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.

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Open Return of the 12th Kazekage: The Weight of Solitude

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The streets of the Golden District gleamed beneath carefully maintained lanterns, their warm amber light reflecting off polished stone and pristine glass. This sector of Sunagakure's Commercial District catered to those with wealth and status, merchants who'd struck fortune in the desert trade routes, shinobi who'd survived long enough to accumulate mission payments, nobles from the various clans that called the village home. The establishments here didn't advertise with garish signs or loud music. They didn't need to. Those who belonged knew where to find them.

Chikamatsu Shin walked these streets with measured steps, his distinctive golden hair catching the lantern light despite the late hour. He'd left his silver armor in the Arboretum, opting instead for simple civilian clothing, a dark black suit tailored to fit his body with clean sharp lines that rested over a light blue button down shirt, the kind of attire that spoke of quality without demanding attention. The absence of his usual regalia felt strange, like removing a second skin he'd worn for so long he'd forgotten what lay beneath.

His crystal blue eyes, once bright with purpose and certainty, now carried a distant quality, as though they were focused on something beyond the physical world before him. The weight of recent events pressed against his consciousness like the desert heat against the dome's glass, constant and inescapable.

`How long has it been since I walked these streets alone?`

The thought came on unexpectedly, accompanied by the phantom sensation of other presences that should have been there. Kohana's sharp awareness scanning for threats. Maho's tactical assessment of sight lines and escape routes. Seishinko's perception of the spiritual currents flowing through the district. Seikatsu's quiet prayers for the souls they passed. Kayaku's quick mouth running about what to purchase next.

Now there was only silence. Singular consciousness moving through a world that suddenly seemed too large, too empty.

The Azure Lotus stood at the intersection of two main thoroughfares, its design a journeyman's masterwork of blue-tinted glass and polished desert stone. The establishment's name was etched in elegant script above the entrance, accompanied by the stylized lotus bloom that served as its sigil. Unlike the louder establishments in the Stone Plaza or the illicit speakeasies that hid in shadowed corners of the redlight district, the Azure Lotus cultivated an atmosphere of refined discretion.

Shin pushed open the door.

The interior was exactly as its reputation suggested, understated elegance designed to soothe rather than impress. Low tables of dark wood were scattered throughout the main room, each separated by carefully positioned screens that offered privacy without complete isolation. The lighting came from paper lanterns infused with soft blue chakra carmots, casting everything in a gentle aquatic glow that reminded Shin of looking up through water toward the surface.

A handful of citizens occupied various corners of the establishment. A merchant in fine silks nursing what appeared to be expensive sake, one that must have gained wealth from the recently dissolved merchant clans. Two ANBU members Shin recognized from staffing reports, their masks removed and not present at their table, speaking in hushed tones. An elderly woman whose weathered face spoke of decades surviving the desert's harsh embrace, staring into a cup of tea as though it held answers to questions she'd long since stopped asking aloud.

No one looked up as Shin entered. In a place like this, discretion was currency, and everyone's business was their own.

The bartender—a middle-aged man with salt-and-pepper hair and the precise movements of someone who'd mastered their craft—looked up from the glass he was polishing. Recognition flickered across his features, quickly followed by professional neutrality. He nodded respectfully toward an empty seat at the bar.

Shin crossed the room with quiet steps, settling onto one of the high-backed stools. His body still ached from the Baron Twins battle, especially in the places where he'd burned his own life force as fuel leaving scars of brilliant gold... where he'd pushed himself beyond safe limits because the alternative was watching his village suffocate in collapsed tunnels.

The bartender approached with unhurried confidence.

"Good evening. What can I prepare for you?"

Shin considered the question. What did one drink when carrying the weight of dissolved bonds and shattered promises?

"Sake. Something from the northern regions if you have it. Clear, cold, strong enough to feel but refined enough not to regret."

A ghost of approval crossed the bartender's face. "I have a vintage from the mountains near the border with Lightning Country. Water from glacial runoff, rice cultivated in terraced fields. It's... contemplative."

"That sounds appropriate."


The bartender retrieved a dark blue bottle from behind the bar. He selected a small ceramic cup—pale blue with a pattern of falling petals glazed into its surface—and poured with practiced precision. The sake caught the lantern light as it filled the cup, clear as mountain water and just as cold.

Shin stared at the cup for a long moment. The falling petal pattern seemed to mock him, flowers preserved forever in their descent. Unlike the Yurei Orchid, whose grey petals curled inward in death. Unlike the bonds he'd severed, which couldn't be preserved, only destroyed.

He lifted the cup with hands that remained steady through sheer force of will.

"To roots that remain, even when the flower dies."

The sake burned cold down his throat. It tasted of distant mountains and melted snow, of places far from the desert's heat and the underground village's pressing darkness. Places where perhaps a man could stand alone without the weight of the world crushing him into the sand.

He set the cup down and poured another, engaging in the ritual of it. The measured pour. The contemplation of liquid stillness. Each repetition a small meditation on the concept of solitude he was only now learning to bear.

The door to the Azure Lotus opened again, admitting another patron seeking refuge in the late evening hours.
 
Kureji stuck out like a sore thumb. He goes where his feet take him and lo and behold! He ended up at some gaudy rich person avenue! He carried no class, only confidence as he walked down the street with his guitar strapped to his back. He wore the glasses mainly because he feels like it. There's totally nothing wrong with his vision. Heads turned as he would walk by, most of which, he deduced to be civies. The few that didn't he guessed were Sand shinobi that dug themselves deep into the rich status.

It really made him sick to think about. Aside from PERHAPS the sand shinobi that live here, he would guess that the rich people who live here have no interest in helping the small guy, the poor, the needy! Them seeing Kureji here is probably an anomaly enough for them to warrant to want to find a way to remove him. He doesn't care. His own personality is loud and confident.

Eventually, he would make his way to what appeared to be another gaudy place. It just yells to him that they don't want attention but is at an intersection of rich person avenue! But he thought, heck, why not? So he would walk in and immediately, some people have turned heads to look at him, stunned to see, well.... A commoner in their eyes so brazenly waltz into a place like this. He would wink at a group of women and do the finger gun thing as he passed by them to make his way to the bar.

Sitting down, there was one other guy there who looked vaguely familiar to him. He feels like he met the guy before but the name was eluding him. He shrugged and waited for the barkeep to come his way. After about a minute, the barkeep came back, from Kureji guessed taking someone else's order. He looked Kureji up and down, almost hesitant but eventually asked him what he wants to order.

"You got anything strong? Just wanna chillax. Ya feel me?" He would say in a casual manner.

The bartender would stare at him, as if trying to process what he had just said before replying, "We have an import from Moon Country, very pricey though."

Kureji has had strong liquor from Moon Country before because he has been there before. But he's down to have another of their drinks. He would pay the appropriate amount to the bartender whom looked rather surprised that Kureji would have enough to buy the whole bottle! Kureji smiled pleasantly as he was handed the bottle and poured some into a glass. He downed the shot in one go pretty easily. Over the years he's gotten used to the bad aftertaste that follows some alcohol.
 
The cold burn of sake was still settling in Shin's chest when the atmosphere of the Azure Lotus shifted. Not dramatically, but enough that his awareness—honed by years of reading rooms and crowds—registered the change. Heads turned. Conversations paused mid-sentence. The kind of disruption that came from someone who didn't belong in a place like this walking in anyway.

Shin didn't need to look up immediately to know something was different. The quality of the silence told him enough.

When he did glance toward the entrance, recognition came with the weight of complicated history.

Kureji.

The missing-nin moved through the refined space with the kind of confidence that had nothing to do with belonging and everything to do with not caring whether he did or not. The guitar strapped to his back, the casual swagger, the finger guns at a group of women who looked scandalized by the gesture—all of it screamed someone who existed outside the careful social hierarchies that places like the Azure Lotus were built to maintain.

Shin watched him approach the bar and settle onto a stool several seats away. Close enough to be in the same space, far enough to maintain distance. The bartender's hesitation before taking Kureji's order was subtle but noticeable.

`Of all the people to walk through that door.`

Their history wasn't pleasant. Two encounters, both tense, both leaving bad tastes that had nothing to do with alcohol. The first had been dry and cold, two people who instinctively disliked each other for reasons neither had bothered to articulate. The second had nearly ended in violence when Kureji's bandmates had threatened Shin's students, and only careful restraint on both sides had prevented bloodshed.

And yet.

Shin's fingers traced the rim of his sake cup as memory pulled him back to the surface battle. The explosion. The sandworms. His phoenix wings flickering as his life force burned too hot, too fast. The moment when he'd pushed beyond safe limits and felt his body beginning to pay the price in ways that would leave permanent scars.

And music. Healing music that had woven through the chaos, notes that had sustained him when his own reserves had nothing left to give.

Kureji had been there. The missing-nin who owed Sunagakure nothing had shown up and helped extract information from the puppetmaster, had provided support when the village's own forces were stretched thin and desperate.

The gratitude Shin felt was genuine, even if acknowledging it felt awkward in a way he couldn't quite name.

He lifted his cup and drained the remaining sake, then caught the bartender's attention with a slight gesture. When the man approached, Shin spoke quietly enough that only he could hear.

"The gentleman who just sat down. Whatever he's drinking, and whatever food he'd like... put it on my account."

The bartender's eyebrows rose fractionally, but he nodded with professional discretion before moving to inform Kureji of the arrangement.

Shin poured himself another measure of sake, the ritual giving him something to focus on while he waited to see if Kureji would acknowledge the gesture or ignore it entirely. His crystal blue eyes remained fixed on the falling petal pattern in his cup, but his awareness tracked the missing-nin's presence with the kind of attention born from years of tactical assessment and genuine curiosity.

When he finally spoke, his voice carried just far enough to reach Kureji without broadcasting to the entire establishment. The exhaustion in it was impossible to hide, but beneath that was something that might have been sincerity.

"I heard your music during the battle at the surface. The healing melodies kept more people standing than my medical techniques did that day."

He lifted his cup slightly, a gesture that wasn't quite a toast but held similar weight.

"Thank you for that. And for helping with the interrogation. The information you extracted bought us time we desperately needed."

The words felt strange in his mouth, gratitude directed at someone he'd nearly fought, acknowledgment of debt to someone who existed outside the structures of loyalty Shin had built his entire life around. But recent events had taught him that the world was more complicated than the neat categories he'd once relied on, and that sometimes the people who showed up when it mattered most were the ones you least expected.

He set the cup down and met Kureji's eyes directly, his expression weary but genuine.

"The least I can do is buy you a drink and a meal. Consider it payment for services rendered, if that sits better than calling it gratitude."
 
Kureji drank his alcohol in peace, that is, until the bartender came back and refunded him his money in full. He raised an eyebrow as the man would explain that all his drink and food will be put on another person's tab. "Now who would do such a thing?" He mused to himself.

It wasn't very long until the person made themself known. The man would explain that he heard Kureji's music that healed a lot of sand ninja and that he was able to get information out of an enemy. He moved a couple seats closer, leaving only one empty seat between them as he would speak, "I did it to help the civies out in the long run of things. You all die, they'll most likely will die soon after. I know how you people work more than those attacking." He would take another shot of his drink before offering Shin some. Whether he took it or not, Kureji would continue, "I don't think I told anyone of that. Do you read minds?! Quick! What number am I thinking of!" He would exclaim and think of the number sixty-three.

He would listen as the man would go on and confirm that he was the one that is covering the cost of Kureji's meal and drink, saying that it was payment if Kureji won't take it as gratitude. Kureji racked his brain trying to remember who this was... The voice surely sounded familiar to him. He would take another shot and then say, "I think I know who you are..." He let the suspense build up before he spoke again, "You're glowy dude. Though, you're not glowing right now." He would wait for the man to confirm his identity before continuing on, "Well thanks but I do gotta ask ya. This type of stuff usually comes with a but. I guess I'm waiting for a terms of service agreement with some fine print that is easily missed type of thing." He took a shot, "I'm already planning on taking a trip to our.... mutual 'friends' hang out spot, but it would be better if I'm in the loop of things, so I don't cause any unnecessary collateral damage."

Kureji would let out a yawn and stretch his body while still sitting on the barstool, "If you're willing to have me tag along, then we can talk a deal. Perhaps one more enticing than covering for a meal and drink." He would say casually.
 
A faint smile ghosted across Shin's lips at the "glowy dude" comment—exhausted humor that carried more weight than genuine amusement. The kind of reaction that came from a man too tired to maintain perfect composure.

"Glowy dude. I suppose that's accurate enough. My Phoenix Sage Mode tends to draw attention, especially when I am chakra burning to death."

At Kureji's question about mind reading, Shin's expression shifted into something that might have been amusement. He set the glass down and tapped his temple deliberately.

"Actually, yes. I do read minds. Or rather, I connect them."

He leaned back slightly, his crystal blue eyes holding a knowing glint despite the exhaustion.

"Do you remember those giant flowers on the battlefield? The ones that bloomed across the combat zone?"

Another tap to his temple, more pointed this time.

"Mind Web Jutsu. If you saw it, I saw you. Every ally connected through those flowers shares their sensory information with me—sight, sound, tactical awareness. It's my greatest asset as the Kazekage."

The weight of that statement hung in the air for a moment. The admission of just how much Shin had observed during the battle, how deeply his awareness had penetrated the chaos.

"So when you played your healing melodies, when you helped with the interrogation... I wasn't just receiving reports after the fact. I was there, in a sense. Watching through the eyes of every shinobi you helped keep standing."

He took another measured sip of the Moon Country import, letting Kureji process that information.

"And the number you're thinking of is probably something intentionally absurd to test whether I actually claimed to read minds. Which I did."

A pause, then something more serious crept into his tone.

"Though I'll spare you the discomfort—I don't actively read surface thoughts without the jutsu active. Right now, we're just two people having a drink. No psychic surveillance."

The exhaustion in his voice carried through into his next words, but so did something that might have been respect—grudging, complicated, but genuine.

"As for terms and conditions..."

Shin paused, considering how to navigate this carefully.

"There are none. I'm not recruiting you. I'm not trying to manipulate you into service. You helped when you didn't have to, and I'm acknowledging that debt. That's all."

He poured himself another measure of sake, the ritual giving him a moment to organize his thoughts. The golden scars beneath his clothing ached, permanent reminders of burning too bright, pushing too far.

"You're right that I'm usually the type to attach strings. That's how village politics works. How shinobi alliances work. But tonight..."

He gestured vaguely at the Azure Lotus around them, at the space that existed outside official hierarchies.

"Tonight I'm just a man buying another man a drink because gratitude seemed appropriate."

The mention of their "mutual friends" caused Shin's expression to harden slightly. The Baron Twins. The battles still to come. The intelligence they'd extracted from the puppetmaster pointed toward conflicts that would require every advantage they could muster.

"If you're planning to move against the Baron Twins, I won't stop you. They're a threat to everyone in Wind Country, mercenaries and village shinobi alike."

He took another drink, letting the cold burn settle.

"But I'd be lying if I said I wouldn't appreciate coordination over chaos. Information sharing benefits us both."

He turned on his stool to face Kureji more directly, his posture still carrying the weight of exhaustion but his attention fully present.

"So here's what I can offer, without strings: Intelligence. When we learn something about the Twins' movements, locations, capabilities—I'll make sure you receive that information through whatever channels keep us both comfortable. In return, if you discover anything in your own operations, you share it back. No formal alliance, as I feel as though you'd be opposed to rejoin our ranks. Just practical cooperation against a common enemy."

Shin's fingers traced the rim of his sake cup, an unconscious gesture that betrayed the contemplative mood.

"As for 'tagging along'..."

He considered this carefully.

"Six days, meet my team at the gates. We will be resurfacing then..."

He met Kureji's eyes directly, the weariness still present but underneath it something more calculating, more strategic.

"...but for now, order whatever food you want. The bartender here makes an excellent grilled fish with desert herbs, if you're interested in recommendations."

"And Kureji?"


The use of the missing-nin's actual name was deliberate, a small acknowledgment of treating him as a person rather than just a tactical asset.

"The civilians you helped save? They won't know your name or what you did. But I do. And that matters, even if you don't think it should."
 
Kureji listened to what the man had to say, through and through. He was never really good at being a bullshit detector so he'll just have to take the man's word for it. He poured himself another shot and offered Shin one as well before he downed his.

"Since we're on the same page now." Kureji started, "And since you got this.... Hyper awareness thing when you got giant flowers on the battlefield. Then you know more or less about my specialty. Even with coordination, I thrive in a chaotic environment. So I'll give a recommendation."

The barkeep came by with the food that Shin had recommended and Kureji's eyes lit up as he dug in. After a few bites, he swallowed his food and spoke once more, "One of their operations is trafficking. It is a complete affront to my own ideals of all living beings having freedom. I have two goals. Free everyone and everything there." He took another bite of his fish before he continued, "And if these twin dudes are still alive by the time I get to em, I'll kill em as well." He said it as if he was stating a fact. "I will act as both a distraction and a search and rescue for the first part of the invasion. And once I'm done, I'll regroup with yall."

There was one other thing that pricked Kureji's mind. Specific wording that Shin had used. 'Rejoin our ranks'. "So you knew, huh? Was wondering when people were gonna link me back to this place." He took another shot. "And you still want to work with someone like me, given what I assume that you know my history?" Back when he had first went missing from the Village, he had went quietly, in the dead of night and not caused harm to a single other villager or ninja. For the most part, he was basically a ghost in Wind Country. That was when.... He was a fresh genin. He acted purely on impulse and he has no regrets whatsoever. He figured that it was a matter of time that someone would find out who he really was. His history. There was no danger or sound of being cornered in his voice, it was more like he was talking plainly about something factual.

He thinks of this as important for him to know of what this man's stance is on Kureji as a missing ninja. The last thing Kureji wants is to help the Sand ninja out with this problem only for them to turn around and throw him in a jail cell after they find no more use of him. Or ya know, try and execute him, any of that not so fun stuff.
 
Shin accepted the offered shot with a slight nod, the gesture carrying more weight than simple politeness. He lifted the glass in a brief acknowledgment before downing it in one smooth motion, the Moon Country liquor burning cold and clean down his throat. The taste was harsh but honest—no pretense, no artifice. Appropriate for the conversation they were having.

He set the glass down and listened as Kureji laid out his approach, his specialty, his goals. The mention of thriving in chaos didn't surprise him. Everything about the missing-nin screamed controlled entropy, the kind of fighter who turned disorder into advantage while more structured combatants struggled to adapt.

"Trafficking," Shin repeated, his voice carrying a harder edge than before. "Yes. The intelligence we extracted confirmed it. The Golden Sanctuary operates as a merchant paradise on the surface, but underneath runs on forced labor and human commodities. It's... reprehensible."

His fingers tightened slightly around his sake cup, the only outward sign of the disgust that rippled through him. As a medical shinobi, as someone who had sacrificed pieces of his own soul to give life, the concept of treating people as disposable resources struck something deep and visceral.

"Your approach makes tactical sense. If you're acting as search and rescue while simultaneously creating chaos, you draw their attention away from our primary objectives. The Twins won't be able to focus their full strength in any one direction if they're dealing with mass liberation and structural disruption."

He poured himself another measure, the ritual giving him a moment to consider the operational possibilities. Kureji's music-based abilities, his clear disregard for conventional tactics, his personal investment in the trafficking angle—all of it could be weaponized effectively if coordinated properly.

"We'll plan the invasion with your chaos in mind. My team will know you're operating independently in the search and rescue capacity. I'll make sure they understand that the disruption isn't friendly fire—it's part of the strategy."

The barkeep delivered the grilled fish, and Shin nodded his thanks. He let Kureji enjoy several bites before continuing, giving the man space to eat while processing what came next.

Then came the question about his history. About being a missing-nin. About whether Shin knew.

The Kazekage set down his chopsticks and met Kureji's eyes directly, his expression serious but not hostile.

"Yes, I knew. Not immediately, but once you showed up on the battlefield, I made it my business to know who was operating in my village's sphere of influence."

He took another drink, buying himself a moment to choose his words carefully.

"Your history says you left quietly. No violence against village personnel. No theft of forbidden techniques or classified information. No sabotage or betrayal. You just... left. Walked away from the life Sunagakure had planned for you and chose your own path."

Shin's tone carried neither approval nor condemnation, just factual assessment.

"Technically, that makes you a missing-nin. Legally, I could order your arrest or execution. Practically..."

He gestured vaguely at the space between them.

"I'm more interested in results than regulations. You've caused no harm to my people. You've actively helped them when you had no obligation to do so. And right now, we're facing an existential threat that requires every capable fighter willing to oppose it."

The exhaustion in his voice deepened, but beneath it was something that might have been pragmatic respect.

"My stance is this: work with us against the Baron Twins, and I won't pursue the missing-nin issue. No arrest. No execution. No jail cell waiting for you after the dust settles. You help us end this threat, you walk away free—same as you walked away before, but this time with my explicit permission rather than silent departure."

He leaned back slightly, his posture open rather than guarded.

"After the Twins are dealt with, if you want to stay gone, you stay gone. If you want to return to the village officially, we can discuss reinstatement as a Jounin within our ranks where you could help teach the next generation on how to live their lives for the betterment of all people, not just there own. But there's no trap here, Kureji. No bait-and-switch where I use you and then betray you. I'm offering practical alliance against a common enemy, with the understanding that what happens after is your choice to make."

Shin took another bite of fish, letting that sink in.

"I've learned recently that the world doesn't fit into neat categories of loyalty and betrayal. Sometimes the person who shows up when it matters most is the one who refused to be bound by the structures everyone else accepts without question."

His crystal blue eyes—still luminous even without his sage mode active—held a knowing weight.

"You chose freedom over security. I can respect that, even if I chose the opposite path. And right now, I need people who choose to fight rather than people who fight because they're ordered to. The former tend to be far more effective when things get desperate."

He raised his sake cup slightly, a gesture that wasn't quite a toast but carried similar intent.

"So here's my official stance as Kazekage: Kureji, formerly of Sunagakure, is operating under temporary amnesty for the duration of operations against the Baron Twins and their organization. All charges related to unauthorized departure are suspended indefinitely. He is to be treated as an independent contractor rather than a hostile missing-nin."

The formality of the statement gave way to something more personal.

"And my personal stance? You helped save lives when you didn't have to. That earns more trust from me than a hundred sworn oaths from people who only stay loyal because leaving would be inconvenient."

He paused, then added with something that might have been dark amusement.

"Hell, I made the missing-nin Miroku Akkuma of Kirigakure not only my Medical Chief of Research and Development when I was Sennin—I elevated him to Sennin when I became Kazekage. The man has charges that would fill a scroll twice over, a reputation that makes mothers tell their children cautionary tales, and enough documented incidents to justify execution three times over."

Shin's expression carried no judgment, only pragmatic assessment, perhaps even a longing look of what could be described as affection as he spoke next.

"But his actions spoke louder than his history. When it mattered, he chose to help rather than harm. He committed himself to protecting what I was trying to build, even when doing so put him at risk. That earned him not just amnesty in my eyes, but authority."

He met Kureji's eyes directly.

"Everyone gets a pass if they prove themselves through action rather than just words. If I can openly trust someone with Akkuma's background—all his charges, all his darkness—because of what he's done rather than what he's accused of, then I believe it's safe to say I can trust your actions as well. Unless you prove me otherwise."

The weight of that statement hung in the air—not a threat, but a simple acknowledgment of how trust worked in Shin's world. Actions over accusations. Results over reputation.

"So no, Kureji. There's no trap waiting for you. Just an opportunity to do something that matters, with people who won't judge you for the path you took to get here."

He drained the sake and set the cup down with quiet finality.

"Six days. The gates. Bring your guitar and your chaos. We'll bring the tactical framework and the medical support. Between us, maybe we can tear down a slave operation and kill some monsters who deserve it."

A ghost of dark humor crossed his features.

"And if things go wrong and we all die trying, at least we'll die doing something that mattered. There are worse ways to go."

And with that, Shin took to his feet, placed a handful of yen on the bar, and made to the door.

He hesitated slightly at the exit, before heading out.

[topic left]
 
Kureji would listen as the man would speak. He was with the idea of his plan to cause chaos and discord to the slavers and cause mass liberation. He would smile as he thought about what he could do to those people that have committed such atrocities. But as the conversation went on to talk about him knowing Kureji is a missing ninja from Sand, the rock star merely downed his shot and said, "You did your homework."

How he had talked, giving a calm sense despite the wording that he is using. Work to get rid of the Baron Twins and there will be no gallows waiting for Kureji. He spoke with a lot of sugarcoating, dangling Kureji's freedom above his head. If Kureji wasn't already planning on helping them out to get rid of people that are more of a threat, he would spit in Shin's face. Granted, he promised much, but Kureji has been burned for trusting blindly to other people. Even to someone he thought he could trust the most.... Mirokou Akkuma.

He finished his import and walk out of the bar.

(topic left)
 

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