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:

Private [Class] Squeezing Blood from Stone

Ryuu Nozomi

New Ninja
Joined
Jul 16, 2025
Messages
124
Yen
775,300
ASP
2,434
OOC Rank
A
The lowlands of Lightning Country were already awake despite the world feeling as if it was still at rest. Mist clung to irrigation channels and riverbanks before drifting lazily above fields that stretched in neat, deliberate patterns toward distant villages. Water moved everywhere here being quietly guided to feed crops, power mills, and sustain the lives of people who had chosen to build permanence in this place. Somewhere from just beyond the nearest rise, smoke curled from morning hearths and into the pale sky above. Retired shinobi, farmers, craftsmen, and a few large families called this place 'Home'. Civilization thrived in this belt of land because the mountains gave just enough and demanded little in return.

Abruptly, the land ended. Nozomi stood at the edge of a wound that had not existed the evening prior. There was a quarry which yawned open before her. It was a vast circular depression carved cleanly into the earth near the base of the mountain, where stone shifted from fertile soil into veins of pale marble and iron infused rock. However, none of the walls bore markings of long hours of work. It did not look old as most quarry's do, but it seemed legitimate none the less. She had arrived before sunrise, when the world was still dark and the first breath of cold air off the mountain cut through her and awoke every nerve in her body. She had welcomed it, due to her previous training, the cold kept the mind precise.

Each detonation had been perfectly measured and each collapse guided. The crater had been formed in layers as if workers had spent years peeling the mountain open to allow for such a quarry to exist. Here, she took pride in her work as she awaited Ruri to arrive. The sun now crested just above the horizon, spilling gold across the quarry walls. Heat followed quickly causing the exposed stone to bake which brought about a faint metallic smell.

This place would teach something different than the hot springs had. There, chaos had been the teacher. How to channel instincts into reaction, adaptation, and survival. Then, it taught a practice in patience in the cleanup phase. Here, the lesson would be creation through destruction. Rather then break something down to dispose of it, this would be a lesson in how to take something massive and break it down to become useful. The marble glimmered faintly in the morning light where veins had been exposed along the quarry wall. Pale, dense, and most of all, beautiful. Stone carved by pressure and time. A beauty that would soon become the foundation of the new hot springs.

She imagined Ruri's reaction as she wiped the sweat away from her forehead. The look on the girls face when the mountainous terrain abruptly changed character as she crossed the terrain will be enjoyable to see. For now, Nozomi simply waited on the edge of the slope down. The sun had just come up fully now and was beginning to challenge the cold air that dropped from the mountain top. Folding her arms loosely, she allowed her gaze to drift toward the path that led to this place and waited for the student to arrive.

[WC: 540, Class: 1/5, Total WC: 540]
 
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Before she had ever set foot on the road, Ruri had already worked up a sweat. Her morning had begun in the quiet courtyard of the Shuusui compound, the sky still dark and the air cool against her skin. Barefoot on stone, she moved through her forms with methodical precision, Gentle Fist stances flowing into one another, palms cutting the air in sharp, controlled arcs. She focused on balance first, then breath, then speed. Each strike was measured, each step deliberate, chakra pulsing faintly as she practiced channelling it cleanly to her feet and hands. When the forms were done, she shifted into conditioning, push-ups on her knuckles, deep squats, core work that left her muscles burning but loose, followed by long stretches that coaxed flexibility from well-used joints. Then, before the sun had begun to hint at the horizon, her body was warm, responsive, and ready for anything, exactly how she liked it. Only then had she set off at an easy jog, already prepared for whatever the day intended to throw at her.

Ruri crested the last stretch of the road just as the sun finally cleared the horizon. Mist still clung to the grass around her ankles and drifted low across the stone path, parting lazily as she jogged through it. Her pace was steady and unhurried, the kind that came from habit rather than effort. By the time she reached Nozomi, a fine sheen of sweat caught the morning light on her arms and collarbone, her breathing was deep and even, well controlled and practiced. She slowed to a stop in front of her, hands resting briefly on her hips as she drew in one more long breath.

“That was a scenic jog,” Ruri said with a small, satisfied smile before adding, “Morning.” With a nod.

Her pale eyes drifted past Nozomi then, scanning the terrain. At first glance, it was just earth and stone to her curious eyes, a large, abrupt depression where the land simply… stopped. A hole? Big, yes, but nothing about it immediately screamed danger or importance to someone without context. Her gaze lingered, thoughtful rather than impressed. Then she looked back to Nozomi, rocking lightly on the balls of her feet, energy coiled and waiting.

“I take it the stone is what we’re after?” she asked, curiosity edging into her voice.

There was no trace of complaint in her posture or tone, if anything, she looked eager, as if waking early and running into the cold mountain air had been a privilege rather than a burden. Truthfully, it had just been routine. Ruri always rose hours before she needed to, running through stances and forms until her muscles were warm and responsive. Starting a day without it felt wrong. Whatever waited for her in that quarry, she was ready to meet it head-on.

[Class Post 1/5]
[Word Count - 472]
[Total Word Count - 472]
 
The lowlands stretched behind them in layered contrast. Mist clung to the grass while cold wind slid down from the mountains and met the sun’s growing warmth as it baked the ground unevenly. The land existed in different states of fertile and harsh, calm and volatile. Nozomi watched Ruri arrive, she had heard the girl before she crested the road. The steady cadence of footfalls, the controlled regulation of breath, and the way chakra settled rather than flared as exertion increased. It was a familiar pattern, one that spoke of preparation done elsewhere, Nozomi approved. By the time Ruri slowed to a stop, her body was already warm, aligned, and ready for more.

“Morning,” she replied, her voice carrying easily in the open air.

Ruri’s gaze lingered on the quarry with curiosity rather than awe. Nozomi turned fully toward the crater. What had been empty land hours ago now bore the illusion of long labor. There were clean-cut stone faces and wide shelves of exposed marble threaded with pale veins. It looked old and worked but the deception was intentional as newly scarred land invited questions.

“Yes,” Nozomi said when Ruri asked. “The stone.”

She stepped forward, boots crunching lightly against gravel, and gestured toward the exposed marble.

“This quarry will supply the material to rebuild the springs. Not just to restore what it was, but we want to improve upon it.”

Nozomi then raised one finger and spoke further, “Most people think it would require great force or explosives to yield results here, but you've learned better than that yesterday. You want to take the rock here and just like the bone, make it easier to crumble than stay together. There is... one key difference though."

She moved along the rim, indicating subtle shifts in color and alignment. Particularly the thin lines where mineral deposits changed along natural seams that cut diagonally instead of straight. She pointed out to a few different places in particular over the course of a five minute walk down the line of stone.

“Marble has natural fault points. Places where pressure already wants to go if you give it permission,” Nozomi explained. “Your Byakugan will see more than I can here. Use it to understand how it holds itself together. To start, we're going to mark up this rock into usable sections. You need to identify where large slabs can be taken out cleanly and where that pressure will naturally separate the material rather than shattering it into many pieces.”

She stopped and turned back toward Ruri, posture calm but attentive. She would take out a bag of clay in order to mark points of destruction even if they weren't going to break anything just yet. In this moment, a chill wind slid past them from the mountains, cold against sun-warmed stone. Nozomi adjusted her gloves, the mouths in her palms remaining restrained.

“Take your time,” Nozomi finished. “When you can tell me where to strike and why, we move onto the next step.”

[WC: 500, Class: 2/5, Total WC: 1,000+]
 
Ruri lingered at the quarry’s edge for a moment longer than strictly necessary, letting the Byakugan settle fully into place. The world felt louder like this, not with sound, but information, it was difficult to describe to someone who'd never experienced it. The stone itself was simple, happy to spill it's secrets, eager to be taken or so it looked to her. She hopped down from the ledge and into the pit proper, fingers brushing the marble’s cool surface as she walked along, searching each small vein and crack that could be exploited. It felt different from the bone of the previous day, denser and older. Bone still remembered motion, growth, life. This stone remembered pressure and time.

“Alright,” she said quietly, mostly to herself, then glanced back toward Nozomi. “This is… kind of beautiful, actually. In a terrifying, ‘could-crush-me-if-I-mess-up’ sort of way.”

She shifted sideways along the wall, eyes tracing through layers of mineral density. Pale veins glimmered faintly, not with chakra exactly, but with stress, places where force had been stored for centuries. Ruri pointed one out, then another, narrating as she went, half explanation and half thinking out loud.

“See how this seam runs straight for a while, then suddenly bends?” she said, tapping the stone lightly with her knuckle. “That bend is a trap. You hit too hard there and the whole thing fractures outward like a spider web. But, if you start below it, the weight above should pull the break clean.”

She paused, brow furrowing slightly as she compared two nearly identical veins.

“…And this one looks promising, but it’s lying. The surface says ‘easy break,’ but underneath it’s all knotted together. That’d turn into gravel instead of slabs.”

Ruri straightened and rolled her shoulders, the familiar warmth of motion spreading through her muscles. The early jog, the drills before dawn, they were paying off. She didn’t feel stiff or cold, just how she liked it.

“You know,” she added casually, glancing at Nozomi as she moved further down the quarry face, “most of my clan training is about ending fights fast. Strike fast, precise, before anyone can react. This…” She gestured at the stone. “…this similar, locating the Tenketsu points, striking in the most efficient spot, taking what you want and it can't retaliate.”

A small smile crept across her face as she marked another fault line with a quick press of a finger. “I kinda like that.”

She worked steadily, calling out observations as she went. Sometimes she asked questions outright, why one seam felt more cooperative than another, whether marble always behaved this way or if this quarry was special. Other times, she just talked. About her morning routine, about how weird it still felt to think of the hot springs as something she’d help rebuild instead of just a place where she nearly died naked and screaming.

“I used to think rest days were a waste,” Ruri admitted at one point, hopping lightly down from a ledge. “Like, if you weren’t pushing, you were falling behind. But after the springs… and then yesterday…” She shrugged. “I dunno. Feels like there’s more ways to get stronger than just hitting harder.”

She laughed, quick and bright, then pointed out another promising section of stone.

“This one’s good. Big slab potential. If we cut along here and here...” she traced the lines in the air “...it should come away clean without stressing the rest of the wall.”

Ruri paused, glancing back at Nozomi again, a little more openly this time.

“Thanks. For… all of this,” she said, gesturing broadly to the quarry, the lesson, the trust implicit in being here. “Spent my life having to fight to learn anything, no one expected me to accomplish anyhing. But you actually explain things. Makes it easier for me to understand.”

Her grin returned, sharp and earnest.

“Don’t get me wrong. I’m still gonna do things my way,” she added quickly. “But it’s nice having someone who doesn’t try to hammer me into a shape I don’t fit.”

She turned back to the stone, Byakugan still active, attention snapping back into focus as she identified a rather large, major fault line in this section.

“Okay,” Ruri said, energy humming through her despite the calm precision of her movements. “I think we've cleared out everything good on this level, want me to keep going or should we start Mining, or exploding I assume.”

She glanced over her shoulder, eyes bright, posture loose but ready, less like a student waiting for instruction now, and more like a partner eager to get to work.

[Class Post 2/5]
[Word Count - 765]
[Total Word Count - 1237]
 

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