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File: ame_openingIII.png (779 KB, 1061x700)
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You are Raishō Naori, a mercenary ninja who has left Akatsuki out of dedication to the ideals it once stood for and distrust of its shadowy leadership. And this? This is going to be one hell of an awkward conversation, one you tried very hard to avoid even having in the first place.

“Naruto, there’s something you should know about Pain.”

After a moment, Naruto shoots you a sidelong glance. You can tell he’s only just interested in what you have to say… he seems more tired than anything else.

“What is it?”

“You’re not Jiraiya-sensei’s only student, you know,” you begin, almost immediately considering the tone of that to have been a misstep. “I mean to say you know that already. He also taught the Fourth Hokage, Namikaze Minato. He even taught me, albeit very briefly. And it was really more like he just gave me a pointer and let me teach myself.”

“What are you getting at?” Naruto asks curtly. “I already know all that stuff ya know.”

“He had three students even before Minato,” you cut straight to the point. “Three war orphans from my homeland, Amegakure.”

At that news, it seems that Naruto finally takes some interest in what you’re trying to explain to him. “Wait, what? I never knew that!”

You nod quietly. “He must’ve thought they all died too, like Minato and his own sensei, so he never talked about them. And one of them was killed in Amegakure when I was a baby.”

“Then… what happened to the others?”

“One, Konan-han, eventually became my sensei,” you continue. “The other is now known as Pain, and is the one who killed Jiraiya-sensei.”

“He joined Akatsuki!?” Naruto demands. “I can’t believe...”

“Naruto,” you interrupt him, “the orphans were the original Akatsuki.”

Naruto is too visibly stunned to say anything further, so instead you continue your explanation. “In the beginning, Akatsuki was an organization whose only goal was to bring peace to Amegakure, ending the chaos of its civil wars and serving as a model for how other lands could find their own solutions.”

“That changed when their first leader was killed, along with most of their members. That includes my father.”

“Your dad was in Akatsuki?”

You nod. “Yes. And so was Konan-sensei, who I mentioned before. They were all in Akatsuki together...”

You briefly consider this next part of the story… it’s an incredibly sensitive subject after all, a secret that Konohagakure has kept from its own people for years. In fact, the elder council has kept it a secret from its own Hokage. But in the end, you settle on one guiding principle for making this determination: fuck Danzō.
>1/2
>>
>>4306138
“… until elements of your village’s ANBU cooperated with Hanzō of the Salamander to eliminate them. It was a secret mission, one that the elder council even hid from Tsuna-han until I told her earlier today.”

Naruto takes several seconds to process what you’re saying. “But that means… oh.”

“Yeah,” you agree with a wry grin. “In a sense all this is Konoha’s own fault. Pain became the de facto leader, and relied on an outsider to help refill his ranks with S-rank criminals. That became the Akatsuki that you know, the one that I left.”

“Pain… was Jiraiya-sensei’s student...”

“That’s right.”

“And he killed him?” Naruto shakes his head. “I can’t understand that, how could he?”

“Konoha fought a war across the Land of Storms,” you reiterate. “Not once but twice. And Jiraiya had been a soldier in that war… I can only guess at what’s going through Pain’s mind but his relationship with Jiraiya-sensei can’t be that simple. And Konan-sensei was concerned about him when I left.”

“Concerned?”

“That he himself was being used by another member of Akatsuki,” you explain. “The man I mentioned before who came to them after Hanzō and the Leaf destroyed the original Akatsuki.”

“It doesn’t excuse what Pain did, but I hope it explains some of his anger… the problem’s right there in his name after all.”

“What, ‘Pain’?”

You nod in agreement. “Seriously, that can’t be the name his mother gave him.”

“So what’ve you been doing?” Naruto eventually asks. “Now that you’ve left Akatsuki and all. I heard something about the samurai?”

“I offered to hold a meeting in the Land of Iron,” you clarify. “Shikamaru was there, and Gaara sent Temari. A friend of mine was there from Iwagakure, Kurotsuchi, and since so many villages had sent people it forced Kiri and Kumo to send people too.”

“All five of the great nations,” Naruto realizes. “But they wouldn’t send their Kage, like Gaara’s been complaining about?”

You shake your head. “I could’ve gotten Gaara and Tsunade, and I may get to meet Terumi-han, the current Mizukage. But no, the Tsuchikage and Raikage have been… a problem.”

“Why’s that?” Naruto wonders. “Why can’t they even just talk like regular people? That’s just dumb, ya know?”

>Terumi-tono, Gaara-kun, and Tsuna-han are all still fairly new at this. They haven’t had time to become stubborn, and I hope they never do.
>There’s a lot of bad blood. For example, this is the same Tsuchikage who Minato thoroughly embarrassed during the war.
>It’s dumb, yeah. But a lot of it has to do with the daimyō and the elder councils more than the Kages themselves.
>Other?
>>
>>4306140
>>Terumi-tono, Gaara-kun, and Tsuna-han are all still fairly new at this. They haven’t had time to become stubborn, and I hope they never do.
>>It’s dumb, yeah. But a lot of it has to do with the daimyō and the elder councils more than the Kages themselves.

combo. Fresh Kages *and* obstinate councils and daimyos
>>
>>4306140
>>Terumi-tono, Gaara-kun, and Tsuna-han are all still fairly new at this. They haven’t had time to become stubborn, and I hope they never do.
>>There’s a lot of bad blood. For example, this is the same Tsuchikage who Minato thoroughly embarrassed during the war.
>>It’s dumb, yeah. But a lot of it has to do with the daimyō and the elder councils more than the Kages themselves.
all of it, this isn't a simple problem
this is a layered clusterfuck of stupidity, rigid thinking and arrogance
>>
>>4306140
>Terumi-tono, Gaara-kun, and Tsuna-han are all still fairly new at this. They haven’t had time to become stubborn, and I hope they never do.
>There’s a lot of bad blood. For example, this is the same Tsuchikage who Minato thoroughly embarrassed during the war.
>It’s dumb, yeah. But a lot of it has to do with the daimyō and the elder councils more than the Kages themselves.
>>
>>4306140
>>Terumi-tono, Gaara-kun, and Tsuna-han are all still fairly new at this. They haven’t had time to become stubborn, and I hope they never do.
>>It’s dumb, yeah. But a lot of it has to do with the daimyō and the elder councils more than the Kages themselves.
Old fucks need to stand down and just drink their damn prune juice.
>>
>>4306140
>Terumi-tono, Gaara-kun, and Tsuna-han are all still fairly new at this. They haven’t had time to become stubborn, and I hope they never do.
>There’s a lot of bad blood. For example, this is the same Tsuchikage who Minato thoroughly embarrassed during the war.
>It’s dumb, yeah. But a lot of it has to do with the daimyō and the elder councils more than the Kages themselves.

What others have said. Combination of older Kages being stubborn and there being a lot bad blood. While newer Kages could cooperate, their councils wouldn't like it at all.
>>
>>4306140
>>It’s dumb, yeah. But a lot of it has to do with the daimyō and the elder councils more than the Kages themselves.
>>Terumi-tono, Gaara-kun, and Tsuna-han are all still fairly new at this. They haven’t had time to become stubborn, and I hope they never do.
>>
>>4306140
>"If you want it all in a nutshell, all of it is just dumb childish stupidity layered on top of one another in a giant pile."
>"The more complicated answer is that while Temari-tono, Garra-hun, and Tsuna-han are new to this game of politics, there are plenty of cranky old men and women who still bear grudges and bad blood, and use the Kages and the political system to game out their grudges and start wars."
>>
>>4306140
“Yeah, it’s dumb,” you agree. “But it’s not entirely their fault. The Raikage and Tsuchikage have been in their positions long enough to have gotten stubborn, but Gaara, Tsunade, and Mei haven’t. Instead they’re more hindered by their elder councils and the daimyō, who see change as scary.”

“So they get tied down until they start getting old,” Naruto grumbles. “That’s great.”

“Not just old so much,” you point out. “Tsunade’s already as old as Jiraiya was when he died. Makes her about fifty-five I think?”

“Ah, you’re right!” Naruto admits. “I just kinda forget sometimes, ya know?”

“It’s easy,” you shrug. “She’d probably be flattered.”

“Maybe I should mention it next time she gets mad at me?”

“It’d just go to her head,” you insist. “Better not.”

“They can’t just ‘talk’ because the entire role of the Kages frames them as enemies from the start,” you eventually continue to declare. “It’s all just down to whether they think that way themselves or not. Gaara and Tsunade don’t. Whoever replaces them, hopefully many years from now, might.”

“It’s not a simple problem with a simple solution.”

“It was the problem Jiraiya-sensei was tryin’ to solve when he was killed,” Naruto recounts. “He said there was too much hate in the world.”

“Too much pain,” you correct him. “It’s the pain left to fester that turns into hate, that’s what I think at least.”

“How the heck am I supposed to fight that now?” Naruto wonders aloud. “I never took him seriously when he used to talk about it. I guess I always kinda figured he’d be around long enough to see it through.”

>Think hard about what he would do. He trained you personally, he must have left you with something to go on.
>It’s entirely up to you. He chose you because he saw something in you that he didn’t see in anyone else, not even me.
>”Plans” are just things that can go wrong. All you can do is the best you can do, with the best people you can find, for as long as you can.
>Other?
>>
>>4306757
>>Think hard about what he would do. He trained you personally, he must have left you with something to go on.
>>
>>4306757
>>Think hard about what he would do. He trained you personally, he must have left you with something to go on.
>>
>>4306757
>Think hard about what he would do. He trained you personally, he must have left you with something to go on.
>>
>>4306757
>>Think hard about what he would do. He trained you personally, he must have left you with something to go on.
>>
>>4306757
>>It’s entirely up to you. He chose you because he saw something in you that he didn’t see in anyone else, not even me.
>>
>>4306757
>It’s entirely up to you. He chose you because he saw something in you that he didn’t see in anyone else, not even me.
>>
>>4306757
>It’s entirely up to you. He chose you because he saw something in you that he didn’t see in anyone else, not even me.
>>
>>4306757
>>It’s entirely up to you. He chose you because he saw something in you that he didn’t see in anyone else, not even me.
>>
>>4306757
>It’s entirely up to you. He chose you because he saw something in you that he didn’t see in anyone else, not even me.
>>
>>4306757
“I know this won’t sound helpful,” you admit, “but seriously… Jiraiya-sensei chose you as his student. He chose you because he saw something in you that he didn’t see in anyone else, including me.”

“You’re better at pretty much everything I’m good at,” Naruto counters. “I can’t even do genjutsu, and that comes naturally to you. I’m only okay at taijutsu, and you’re a kenjutsu master. You barely ever use nature releases and I’ve got one technique in one nature.”

“So the reason he chose you wasn’t based on your skills,” you insist. “No, it certainly wasn’t your skills. And if you can realize what that is, you’ll know what Jiraiya intended you to do.”

“So how do I train that?”

You cock your head at him. “What?”

“I learn by training my butt off,” Naruto clarifies. “I know I’m not really clever, so instead I find ways to train my butt off and push myself until I figure it out, like using shadow clones to train like ten times faster.”

“So you want to know how you can do the same for self-realization?” you nod thoughtfully. “Nope.”

“Nope?”

“Nope,” you repeat. “You can’t use brute force on something like this.”

“Then… how?”

“It’s called meditation,” you tell him. “I can teach you tomorrow morning, if you’d like.”

“Sure,” he agrees. “When and where?”

“Dawn,” you insist, unsealing a special kunai and marking it. “Hang this outside the door to your apartment, I’ll collect it.”



Tenten was kind enough to deal with Hinata after that… and she seemed more than willing to do so once you explained it will mean seeing Neji again. After that you go home to sleep, careful not to wake anyone since it’s already late by the time you’re ready to return. You find that difficult, since Yugito, Fū, and Karin have all rolled out their futons in the room you’ve typically claimed for yourself. But someone was thoughtful enough to set out your own futon as well, meaning at least you don’t have to do that work in total silence.

Still, you might otherwise have set up in the next room had they given you the option.
>1/2
>>
>>4307445
The next morning an alarm goes off, and amid significant complaining you escape from your room to get re-dressed before teleporting yourself to the marked kunai you left with Naruto last night. In the morning gloom you knock at the door to his apartment.

It takes a while, but a visibly-exhausted Naruto eventually comes to the door.

“Ah,” he grumbles wearily. “Right.”

When you basically push your way past Naruto into his apartment you find that it’s definitely messy… but actually not as bad as you might have imagined if for no other reason than a lack of ‘stuff’ to clutter it. Still, that being said, you wouldn’t want to imagine what horrors lurk inside his fridge.

“So pay attention,” you tell him curtly. “I’ll only go over this once.”

“Got it,” he mutters, “I’m listening.”

“There are three common ways to sit when you do it,” you explain, “based mostly on either tradition or comfort. As a swordsman I use seiza, but lotus or ‘padmasana’ is also fairly traditional. There’s also a half-lotus variation.”

“Try them out.”

After a while Naruto eventually settles on a half-lotus position, which you can’t say surprises you. Next you correct the posture of his back to promote focus and ease of breathing, pushing his shoulders out of his habitual slouch in the process.

“What you do with your hands isn’t all that important,” you admit. “Some people who practice the padmasana or half-lotus insist on holding old hand positions called the mudrās… a spiritual equivalent to the hand seals used in ninjutsu. It’s said that they come from the same ancient tradition, but I don’t think anyone alive ca prove that.”

“I don’t use any when I meditate, since I sit in seiza,” you continue, “but you might find dhyāna or some variation useful in half-lotus… the mudrā associated with meditation. Place your hands in your lap, palms-up, with the tips of your thumbs touching and your left fingers atop your right.”

“The variation is mida no jōin, where the fingers are curled upwards so the second digits are touching. The only real differentiation is that it’s meant to distinguish the Amitābha buddha from the Vairocana buddha in statues and paintings. But I always felt an affinity for the mida no jōin.”

“How do you know all this?” Naruto demands. “All this religious talk is just confusing. I could never keep it straight.”

“I used to live in a large shrine,” you explain. “The monks taught me the basics after my mom died… a gift to help me deal with the grief.”

“… oh.”

“Don’t get mopey about it,” you chastise your student. “Now, this is the most important part. Settle into your position and listen to what I’m about to tell you.”
>2/3
>>
>>4307473
Once Naruto has resumed his proper half-lotus sitting position, now using the regular dhyāna mudrā with his hands resting calmly in his lap, you continue.

“The important part of the process is what goes on inside your head,” you explain, “and that depends on what you want to get out of it. When I was learning I was taught to empty my thoughts, to achieve a state of total peace and awareness without unwanted thoughts or feelings straying into my mind. This helped me become a master of kenjutsu, because once in that state you can fight with that same comprehensive awareness and focus. That way your mind is totally free to examine what your eyes are seeing.”

“But for you, directing your thoughts is the goal.”

“Directing my thoughts,” Naruto repeats with a frown, squeezing his eyes shut. “Directing my thoughts… directing…”

“… this isn’t working.”

“Pay attention to your breathing,” you direct him. “The cycle of it… in, hold, out, hold, in, hold, out.”

You wait for several seconds until it seems like Naruto’s not trying so hard. “Now, think about the idea or the feeling you want to meditate on… it can be anything, but maybe it’s best not to start on Jiraiya.”

“You have it?”

Eventually, Naruto nods.

“Good,” you tell him. “Very good. Now, anything else has no place in your mind right now. Only the subject of your focus. If your mind strays, if you start losing your focus and control, return to your breathing, clear your mind, and start fresh.”

“Do it twice a day for twenty minutes,” you leave him with the final thought. “Make it a routine, like any other. Don’t be too rigid, or force it too hard, but also try never to skip.”

“Eventually, you should start to become more self-aware. You may even find some answers this way. If you get used to achieving meditative focus you can start doing what I do, and actually do stuff within that same contemplative, aware state. Chores are one thing, but I even practice kenjutsu kata while meditating.”

>Stay here for a while and meditate, be on hand if anything goes wrong with Naruto.
>Excuse yourself for a morning training session of your own here in Konoha.
>Return back to the hideout.
>Other?
>>
>>4307481
>Stay here for a while and meditate, be on hand if anything goes wrong with Naruto.
Meditating with kurama around might cause an issue, so maybe we should stick around for a bit.
>>
>>4307481
>Stay here for a while and meditate, be on hand if anything goes wrong with Naruto.
>>
>>4307481
>>Stay here for a while and meditate, be on hand if anything goes wrong with Naruto.
>>
>>4307481
>Stay here for a while and meditate, be on hand if anything goes wrong with Naruto.
>>
>Stay here for a while and meditate, be on hand if anything goes wrong with Naruto.
>>
>>4307481
>>Stay here for a while and meditate, be on hand if anything goes wrong with Naruto.
>>
>>4307481
>Stay here for a while and meditate, be on hand if anything goes wrong with Naruto.

Doesn't hurt and if he has anything to ask when we finish, we have some time to answer.

When all finished, we should continue our work on Hiraishin. It is bullshit super strong skill to know.
>>
>>4307481
>1d6, DC 10
>taking the first three

>SP: 6/6
>ES: 0/2 (0T)
>>
Rolled 3 (1d6)

>>4307659
>>
Rolled 3 (1d6)

>>4307659
>>
Rolled 4 (1d6)

>>4307659
>>
Rolled 1 (1d6)

>>4307659
>>
>>4307659
“Oh, and one thing that should go without saying,” you add. “Don’t meditate on Kurama’s presence. Just… don’t. I don’t wanna have to fight a tailed beast today.”

“Oh,” Naruto realizes, “I never thought of that.”

“Well don’t think about it again,” you insist before stepping out. “Come on. We’ll find someplace a bit nicer for this sorta thing.”



That nicer place turns out to be the top of a roof nearby, flat and wide with a view of the village in panorama. Nice and quiet and calm at this hour in the morning, it allows even you a chance to clear your mind and bend all thought to a single subject: hiraishin.

>https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gfOCyyjnJYQ

You take Umekiri and her hilt out of your obi and place her at your side, seating yourself in seiza with your hands resting atop your lap. Then you begin, remembering what Tsunade told you.

The formula for your version of the hiraishin would, at this point, cover a significant portion of the roof, and with your mind clear of any other concerns you can basically envision the entire thing spread out around you. Tsunade’s point was that you should be able to do the complex spatio-temporal manipulations using nothing but long lines of sealing script that duplicate the role of the thirteen initial hand seals you once used to perform those manipulations.

And so you begin working through possible permutations, tracking how the formula would have to change to accommodate the new lines of script. Every single change you make sends proverbial ripples through the whole formula, disturbing the carefully crafted functionality of the whole.

But eventually, after an hour or so of meditation on that sole topic and nothing else, you have in your mind a new formula… you just don’t yet know how to compress it into a string of four characters the way you had done for the previous version. And doing so is going to prove even more difficult than it was before, since you’re making that formula do more different things all in the correct sequence as efficiently as possible.

You spread a large scroll out in front of yourself and begin placing the ‘ink’ onto it using your chakra, scrawling entire lines of characters onto the paper at a single stroke of your fingertip, separated here and connected there by the archaic sealing script used so often in the summoning technique and in older-style fūinjutsu formulae. Their pattern seems to your eye less chaotic, and more organic somehow, as though your work were encoding the essence of some living being into black and white.

After a few minutes of this you’re aware of Naruto staring at you as you work.

“Can I help you?”
>1/2
>>
>>4307751
“What is all this?” he asks you, staring at what to him must be incomprehensible gibberish.

“This is our clan’s legacy,” you admit, continuing your work. “The skill that got our entire nation wiped out before you or I were even born… an exceptional, nearly instinctive talent for fūinjutsu.”

You pause. “Wait a minute.”

“Fine, okay,” Naruto replies, still watching you curiously. “I hadn’t caught up with you yet anyway, ya know, so take your time.”

“Everything about our clan is related to our unusual chakra,” you muse thoughtfully. “The Kagura Shingan, the Kongō Fūsa, the rapid healing. Even the Rasengan has roots in the way our chakra spins. So maybe I can somehow apply that knowledge to spatio-temporal manipulation.”

“And you lost me,” Naruto admits. “Again.”

“That’s fine,” you shrug. “All you need to know is that our chakra has weird properties that let us do weird things with it, and this may be one of them.”

“… but how to harness those properties...”

“Well, I’ll leave you to that?” he asks tentatively.

“Oh yeah,” you reply. “Just do it again later today, like after dinner or something.”

“Cool.”

How to do that thing you were talking about… it’s a strange question, since it’s not really a question of chakra shaping nor really a fūinjutsu in the literal sense despite relying on a lot of the same principles.

>Try to join the shrike clan for a little while, see if you can convince them to let you see their reverse-summoning formula.
>It may be possible to learn a little more about the original Uzumaki sealing style. Check out Konoha’s library.
>It’s a WILD idea, but you might be able to crack this problem by using Tensa Jōdo Tensei.
>You thought you heard something about a bastardized version of the technique only usable by a team of jōnin.
>There’s an example of the Fourth Hokage’s work in the ruins of Roran.
>Other?
>>
>>4307812
>Try to join the shrike clan for a little while, see if you can convince them to let you see their reverse-summoning formula.

The birds must have a information that could help us from far longer timeperiod than Konohas library. While Tensa Jodo Tensei interest me purely due to MYSTERY BOX, I would save it for the last.
>>
>>4307812
>>Try to join the shrike clan for a little while, see if you can convince them to let you see their reverse-summoning formula.
>>
>>4307812
>Other?
Try talking with your sword about it.
>>
>>4307812
>>Try to join the shrike clan for a little while, see if you can convince them to let you see their reverse-summoning formula.
>>
>>4307812
>Try to join the shrike clan for a little while, see if you can convince them to let you see their reverse-summoning formula.
>>
>>4307812
>>It’s a WILD idea, but you might be able to crack this problem by using Tensa Jōdo Tensei.

Because somebody has to be insane enough to vote for this.
>>
>>4307812
>>4307870
My man, I'm with you.

>It’s a WILD idea, but you might be able to crack this problem by using Tensa Jōdo Tensei.
>>
>>It’s a WILD idea, but you might be able to crack this problem by using Tensa Jōdo Tensei.
>>
>>4307812
>>It’s a WILD idea, but you might be able to crack this problem by using Tensa Jōdo Tensei.
>>
>>4308317
try linking to it or it won't count
>>
>>4307812
>>It’s a WILD idea, but you might be able to crack this problem by using Tensa Jōdo Tensei.
>>
>>4307812
>1d6, high roll
>best of three
Degrees of success here folks.
>>
Rolled 4 (1d6)

>>4308584
>>
Rolled 4 (1d6)

>>4308584
>>
Rolled 2 (1d6)

>>4308584
>>
>>4308584
You have the beginnings of an absolutely wild idea: if you need to know about the hiraishin the best person to ask is someone who also knows the technique in its full, and you have a way to actually do that in the Tensa Jōdo Tensei. All you need is a sample of one of two individuals: either Senju Tobirama or Namikaze Minato. Tobirama was killed outside the village and many decades ago, meaning you’re not absolutely certain that you’ll be able to get a sample of his blood to use the technique on, but with a little bit of work you should still be able to find a piece of Minato to use.

It’s a wild idea, and not one that leaves a particularly good taste in your mouth, but it is the single most effective solution to your problem. And since Orochimaru is dead and nobody knows about your abilities, his grave won’t be guarded.

Still, you’d prefer to do it some other way if possible.

“I’d like to see records related to the previous Hokages,” you tell the librarian at the Konoha main library. “I’m trying to figure out some details about a mission Namikaze Minato went on that intersected with one of my own, in Roran.”

It’s not entirely a lie, you’d be very interested to see more information about that mission if possible, or even to confirm when it might have taken place. A line of thinking that becomes immediately relevant.

“I’m sorry, but many of lord Fourth’s mission records are sealed,” the young man replies. “Particularly his S-rank missions.”

“Even if I can figure out when he might’ve been there it’d help,” you explain. “Please, it’s important that I at least try.”

After a few moments, the man gestures towards a small, boxy computer. “Let’s see what I have here.”

He types in a few command strings, and the amber text on its black field returns a few lines of kanji.

“Seems like we do have some records,” he admits. “Some materials in special collections, with the rest being in local history. Second floor, section H, aisle twelve. Special collections is in the basement.”

“I’ll go to the local history section first,” you suggest, “so can you have someone pull the records and have them waiting for me downstairs?”

“Of course.”



The local history section of course tells you where Namikaze Minato’s street address was when he was serving as Kage, which gives you a lead: his home was never sold off, most of his possessions are still there, and nobody lives there currently. So there’s a chance that if you go there, you might find a sample to work with.

Downstairs, you find that breaking into his home won’t be necessary.
>1/2
>>
>>4308620
Included in the material is a stack of documents, most of which are marked as either “declassified” or “not classified”, detailing some seven hundred official missions marked lower than S-rank. The majority, well more than half, are marked as B or A-rank, with more of the latter than his D and C-rank files put together. Flipping through the A-rank listings you find a likely gap not long before the war destroyed Roran that seems likely, which gives you something to pursue on that angle if the situation there ever becomes relevant again.

But the jackpot is an off-white cloak trimmed in a red flame pattern, with a foot-wide hole through it right in the middle of the phrase “Fourth Fire Shadow” written in wide kanji. Around that hole is dried blood, having soaked into the material.

It’s the cloak he was wearing on the day Kurama killed him.



“Sobering,” you admit to the librarian upstairs after you’ve finished your work, having taken a small amount of the blood-stained cloak with you pulled from the edges of the hole. It’s now imperceptibly wider around than it was before. “I had no idea you kept his outfit.”

“Of course,” the librarian replies sadly. “The whole village was in mourning… I don’t think many people could have thrown it away after what happened.”

“Did it help you answer your question?”

You nod. “There’s a gap in his mission records right around when I suspected he was in Roran. So now I know a little more about the context… and that the records of that mission definitely exist.”

“Sorry they’re sealed,” the librarian tells you. “Lady Tsunade’s office would still have them, but you’d have to convince both her and the elder council to unseal them.”

“Just knowing they exist is enough for now,” you insist. “Though if it ever becomes a problem again in the future I’ll know where to go.”

“Glad to help.”



You set up your operation in the currently unoccupied safehouse in Kusagakure, to which you teleport straight away after leaving the library.

A mass of living natural energy, shaped into an earthen vessel roughly the shape and size of an average adult male, the dried blood from Namikaze Minato’s cloak, the scroll which will contain his summoning contract… it’s all here.

But when you perform the Tensa Jōdo Tensei, nothing happens. The natural energy dissipates back into the atmosphere, the vessel crumbles away… there’s a glow, and then nothing. It’s never failed before.

>Try it on the traces that Konan-sensei gave you. Make sure the technique still works.
>Other?
>>
>>4308623
>>Try it on the traces that Konan-sensei gave you. Make sure the technique still works.
>>
>>4308623
>>Try it on the traces that Konan-sensei gave you. Make sure the technique still works.
>>
all of this feels very rude and tasteless, i don't like it personally. we're disturbing the dead just to improve a technique that we can already use at a high level, when there are other options.
>>
>>4308646
That would be the
>other
>>
>>4308623
>>4308646
>>4308648
>Stop fucking around with corpses and just go ask the shrike clan about their technique instead
>>
>>4308623
>Try to join the shrike clan for a little while, see if you can convince them to let you see their reverse-summoning formula.

Clearly we didn't have enough of the material available. And I would leave the traces Konan-sensei gave us for the actual later use
>>
>>4308623
>>4308650
Good idea, maybe also ask if nyoka or their sage have an idea why it didn't work this time?
>>
Did we ever release the hokage souls with the mask?
>>
>>4308659
Nope, but we also don't know the are trapped, that the mask can free them or that either is even possible
>>
>>4308623
shrike time
>>
>>4308623
>1d6, high roll
>best three of four
>>
Rolled 6 (1d6)

>>4308890
>>
Rolled 3 (1d6)

>>4308890
>>
Rolled 4 (1d6)

>>4308890
>>
Rolled 6 (1d6)

>>4308890
>>
>>4308890
You decide not to push it.

Bringing somebody back from the Pure Land without needing a living human sacrifice is an extremely powerful technique, which has a lot of potential. It trades the exploitative aspect of the original, the ability to force an unwilling soul to fight for you against its former comrades and homeland, for some relief from the moral issues. And by bringing back only the handful of people likely to welcome a chance to help you, at least in some small way, you can achieve powerful results despite not being able to exploit the dead in the same ways.

But it still involves ripping the dead away from the afterlife and forcing them into a hollow shell of an existence, which is why you were willing to allow your mother and your closest childhood friend to ‘die’ again when you ended the technique. And when you consider it more closely, it’s not something you particularly want to do to the former Hokage unless it’s absolutely necessary.

So while it would have been helpful had it worked this time, and you’re certain that you could conduct it respectfully and conscientiously, it may not be the worst thing in the world that it didn’t work. You’re just a little confused as to why it failed, and that’s not a question pressing enough to try summoning Konan’s former lover into the world just to answer.

The next best thing you can think of is to call Kijani, and have him reverse summon you to Nyoka’s eyrie high above the primordial sage forest.

“Thank you, Kijani-han,” you tell the bird politely. “I appreciate your assistance as ever.”

“Of course,” Kijani bows politely before flying off.

“Nyoka-han,” you greet the great shrike.

She inclines her head. “This one is surprised to receive you. To what does she owe the pleasure?”

“I have a problem I’m working on,” you admit. “Well, two related problems.”

“Tell this one the story,” Nyoka replies patiently.

“I’ve been revising my hiraishin formula, and was looking for advice on how to reduce it to a marking that can go onto a small object like a kunai handle or a paper shuriken.”

“And where did you look first?”

You sigh, seating yourself on a nearby branch. “The Fourth Hokage.”

“Who is dead.”

“That’s right.”

“A reanimation technique,” Nyoka muses politely. “It failed?”

“It did,” you confirm. “First time that’s ever happened.”
>1/2
>>
>>4308930
“This one can think of only one reason,” Nyoka replies calmly. “That the soul you seek does not currently reside in the Pure Land, which the Second Hokage’s technique was designed to call a soul from. This could be because it has not moved on yet from purgatory, and still restlessly wanders the world in parallel, or because it has been sealed into the belly of the Shinigami by the Uzumaki clan’s sealing technique.”

“I’ve heard of that one,” you admit. “You think that Namikaze Minato may have used it?”

“It is possible” Nyoka admits. “It may prove beneficial to discern whether the soul of the Fourth Hokage may have been sealed as such… if so, this one recalls that the Uzumaki clan were said to possess a mask that could allow a wearer to see and interact with the Shinigami, potentially releasing those souls from the Shinigami’s belly.”

“But so far as this one is aware that is merely a rumor.”

>Well, setting that aside, would it be possible to examine my contract’s reverse summoning formula for inspiration?
>If someone were to find this mask, say, in a shrine outside Konohagakure, how would one go about using it, hypothetically speaking?
>You mean this mask right here?
>Other?
>>
>>4308936
>>You mean this mask right here?
>>
>>4308936
>You mean this mask right here?
>>
>>4308936
>>You mean this mask right here?
it would explain why guren was sent by orochimaru. Although i wonder what he wanted back?
>Well, setting that aside, would it be possible to examine my contract’s reverse summoning formula for inspiration?
>>
>>4308936
>You mean this mask right here?
>Well, setting that aside, would it be possible to examine my contract’s reverse summoning formula for inspiration?

Oh oh! That mask! Now I remember when we got it.
>>
>>4308936
>You mean this mask right here?
>>
>>4308936
>You mean this mask right here?
>>
Wonder if Naori's mom would be able to instruct her daughter in any of the Uzumaki sealing techniques so that the tradition carries on. Even if she can't, she's at least got to have some ideas where to look, right?

Failing that, still curious about making our own sealing techniques using senjutsu.
>>
>>4308936
>>You mean this mask right here?
>>
>>4308936
“You mean like this mask right here?”

Nyoka stares at you in avian shock. “You have it? How? When?”

“Orochimaru was after it,” you explain, “but I got to it first. Then the agent he sent surrendered to Konohagakure and Orochimaru himself died, so it never seemed immediately relevant.”

“You could use that mask to free any souls that are trapped inside the Shinigami,” Nyoka reiterates. “Keep it secret. Never show it to anyone else unless you absolutely must use it.”

“I understand,” you nod in agreement, resealing the mask. “What I wanted to do was see if I could study the reverse summoning formula included as part of my contract with you. That might give me some inspiration into how to improve my hiraishin.”

“After all, the two techniques are actually pretty similar.”

“That is true,” Nyoka admits. “This one would suggest that Zenkibo would be the best to ask about this matter.”

“Then I’ll go see him,” you agree. “Thanks, Nyoka-han.”

“Of course,” she bows politely. “Just remember what this one has said.”



Zenkibo’s temple is quiet as usual, with nothing to be heard but the burbling of a distant creek and the chirping of the odd mundane bird. The old tengu is waiting for you, perched atop a pillar where in a normal shrine or temple a statue of some animal guardian might rest.

“Welcome, young one,” he greets you with a croak. “You have come to see me for a reason I take it?”

“I want to see the details of my contract,” you explain, “specifically the formula for your reverse-summoning technique. Nyoka-han suggested I ask you.”

“Nyoka is wise,” Zenkibo muses. “Indeed, you will need my help to dissect the finer points of the reverse summoning technique in spite of it being written on a scroll kept by Kijani. And Kijani would have told you as much.”

“So you will help?” you ask.

He nods. “Yes. I will summon Kijani here. In the mean time, I suggest you make whatever preparations will help you with constructing a sealing formula.”

That means… the Uzumaki sealing style.

>You can do this yourself.
>Call on your mother for advice.
>Call on your former rival Ajisai for advice.
>Call them both in. It might be nice for them to meet.
>Other?
>>
>>4309044
>>Call them both in. It might be nice for them to meet.
>>
>>4309044
>>Call on your mother for advice.
>>
>>4309044
>Try to do it ourself first, and only call on mother if we fail hard
>>
>>4309044
>>Call on your mother for advice.
>>
>>4309044
>>Call them both in. It might be nice for them to meet.
>>
>>4309044
>>Call them both in. It might be nice for them to meet.
>>
>>4309044
>>Call them both in. It might be nice for them to meet.
Reunion time for sealing science!
>>
>>4309044
>Call them both in. It might be nice for them to meet.
>>
>>4309044
Unsealing your Pure Land contract scroll and opening it, you start preparations for a double-summoning. Gathering natural energy into two vessels this time, you call the souls of both your mother and your childhood friend to inhabit them.

Ajisai looks around uncertainly, while your mother just seems somewhat surprised.

“Naori?” she asks you. “Why are we in the middle of a forest?”

“This is where my summoning clan lives,” you explain. “The shrikes.”

“Excellent!” Ajisai replies cheerfully. “If only I were still alive to form a contract with them.”

“I would be very interested to know why you have brought us here,” your mother muses. “As always I am happy to be of assistance, but you must admit the scenery is a bit unusual… it hints at an equally unusual problem.”

“You’re right of course,” you admit, “I’m trying to use my summoning contract’s reverse-summoning formula to improve my hiraishin formula, a teleportation technique created by the Second Hokage.”

“Well, that is quite the tall order,” your mother muses. Then she turns to Ajisai. “You… you would be Ajisai-kun?”

“Ah, yes,” Ajisai realizes abruptly that she and your mother haven’t ever been properly introduced.

“I am sad to see that you died so young,” your mother offers, her expression downcast. “Allow me to introduce myself properly, I am Uzumaki Makoto. In life, when you knew me only as Naori’s mother, I went by the name Tenran of the Storm.”

“And I’m Ajisai,” Ajisai returns the courtesy with a polite bow. “Naori-kun and I were friends, for a while.”

This time it’s Makoto’s turn to bow in gratitude. “Thank you for helping take care of my daughter after my passing.”

“It was nothing,” Ajisai insists curtly.

Before the humble-off can continue any further, Zenkibo returns to renewed confusion and surprise from your friend and mother.

“A tengu?” Makoto wonders aloud. “How fantastic!”

“Who are these two unfortunate souls?” Zenkibo asks you directly.

“My mother, Makoto, and my childhood friend, Ajisai.”

“And they are here willingly?” Zenkibo wonders aloud. “How very peculiar. The technique you have clearly based this on was never intended to summon and bind willing souls back into this world.”
>1/2
>>
>>4309660
“Well I wasn’t intended to be a jerk,” you counter with a dismissive shrug. “So I adapted the technique.”

“Well, I suppose that makes sense,” Zenkibo admits. “So I will agree to overlook the moral implications of this… most peculiar method of yours.”

Zenkibo leads you into the shrine’s outer hall, with Kijani perched calmly on his shoulder. At his instruction Kijani extends his neck, laying the scroll out in front of Zenkibo who sweeps it open with one of his wings.

“Here is the contract in full detail,” he tells you, tapping one section of borderline illegible text with one talon. “This is the segment relating to reverse-summoning.”

“Fantastic,” Ajisai muses, mesmerized at what’s just been unfurled in front of her. “I’ve never seen such a complex series of derived spacetime formulae.”

>1d6, DC 12
>best three of four

>SP: 6/6
>ES: 0/2 (0T)
>>
Rolled 1 (1d6)

>>4309672
>>
Rolled 2 (1d6)

>>4309672
>zenkibo didn't try to lecture us, only to get chewed out himself by mom
i'm a little sad
>>
Rolled 2 (1d6)

>>4309672
Rip rolls
>>
Rolled 2 (1d6)

>>4309672
>>
>>4309672
Spend 4 SP and take 2 ES to pass?
>Y
>N
>>
>>4309687
Y
>>
>>4309687
>>Y
Fuuuuuu- I promised myself I wouldn’t do this again but I’m a liar so fuck it.
>>
>>4309687
>Y
>>
>>4309687
Nope
>>
>>4309687
>Y
>>
>>4309672
>Y
>>
>>4309687
>SP: 2/6
>ES: 2/2 (4T)
Will update this evening.
>>
>>4309687
“Derived?” you muse. “Where do you see evidence of that?”

“Here,” she points out a few passages that, if you really squint, look like they could in fact have been derived from a common element. “See?”

“I wouldn’t have,” you admit, activating your Mangekyō sharingan and feeling a slight trickle of warm wetness from the corner of that eye. “I see… you’re right.”

“You okay?” Ajisai asks.

“Hm?”

“You are bleeding from your left eye,” your mother tells you, dabbing at the corner of your eye with the end of her sleeve.

“It’ll be fine,” you insist, closing the eye and forming the seal of confrontation to manually restrict the chakra flow to it. “The Mangekyō is tough on the eye that its powers originate from… so long as I don’t do this often it’ll recover quickly enough.”

“That said, when I get home I’m going to want to use some medicine on it for the eyestrain.”

“Well, please be sure that you take care of yourself,” Makoto tells you sternly. “I taught you at least that well.”

“And even if you hadn’t Karin and Fū would probably hound me over it,” you shrug.

“They sound like good friends,” your mother smiles.

“Karin is,” Ajisai replies. “I only met Fū briefly, and not under good circumstances.”

“We captured her,” you admit. “She came with me when I left Akatsuki… or rather, when I took it back.”

“I see,” Makoto sighs, while Ajisai seems stunned at the news of your defection.

“What about Tenshi-sama?” she protests.

“Konan-sensei gave it her blessing,” you explain. “She knew it was coming, but she stayed. She still has some hope of convincing Pain not to go too far, but I couldn’t trust to that hope. So I had to take matters into my own hands.”

“Well, I’m dead,” Ajisai admits. “So it’s not my place to decide.”

“If I could’ve stayed in good conscience I would have,” you insist. “But I couldn’t. You know me, Ajisai. You know what that means.”

After a moment, she nods curtly. “Yeah. I do.”

“Now… the topic at hand...”
>1/2
>>
>>4309942
For a few hours the three of you piece together a coherent picture of how this contract actually works, with you and Ajisai doing most of the work to decompile the script relating to spacetime manipulation and your mother helping you to puzzle out exactly how the structure of the sealing script was developed and employed. With your own hiraishin formula laid out nearby, you and Makoto refine several key passages and begin the long, difficult work of reducing the entire formula to a usable sealing mark.

“My own mother only taught me the basics of the Uzumaki sealing style, so this is as far as I think I can help you,” she eventually admits… that being said you have two characters pretty much ‘locked in’.

Those are the two characters for ‘Kongō’, which can either mean diamond or relate to the ritualistic ‘vajra’ implement thought to evoke lightning. It has also been used in ancient contexts to mean any number of fantastical materials reputed to have been indestructible. The first of these characters carries meaning related to value: either in the sense of a financial instrument or in the sense of being treasured. The second of these typically means strength or rigidity.

“We’re basically half-way there,” you admit, “in just the span of two days. Good work, go team.”

“Happy to have been of help,” your mother bows politely.

>Ask Zenkibo if there are any other sources of inspiration that you can use around here. The Shrike clan is after all ancient in the extreme, and there’s a lot of wisdom nested away around here.
>Offer to take your ‘guests’ to see how you live. It’d certainly let your mother rest a little easier knowing how well you’ve been doing for yourself.
>This has come to its logical, reasonable end. You should let the dead rest now, and honor them by doing the rest of the work yourself.
>Other?
>>
>>4309987
>Offer to take your ‘guests’ to see how you live. It’d certainly let your mother rest a little easier knowing how well you’ve been doing for yourself.
>>
File: Naori_Kongo.png (3 KB, 95x182)
3 KB
3 KB PNG
>>4309987
Forgot the image.
>>
>>4309987
>>Offer to take your ‘guests’ to see how you live. It’d certainly let your mother rest a little easier knowing how well you’ve been doing for yourself.
>>
>>4309987
>Offer to take your ‘guests’ to see how you live. It’d certainly let your mother rest a little easier knowing how well you’ve been doing for yourself.
>>
>>4309987
>>Offer to take your ‘guests’ to see how you live. It’d certainly let your mother rest a little easier knowing how well you’ve been doing for yourself.
>>
>>4309987
>Offer to take your ‘guests’ to see how you live. It’d certainly let your mother rest a little easier knowing how well you’ve been doing for yourself.

After this short rest, come back to murder birds.

>Ask Zenkibo if there are any other sources of inspiration that you can use around here. The Shrike clan is after all ancient in the extreme, and there’s a lot of wisdom nested away around here
>>
>>4309987
>Offer to take your ‘guests’ to see how you live. It’d certainly let your mother rest a little easier knowing how well you’ve been doing for yourself
>>
>>4309987
>>Ask Zenkibo if there are any other sources of inspiration that you can use around here. The Shrike clan is after all ancient in the extreme, and there’s a lot of wisdom nested away around here.
>>
>>4309987
“Zenkibo-han,” you bow politely, “thanks for accommodating me again. I’ll absolutely be back later to learn more from your clan.”

“Of course,” Zenkibo inclines his feathery head. “Welcome guest though you may be you are of the world, and to the world you must return.”

“Zenkibo-han,” your mother adds, addressing him with an effortless grace you can only try to emulate. “I thank you as well, now that I can, for your clan taking my daughter under your wings. I can see she has been very fortunate.”

Zenkibo bows a little lower to your mother. “The feeling is mutual, Uzumaki Makoto-san.”

“Now, hands on my shoulders,” you instruct, before forming the hand seals that for the time being are still required.



“This is a hideout?” Ajisai asks, clearly amused at the mental discrepancy between the word and what it’s being applied to.

“I find it wonderful,” Makoto insists with a smile. “I see I taught you well. Your aesthetic sense has become quite refined… you moved these buildings using sealing techniques to place them into pre-excavated slots.”

“And then ran the wiring to a chakra battery,” you confirm. “Speaking of which, give me a second here. I need to swap the tag out for a fresh one.”

After attending to that rather dull detail, you return to find that your living and dead guests have taken notice of each other. None are more completely levelled than Karin, who knows that Ajisai has been dead for some time.

“How is this even possible!?” she demands.

“Yes,” Yugito-han presses, her eyes locked with your mother’s. “I would be interested to know.”

“It’s a reanimation technique,” you explain. “Senjutsu-based.”

“And the victims?” she demands.

“None,” you shrug. “Senju Tobirama didn’t have natural energy to cheat with, but I do. It’s still not something to be used lightly or often… now that I think of it I don’t actually know what happens to the natural energy once it’s been ‘sacrificed’. Although all the physical laws we know of say it shouldn’t just disappear it may not be infinitely sustainable.”

“You have a point of course,” your mother agrees with you. “After you have ‘shown us around’, you should probably avoid using the Tensa Jōdo Tensei in the future except at the extreme ends of need.”

“I’ll continue to refine it in theory,” you tell your mother, “in case I have to use it in battle for some reason. But seriously, I agree… it’s not something to be misused.”
>1/2
>>
>>4311011
That being said… it has given you a chance to introduce your mother to Karin, her distant niece, and to Fū, a completely unrelated ray of sunshine for her to delight in. It also puts into perspective for both her and Ajisai the reasons you left Akatsuki, when they meet Yugito-han and hear the story of how she came to be here with you. You can also show them the gardens you’ve planted here, and the view from the mountaintop, and the island you chose for your Grass hideout. You finally head for the teahouse in the Land of Grass, sitting with them on the edge of the veranda in the middle of a stand of dense bamboo.

“You’ve been busy,” Ajisai admits with a wistful sigh, laying sprawled out across the deck with her feet hanging off the edge. “I’m a bit jealous.”

“It does not become you, dear,” Makoto chides her. “Though… it is somewhat frustrating that I cannot have a cup of tea here, in such a place that calls for it so.”

“Sorry,” you apologize. “If I sacrificed someone for the technique maybe you could use their taste buds, but that’s… not going to happen.”

“I could not recognize you if it did,” your mother agrees. “I do not think I can say it enough, and I do not know when I will get to say it again, so humor me while I say it now… I am so very proud of you, my daughter.”

Left speechless, you simply bow politely as Uzumaki Makoto’s body glows brightly, then crumbles away like dust onto the wind as you release the technique binding her into the world. After a few awkward seconds of silence, you sigh.

“It’s always been harder with you,” you admit. “Seriously, Ajisai… you shouldn’t be dead right now. And no, it’s not okay.”

Ajisai nods quietly. “I… can only guess how you feel right now.”

“Not great.”

“But I do think you’re right,” she insists. “Go be you, Naori. Don’t worry about us.”

“If I can find a way to put what was done to you right, I will,” you promise. “I haven’t given you up for dead just yet.”

Ajisai suppresses a snort of laughter. “That’s definitely you being you, never a step back. You’re stubborn. I always liked that.”

You can’t help but crack a smile as you release her too. “Thanks. See you later.”

It would have been a better goodbye had your forced smiles not started to fade just before Ajisai disappeared.
>1d6, taking the third roll
>>
Rolled 4 (1d6)

>>4311053
>>
Rolled 3 (1d6)

>>4311053
And that is another reason to not use it often, wouldn't be surprised if a part of Naori regrets creating and using the technique
>>
Rolled 1 (1d6)

>>4311053
>>
>>4311053
It’s only a few calm days later that you find yourself abruptly summoned to Kijani’s side into a scene of utter devastation… storm clouds are gathered high above, and black flames surround you on all sides, hissing in the distance as the rain falls on them. Broken chunks of old walls lie all around, the dust from their collapse kept low by the same rain that falls on you now as well.

Before you, Uchiha Sasuke lies slumped against what little wall remains standing, and in front of him, at your feet, lies his brother. Both young men are covered in blood and bruises, and Sasuke stares at you in shock as you appear so abruptly.

You knock a weighted chain out of the air with Umekiri’s edge to protect Kijani, swiftly creating a trio of shadow clones even before the chain retracts to the man in the orange mask who launched it at you.

“I should have guessed,” Tobi muses, his usually playful tone replaced by one that can only be described as grim. “Of course he would rely on you in the end. I’ve underestimated you, Itachi.”

One shadow clone takes Sasuke by his arm and lifts him over her shoulder, and the second scoops Itachi up off the ground. The third raises a barrier sphere with the Kongō Fūsa, while you yourself draw in natural energy through Umekiri’s blade.

“Take them,” you order Kijani.

“Immediately,” he replies.

He disappears just as, to your shock, Tobi simply steps through the Kongō Fūsa barrier. Your own sage mode is ready at the last possible second, and you raise your sword to slash through his body as he charges… straight through you as well. His body passes clean through you, like some sort of black ghost, though you realize that the chains he’s left behind him are still very much tangible. At the last second before they start to close around you, there’s a puff of smoke.



“Thanks, Kijani-han,” you gasp, releasing all the tension in an instant as you realize that you, Sasuke, Itachi, and all your clones made it. One clone, the one who raised the barrier, dissipates. “I’m gonna have to finish off that hiraishin formula fast.”

“I owe you big this time, birdie. You name your prize.”

“I will have to simply be surprised,” Kijani replies, amused at your outburst of gratitude.

Weaving the seals, you return to your safehouse.



“Give me a hand here,” you order Karin sharply. “I can’t get a pulse.”

Karin gives Itachi the briefest examination, before shaking her head. “That’s because he’s dead, Naori.”

Yugito-han stares in shock at the fallen Akatsuki, who lies motionless and bloody in your courtyard. Then, she stares at his little brother, who stares at the same scene without seeing it.
>1/2
>>
>>4311105
After taking a few moments to let the adrenaline from your seconds-long encounter with Tobi, you start to get a handle on what needs to be done.

“You, Karin,” you order one of your clones and your cousin, “take Sasuke to the shower room. Get him cleaned up and take him to the small guest room.”

“I’ll deal with things out here.”

“Will you be okay?” Karin asks hesitantly. “I… know that you knew him.”

“I’ll deal with it,” you repeat bluntly. “Please.”

Karin nods curtly, before helping your clone lead a barely-functional Sasuke away.

You sigh, kneeling over Itachi’s body, soaking wet from the rain. First, you deal with that using your basic water shaping ability, pulling the rainwater and most of the blood out of his clothing and sending it in a high arc over the roof and out onto the scraggly pines which top your little mountain. His ring you carefully remove and store in a small scroll. He has no other possessions, aside from the contents of his belt pouch. A few shuriken, and nothing else… seems he wasn’t planning on a long fight.

Then you take his eyes, putting them into a small vial and sealing them along with his ring. Onto this scroll you write a contract formula in his own blood, for later. Last, after placing a few aromatic herbs here and there on the body, you seal what remains of Uchiha Itachi into a scroll of his own, and put the scrolls away.

All the while, Fū and Yugito watch quietly. It’s Fū who eventually breaks the silence.

“Are you sure you’re okay, Nakkun?”

>I owed this many my life. So I’m filling his last requests of me. That’s all.
>Itachi was a complicated man. But I think, in the end, too kind for his own good.
>I think I loved him. It went nowhere of course, he already knew he was dying when we met.
>Other?
>>
>>4311128
>>I owed this many my life. So I’m filling his last requests of me.
>>Itachi was a complicated man. But I think, in the end, too kind for his own good.
>>
>>4311128
>I owed this man my life. So I’m filling his last requests of me. That’s all.
>Itachi was a complicated man. But I think, in the end, too kind for his own good.

A lot of respect from Naori towards Itachi.
>>
>>4311128
>I owed this many my life. So I’m filling his last requests of me. That’s all.
>Itachi was a complicated man. But I think, in the end, too kind for his own good.
>I think I loved him. It went nowhere of course, he already knew he was dying when we met.
>>
>>4311128
>I owed this man my life. So I’m filling his last requests of me.
>Itachi was a complicated man. But I think, in the end, too kind for his own good.
>>
>>4311128
>I owed this many my life. So I’m filling his last requests of me. That’s all.
>Itachi was a complicated man. But I think, in the end, too kind for his own good.
>>
>>4311155
>>4311128

>I owed this man my life. So I’m filling his last requests of me. That’s all.
>Itachi was a complicated man. But I think, in the end, too kind for his own good.

Yeah, definitely. He's kind of us, through a mirror darkly. He was always doing everything he could to find the right path, with limited time, resources, and the weight of his own actions.

The difference is he chose to do it alone, and I think Naori is always going to hate that part. He could have accomplished so much more if he had asked anyone for real help. Means a lot that he asked Naori though.
>>
>>4311128
>I owed this many my life. So I’m filling his last requests of me. That’s all.
>Itachi was a complicated man. But I think, in the end, too kind for his own good.
>>
>>4311128
>I owed this man my life. So I’m filling his last requests of me. That’s all.
>Itachi was a complicated man. But I think, in the end, too kind for his own good.
>>
>>4311128
>Itachi was a complicated man. But I think, in the end, too kind for his own good.
>I think I loved him. It went nowhere of course, he already knew he was dying when we met.
If nobody else will admit it than I'll play Devils Advocate, we loved him in our own way and that deserves to be acknowledged
>>
>>4311442
i think it was a crush that had the potential to become love, but didn't due to A LOT of factors
>>
>>4311128
>>I owed this many my life. So I’m filling his last requests of me. That’s all.
>>Itachi was a complicated man. But I think, in the end, too kind for his own good.
>>
>>4311128
>I owed this man my life. So I’m filling his last requests of me. That’s all.
>Itachi was a complicated man. But I think, in the end, too kind for his own good.

Please don't mistake a simple crush for true love.
>>
>>4311128
>>I owed this many my life. So I’m filling his last requests of me. That’s all.
>>Itachi was a complicated man. But I think, in the end, too kind for his own good.
>>
>yfw Naori will never have the god-child with Itachi

Fuck you Hiashi
>>
>>4311128
“I owed him my life,” you admit, “and at one point I even had a bit of a crush on him. But he was complicated… he took the weight of a lot of things onto his own shoulders for the sake of others, most of whom see him now as an irredeemable villain, and never complained about it. He never begrudged the ones who demanded far too much of a preteen.”

“And now, because I made a promise to him before he went to his death, I have a decision to make. I have to either do what he would have wanted me to despite disagreeing with his terminal martyr complex, or do what I believe to be right in the spirit of how he lived and died.”

“What is that supposed to mean?” Yugito-han presses you.

“I can’t tell you exactly,” you sigh, “but Sasuke seems to have lost his sense of purpose in Itachi’s death. All he has left is the lie Itachi wanted him to believe. But if I told him the truth, I don’t know what would happen… and neither did Itachi. Because for all his preparation and consideration he didn’t seem to consider what would happen to his little brother after this point.”

“So that’s another thing I disagreed with Itachi on, in addition to his stubborn determination to martyr himself.”

“I would tell him the truth,” Fū declares.

“I don’t know,” Yugito admits. “I don’t know what ‘the truth’ actually means.”

>I’ll tell him when he wakes up, then see what happens from there.
>I’ll take him back to Konohagakure, and that will be that.
>I’ll make a decision AFTER speaking with Sasuke, some time tomorrow.
>Other?
>>
>>4311658
>>I’ll make a decision AFTER speaking with Sasuke, some time tomorrow.
>>
>>4311658
>I’ll make a decision AFTER speaking with Sasuke, some time tomorrow
>>
>>4311658
>I’ll make a decision AFTER speaking with Sasuke, some time tomorrow.
>>
>>4311658
>>I’ll make a decision AFTER speaking with Sasuke, some time tomorrow.
>>
>>4311658
>>I’ll make a decision AFTER speaking with Sasuke, some time tomorrow.
>>
>>4311658
>>I’ll make a decision AFTER speaking with Sasuke, some time tomorrow.
>>
>>4311658
>>I’ll make a decision AFTER speaking with Sasuke, some time tomorrow.
>>
>>4311658
Well, i wasn't here in time for the vote, but i would have voted to speak with both sasuke and itachi before deciding.
>>
>>4311826
Itachi decided to take the truth to his grave, it’s pretty clear how he feel about this.
>>
>>4312240
Itachi is retarded. I don't want to ask him how he feels about it, i want to explain how retarded he is and change his mind.
>>
>>4311826
>>4312243
Not only are you being a jackass, our character explicitly doesn't want to revive people outside of emergencies.
Swerving on it just like that would be silly.
>>
>>4311658
“I’ll make a decision after speaking with Sasuke,” you decide. “And that will have to be tomorrow at the earliest.”

“Tomorrow?” Fū repeats.

Yugito-han seems to understand immediately. “That makes sense. Give him some time to rest… it seemed like he could use it.”



When the evening gloom gives way to night, you don’t go into your own room. Instead you find yourself sitting upright in the guest room where Sasuke is sleeping off his deathmatch with Itachi. He’s been washed and bandaged, and Karin has given him basic treatment using the mystical palm technique, but he’s still in rough shape. That being said, if you were in his condition you could probably find yourself waking up in the middle of the night and making a run for it, so you have to take certain precautions.

That’s why you end up resting through the night propped up against the wall, with Umekiri and her sheath to lean on.



It’s early in the morning when you hear a sharp hiss of pain that wakes you from your light sleep.

“I see you’re already awake,” you muse. “Karin’s very skilled. You should thank her when you get the chance.”

“Who…” he begins, before realizing the answer to his own unfinished question. “Raishō Naori… what is this?”

“It is what it looks like,” you shrug, as his eyes finally manage to meet yours, tired though he obviously is. “When Itachi dies I was summoned to...”

The words catch in your throat as one of Sasuke’s eyes activates, not just the sharingan but the familiar pinwheel pattern of a Mangekyō… Itachi’s Mangekyō. You feel your own left eye doing the same, blood trickling from both your eye and his as you cough violently.

“What’s happening?” Sasuke demands, wincing as he tries to move but finds his wounds still in the process of healing.

You double over, gagging as something comes up from your throat… so this is what it feels like?

When the small scroll finally pops out, you take a moment to massage your throat and catch your breath.

Gross,” you muse. “Itachi, you jerk… putting a delayed-trigger seal on me like that. Now I know how Kijani feels.”

Sasuke stares at you in total confusion. “I… have no idea what’s happening.”
>1/2
>>
>>4312646
“It’s all Itachi’s fault,” you grumble. “He must’ve created a programmed sealing technique using his Mangekyō that would activate when our eyes met, but only after he died. He guessed that we’d meet like this… now that I think about it I even know when he probably did it.”

“Itachi… did that?” Sasuke demands. “Why? What was your connection to him? Why did you capture me like this, and why did you...”

“Keep it down,” you insist curtly. “No need to get hysterical. My friends are trying to sleep a few doors down.”

“Answer the question!” Sasuke presses, albeit after lowering his voice.

“He saved my life years ago, before I joined Akatsuki,” you explain. “And in exchange, I became someone he could open up to, at least a little. This scroll is probably a message to both of us.”

“What kind of message?” Sasuke demands curtly.

“I don’t know,” you admit, still in the process of unrolling it. “I haven’t opened the thing yet.”

“It could be a trap.”

You snort, trying to hold back a laugh. “As if… it’s a tatami floor.”

“What?” Sasuke asks bluntly.

“Look,” you insist, laying the scroll out in front of him and kneeling beside him. “The organization of these blocks follows the same rules for organizing tatami in an auspicious layout… a shrine floor.”

“How can you tell that?”

“Most honden follow certain architectural rules,” you explain. “I recognize the proportions. One tatami mat is marked.”

“This is the Naka shrine,” Sasuke realizes. “This marked tatami mat is where the entrance to the Uchiha clan’s meeting place is hidden.”

“Then I think he intended for us to go there,” you suggest.

“And you’re just… going to?” Sasuke demands.

>I think he meant for you to come with me. We can be discreet about it if you like.
>It may be time for you to go home anyway, Sasuke-kun. You’ve been sorely missed there.
>I’ll go by myself if you’re more comfortable that way. But Itachi planned this for a reason.
>Other?
>>
>>4312647
>I think he meant for you to come with me. We can be discreet about it if you like.
>>
>>4312647
>>I think he meant for you to come with me. We can be discreet about it if you like.
>>
>>4312647
>I think he meant for you to come with me. We can be discreet about it if you like.
>>
>>4312647
>I think he meant for you to come with me. We can be discreet about it if you like.
>>
>>4312647
>>I think he meant for you to come with me. We can be discreet about it if you like.
>>
>>4312647
>I think he meant for you to come with me. We can be discreet about it if you like.
>>
>>4312647
>>I think he meant for you to come with me. We can be discreet about it if you like.
>>
>>4312647
>I think he meant for you to come with me. We can be discreet about it if you like.
>>
>>4312647
>>I think he meant for you to come with me. We can be discreet about it if you like.
>>
>>4312647
>>I think he meant for you to come with me. We can be discreet about it if you like.
>>
>>4312647
>I think he meant for you to come with me. We can be discreet about it if you like.
>>
>>4312647
>1d6, best three of four
>high roll
>>
Rolled 3 (1d6)

>>4313021
>>
Rolled 5 (1d6)

>>4313021
>>
Rolled 6 (1d6)

>>4313021
>>
Rolled 4 (1d6)

>>4313021
>>
>>4313021
“We can go discreetly,” you offer. “But Itachi-han intended for us both to find something at this shrine of yours. I’m going, without you if I must.”

“You won’t be getting in without me,” Sasuke tells you, laying back. “There’s a special technique required to open the entryway. So if I’m going that far anyway, it makes sense to go with you the rest of the way.”

“Can you move?”

“With some difficulty,” Sasuke admits. “Just don’t count on me for anything beyond walking.”

“I’ll fetch you some fresh clothes,” you offer.

“A cloak would be fine,” he counters. “We can… no, perhaps my old clothes wouldn’t fit.”

“I have another idea,” you offer.



“So you want me to dress him,” Ryūzetsu summarizes.

You nod politely. “Please.”

“You’ve made some strange requests over the time we’ve known each other,” she muses, before punching a button on her desk. “Get me some clothing for a male, average build, around a hundred and sixty-five to a hundred and seventy centimetres and maybe fifty, fifty-one kilograms?”

“Fifty-two,” Sasuke corrects her.

“Fifty-two,” Ryūzetsu relays the message. “And no sass this time?”

Several minutes later an attendant delivers ankle-length drawstring trousers, a simple black top with short sleeves, and a loose-fitting top like a dōgi. It doesn’t make any real sense together as an ensemble, but it’ll have to do.

“I look like an idiot,” Sasuke grumbles.

“So nothing changed,” you snark back. “Come on, all it has to do is serve the purpose.”

“She has a point,” Ryūzetsu agrees. “Say ‘thank you’.”

“… thanks.”

“You’re welcome,” Ryūzetsu replies with a placid smile. “A friend of Naori’s is a friend of mine.”

“We’re not friends,” Sasuke insists.

“Then get out of my office.”
>1/2
>>
>>4313079
“I don’t think I could ever get used to that,” Sasuke admits after you use the hiraishin to take him to a still-closed Ichiraku. “I’m surprised someone in such a position of authority got out of bed for you so… eagerly.”

“Friends are good,” you shrug. “Now, where’s this shrine of yours?”

“Follow me.”



The Uchiha district… an abandoned section of Konoha near the defensive walls, more or less a walled village within the village. It seems that after its previous occupants were wiped out, no one was keen to move in to replace them. The buildings remain empty, windows remain boarded up, and doors have been locked with heavy chains and padlocks.

There’s a dusty, disused shrine deep within the district, just a few blocks from the main wall of Konohagakure’s formidable defenses. Inside the honden, under the tatami mat Itachi’s note specified, you find a heavy stone slab with a three-dot tomoe pattern at the center… the sharingan.

“Here,” Sasuke insists, kneeling at the edge of the slab and performing a series of hand seals. The edges of the slab rise up for a moment as hidden mechanisms slowly engage, and with your foot you can push the slab off the top tread of a staircase beneth it and nudge it into a hidden tunnel, where it first lowers into position before sliding forwards and out of the way.

Down those stairs you find several lanterns and candles, which Sasuke effortlessly lights as he passes, until you reach an open room that was once closed off by sliding doors and floored with tatami. In the back of that room is an alcove with two firepits, which Sasuke places flames in using his fire release.

“What’s this?” you ask him, pointing out the stone tablet set up in the decorated alcove. “Some sort of tablet?”

You can’t read it… how strange, it’s no language you’ve ever even heard of, though it seems like it should be familiar.

“It has been in the Clan for generations,” Sasuke explains. “Only a sharingan can decipher it.”

“Then let’s try that,” you suggest, unsealing Izumi’s sharingan as Sasuke activates his own, before turning to you in surprise.

“You have one?” he demands. “Given to you by Itachi?”

You nod in admission. “It belonged to Uchiha Izumi. He entrusted me with her eyes.”

“I knew her,” Sasuke replies sternly. “She was Itachi’s friend… I always thought she had a crush on him, like a girlfriend. He killed her.”

“Yes,” you agree. “All of that is true. Focus on the tablet.”
>2/3
>>
File: Mango_Five.png (208 KB, 894x894)
208 KB
208 KB PNG
>>4313110
“Only some of it is readable,” Sasuke confirms what you can already see. “This is information about the Mangekyō sharingan.”

“There’s also a few lines here from some sort of religious history,” you add. “Seeking stability, one god was divided into yin and yang, these opposing two acting together obtain all things in creation… it’s the ending of the story of the Sage of Six Paths.”

“What?” Sasuke demands. “How can you tell?”

“I’ve seen him referred to before in ancient texts,” you explain. “Here. The language is seriously florid by modern standards, but it mentions a Rabbit Goddess eating fruit from… a ‘God Tree’, and gaining chakra. She shared that chakra with her children before becoming a power-mad dictator herself. Her two sons cooperated to seal her away in what would become the moon.”

Sasuke stares at you in suspicion. “How’d you get all that from it? Half of it is gibberish to me even if I can read the words.”

“Like I said,” you shrug, “it’s linguistically archaic.”

“The Mangekyō is awakened by being the one responsible for the death of one’s best friend,” Sasuke muses, turning his attention back to the more practical aspects of what you can now read. “Someone you love. I see, so that’s what Itachi meant...”

“… and something about a Curse of Hatred.”

“I see,” you sigh gloomily. “The sharingan is awakened by chakra flow across the optic nerve. The new chakra that activates it may have a risk of changing how an Uchiha thinks and acts.”

“I never knew,” Sasuke admits. “But why can’t I read more of this?”

“Perhaps it’s locked behind another level of dōjutsu,” you suggest. “The parts we can read explain the Mangekyō, so maybe the Mangekyō can be used to read it all.”

“Too bad,” Sasuke sighs, defeated. “Neither of us has it. I suppose we could ask Kakashi-san… yeah, right. That’s a conversation I want to have today.”

>Why not. Let’s go ask Kakashi.
>Actually, I have the Mangekyō.
>Don’t look and don’t ask.
>Other?
>>
>>4313128
>Actually, I have the Mangekyō.
>>
>>4313128
>>Actually, I have the Mangekyō.
>But it awoke from the death of my friend not of my hand, I'm a Uzumaki not a Uchiha so the rules may be different.
>>
>>4313128
>>Actually, I have the Mangekyō.

Might as well since we’re here.
>>
>>4313128
>actually I have the mangekyo

Also sauce didn’t get his mangekyo after killing itachi?
>>
>>4313194
I think the trigger was him realizing Itachi still loved him. Without Tobi spilling the beans, it's the catharsis of a lifelong mission, not murdering his only remaining family.
>>
>>4313128
>Actually, I have the Mangekyō.
>>4313201
Yeah pretty much, it also took some time to develop for some reason if I know the lore correctly? Correct me if I'm wrong on that
>>
>>4313201
>>4313225
gotcha. Well maybe Tobi will still pull it off or we find a good reason to tell him ourselves.
>>
>>4313128
>>Actually, I have the Mangekyō.
>>
>>4313128
>Actually, I have the Mangekyō.
>"If you want to ask. My best friend died for me on a mission against a tailed beast that resulted in her death. I didn't know about her death until Itachi showed me her corpse."
>>
>>4313128
>Actually, I have the Mangekyō.
>>
>>4313128
“Actually,” you admit, cautiously at first to gauge his response. “One of us does have the Mangekyō.”

It takes Sasuke a couple of seconds to understand what you mean. “You?”

You nod, taking a moment to slowly blink. When your left eye opens, your ‘five-petalled’ Mangekyō is visible there. “Something else Itachi-han saw to, was making sure I saw the body of my closest childhood friend… after a mission Akatsuki sent her on killed her.”

“You blamed yourself for her death,” Sasuke guesses.

“Of course I did,” you reply, before turning your attention back to the stone tablet. “I can read much more of the stone now.”

It’s… fairly grim reading. The Uchiha gain great power by awakening the sharingan, a power descended from the days of the Sage of Six Paths, but at the same time that power changes them. And the more Uchiha possess the sharingan, the more their fate becomes sealed by that power that others fear, and which makes them fear and hate others in turn. This ‘Curse of Hate’ will grow stronger, make the clan behave irrationally, and eventually lead them to self-destruction if its leaders weren’t careful. That explains the coup attempt… Uchiha Fugaku must have read this part of the tablet and thought that placing the Uchiha at the top of Konohagakure’s leadership was the only way to ease their hatred and resentment towards the village that sought to marginalize them, thereby preserving the Uchiha for the future.

The tablet however has other ideas, suggesting that something called an ‘Infinite Tsukuyomi’ is the only way to save the Uchiha… but the part of the text that says what that is still isn’t legible.

Less important in your eyes is the passage which states that a user of the Mangekyō who overuses their eyes can take those of a close relative as a transplant… in theory, swapping eyes like this can preserve their use indefinitely. An ‘eternal’ Mangekyō, so to speak. So that’s what Itachi wanted you to do with his eyes… only trouble is...

“So what does it say?”

>Tell Sasuke everything, including the context this places the coup into, as well as Itachi’s own actions. He deserves to know the truth.
>Tell Sasuke it’s a warning about what will happen if the Uchiha failed to control their Curse of Hatred and leave it at that, at least for now.
>Tell Sasuke you can’t read it all. There must be something beyond a Mangekyō sharingan, and that portion of the tablet is meant for its users.
>Other?
>>
>>4313801
>Tell Sasuke everything, including the context this places the coup into, as well as Itachi’s own actions. He deserves to know the truth.
>>
>>4313801
>>Tell Sasuke everything, including the context this places the coup into, as well as Itachi’s own actions. He deserves to know the truth.
>>
>>4313801
>tell him everything
>>
>>4313801
>>Tell Sasuke everything, including the context this places the coup into, as well as Itachi’s own actions. He deserves to know the truth.

If there was anyone who deserved an explanation for why their life was full of shit, it’s Sasuke. Especially with Naori able, willing, and present to if need be forcibly make him stop and take a damn second to calm down and think things through.
>>
>>4313801
start with
>>Tell Sasuke it’s a warning about what will happen if the Uchiha failed to control their Curse of Hatred
then
>tell him everything

also maybe
>Most likely, the person Itachi hated the most was himself
>>
>>4313801
>>Tell Sasuke everything, including the context this places the coup into, as well as Itachi’s own actions. He deserves to know the truth.
>>
>>4313801
>>Tell Sasuke everything, including the context this places the coup into, as well as Itachi’s own actions. He deserves to know the truth.
>>
>>4313801
>>Tell Sasuke everything, including the context this places the coup into, as well as Itachi’s own actions. He deserves to know the truth.
>>
>>4313801
“It makes a lot of sense actually,” you admit. “The two less significant portions explain how to counteract the long-term drawbacks to overusing the Mangekyō by trading eyes with a close relative, ideally a sibling. I also know how to use the sharingan to control a tailed beast now. It seems you need the Mangekyō, but unlike the Susano’o you can do it with just one eye.”

“And the more ‘significant’ portion?” Sasuke presses. “What have you learned?”

“It’s a warning about the Curse of Hatred,” you explain, “predicting that the more Uchiha who possess the sharingan the more likely that the Curse will drive the clan to its own destruction. Those who awaken the Mangekyō and can begin to learn the truth about the Curse were meant to be the leaders, who could possibly keep the clan from that fate.”

“That didn’t seem to work,” Sasuke grumbles, before it seems to click. “Wait a minute, what did you mean it made sense?”

“Your father and Itachi both had the Mangekyō,” you explain, “so both were aware of what the tablet said about the Curse of Hatred. So it explains why the situation evolved so that Itachi felt no alternative existed to killing his own family.”

“… explain,” he demands.

“Your clan had been planning a coup,” you explain. “Your father probably understood that replacing the Third Hokage would be the only way to alleviate the clan’s hatred and mistrust of Konohagakure, so he lent his authority to support it.”

“Itachi was a member of ANBU at the time,” you continue to explain. “So when Shimura Danzō took action to try making the coup an inevitability, Itachi was left two options: allow a civil war to cause thousands of innocent deaths and leave the village vulnerable to the other four great nations, or...”

“… to kill his own family,” Sasuke completes the thought, wide-eyed in horror at the implication.

“Which he did,” you continue. “I saw his own memories. Your parents understood and acknowledged the position they’d put him in. They refused to fight back… all your father insisted on was that Itachi look after you, because the clan had kept the whole coup plan a secret from you. You were totally innocent.”

“There’s no way,” Sasuke insists. “Itachi murdered my whole family! He hated them! He told me himself, he only left me alive because I wasn’t worth killing!”

“He left you alive because out of the whole clan you were the only one he couldn’t bring himself to kill,” you correct him. “And he left you to be the one to pass judgment on him later. Because the only person he ever hated was himself!”

“That can’t...” Sasuke gasps, falling to his knees as he struggles to breathe. “But if it is… then I...”
>1d6, best three of four
>high roll
>>
Rolled 2 (1d6)

>>4313921
>>
Rolled 5 (1d6)

>>4313921
>>
Rolled 6 (1d6)

>>4313921
>>
Rolled 1 (1d6)

>>4313921
ohoho, this is getting juicy
>>
>>4313924
>>4313931
>>4313936
Promising.

So, how do we pitch to sauce he should join our Akatsuki, an organization dedicated to making sure tragedies like the Uchiha Massacre and the Shinobi World Wars never happen again?

I feel like bringing up that we've already made moves to unseat Danzo, and that the current Konoha leadership is on our side would probably help, yeah? We gotta press home that it's not Konoha that's to blame, it's people like Danzo.
>>
>>4313921
Sasuke’s train of thought can only carry him to one logical destination, one grim realization. And when he reaches it he cries out in sudden grief and guilt, doubling over and screaming all of his emotions straight into the floor. The only time you’ve ever heard something like this was when you saw Ajisai’s body lying lifeless in front of you.

You wait for him to scream himself hoarse, and when he raises his head you can see that his eyes have changed patterns. Of course this is why you left him alone, to let him process what he felt. And now you can interfere, nudge him away from the path that you now know is called the ‘Curse of Hate’.

“Sasuke,” you begin calmly. “What are you feeling right now?”

“… anger,” he admits. “A lot of anger… and I don’t know what to do with it.”

“Listen to me,” you insist sternly. “Take a step away from it. Don’t judge yourself for it, don’t direct it at all: understand it.”

“What are you angry at?”

Everything!” he snaps. “I’m mad at Itachi for keeping this from me, I’m mad at my father for not stopping my clan, I’m angry at my clan for being such fools, I’m mad at the Third for failing to stop it peacefully, I’m mad at the village elders for ordering Itachi to do it… I’m mad at myself for spending years hating my brother for something I couldn’t possibly understand!”

“I’m even mad at you for telling me about it! How can I possibly go back to the village after learning the truth!?”

“Most of your village don’t know this either,” you clarify. “In fact only a very few know the truth… the elder council and Shimura Danzō kept it from Tsunade-han too. I only told her a few days ago, against Itachi’s wishes.”

“Why!?”

“Because she needed to know,” you assert. “Danzō was rapidly becoming a problem for the village again… and Itachi’s actions were all for his village. Same as now, to honor his intentions I had to do what I thought to be right, not what I thought he might want.”

“Then what do I do now?” Sasuke demands. “If the Fifth is dealing with it already what am I supposed to do? Everyone directly responsible now is either dead or in power in the same village my brother gave his life and soul to protect.”

“And the villagers don’t even know about it… they don’t even know that their happiness is built on the deaths of my clan!”
>1/2
>>
>>4314395
“And the village finding out now might undo everything Itachi strove for,” you counter. “Tsunade-han is in the same compromised position herself.”

>I can’t tell you what to do now. All I can do is warn you about Tobi and the rest of Akatsuki.
>I’d suggest staying here in Konohagakure until you can sort out how you feel towards what Itachi gave everything to protect. I’ll be in touch.
>You can stay with me until you’re ready to move on. I won’t force you to stay, or kick you out.
>Other?
>>
>>4314397
>I’d suggest staying here in Konohagakure until you can sort out how you feel towards what Itachi gave everything to protect. I’ll be in touch.
>>
>>4314397
>>You can stay with me until you’re ready to move on. I won’t force you to stay, or kick you out.
>>
>>4314397
>You can stay with me until you’re ready to move on. I won’t force you to stay, or kick you out.

Let's take care of the poor idiot for a while, so he can get his shit together.
He's got nowhere else to go.
>>
>>4314397
>>You can stay with me until you’re ready to move on. I won’t force you to stay, or kick you out.
>>
>>4314397
>>You can stay with me until you’re ready to move on. I won’t force you to stay, or kick you out.

One way or another, Sasuke needs to decide his own path in life without undue manipulation steering him. The least we can do is give him a quiet space to think in.
>>
>>4314397
>>You can stay with me until you’re ready to move on. I won’t force you to stay, or kick you out.
>>
>>4314397
>>You can stay with me until you’re ready to move on. I won’t force you to stay, or kick you out.
but also warn him about the Akatsuki and Tobi. Should we let him tag along on our diplomacy things?
>>
>>4314397
>You can stay with me until you’re ready to move on. I won’t force you to stay, or kick you out.
I definitely wouldn't keep the obvious threat that Tobi represents a secret, but until he makes a decision on what he wants to do then he needs somewhere to stay.
>>
>>4314397
>you can stay with me, until you make up your mind
But
>I have to warn you of tobi and akatsuki
>>
>>4314397
“You can stay with me for a while,” you suggest. “I won’t force you to, and I won’t force you to leave either. Just treat it as a place to collect your thoughts for a while, at least until your wounds fully heal.”

After considering your proposal for a few moments, Sasuke eventually nods in agreement. “Fine. Just don’t make a big deal out of it.”

“Nope,” you agree. “It’s your life, your decision to make. All I’m here to do is make sure you get to make it for yourself.”

Sasuke’s eyes narrow slightly. “Why the concern?”

“There are those in Akatsuki who would try to take advantage of your… position,” you explain. “Especially Tobi, who I had to fight to get you and Itachi back to my hideout.”

“Tobi...” Sasuke repeats. “He was partnered with Deidara.”

“So that’s who it was...” you muse. “I was there shortly after your fight. But I thought the one that got away must’ve been Zetsu. Now that you mention it though it does explain what happened when we fought.”

“Like a ghost?” Sasuke asks.

You nod curtly. “Except no ghost should be able to slip through a Kongō Fūsa barrier. That technique could only have been one of three things: an advanced application of genjutsu, space-time manipulation on a similar level as the hiraishin, or manipulation of light.”

“Light?” Sasuke repeats.

“Light can pass through the barrier I used,” you explain. “It can also be bent using ninjutsu.”

“So there’s too many things it could be to say for sure what it is,” Sasuke summarizes.

“It’s a common problem with Akatsuki,” you admit. “Seriously, half of ‘em even I don’t know how their abilities work. Or worked, in some cases.”

“Nice work beating Deidara by the way. Did you figure out how to counter his bombs using lightning release?”

Sasuke nods curtly. “Only I didn’t kill him in the end. He blew himself up.”

“I suspected,” you admit. “Still. Nice work.”

“… thanks,” Sasuke grumbles. “I haven’t been looking forward to this, but there’s something else I should do while I’m here.”

You sigh. “I think I know where this is going.”
>1/2
>>
>>4315393
Thankfully it’s still pretty early, and Sasuke has a wide, deep-brimmed travelling hat like the one you wore in Akatsuki to hide his face from the few people who are out this morning. And just as thankfully it seems none of the shinobi around your ages are out either. They’re probably eating breakfast. That means the way to the Hokage office is clear of obstacles, you can walk right in through the front door like regular people.

Tsunade doesn’t look like she’s slept much, and probably hasn’t had her first coffee yet. Despite that, several shinobi from Kumogakure are in her office already: one fair skinned kunoichi with a blonde bob, one darker-skinned kunoichi with messy red hair behind a bandanna-style headband, and the third is a dark-skinned young man with a short crop of white hair.

“Sorry,” you apologize as Sasuke hangs back, keeping his face hidden in front of the foreign shinobi. “Am I interrupting?”

“Why you…” the dark-skinned kunoichi growls, before spotting the red cloud on your obi. “Akatsuki!”

She moves to draw the sword from her back… only to find your right palm pressed against her elbow. Her upper arm immobilized in place, she can’t move her lower arm enough to finish the draw.

“Stop it,” you insist curtly. “You’re being rude to our host.”

“She’s right, Karui,” the blonde, who you realize now has one hell of a figure, agrees with you. “Knock it off.”

“If you tried to fight Akatsuki here half the village could be wiped out,” the young swordsman insists. “The Boss would probably have us knocked back to genin for an embarrassment like that, if we survived that is.”

“Um...” you begin, “hang on...”

“You’d really threaten to take it out on Konoha like that!?” Karui demands angrily. “That’s cold, even from you, Akatsuki.”

“I didn’t...”

“Karui,” the jōnin insists. “I told you to knock it off.”

“You can’t be serious!” Karui counters. “She’s the one who...”

“I could come back...” you offer, tilting your head to speak past the Kumo-nin and straight to Tsunade at her desk. She looks even more exhausted now than when you first let yourselves in.

“As if I’d let you...” Karui strains against your grip.

You push up on her elbow, forcing her to sheath her own sword against her will.

Shut. Up.” you growl. “If you really want to fight me we can do that outside, when I’m finished here. Until then, just keep your idiot mouth shut for like five minutes while the grown-ups talk.”
>2/3
>>
>>4315401
For a few seconds after you release her elbow you’re not sure if Karui is going to draw or not, but eventually she lowers her arm.

“Sorry about that,” you bow politely to the jōnin and to Tsunade. “But seriously, even my patience has limits.”

“They were just leaving,” Tsunade replies. “Samui-san, wasn’t it? Tell the Raikage exactly what I said to you. Verbatim. Understand?”

“He’s not going to like that,” ‘Samui’ admits. “But I will. Thanks for agreeing to meet with us.”

“Of course,” she inclines her head politely.

“Now, what’ve you brought here, Naori-kun?”

Samui pauses. “Raishō Naori-kun?”

“The same,” you reply.

The blonde sighs, grabbing Karui by her collar as she passes on her way to the door. “Karui, you really went and did it this time.”

“Meet you downstairs in a few minutes, dummy,” you taunt the chūnin. “You and the shy guy can both have a go if you like. I can spare the extra thirty seconds.”

“You...” Karui protests even as her senior drags her off.

Once the Kumo-nin are out of the way, Sasuke removes his hat. “Finally. I thought they’d never shut up.”

Tsunade’s eyes widen as she realizes who’s standing behind you. “Uchiha… Sasuke?”

“Ma’am,” he replies curtly, but with a polite bow. “I’ve… done what I left the village to do.”

“Just like that?” she demands.

“Yes,” Sasuke replies. “I don’t expect things to be simple, but both Orochimaru and Uchiha Itachi are dead. Whether Konohagakure will become my home again… I can’t say. It all depends.”

“On what?” Tsunade demands.

“On how you as the Hokage deal with the three surviving elders responsible for the extinction of my clan,” Sasuke explains. “Harboring them insults my family’s memories, and while it doesn’t mean we’re enemies it doesn’t exactly make this place seem like the welcoming home I once knew.”

“It also depends on what the Daimyō knew of the Uchiha massacre, if anything.”

“That I can tell you,” Tsunade admits. “The Daimyō wasn’t informed.”

“Good,” Sasuke admits. “That would’ve been a problem.”
>3/4
>>
>>4315406
“But it also depends on how I feel about it once it’s not fresh in my mind,” Sasuke continues. “I just found out the truth, and I have a lot to think about from looking at my own clan’s records. There’s a lot about the Uchiha clan that I didn’t know before, or only thought I knew but never understood. It’s going to take some time to come to terms.”

“Where will you go?” Tsunade asks politely. “With Naori-kun? You could have a worse plan than that.”

Sasuke nods. “She made that offer, and I accepted.”

“Good,” Tsunade sighs wearily, turning in her seat to look out the window. “Like I said, it could be worse. Will you want to speak with your team while you’re here?”

“If I wanted to I’d have gone to them first,” Sasuke insists. “Naori-san went to some lengths to ensure I could decide things for myself, without interference… and she was right. I need time to myself right now.”

“But when you tell them I was here, would you mind also telling them something for me?”

“Of course not,” Tsunade replies.

“An apology would just be hollow,” he admits. “Instead I want you to tell them what happens when an Uchiha awakens the sharingan.”



When Sasuke has finished his explanation, Tsunade’s expression is unusually grave. “To think such a thing was so widespread… but not all Uchiha seem to have fallen victim to it. Uncle Tobirama used to speak fondly of Kagami, a student of his, and there were others too. Like one-eyed Naori, who was around when the village was founded, and ‘Shunshin’ Shisui.”

“Itachi never fell victim either,” you add. “Nor did Izumi.”

“Izumi?” Sasuke repeats.

“So I’m told,” you lie, omitting the fact that you learned as much from Izumi herself long after her death.

“So it’s not a certainty,” Tsunade summarizes. “Or else it’s something that can be broken with the proper mindset?”

“It seems so,” Sasuke agrees. “And I intend to try. Like I said though, I’ll need time.”

“You’ll have it,” Tsunade agrees. “You have my word.”

After a moment, Sasuke bows politely. “Thank you.”

>Unless you expect Sasuke to wear womens’ underwear from now on, we need to buy some clothes in privacy. Can you help ensure we have that?
>We’ll be leaving after I throw those Kumo idiots around for a while. Thanks for your understanding.
>It’d be pretty mean to leave Karui waiting for me out there. But I’m feeling pretty mean right now.
>Other?
>>
>>4315417
>>Unless you expect Sasuke to wear womens’ underwear from now on, we need to buy some clothes in privacy. Can you help ensure we have that?
>>We’ll be leaving after I throw those Kumo idiots around for a while. Thanks for your understanding.
>>
>>4315417
>>Unless you expect Sasuke to wear womens’ underwear from now on, we need to buy some clothes in privacy. Can you help ensure we have that?
>>We’ll be leaving after I throw those Kumo idiots around for a while. Thanks for your understanding.
>>
>>4315417
>>Unless you expect Sasuke to wear womens’ underwear from now on, we need to buy some clothes in privacy. Can you help ensure we have that?
>>We’ll be leaving after I throw those Kumo idiots around for a while. Thanks for your understanding.
i also wouldn't mind keeping them waiting indefinetly
or shaking for that matter
>>
>>4315417
Think Tsunade can get Shizune or someone trustworthy to accompany Sasuke shopping as we beat up the Kumo-nin?

>Unless you expect Sasuke to wear womens’ underwear from now on, we need to buy some clothes in privacy. Can you help ensure we have that?
>We’ll be leaving after I throw those Kumo idiots around for a while. Thanks for your understanding.
>>
>>4315417
>Unless you expect Sasuke to wear womens’ underwear from now on, we need to buy some clothes in privacy. Can you help ensure we have that?
>We’ll be leaving after I throw those Kumo idiots around for a while. Thanks for your understanding.
>>
>>4315417
>Unless you expect Sasuke to wear womens’ underwear from now on, we need to buy some clothes in privacy. Can you help ensure we have that?
>We’ll be leaving after I throw those Kumo idiots around for a while. Thanks for your understanding.
>>
>>4315417
>1d6 high roll for trolling the Kumo-nin
>best three of five cause they're way out of their depth
>>
Rolled 1 (1d6)

>>4315467
>>
Rolled 1 (1d6)

>>4315467
>>
Rolled 2 (1d6)

>>4315467
Yikes
>>
Rolled 5 (1d6)

>>4315467
>>
Rolled 2 (1d6)

>>4315467
>>
>>4315467
“Unless you particularly like the idea of Sasuke walking around in womens’ underwear for the foreseeable future,” you muse, “we kind of need to go shopping. Could you ensure that we can do that without anyone knowing?”

“Please,” Sasuke insists quietly. “She has a point.”

“I can,” Tsunade agrees. “It’s the least I could do. But it’ll take some time to arrange.”

“That’s fine,” you shrug, creating a shadow clone. “I’ll use the time to teach those Kumo chūnin some humility.”

“You were serious about that?” Tsunade wonders aloud. “I’d have thought that would be a waste of time.”

“I won’t turn down some morning exercise,” you admit with a shrug. “If you’ll excuse me.”

“Sure.”



Downstairs you walk out into the little grassy park outside the building, which you’re vaguely aware is where academy students will often play during their breaks. Now the first few students to arrive in the morning are giving the Kumo team quite a bit of room.

“Took you long enough,” Karui smirks. “I was starting to think you wouldn’t show up.”

“It was ten minutes tops,” you sigh. “So that sounds like wishful thinking to me.”

“As if!” she replies, this time drawing her sword from a distance first. And this time, you let her. Instead you quietly open the first gate, the Gate of Opening. But instead of immediately making use of that power, you hold back for now.

“I’m looking forward to teaching you some respect!”

“And I’m looking forward to teaching you humility,” you counter. “It’ll be a good lesson for the kids.”

She raises her sword, obviously psyching herself up. “Omoi, back me up!”

“I really don’t think this is a good idea,” Omoi replies thoughtfully. “If you’re not right about this...”

“Oh, enough of your crap!” Karui barks. “I’m going, either back me up or don’t!”

As she charges, you start to draw on your strength, preparing to surpass your usual self-imposed limits. You duck under the swing at the last second, sliding one foot a few inches to widen your stance and maintain your balance, then the instant the sword is past you your body is back in the same posture it was in before you dodged.

Karui pauses, having stepped past you, and Omoi stares at you in surprise.

“Well that’s not right,” he muses.
>1/2
>>
>>4315483
Samui, their jōnin team leader, is staring at you in wordless horror as you do the same thing to attack after attack… of the three of them she’s the only one who seems to realize what just happened. Had you been a bit better at utilizing the advantage of your first released gate she might not have even caught it, which goes to show how much room for improvement you still have. But in terms of potentially using the Eight Gates together with Sage Mode, this still seems promising. The shorter you can get the interval in which you exceed your physical limitations down to, the better the two enhanced states will mesh.

Even Omoi joins in, attacking more tactically with shadow clones summoned mid-attack. You reply to these by throwing senbon at unimaginable speeds while dodging, before returning each time to your original position. These senbon, to a keen observer, would seemingly appear stuck almost their entire length into trees or walls nearby, and again Samui seems to be the only such observer nearby.

“Huh,” you hear one of the academy brats watching in the little crowd by the door muse. “Maybe they’re not as scary as we thought.”

“You’re wrong,” a brown-haired girl next to her insists quietly. “She’s like… so cool.”

Wait… does she actually know what’s happening right now?

“Damn it!” Karui curses as her blade slides through your afterimage again. “Where are you!? Quit using genjutsu you coward, get out here and face me!”

“Karui, enough!” Samui barks. “That’s not genjutsu, you fool! Look at her feet!”

Karui glances down at your feet, and her eyes widen in realization as she notices the trampled grass from where you’ve been shifting your stance.

“She’s been dodging each of your attacks and moving back before you noticed that you were looking at her afterimage!” Samui explains. “She tracked Omoi’s clones too and dispersed them with senbon.”

“What a load!” Karui shouts. “Nobody’s that fast!”

“I said enough!” Samui insists, louder this time. “I don’t know if she’s as fast as Lord A, but even if she’s not she’s close enough that neither of you can even touch her.”

Karui stares at you, lowering her sword. “I don’t believe it.”

>Listen, we may not be FRIENDS but I’d appreciate if you wouldn’t start trouble for no reason.
>Insist to Samui that you have nothing against them, so they have nothing to be concerned about.
>Forget these losers. You’re more interested in that Academy brat watching your fight.
>Other?
>>
>>4315497
>Insist to Samui that you have nothing against them, so they have nothing to be concerned about.
>Forget these losers. You’re more interested in that Academy brat watching your fight.
>>
>>4315497
>I'm not even using sage mode, you know. This isn't even close to my top speed.
>Insist to Samui that you have nothing against them, so they have nothing to be concerned about.
>Forget these losers. You’re more interested in that Academy brat watching your fight.
>>
>>4315497
>>Forget these losers. You’re more interested in that Academy brat watching your fight.
>>
>>4315503
>>4315497
Supporting this
>>
>>4315497
>>4315503
this
>>
>>4315503
>This isn't even my final form!
>>
>>4315497
>Insist to Samui that you have nothing against them, so they have nothing to be concerned about.
>Forget these losers. You’re more interested in that Academy brat watching your fight.
>>
>>4315503
this
>>
>>4315554
>>4315567
Please link to queens post to easier identify votes, thank you
>>
>>4315497
>Other?: Prove your speed by snatching her forehead protector, then return it to her.
>Insist to Samui that you have nothing against them, so they have nothing to be concerned about.
>Forget these losers. You’re more interested in that Academy brat watching your fight.
>>
>>4315607
That forehead protector thing is extremely rude, let's not.
>>
>>4315497
>I’m sandbagging pretty badly right now. Amongst the Akatsuki before I left I was 3rd to fourth amongst them, and anyone in the group could destroy a village with ease bordering on contempt. Please keep trying if you think I’m lying, but I’ll stop holding back.
>>
>>4315497
>Insist to Samui that you have nothing against them, so they have nothing to be concerned about.
>Forget these losers. You’re more interested in that Academy brat watching your fight.
>>
>>4315417
>Like one-eyed Naori, who was around when the village was founded
I just caught up from last night, but Queen's done Time Shit before...
>>
>>4315646
there is a Naori Uchiha in canon, our Naori is named after her
Queen is good enough a writer to not do the same trick twice in as many quests
>>
>>4315649
Fair enough. I really don't know canon that well beyond the major strokes.
>>
>>4315650
i don't either, i just heard her mentioned and googled to confirm it
>>
>>4315646
>>4315649
Actually, I DID steal the name, though IC they're totally unrelated. Also, 'one-eyed' is referring to the fact that Uchiha Naori used one of her clan's kinjutsu that leaves you blind in one eye.
>>
>>4315497
>>Forget these losers. You’re more interested in that Academy brat watching your fight.
>>
>>4315497
>>4315503
supporting.
kohai, get?
>>
>>4315497
>>4315629
>>
>>4315497
“Samui-han,” you address the jōnin calmly. “I know it might not look that way but I’m not taking this seriously. So no one’s at any risk here, you can calm down.”

Then you turn your attention to the academy students, one of whom stands out to you. She’s the one who commented on how ‘cool’ you are, a young girl with sharp eyes in a cool blue-grey, and with mousy brown hair. She watches you approach like a wild animal might watch another wild animal drawing closer. In the mean time her friends and classmates seem to retreat a pace or two each, leaving her alone in the front.

“Hi,” you greet her. “”What’s your name?”

She stares at you for a moment before answering. “Hinoko.”

“How much did you see, Hinoko?” you ask.

She hesitates at first. “Like… I noticed one of your senbon. That’s it.”

“More than those chūnin noticed,” you muse. “How old are you, twelve?”

“Eleven,” she replies. “And like, I don’t see how that matters.”

“Easy there,” you insist, holding up your hands. “I’m just curious, that’s all. It’s not every day I meet an academy student who impresses me.”

She raises an eyebrow at you. “I… impressed you?”

“Seriously,” you insist with a smile. “I mean it… you notice the only other person who figured out what I was doing was a jōnin?”

“I guess?” Hinoko admits.

“Well there you go,” you tell her. “So listen, here’s the thing: it’s not easy sometimes having talent at your age. People are gonna want to use your talents for themselves, so you’ve gotta be careful.”

“People?” Hinoko asks. “Like, ‘people’ who?”

“Like ANBU,” you suggest. “Or like how Akatsuki recruited me.”

“Like, thanks for the warning and all,” Hinoko quips, “but I can handle it myself.”

>Yeah, it’s not my decision to make. But when the time comes just remember that I warned you.
>Look at it this way… what can you do, ninjutsu-wise? Compare that to the kids behind you.
>Fine. Play it however you like, I have other things I need to do today.
>Other?
>>
>>4316809
>I'm sure you can, but the burden of that strength will still wear on you. And no matter how strong you are, you can't take on the world alone. Just remember, it's good to have friends.
>If it ever comes to be too much and you need some... sage advice, just tell tsunade-han you'd like to see me. I'll come visit you.
>>
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>>4316809
Pic related. Forgot I went and found one for her.
>>
>>4316809
>>4316817
supporting. captures well what I was feeling we ought to do.

and the pun won me over
>>
>>4316809
>>Look at it this way… what can you do, ninjutsu-wise? Compare that to the kids behind you.
>>
>>4316817
>>4316819
I'll back this. How many sages are even left right now?
>>
>>4316835
Well there's kabuto, orochimaru and naori. Soon to be naruto.
>>
>>4316841
Oh right Orochimaru is never actually dead. Had no idea Kabuto became a sage since I never watched Shippuden.
>>
>>4316817
>>4316809
supporting this
>>
>>4316841
I don't think Orochimaru was ever actually a sage himself.

But he did identify, isolate and reproduce the enzyme responsible for allowing Jugo's bloodline to absorb nature energy involuntarily. That was the basis for his cursed seal technique.
>>
>>4316841
Isn't orochimaru almost completely inept at senjutsu?

That's why he made Mitsuki, right?
>>
>>4316809
>Hmm, confidence is good and so is self-reliance. But humility can save your life. Never assume you can't make mistakes. *gesture at eye scar* Trust me: learning humility the hard way sucks--if you live.

>In fact, I was just giving a free lesson in humility to these Kumonin. What do you say, do ya think it took hold?
>>
>>4316896
>>4316817
>>4316809

Supporting these.
>>
>>4316809
>Look at it this way… what can you do, ninjutsu-wise? Compare that to the kids behind you.
>>
>>4316809
“I’m sure you can,” you shrug. “Thing about doing everything alone is you don’t have to. There’s nothing wrong with taking free advice given in good faith, and there’s nothing wrong with asking if you’re not sure.”

“Because while confidence is a good thing, it needs to be tempered with humility. And learning humility the hard way can be painful,” you declare, tapping the scar under your left eye. “Really, I did those two idiots a kindness.”

“You lost an eye,” Hinoko realizes. “Like… how?”

“One of the Seven Swords of the Mist cut it out,” you explain briefly. “When I was a genin. I was lucky not to lose my head.”

“The world throws you in the deep end sometimes.”

“I’ll… keep that in mind,” Hinoko eventually agrees.

“And if you ever need some sage advice, you can always ask Tsunade to ask me,” you shrug.

“That might take some… like… explaining though?”

You can’t help but laugh. “Nah, I’m way past having to explain...”

It’s at this inopportune moment that you notice something… the kunai you sent to Kirigakure.

“Sorry,” you apologize. “I have to take this.”

You create a shadow clone, leaving it to finish your conversation with Hinoko… which is basically already finished anyway. After that she’ll see to Sasuke’s wardrobe.

“Did something happen?”

You nod. “Yeah, call it a political house call.”



“Hello again,” you greet the Fifth Mizukage politely. “Can I ask where we are?”

The room you’re in is too open to be an office, and there’s no desk for someone like a Kage to work at. There are windows, all of which have had the blinds drawn, and the floors are made from sealed and stained hardwood.

“You’re in my home,” Terumi Mei explains, taking a seat on a couch and making herself comfortable. “I didn’t think the village elders would look too kindly on us meeting, so I’m doing it away from their meddlesome oversight. What they don't know, they can't lecture me over.”

“I’m sorry that’s necessary,” you offer, removing your sandals and setting them aside. “Apologies, I wasn’t anticipating this.”

“It isn’t a problem,” she assures you.
>1/2
>>
>>4317303
“I hope I did not interrupt anything,” Terumi Mei offers politely, before gesturing to a sake set on the low table in front of her couch and your chair. “Please help yourself.”

“Thank you,” you reply, pouring two cups. “I was offering a prodigious young kunoichi at Konoha’s academy some advice. So I left a shadow clone to wrap things up there.”

“I’m flattered to get the real you’s attention.”

“Naturally,” you incline your head politely. “It’d be rude to send the clone.”

“Indeed,” she muses. “I got your message from Chōjūrō, so I wanted to share my thoughts with you if you’re willing.”

“And I’m here to listen,” you agree, sipping at the slightly watered-down alcoholic beverage that was in the jug.

“I’ll admit up-front, I have no desire to meet with the other Kages,” she begins. “I doubt that under the current circumstances it would be especially productive to meet the Tsuchikage or the Raikage, though I must admit I have privately entertained the notion of pursuing closer ties with Sunagakure.”

“Not Konohagakure?” you ask.

She shakes her head. “I have no doubt that Tsunade-hime would be reasonable. But unfortunately she’s not all there is to that equation… our villages have a lot of old grievances that would not be easy to resolve.”

“There’s a lot of that going around,” you sigh.

“I know it must be frustrating to you,” Terumi-han acknowledges. “But that is the framework within which I need to make my decisions. But I am open to the idea of limited cooperation, especially if some neutral arbiter can be relied upon.”

“I get the feeling that you might be that arbiter.”

>I’m flattered, but I’d be no good with the Raikage. They’re REALLY pissed about Yugito-han.
>Before anything else, I was wrong when I said Akatsuki didn’t put the genjutsu on Yagura.
>What about your elder council? I know Tsunade’s been having some difficulties with hers.
>Other?
>>
>>4317330
>>Before anything else, I was wrong when I said Akatsuki didn’t put the genjutsu on Yagura.
>>
>>4317330
>>Before anything else, I was wrong when I said Akatsuki didn’t put the genjutsu on Yagura.
i mean, got a point in covering this first, but try to say this in a way that won't make her want to immediately kill us?
>>
>>4317330
>Before anything else, I was wrong when I said Akatsuki didn’t put the genjutsu on Yagura.
>>
>>4317330
>>Before anything else, I was wrong when I said Akatsuki didn’t put the genjutsu on Yagura.

Might as well read her in. Keeping secrets won’t help long-term.
>>
>>4317330
>Before anything else, I was wrong when I said Akatsuki didn’t put the genjutsu on Yagura.
>>
>>4317330
>>Before anything else, I was wrong when I said Akatsuki didn’t put the genjutsu on Yagura.
>>
>>4317330
>>Before anything else, I was wrong when I said Akatsuki didn’t put the genjutsu on Yagura.
>>I’m flattered, but I’d be no good with the Raikage. They’re REALLY pissed about Yugito-han.
>>
>>4317330
She's a babe but every time I see her picture I have an urge to cut her bangs
>Use a hairclip so you can see her pretty eyes
>>
>>4317330
“I have to admit something to you, before we go any further,” you tell the Mizukage. “I’ve gotten new information since the last time we met face to face, and it was sensitive enough that I didn’t bring it up with Chōjūrō.”

“Okay,” Terumi-han replies, a little of the veneer coming off as you continue to preface yourself. “You seem concerned.”

“I learned who it was that put the genjutsu on your predecessor,” you explain. “And I’ll ask your patience as I explain its context once I’ve told you.”

“I can only promise,” she replies, “not guarantee.”

“It was a member of Akatsuki I knew nothing about at the time we spoke,” you admit. “He goes by the name Tobi and my suspicion is that he’s the unknown Uchiha I was suggesting might be responsible.”

“You don’t say,” Terumi-han frowns. “How is it you didn’t know anything about a member of your own organization?”

“He was the one who helped reorganize Akatsuki after the last major war,” you explain. “My former sensei Konan is Pain’s partner. She told me the truth about how Tobi’s been manipulating them before I left.”

“Before that I had never been told of him. I was recruited by Konan and Pain.”

“Tobi,” Temari-han muses. “Tobi. An interesting name.”

“And I doubt it’s his,” you admit. “Before Uchiha Itachi passed he admitted to me that Tobi had claimed to him to be Madara, but that he had his own doubts about whether that was true. And now I understand why.”

“Do you?” Terumi-han nods along. “I trust I don’t need to twist your arm for you to share.”

“Not at all,” you agree. “According to the Uchiha’s own mythical records it seems the Mangekyō sharingan has been more common, historically speaking, than outsiders have been lead to believe.”

“Is that so? Then the fact that this supposed ‘Madara’ had powerful eyes doesn’t mean he truly must be Madara?”

“Exactly,” you agree. “I’ve also known that I was right to suspect that this Tobi was planning to use the tailed beasts for his own ends.”

“And what gives you that confidence?”

“I learned how to hypnotize a tailed beast,” you explain. “It’s an ability granted by the Mangekyō, which I have in one eye.”

“And if Tobi’s claim to being Madara was based on his Mangekyō sharingan, as you seem to suspect...”

“… then it stands to reason he can also control a tailed beast, exactly.”
>1/2
>>
>>4318824
“When did you learn this?” Terumi-han demands. “And why haven’t you made it public knowledge? If the other Kages are basing their decisions, as I have been, on an assumption that Akatsuki cannot make practical use of the tailed beasts it’s stolen, they need to be made aware.”

“I found out this morning,” you admit, “and consider who it is we’re talking to. The Tsuchikage and Raikage probably won’t listen to me anyway and I have no easy way to contact them, and the Kazekage and Hokage are already taking this as a serious threat.”

“The only wild card was you.”

“Consider me serious then,” Terumi-han replies, taking her turn to refill your drinks. “Here. I have something to ask of you.”

“And that is?”

“Contact Sunagakure, quietly,” she asks you. “I want to be able to at least cooperate to some degree in answering Akatsuki. And maybe seeing three villages cooperating will bring the Tsuchikage and Raikage to the table.”

“Maybe,” you agree after taking a sip. “I’ve been trying, and it’s not proven easy. Their respective representatives shared my assessment.”

“Then Sunagakure will be my focus,” she decides. “Thank you for your assistance… I promise to avoid using you as a messenger like this again in the future, but I hope you understand why I’m having to rely on you like this.”

“Sure,” you admit. “Being able to teleport makes that trivial.”

>Head straight to Gaara first.
>Check in with Sasuke.
>Inform Tsunade of what you learned.
>Other?
>>
>>4318894
>>Head straight to Gaara first.
>>
>>4318894
>>Check in with Sasuke.
>>Inform Tsunade of what you learned.
>>
>>4318894
>Head straight to Gaara first.
>Inform Tsunade of what you learned.
>Check in with Sasuke.

The infinite potential of teleporting clones!
>>
>>4318894
>Head straight to Gaara first.
>>
>>4318894
>>Head straight to Gaara first.
>>
>>4318894
>>Head straight to Gaara first.
>>
>>4318894
>>Head straight to Gaara first.

Better to get Gaara’s input before we give Tsunade the overall assessment of things.
>>
>>4318904
>>4318894
I like this one
>>
>>4318894
>Head straight to Gaara first.
>>
>>4318894
First thing first, you have a message to take to Gaara, so that should be your priority. Once that has been handled you can return to Tsunade and inform them of both pieces of information at the same time: the contents of the Uchiha tablet, which you hesitated to mention in front of Sasuke, and of the Mizukage’s growing willingness to ‘play nice’ with the other Kages at least on some issues.

“I’ll see to that first,” you tell Terumi-han. “Anything else we need to discuss first?”

She shakes her head. “At the moment no. I’ll expect a return message from the Kazekage by the regular means. And suggest that he use a code… a white message will mean he agrees to pursue some form of collaboration, black will mean he disagrees.”

“You think that’s necessary to keep your elder council out of it?” you ask.

“Our elders, and especially our Daimyō and noble houses,” she replies wearily, “are aggressively isolationist. So it might be best to work out at least a tentative agreement before they find out and take the opportunity to meddle.”

“I understand,” you nod politely, setting aside your tea and slipping your tabi back on. “I’ll be going now.”

“Thank you,” Terumi-han rises to see you off. “It was a pleasure to learn that you were precisely the sort of person I took you for.”

“Good luck on your end,” you reply one last time, performing the hand seals and reappearing on Gaara’s balcony. Surprisingly the doors have been left open to the warm desert breeze.

“Come in,” Gaara insists, having sensed your arrival. “I was just taking a break anyway.”

“Thank you,” you reply politely, taking a seat opposite him at his desk. “Temari and Kankuro are both busy?”

“Yes,” he replies. “They’re on a diplomatic mission at the moment to Konoha. They’re due to arrive there later this afternoon.”

“I may run into them then,” you chuckle. “Anyway, I’m bringing some unexpected business from Kirigakure.”



“That is unexpected,” Gaara eventually agrees with your assessment. “But not necessarily unwelcome. It’s simultaneously heartening and frustrating to hear that her reticence was not to her own judgment but to an entrenched sentiment among the other leaders in her village and nation.”

“Yeah no, it doesn’t seem uncommon,” you admit. “Even Tsunade is having to deal with a certain somebody on her own elder council… a relic from the past whose ruthlessness and amorality have outlived their use.”

“Forgive me if I can’t say anything more. It’s an internal affair that I just happened to have information about, which I shared with her.”
>1/2
>>
>>4320158
“I do believe that we should respond to this in the positive,” Gaara admits, “though I will at least broach the subject to the jōnin council. Elder Chiyo will probably also endorse the effort, since it presumably comes with your support?”

“In my opinion?” you shrug. “I think she’s being honest.”

“Then I will send my response,” Gaara nods in conclusion. “Thank you for bringing this to me, and for your continuing work along parallel lines to my own attempts.”

“Have you made any inroads with the Tsuchikage and the Raikage?” you ask.

Gaara folds his hands in front of himself and rests his chin there, looking about as pensive as usual for him. “Not particularly, no. However I also didn’t expect this from the Mizukage, so it seems that the situation could still change dramatically at any time, for a variety of potential reasons I don’t yet know about.”

“It seems that way,” you agree. “One other thing… another member of Akatsuki may have a Mangekyō sharingan, aside from Itachi who was killed yesterday.”

“Is that so?” Gaara muses. “Based on what?”

“On the fact that Itachi believed it possible, even if unlikely, that the man was Uchiha Madara,” you explain, “who he claimed to be.”

“That’s difficult news to swallow,” Gaara admits.

“But wait, there’s more,” you insist. “I also learned that the Mangekyō sharingan is capable of hypnotizing and controlling a tailed beast. That would explain why this ‘Madara’ wanna-be has been pulling Akatsuki’s strings from the shadows, he wants to use the tailed beasts for his own purposes and Akatsuki gives him a good tool to steal them.”

“It never rains but it pours,” Gaara replies sternly. “Has the Hokage been informed?”

You shake your head. “Yeah no, I didn’t wanna bring it up in front of Sasuke.”

“Sasuke?” Gaara repeats. “What exactly has been going on with you lately?”

“Complicated,” you sigh. “But Uchiha Sasuke’s going to be living with me for a while so he can figure things out.”

“I see...” Gaara muses, evidently grappling with all this new information. “Well then, good luck with that.”

“Speaking of which, I need to go sort that mess out,” you bow politely. “Let me know how it goes with Terumi-han?”

“I can do that,” Gaara nods in response.
>2/3
>>
>>4320184
“You!” Naruto growls when you reappear in Tsunade-han’s office, grabbing you by the collar of your yukata top. “What the hell is going on!?”

“Explain yourself!” Sakura joins in angrily.

“What is there to explain?” you ask, totally disinterested in Naruto at the moment as you turn your head to talk to Tsunade over your shoulder. “I have some recent developments to report? Kakashi can stay I think, but this is a little bit above the genin or chūnin paygrade.”

“That so?” Tsunade muses. “Sakura, leave us. And take Naruto with you.”

“Tsunade-sama, I...”

“Sakura,” Tsunade’s tone takes on the sound of a warning. “Am I to believe, Naori-san, that this information relates to the national security of the Fire Nation?”

“Among others,” you agree.

“Then Sakura,” Tsunade continues, “do as I say.”

“Naruto,” Kakashi insists quietly. “Do as the Hokage orders. We’ll talk later.”

“But she...”

“Naruto,” Kakashi repeats.

After a moment, Naruto releases you with a huff of indignation. “This isn’t over.”

“Yes it is,” you reply, rolling your eyes.

Once the two are gone, Kakashi visibly deflates. “I kinda get how they feel, you know?”

“What do you have to say?” Tsunade asks you, ignoring Kakashi’s frankness.

“The Mizukage and Kazekage are quietly trying to agree on some kind of cooperation against Akatsuki,” you explain. “I also have new information about the member of Akatsuki who calls himself Tobi. I didn’t want to mention it in front of Sasuke earlier.”

“Go ahead,” Tsunade nods.

“He’s definitely an Uchiha, who Itachi-han believed possessed the Mangekyō,” you explain. “Which is the reason he couldn’t immediately dismiss Tobi’s claim to be Uchiha Madara.”

“Madara...” Tsunade repeats grimly.

“Worse still, the Mangekyō can be used to hypnotically control a tailed beast,” you continue. “Which means that Tobi is probably using Akatsuki to eventually do so on a mass scale.”

“And how do you know that?” Kakashi asks you.

>I learned it from the Uchiha clan’s meeting place, where there’s a coded stone tablet.
>Because I know the technique myself now. It just takes one Mangekyō.
>A lot of it is speculation, but it’s speculation that lines up.
>Other?
>>
>>4320195
>>Because I know the technique myself now. It just takes one Mangekyō.
>>
>>4320195
>The uchiha clan had a secret stone tablet which can only be read with a sharingan. I learned the technique from that.
>don't mention WHERE the tablet is

We should probably bring that tablet to the shrike forest, along with all the other dangerous artifacts we've found.
>>
>>4320195
>I learned it from the Uchiha clan’s meeting place, where there’s a coded stone tablet.
>Because I know the technique myself now. It just takes one Mangekyō.

Why yes, Tsunade, I also possess a nuclear launch code.

>>4320217
>We should probably bring that tablet to the shrike forest, along with all the other dangerous artifacts we've found.

Good call.
>>
>>4320195
>I learned it from the Uchiha clan’s meeting place, where there’s a coded stone tablet.
>Because I know the technique myself now. It just takes one Mangekyō.
>>
>>4320195
>I learned it from the Uchiha clan’s meeting place, where there’s a coded stone tablet.
>>
>>4320195
>>4320217
support
>>
>>4320195
>>4320217
This.
>>
>>4320195
“It’s a technique recorded on an artifact held by the Uchiha clan,” you explain. “Itachi sent Sasuke and me there to find it and read the tablet.”

“You know the technique, don’t you?” Kakashi asks carefully.

You shrug awkwardly. “I can neither confirm nor deny.”

“But you’ve never used it?” Tsunade asks.

You shake your head. “No occasion to try. I’ll consider it an ace in the hole… honestly I think most of them would rather have me calling the shots for them instead of Tobi, whoever Tobi actually is.”

“I won’t ask,” Tsunade sighs.

“I couldn’t read the whole tablet though,” you admit, “and neither could Sasuke. It’s coded in a way that requires a sharingan to read any of it, and that a Mangekyō lets you read more of it, but not all of it.”

“Does that imply there’s a level beyond Mangekyō?” Kakashi wonders aloud.

“It’s possible,” you admit. “Now that I know the Rinnegan exists. Both the Rinnegan and the Uchiha clan seem to be tied to the Sage of Six Paths somehow, it’s just the religious language makes it hard to know what that relationship is.”

“Do you think the Rinnegan is somehow the next stage of evolution beyond a Mangekyō?” Kakashi-han asks you. “It seems like a possible explanation.”

“I don’t know,” you admit. “As I said it reads like scripture rather than something useful.”

“This tablet,” Tsunade presses. “What other information was recorded on it?”

>Leave it at the parts related to the coup.
>Tell them everything you can remember.
>Offer to bring it to them.
>Other?
>>
>>4320333
>Tell them everything you can remember.
>>
>>4320333
>Tell them everything you can remember.
>>
>>4320333
>>Tell them everything you can remember.
>>
>>4320333
>>4320341
but ask them to keep it quiet, since it is part of the legend of an almost dead clan
>>
>>4320333
>>Tell them everything you can remember.
>>
>>4320333
“The portions visible with the base sharingan included information on obtaining the Mangekyō and the end of the tale of the Rabbit Goddess,” you explain, “as well as mentioning the Curse of Hatred.”

“What is that, exactly?” Tsunade asks curtly.

“It’s a phenomenon that relates to the process of awakening the sharingan,” you explain. “It seems to be some sort of complex interaction between biochemistry and chakra qualities that can change how an Uchiha who awakens the sharingan thinks.”

“The parts readable with the Mangekyō detail how the Curse of Hatred will likely lead to the destruction of the Uchiha clan as their members are increasingly controlled by their hatred,” you continue, “as well as explaining how to control a tailed beast and how to extend the lifespan of an activated Mangekyō by trading for the eyes of a close blood relative.”

“It also claims that the sharingan is descended from the Sage of Six Paths, and mentions something called an ‘Infinite Tsukuyomi’ as being one way to save the Uchiha clan from itself.”

“An ‘Infinite Tsukuyomi’?” Kakashi presses. “Is there any indication of what that means?”

You shake your head. “No.”

“Perhaps it’s part of the text that requires a different dōjutsu?” Tsunade suggests.

“Maybe,” you agree. “It seems reasonable,”

“Is there anything else?” Tsunade enquires.

>Possibly. There was a lot of cryptic language involved.
>Nothing I can say for certain, no.
>Sasuke’s perspective as an Uchiha may be useful.
>Other?
>>
>>4320696
>Possibly. There was a lot of cryptic language involved.
>Sasuke’s perspective as an Uchiha may be useful
>>
>>4320696
>Possibly. There was a lot of cryptic language involved.
>>
>>4320696
>>Possibly. There was a lot of cryptic language involved.
>>
>>4320696
>>Possibly. There was a lot of cryptic language involved.
>>
>>4320696
>>Possibly. There was a lot of cryptic language involved.
>>
>>4320696
“It’s seriously possible,” you admit, “for sure. There’s a lot of cryptic language involved that seems to require some kind of context, maybe like an oral history.”

“Do you think Sasuke-kun would know that missing context?” Tsunade-han asks.

You shake your head. “He admitted as much, he can barely make sense of it himself. If I hadn’t spent so long with the priests I wouldn’t be much better off.”

“Priests,” Kakashi-han muses. “We don’t have many of those, or monks either after what happened. But maybe that’s the answer?”

“A shinobi temple,” Tsunade agrees. “According to Asuma-san’s report elder monk Bansai is still alive, though he may no longer be at the fire temple. He had two students with him who also survived the attack.”

“There are also other temples,” Kakashi suggests. “Though some of them aren’t in what I would call friendly territory.”

>I’ll try to track down Bansai and speak with him. Maybe he knows something to contextualize the parts of the stone that make no sense to me.
>I’ll try at one of the other shinobi temples. Maybe Ryūzetsu-han can get me into one in the Land of Grass?
>First and foremost I’m going to talk to Sasuke about taking that stone and re-hiding it. The knowledge on it could be dangerous if Pain gets it.
>Other?
>>
>>4321614
>>I’ll try to track down Bansai and speak with him. Maybe he knows something to contextualize the parts of the stone that make no sense to me.
>>
>>4321614
>I’ll try to track down Bansai and speak with him. Maybe he knows something to contextualize the parts of the stone that make no sense to me.
>Also what happened with Naruto and Sakura, they saw Sasuke didn't they?
>>
>>4321614
>>I’ll try to track down Bansai and speak with him. Maybe he knows something to contextualize the parts of the stone that make no sense to me.
>First and foremost I’m going to talk to Sasuke about taking that stone and re-hiding it. The knowledge on it could be dangerous if Pain gets it.
>>
>>4321614
>>I’ll try to track down Bansai and speak with him. Maybe he knows something to contextualize the parts of the stone that make no sense to me.
>>
>>4321614
>>First and foremost I’m going to talk to Sasuke about taking that stone and re-hiding it. The knowledge on it could be dangerous if Pain gets it.
>>
>>4321614
>First and foremost I’m going to talk to Sasuke about taking that stone and re-hiding it. The knowledge on it could be dangerous if Pain gets it.
>>
>>4321614
“I’ll track down this Bansai and his students,” you decide, “starting at the ruins of the Fire Temple. But yeah… no, I’m also going to leave a shadow clone here to plant a teleportation marking on the stone tablet.”

You proceed to create the shadow clone as you continue speaking. “When she disperses the shadow clone with Sasuke will know to open a discussion about moving and re-hiding the tablet. If we’re right, and the Rinnegan can read the rest of it, then Pain getting hold of it could be a problem.”

“Good thought,” Tsunade-han admits. “Though I would prefer it next time if you would inform me before you decide to infiltrate my village to examine ancient prophesies?”

“No promises,” you reply with a smirk as you and your clone both teleport at the same time.



“I’ll be a while longer,” you tell your compatriots back at the hideout. “Yugito-han, if you could write down some notes about any shinobi temples in the Land of Lightning I’d appreciate that.”

“Wait, what for?” she asks.

“Reasons,” you reply warily. “Maybe important ones, maybe nothing, I have no idea yet. That’s why I need a monk, preferably one of the old, wise ones.”

“How old and wise?” Fū asks curiously.

“Imagine a wise old monk?”

“Kay.”

“Older and wiser than that,” you add.

“Wow,” Fū muses. “That’s like, super old.”

“Yup,” you agree. “Actually, Karin. I need your sensing technique right now. Are you free?”

“I am,” she admits. “What for, tracking down a monk?”

“It may not be necessary,” you tell her. “But better to have an ability available and not need it.”

“I get it,” Karin nods. “Where to first?”

“Konohagakure,” you reply.



You appear at Ichiraku to face a very surprised and excited Ayame.

“Hey, did you hear?” she asks. “Uchiha Sasuke’s been spotted in the village!”

“I know,” you admit. “I have a shadow clone with him. Also I brought him here in the first place, so, you know.”
>1/2
>>
>>4322449
“I… see,” Ayame-han replies awkwardly. “I’m honestly not sure why I’m surprised right now.”

“Neither do I,” you shrug. “Sorry to drop by and run… actually...”

“What is it?”

You create another shadow clone, who speaks for you. “I’ll stay here and bring a couple of bowls of ramen along with me when they’re ready.”

“Karin,” the real you asks, “what’ll you have?”

She considers the question. “Two large bowls of bone broth with pork, mushrooms, and corn.”

“I’ll have two large bowls of bone broth with scallops, corn, and miso,” you add. “See you later other me.”

“Yeah, sure,” your other you replies. “No need for kunai or anything… but that being said...”

“You don’t have one, do you?” you ask Karin, unsealing a wood-handled kunai as you walk and talk. “Here. Keep this on you.”

“… okay?”

>1d6, best three of four
>>
Rolled 1 (1d6)

>>4322495
>>
Rolled 2 (1d6)

>>4322495
>>
Rolled 6 (1d6)

>>4322495
>>
Rolled 2 (1d6)

>>4322495
>>
Rolled 5 (1d6)

>>4322495
>>
>>4322495
“Do you sense anything?” you ask, standing some distance away from the front of the ruins of the Fire Temple.

Karin shakes her head. “You’re not going to like it. You said there were three monks left alive?”

“That’s right,” you nod.

“There’s a lot more than three people in there.”

You squint at the gate. “That certainly doesn’t look very monastic to me.”

“You think someone’s squatting in the ruins?” Karin muses. “It seems like what remains of it could be turned defensive pretty quickly, if you have enough hands.”

“How many hands do they have?” you ask.

“Forty exactly,” Karin informs you. “Their leader is clearly at least a jōnin-level opponent. Most of the rest are at the chūnin level.”

“Forty chūnin aren’t even a credible threat anymore,” you sigh, rubbing the back of your neck. “Which makes the problem one of fairness. I could go in and wipe them out myself, but that just seems… sort of cruel?”

“Go in looking for someone deserving of mercy and you’ll probably be disappointed,” Karin grumbles. “I’ve seen what people like that are capable of.”

“That may be true,” you admit, “but can you determine that none of those forty are the three monks?”

“No,” she admits.

“Then it makes sense to at least take a look under the assumption that I can’t just wipe out everyone I see,” you decide.

>This can be done through infiltration. No one has to die.
>I’ll infiltrate, and if I don’t find anything I’ll wreck up the place.
>If they’re bandits Konoha will want them gone anyway.
>Other?
>>
>>4323412
>this can be done by infiltration, no one has to die
>>
>>4323412
>This can be done through infiltration. No one has to die.
>>
>>4323412
>This can be done through infiltration. No one has to die.
>>
>>4323412
>>This can be done through infiltration. No one has to die.
>>
>>4323412
>This can be done through infiltration. No one has to die.
>>
>>4323412
>1d6, best three of four
>DC 9
>>
Rolled 3 (1d6)

>>4323562
>>
Rolled 6 (1d6)

>>4323562
>>
Rolled 2 (1d6)

>>4323562
>>
Rolled 5 (1d6)

>>4323562
>>
>>4323562
Sorry, been taking care of some stuff. I'll be back in a bit to update.
>>
>>4323412
“I can probably sneak in pretty easily,” you admit. “Looks like shower weather. What do you think?”

“I think that’s not unreasonable,” Karin agrees.

You bite your thumb and toss out a few marked shuriken, which land in a triangle from which Nyoka immediately emerges.

“Yes, Naori-san?” she addresses you politely. “What is it that you need this one to do for you?”

“Just change the weather,” you shrug. “I need some autumnal rain to cover for me.”

“Easy enough,” Nyoka muses, looking up into the air. “It seems that there is plenty of moisture in the atmosphere to work with. It will not take long.”

“Thanks,” you smile and bow graciously to your partner. “I’ll be waiting on you down here.”



Once Nyoka has caused it to start raining, you approach the front gate swiftly and silently, scaling it and positioning yourself at the top to look down into the compound. It seems that a lot of rubble has been cleared and pushed towards what gaps are left between the largest sections of wall that are still standing. That suggests to you that the jōnin-level bandit here is skilled with earth release, or else there are several chūnin-level foot soldiers who cooperated to achieve the feat.

The bandits have also erected canvas tents in that opened space, and have clearly broken down the timber from the worship hall and the roof material for firewood, piling it at the corners of the walled ritual precinct. They probably use it for bonfires as well, to make it easier to spot anyone trying to approach under cover of darkness. Most of them have huddled away from the rain, sheltering themselves wherever they can.

That makes it so much easier to move silently and unnoticed, counting up the number of bandits you can see out and about… then you release paper sensing butterflies to move around the compound, furthering your proverbial reach.

All forty chakra signatures are quickly accounted for, though you nearly alert the jōnin by mistake as the butterfly comes perilously close to hitting him in the back of the head. You also eventually realize that these men, and a few women, aren’t bandits per se. They seem to be mercenary shinobi, not too dissimilar to you in that sense.

>Approach the jōnin-level shinobi and ask him, politely, if there were any monks here when they occupied the place.
>Just leave. No sense sticking around.
>”Borrow” one of the chūnin-level shinobi and interrogate them.
>Other?
>>
>>4323900
>>Approach the jōnin-level shinobi and ask him, politely, if there were any monks here when they occupied the place.
>>
>>4323900
>Approach the jōnin-level shinobi and ask him, politely, if there were any monks here when they occupied the place.
>>
>>4323900
>Approach the jōnin-level shinobi and ask him, politely, if there were any monks here when they occupied the place.
>>
>>4323900
>approach the jonin ...
>>
>>4323900
>Approach the jōnin-level shinobi and ask him, politely, if there were any monks here when they occupied the place.
>>
>>4323900
>>Approach the jōnin-level shinobi and ask him, politely, if there were any monks here when they occupied the place.
>>
>>4323900
>Approach the jōnin-level shinobi and ask him, politely, if there were any monks here when they occupied the place.

If they are smart, they realise the power gap between Naori and them.
>>
>>4323900
>1d6, high roll
>taking the first three
>>
Rolled 4 (1d6)

>>4324097
>>
Rolled 3 (1d6)

>>4324097
>>
Rolled 4 (1d6)

>>4324097
It's gonna be a 1 isn't it
>>
>>4324097
You withdraw to the gate, and allow yourself to be seen by the nearest few chūnin-level mercenaries.

“You!” one barks. “Who are you and what are you doing here!?”

“I’m here looking for monks,” you reply swiftly. “Seen any?”



Within a few minutes you stand face to face with the jōnin-caliber mercenary captain, a man with a receding hairline and a prominent scar on his forehead where a headband once would have sat.

“You are a member of Akatsuki?” the man demands sharply.

“Former,” you correct him.

“So that would make you Raishō Naori,” he muses, “of Amegakure. Quite fortuitous for you to wander into our camp, I’m certain there’s a nice bounty on your head.”

“As if,” you shrug. “First of all, who’s paying? Second, what makes you think you could collect?”

“Kumogakure’s got it out for any member of Akatsuki,” the man informs you.

“Tell me,” you insist, “before you decide whether or not to force me to kill you, were there any monks still here when you moved in?”

“Three,” he replies. “They left for the Land of Grass.”

“Good to know,” you nod. “Now, you have a decision to make.”

In a blur of motion the jōnin leaps backwards and weaves hand seals, releasing a torrent of mud from his mouth.

Then he begins weaving more seals. “Doton: Doryū...”

His eyes widen as he realizes what just happened, with the few fleeting moments before the two halves of his body separate along the line you drew through them with Umekiri.

“That was fast...”

He collapses on the spot, dead before he hits the ground.

>Chase after the monks in Kusagakure.
>Head back to Konoha and report on these mercenaries.
>Threaten the mercenaries into leaving.
>Other?
>>
>>4324362
>>Chase after the monks in Kusagakure.
>>
>>4324362
>Chase after the monks in Kusagakure.
>Send a clone to report on the mercenaries
>>
>>4324362
>Chase after the monks in Kusagakure.
>Send a clone to report on the mercenaries
>>
>>4324362
>>Chase after the monks in Kusagakure.
>>Send a clone to report on the mercenaries
>>
>>4324362
>Chase after the monks in Kusagakure.

The mercenaries are fine being here, they hunt criminals and are like small ninja villages except less shady. No reason to push them out.
>>
>>4324362
>Chase after the monks in Kusagakure.
>>
>>4324362
>>Chase after the monks in Kusagakure.
>>
>>4324362
“I’m not gonna do anything to the rest of you,” you declare, flicking a little speck of blood from Umekiri’s blade before performing a slow, standard noto to return her to her unique scabbard. “Honestly you’re Konohagakure’s problem. But seriously, take that as a reminder of what’s gonna happen to all of you if you cross the line into banditry.”

The chūnin stare at you tensely as you turn and walk away, silently opening the first gate and spiking your chakra and physical abilities briefly to two or three times your normal limits to punch the gate off its hinges with a single blow. Just in case any of them were thinking about attacking you while your back is turned.



“How did it go?” Karin asks as the rain lets up, Nyoka taking a perch on a wide branch above you.

“Well enough,” you reply. “I have a next destination which you may not like though.”

“Oh?”

“Kusagakure,” you explain. “More specifically, Hozuki castle.”

She frowns, and is silent for a moment.

“Take some time,” you insist. “Nyoka-han, will you be going back now?”

“This one must confess to some curiosity,” Nyoka replies, fluttering down to the forest floor. “This one has never been ‘teleported’ before, and wonders what the experience is like.”

In response you reach out to lay a hand on her beak, and teleport her to the Land of Hot Water.

Her eyes widen. “Most intriguing! This one would have expected it to feel more like the summoning technique, but it takes such a miniscule amount of time it barely resembles that experience at all!”

“That is a big bird...” Yugito-han muses, staring from the edge of the porch.

“Thank you,” Nyoka replies cheerfully before disappearing into a puff of smoke.

“So… what was that?” Yugito asks you.

“Doing a favor for a friend,” you shrug. “Gotta go back to Karin now, talk to you later?”

“Sure, I guess...”

You reappear in the next instant beside Karin.

“That was nice,” you smile to yourself. “I should do more stuff with them.”

>Karin, I won’t make you come to Kusagakure with me.
>Karin, I want you to meet a friend of mine in Kusagakure.
>Karin, I think you should face your past if you’re ready.
>Other?
>>
>>4325106
>Karin, I want you to meet a friend of mine in Kusagakure.

Karin must realize that there is someone who you can trust in Land of Grass
>>
>>4325106
>>Karin, I want you to meet a friend of mine in Kusagakure.
>>
>>4325106
>Karin, I want you to meet a friend of mine in Kusagakure.
>>
>>4325106
>Karin, I want you to meet a friend of mine in Kusagakure.
>You don't have to go if you're not comfortable.
>>
>>4325106
>>Karin, I won’t make you come to Kusagakure with me.
>>
>>4325106
“Karin,” you muse, “you remember my friend Ryūzetsu?”

“Of course,” she replies, “it wasn’t that long ago.”

“I need to speak with her,” you tell her, “and I think you should come with me to speak with her as well. That means coming back to the Land of Grass… not to Kusagakure itself, but to Hozuki castle.”

“You mean the prison,” Karin translates.

“Ryūzetsu’s home is a separate compound within the prison,” you correct her. “Seriously, you’d never know the prison was there unless you went out of your way.”

“And you want me to talk with her,” Karin continues.

“That’s right.”

After a few moments, she replies. “I think I can do that much.”

“Good,” you nod in agreement, “can you go immediately?”

“Yes.”

“Then hand on my shoulder.”



“Karin, wasn’t it?” Ryūzetsu greets you after the initial surprise wears off. “Welcome to my humble home, what can I do for the two of you?”

“We’re trying to track down three missing persons,” you explain. “Monks from the Fire Temple across the border. Last I heard they were coming here.”

“I can help you find them then,” Ryūzetsu agrees. “Anything else?”

“I’ll be going out on my own,” you explain your thoughts from here. “But I think Karin has something she wants to discuss with you in the mean time.”

“That’s fine,” Ryūzetsu shrugs nonchalantly. “I understand.”

>The largest temple is the most likely place to find who you’re looking for.
>You’re going to wait within the prison grounds for Ryūzetsu to do her search.
>Other?
>>
>>4325586
>>The largest temple is the most likely place to find who you’re looking for.
if karin is ok with us leaving again, otherwise we can wait a bit if she is uncomfortable
>>
>>4325586
>>The largest temple is the most likely place to find who you’re looking for.
>>
>The largest temple is the most likely place to find who you’re looking for.
>>
>>4325586
>>The largest temple is the most likely place to find who you’re looking for.
>>
>>4325586
>The largest temple is the most likely place to find who you’re looking for.
>Leave a clone with karin and ryuzetsu in case they find them
>>
>>4325586
“Ryūzetsu,” you continue, “tell me something, how many major temples and shrines are there in this land?”

“Just the one, to the southeast,” she replies calmly. “It typically isn’t open to outsiders though. I can give you a letter of introduction.”

“Thanks,” you bow politely as Ryūzetsu fishes some paper and a pen out of her desk. “Karin, would you like to stay here for a while?”

“That’s why I’m here with you,” she agrees. “I’ll stay.”



It takes you the rest of the day to reach the temple, where you produce the letter Ryūzetsu wrote for you at the gate. A man in a simple white uniform meets you there, carrying a quarterstaff that he holds out to bar your way.

“What business do you have here?” he demands.

You offer him the letter. “I’m here looking for survivors from the Fire Temple. I have a letter from the warden of Hozuki castle.”

“Come with me,” the guard demands, not taking the letter and keeping you on the opposite end of his staff. It doesn’t sound like a suggestion.

You allow yourself to be led into the temple by the monk, who leads you past a dozen or so others all similarly armed and standing at the ready. Eventually you reach the main hall, smaller than some but elaborately constructed. Inside you are led to a man with a shaved head, like all the others, but distinguished by the string of large prayer beads around his neck and the colored sash at his waist.

“This is the head abbot,” the monk who escorted you here declares.

You bow politely without being prompted, but say nothing.

“Introduce yourself,” the monk instructs you.

“I am Raishō Naori of Amegakure, former mercenary with the organization Akatsuki,” you bow again, “currently working against the same.”

“I am head abbot Rikishi,” the abbot replies. “Welcome to Hohoshi-dera. You have a letter of introduction. I would like to see it now.”

You hand him the letter, and he reads it carefully. “Yes, this is clearly sufficient. It may seem strange to you, but our temple has strict rules regarding who can enter and for what reasons.”

“And do those reasons allow for refugees from another shinobi temple?” you ask.

“You refer to the three from the Fire temple,” abbot Rikishi muses. “Yes, you were correct in assuming that our rules would allow that. What happened to the fire temple was a senseless tragedy.”
>1/2
>>
>>4327553
“The perpetrators were a heart-stealing bounty hunter and a Jashin cultist,” you explain. “Senseless was their bread and violence their butter.”

“So you knew them?” Rikishi-han enquires.

“Not well,” you admit. “But yeah, no, I’d known for a while we’d end up fighting.”

“And did you?”

“… they’re no longer a threat,” you confirm.

After a few moments’ quiet contemplation, Rikishi-han makes his decision. “Bansai-dono is in deep meditation after the events of the destruction of his temple. I will allow you to speak with him if he wishes to speak with you.”

“What shall I tell him?”

>Tell him I have to ask about the Sage of Six Paths legends.
>I have something like a strange sutra. I wanted his opinion on its meaning.
>It has to do with the history one of the great clans of Konohagakure.
>Other?
>>
>>4327568
>Tell him that i wish to speak about the sage of six paths, the rinnegan and the uchiha clan's curse.
>>
>>4327568
>>Tell him I have to ask about the Sage of Six Paths legends.
>>I have something like a strange sutra. I wanted his opinion on its meaning.
>>
>>4327568
>Tell him I have to ask about the Sage of Six Paths legends.
>I have something like a strange sutra. I wanted his opinion on its meaning.
>>
>>4327568
>>I have something like a strange sutra. I wanted his opinion on its meaning.
>>
>>4327568
“Tell him that I found some old documents,” you explain, “which contain some dangerous information that I need to put in context. A lot of it is written like a strange sutra, so the Hokage and I figured that a monk from the Fire temple would have the best chance of helping decipher it.”

“Like a strange sutra?” Rikishi-han muses. “In what sense?”

“It uses similar language and structure,” you explain, “and some of it seems to reference the story of the Sage of Six Paths. The only question is what the reader’s supposed to take away from it.”

“I see, so in nearly every sense,” the abbot mutters. “I will inform Bansai-dono of your request. But I have to warn you that it may be the case that it’s going to be much too vague to make any sense of.”

“If that’s the case, then it’s an answer in and of itself,” you shrug. “Seriously, a dead-end is almost better than the alternative.”

“So long as you know,” Rikishi-han insists.



When you meet with Bansai about an hour later, you find a quite old man with a grey beard and prodigiously bushy grey eyebrows, his face marked by deep-set wrinkles and his head cleanly shaven.

“Good afternoon, young miss,” he greets you politely. “It isn’t every day we meet someone your age with a copy of a sutra to show us, so you must forgive my curiosity.”

“I lived in a shrine for a while,” you explain, “so I’ve copied my share of sutras.”

“I see,” he nods. “Now then, do you have a copy with you?”

“No,” you admit, “but I can remedy that.”

“The sharingan,” Bansai-tono muses as you use the dōjutsu to clearly recall your own memory of having seen the stone and carefully transcribing only the portions you have questions about. “How fascinating to see it used this way… too bad it cannot give such comprehensive understanding of such arcane subjects.”

“It isn’t a shinobi technique,” you shrug, having completed the task in your own style of penmanship. “And the sharingan can’t teach you something you lack the ability to do. If I don’t have the context for a piece of information I’ve seen with it, the eye won’t suddenly just give me that missing element any more than it can give me a kekkei genkai.”

“I see, I see,” Bansai-tono replies, already looking over what you’ve scribed onto a scroll for him. “Let’s see now… yes, you were right to bring this to me. This references a familiar story to most of us shinobi monks about the separation of ninjitsu from ninshū, albeit obliquely.”

“Ninshū?” you muse. “I heard a little about it, but it’s outside my expertise.”

“Tell me about it.”
>1/2
>>
>>4328836
“To understand you must go all the way back, to the origin of chakra itself in the demon goddess Kaguya,” Bansai-tono informs you calmly in his old, perpetually tired voice. “This being gave birth to two sons by a human father, one of whom would become the Sage of Six Paths, the first human to use senjutsu chakra.”

“They were the ones who sealed Kaguya,” you nod along.

“So you do know a little of the story,” Bansai muses happily. “That’s good. It’s all too rare a topic of any serious study for people these days. In any event, this passage doesn’t seem to relate to the Sage directly, but rather to his sons Indra and Asura.”

“His sons?” you repeat. “I’ve heard of this. Only one of them could become his successor.”

“Now that is hardly common knowledge,” Bansai frowns slightly. “Unless you yourself are affiliated with one of the ancient sage clans.”

“Shrikes.”

“I see!” he declares, his mood suddenly improved. “That would explain much, so I will not trouble you with any irrelevant details. The important thing is that Indra was the one to create what would become ninjutsu, techniques using chakra for conflict, while Asura would inherit the practice of ninshū, which was used to connect people’s hearts.”

“So ninshū was the original practice?” you muse. “Is it still practiced?”

“To an extent, the shinobi monks can be considered inheritors of the philosophy,” Bansai-tono declares, “though it has come to reflect the emergence and prevalence of ninjutsu. The same may also be said of the more esoteric schools of the samurai of the Land of Iron, who maintain a distance from the shinobi world.”

“So the two sides that the sutra was mentioning,” you frown. “Did they mean the Sage of Six Paths and his brother? Or did it mean Indra and Asura?”

“Both,” Bansai-tono muses thoughtfully. “And neither, perhaps. It’s a parallel you see, repeated in various circumstances and combinations right back to the root of all chakra, and straight forward into the uncertain future.”

“Back to the root of all chakra?” you repeat. “You mean to Kaguya?”

Bansai nods. “Yes. For Kaguya was not just the root of all chakra but all things connected to it… including the great dōjutsu and all of the kekkei genkai of the various lands.”

“The dōjutsu...” you muse, mulling over that point in particular. “The dōjutsu...”
>1d6, best three of four
>>
Rolled 2 (1d6)

>>4328844
>>
Rolled 1 (1d6)

>>4328844
>>
Rolled 5 (1d6)

>>4328844
>>
Rolled 2 (1d6)

>>4328844
>>
>>4328844
You have to write it out in sealing script on your palm, just to be certain.

RINnegan
ShaRINgan

Both words written with the same character, referencing the wheel of rebirth, and the legends of Kaguya and her progeny as the source of all chakra as well as the techniques for using them, including the various hiden and kekkei genkai. If everything traces back to Kaguya, then if you go back far enough… could it be possible that ‘two coming together’ refers to reuniting the bloodlines of the two sons of the Sage of Six Paths?

Then the Rinnegan is rare not because it’s an evolution of the sharingan, but because it’s a reversion to an ability which existed previously but which has been lost due to a thinning of the bloodlines? And if that leap in logic proves to be true, then does that mean combining the bloodline of the Uchiha with that of another prominent clan can lead to awakening the Rinnegan?

If so, then which? The logical choice of course would be the Senju, since they and the Uchiha were enemies all throughout the warring states period. But the Uzumaki and the Senju had intermarried even before Tobirama-tono’s child married into your clan, so it may be possible that the Uzumaki bloodline will have the same effect. Really, what will prove or disprove that wild line of reasoning is if Pain’s true body is that of an Uzumaki clansman.

In that case, you can suggest fairly definitively that your Mangekyō should, at least given the time and the right stimulus, awaken into a Rinnegan.

But to get there requires several leaps in logic, and any one of them could prove to have been founded on false assumptions or misunderstandings.

“Strange,” you muse. “Thank you, Bansai-tono. You’ve been a great help.”

“Have I now?” he asks. “That comes as a surprise. Clearly you have been doing some thinking of your own?”

“Extensively,” you admit.

>Inform your clone with Sasuke that it’s time to withdraw and regroup.
>Inform Tsuna-han of what you’ve learned, in some detail.
>Inform Tsuna-han that you’ve learned that none of the passages contained anything dangerous.
>Head back to Ryūzetsu’s office.
>Other?
>>
>>4329400
>inform the Sasuke clone
And the let's get karin back
>>
>>4329400
>Inform Tsuna-han of what you’ve learned, in some detail.
>>
>>4329400
>>Inform Tsuna-han of what you’ve learned, in some detail.
>>
>>4329400
>Head back to Ryūzetsu’s office.
>>
>>4329400
>>Head back to Ryūzetsu’s office.
>>
>>4329400
“I take my leave of you now,” you bow politely. “Thank you for your time, and be well, Bansai-tono.”

“Of course, young one,” Bansai replies in kind.

With that, you teleport yourself straight to the Hokage’s office.



“Tsuna-han,” you greet her with a wry grin. “I’ve just had a long talk with Bansai-tono. There are some things I need to tell you.”



“How sure of this are you?” Tsunade asks you quietly.

“Not,” you admit. “A lot of it requires you to take some real leaps in logic with me, but the thing is none of them are all that unbelievable.”

“I have the same impression,” Tsunade admits. “It does seem entirely possible that combining a sharingan with a strong example of the Uzumaki or Senju bloodlines could lead to unexpected developments.”

“Yeah, no, it’s just a theory,” you continue to downplay it all. “And I have no idea when or why the change would even be triggered.”

“That having been said,” Tsunade replies with a frown, “it’s something that must be considered… the existence of another Rinnegan, the dōjutsu which ended Jiraiya’s life, in the hands of a sage...”

“You’re concerned,” you guess. “I thought we were past that.”

“No, unfortunately,” Tsunade admits. “Even for a friend and ally that’s something our village has to consider carefully.”

“I see,” you sigh. “More of the same then.”

“In a way,” Tsunade shrugs. “Different form, same principle. With the way things are my own village’s interests must come first.”

“Sure,” you shake your head. “So what will your likely response be?”

“I have no idea,” she admits. “Probably nothing. But the council and the Daimyō are going to have to sort the matter out anyway, and it’s my duty to give them that chance… but only if the possibilities you’ve laid out come to pass.”

“While it does seem reasonable,” you muse, “thanks for it anyway.”
>1/2
>>
>>4330880
“I’m not too thrilled that I’ve been recognized,” Sasuke frowns, crouching next to you atop a roof near where Team Kurenai recognized him. It took both of you using genjutsu together to escape without so much as throwing a punch, but you managed.

You shake your head, as frustrated as he is. “Sorry. But they’re going to tell Naruto and Sakura soon.”

“Then can we leave?” Sasuke asks.

“Of course,” you tell him calmly. “Are you sure?”

“It’s important that I have some time away from them,” Sasuke explains, his expression and tone grim. “After hearing about the Curse of Hatred… I think distance, objectivity, is the only way I can be sure of whatever decision I reach.”

“Then I’ll help you have that,” you agree, placing your hand on Sasuke’s shoulder. “Sounds like time for a change of scenery.”



“Here we are,” you muse, having arrived outside Gaara’s office. “Since our cover is blown anyway.”

“This is...”

“… the Kazekage’s office,” you confirm.

“What are you doing out here?”

Temari’s eyes widen as she recognizes Sasuke. “Uchiha… Sasuke?”

She quickly draws her sword and small fan. “What is this? Naori-kun, explain!”

“It’s exactly how it looks,” you offer. “Sorry to come on such short notice, but it seems Sasuke-kun has grown pretty shy in the last few years.”

“… shy?” Temari demands, lowering the tip of her sword. “Naori, have you told the Hokage? Or Naruto-kun?”

“The Hokage knows what’s happened,” Sasuke declares sternly. “She and Naori-san have decided to respect my wishes.”

“Oh,” Temari replies with a frown, “well that explains everything then.”

“Temari, I know that tone,” you sigh. “But there’s really nothing more for me to say. Sasuke-kun’s asked to have some space to think things through.”

“And so you brought him to my brother’s balcony?”

“To avoid an encounter even more awkward than this has been,” Sasuke admits.
>2/3
>>
>>4330921
“How cute,” Temari taunts him, albeit still with a frown. “He can still feel embarrassment. Maybe there is still some hope for him yet.”

“I need your brother’s permission to finish shopping for him in your village,” you explain. “He’ll be staying at my hideout, but right now he has basically no personal possessions.”

“At least we got the right sort of undergarments,” Sasuke grumbles, leaning on the railing. “So that priority has been seen to.”

“Yikes,” Temari muses. “Alright, I think I understand that much at least.”

“No need to bother the Kazekage with this. I’ll serve as a minder for now and report on it later… that okay with you, Gaara?”

Gaara, who has been listening in from his office, offers a simple reply. “That’s fine.”

“Good,” Temari nods. “I know some of the better shops for guys in our village, it’ll save you some time.”



“So what do you really think?” Temari muses quietly as you both watch Sasuke as he evaluates various shirts on a rack. “About all this, I mean?”

>Sorry, but the truth is that what I think involves some pretty sensitive information.
>I think he has the right idea, as much as it sucks to be Naruto or Sakura right now.
>The Uchiha clan has a long history of complicated, powerful emotions. The sharingan is proof enough of that.
>Other?
>>
>>4330921
And to clarify out of character, these are memories that are about to be transferred to Naori's real body while she's in Tsunade's office.
>>
>>4330925
>The Uchiha clan has a long history of complicated, powerful emotions. The sharingan is proof enough of that.
>>
>>4330925
>The Uchiha clan has a long history of complicated, powerful emotions. The sharingan is proof enough of that.
>>
>>4330925
>He's been through a lot, some of it very personal... almost all of it out of his control. I don't think he's a bad guy in the end. He just needs time to think things through, now that he knows the truth about his brother, and i hope he can move forwards once he does.
>>
>>4330925
>>The Uchiha clan has a long history of complicated, powerful emotions. The sharingan is proof enough of that.
>>
>>4330925
>the Uchiha clan has a long history of ...
>it think he has the right idea ...
>>
>>4330925
>>I think he has the right idea, as much as it sucks to be Naruto or Sakura right now.
>>The Uchiha clan has a long history of complicated, powerful emotions. The sharingan is proof enough of that
he's pretty much starting to do what he does in boruto, so I assume this is the correct enough path. Someone who suffers due to overloading of sensory information distances themselves from the source of discomfort or stimmies to offset the input, I'd wager his case is not too dissimilar.
>>
>>4330961
>>4330925
>>
>>4330925
“The sharingan is awakened and strengthened by changes in an Uchiha’s brain chemistry and chakra characteristics,” you muse quietly. “Sasuke probably hasn’t stopped that process from awakening his Mangekyō, but with a firm but gentle nudge here and there might make all the difference.”

“Between what and what?” Temari asks you.

“Between two fates,” you explain carefully. “Several Uchiha, like Itachi or the one whose eye replaced mine, avoided the worst of it. The rest self-destructed. Both options are still before Sasuke-kun.”

“I… see,” Temari replies quietly, glancing back at Sasuke. “So it’s like that.”

“I guess you could say he kinda needs a big sister figure right now,” you continue, rubbing the back of your neck idly as you consider just where this is likely to go from here. “Itachi trusted me enough to leave that in my hands.”

“Well, I’m scheduled to leave in a bit for Konohagakure,” she admits. “I think Sasuke’s a lucky guy to have you looking out for him like this. And if you need a hand, or some advice, feel free. After all, it’s not like I have any connection to Konoha, so it should be fine, right?”

“Yeah,” you agree. “Thanks.



The wave of memories catches you off guard, but Tsunade barely notices.

“Something happen?” she enquires casually.

You shake your head. “Catching up on some shadow clone memories.”

“Ah,” she nods. “I think we were just about finished here anyway.”

You bow politely. “That’s all I learned, so yeah. Probably fine to leave it there.”

“Have a nice evening,” she tells you. “You’ve more than earned a chance to relax a little after the sort of day you’ve put in.”

“Thanks,” you smile. “I’ll try and do that.”



It’s getting late, the sun having sunk low and turned the sky orange and scarlet shot through with golden streaks of cloud. It’s a beautiful scene, and you find yourself wandering a little through the village just to drink it in. You’re going to have to return to Karin… but would you want to do anything else this evening?

>Head to Ichiraku on a whim, offer to show Ayame some hospitality in return for all of hers.
>See if Kankuro and Temari are still around. They should’ve arrived in the village by now.
>Just go pick up Karin and call it a night.
>Other?
>>
>>4331756
>>Just go pick up Karin and call it a night.
Time for bed.
>>
>>4331756
>pick up karin and go to ichiraku's
>>
>>4331756
>Just go pick up Karin and call it a night.
>>
>>4331756
>>Just go pick up Karin and call it a night.
>>
>>4331756
>>Head to Ichiraku on a whim, offer to show Ayame some hospitality in return for all of hers.
>>
>>4331756
>>Head to Ichiraku on a whim, offer to show Ayame some hospitality in return for all of hers.
>>
>>4331756
>>>Just go pick up Karin and call it a night.
>>
>>4331756
>Just go pick up Karin and call it a night.
>>
>>4331756
>See if Kankuro and Temari are still around. They should’ve arrived in the village by now.
>>
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>>4331756
Tired from the long and busy day, you teleport straight back to the Land of Grass.

“Welcome back,” Ryūzetsu greets you warmly. “Did you learn the answers you were seeking?”

“I did,” you admit, rubbing the back of your neck. “Seems like more trouble though. Karin, you get anything out of this?”

“Actually, yes,” she admits with a curt nod. “I trust my new friend here will keep things quiet?”

“You have my word,” Ryūzetsu agrees.

“Thanks.”

You raise an eyebrow. “Apparently so! I was hoping it would go this well.”

After excusing yourself politely, you return to the hot water hideout.



>https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DGohNlOgEZ4
The sun has gone down and the moon has come up, and the dinner Fū and Yugito-han (mostly the latter) cooked is gone. You’ve headed out into the garden to meditate under the light of the moon and the stars, within the barrier ninjutsu you erected to hide your chakra signature from prying eyes. It’s a nice few minutes to yourself, to calm your mind and focus on nothing else but your own chakra flowing within your body as it mixes with the natural energy of the world itself.

You’re seated in seiza with your hands resting palms-up on your lap, Umekiri laying across your palms in turn. Natural energy flows in through the blade, mixing with your own chakra, and as this occurs you consciously focus on how much chakra you’re drawing.

Once you’re comfortable and calmly aware, you open the first inner gate. You draw and mix the chakras into senjutsu chakra, first at one-half your normal maximum, then working your way up. You test carefully, increasing it slowly and then lowering it, observing the results, listening to the crackles and pops as something strange happens. The whole world seems as though it’s slowly breathing in a rhythm that matches your own, and when your own power peaks you can hear cracks and pops of static as the sheer amount of chakra being exchanged and mixed then released causes some unexpected side-effects.

It’s actually a bit like a tide, leaving little waves and ripples as natural forces and human presence interact in a way only a rare few individuals have ever experienced. You can even feel your hair moving as though water were flowing around you, lifting it up and swirling it around on that tide.

Lonely, in the sense that you’re the only living human who knows this strange feeling of peacefulness and vast power wrapped into one.

Increasing the natural energy to its peak causes a static snap of electricity… no, not just lightning-nature, but a bluish emanation that seems to both arc and flow at the same time. It’s ranton-natured, you can feel it there like a little swirling storm in a single flicker of ambient chakra.

How strange.

Gradually you become aware that you’re being observed.
>1/2
>>
>>4333078
“How can any human handle chakra like that?” Sasuke asks you, watching from the porch in formal seiza, with a half-full cup of tea at his side. It seems he’s changed into some of the clothes you had him buy during the day, almost like those of a regular teenager having just come home from school.

Heh. Normal teenagers? What a joke.

“Who said anything about humans?” you muse. “But yeah, no, I almost forgot you’ve never really seen me like this. At least, not properly.”

“I caught a glimpse during the incident with Angkor Vantian,” Sasuke admits. “I was a little preoccupied though, and even with the sharingan I didn’t quite understand what I was looking at back then.”

“It’s like the whole world itself is swirling around you, becoming an extension of you. And the chakra that results from that is unreal.”

“Good job avoiding the word ‘unnatural,’, Sasuke-kun,” you muse.

“The thought crossed my mind,” he admits. “But it wouldn’t quite be accurate, would it?”

>Sage mode is just a new ‘base’ state. I’ve been working on ways to utilize it in more powerful ways other than just letting it work passively.
>I’m actually noticing new intricacies, like the small arcs of ranton chakra just now. There’s much I don’t yet know about the world I’ve entered.
>I have your brother’s eyes, Sasuke-kun. I’m open to suggestions as to how we should handle that fact, and this ‘Eternal Mangekyō.’.
>Other?
>>
>>4333093
>>I’m actually noticing new intricacies, like the small arcs of ranton chakra just now. There’s much I don’t yet know about the world I’ve entered.
>>
>>4333093
>>I’m actually noticing new intricacies, like the small arcs of ranton chakra just now. There’s much I don’t yet know about the world I’ve entered.
>>
>>4333093
>im actually noticing new intricacies
>>
>>4333093
>>I’m actually noticing new intricacies, like the small arcs of ranton chakra just now. There’s much I don’t yet know about the world I’ve entered.
>>
>>4333093
>I’m actually noticing new intricacies, like the small arcs of ranton chakra just now. There’s much I don’t yet know about the world I’ve entered.
>>
>>4333093
>>I’m actually noticing new intricacies, like the small arcs of ranton chakra just now. There’s much I don’t yet know about the world I’ve entered.
>>
>>4333093
>I’m actually noticing new intricacies, like the small arcs of ranton chakra just now. There’s much I don’t yet know about the world I’ve entered.
>>
>>4333093
>"Sage mode is just a 'base' state, what I'm trying to do is actively tapping into the chakra of the world instead of passively, but even now I'm finding new intricacies. There's much I don't know about the world."
>>
>>4333093
>I’m actually noticing new intricacies, like the small arcs of ranton chakra just now. There’s much I don’t yet know about the world I’ve entered.
>>
>>4333093
>>I’m actually noticing new intricacies, like the small arcs of ranton chakra just now. There’s much I don’t yet know about the world I’ve entered.
are we ionizing the air and creating plasma .-.
>>
>>4333093
“There’s a lot about the world I’ve stepped into that I don’t understand,” you admit. “Take that ranton chakra effect just then… seriously, I’ve never seen that before.”

“Ranton,” Sasuke repeats calmly. “No wonder I didn’t recognize it as lightning release.”

“I’m not very good at it, so it’s not surprising you wouldn’t have gotten a good look at that either.”

“I have trouble believing that,” Sasuke mutters.

“It’s true!” you insist. “I can only use it either with the Mangekyō or while in sage mode, and anything that’s not water or lightning I can’t even do in sage mode. Outside my own affinities, I’m lousy at nature transformations even with mitigating factors.”

“Huh,” Sasuke muses. “Guess I never really thought of you as someone who could be less than superb at anything.”

“That’s what happens when you know your strengths and play to them.”

“Well, thanks again,” Sasuke bows politely before getting back up. “I’ll be turning in. My room is the third one?”

“That’s how I intended it,” you nod in confirmation.

“Then I will see you in the morning.”



In your room you find Yugito-han sitting up by candle light, evidently reading a book.

“Fū and Karin are asleep in the next room,” she tells you. “They turned in about an hour ago. Is Uchiha Sasuke-kun doing better?”

“I think so.”

“That’s good to hear,” Yugito-han muses quietly. “It would be a problem for us living here were it otherwise.”

“I guess I tend to bring a lot of my problems home, don’t I?”

She nods. “Certainly seems that way. But I don’t think it’s a bad thing.”

“How so? Usually that’s considered a bad thing.”

“Your ‘home’ is something you made for yourself,” Yugito clarifies, “from cutting the rock to assembling the building, to gathering the people under its roof. The only things you bring here are really important to you.”

“Huh,” you muse. “Guess I didn’t think about it that way.”
>1/2
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>>4333629
“No,” Yugito replies, setting her book aside. “You probably wouldn’t.”

“Because I’m still young?”

“I’m glad we’re on the same page.”

“I just got finished telling Sasuke as much,” you admit, stepping behind a screen to undress for bed. “Different context, same idea.”

“Don’t get me wrong of course,” Yugito quickly insists as you slide under your own covers. “It’s better than trying to un-learn things. That’s been the problem that I’ve had, and I hope you can avoid ever having to do it.”

“It’s fine,” you sigh. “Even if we don’t start off agreeing on everything, you’ve always kept an open mind. I appreciate that about you, Yugito-han. It makes things easier than they had to be.”

>1d6, taking the third roll for tomorrow
>>
Rolled 2 (1d6)

>>4333685
>>
Rolled 6 (1d6)

>>4333685
>>
Rolled 3 (1d6)

>>4333685
>>
>>4333685
You spend the next two weeks or so in relative quiet… no trouble raised by the Kages or their respective daimyō, no actionable information on Akatsuki’s movements, no crises or tantrums to deal with. Karin and Fū continue to train, and though she remains somewhat hesitant to get too involved Yugito-han has taken to observing them and offering Fū the occasional pointer in how best to take advantage of her abilities as a pseudo-jinchūriki.

Meanwhile Sasuke has been much quieter, having taken to surprisingly spiritual activities. Evidently his mother taught him how to meditate and arrange flowers when he was young… the former you’re already familiar with the benefits of, but it seems that Uchiha Mikoto used the art of ikebana for similar purposes. And why shouldn’t she have done so? Ikebana represents an ordinary activity elevated to art, in the belief that a presentation of flowers for an important event such as honoring an ancestral shrine or a guest in one’s home should represent some amount of time and careful thought. Otherwise the action itself would be a rather empty one, devoid of sincerity and meaning.

Your own meditations have seen you replace the focus on breathing that is often used in the zazen, or seated meditation, with a focus on chakra flow and natural energy: a sort of senjutsu-centric form of meditation. The phrase you’ve coined in your own head for it is simply seikohō, or “sacred breathing method”, using the same character as when writing the word for “sage mode”. You’ve learned through experimentation that there is essentially no particular drawback to opening the first two gates at once, as the Gate of Rest doesn’t forcibly heal your body or accelerate cellular division or anything like that, but simply allows your body to recover from exhaustion by invigorating yourself using chakra.

In effect, by only briefly exceeding your limits and keeping that excess to just two or three times, rather than by the full five times for an extended period, you can keep the potential backlash down to a minimum. And given the fact that you’re playing with an enhanced senjutsu state, safety has to be a concern.

It’s on a routine visit to Sunagakure that things get a little more dramatic.

“Naori-san,” Gaara greets you. “Your timing is far from perfect in this case, though I will take what I can get.”

“Oh?” you muse. “What’s going on, Gaara-han?”

“There has been an incident,” he informs you bluntly. “Team Kakashi is responding, as well as a Sunagakure team led by Temari. A criminal from our village is headed towards the ruins of Rōran: we think he may be intending to activate their old source of power, buried below the city.”

“Ah, so that’s all,” you muse with a wicked grin. “That should be interesting!”

“So you will agree to assist?” Gaara wonders.

“I’m way ahead of you, Gaara-han...”
>1/2
>>
>>4334749
You are a shadow clone of Raishō Naori, and you find yourself abruptly… somewhere?

Where is this place? You look around, not initially seeing anything familiar. Stones rise up at unusual angles in strange blocks, trees growing amidst them, and the ground itself is wreathed in low green grasses that seem to have grown thick and wild. It’s actually sort of pretty in a way beauty often lacks, without the same sorts of artifice and pretense you might see in a carefully-manicured and presented garden.

It’s when you listen closely that you can hear singing: two voices, a woman and a girl. No, a mother and daughter. The decision to eavesdrop is an easy one to make.

“Sāra, is something wrong?” the mother asks, brushing her daughter’s hair. These two look familiar, strikingly so in fact.

The daughter, Sāra, shakes her head. “No, no mother. Nothing is wrong.”

“You know you can talk to me, my dear,” her mother insists, as though having seen through a lie. “What is it?”

“You’ve been so busy lately!” Sāra insists. “We… hardly have time to see each other anymore.”

“The changes minister Anrokuzan has suggested will take much effort,” the woman admits, seeming to concede the point. “Though Rōran will certainly prosper by them, and that will be good in the long run. Once the work is finished there will be much time… though I am sorry to be trading time with you now for happiness and prosperity for our whole kingdom later.”

Rōran? You’re in Rōran right now? So that means…

You very nearly curse aloud at the realization… these two people look so much like the girl you met in the ruins because they’re related. Somehow, something exceedingly stupid must have happened to the seal you replaced on the Ryūmyaku, and you’ve clearly been taken along for a ride.

And if you are somehow in the past, this could be an extremely dangerous situation. One wrong move and you could accidentally change history… but at the same time, inaction might allow history to be changed too.

>Wait for what must be the queen and princess of Rōran to depart, then find your way out of here.
>Look for an opportunity to hide in one of their shadows… it’s a strange technique, but for you it should be possible.
>Slink away, try to figure out where exactly “here” even is… and WHEN it is too for that matter.
>Other?
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>>4334762
>>Slink away, try to figure out where exactly “here” even is… and WHEN it is too for that matter.
time travel?
god dammit
>>
>>4334762
>>Slink away, try to figure out where exactly “here” even is… and WHEN it is too for that matter.
>>
>>4334762
>Slink away, try to figure out where exactly “here” even is… and WHEN it is too for that matter.

Time travel woo
>>
>>4334762
>Look for an opportunity to hide in one of their shadows… it’s a strange technique, but for you it should be possible.
>>
>>4334762
>>Slink away, try to figure out where exactly “here” even is… and WHEN it is too for that matter.
>>
>>4334762
>1d6, best three of four
>DC 10
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Rolled 1 (1d6)

>>4335226
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Rolled 2 (1d6)

>>4335226
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Rolled 3 (1d6)

>>4335226
>>
Rolled 6 (1d6)

>>4335226
>>
Rolled 6 (1d6)

>>4335226
And here we go
>>
>>4335227
>>4335228
>>4335233
>>4335234
>>4335235

just ... wow
>>
>>4335226
You decide that the best option is to try to slink away, and so that is precisely what you do with nothing more than the most basic shinobi training… albeit at the level of a true professinonal sneak. You ditch your Akatsuki robe and seal it into a pouch, instead stealing a sand-colored cloak to wear over your outfit underneath that will help you disappear into the settlement a little easier.

Speaking of which, Rōran of this time is very different to what you know… a typical if somewhat dusty oasis town with a fairly substantial population and a few large markets, supporting traders from settlements nearby. You manage to spot a calendar at the back of a stall, which tells you that you’ve found yourself twenty-four years before you were sealed into the Fourth Hokage’s fūinjutsu formula.

So it may be a few years before the Fourth Hokage’s mission here… too bad you never got the chance to narrow down the range on that at all. You suspect there may be answers in Konohagakure’s records office.

A passing thought occurs to you… both of your parents are still alive right now.

How strange.

But also, how pointless to even consider. That sort of indiscretion is exactly what you should avoid. Even knowing that it’s all academic at this point, you do have to admit you’re curious as to whether you could use the contract you forged with your mother’s soul to summon her here in a time when she’s still alive.

“Temporal mechanics are weird,” you groan quietly, before moving on to gather information within the town.



It seems that a new minister, Anrokuzan, arrived some time last year from somewhere outside the kingdom, suggesting an ambitious building project using the power of the Ryūmyaku. Your guess is that he’s talking about the rise of Rōran into the city of a thousand spires that you’re more familiar with, at least in ruined form, and the feat which will eventually draw the focus of the Land of Water in the coming war. But you can say nothing about this to anyone, of course.



Later that day, in the evening of your arrival, you overhear a conversation in a small outdoor cafe… anguished voices, shouting, crying. It seems the queen, who you saw just earlier this same day, has died.

You could’ve sworn she seemed perfectly healthy, and aside from some concern over how much time she’d been spending with her daughter lately she didn’t seem unhappy either. So how? Why?

>This calls for an investigation. See if you can’t break into the palace and snoop around.
>If you had followed them out this may have been avoided… you won’t make that mistake again with Sāra.
>You need to stay away from that situation. It’s not your place.
>Other?
>>
>>4335290
>>This calls for an investigation. See if you can’t break into the palace and snoop around.
>>
>>4335290
>If you had followed them out this may have been avoided… you won’t make that mistake again with Sāra.
>>
>>4335290
>If you had followed them out this may have been avoided… you won’t make that mistake again with Sāra.
>>
>>4335290
>if you had followed them out ...
>>
>>4335290
>>This calls for an investigation. See if you can’t break into the palace and snoop around.

No point worrying about what-ifs, just dig for the facts.
>>
>>4335290
>>This calls for an investigation. See if you can’t break into the palace and snoop around.
>>
>>4335290
It may feel a little over-dramatic, but had you gone with the queen she wouldn’t have been murdered by someone from the future, at least judging by your own presence here in what for you is twenty-five years in the past. That’s all internally consistent, and inarguably true. And if you’re not careful the same thing might happen to the princess, Sāra, which would be a violation of the timeline since she wouldn’t be able to have princess Sēryū in the future.

And who the hell knows what’ll happen to your future if that happens.

But on the other hand, in less overly dramatic terms, your sense of responsibility has also presented you with an obvious next step, and that would be following Sāra… for the next several years.

“Oooh...” you wince at the implication. “That’s… going to be a whole thing.”

You’ll need to at least do some degree of investigation to figure out who it is that killed Sāra’s mother the queen, and what that person is here to do, before you can stop him. Or, conceivably a her? Either way, the easiest way to do that will be to stick close to Sāra for a while.



When you slip into the palace you hide yourself in her shadow… while she cries awkwardly in her room… by herself.

It feels oddly familiar to watch it play out, and not in a good way.
>1d6, best three of four
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Rolled 1 (1d6)

>>4336527
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Rolled 2 (1d6)

>>4336527
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>>4336527
Dice+1d6
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Rolled 5 (1d6)

>>4336527
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>>4336531
almost, try again in the options field
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>>4336531
>>4336542
and with a lowercase d
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>>4336527
>>
Rolled 3 (1d6)

>>4336527
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>>4336550
well done
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>>4336551
o7
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>>4336527
It takes you a while to piece it all together.

The first two years are pretty much a total wash, since you know that you can’t take any initiative until Rōran becomes a full-fledged highrise city. But the next few years are also largely wasted since you’re much too intimidated by the prospect of altering the timeline through carelessness, which is why you set the burden of proof of Anrokuzan’s guilt so high.

He met it pretty much immediately of course, the man’s guilty as sin and the only one who can’t seem to see it is Sāra herself. There’s even some evidence that he’s been using slave labor to construct weapons without Sāra’s knowledge.

But it’s not your place to stop that. That’s what Minato-han is supposed to do, at some uncertain point in the future. That’s how things unfolded to bring you to this point, so that’s how it needs to unfold a second time… that is, unless one of two things is true: that it’ll just spawn a new parallel timeline, or that anything you do has already been accounted for in a sense. Either one is basically a variant of the notion that time can protect itself, and unfortunately neither one is something you can prove.

It’s not a total waste of time though, since Sāra remains an emotional wreck for years after her mother’s apparent murder… other than Anrokuzan there aren’t many ministers who really stick too close to the young orphaned queen for very long. The old bastard sees to that with some efficiency. But you are there for her. For what little difference you can make.

An unexpected treat left for her in her room, a shadowy embrace when she finds herself sitting in the corner crying her eyes out, keeping the flowers in the vase on her writing desk in bloom for weeks longer than they normally would have with regular transfusions of natural energy: these are some of the things you can do for her, to lift her spirits if nothing else.

It’s especially bad for her on her birthdays, which for all his scheming and posturing Anrokuzan doesn’t even know. But because you can’t show yourself to her, Sāra is left to think that’s all she has. And it drags out for five long years.

You grow tired of waiting for Minato-han to come, so you… break your one rule. In fact you shatter it. You send a letter to Konohagakure detailing what you know of the situation and requesting assistance from an expert in fūinjutsu.


>1/2
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>>4337099
The day of the festival. The fifth one since the sudden death of Queen Sēramu, a puppet spectacle put on for the purpose of keeping Sāra compliant, another aspect of the real Rōran that’s been kept hidden from her. She watches from a balcony too high to see the truth from, like always, but this time something different happens.

This time, from between the two puppets flanking her, a hand pushes her towards the rail… and the floor beneath her gives out.

As she falls, you have a choice to make. It’s clear that it’s not a time for inaction.

>Paper wings are the answer. Carry her to safety.
>No need for anything flashy, it’d give you away.
>Wait… who’s the orange idiot and why does he look familiar?
>Other?
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>>4337101
>>Wait… who’s the orange idiot and why does he look familiar?
hm?
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>>4337101
>Wait… who’s the orange idiot and why does he look familiar?
>>
>>4337101
>>Wait… who’s the orange idiot and why does he look familiar?
>>
>>4337101
>>Paper wings are the answer. Carry her to safety.
>>
>>4337101
>>Paper wings are the answer. Carry her to safety
>>
>>4337101
>>Paper wings are the answer. Carry her to safety.

Steal everything from Naruto.
>>
>>4337101
>Paper wings are the answer. Carry her to safety.
>>
>>4337101
>>Paper wings are the answer. Carry her to safety.
>>
>>4337101
>Paper wings are the answer. Carry her to safety.
>>
>>4337101
>Wait… who’s the orange idiot and why does he look familiar?
>>
>Wait… who’s the orange idiot and why does he look familiar?
>>
>>4337101
>Paper wings are the answer. Carry her to safety.
>>
>>4337101
No, Sāra can’t die now. This still isn’t her time.

You un-transform a flurry of paper sealing tags from your Akatsuki cloak, which shape themselves around Sāra like a cushion and pull her away from the tower, guiding and slowing her fall so as to set her down gently out of sight from the crowd of puppets in the street. Then you seal the tags again, pulling it all back into your ward’s shadow just before the orange-clad teen you noticed a few seconds before catches up with you.

“Man, what was that!?” he asks. “Are you okay? What happened?”

“I… suppose I fell?”Sāra muses, looking up in the direction of the tower. “No, I felt a hand before that?”

“Whoa, was someone trying to kill you?” the young man asks… wait, that voice… Uzumaki Naruto? Not the one you know, but evidently a little older than you remember.

“Of course not!” Sāra insists sharply, “why would any of my people want to do such a terrible thing to me?”

“But… you just said you were pushed?”

Sāra quickly remembers her manners and calms down slightly. “I must have imagined it… I am Sāra, Queen of Rōran.”

“I’m Uzumaki Naruto, a shinobi from Konohagakure,” he replies. “So, this place is called Rōran too? I was just at a place with the same name, but that place was a total ruin.”

“Wha...” Sāra huffs. “How rude of you to say such things!”

Naruto is about to say something and probably dig himself in deeper when a trio of jōnin appear: including Namikaze Minato. Good. Finally, after five long years, a positive development.

“You didn’t keep your promise,” Minato-han muses as Naruto gets ready for a fight.

“Wait, don’t tell me,” Naruto seems to realize something, “are you here after her life!?”

His single wild swing doesn’t even give Minato-han pause before he finds himself in a rather devious joint lock.

“Calm down,” Minato-han insists, very much in control himself. “We’re not here to cause Queen Sāra any harm.

>Speak up. That’ll make things simpler.
>Say nothing. Let this play out.
>Other?
>>
>>4337877
>>Speak up. That’ll make things simpler.
we do have the evidence for who the culprit is, iirc?
>>
>>4337877
>Speak up. That’ll make things simpler.
>>
>>4337877
>>Speak up. That’ll make things simpler.
>>
>>4337877
>Speak up. That’ll make things simpler.
>>
>>4337877
>Speak up. That’ll make things simpler.
>>
>>4337877
“Then… why are you here?” Naruto asks, clearly confused by the whole situation.

“Because I requested them,” you reply from Sāra’s shadow.

Everyone around you pauses for a moment, looking for whoever the clearly feminine voice belonged to… all except for Minato-han.

“So you decided to speak up,” Minato-han muses. “That simplifies things. I take it you don’t intend to show yourself?”

“That would be for the best,” you admit, mindful of your own speech patterns.

Sāra finally works up the nerve to speak. “Now hold on just a moment! All of this is very suspicious, now with five strangers in my kingdom, one of whom refuses to even show her face?”

“We should get out of the streets,” Minato-han decides. “Queen Sāra, I am more than willing to explain everything if you would agree to hear us out.”

“Very well,” Sāra agrees.



You lead her up to a covered hallway some height above the street level, which you’ve gathered over the years is actually a good height above where the old city used to be. The streets run around the bases of the many towers for support.

“Are you here too, faceless stranger?” Sāra demands.

“Yes,” you admit. “I’m right where I have been for years now, hiding in your shadow.”

“Look down.”

Sāra looks down at her shadow, only to watch it wave to her, then bow politely.

She stares in shock. “Oh…”

“Then how do we know you’re not the one who tried to kill her just now!?” Naruto demands.

“It does seem like a fair question,” the largest of the three Konoha-nin muses… he must be an Akimichi. “Can you answer that, miss shadow?”

“Sāra,” you address the young queen directly. “You’ve wondered for years why it is your flowers stay fresh for so long? Why sometimes when you feel scared and alone and cry alone in your room, you feel like you’re being embraced? Why when you sing the song your mother taught you, it sometimes seems as though someone is humming with you?”

She stifles a small gasp of surprise. “I… that was all you?”

“Always,” you admit. “I wasn’t there to save Queen Sēramu, and I have nowhere else to go anyway. So I’ve been watching over you these last five years.”
>1/2
>>
>>4338225
“You were protecting her from this Anrokuzan?” Minato-han enquires. “I have to appreciate your dedication, for someone who does not belong in this time.”

“So you guessed as much?” you muse. “You’re quite perceptive, Namikaze Minato.”

The other two shinobi seem startled, but Minato-han knows better. “The message asked for me by name. You know of my abilities.”

“That’s right.”

“How, may I ask?”

“You may not ask,” you chide him. “That would be spoil it.”

“I see,” Minato-han muses.

“Minato-san,” the thinner of the two muses quietly. “Is this really alright?”

He nods curtly. “I actually have similar concerns myself, so we’re really on the same page.”

“If you say so,” the other man agrees hesitantly. You can tell he’s still wary of you.

“You’d be a member of the Aburame clan?” you ask him, and he immediately locks eyes on Sāra, who flinches.

“I’m down here, buddy.”

The Aburame-nin glances down at the shadow on the floor. “Sorry. It’s a strange way to hold a conversation.”

“I know you have you doubts about me,” you admit, “and those doubts are totally understandable. But we’re all here for the same purpose, and that’s to prevent as much damage as we can.”

“Damage from what!?” Sāra demands. “Please excuse my ignorance, but for ‘taking me aside to explain things’ this conversation has not explained anything to me so far!”

>Full disclosure: you were brought back twenty-four years in time in the same event as ‘Minister Anrokuzan’, who murdered Queen Sēramu and is using Rōran to build weapons.
>Partial disclosure: you promised to protect Rōran in your own time, and that means stopping Minister Anrokuzan in this time.
>Let Minato-han decide how much information he wishes to divulge, since he’s the one who’s SUPPOSED to be here… or rather, ‘now’.
>Other?
>>
>>4338255
>Partial disclosure: you promised to protect Rōran in your own time, and that means stopping Minister Anrokuzan in this time.
>>
>>4338255
>partial disclosure
>>
>>4338255
>>Let Minato-han decide how much information he wishes to divulge, since he’s the one who’s SUPPOSED to be here… or rather, ‘now’.
>>
>>4338255
>Partial disclosure: you promised to protect Rōran in your own time, and that means stopping Minister Anrokuzan in this time.
>>
>>4338255
>>Partial disclosure: you promised to protect Rōran in your own time, and that means stopping Minister Anrokuzan in this time.
>>
>>4338255
>>Partial disclosure: you promised to protect Rōran in your own time, and that means stopping Minister Anrokuzan in this time.
>>
>>4338255
>Partial disclosure: you promised to protect Rōran in your own time, and that means stopping Minister Anrokuzan in this time.
>>
>>4338255
“When I’m from,” you explain carefully, “I made a promise to protect the people of Rōran. And while I’m here all I do, and all I choose not to do, is to keep that promise.”

“What not to do?” Naruto repeats skeptically.

“She seems to realize the severity of the situation,” Minato-han replies. “If I’m honest, she’s looking at things from the same perspective I am and that’s reassuring.”

“So will you be so kind as to explain the situation to Sāra-dono?” you ask, again mindful of your typical accent.

Minato nods curtly. “Our report is that six years ago, this ‘Anrokuzan’ appeared in Rōran, advocating that your kingdom harness the power of the Ryūmyaku. Less than one year after that Queen Sēramu passed away under suspicious circumstances, and the project Anrokuzan championed was placed on an accelerated track.”

“Of course,” Sāra replies, “my mother believed in that as well. It was what she would have wanted.”

“We also have reports of numerous ministers being forced out of government as Anrokuzan rose to prominence,” Minato-han continues. “I have a list here, if you’d like to read it for yourself.”

“See, this is where this whole notion of a conspiracy falls apart!” Sāra counters. “Minister Anrokuzan has done nothing wrong, and has been nothing but loyal for six years. And you expect me to simply take it at your word that he has some nefarious motives?”

“Sāra, this guy’s been lying to you!” Naruto insists. “His real name isn’t even Anrokuzan, it’s Mukade! If he can’t even be honest with you about his name how can you trust anything else about him!?”

“You know what I think?” Sāra counters, “I think that you are the ones who are lying! I’m going to speak with Anrokuzan myself to sort all this out!”

Sāra turns away abruptly and runs down the hall, back towards the tallest tower at the center of the city… the one she was pushed off of not long ago. And of course, being her shadow, you’re dragged along with her until she reaches an elevator with a view onto the open plaza below where the parade of puppets had been before.

“How dare they...” she mutters, half-angry and half-saddened as she waits for the car to reach her floor. “How could they know anything?”

“They’re telling you the truth,” you insist quietly. “Sāra-tono, I’m sorry to have to confront you with this, but this Anrokuzan must have been tampering with the seals on the Ryūmyaku in the future… it’s the only explanation.”

“And how does that explain anything?”

“Because I placed myself into the sealing formula as a safeguard,” you explain. “I can’t say anything more than that.”

“Anrokuzan has looked after me for the last five years,” she insists. “How could I...”
>1/2
>>
>>4340137
“Sāra, listen to me,” you tell her calmly. “You’re not alone now, and you never have been.”

The young princess is stunned for a moment, until you reach the top floor. You follow her out into the hallway, and she eventually replies. “I… suppose you’re right. You even saved my life when I fell earlier, didn’t you?”

“I did,” you admit. “Paper ninjutsu was my sensei’s speciality… or I guess, it will be.”

“And you’re here because… you made a promise?”

“And because it’s the right thing to do,” you add.

Sāra is about to reply when you find yourselves pulled into a large broom closet and surrounded by a group of figures in improvised masks and carrying pitchforks, rakes… all farming tools?

“No… there really are people trying to kill me!?” Sāra yelps.

“Give them back!” the woman who dragged you in here insists loudly.

“Give… give what back?” Sāra asks in panicked confusion.

“Give them back!” she insists again.

“I don’t...” Sāra begins, before being interrupted by Naruto shoulder-crashing through the door.

“Assassins!?” he shouts, drawing a kunai on a spring deployment system out of his sleeve. “Everyone back off!”

“Gyaaah!” a shortish, roundish cloaked figure panics, dropping his rake. “Please don’t kill us, mister!”

“Wait, what?” Naruto asks.

“Heavens’ sake,” you sigh, using a floating paper tag to flick the lights on. “What kind of assassins use farming tools… and that one in the back is carrying a shovel!”

“Yeah,” the voice of a teenage girl replies as the masked figure tightens her grip. “Well, it’s what I had, okay?”

>Explain the situation to Naruto and Sāra.
>Explain the situation to the pissed-off commoners.
>Let this play out.
>Other?
>>
>>4340192
>Explain the situation to the pissed-off commoners.
>>
>>4340192
>>Explain the situation to the pissed-off commoners.
>>
>>4340192
>>Explain the situation to the pissed-off commoners.
>>
>>4340192
>Explain the situation to the pissed-off commoners.
>>
>>4340192
>Explain the situation to the pissed-off commoners.
>>
>>4340192
“Listen,” you address the angry commoners, “your loved ones have probably been abducted by First Minister Anrokuzan, not under the orders of Queen Sāra or even with her knowledge. So put the pitchforks down, you’re not helping anyone like this.”

“Okay,” the woman in front declares, practically ripping her face wrap off in agitation, “who’s actually talking right now?”

“A shinobi,” you explain vaguely. “I’ve been literally living in Sāra-dono’s shadow for five years, since shortly after her mother died.”

“If that’s true then why...” the woman begins to demand, only for you to place a paper tag lightly over her lips.

“Shhhh,” you shush her sarcastically. “It’s complicated and the answer would change nothing anyway, so try to focus on what to do next. And remember, it’s not me you need to appeal to.”

You remove the tag just as effortlessly, allowing her to speak to Sāra.

“Queen Sāra,” the woman asks, “did you really not know any of this was going on?”

She shakes her head. “No… I’m finding out a lot today. Shadow… tell me something. You and the other shinobi believe that Anrokuzan is creating weapons here in Rōran without my knowledge, correct?”

“That’s right,” you agree.

“And now I’m hearing of mass kidnappings in the city below,” Sāra continues.

“That’s right!” a the round commoner frowns, having removed his mask as well to reveal a potato-shaped head and buck teeth. “Everyone here has lost someone! That’s why we came here to make you listen to us!”

“But have you any proof?” Sāra asks.

“Actually, yes,” you muse. “You there, tall one with the pitchfork. What’s your name?”

“It’s Fujiko,” she replies curtly. “What is yours?”

“Unimportant,” you insist. “Fujiko-san, take Queen Sāra down to the evening parade.”



Once at street level, your charge, Naruto, Fujiko, and the buck-toothed potato boy find your way to the main plaza.

“So what is this supposed to prove?” Sāra asks hesitantly.

After squinting for a while, Naruto draws a familiar-looking chakra blade with a wooden handle from a scabbard on his back.

“I think I get it,” he declares, throwing the blade in a wide arc.
>1/2
>>
>>4340857
Several of the revelers on the edge of the crowd slump to the ground, and after catching his short sword he leads the way to the collapsed puppets.

“Here’s your proof,” Naruto declares, running chakra into the puppets and reconnecting the chakra threads to the energy conduits above the streets. “There. The threads connect to those pipes up there… this entire crowd is entirely made up of puppets.”

“But… those are the conduits for energy from the Ryūmyaku,” Sāra realizes.

“All these puppets are powered by that incredible source,” you explain. “As are the puppet guards Anrokuzan built for the city, where as best I can tell there never has been any serious crime or unrest.”

“Up until today,” Sāra muses, “when I was nearly assassinated.”

“My guess is that as the only person with the power to stop the Ryūmyaku’s energy flow,” you tell her, “you’re now more of a threat to Anrokuzan’s plans than you are an asset. So he chose today to try to get rid of you.”

“But to assassinate the queen...” she realizes as a recorded, slightly tinny trumpet chorus heralds the arrival of something of significance.

“Look, up there!” Naruto realizes, pointing to the balcony high up the palace wall.

Standing there is a puppet… one dressed the same way Sāra was earlier in the day. The puppets below rise up in a clattering applause at the appearance of their puppet queen, who waves mechanically down to them.

“Now that’s just in poor taste,” you muse grimly. “You see, Sāra, this is practically Anrokuzan’s declaration of guilt.”

“… how horrible...” she trembles, staring wide-eyed at her own replacement. Even the ones who were trying to kidnap her not an hour ago stare at the ground in awkward silence. “I… I trusted him! And my mother… did he also...”

>Suggest that she focus on what’s important now, and what she can do next.
>Just for a few seconds, step out from her shadow and say what’s important.
>Let someone else handle it. This is perilously close to not your business.
>Other?
>>
>>4340886
>Suggest that she focus on what’s important now, and what she can do next.
>>
>>4340886
>>Suggest that she focus on what’s important now, and what she can do next.
>>
>>4340886
>>Just for a few seconds, step out from her shadow and say what’s important.

We can’t be so heartless as to push a civilian into the deep end without a kind word. We have to be better than that.
>>
>>4340886
>>Suggest that she focus on what’s important now, and what she can do next.
>>
>>4340886
>Just for a few seconds, step out from shadow and say what’s important.
>>
>>4340886
>>Suggest that she focus on what’s important now, and what she can do next.
>>
>>4340886
>Just for a few seconds, step out from her shadow and say what’s important.
>>
>>4340886
>Just for a few seconds, step out from her shadow and say what’s important.
Right here and now, a personal touch is more important than keeping our face hidden.
>>
>>4340886
>>4340921
This
>>
>>4340886
You put a gentle, reassuring hand on the young queen’s shoulder, the contact startling her at first before she realizes that her own shadow has embraced her.

“Sāra, your mother left you something important,” you tell her quietly, stepping back and out of her shadow, hands still on her shoulders. “It’s not the buildings, it’s not the puppets, it’s not even the Ryūmyaku. Think about what it is, and think about what it is that you can do to protect that important thing.”

“You...” she stares at you in shock, seeing you for the first time in five years. “I’m not you though! I can’t hide in people’s shadows, or shoot fireballs, or control mechanical puppets, and I’m pretty sure if I tried to throw a knife I’d probably hurt myself. What can I do?”

“Naruto here can’t do most of those things either,” you smirk.

Naruto frowns at you. “Hey, what’s that supposed to mean!?”

“But he’s got some skills even other shinobi don’t,” you continue. “Think about what you can do, not about what you can’t, and the answer will be obvious.”

After a few moments, Sāra nods resolutely. “I know what to do, if you and Naruto-kun will follow me.”

“Good girl,” you smile, giving her a curt nod before turning to Naruto. “You game?”

“Wait… you look familiar,” Naruto stares at you. “I mean like really familiar.”

“I get that a lot,” you lie, sliding back into Sāra’s shadow. “Seriously, anyone who’s ever seen a readhead thinks they’ve seen me before. It’s not that rare.”

“… wait, five years…” he muses, narrowing his eyes. “Naori?”

>A shadow clone to be precise.
>Not now, Naruto-kun.
>Cute name. Not mine though.
>Other?
>>
>>4342145
>Not now, Naruto-kun.
>>
>>4342145
>Not now, Naruto-kun.
>>
>>4342145
>Not now, Naruto-kun.
>>
>>4342145
>Not now, Naruto-kun.
>>
>>4342145
>Cute name. Not mine though.
>>
>>4342145
>>Not now, Naruto-kun.
>>
>>4342145
>Not now, Naruto-kun

Great. NOW he decides to stop being a clueless dolt.

I mean, good for him: but dat timing tho.
>>
>>4342145
>>A shadow clone to be precise.
>>
>>4342616
Ah. That's what happened.
>>
>>4342145
“Here isn’t the place Naruto-kun,” you insist, “and now is not the time.”

“What’s that supposed to mean?” he demands. “If not now, when?”

“In about twenty years,” you reply curtly.

“Is there a problem?” Sāra asks you both.

“He and I have a history that hasn’t happened yet,” you explain, “and giving him the answers he wants would be dangerous.”

“Dangerous how?” the bucktooth potatohead commoner asks.

“Think about it this way, I won’t actually be born for another three years,” you tell him. “Naruto for another two after that.”

“I see,” Sāra realizes. “If you were to do something that prevented your own birth you could not come back in time like this… and then what?”

“Nobody knows,” you admit. “But there are more ways I could possibly create a paradox on a similar level. Seriously, it’s best if we just never find out what happens in any of those cases.”

“You understand, Naruto-kun?”

He shakes his head. “Nope, not really. But I do know what it’s like to inherit something important to protect… so I’ll help any way I can.”

“Good,” Sāra nods curtly. “Because I know where we need to go, and I’ll need all the help I can get.”

Then she turns to the commoners. “I promise you, we will rescue the people who have been taken.”

“Sarai,” Fujiko insists, “we’ll be escorting Queen Sāra.”

“A-alright, Fujiko-san!”



The young queen leads you to the base of one of the many towers ringing the central plaza, and taps her foot on a heavy metal grate set into the street surface.

“We’ll need to move this,” she declares. “The foundation of this tower is very close to the only convenient access point to the Ryūmyaku, we can climb down here.”

“I’ll get it,” Naruto insists, using a kunai as a prybar and leveraging the grate out of its slot. “You two, get yourselves somewhere safe.”

“Right,” Fujiko-han agrees.

>Take a passive approach, wait to act until you’re needed.
>Lead the group by using paper butterflies to scout ahead.
>Use a shadow clone for some reconnaissance in force.
>Other?
>>
>>4344169
>Take a passive approach, wait to act until you’re needed.
>Lead the group by using paper butterflies to scout ahead.

Use the butterflies, but outside of that don't do much.
>>
>>4344169
>Lead the group by using paper butterflies to scout ahead.
>Use a shadow clone for some reconnaissance in force.
>>
>>4344186
>>4344169
>this
>>
>>4344169
>Lead the group by using paper butterflies to scout ahead.
>>
>>4344169
>>Lead the group by using paper butterflies to scout ahead.
>>
>>4344186
>>4344169
+1
>>
>>4344169
“I’ll be keeping my presence as a surprise,” you decide. “But I’ll use my paper ninjutsu to scout ahead for now.”

You unseal a number of sealing tags, folding them into butterflies and sending them fluttering ahead through the ventilation system and out into a large, open space some distance ahead. In that space you find exactly what Sāra is looking for. It’s a large chamber with an immense number of pipes through which vast amounts of power flow, along with assembly lines for constructing combat puppets. These assembly lines themselves are run by puppets, while menial labor seems to be the role of the captured civilians.

“We’re on the right track,” you report. “Just ahead, second grating.”

Naruto works quickly to lift the grate and drops down first.

“It’s a long drop,” Sāra muses, looking down at the floor. “Are you sure...”

“I saved you from longer falls, remember?” you chuckle lightly. “Just trust me.”

After a few moments Sāra drops through the opening and you support her with a pair of small paper-crafted wings. She lands pretty awkwardly, but on her feet. Not bad for a first time if you’re honest.

“Naruto,” Sāra orders, “you see those men?”

Naruto glances at a large device where a pretty large number of men are chained up and walking in a circle… for… reasons? It seems unusually backwards for such a heavily automated facility, almost as if this Anrokuzan was deliberately going out of his way to make things harder on his kidnapped labor force.

“I see them,” Naruto confirms.

“I want you to start releasing them,” she instructs. “I will go and perform the technique that will shut down the flow of power from the Ryūmyaku.”

Sāra runs to a familiar array inscribed into the floor with four statues at its corner and an eye-like device at its center, which she kneels next to with her hands clasped in front of her.

“I, the queen of Rōran, command thee,” she begins to recite an incantation in an incredibly antiquated, courtly dialect that even having been raised in the rarefied air of a courtesan house you can barely make out. “Ryūmyaku cease thy flow, and quell the power that lies within thee.”

“Kyu, kyu, nyo, ritsu, ryō.”

She draws a violet hemisphere of chakra out from the eye, then pushes it carefully back into the ground. Ripples expand outwards as the lines of fūinjutsu script illuminate, then fade.

“Those were some very old words,” you muse as the flow from the Ryūmyaku ceases.

“They were taught to me by my mother,” Sāra tells you, “as her mother taught them to her. You were right when you said she left me something important.”
>1/2
>>
>>4346320
“We’ve been noticed,” you muse.

“Is that so?”

“Look up.”

Sāra glances up to an elevated catwalk, where a rather pudgy middle-aged man stands watching even as a number of chakra threads attach to the puppets which had slumped before as the Ryūmyaku was suppressed.

“Minister Anrokuzan?”

“My, how odd for you to be in such a place, Queen Sāra,” he muses.

Naruto comes running back. “I did what you said, Sāra… who’s this?”

“We’re surrounded,” you tell him. “Seems this ‘Anrokuzan’ doesn’t plan to make this easy.”

“Anrokuzan,” Sāra declares, “you stand credibly accused of kidnapping, false imprisonment, and treason. This is the point where if you’re innocent, you would make your case to me.”

“It’s almost a shame,” he replies smugly, “that you’ve picked now of all times to start acting like a ruler. But just like your mother, you’ve wised up just a little too late for it to make a difference.”

“You bastard!” Naruto spits.

The puppets begin to surround the three of you… it seems like Anrokuzan has no idea you’re here, or what you really amount to, so that gives you the advantage.

>Kill him with a pre-emptive strike. He’s all but declared his guilt.
>Focus on making a hole for Sāra to escape. She’s your priority.
>Hold yourself back. Only intervene in ways that won’t get you noticed.
>Other?
>>
>>4346329
>Focus on making a hole for Sāra to escape. She’s your priority.
>Tell Naruto to go wild or something

While we could just kill the dude, Sāra is under our protection. That is the priority.
>>
>>4346329
>Ask Sara what his sentence will be, and deal with him accordingly
>>
>>4346329
>Focus on making a hole for Sāra to escape. She’s your priority.
>Tell Naruto to go wild or something
>>
>>4346329
>Focus on making a hole for Sāra to escape. She’s your priority.
>>
>>4346329
>>Focus on making a hole for Sāra to escape. She’s your priority.
>>
>>4346329
>>Focus on making a hole for Sāra to escape. She’s your priority.
>>
>>4346329
>>Focus on making a hole for Sāra to escape. She’s your priority.
>>
>>4346329
>1d6, best of three
>DC 8
>SP: 5/6
>ES: 0/2 (0T)
>>
Rolled 6 (1d6)

>>4347512
>>
Rolled 5 (1d6)

>>4347512
>>
Rolled 4 (1d6)

>>4347512
>>
>>4347992
New thread



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