumihiro continues. “And everything’s been arranged so smoothly. This is more than help.”
Yoshizawa shrugs. “We’re friends. Don’t make it sound like a favor.”
Fumihiro hesitates. “Still. Sagawa’s got a real shot. Everything’s lining up. If he takes the belt…”
“When,” Yoshizawa says mildly.
Fumihiro exhales. “Ah, yes… when he takes the belt, and Sinichi defends his title again, we’ll have to celebrate together. I’ll handle it. Just don’t expect mountains and hot springs.”
As their thoughts drift too far ahead, the sparring in the ring subtly quickens in its second round. Gloves thud harder. Breaths shorten. The edge arrives without announcement.
Fumihiro and Yoshizawa share history. In the ring, their fighters share nothing but tension.
Yoshizawa watches for a moment, and then speaks as if the thought has just occurred to him.
“Sinichi is ready to go beyond Japan soon.”
Fumihiro nods. “He should.”
“It would be good,” Yoshizawa says, “if that chance came from someone familiar.”
Fumihiro turns slightly. “You mean…”
“Nothing formal,” Yoshizawa says, waving a hand. “Just priority. Between friends. If Sagawa’s holding the OPBF, Yanagimoto gets first consideration.”
Fumihiro looks back at the ring just as Sinichi switches stance again. The change is subtle, but Sagawa is a half-step late. A stiff left clips the side of his headgear, sharp enough to snap his focus back into place.
Sagawa adjusts, tightens up, but the moment lingers.
Fumihiro watches, measuring it. Beating the OPBF champion won’t be simple. But if Sagawa can get through that, then dealing with Sinichi shouldn’t be the real problem anymore.
“That’s reasonable,” Fumihiro says at last. “Keeps things here.”
Yoshizawa’s smile doesn’t change. “And,” he adds lightly, “there’s one more thing.”
Fumihiro frowns. “What is it?”
“If Ryoma Takeda ever comes calling,” Yoshizawa says, his gaze drifting from the ring, “don’t take it… belt or not, OPBF-sanctioned or otherwise.”
The name lands heavy, settling between them like something unfinished, carrying history, discomfort, and consequences no one feels ready to address.
“I don’t have anything against the kid personally,” Fumihiro says.
Yoshizawa exhales. “I know, but…”
“But I won’t pretend he doesn’t worry me,” Fumihiro continues. “The way he behaves. The things he says. If we let him do whatever he wants, what kind of image does that give Japan?”
Yoshizawa nods once. His eyes don’t return to the ring, drifting instead as if the matter is settled, a faint satisfaction held carefully out of sight.
But suddenly, a shout cuts through the air.
“Hirobumi!!!”
One of the assistant coaches rushes forward, voice sharp.
Another follows. “Sinichi… You’ve gone too far.”
Fumihiro and Yoshizawa turn at the same time.
Sagawa is on one knee in the center of the ring, his left arm clamped tight against his ribs. His mouth is open, breath coming in broken pulls, a thin line of blood at the corner of his lips.
For a second, he fights it. Then his strength gives.
Sagawa collapses onto the canvas, back arching, a hoarse groan escaping him as the pain floods in, immediate and unforgiving.


