Cursed Eyes (Itachi in Jujutsu Kaisen)

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Uchiha Itachi wakes up in a world he doesn't recognize, with a past he would rather forget, a future that is uncertain and a name that is unfamiliar. What would a world weary shinobi do with this new lease on life? Itachi
as a Gojo.
Chapter 1
Location
Lagos
He woke up.

In any other scenario, or if he were any other person, there would be nothing to it. Most people closed their eyes and opened them back up 5-6 hours later, like puppets controlled by unseen threads.
He was not like most people.

Most people didn't die bleeding out with blurred eyes and a sickly frame, only to wake up at an indescribable later time.

Pale gray eyes stared at the wooden beams above his head for what felt like ages, but his keen mind broke it down to only 1 hour, 24 minutes, and 56 seconds.
 Though his instincts screamed at him to roll off what his back told him was a futon and explore his new surroundings, all he wanted to do was just... nothing.

He was exhausted, beyond tired, and he hoped it had ended, but hope was a lie – he knew that more than most. Yet, here he was again, staring at a ceiling, knowing this was as real as anything. With his experience with genjutsu, it would take Kami himself to deceive his senses.

If left to himself, he would have languished there for however long, but as the sun slowly crept into his room, chasing away the comforting darkness and shadows, he heard a soft knock on what he assumed was a door. A second later, the door slid aside, and a soft and demure voice called out, "Jiki-san."

He stayed still, wishing the voice away, yet it called out again, softly, this time with more urgency, "The family head would be displeased if he knew you're still in bed"
 This time, the voice had a touch of fear and pain. Physical pain.

He raised himself up on one soft arm, idly noticing the little to no musculature, and looked at the black-haired woman standing at the entrance to his room. With a slow blink and another glance, he reassessed her from a woman to a teen, judging by her still soft cheeks, lack of any wrinkles, and the brightness of her eyes.

She was garbed in a black one-piece gown with a white cloth upon it.
 Her head remained bowed as he quietly observed her. With slow and unfamiliar movements, he got to his feet. The transition from a 5ft8 lethal physique bred for war to a 3ft toddling mass of soft flesh and poor motor control would've taken any other person months. But he had it down by the 10th second after getting up and on his 7th step towards the teen.

He went from jerky, uncoordinated movements to a refined, smooth pace, and his bare feet barely made a sound on the wooden floor. He stopped directly in front of her bowed head and whispered, "I'm up." 
She brought her head up and gave him a soft and familiar smile that reminded him of his mother – a smile that radiated immense love and kindness, a smile he smothered and laid to rest for the sake of peace.

Something must have shown in his expression, as the teen flinched back.
 Then followed an unfamiliar routine – he was led out of the house and to a bathroom. Stepping into the bathtub filled with water, he stared at a familiar face with unfamiliar features. The paradoxes of the statement forced him to narrow his eyes, showing his trademark lines below his gray eyes.

Bone-white hair fell down his head in waves and tickled his ears while masking his implacable visage of pure apathy. The maid rolled up her sleeves before taking up a pail of water and dumping it above his head.

He felt sensations he'd never imagined he'd ever feel again.
 The rest of the bath was a blur, culminating with the maid toweling him and dressing him in a white Hakama and a matching black and white checkered kimono, while his feet were clad in finely textured wooden geta.

He ignored the unfamiliar sensation of being dressed and stoically listened to the maid's incessant prattling. He learned that he was a member of the Gojo clan, and today was his fourth birthday, which meant he would be meeting the clan head. His elder cousin had also left earlier for Jujutsu High for his second year.

The walk to the clan head was more sedate and quiet, with the maid sending him nervous glances. He ignored them and followed her, a step behind and to the side.
They stepped out of the house and walked on well-paved cobblestones that led from his house, which he realized was on the outskirts of the clan compound, to the inner compound.

He ignored the stares from his black-haired clan members and the occasional white-haired member as they reached the house in the center – a traditional house that felt more like a fortress than a home. The closer they got, the more wooden his maid's posture, walking steps, and features became.

They stood in front of the door for seconds before she mustered the courage to finally knock. She barely touched the doors before they opened slowly. She stopped there and gave him a look that was equal parts fear, begging, and desperation. He stared into her eyes, gray into black, and tried to decipher what she was screaming at him with her eyes.

His efforts proved futile, so he did the only thing he hoped would ease her – he slipped his little pale hand into her rougher palms before giving it a slight squeeze. Her resulting grip was instinctual. He gave her a soft nod before heading in.
The door closed shut behind him, leaving him trapped in a dark house.

His eyes slowly adapted to the darkness as he patiently waited. The dark was not an enemy. It was as comforting as a mother's touch. He was born in it, molded by it. Half his life was spent in it. He had no fear of it.

He took soft steps as his eyes adjusted to the darkness, sliding his feet while leaving his arms folded in the kimono.
It took him a minute to reach the end of the hallway, where the door swung open and led him into a cavernous room with tatami mats spread out at the end. He let his eyes fall into a half-lidded gaze instead of blinking, as the harshness of the room's sudden light requested of him.

The room was ringed by bronze statues, each depicting a man sitting in seiza with extreme features ranging from maniacal smiles to wrathful expressions. All held prayer beads and looked at the person in the middle.
Even from his distance, he felt something malicious from the man seated in the middle. Not necessarily chakra, but an aura that permeated the surroundings and choked him in a way that almost made him stagger.

His wide eyes and hitched breath were his only show of emotion at the suffocating aura.
The elderly man opened his eyes and stared at him before nodding at a mat directly placed in front of him. He replied with his own nod before walking to it and sitting with his legs tucked and his hands placed palm-flat on his lap.

The elder closed his eyes once more, giving him the opportunity to study his features. Skin so pale, he must've never felt the sun in decades, yet bearing musculature that spoke of a fighter, with a black kimono that looked as though they were tailored for him as he sat, bearing nary a wrinkle.
His glance shifted to the statues surrounding them, cataloguing their features. He had barely started on the third before the man's eyes opened once more, and he gave him a look that drew his complete attention.
"Gojo Jiki," his voice came out raspy and rough. "Do you want to be a sorcerer?"
 
Chapter 2
The conversation that followed that question shaped the next two years of his life.

He stepped out of the house with a shallow idea of curses, cursed techniques, the three great clans, his family, and his place in it. It also gave him an idea of why his maid was so scared of him walking in.

His mother died while giving birth to him, and his father, a mediocre sorcerer by the clan head's standard and rather spiteful man, named him Jiki on the spot, for his birth brought about about her death.
 His next 4 years before his awakening were spent being taken care of by his maid, Aiko.

The black-haired teen had practically raised him from birth like her own child and feared for the choices that would be laid before him as a direct descendant of Michizane Sugawara and a member of the Gojo clan.

The Clan head's clear lack of interest in him after his decision dropped his standings in the clan by a fair amount. But he had no interest in being part of such a life again. This world was as close to having peace as he ever imagined compared to his last.

He saw no reason to stand at the forefront anymore. His elder cousin, bearing the weight of the clan's once-in-a-century dojutsu and the burdens that came with it, brought memories of his own time as clan heir.

Memories he would rather have left forgotten on that broken world.
 He spent the next two years in his clan's library and learned so much about this new world. He had assumed The Elemental Nations and this earth were similar, but after a glance at the world map, the wars fought, the histories told, and the alliances formed, he was certain now that he was nowhere near the elemental nations.

The easy access to technology that he had, even in his apparent isolationist clan, was more than even the top heads in the hidden villages ever received.
He spent his days on mundane things, trying to live a life he never had the opportunity to live. From paintings in the morning with Aiko, to working on his writing and calligraphy alone in the library among clan mates that had little to no love for him.

Yet, he didn't care for it. Any other child would've craved the attention of family, perhaps that was the old bastard's plan when he set all this into motion. But not Itachi. He didn't deserve the love of a new family. Not after he slaughtered his last for the sake of peace. Not after what he had done in the Anbu in the guise of orders from commanders. 
No, Itachi saw no reason to get close to this new family, and the distance most of them kept suited him and made it all the better.

The only light in his dark world of apathy, angst, and horrible memories was Aiko.
Where most clan members had shut him out and moved on with their lives, Aiko stuck even closer to him. His first painting was of her smile as she helped bathe him. And like all things Itachi had tried his hand at, it was as perfect as it could be.

The dark of her hair was wrapped in a bun under a white cloth, the strands that escaped at the sides and moved with the soft early morning breeze. Her hands were covered in foam as she washed his white locks while whispering sweet nothings to him.

The radiant glow of a woman that was happy and loved what she did, bright smiles she only showed to him when they were together.
 After his first work, she took it and with tears in her eyes, hugged him so tight she would've broken his spine if she kept it up any longer.

The next day, he woke up with an aisle, canvas with ultra-smooth, fine, and coarse brushes lining the aisles, and a beautiful number of colors on the side, courtesy of the clan head himself.
 He was confused, and for the first time in a long time, he was forced to reassess the old man's opinion of him.

Didn't he despise him for wanting to live a mundane life? For the death of his daughter? It took him his second painting, which was of the bronze figures he saw in the mansion, to disappear the following morning from his aisle, only to reappear once more on the doors of that forbidding house for him to realize his mistake.

He had automatically assumed the Clan head was much like the Uchiha clan elders, who would try to shape and mold the younger ones into what they wanted. Who cared more about bloodlines, cursed ability, status, and martial prowess than what other skills a child would have to offer.? He knew most clans were like that considering his forays into the clan library, but it just occurred to him that he never even gave his clan leader a chance.

The slip-up was a show of his humanity. In as much as the Uchiha clan elders and Konoha tried to make him perfect, he wasn't. He was as human as everyone else. The thought brought a smile to his face. A smile that was covered in a bright flash a second later by what appeared to be his maid with what he learned was a camera.

She gave him an even brighter smile than he believed he could ever possess before skipping out of his workshop.
 Days later, he started hearing the whispers once more. The accursed words that brought so much suffering to his past life. Genius, prodigy. The side glances that he got from his clan members changed from apathy to interest.

How many five-year-old children could recreate the beautiful images and finely detailed artworks he produced so easily? At the end of the day, he was able to get past it as despite the similarities in the words, the context differed.

Here nobody was praising his genius for finding the perfect angle to slit a man's jugular and carotid in a single stroke. He was not called a prodigy here for learning how to modify and draw explosive tags on the spot. No. He was praised for the mundane art of painting.

His art was usually visceral. Images burnt into his brain. A curse and blessing of the Sharingan, a past life filled with enough horror to break lesser men.
 He was given a small building in the compound and to the side of his building to display his art, from paintings of the bloodstained beautiful grasses of Kusagakure, to the withering heavy snow and eternal winters of Yukigakure.

He painted island villages from the Elemental Nations, where the sun, for some reason, rose once in two years. To the liminal and fluid nature of the various summoning realms.

The unending skies and immutable mountains of the home of the hawks. To the everlasting darkness of the home of the crows and the albino red eyed matriarch that perched on a dead tree.

If he was going to bring back anything from his cursed origins, it was going to be the beauty of the places he saw during his years of wandering with the Akatsuki.
 His years of mundanity and bliss ended with a simple question that led to a future he could not have calculated or considered.

A fickle chance, Fate, Horrid Luck? 
At the age of six, after a long day of working on his calligraphy, he looked up at his maid, Aiko-chan, and made a request that would change the course of his life.

Born of the memories of jumping from cafe to cafe with Sasuke as children during festivals. "I want to go to a cafe," he whispered in his soft voice. Aiko-san looked at him for a second before giving a soft smile and acquiescing. "I'll see what can be done, young master."

A week later, he woke up, followed his regular routine, and when it was time to be dressed, instead of his regular yukatas, hakama, and haori, he was dressed in a baggy black long-sleeved shirt and white shorts that stopped before his knees, while his hair was tied into a bun at the back with only a few stubborn strands escaping it.

His feet were clad in black slides as he stared at his maid with uncertainty. She noted his surprise with a smile and announced to him, "The clan head has agreed to your request"

He gave a soft nod as he followed her from their house to the main gates of their compound. A compound he had spent the last two years in.

They were met by a man in a black suit and a soft frown as he gestured at them into a matching black car. Seated inside as the car drove past the isolated clan compound and into the city, he realized the reason for his change of clothes.
 Not a single person was dressed formally like the rest of the clan, and dressing like that would've drawn attention in a way that some part of him that spent decades in the shadows wince.

As they stepped out and walked into a cafe, his head was on a swivel. Looking at everything and anything. It was one thing to see the pictures, and it was another thing to live it. Tokyo was easily five times more populated than any hidden village he knew about. And this was just a single city in a country that housed tens of them.
His sightseeing was cut short as he started to notice them.
Most of them were little malformed-looking creatures stuck on some specific humans.

He saw a bigger one that stayed on a building. Twice as big as a horse, skin an uncanny blue, four arms that sank into the stone like a hot knife through butter, and a multitude of eyes that lined its back and seemed focused on HIM.

It watched them walk into the cafe, without moving from the spot. Aiko-san didn't seem to notice the creature, blissfully unaware as she pointed at everything that was on display. From boy bands on billboards to clothes and more.

The strange and quiet man dressed in black gave it a side glance before leading them into the cafe.
It was at their fifth location that it all changed.

They stayed in a queue for minutes waiting to be served, a type of strange variation of dango that Aiko-chan promised was heavenly. Their driver and escort had his head on a swivel with a heavy frown on his face since their fourth stop and excused himself after a short conversation with Aiko.
It was this overload of this new experience that had him lower his guard and let something slip past.

It started off as a spike of what he knew to be cursed energy from close by, before a blue blurred figure was a step away from him. Then someone clothed in black with wide and terrified eyes stepped in front of him and pushed him to the side before disappearing in a blur.

It took him a second to realize what happened. For his immense intellect to parse through the details of what felt like a split second.

For the first time in this new life, he felt something. Something that broke his facade of apathy, as he noted the thick texture of freshly spilled blood that soaked his white hair and splashed on his right cheek. He stared at the broken and unmoving form that lay crumpled and bleeding at the side of a building.

At the Polaroid picture that slipped out of the cloth to sink in the blood split. A picture bearing a white haired boy with a soft smile.

Itachi had been angry in his past life. Angry at the situation that forced him to slaughter his clan. Angry that he was forced to work with some of the most horrible people he knew, all for the sake of his village. Angry at the path he forced his little ototo on.

But he had never known hate.

Yet the moment he felt it, he knew it for what it was.
 There was something about the purity of it. Where mind, body, and soul focused on one emotion. Aligned and in sync.

Where you knew at that point in time, nothing could stop you from ending something.
 Even Kami would come down begging on folded knees, and you would still accomplish what you wanted to do.

The world could crumble and be damned. All thirty million souls in the city could be snuffed out as a result, and you would feel nothing other than the desire to complete a purpose.

He Knew hate for the first time in two lifetimes.
It was almost like a dam had broken in him. He felt that hate flow through him, it called out like an old friend.

Following long-forgotten pathways before leading up to his eyes, the clarity of vision that came with the feeling burnt the image of the crumpled form in black and white into his spinning pupil as it split and multiplied from one to three, before folding on itself into another shape, in a rapid procession that most would've missed.

He looked at the curse staring at him with its multiple eyes, an arm stretched out to grab him, and its skin splitting vertically in the middle of its face to reveal a carnivorous maw.
Heedless of the shouting and the movements of the masses by this intrusion into thier worldview.

This break in the pattern of their scripted lives. He said a single word that left his throat raw. A word, a sentence, a promise, an order, a command that he expected the world to rollover to accomplish.

With blood trailing down his left eye, he said 
"Die"
 
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