Ninpocho Chronicles

Ninpocho Chronicles is a fantasy-ish setting storyline, set in an alternate universe World of Ninjas, where the Naruto and Boruto series take place. This means that none of the canon characters exists, or existed here.

Each ninja starts from the bottom and start their training as an Academy Student. From there they develop abilities akin to that of demigods as they grow in age and experience.

Along the way they gain new friends (or enemies), take on jobs and complete contracts and missions for their respective villages where their training and skill will be tested to their limits.

The sky is the limit as the blank page you see before you can be filled with countless of adventures with your character in the game.

This is Ninpocho Chronicles.

Current Ninpocho Time:

Open Chalk Marks and Secret Codes

Ryuu Nozomi

New Ninja
Joined
Jul 16, 2025
Messages
21
Yen
20,000
ASP
12
OOC Rank
D-Rank
The Susukino District, the beating heart of Kumogakure, never truly slept. During the day, it buzzed with voices of salesman and the aroma of spiced meats curling from open skewers. Children darted through crowds with festival masks half on and half off, chasing one another in fits of laughter. By night, the signs pulsed with a soft neon glow, casting long shadows into alleys paved by generations of stories. Music drifted from every block, tangled with the scent of citrus sake and cherry tobacco. Though beneath the life, color, noise, and indulgence lived something much older.

Nozomi walked through Sordid Avenue with the quiet precision of someone who saw the world through blueprints rather than streets. She didn’t move quickly but she also didn't meander. Her route was guided by symbols no one else noticed or even cared to. Her pale eyes flicked toward the gutter beneath a shuttered parlor. Marked on the gutter itself was a half-erased chalk sigil, shaped like a horned crescent surrounding a jagged line. She crouched beside it, allowing her fingers to brush the dusted stone. The chalk was dry, but relatively fresh. Too old to be a part of the event which had begun to engulf the Avenue.

Around her, chaos reigned supreme. Genin teams chased academy students in a prank war that had spiraled far beyond teacher supervision. Temporary dyes exploded in clouds of bright smoke as paper traps burst with water balloons, or students casting harmless jutsu. Laughter, jeers, and adolescent declarations of vengeance filled the air. It was a harmless sort of madness, exactly the kind Nozomi usually actively ignored. Today was different though, something felt strange.

Two days ago, she'd seen the first mark similar to the one she saw now near the parlor. It was scrawled behind another shuttered vendor's awning. At first, she'd thought it was just another prank, but then it appeared again, on the underside of a stair rail above an abandoned noodle shop. Then again, this morning, carved into the bark of a twisted tree growing sideways out of a roof vent. Always the same design and always somewhere out of place.

She took out her notebook and continued to sketch with obsessive detail. Arrows, spirals, mirrored loops, every symbol marked with the time of day, weather conditions, and chalk composition. Then, a shadow fell over her notes causing her to stop writing.

“You drawing sidewalk poetry now?” Junpei spoke. He was a loud, grinning Genin with too much glitter in his hair and not enough caution in his bones. He wore a cocky smile of someone who had committed their fair share of mischief already.

“It's a pattern,” Nozomi murmured, not looking up.

He knelt beside her, squinting. “Looks like a snail with indigestion.”

She finally glanced his way. “It’s not part of the prank war. It's not the academy students or the Genin.”

Junpei scratched behind his ear. “I donno, could be gang stuff?” He spoke with a sort of excitement in his voice.

Nozomi shook her head. “No known sigils match, and yet the strokes are deliberate. It's code. Someone wants it seen but not understood.”

“You get way too into this stuff,” he muttered before walking away. Clearly, he was no longer interested.

“Someone should.” She would whisper more to herself than anyone else.

She followed the trail deeper into the district, away from the painted mess of youthful skirmishes. Down the twisted alleys where signs had long since rusted over and bamboo blinds hung like forgotten eyelids. The symbols continued to grow in number; some chalk, some carved, some stained in crimson. The deeper she went, the more intricate the signs became. Finally, she stopped in front of an old shopfront with their blinds drawn, and windows full of dust. The business was titled 'Thunder Blossom Florist'. A relic from years ago. So long closed down that few even remembered the name.

There, inside the glass, was the symbol again. Only this time, it wasn’t drawn. It was burned into the very glass itself. Nozomi stared at it. The scorch marks ran deeper than mere soot or flame. They cut through the glass, as if seared by chakra itself. The edges still hummed faintly, and the sigil glimmered faintly when she narrowed her eyes and allowed her focus to sharpen.

Here is where she stood, lost in thought, and perhaps waiting for someone else to notice the oddities that have intrigued her so deeply.
 
Shortly before the chaos of the prank war erupts, a young Kaguya student skips through the bustling Susukino district herself alongside a ferret bounding about in search for anything to get its tiny little paws on and taste-test. The excited mustelid even tries to nibble on a discarded bottle cap before deciding it would serve better as a gift to give to his owner, scurrying atop her foot and clambering up her leg and then her body to present the somewhat shiny, somewhat smelly object to her.

"Oro!" she chuckles as she accepts the gift, stowing it away in the satchel dangling from her shoulders and giving her familiar a tiny scritch atop his head. "Thank you, but I don't know what I will use this for!" The snake-like mini-weasel then scampers back down and begins feverishly clawing at some sort of strange chalk sigil in a gutter alongside a parlor's front. The girl cocks her head to the side and examines the curious symbol: a horned crescent surrounding a jagged line. "Oro . . . you sure do find the strangest things," she muses to herself just as the prank war erupts.

"Eep!" she shrieks as she opens her satchel for Oro to crawl into. However, the ferret has other plans as he scampers towards another chalk sigil--apparently a trail for the more astute to follow--prompting his owner to chase after him. Eventually she almost bumbles into another girl--one staring inside the wind of an old business named 'Thunder Blossom Florist'.

"Oh! I'm so sorry!" she apologizes profusely with several deep bows before scooping up Oro--who had been pawing at the chalk sigil through the window--and puts him unceremoniously into her satchel. "Do you know what those things are?"

WC: 290
MFT: Week of 8/11/2025
 
Nozomi had been leaning against the edge of the Thunder Blossom Florist’s window for some time, her eyes tracing the faint sigils on the glass as if they might shift again under her gaze. The flower shop had been closed for years, its painted signage dulled by sun and rain, but the intricate symbol burned into the glass must mean something to someone. That, more than anything else in the district, had drawn her here. It was a puzzle, and Nozomi loved puzzles.

Her attention was locked on the horned crescents, jagged lines, and intersecting strokes that spoke a language most people ignored. She was thinking through possibilities when a sudden flutter of movement in the corner of her vision pulled her out of her thoughts. A girl came rushing up, almost colliding with her. Nozomi caught herself from stepping back, gaze flicking toward a blur of fur and twitching whiskers at the girl’s feet. There was a ferret; scrappy, bright-eyed, and wriggling with the kind of restless energy that reminded Nozomi of a lit fuse. It jumped up toward the glass, tiny paws pressing against the lower pane where one of the sigils had been drawn.

The girl’s voice spilled out in hurried apology, punctuated with quick bows. Nozomi stood still, her head tilting slightly as she regarded the newcomer. The ferret was scooped up and, after a bit of squirming, tucked into the satchel at the girl’s side. The creature’s small head still poked out, eyes following Nozomi with what felt like suspicious intelligence.

Then the question came, "Do you know what those things are?"

Nozomi let her gaze drift back to the chalk where the lines gleamed faintly in the daylight.

“They’re not decoration,” she said after a moment.

The tone wasn’t unfriendly, but it carried the crisp precision of someone stating a fact rather than offering conversation.

“Someone wanted these to be found, but not by everyone. They’re markers... for something.”

Her eyes flicked over the horned crescent, following the sweep of the line and the way it framed the jagged symbol inside. She traced the motion in the air with a finger.

“I think it might be a kind of language. Not letters or pictures exactly. Might be a code.”

She crouched slightly to get a better look at the one the ferret had been pawing at. The edges weren’t smudged, which meant whoever had drawn it had been here recently.

“They could mean a meeting point, maybe a warning, or anything else.”

Her gaze slid to the ferret, then to the girl. “You followed them here?” she asked. It wasn’t really a question as her tone suggested she’d already guessed the answer.

A mild curiosity hung beneath the words as her eyes returned to the sigil, measuring it again. The horned shape reminded her of certain old clan notations that she’d seen in border towns, like the one she grew up in, where chalk was cheap and rain washed secrets away before the wrong eyes could read them.

She stepped closer to the window, the reflection of her own face ghosting over the lines.

"I'm curious to see if we keep finding them, and if there is an end." She would look over to her fellow student, and the thought crossed her mind that others are typically not interested in the things she finds intriguing.

"Clearly the animal is curious. Are you equally intrigued? Would you wish to keep looking, and see if we find an ending point for these markings?"

Without awaiting a response, Nozomi would dig into her bag and pull out her worn notebook once more. Jotting down this new observation and making note that an animal, a ferret, had great instinct in detecting the fresh symbols. She would be seemingly lost in thought for a moment before adding,

"I think maybe your friend has picked up on something neither of us can see. Maybe it has the scent of whoever made these marks?"

Just then, the street noise swelled again. A group of laughing teenagers passed behind them as the scent of fried dough drifted in their wake. Though Nozomi wouldn't move, she was still eyeing the girl and the strange markings, waiting to see if she had piqued the interest of another to explore this further.
 

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