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:

And The Winter Walked With Him .:. [Requesting Entry]

Joined
Nov 3, 2012
Messages
230
Yen
137,975
ASP
115
OOC Rank
A
.
.
Unnatural skies reflected gray in shining white upturned eyes. Swirling and bubbling clouds seemed to pour out their fury in the ominously silent form of pure and pristine white sheets of tossing and turning snow that seemed to weave through the storm, snaking in sinuous white designs before disappearing into the wall of grays and whites that the building blizzard was manufacturing. As time passed, bolts of lightning slashed from heaven to earth, ringing out with their thunderous battlecry and sending chills that both pleasure and comfort, but also an odd sense of anxious unease. Goosebumps crawled up his pale white arms, sending his muscles into spasms that shook crystalline clumps of accumulated snowflakes from his shoulders and equally white hair. He was a ghost, fading into and out of existence, his white adornments and the pallor of his features were shimmers in an ever-shifting wind, being drawn to life and then erased by the icy curtains that were in a constant state of cyclical pattern, manifesting then dying upon those same bitter gales that carved it into existence before being dispersed across the ground to become a thread of the majestic white carpet that flowed across the increasingly jagged and rocky terrain, smoothing it over with a pillowtop of powder, marred only in its perfection by the persevering footsteps that ended with the lost Santaru.

The journey seemed endless, every footfall that brought ease and progress also brought new obstacles in the young man's path. Shirokouu fully understood that he must have fallen away from the trail at some point along the road. It had been a long and harsh journey from the frozen remains of Kirigakure where Shirokouu had lost track of the time that had passed in what must have been years of meditation.
I need to find a way back... But it's been so long and it's hard to distinguish anything in this snowstorm. The young man moved a gloved hand to his forehead, wiping away melted snow and sweat that threatened to freeze right onto the shinobi's frost-reddened skin. As he pulled his hand away, he solemnly took note of the glowing white reflection that glimmered upon his wet glove. Still glowing... Why won't it stop? The constant state of illumination that his eyes were in left him feeling drained constantly, not to mention the frustration of not understanding its cause, and he was beginning to realize that he couldn't travel as long as he previously thought. I need to find somewhere to take shelter.

The young Santaru scanned the hilly and rocky surroundings for a place sheltered from the biting winds and piling snow of the blizzard. As he looked behind him he saw the forest from which he had just emerged. For just a moment, he thought of seeking protection from the storm within the branches of the trees. The thought in and of itself reminded him of the lush forests of Konoha. The feeling of remembering that village he grew up in gave him a warm, but bittersweet feeling inside. Taking heart in the brief moment of nostalgia, Shirokouu decided to move on. Just as he had decided to go that way a thunderous crackling sounded out among the forest. Trees, their sap brought down to the point of freezing from the sub-zero temperatures that the snow and wind of the storm brought, snapped, exploding into splinters and sending a cracking shriek from the forest that echoed off of the cliffs that it faced as two logs cross the path in an X of uprooted frozen trees.
No. I don't think I'll be going that way. He said, coming to a conclusion in his mind as he turned around and scanned what to him was uncharted ground. As his eyes moved across the cliffs before him, he searched for a cave or some other form of protection from the storm. Shiro's glowing eyes widened as a section of darker gray blurred into vision before him. Fortunately for the adolescent Santaru, the cliff had a section that hung over the ground, almost as if a smooth, shallow bowl had been carved into the cliff's face. As he approached, two great trees, what appeared to be the final two silent guardians of the faded forest, materialized in his vision. They stood, grand and thick, their clumped plumage bound by pounds of piled powder that they had shielded the lower portion of the embankment from. Truly, they provided a natural wall, making the overhang even more ideal shelter.The thought crossed Shiro's mind that they might explode in the same fashion as the trees from the forest, but greatness of size and thickness of branches and foliage sheltered the innards of the tree from the biting winds and any direct contact with the ever-pouring snow. </I>Well... I guess this is the spot... Shiro silently noted, then immediately began to make camp, setting up his things and securing the site before sleep and exhaustion overcame the biting cold and he succumbed into slumber.

Shiro's mind awoke to a scene painted in black. Slowly, several slivers of shining light awakened into existence like tiny slices in a pitch black lampshade. As they opened, the identity of these strange luminous objects became obvious.
Eyes! In an instant slivers became nearly circular, all radiating the same pure white light that broke through the darkness to guide the way. Shirokouu's feet moved unconsciously forward, stepping lightly and without sound on what seemed to be a hard surface of pure air. He felt that he could almost see the white of his clothes, the pallor of his skin in the light shed by the silent watchers' ever glowing eyes. Without a thought for action, his legs persisted, continuing Shiro upon his path into the darkness, towards the set of eyes furthest away from him. All of the eyes around him glowed a pure white light and almost seemed to be forming a path before him. At the end of the forward procession, a set of eyes stood out amongst the others. It was strange. They shed a light that was almost gray, rather than white, but they shone brighter than any others. As the young Santaru approached, those eyes that he was drawn to seemed to light up corresponding to his proximity, glowing a brighter and brighter gray, almost unnaturally shaded by their own illumination. Closer and closer still grew Shiro as he continued, the optics before him became more and more radiant until eventually those closed grays and the stoic light they displayed gave way to a brilliant and shining gold that seemed to break through the milky gray before them. He continued forward, mere paces away from the figure, his eyes set in perfect reflection to the ones they were focused upon. Finally reaching the end of the path, the sight that Shiro saw was mystifying. Shiro's eyes shone with unanticipated fervor, widened by the surprise of what he saw. His eyes, now glowing gold, lit the figure's face, giving away the identity of his observer. A grayed man, his face wizened by battle, loss, and constant analysis, stood before him. His visage portrayed an air of power. Power that was under complete control and guided by the solemn, stoic, and calculated anticipations of the mind beneath them was evident in his eyes.

Shiro stifled back a choke that was oddly silent.
"Dad..." The voice of his conscience echoed audibly and his glowing gold eyes sent melting refracted light through the tears that were subconsciously flowing from them. "Son, you know not where you go, but the will I have left with you, the will of fire, burns in your blood." With that, the young man's father pointed upwards, to a set of eyes that shone more brightly than any of the others could even be compared to. "You find yourself at the God of Lightning's door. But fear not. Surely we both know that the gods are the merely the consciousnesses that each of us reverberate. Follow your legacy, my son." Without a further word, an echoing voice halted his father's conversation. "Our eyes shine with the light of the storm. The rain, the snow, the hail, the winds. They shift according to our will. Unleash the fury of the soul that burns behind those eyes. Make them your tools. Be one with the storm. The Rain. The Snow. The Hail. The Winds. You are the sky's swordsman, the Lightning your blade. Wield it well, for you are the heir of a great legacy." The thought was all it took for the audible honoring to be heard. "The God of Lightning..." Shirokouu did not understand what he saw, nor who he saw, but his mind was not set upon that, but rather his father. Shiro's face donned an expression of confusion, he quirked an eyebrow, a telling mannerism of his heredity, and questioned his father's words. "What do you mean, father? I'm going back to our home... To see what's left of it... To do something about it... I've stuck in this blizzard since Kirigakure. It follows me and I don't know where I am." His mind wandered for a moment, his focus slipping to survival. "I'll find the trail back tomorrow.</B><i></i> With a single cohesive thought, the blackness covered over all that was to be seen. Tomorrow? Blizzard? Where am I again? Why.... Why does this feel so familiar..? Must be déjà vu~ The thoughts materialized in his mind and escaped from his memory in mere seconds. Shining eyes awakened upon a black world for the second time.

Shiro's body ached, a feeling that was not displayed just moments before, but lack of memory leaves nothing to be missed. He streched his arms, turning his head to crack his neck, before bringing his hands together to ring out his knuckles. Looking around, nothing could be seen of the outside world.
Surely I didn't sleep so long that it's night time again? He thought to himself, confused by his own lack of vision. And I can't imagine I've not slept through the night. The situation perplexed Shiro, but as he walked forward, to the place where the exit to his personal shelter used to be, the answer was revealed. The storm had raged through the night and the exit that had just been there was instead covered completely with snow, leaving not even a single hole that gave way to the light of the world. It was fortunate that he was blessed with the eyes that he was, at close range he wouldn't even need the light of the sun, moon, or stars to guide his way. Won't do me much good if all I can see is a foot in front of my face though... He thought bitterly, frustrated at his thoughtless lack of planning, despite what consolation could be given from the rough circumstances. <I>Well, I'll just have to dig. Giving himself over to the menial labor that it would

Hours passed as packed snow was scraped away by numb fingers that were bleeding at the tips from overuse.
Why can't I get through this ice!? The tone of his thoughts reflected his frustrated anger. It was anger that was short-lived, however, and in an instant the young Santaru's face regained the calm sense of composure that it generally held. "You are the sky's swordsman..." The proud, regal voice echoed in the confines of his constantly churning mind. "The lightning is your blade..." His subconscious reverberated, the thought finally cycling back to his conscious mind. "I know what I must do." The words escaped his lips, softly floating upon the air before being devoured by the cold nothingness of the snowy walls that formed the child's icy prison. With before unseen intensity, Shirokouu emptied himself into the lightning. It arced from his hands, his shoulders, his whole body, cutting jagged and wildly winding lines in the icy prison that encircled him. The snow gave way, falling all around him, but being cut and burnt to mere droplets of water before even reaching his skin. He did not relent, the arcs of lightning, at first chaotic and random, began to take on a sense of control, as if guided by the sword-arm of a samurai. Finally, after expending a good share of his energy, Shiro saw what his eyes had longed for: The light of day, shining through a final layer of snow. It illuminated the makeshift dwelling that Shiro had hastily prepared and gave the young Santaru a second wind. With a quirk of his mouth, a wry and cocky smile crept across Shirokouu's place. Time to finish this and get out of this prison! With a final level of focus, Shiro sent out several bolts of lightning, each hitting the spot he designated without error, and cutting a large enough hole in the weakened portion of the snowy embankment that he could finally crawl out.

As he emerged into the open air, the sun shone down upon him, his skin raised with goosebumps, almost as if his very pores reached for the light and warmth of the forgiving sun. As he scaled the cliff, his only exit, what his eyes finally laid upon left him breathless. A beautiful city, reduced to overgrown ruins, stretched out before the young Santaru. The ghost town had evidence of the massive, unnatural storm that had just taken place, but the serenity of the snow-topped shelters, capped with white and adorned with meter-long icicles that descended in ridges until coming to a sharp, dripping point, shining in the sun and refracting its light as though through a prism, gave solace to Shiro's tempestuous soul. He was so overawed by the sight and caught up in the deeply inspiring display of the ancient past that he didn't even curse himself for not scaling the cliff before night set. He walked the village, looking around for something to point him in the direction that he needed to go. Wandering into and out of random buildings, observing the sights that he saw, the young man probably appeared to be a careless traveler letting his feet take him wherever they willed.

Finally, the Santaru's eyes came upon a towering statue, split in two. The sight was a phenomenon that was familiar to him. Snaky lines made from intense heat and pressure lined the broken innards of the stone figure. He walked closer, feeling strangely drawn to the statue as if it was connected to him somehow. It reminded him of Konoha, of training endlessly, lashing out with lightning at the training stones that he often fed his frustrations to as a child.
Konoha... I need to get back on the road. I'm sure I'm not too far off from where I was supposed to go. He thought, still staring up at the statue before readying himself to depart from the lost city, until he was distracted by a voice he'd never heard before. "That guy used to own this town ya' know?" Spinning around in an instant, the figure of a ragged, middle-aged man came into his vision. "That is... 'Til 'ole Raiden struck him and tore this whole town down." Shiro took a step back, not fully trusting this unknown and haggard old man. The name he just mentioned reverberated in his mind, he dwelled on it for a moment, but couldn't remember where he heard it before. Perhaps an old friend? No, Shiro didn't have overly many friends back in Leaf. Maybe someone his mother had talked about? No, he knew all her usual cohorts. His mind escaped him for a moment, but he went back to regarding the drunken oldtimer. "Who are you?" He asked, his suspicion evident in his voice. "Whoa there young man. No need to get hasty. I'm just an old traveler that chose the road to be his home. And this here is my travellin' companion." He said, raising his jug before taking a swig of alcohol that was strong enough to hit Shiro's olfactory even with the distance between the two of them, an eye open that seemed to study the young man with a mischievous glance that Shiro didn't even take note of.

The young man seemed a bit lost in his thoughts for a moment before recollecting himself and making a decision.
Well, I guess there's no one else around here to ask... With his thoughts only on home, he asked the man, "Do you know the way from here to the village gates?" The man's mouth curved in a crooked smile as he replied in a jolly tone. "Ahh, the village gates, you ask?" He seemed to be wrapping his mind around the question, or rather it was his mind that was unraveling the inquiry. Either way, he answered honestly. A lie's not a lie if the questioner doesn't ask the right question. "Eh, well, I suppose I'll point ya down the right path." He said, attempting to show some semblance of distrust and reluctance. The directions couldn't have poured out quicker, however, and they were as numerous as complicated. I never knew how tough Konohagakure was to find. I must've traveled further off the trail than I thought. He noted mentally. If only Shirokouu realized just how very close he was to the answer that had been escaping him. With a nod and a brief, "Thanks," Shiro was on his way, his footfalls hitting earth and sounding out perseverance as he was finally on his way home. Or so he thought~.<i></i>

Shirokouu's memory may have had error on the venture to this point, but he followed the old drunk's instructions thoroughly, taking note of every tree, every bend in the trail, every rocky face that he had to pass over, and every precipice he had to summit. His will and determination to find his way back to Konoha and his weariness after being on the road alone for as long as he had engulfed him and he focused intently on the path before him. His mind was not dulled, but rather was unable to understand that the man's instructions had led him not to the towering gates, seen through the forests of Konohagakure that Shiro had come to love, admire, respect, and feel a part of, but rather the Dragon Gates of the Village Hidden in the Clouds. As soon as those great gates and the artificial mountain paths that sheltered them came into view, the mistake was set in Shiro's mind. Looking behind him, down miles of treacherous paths of jagged rocks and mountainous precipices, he knew that he could not go back.
"Follow your legacy, my son." His father's words echoed in the confines of his troubled mind and eased his fears. Suddenly everything was coming into perspective. "Raiden... That's where I'd heard that before..." The old drunk seemed less and less incoherent and more and more like he was guiding him right here, to stand before the gates of the Kumogakure, the Village Hidden in the Clouds.</COLOR>
<B><COLOR color="white">

.:. Requesting Entry .:.
.
.
 
Re: And The Winter Walked With Him .:. [Requesting Entrance]

Biru and Tedo walked out of the guard house and saw Random McRandomface requesting entry to Cloud, and headed over to him. ”Greetings! My most esteemed colleague Tedo and I will be handling your excellent paperwork today.” Biru exclaimed with enthusiasm. ”If you could just produce the required most bodacious documentation, we’ll get you sorted out in a most outstanding manner and allow you access to our non-egregious city behind these excellent walls.” Tedo continued, as the slightly atypical pair proceeded to do their job and guard the gates.
 
Wind swept Shirokouu's slight shorter than shoulder-length hair. His eyebrow quirked as the young Santaru observed the approaching pair, but their demeanor and greeting was so enthusiastic and unusual for shinobi, he couldn't contain a bright smile. When the awesome duo uttered, "Greetings! My most esteemed colleague Tedo and I will be handling your excellent paperwork today. If you could just produce the required most bodation documentation, we'll get you sorted out in a most outstanding manner and allow you access to our non-egregious city behind these excellent walls." Shirokouu couldn't help but laugh aloud before replying in a friendly and genuine tone. "Well met~" He started gregariously in greeting before continuing in a slightly sombered tone, "My name is Kakihara Shirokouu. I, unfortunately, got turned around and ended up here." He mumbles something, not even words, to himself before continuing. "The truth, however, is that I am a refugee. I have been away for quite I was returning from searching for comrades from my former home and my path strayed and took me here... Once again." His smile faded when thoughts of his past returned and ghosts of the past wracked his mind and furrowed his worried brow.

But as a few moments passed his eyes brightened as he thought back on the last time he had been in Kumogakure. His voice was genuine and full of faith, "But this isn't my first time here. It's been ten years, but I was also far from home, after getting lost during the inter-village exams, and I met the Raikage, Kiyo, on her way out... She helped me get home all that time ago. So these gates give me hope once more. That I can discover the fate of my home after being isolated for so long... That someday I can make it back." Shiro struggled against difficult emotions as he spoke, but his determination showed through in the look on his face, and even more-so in his glowing eyes.
 
”A refugee? That sounds most bogus.” Tedo said in a solemn tone. The pair had seen their fair share of refugees when Mist froze over, and it hadn’t been easy to process them all. In the end, after that particular crisis had passed, the procedure was now to call in a Sennin to handle the rest. ”I shall send for our most excellent boss lady, or one of her esteemed colleagues, so you can be taken care of in the most excellent of ways.” Biru said and radioed for either the Main Branch Sennin or the ANBU Sennin to come to the gates and handle the rest of this case.

[Calling Yuii or Yoshi]
 
Yuii would arrive bleary eyed and smothered in an oversized wool coat in an attempt to stave off the cold. She had been enjoying one of those short reprieves from her new position when the call to come to the gates had arrived. Refugee, no passport, either she or Yoshi were needed. She could not muster much enthusiasm in the cold weather. It had crossed her mind to just leave the call until the snow stopped or her fellow Sennin answered. Yoshi wouldn't have minded would he? He was gallant enough a thank-you would have sufficed. But that would have left the gate crew on alert and she couldn't afford to hurt the feelings of the people newly under her care. Probably they wanted to be in their warm homes as much as she did.

The blue haired woman exhaled as she approached the guards from behind and she took the opportunity to observe their tarried entrant. And odd looking fellow and surely someone the cult of the Dawnbringer might bother. Certainly he was a shinobi, only one of their kind could make it up the mountain side in a storm. "I'm Yuii It's bloody cold out here, lets talk inside. Biru and Tedo was it? Thank-you, you are dismissed," she said, not her cheery self when faced with the cold. She jabbed her thumb towards the nearest gate house, fairly certain that their guest could damage them just the same inside or out. She didn't wait but led the way back. She was a leader already; not.

'My feet are frozen' she thought begrudgingly, kicking the snow from her boots as she let herself inside, 'and my fingers are like ice. The main room of the place was militaristic-ally clean, with only a bit of common space. Someone had been playing cards recently, but her approach had scared the slackers back to work. Probably best to continue the illusion she cared.

"So you want into Kumogakure but don't have a passport? The village is not in the habit of allowing random shinobi in as led to unfortunate circumstances in the past. Where are you from?" she asked, occupying a chair and pulling her soaked boots off. Let him attack her, maybe she would be so lucky that he used fire. Then she could be warm again.
 
As Bill and Ted Biru and Tedo excellently acquired assistance, Shirokouu couldn't help but let his lips curve into a slight, but genuine, grin, his eyebrows and cheeks raising just a touch. The expression stuck, as though frozen by the unseasonably cool weather and Shiro stretched his arms out, moving his muscles to guard against the creeping cold and smiling softly to himself. All in all, Shirokouu seemed rather pleased as he waited. He was happy to see that there were others taught the way he was, despite the reputations of the gates of Shinobi villages.

The azure eyed kunoichi had dripping blue hair that matched her wind-watered optics, bundled up and shivering in a woolen jacket was hardly the ceramic facade Shirokouu imagined he'd find greeting him. Though, to be fair, the man that allowed him entry the first time all those years ago was hardly the conventional sight himself. Her investigative eyes and sharp greeting was more in place, however. "I'm Yuii It's bloody cold out here, lets talk inside. Biru and Tedo was it? Thank-you, you are dismissed," Her tone was short and decisive, something one would expect of a person in a leadership role. Shirokouu's eyebrow quirked slightly as he nodded and followed her into the building, the only sound coming from him being the subtle sizzle of snow shocked to steam upon his skin.

The guards scurried to look busy at her approach, another tell-tale sign of her position. Shirokouu was convinced she did not enjoy this particular facet of her job, but was impressed that she kept herself poised, especially in front of those she was expected to lead. Hmm... Something about her feels familiar... His mind shuffled through the labyrinth of jumbled memories, guarded closely, but the young woman continued before he could put his finger on the connection. "So you want into Kumogakure but don't have a passport? The village is not in a habit of allowing random shinobi in, as it has led to unfortunate circumstances in the past. Where are you from?" Shirokouu sighed at her simultaneously blunt and pointed questions as she began to remove her shoes and took his place in another seat, across a table from the Sennin. As she did so he shuffled through a pouch and produced a headband, the type recognizable to all shinobi, this particular one bearing the symbol of a leaf proudly in the middle with the family name Kakihara stamped in small print into the corner of the metal face. "My name is Shirokouu and I come from Konohagakure." He then produced a second item.

It was a medium sized tin case of some sort. "But you see, I find myself here due to fate. White skies and constant snowstorms don't make for easy navigation and while attempting to make contact with others from my village and find my way home. Strange as it sounds, I found myself here in its stead..." His words were genuine and honest, the tone told true, and as he spoke he opened the case, revealing three smaller tins, two collapsible cups, and a larger flask. However, as the utterance ended, his icy eyes wandered, and he paused for a moment, almost staring through the tabletop he leaned his forearm on. "For the second time..." As the kunoichi finished removing her shoes, Shirokouu opened a smaller tin, dropped something from it into the larger jug, removed a glove, held the jug, then proceeded to pour the liquid into both cups. As the frosty kunoichi finished and looked up, a slight smile sat on Shiro's lips. Intense eyes gazed, still glowing, always glowing, and reflecting pale blue in Yuii's for the first time during their introduction. "But that's a long story from a long time ago. Would you like some hot tea?" A slightly greyed eyebrow quirks above one sipped cup as the second slides across the table to rest in front of the Kagetsu clanswoman.
 
Leaf then. That was unfortunate for him."Oh, my sympathies." she replied, eyes raking over the relic of Konohagakure. It was strange to see a headband of any other country- for all her own travels Yuii had run into very few ninja from other countries. The great warriors of the land had little use for the tiny towns she had cared for. In fact, there had only been Sunuke, and her friend had never produced a headband for her. Perhaps he had lost it. "I don't know much about the situation in Fire country, that never concerned me, but I'm aware things have not been.... good."

Feet now warm she felt herself cheering up to conversation and life in it's totality. She took the extra measure of tucking them up beneath her bottom to keep them warm, though the action was awkward on the plain wooden chair. She found herself returning his smile, and somewhat entranced by his odd eyes. "Tea? I guess. Thanks." she would have preferred a cup of hot chocolate or sweet apple cider instead but beggers couldn't be choosers. The thought crossed her mind that it could be poison, but she disregarded it as unlikely. Why walk all the way up to Kumogakure just to poison a Sennin. Her occupation as Main Branch Sennin was in it's infancy, she would be easily replaced in the event of her death and there wouldn't be much impact. He seemed like a nice fellow anyways, if her instincts were anything to go by.

He was a lost refugee by her own definition then. That status was neither a positive or negative for his entry and Yuii groaned internally. There was a call that needed to be made and it was going to be up to her. With a sense of longing for the easier rank of Jounin, she proceeded, "So you're here by mistake? You can call it whatever you like but that sounds like some bad luck. How does someone climb a mountain and not notice?" She chuckled heartily at the very thought, picturing the colour bleached man blindly choosing paths and blithely ignoring his surroundings.

She would be interested to know the story, but first she needed to get the administrative issues aside. "So you're here, but what is your intention by entering Kumogakure no Sato? You need supplies and rest I guess, as you would, but anything more? Are you looking to see our Raikage? I don't see any reason to deny you entry, but there will nee- wait did you say twice? How do you get lost and end up here twice?" She couldn't help it, Yuii broke out in bubbly laughter. How did anything get lost up a mountain twice? That was the strangest luck. Maybe it really was fate. "Alright, you're going to have to tell me more. Not because I need to know for this, but how does that even happen?"
 
The cerulean crowned kunoichi's kind sentiments were sincerely appreciated by Shirokouu as he began his story. He had barely even started and already it was beyond her belief. "So you're here, but what is your intention by entering Kumogakure no Sato? You need supplies and rest I guess, as you would, but anything more? Are you looking to see our Raikage? I don't see any reason to deny you entry, but there will nee- wait did you say twice? How do you get lost and end up here twice? Alright, you're going to have to tell me more. Not because I need to know for this, but how does that even happen?" Shirokouu lifted his tea, which was an aromatic and calming blend that smelled of jasmine, sipping while smiling with his cheeks as she reacted in shock to the truth of his circumstances.

Putting his tea down, the white-haired lightning caller removes his jacket, laying it over the back of the chair, and revealing a lean toned frame within a similarly white vest. Reaching for his case again, Shirokouu affirmed and reminded Yuii, "Alright then~ Forgive me, but I did warn you. It's a long story..." He opened first the second of the tins, revealing a small pipe carved in traditional kiseru style, setting it upon the table, then opening the other tin. "I hope you don't mind." He said as he thumbed a small amount of pleasant smelling herbs into the bottom of it, his fingers sparking as they parted from the pipe. puff~ puff~~<i></i> The sweet smell of incense filled the air and a trained eye could see the shinobi was simply enjoying the aroma rather than inhaling the smoke. Instead, it lifted in a single thick stream, that waved and widened only slightly above his head in a sort of wispy halo.

Clenching it into his teeth, Shiro began, speaking as clearly as before, "It was 13 long years ago... Feels odd to say it. Almost like another life." His eyes, still oddly shimmering like white light being cast through icy waters, looked Yuii into eyes, maybe beyond them. "I was just a child, a young and enthusiastic genin, when my father was killed. Assassinated by shinobi who had abandoned their countries" His brow furrowed only slightly, despite the harsh memories coursing through his mind as he recanted his tale. "Needless to say, it was not an easy time for me. And the timing was bad as well. Before I had the chance to grieve and mature from the process of that kind of loss, I was called to take part in exams outside of Konoha." He paused, taking a deep breath and stretching his back before continuing, "However, things didn't go exactly as planned. I hung back, keeping from the group. As my father was something of a local celebrity, it was a challenge to avoid difficult questions and condolences that brought up even more difficult emotions. A blizzard set in, separating me from the group traveling and I lost my way." Shirokouu paused, looking away for a moment as recollections rushed.

The Santaru was a hardened man, who had been through much, but being in this place again, experiencing such similar circumstances, it was enough to cause his memories to return and his eyes to water slightly beneath a tense brow, further enhancing their shining effect, which appeared to get slightly brighter. Collecting himself, he regained his usual tranquil smile as he continued, "In my travels I met a kind, somewhat portly man who recognized me as shinobi and claimed he could lead me back to the Gates. He gave me detailed directions, which I followed, focusing on the icy path before me rather than the peak I was to climb. Little did I know that the gates I was led to were far from home, and none other than these." The similarities between the stories were uncanny and Shirokouu certainly realized it. "In fact... reaching here again on the grace of an altruistic traveler is so similar to the past, it's hard to imagine it being a coincidence." A half-laugh, half-sigh escaped his lips at the thought.

Placing the pipe upon the table, it continued burning in a straight line as though it was a stick of incense. Shirokouu lifted his tea to his lips, quenching his thirst then recanted his last experience of Kumogakure, "In my last visit, I met some incredible people, some of which I still wonder the nature of to this day. One of the most influential was the Raikage at the time. She saw a lost child from another shinobi village, and instead of seeing me as an enemy, she saw me as what I was, a boy who had wandered far from home. It was in her and her honorable companions' company that I finally found my way back to the village I knew and loved." His eyes were full of hope, but there was a pain hidden behind them too. "But when I returned, things fell into chaos and I was forced to leave, hoping to find a way to one day restore my home. My travels led me briefly to Kirigakure, but that place is now a frozen wasteland. Nevertheless, I walk now, unable to return home, but with faith that I will find those who feel the same as I still do... Who still have the Will of Fire burning within them. My path led me once again to attempt to return. And once again, I was guided to these grand gates, by mistake, by a kind traveler. I know... it's a difficult tale to believe. But it is the truth." Shirokouu sipped the last of his tea, calmly placing his palm over it and collapsing it back down to the shape of an overly large coin. He looked at Yuii deeply, grasping at churning memories, studying her facial features as his eyes widened slightly in realization, though he'd let her reply to his inconceivable, but veracious story.
 
Her face lit up a little when he relented to telling his story. Yuii was a sucker for an story and it had been a long time since she'd heard anything more interesting than crop growth details or marriage politics. By habit she pulled a small notebook and pen from her jacket pocket and without apology began to write as he spoke. The unseasoned sennin wrote quickly, her eyes hardly touching the page as she watched Shiro intently. She made quick note of when he had last visited, how he had become separated from his people and the odd circumstances that had led him into Lightning country. She had the good grace to hum sympathetically at word of his father's loss and while she herself had never had parents to mourn, she likened it to the unwanted sympathy after Kiyo's attack. The extra attention when grieving was, but her experience, never welcome. Otherwise, it was amazing to her that anyone could travel such a long way without noticing the change in the lay of the land or the difference in culture but he seemed sincere. His story did not paint him as a great traveller either, just a lost and somewhat grief addled kid that kept moving forward.

"Kiyo was kind," she muttered, jotting the Ex-raikage's name down. The timeline was correct. It would have been three years before the Kingslayer's grievously injured the last Kagetsu Raikage at this very gate. Yuii had been a child herself and knew very little about the lady Raikage's time in office. Her aunt had never been very forthcoming with information, and Yuii had never been overly curious. It seemed she had missed out on some interesting tales. Unlikely she could coax much from the sullen woman Kiyo had become.

At the conclusion of his story Yuii grinned and snapped her notebook closed, "You're the luckiest unlucky man then," she laughed, curious to know who could have given such detailed instructions to Kumo. Had they been one of her fellow shinobi or a more mythic creature. "Perhaps it is or was fate, but do me a favour and avoid such words within Kumogakure? The cult of the Dawn Bringer is ever vigilant in searching for signs of the return of their albino idol. It seems like every other week that someone sees a sign in a teacup or cheese sandwich; you would cause an outright riot. You're lucky to have not been in Kirigakure either; sadder still what has befallen that country. We're lucky the gods watch over Kumogakure and keep her safe while the other villages seem to suffer so." It was impossible to fathom losing Kumogakure or being turned away from it. The village was the closest thing to a home she had ever known, brief as her time spent in it's walls was. It wasn't a wonder he would be searching for his lost comrades either if they were all that was left.

"I'm going to believe you. I'm afraid I've heard nothing of this, but I am woefully new to my position so there is much yet left to read. I'm certain our fine Anbu have kept a file of your last visit, I may give it a visit," that would be something a good Main Branch Sennin would do, she decided. Not that she would go and find it herself, but it would be interesting to see. A break from the monotony of approving messenger missions and reviewing exam results. "I will grant you an interim pass into Kumogakure. I'll give it a month's duration, so long as you behave the entire time." She pulled out another booklet, this one new and official. On it she wrote a quick description of him, the date, and her permission for him to stay.

As she wrote she continued to speak, "Our current Raikage, Kogami Ayumu, is also kind, and if you are in need of more time in the village or are in need of something more I urge you to speak to him. Maybe he would be interested to hear about Konoha, maybe not, but it would not hurt." Her voice softened a little when she spoke Ayumu's name. Yuii had a soft spot for the Raikage, even if he played infuriating pranks sometimes.

She ripped the paper cleanly from it's binding, fumbled her signature on the bottom then held it out for him to take, "Kakihara for the last name, right? That was what they said. Here you are." His suspicions of any connection would be confirmed, of course, as her surname matched.
 
The Kagetsu kunoichi showed kindness and poise that did her name proud as the Santaru shared his story. Shirokouu couldn't help but feel warmth and hope that his memories of the hospitality of the people of Kumogakure were intact, as it was almost immediately displayed by one of their leaders. Snapping her notebook shut, Yuii got down to business, "You're the luckiest unlucky man then. Perhaps it is or was fate, but do me a favour and avoid such words within Kumogakure? The cult of the Dawn Bringer is ever vigilant in searching for signs of the return of their albino idol. It seems like every other week that someone sees a sign in a teacup or cheese sandwich; you would cause an outright riot. You're lucky to have not been in Kirigakure either; sadder still what has befallen that country. We're lucky the gods watch over Kumogakure and keep her safe while the other villages seem to suffer so." Shirokouu knew nothing of the clan she spoke of and had only heard the most rudimentary version of the story of their diety, but he did note that she seemed to prescribe to at least a semblance of the ideal herself. It would be a lie to say he wasn't intrigued.

Yuii continued, getting to the bottom line. "I'm going to believe you. I'm afraid I've heard nothing of this, but I am woefully new to my position so there is much yet left to read. I'm certain our fine Anbu have kept a file of your last visit, I may give it a visit. I will grant you an interim pass into Kumogakure. I'll give it a month's duration, so long as you behave the entire time." Shirokouu nodded and replied in gratitude, thanking the newly appointed Sennin and assuring her, "Understood. You can trust me to honor the good will I've always received here. Yuii... I've been on the road for a long time. Your aid is appreciated more than you know..." before she continued.

"Our current Raikage, Kogami Ayumu, is also kind, and if you are in need of more time in the village or are in need of something more I urge you to speak to him. Maybe he would be interested to hear about Konoha, maybe not, but it would not hurt." It was a sentiment he had hoped to hear. Perhaps there was still a slice of his experience that hadn't disappeared. "Thank you. I'll make it a point to stop through." Shirokouu finished packing his tins away as she concluded, "Kakihara for the last name, right? That was what they said. Here you are." A glimmer of shock appeared on the Santaru's face and his eyes widened as he nodded in reply, shifting in color and glowing slightly more intensely. Rather than icy blue, they shone almost stark white. Kagetsu Yuii was written in quick handwriting upon the bottom of the passport; a family name he recognized immediately. "Exactly right~" His reply came with a charismatic grin and a toning down of the intensity of his optical glow. Placing his pipe in his mouth, donning his jacket once more, and pushing his chair in, Shirokouu thanked the Sennin, saying, "Your family should be proud Yuii. You're a leader, like she was. It's plain to see." Folding the passport into a safe place, Shirokouu stood up. He began to walk towards the door, placing a couple fingers to his forehead and extending them in a wave towards Yuii before he was reminded. Turning back to her, he stood in a relaxed stance with a hopeful smile upon his lips. "I almost forgot." He started, "Have there been any other refugees of Konoha that have come through?" His eyebrow quirked as he awaited, hoping he was an even luckier unlucky man this day.
 
The Sennin blushed faintly at the compliment. While it was wrong, the idea of bringing up and arguing clan politics with a strange was not appealing. The Kagetsu felt little pride in the case of either Yuii or Kiyo, however, they were expected to succeed not rewarded for it.

Yuii balked at the question of other leaf nins and quickly occupied herself with finding her footwear again. Not dry, of course, but nothing a gentle fire jutsu couldn't cure. As she sat again to pull each boot on, the woman searched for the proper words to deny knowledge of any Leaf nin. She startled herself instead by admitting the truth. "I know of one without searching files."

Sunuke's image came to mind and she had to fight the smirk his sweet image brought. The ex-leaf nin was by far her closest friend and in many ways the brother she would never have. He had a childish and sweet demeanour that made the Cloud Sennin want to protect him above all else. The Nanjirou was mischievous and friendly which made him prone to ending up in dangerous situations. They were alike in that matter, but Sunuke hadn't lived or trained with shinobi the way she had. The idea of him meeting with Shirokouu and possibly leaving the protection of Kumogakure frightened her. If the wanderer left Sunuke might feel obligated to chase the ghost of his childhood.

She gnawed her lip as she stood thinking.

Sunuke had a right to choose to meet him, she reminded herself, just as Yuii had given him the choice to come to Kumogakure. If Yuii took the choice away from him she knew he would not forgive her if he found out. There was a chance that Shirokouu's destiny was to join Kumogakure, as it was certain Raiden himself had led him there twice. Sunuke might be the one to help him decide. "I will have him find you she said finally, breaking from thought, "He is under Kumogakure's protection."

Redressed again, she arose and waited for him to leave first, if he had a mind to. She would escort him through the gates make certain the guards found no fault with her makeshift pass. Then she could find her own way home.
 
Shirokouu's question was a genuine one, born of concern for his country and his compatriots. Yuii had no way of knowing, but her flash of a shocked reaction was wholly unnecessary. "I know of one without searching files." Her reply shocked Shiro equally, as a smile appeared upon his face in an instant. "That's fantastic news! I can't even count the days since I've last met someone from home." His excitement was abated quickly when he noticed her hesitation and apparent worry, chewing her lip as she worried. "I will have him find you. He is under Kumogakure's protection." She finally answered, sounding like the words were pushed out by whatever side in her won out on the internal argument.

The travel-worn but warm Santaru smiled softly as he replied. "Even better then~" He started, genuinely enthused. "I can't tell you how rejuvenating it is to hear that you here, who have treated me so well, are doing the same for one of my brothers. I'll look forward to reconnecting." The white-clad shinobi gathered himself against the upcoming chill of the harsh weather that followed him wherever he went. He took a puff from his pipe, reigniting the dying incense and stoking it against the wind to come. He turned to the door, nodding his head and turning it slightly as if talking over his shoulder he finished, "Thank you Yuii. I hope to see you again before our paths separate." With that parting sentiment fading to silence, Shirokouu's soft footfalls were all that remained as he walked out into the cold once more. Flashing his newly created passport as he approached, the young Santaru man walked into the Village Hidden in Clouds, leaving bare snowless tracks in his wake...

And the winter walked with him~

[Topic Left .:. Kumogakure Entered]
 

Current Ninpocho Time:

Back
Top