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 Embers beneath the Sand

Joined
Oct 22, 2012
Messages
1,549
Yen
96,190
ASP
343
OOC Rank
S-Rank
The commercial district of Sunagakure moved in layered rhythm. Fabric awnings snapped in the dry wind overhead. Vendors called out prices across trays of spices and dried fish. The scent of oil and iron mingled with sun-warmed stone. Children darted through narrow spaces between adults, their sandals kicking up fine grains of sand that glittered briefly in the light before settling again. Life. Noise. Commerce. And beneath it all, tension. Not visible. But present.

Near the edge of the square, where a sandstone column cast a narrow sliver of shade, stood Rakujo Reika. Her cropped jacket, dust-stained and reinforced along the seams, hung open over a sand-colored wrap top that clung close to her form without restricting movement. Bandages wrapped her forearms and hands, half-hidden beneath fingerless gloves worn smooth from long use. Utility straps crossed her hips, securing tools and sealed clay pouches that rested against fitted trousers tucked neatly into boots built for long days and longer ground. Nothing ornamental. Nothing accidental.

Her black hair fell straight down her back, dark against the pale stone of the village. Healed scars traced faint lines across exposed skin, old wounds carried without apology. She stood still. Too still for someone merely shopping.

The air around her felt… cooler than it should have under the desert sun. Not cold enough to draw alarm, but enough that those passing through her orbit noticed it subconsciously. Conversations dipped in volume. Steps unconsciously redirected. The current of foot traffic curved around her in a subtle crescent. Reika’s ember-toned eyes moved slowly across the district. Counting. Measuring. Three rooftops with clear sightlines. Two alleyways narrow enough to funnel attackers. One elevated walkway that could become a problem if someone clever occupied it. “Acceptable.” she murmured quietly to herself.

A child barreled through the crowd too fast, colliding against her hip before stumbling backward. Her hand shot out on instinct, steadying him by the shoulder. The contact was controlled, deliberate. No heat. No burn. The boy blinked up at her, wide-eyed, as though expecting something harsher. “Watch your footing,” she said simply. Her voice was low. Even. Unhurried. He nodded quickly and ran back toward his friends.

Reika let her hand fall. For a fraction of a second, the air around her shimmered, not visibly aflame, but dense, restrained. Something held tightly in check. She exhaled slowly. A faint curl of warmth escaped her breath, visible only because the air immediately around her remained just a touch too cool.

Across the square, raised voices sparked — sharp enough to cut through the market noise. Not panic. Not yet. But pride bruising against pride. Her gaze shifted toward the disturbance. The smallest tilt of her head. The subtle shift of weight onto the balls of her feet. She did not move. Not yet.

“Sunagakure,” she murmured under her breath, more observation than challenge. “Show me what kind of fire you carry.” And she waited.
 
Screenshot-20260213-094332-Chrome-2.jpg


The Commercial District. An area the boy would frequent when he had leisure time. Being back in the village, this would be one of the first areas he would visit again. "If only I could remember where to find one of those bakeries with the good donuts." He was finding his bearings once more as he ventured the village. He cleaned himself up, not wearing his tattered shroud anymore, but one of his extravagant suits. Not looking for attention, but keeping a clean look as he took his stroll. Despite his longing for donuts, he kept a smile on his face, greeting those that spoke first. Very charismatic, but careful not to be too inviting to forces that opposed Suna.

In the midst of a conversation he was having with a civilian, something caught his attention. 'What is that?' Uzi turned his head. He wasn't on duty, but since his youth, he had a heart of gold. On duty or not, he would investigate if things went haywire. He figured it was something small, but being aware of your surroundings was how one would be prepared for even the most catastrophic disasters. With the talks of war, Uzi knew to stay on his toes.
 
3992d996bd7efb426f66a6229554dfff.jpg

I wasn't looking for trouble.

I was looking for donuts.

Specifically the kind from the vendor on the east side of the commercial district who fried them fresh and dusted them with ground pistachios and honey, the only worthwhile culinary discovery I'd made since getting this body. I had on a simple dress Shin had bought for me, made me feel ridiculous, but whatever.

I spotted Uzi before he spotted me.

That extravagant suit. Fucking hell, that man had always dressed like he was perpetually on his way to his own funeral reception and wanted to look good for it. Something warm flickered in my chest, kinda the Kureji kind of warm, which I was absolutely not thinking about, I swear I wasn't... Fuck you... This shit was something older. Familiar.

I'd spent years inside Shin's stupid ass head watching Uziuke move through the world. Watched him fight, watched him make Shin laugh, watched him be one of the few people my brother genuinely trusted without reservation. Felt the way my brother's cheeks would flush when they spoke... I knew the way he carried himself better than he knew I existed.

Which was the weird part. He'd never met me. Not really. He'd met Shin.

This is going to be a whole thing.

I was already cutting through the crowd toward him when I caught it, that subtle drop in temperature, foot traffic bending around a fixed point like water around a stone.

I stopped dead.

Those ember eyes. That controlled stillness. That particular brand of quiet that wasn't peace but was something carefully held in check.

You have got to be fucking kidding me, this bitch? Really...

Reika. Red Eyes. The kimono-wearing philosophical pain in my ass from the overlook who had stood there radiating heat and dignity while I had my first genuine breakdown in a back alley clutching a desert rose and two steel guitars.

She hadn't seen me yet. She was watching the disturbance across the square with that measured tactical assessment that I recognized because I did the exact same thing and it was infuriating to see it on her face.

I had two options. Leave. Or stay and deal with both of them at once.

I thought about the donuts. I thought about Uzi in that stupid suit. I thought about how I had literally nowhere else to be and how running away twice in three days would constitute a genuine pattern of cowardice that I refused to establish.

I kept walking.

"Uzi."

My voice came out steady, which I was proud of. I stepped up beside him, and looked at him the way you look at someone you've known for years even though they've never properly met you.

"You probably don't recognize me. But I know you. Which is a whole thing I'll explain in a second."

I jerked my chin toward the disturbance across the square, then let my gaze slide—deliberately, unhurried, like I absolutely didn't care—toward the column where Reika stood.

"I'm Kohana. Chikamatsu Kohana. Shin's twin sister, sort of. It's complicated." I paused. "I used to be the ghost that lived in his head and made his life difficult. Now I've got my own body and I'm making everyone else's life difficult instead. It's a fucking upgrade, honestly. I don't have to hear his thoughts about your cute ass every time you walk away anymore."

I finally looked at him properly—taking in the suit, the years on his face, the way he was watching the square with that same careful attention Shin had always talked about. My gaze and appearance would like very similar to Shin's as we were technically genetically near identical since he used his own DNA as the structure for my homunculus body, and being that our clan was proudly filled with lady boys, Shin always kinda looked like a bitch to me already.

"Anyways, you're back. Shin mentioned you." Something in my expression softened just slightly, involuntary and brief. "He was glad. In case nobody told you that directly."

Then, because the universe apparently had a vendetta against my peace of mind, I felt that drop in temperature shift slightly as Reika's attention moved in our direction.

My jaw tightened.

"Also, fair warning, I know that cunt by the column and our last interaction ended with me running away, which was her fault, so if things get weird, that's context. Fuck her, fuck this, if she wants to start shit let's give it to her okay."
 
The disturbance across the square was minor. A raised voice. A crate knocked over. Two shinobi stepping in before irritation could harden into something uglier. Reika watched it with measured patience, red eyes tracking posture shifts, hands, shoulders, breath. Pride was always the accelerant. especially lately. but this looked like it would burn itself out. Good. She kept scanning anyway. Awareness didn’t turn off just because things appeared calm. Her gaze drifted across vendors, alley mouths, the flow of civilians and lingered, unintentionally, on a man in an extravagant suit.

Immaculate. Intentional. Too composed to be accidental. He wasn’t drawing attention, but he wasn’t hiding either. The way he stood, balanced, alert without being tense. set something faintly familiar stirring at the back of her mind. She couldn’t place it. Reika held the look a beat too long before pulling her attention away, exhaling slowly through her nose. Whatever that thread was, it could wait. She returned her focus to the square just as the last of the tension eased and the crowd resumed its natural rhythm.

And then... Of course.

Her eyes found the woman cutting through the foot traffic with purpose. Kohana. The woman who had fled the overlook days ago after venom and heat and a moment that had gone sideways. The woman who had spat words sharp enough to draw blood and then vanished. Reika felt the faintest flicker of old irritation, contained, distant, but present. Really…? She didn’t move at first.

Kohana had already noticed her. She was focused on the suited man, speaking with familiarity that Reika neither questioned nor cared to interpret. Reika watched long enough to catch the warning Kohana offered him, the framing already set, the story already being shaped. So that’s how it’s going to be. Reika weighed it calmly. She could stay where she was and let herself be defined in absence. Or she could prevent the lie from settling. The choice took no time at all.

One moment she stood beneath the column’s shade. The next, she was crossing the open stone of the square. Not hurried. Not aggressive. Just direct. The crowd adjusted subtly around her path, as if instinctively making room. She stopped roughly a meter from them. Close enough to be unmistakable. Far enough to leave space.

She caught the tail end of Kohana’s words, enough to understand the shape of them. Reika tilted her head slightly, red eyes steady.

“You talk like someone who’s only ever cut down what couldn’t fight back.” Her voice wasn’t sharp. It didn’t need to be. A small pause, not for effect, but consideration. “There were easier ways to stand in front of me.” Her gaze held steady. “I’ve buried worse than you.” There was no surge of chakra. No flare of heat. Just presence, contained, deliberate. Then she shifted her attention briefly to the man beside Kohana, acknowledging him without assumption or appeal.

“This doesn’t involve you.” Reika said simply. Not dismissive. Not hostile. Just clear. The man would be caught in the crossfire in the spat between the two women. Her eyes returned to Kohana. “I didn’t follow you.” She said. “I didn’t corner you. And when you left last time, I let you.” A pause. Her posture remained grounded, unflinching, not blocking, not retreating. “But don’t dress it up like I came looking for you.” She fell silent then, leaving the tension suspended not in heat or threat, but in choice.

[MFT]
 
Upon hearing his name, Uzi glanced towards the source of the sound. Vaguely familiar, yet couldn't quite put a finger on it. The explanation of the woman before him seemed ordinary. He was seen around a lot, maybe more during his times before his departure. 'She looks really familiar.' Uzi thought to himself as her attention seemed to drift else where. He wondered if he ever met this woman before. It was like trying to remember one of those things that were on the tip of your tongue, and when you almost had it, it slipped away. Something like a fish that a fisherman caught, and instead of placing it in a bucket, he placed it right near the shoreline, just so the fish could splash around and find it's way back into the body of water. What a miss, but one couldn't complain about such things. Spilt milk and all, right? He figured he saw her at the gates maybe? Let her out to the Outer Village areas, but then again, she could have been from somewhere else. At least, he didn't remember meeting her at the gates, and he usually had a good memory for that sort of thing. 'Maybe from somewhere within the village?' He assumed, listening as she began once more.

It seemed each word turned Uzi's mind a different way. It wasn't a rubik's cube, but his brain muscles began to spin. 'Kohana, seems easy to rem-. CHIKAMATSU!?' He half asked, half exclaimed. She was related to Shin?! He began to put a finger up, wanting to say something, but as she continued, he became even more intrigued. 'TWIN SISTER!? Shin never told me he had a twin sister!' He contemplated for a second. 'Wait, wasn't she at one of those Genin Exams?' Uzi listened until she paused once more, a small grin working across his face. His eyebrows raised as a relaxed mood over swept him, "You sure those weren't your thoughts?" He would jokingly remark, chuckling about the 'cute' statement. Uzi's expression would return to normal as she mentioned that his come back was appreciated. He nodded. With her last bit, Uzi looked over to Reika. She continued on how her and the traveler didn't quite fit well. He saw a familiar figure. Ah, but it was the woman that was allowed in the village by the panda ANBU. "The woman from the gates..." A smile graced Uzi's face as he looked in her direction. For a moment, it felt as though his eyes had met hers.

She began in the two's direction. 'Oh what luck. Hopefully this doesn't get out of hand.' Uziuke wondered what the traveler was intending to do. Stopping not too far away from them, Uzi watched as she began giving her own piece of mind. Even telling Uzi not to get involved. The spice added heat to the Commercial District was sure to get out of hand if he didn't step in. "Ah, so I have found you." Uzi stated, discarding the entire situation that began to brew in front of him. Yes, of course he knew the two's intentions. It seemed as though a conflict were flaring up, but from the way he approached the woman, it would seem he hadn't listened to a thing within the last couple of minutes. Was it his way of diffusing the situation? Umm... nope. It was just his way of interjecting. "The woman from the gates." Uzi gave a slight bow, showing his respects. Regaining posture, he continued on. "Yes, me and my friend here were just talking about you. You two seem to have something going on, but I'm still on that donut run from earlier. My mind can't quite comprehend what you two have going on right now. Perhaps we could all have tea and talk things over?" It might have seemed a joke to most, but Uzi really wanted those donuts. "I will take care of the tab myself. It's been a while since I've gotten to enjoy myself within the village, and an argument and a squabble would really mush my day."

Yes, it would really mush his day.

But all in all, regardless, it would be his duty to diffuse the situation. Hopefully the approach he took would be enough to clam things.
 

Current Ninpocho Time:

Back
Top