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:

Event Sunagakure Presents: Two Kings Part 1 - 23 [Ossuary Ward - Bonehall]

Sand Event

New Ninja
Joined
Feb 4, 2024
Messages
30
Yen
0
ASP
0
The Bonehall stood silent in the pre-dawn hours, its austere stone walls bearing witness to a procession that had become all too familiar in recent years. Twenty-three shrouded forms lay arranged in precise rows across the preparation floor, each wrapped in traditional burial cloth, the color of desert sand at dusk. The air carried the scent of myrrh and preserving herbs, clinical yet respectful—the signature of Kyouketsu care.

Shigure moved between the bodies with unhurried precision, his long steady fingers checking each shroud's placement, each identification marker, each personal effect that had been recovered from the battlefield. His completely bald skull caught the dim light from bone-oil lamps mounted along the walls, the bone-white tattoos across his scalp seeming to shift and flow with each subtle movement.

"Three Genin. Caught in fire they couldn't outrun. Two Chuunin. Crushed when stone became sand beneath them. Five Jounin. Various causes... combat, collapse, calculated sacrifice."

His voice was dry as ancient parchment, each word measured and delivered without inflection. He wasn't speaking to anyone in particular. The dead already knew their stories. But Shigure had learned long ago that the living needed these litanies—needed to hear that each death had been witnessed, recorded, would be remembered.

"The rest... Main Branch, ANBU, one Medical-nin who died trying to save a patient she couldn't reach in time."

He paused beside one of the shrouded forms, smaller than the others. Younger. His pale gray eyes lingered on the identification marker for a long moment.

"Fifteen years old. Made Genin six months ago. Took a manta ray's strike meant for her squad leader."

Another pause. Longer this time. Then Shigure's gaunt features shifted into something that might have been the ghost of approval.

"Her femur will reinforce the eastern tunnel entrance. High calcium density, good marrow structure despite her age. She'll protect people for decades. Maybe centuries, if we're lucky."

He moved to the next body, then the next, his bone-reinforced robes whispering softly against the stone floor. Each shroud received the same careful attention—a touch to ensure proper wrapping, a glance at the marker to confirm identity, a mental note about which bones would serve what purpose once the funeral rites were complete.

The Bonehall's architecture reflected its purpose. Preparation slabs lined the eastern wall, each carved from single pieces of sandstone and worn smooth by generations of use. Along the western wall, shelves held the tools of his trade—preservation oils, ritual implements, bone saws that gleamed despite their age. Above, vaulted ceilings stretched into shadow, the space designed to accommodate both the physical and spiritual weight of death.

But it was the northern wall that drew the eye—a massive mosaic constructed entirely from bones. Ribs formed arching patterns. Vertebrae created geometric borders. Skulls marked significant historical moments, each one positioned with deliberate care. Finger bones spelled out names in script so small one needed to stand close to read them. It was the Kyouketsu clan's living memorial, literally built from the remains of those who had chosen to serve Sunagakure even in death.

Twenty-three new stories would soon join that wall.

Shigure completed his circuit of the preparation floor and returned to the room's center. His hands came together, fingers interlacing in a gesture that was part prayer, part professional assessment.

"The Baron Twins wanted to bury us. Wanted to suffocate thousands in collapsed tunnels."

His pale gray eyes swept across the twenty-three shrouded forms.

"Instead, these twenty-three will become the bones that hold those tunnels open. Will become armor that protects the next generation. Will become weapons that strike back at those who thought Sunagakure weak."

The bone-oil lamps flickered. Somewhere in the distance, the first calls of morning birds began—desert larks that nested in the Bonehall's eaves, drawn by the quiet and the constant presence of death.

Shigure moved toward the preparation slabs, beginning the process of laying out his tools with the same methodical precision he applied to everything. Preservation would come first. Then documentation—detailed records of each body's condition, each injury that had proven fatal, each bone's quality and potential use. Then, when the families had said their goodbyes and the funeral rites had been observed, would come the practical work of ensuring these deaths served purpose.

"You're welcome," he said quietly to the silent room, to the twenty-three who could no longer hear, to the city that would benefit from their sacrifice without ever knowing the full extent of it.

"Everyone dies. You died protecting home. Now your bones will do the same. Forever."

The preparation of the dead was sacred work. Grim work. Necessary work.

And Shigure Kyouketsu had been doing it longer than most of the current shinobi force had been alive.

He selected the first set of tools—preservation oils infused with desert herbs that would keep tissue from degrading while the funeral process unfolded—and approached the nearest shrouded form. His long, steady fingers began their work with the practiced efficiency of someone who had performed this ritual thousands of times.

Outside, Sunagakure was beginning to wake. Merchants would soon open their stalls. Training grounds would fill with students. The Kazekage Tower would buzz with emergency meetings about the Baron Twins and the Golden Sanctuary and what came next.

But here, in the Bonehall, time moved differently. Here, the only thing that mattered was ensuring that those who had fallen in defense of their home would continue to serve it long after their hearts had stopped beating.

Twenty-three bodies. Twenty-three stories. Twenty-three sets of bones that would become part of Sunagakure's foundation.

Shigure's work had only just begun.
 
Twenty-three lives had ended in a single day. Twenty-three stories had already become part of the foundation of Sunagakure. And for the first time, Shinda felt what it truly meant to be a Kyouketsu and what it meant to see death clearly, accept it, and let it guide every action that followed.

Shinda stood just inside the doorway, hands clasped tightly behind his back. The Bonehall smelled of herbs and desert dust, the same scent that had greeted him every morning of his short ten years. But today it felt heavier. Today, there were twenty-three bodies lying still, each one telling a story he could almost feel but not touch. He stepped onto the preparation floor, careful to keep his sandals from scraping the stone and moving lightly with reverence. The Bonehall smelled of herbs, dust, and the faint iron tang of dried blood. Twenty-three shrouded forms lay arranged in perfect rows, and the weight of it pressed against him as this place felt heavier than the usual rites bestowed upon one individual. He watched Shigure move, each gesture precise, deliberate. Fingers brushing the shrouds, eyes flicking to markers, lips murmuring the quiet catalog of death.


“Fifteen years old,” Shigure said, pausing over the smallest figure. “Made Genin six months ago. Took a manta ray’s strike meant for her squad leader.” this was a statement that made him swallow as if a rock was lodged in his throat. His mind imagined himself in that body and in that instant a shiver ran down his spine. "Just a few years older than myself...", this thought echoed in his mind. Then Shigure’s words shifted, clinical and almost comforting, “Her femur will reinforce the eastern tunnel entrance. High calcium density, good marrow structure despite her age. She’ll protect people for decades. Maybe centuries, if we’re lucky.” His chest tightened as hearing this rooted him to the stone floor. It wasn’t fear that triggered this response, it was understanding. Every movement, every word from Shigure, carried the same message his parents had taught him since he could remember: "Death is not the end. Purpose survives." This was doctrine and to this he found a definitive truth.

He felt dizzy with the weight of responsibility that lingered on the air of the room. If he were ever to stand in Shigure’s place, he would have to carry this feeling, this constant awareness of mortality, of sacrifice, of purpose. Each body was more than a number. Each was a story, a life honored through meticulous care.

Following in Shigure's shadow, he moved to the next body, hands shaking slightly as he smoothed the shroud. He noticed the subtle way Shigure shifted the lamp to cast light across the bones beneath, how he checked each joint, each limb for strength and future use. He imagined the bones being placed, becoming walls, weapons, protection for people he might someday meet but never know.

“Everyone dies,” Shigure said finally, voice low, almost conversational. “You died protecting home. Now your bones will do the same. Forever.” For the first time, he felt the weight of the Kyouketsu's sacred duty pressing down on him. "Such loss, lives unlived...tears feeding the sands needlessly....", thought to himself in this moment.

His reasoning for being here was simple but important, as his age and experience kept him away from the actual processing of the body. Instead he was responsible to documenting the fallen for their next of kin, capturing a death shroud for memorial. Today, he would attempt Shikyo no Omokage. He had watched and been trained to perform it countless times, seen the cloth or parchment gently pressed over a face and emerge with a faint, glowing image, as if the last instant of life had been etched into it forever. And now… it was his turn. He drew a slow breath, tasting the antiseptic-sweet tang in the air, and whispered the name written on the marker. His fingers brushed the edge of the cloth, tracing the corner as he had been taught. He could feel the spiritual echo of the person beneath it, like a flutter of lingering chakra.

Hands becoming steady, he pressed the cloth gently against the face. His chakra flowed in, tentative at first, trembling with uncertainty. His mind focused, not on himself, not on internal fears, but only on the imprint, the essence of who this person had been in their final moments. The thump of his heart became heavier as his quiet voice pierced the solemn silence that had fallen within the Bonehall...
"Our duty is not lost upon me, but I....I feel so much anger. Doing this to so many brings weight to my heartbeats and fire to my bones."
. Although he spoke openly, Shinda did not divert his attention away from his duty. The cloth seemed to suck in the faint warmth of the face, the last impressions of expression that remained. "Am I supposed to feel this way?".

[Topic Entered]
[WC: 825]
 
Shigure's hands continued their methodical work, applying preservation oils with practiced efficiency. He didn't look up immediately when Shinda spoke—the dead required attention, and pausing mid-preparation would dishonor the body beneath his fingers.

"Am I supposed to feel this way?"

The question hung in the herb-scented air. Shigure completed the preservation seal on the shroud before him, his bone-white tattoos seeming to shift in the lamplight as he finally turned his pale gray eyes toward the young Kyouketsu.

A long pause. The kind of silence that felt deliberate rather than awkward.

"Anger is... appropriate," Shigure said finally, his voice dry as ancient parchment. "Twenty-three deaths in one day. Twenty-three futures stolen by enemies who thought collapsing tunnels would break us."

He moved to the next body with unhurried steps, gesturing for Shinda to follow.

"The anger tells you something important—that you understand what was taken. That you recognize the waste." His long fingers adjusted a shroud corner with precision. "Some shinobi become numb to death. They stop feeling anything. Those shinobi make poor Kyouketsu."

Shigure paused beside the small form he'd examined earlier—the fifteen-year-old Genin who'd taken a manta ray strike for her squad leader.

"She was angry too, probably. In that last moment. Angry that she wouldn't see sixteen. Angry that she'd never become Chuunin. Angry at the Baron Twins for bringing war to our doorstep."

He looked directly at Shinda then, those colorless eyes reflecting lamplight.

"But she still stepped in front of that strike. Still chose purpose over survival. Her anger didn't paralyze her—it focused her."

Shigure returned to his work, selecting a different preservation oil for the next body.

"The question isn't whether you should feel anger, Shinda. The question is what you do with it." Another pause. "You can let it consume you—become reckless, seek revenge without strategy, waste your own bones on pointless gestures."

His gaunt features shifted slightly—not quite a smile, but something close to grim approval.

"Or you can channel it into purpose. Let it sharpen your focus during death shroud rituals. Let it drive precision in your studies of anatomy and preservation. Let it remind you why our work matters—so that these twenty-three continue protecting Sunagakure long after their hearts have stopped."

Shigure gestured to the massive bone mosaic along the northern wall—thousands of names spelled out in finger bones, hundreds of skulls marking significant moments in village history.

"Every bone in that wall came from someone who felt what you're feeling now. Anger at waste. Grief at loss. Fear of their own mortality." He turned back to Shinda. "And every single one of them chose to transform those feelings into service."

The bone-oil lamps flickered as desert wind whispered through the Bonehall's ventilation shafts.

"Continue with the death shroud," Shigure instructed, his tone shifting to something more instructional. "Feel the anger. Acknowledge it. Then set it aside and focus on capturing their essence accurately. They deserve that much—a true impression, not one clouded by our emotions."

He returned to his own work, but his voice carried across the preparation floor.

"Your heart is heavy. Your bones feel fire. Good. That means you understand the weight of what we do."

Another long pause.

"But don't mistake feeling for weakness, and don't mistake numbness for strength. The best Kyouketsu feel everything—and do the work anyway."

Shigure's hands moved with steady precision, demonstrating through action what he preached through words. Each shroud received the same careful attention. Each body would be preserved with equal respect.

"Twenty-three died protecting home. Our anger honors them—but our skill immortalizes them."

He glanced once more at Shinda, those pale gray eyes holding something that might have been understanding.

"Now. Show me you can set the anger aside long enough to capture a true death shroud. Show me you're ready to carry this burden."

The challenge hung in the air, neither harsh nor gentle—simply pragmatic. This was the Kyouketsu way. Feel everything. Do the work anyway. Transform death into purpose.

Always.
 

Current Ninpocho Time:

Back
Top