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 3 - And so, the Missions Begin!

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THE KAZEKAGE'S SUMMONS
Primus Tower - Morning - Kazekage's Office


The morning light of Sunagakure's artificial sun cast golden rays through the towering windows of Primus Tower, warming the Kazekage's office with an illusion of surface-world dawn. Shin stood before the glass, his piercing blue eyes—forever marked by the Yurei Orchid's seal—reflecting the carmot-powered star that hung in their subterranean sky. Even after months of living beneath the earth again, the sight still carried a strange beauty. The engineers had done remarkable work mimicking the gradual color shifts of true sunrise, painting their dome in amber and rose.

He turned from the window and raised both hands, palms up. Chakra gathered at his fingertips, golden and warm, coalescing into three small forms. Desert finches materialized in a shimmer of light—perfect replicas down to the soft brown plumage and black-tipped wings. They chirped softly, tilting their heads as they oriented themselves to their creator.

"Find them," the Phoenix Sage said quietly, his voice carrying the calm authority that had become his signature since taking the mantle. "Yamashiro Ryuni of the Flamebearer's house, Renmei Tsumugu of the Waterbearer's commune, and Sabaku Rika of Sunagakure. Tell them the Kazekage requests their presence. Primus Tower, my office. It's urgent, but not an emergency—they should come properly prepared as fully fledged shinobi of Sunagakure no Sato."

The finches sang in acknowledgment, their voices eerily perfect. Shin moved to the window once more, unlatching it to allow the morning breeze—carefully circulated through the village's ventilation systems—to drift inside. The birds took flight immediately, their wings catching the sunlight as they dove toward the residential districts below. He watched them disappear into the maze of glass and stone, three golden messengers carrying a summons that would change the trajectories of three young lives.

The window remained open as Shin turned back to his office, allowing the recycled air to breathe through the space.



The office itself reflected its occupant—practical, welcoming, yet unmistakably purposeful. Shin moved through it now with the efficiency of someone who understood that small gestures created atmospheres, and atmospheres shaped conversations. He straightened the cushions on the low sitting area, adjusted the alignment of the scroll cases on his desk, and confirmed that the small brazier in the corner held sufficient charcoal should he need it for anything beyond the tea.

Tea.

Two ceramic kettles sat on a heating element near his workspace—one for green tea, another for a calming herbal blend made from desert sage and crystallized honey. Shin snapped his fingers, and a small, controlled flame appeared beneath each kettle, chakra-sustained and precise. The water would need fifteen minutes to reach the proper temperature. Genin deserved the same courtesy he would extend to council members. Perhaps more so—their nerves would benefit from the ritual.

While the water heated, Shin turned his attention to the refreshments he'd arranged earlier that morning. The low table in the sitting area displayed a careful selection: cucumber sandwiches cut into neat triangles, their edges still crisp; a plate of dorayaki, the sweet red bean pancakes that reminded him of his own academy days; delicate wagashi shaped like lotus blossoms; savory rice crackers brushed with soy glaze; and a small arrangement of honey-glazed pastries from the baker three streets down from the market square.

A smile crossed Shin's face as he adjusted the placement of a plate, ensuring everything appeared abundant but not excessive. He'd walked through the commercial district himself this morning—as he does every morning on his way to his office, visiting four different vendors to assemble this spread. Each purchase had been deliberate—the baker who'd lost her storefront in the evacuation and now operated from a stall, the confectioner whose husband had died in the recent battle, the tea merchant who'd given his entire savings to help fund the village's water purification systems.

His discretionary budget as Kazekage was substantial. He could have ordered catering from one of the established merchant houses, could have had servants prepare everything. But Shin had learned long ago that power meant nothing if it didn't flow downward, nourishing the roots rather than only feeding the canopy. Every yen he spent in those small stalls was a yen that stayed in the hands of the people who needed it most, cycling through the village's economy rather than consolidating in the vaults of those who already had plenty.

The Chikamatsu way, he thought, though he knew the irony wasn't lost on anyone. His clan had once been as guilty as any of hoarding influence and wealth. Wei's betrayal had taught them all what happened when the powerful forgot who they served.

The kettles began to whisper with the first stirrings of heat. Shin checked the time—perhaps twenty minutes before the genin would arrive, given how far each lived from Primus Tower. Time enough.



He moved to the east wall of his office, where carefully maintained planters housed a collection of vegetation that seemed impossibly vibrant for an underground city. Yurei Orchids—cuttings from the sacred plant his clan had protected for generations—bloomed in white and grey, their six petals a mirror of the seal across the nape of his neck. Beside them, desert succulents that required minimal water but maximum sunlight thrived under a dedicated photon infused carmot. A small bonsai tree, its trunk twisted with age, sat in a place of honor—a gift from Lord Takahashi after the council meeting.

Shin retrieved a watering can from beneath the planter stand, filling it from a pitcher of collected condensation. Water was precious, even here in their climate-controlled environment. The Renmei had taught the entire village that lesson well. He moved methodically from plant to plant, checking soil moisture with his fingers before administering careful amounts. The orchids received only a light misting—they preferred humidity to saturation. The succulents got barely a few drops. The bonsai required more attention; he'd been training a new branch and needed to check the wire placement.

As he worked, his mind drifted to the three young shinobi he'd summoned.

Yamashiro Ryuni—a name that carried the weight of the Flamebearer's passionate lineage. The Yamashiro were firebrands, zealots in the best and worst senses of the word. But they were also true, unflinchingly so. If Ryuni had inherited even a fraction of Lord Takeru's conviction, he would be a valuable asset. The question was whether that fire burned with purpose or simply burned.

Renmei Tsumugu—a child of the Waterbearer's clan, raised to understand scarcity and stewardship in equal measure. The Renmei were negotiators, thinkers, the calm voice in heated moments. But calm could become passivity if not tempered with courage. Shin hoped the boy had spine beneath the composure.

Sabaku Rika—clanless, but no less worthy for it. Without the infrastructure of a great house behind her, she would have had to prove herself twice over just to reach this point. That kind of determination was its own strength, forged in necessity rather than inherited tradition.

He set down the watering can and retrieved a small pair of pruning shears, carefully removing dead leaves from the orchids and trimming back an overenthusiastic succulent shoot. The repetitive motion was meditative, centering. He would need that center for what came next.

This mission was dangerous.

B-Rank—officially within the parameters for experienced chūnin or even a team of genin with jōnin supervision, but this would be different. The Baron Twins had proven they fought without honor, without restraint. Sending children into that meat grinder went against every instinct Shin possessed as both a medical shinobi and a man who had sacrificed pieces of his soul to give life, not take it.

But war didn't care about his instincts.

The village needed intelligence. They needed eyes and ears in places where adults would be noticed, questioned, killed. Genin were an unfortunate necessity—young enough to slip through certain cracks, skilled enough to survive if things went sideways, and hopefully smart enough to run when running was the only option.

Twenty-three dead. Twenty-seven wounded. The numbers from the recent battle haunted him. How many more would there be before this war ended? How many of those names would be fresh academy graduates who should have had years of simple missions before facing anything like this?

Shin returned the shears to their place and washed his hands in a small basin, drying them on a clean cloth. The kettles were steaming now, almost ready. He moved to his desk and retrieved three files—thin dossiers compiled from academy records, clan reports, and his own observations during the few public events where he'd seen them in passing.

He didn't open them. He'd memorized the contents already. Instead, he set them aside and focused on the tea ceremony, measuring out leaves with practiced precision. Green tea for focus and clarity. The herbal blend for nerves and calm. He prepared both, setting them on the low table alongside the food.

Everything was ready.

Now came the hardest part... waiting, and preparing himself to look three young shinobi in the eye and tell them he was sending them into danger that might kill them.

Shin settled into his chair behind the desk, folding his hands in his lap, and let his luminous blue eyes drift to the open window. Somewhere out there, three finches were delivering his message. Somewhere out there, three lives were about to change.

He exhaled slowly, centering himself in the way his medical training had taught him:

Calm

Steady

Present

"Where water flows, life endures," he murmured, reciting the Renmei motto.

"Through flame, we are reborn," the Yamashiro words followed naturally.

Two clans, their philosophies, and three young shinobi who would need to embody the best of both if they were going to survive what he was about to ask of them.

The Kazekage waited, bathed in artificial sunlight, surrounded by living things he'd tended with his own hands, and prepared to send children to war... or worse... death.
 
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It was morning in the Yamashiro Home, and while others in the clan conclave would be sleeping, resting, and otherwise relaxing at this hour, Ryuni would be in the ceremonial chambers with his father getting the chakra infused ink attached to his upper left shoulder, the ink would be something affixed to him through ancient rituals of the Yamashiro, but its use would not be clear, not yet. Silence filled the early morning air. Two bowls in the entrance of the ritualistic room where the duo had their morning breakfast. A cherry oatmeal with an herbal tea. Filling but not weighted. Ryuni had some bananas and other fruits prepared incase he needed something extra for the both of them.

The silence was broken as a bird flew into the clearing of their window. The Clay walls of this room were seemingly open air with twined sticks were tied together to keep the etched walls from falling in. It was meager. It was poor living. Ryuni didn't much care because this was all he knew. He'd seen how other clans lived And even the hierarchy of his own clan was that that had high, middle, and lower classes. So it wasn't so much that he was apart of a lower clan, he was just born into the lower portions of their clans acknowledgment. Lord Takeru was a fearless leader, and he would bring them all to prosperity but, Ryuni's connection to him was distant. As far as lineage in blood, he was a few generations off from Lord-ship.

Either way, the bird that flew into the room singing a simple song, but stopped on a edge of the threshold of the window after flapping around for a moment. It wasn't until he watched the bird that Ryuni and his father knew what this was, standing up Ryuni would look to his father for a moment expecting it to be for him but alas when the bird spoke...

"Yamashiro Ryuni! You have been summoned to Lord Shin's office! It is urgent but not an emergency. He wishes to see you at once!" the bird would chirp once again before leaving as quickly as it came. It left Ryuni stunned and his father flabbergasted. They stood in the room silent for a moment before Ryuni's father would look down to his son and blink, "...The Kage wishes to see you... Seems like you have a mission my son... Go. And show them the Passion of the Yamashiro!" he'd nod before patting the boy on the shoulder a subtle frown forming on his face as he exited the room. Ryuni stood, unsure of what to say but his father left before he could.

Without a word he'd go to his room to gather his belongings and throwing over his satchel, tightening his gloves and jetting out towards the Kage's office.

It wouldn't take long...

The giant structure in this labyrinth of a village would be extraordinary to Ryu, he had walked by it plenty of times before yet, he'd never been within the building. Since becoming a Genin, which hadn't been long, Ryuni had dreams of becoming a high ranking official within his home... it was apart of his conversation he'd had with Shin. His passion lay in the idea of bridging the clans together one day, his hot blooded nature would have to be tamed a bit for it to happen but he felt like with time he would be able to reach such a goal. At least he'd hoped.

At any pace, with a hand on his strap he'd rush through the halls before meeting eyes with a man who seemed to be a secretary of sorts and would guide the young boy to the appropriate office. And all at once with a huff...

He'd enter.

"Lord Kazekage,I have received your message." Ryuni was ever the prompt one. He never liked being late, and could be seen sometimes as a goody goody... maybe he would have to change that image a bit. Who knew...

[Topic Entered]
 
Rika's morning had started early. She wasn't home; she was out, walking. She planned to train later or find something to read. The last thing she expected was a bird to fly up to her. At first, she thought it was someone's pet that had gotten loose and waved her hand to shoo it away as it flew close to her face. She scoffed and assumed it was trying to land on her head. "I'm not going to feed you!" She muttered, but then she noticed it had landed on a nearby fence. She paused and looked at the bird. "Weird bir-"

"Sabaka Rika! You are being summoned to Lord Shin's Office! It's urgent! He wishes to see you at once!" The bird suddenly spoke, surprising Rika. She watched as it flew away.

"Should have figgured..." Rika mumbled and rubbed the back of her neck. She already had everything she needed, not that she had much, but she was prepared for anything. Rika turned on her heel, changing her direction to start walking towards the Primus Tower. As she walked, she wondered what the meeting would be about. A chill went down her spine as she tried to remember if she had done anything wrong. Did I forget something? Did I forget a document? Her mind raced, internally analyzing anything she could have missed. Outwardly, she smiled and held her head high.

Rika arrived shortly after Ryuni. She entered the building and glanced around. She figured finding the Kazekage's office wouldn't be hard; she passed several other shinobi as she walked. It wasn't until a secretary, who was on his way back from guiding Ryuni, paused for Rika and subtly pointed her in the right direction - not that she needed it. Standing in front of the door, Rika checked herself one last time. Her tunic was clean, her hair tied up in a high ponytail, and she had her gear ready. She wiped her bangs out of her face and tucked the strands of hair behind her ear before her hand reached for the door.

She entered the office and stopped next to Ryuni. She barely glanced at Ryuni before she looked at Shin. She bowed her head. "Lord Kazekage," She greeted, then stood tall. She shifted her weight to one leg and took a quick glance around the office before she looked at the display of treats. Seems like a bit much... Almost like a bribe, or something... Maybe it's for someone else... Rika thought to herself. The treats, if this were some sort of talking to, a punishment, there wouldn't be any. But they could be for a meeting after this, or for a bribe, or for a guilty conscience. She remembered one elder who'd get her treats after yelling at her for no good reason, or before giving her bad news. Sweets weren't free.

[topic entered]
 
Tsumugu knelt and began to prepare so he checked his gourd first. The seal lines responded instantly, humming beneath his fingers as he replenished the internal reservoir next to a large vat that sat in the center of the common room. The water inside shifted, clean and cool, responding to his chakra like a familiar presence as this was a daily ritual. Satisfied, he secured it firmly across his back and turned to his respirator, lifting the dark metal mask from its stand and inspected the blue inlays. No fractures, no chakra leakage and the seals were still structurally sound. He ran a thin stream of chakra through it causing the markings glowed softly in reply. Setting it at his waist, ready to be raised at a moment’s notice should ever the need acquire. Glancing slightly towards the door his mind slightly drifted to thought about the squad, about his teammates, about....he shook his head suddenly. This had been discussed with his father beforehand and how he would react was made clear. Gathering himself, he would make his way out of the home and into the beginning of his shinobi career.

“…You’re already here,” he said in a not surprised kind of tone. It was obvious, being that he was the last to arrive but he was just noting the fact. His gaze moved to each of them as he approached. Rika whom he would give a light nod reserved, but respectful. To the other, his expression tightened for half a second, the memory of academy rivalry surfacing before he pushed it back down. This is a mission site, he reminded himself. There was a faint, unfamiliar feeling in his chest but it was not discomfort, but awareness. Seeing them together like this made the truth settle in more firmly than the words his father had given to him. He was a part of a squad and more importantly a squad which represented Sunagakure. He adjusted the strap of his gourd, grounding himself in the familiar weight, a growing habit and a subconscious tick for his nervousness. Something he did not display because of his calm facial features...

He would then realize the decor of the Kazekage's office which for a moment drew his attention away from the man. It was green and alive, a place he could sense the life in by the very moisture in the air. Eye's snapping back to the Kazekage, his gaze was of approval, there was not a waste of life here. "Lord Kazekage", a simple nod and though he had shown recognition to the man last, his tone was filled with admiration. His mind wandered again on what their task would be...
 
"Please, come in. Sit," Shin gestured toward the low table where the refreshments waited, his luminous blue eyes moving from one genin to the next with measured warmth. "I know the formality of being summoned to the Kazekage's office can be... intimidating. But this is a conversation, not an interrogation. You're not in trouble."

He moved to the heating element where the two kettles steamed softly, their contents ready. With practiced grace, he lifted the first kettle—green tea—and poured it into small ceramic cups, the liquid amber catching the artificial sunlight streaming through the windows. The second kettle followed, the herbal blend releasing notes of desert sage and honey as it filled three more cups.

"Green tea for clarity and focus," Shin explained as he carried the tray to the table, setting it down with careful precision. "And an herbal blend for tranquility. Take whichever speaks to you. Or both, if you'd like."

He settled into his seat across from them, his posture relaxed but attentive, and gestured to the spread of food. "Please, help yourselves. The dorayaki are fresh from the baker near the market square, she makes them the way my mother used to. The cucumber sandwiches won't keep, so you'd actually be doing me a favor."

A small smile touched his lips as he lifted his own cup of green tea, inhaling the steam before taking a measured sip. He let the silence settle for a moment, giving them time to acclimate, to breathe, to realize this space was—for now—safe.

"So," Shin began, his tone shifting to something more conversational, genuinely curious. "How have you all been since graduation? It's a significant transition, academy student to genin and all. The missions start to feel more real. The responsibility heavier." His gaze moved between Ryuni, Rika, and Tsumugu, reading their body language, their reactions. "Have you been sleeping well? Eating properly? I know it sounds like something a medical shinobi would ask, and truthfully having been our Medical Chief of Research and Development it is, but I'm asking as someone who remembers what those first few weeks felt like. The uncertainty. The weight of the headband yku all carry."

He paused, allowing them space to respond, to share what they were comfortable sharing. Shin understood the value of these moments, the quieter exchanges that built trust before the hard truths had to be spoken.

When the conversation had settled, when tea had been sipped and perhaps a few bites taken, Shin set down his cup with a soft clink against the table. His expression shifted, not drastically, but enough that the genin would notice. The warmth remained, but it was joined by something more serious. Purposeful.

"I brought you here for a reason," he said, his voice steady and clear. "And I won't insult your intelligence by burying it beneath more pleasantries. You're officially shinobi of Sunagakure now. That means you're ready to hear what I have to say, and to understand the weight of what I'm about to ask of you."

Shin leaned forward slightly, his luminous eyes holding each of theirs in turn. He rested his elbows on the table and interlocked his fingers, resting his chin on top of his hands.

"I have a mission for the three of you. B-Rank. Surveillance and intelligence gathering." He let that sink in for a breath before continuing. "Your target is the Golden Sanctuary, the Baron Twins' primary stronghold in the Diamond Ocean. You are to infiltrate, gather as much actionable intelligence as you can, and return safely to report your findings."

He reached to the side of the table and retrieved three slim folders, setting them down within reach of the genin but not yet pushing them forward.

"You have three days. Total. That includes travel time, infiltration, intelligence gathering, and exfiltration. Three days to get in, learn what you can about their operations, their defenses, their trafficking networks, and get out."

Shin's expression was unreadable for a moment, not cold, but carefully controlled. This was the part he hated. The part that required him to be Kazekage first, and the man who tended orchids and bought pastries from struggling bakers second.

"I won't lie to you. This is dangerous. The Barons are responsible for the attack that killed twenty-three of our shinobi and wounded twenty-seven more. They fight without honor, and they will not hesitate to kill you if you're discovered, they will not care that you are children." His voice softened, just slightly. "But you're being sent precisely because you're recently promoted genin. Young. Less likely to be seen as threats. More able to move through certain spaces without raising immediate suspicion."

He pushed the folders forward now, one toward each of them.

"Inside, you'll find what intelligence we already have on the Golden Sanctuary, layout maps, known patrol schedules, identified personnel. It's not complete. That's why you're going. Study these. Memorize them. Ask questions."

Shin paused, his gaze sweeping across all three genin.

"This is a volunteer mission. If any of you feel this is beyond your current capabilities, or if you have reservations, you can decline. There will be no judgment. No mark against your record. I need shinobi who are willing and ready, not shinobi who feel obligated."

He lifted his tea again, taking another slow sip, giving them time to process.

"But if you accept, know this... you will have my full support. Any resources you need, any intelligence updates we receive, any contingency planning... you'll have it. And when you return, you'll report directly to me. No intermediaries. No bureaucracy. Just you, and the information you risked your lives to obtain."

The Kazekage set down his cup and folded his hands in his lap, his luminous sapphire eyes reflecting both the light from the windows and something deeper, resolve tempered with compassion.

"So. Questions? Concerns? Thoughts? Any Requests?"

He waited, patient and present, ready to guide three young shinobi toward a mission that could change everything, or cost them everything.
 
A small smirk would frown upon the lips of the young shinobi as he watched the other two come in after him. He felt a sense of pride being the first to show up to these things. Especially, with two that were in his own group. Team Kyuji. It was a bit new, especially with the three of them having such differing states of being. He barely knew anything about the two, but what a time to learn. They were going to be working in closer quarters fairly soon... especially with all the things it would seem Kyuji-Sensei had planned for them.

Thinking for a moment, the tea, the niceties, Ryuni suddenly had a chill run down his spine and his eyes widened as he would sit and look around. 'He's buttering us up... this is just like when my mother wants me to kill one of those spiders... but why does this feel... worse? The Yamashiro would think to himself for the moment. Could the Kazekage be testing them? The questions he'd asked them what were they for? Everything caused him to pause for a moment, trying to keep the internal feelings from affecting him outwardly but his body tensed and he simply looked for a moment. '...Could this be a test more than we think? Hell is this even the Kage? Do we really know?' he'd eye the Kage, Shin, for the moment before throwing that thought away because of the protections in the village and the weight of power within the Jounin and hierarchy within. Alas, Ryuni would huff outwardly as Shin would finish his initial questioning, "...I've... well, I just came back from the Diamond Ocean with my father... which was interesting. I was able to do some small missions to get some money." a meek smile etching across his before going silent and letting his peers talk.

There was something ominous about this meeting. There had been rumors about what had been going on recently, and soon Ryuni would find that they were true. Truer than he'd anticipated before. And after his teammates would finish he'd feel the air shift...

"I brought you here for a reason,"

'Here it comes...' Ryuni would gulp like thick liquid had been poured down his throat. A lump formed and he pushed it down, listening further even leaning forward with his hands in his lap but his upper body leaning even into the table in front of him. 'So its true...' he felt a sense of dread fall over him, listening to the man speak lead him to feel even more inclined to hop out of his seat and to leave. To flee from this place and throw his headband in the trash. There was no way he would be able to do such a thing. Wasnt his power enough to stay within the safety of the village?

Was it enough that he had shown promise and they could just leave him be to train and get better at his craft?

Why train? 'To get stronger...'

Why get stronger? 'To protect my family...'

Then why would you run...?

What would be the point of all this effort... if he stood up and ran away at the first sign of danger? He wanted to live. But what would that matter if he were to be a coward? The burning passion within him to be the bridge of his clan to the rest of his village. How could he ever accomplish any of his goals if he could not stand and be a beacon of change in the eyes of those who could not see it... or wanted to take the power away from the people. These evils he would have to face. This danger would have to be faced... and if not by him. Who? Who could he trust other than himself with HIS goals?

Ryuni shook his head, frowning at his own self destruction before casting doubt to the wayside, a smile crept across his lips slowly. This evident danger was a chance to overcome anything that would hold him back from his chance to be who he'd aimed to be. Whatever that was. Hearts change. Minds mature. But if he ran, he would never know who he could become. Who he could change. Who he could guide.

"...I'm in..." he'd speak looking at his peers then to Shin, "For Suna."
 
Rika would look at Shin and tilt her head, her gaze flickering to the table again, before she stepped up and flopped down to sit. One knee was up on the cushion while the other was curled under. Her posture relaxed as she looked at the tea. The questioning made her hum. She glanced at Ryuni as he answered first, then she glanced back to her Kage. "I've been alright," She answered, and grinned with a thumbs up. Short and simple. She glanced at the tea and the snacks. Her initial suspicion was growing in her gut. She leaned back on the cushion.

Then he finally told them the reason, a mission. Rika's grin widened as she crossed her legs and leaned forward, taking in the details. She looked at the files Shin pulled out. A dangerous mission, she didn't expect such a high-profile mission to be given to kids. She knew her own strength, but she wasn't sure about her teammates. Once Shin finished explaining, and after Ryuni spoke up, Rika nodded. She picked up the file he pushed towards her and opened it, scanning the contents. She looked over the patrol schedules and known personnel. Her eyes squinted for a moment. She was taking mental notes of the most important information.

"Heh, so the treats were from a guilty conscience," Rika murmured as she flicked her gaze up at Shin again. "I'll be honest, I have never been to the Golden Sanctuary," She explained, then looked at the layout map, and tilted her head. "I'm in, I already have some ideas how we can pull this off, I am confident we'll come back alive, and with enough info to take out the Barons," Rika promised as she shut the file, a confident grin crossing her lips. She then picked up a sandwich and took a bite. She may as well eat before they are sent off. Her gaze flicked between Ryuni and Tsumugu. 'I'm sure they can keep up, the Kage wouldn't send them if they couldn't... Hopefully,' She thought to herself, she didn't want to have to babysit while out on a mission.

"Can we borrow a bird? It'd be helpful to have eyes in the sky," Rika spoke after swallowing, "A small one. I'd also like to know if anyone else is out there scouting. I want to avoid an enemy trying to trick us by mimicking one of our own. I wouldn't be surprised if they are preparing something," Rika added, then took a large bite of the sandwich, finishing it off. She picked up the cup of green tea to sip it. She was already trying to think of all the ways the enemy could fuck them over on the mission. She didn't want to fail; this was her first big mission, and she felt the need to go above and beyond. Not only for herself, but for the village as a whole. It was also thrilling, the idea of going into enemy territory, collecting intel.
 
Tsumugu listened without interrupting as the steam from the tea curled upward between them. He waited until Shin finished speaking thinking about his question about post graduation before responding, as he’d been taught. When he did speak after his teammates had, his voice was quiet but clear “I’ve been sleeping,” he said. “Not deeply. But enough.” He glanced briefly at the tray before him, eyes lingering on the tea rather than the sweets. After a moment’s consideration, he chose the green tea, lifting the cup carefully with both hands. He took a small sip before continuing, “The missions since becoming genin that I have taken with my clan do feel heavier,” he admitted. “At the academy, mistakes were a part of it and belonged to us. Now as shinobi those mistakes belong to the village too.” His fingers tightened faintly around the cup, not from nerves, but from thought and focus. The tea was doing it's job, his mind beginning to sharpen and his thoughts reading from his lips as fluid as a stream. He had paused again, but only for a moment before finishing albeit more quietly, “The headband hasn’t gotten lighter but I think… it’s supposed to feel that way.”

Both eyes closed when he listened while Ryuni spoke, his expression calm, but his attention sharpened. He could feel the tension rolling off his teammate not panicked but tightly coiled, like a knot pulled too far and held there. Tsumugu’s eyes drifted briefly to the surface of his own cup which had gone completely still. Those seconds truly felt like an eternity within his mind...what was in this tea? He inhaled once through his nose, slow and controlled. The Renmei were taught to notice imbalance long before it became danger changes in current, pressure, temperature. Right now, the air felt like water held back by stone. When Ryuni finished speaking, Tsumugu waited a heartbeat longer than politeness required before speaking, his eyes never looking towards him but remaining on the cup, “The Diamond Ocean is far,” he said quietly. “You must have learned a lot.” His words as before were quiet and yet restrained, his mind forcing cooperation against personal sentiments.

He felt the word B-Rank settle into him like a stone and his eyes immediately would meet Shin's. His posture straightened immediately, with his attention fully anchored. The calm he carried wasn’t bravado, it wasn't something that came natural to him, it was training asserting itself. The Renmei were taught that panic wasted water, and wasted water cost lives. It was these small tenants over his life intermixed with doctrine that drove him. When Shin mentioned the Diamond Ocean, a faint tension touched his jaw. He remembered Ryuni’s words..his recent familiarity will be important. Still, he did not interrupt or ask questions when the folders were placed on the table, Tsumugu did not reach for it but he would wait for permission and for more clarity on the situation. “Infiltration and surveillance,” he repeated quietly to himself over and over, committing it to memory. “No engagement unless unavoidable.”

Tsumugu waited until Rika finished speaking before moving when Shin slid the folder closer. He opened it and immediately began reading from top to bottom, eyes moving slowly. “I haven’t been there either,” he said, answering Rika indirectly, "But lucky for us...Ryuni has."

He closed the folder carefully before resting his palm on top while his other still held his tea cup. For a moment he said nothing, gaze lowered as he listened to the room, his teammates. When he looked up, his blue-lit eyes were calm, his mind hyperfocused. “I accept,” he said after the other two had. Then, because the Kazekage had invited honesty, he continued only after Rika had asked for a reasonable request.

“My concern isn’t the mission details, I fully believe we're capable” Tsumugu said. “It’s exposure for those three days that have my attention.” He would set an empty cup upon the desk after finishing it's contents. "I imagine for a time we'll be moving as fast as possible before needing to move cautiously, yet exertion is going to require enough food and water." He found himself rubbing on the strap of his gourd, his mind having uncertainty in an area he'd yet been to. An area of the desert where the water was unknown to him. "Water is less of a concern, I brought a lesser water scroll from the Renmei Clan that holds a least a small pond worth of water to draw from but we will need food, or at least a good supply of nutrition pills."

Clentching his jawline just slightly another issue came up, something he noticed but had shoved to the back of his mind. "What type of information are we supposedly gathering? With everything in the folder...leads me to believe there is something specific we're looking for?", he said with an inquisitive voice because this was very important. He did not want to go through all of this to return with information that they already knew...

It was strange that he didn't feel fear or scared of the unknown future, as whether he realized it or not Ryuni and Rika's determination was holding back his true feelings. Like a reef against the tides...he was slowly molding a reliance on their natures.

[WC: 886]
 
"Guilty conscience," Shin repeated softly, a faint smile touching his lips as he met Rika's eyes. "Perhaps. Or perhaps just an old habit from my days running the Medical Research Division. I learned early that difficult conversations go down easier with tea and something sweet. Call it... professional courtesy."

He watched as each genin processed the mission briefing in their own way—Ryuni's internal struggle written clearly across his features before resolve settled in, Rika's immediate tactical mind already working through logistics, and Tsumugu's measured, thoughtful acceptance. Three very different approaches, but each arriving at the same destination. Good. They would need that diversity in the days ahead.

"I'm glad to hear you all accept," Shin said, genuine warmth threading through his voice. "And I'm even more glad to hear you asking the right questions. That tells me you understand what you're walking into."

He leaned back slightly, folding his hands in his lap as he addressed their concerns one by one.

"Rika, regarding your request for a bird—yes, I can provide one. I'll summon a desert hawk for you before you depart. They're excellent scouts, naturally blend into the environment, and won't draw suspicion. The Golden Sanctuary is a trading hub, after all. Birds are common." He paused, considering her second concern. "As for other scouts in the area—you three are the only team I'm sending into the Sanctuary itself. The risk of overlapping operations creating complications is too high. However, there are merchant contacts and informants in Soon's Haven and the surrounding territories who report to us periodically. If you encounter anyone claiming to be from Sunagakure within the Sanctuary walls, treat them as hostile until proven otherwise. The Barons have demonstrated a willingness to use deception."

His gaze shifted to Tsumugu, and something in his expression softened—recognition of practical thinking.

"Your concern about supplies is well-founded, Tsumugu. Three days is a tight window, and you're right that exertion and stress will increase your nutritional needs." Shin stood and moved to a cabinet against the wall, retrieving a small wooden case. He returned to the table and opened it, revealing rows of compressed nutrition pills, each sealed in wax paper. "Military-grade nutrition supplements. Each pill provides roughly the equivalent of a full meal's worth of calories, protein, and essential nutrients. They taste like chalk and sawdust, but they'll keep you functional. Take two cases—that's enough for all three of you for a week if rationed properly."

He set the cases on the table within reach.

"As for water, your preparation is impressive. The lesser water scroll should be more than sufficient, but I'll also provide you with emergency hydration tablets—drop one in a canteen of even brackish or contaminated water, and it becomes drinkable within minutes. Not pleasant, but safe."

Shin settled back into his seat, his luminous blue eyes sweeping across all three genin as he addressed the most critical question.

"Now, regarding the specific intelligence we're seeking." His tone shifted, becoming more focused, more precise. "You're correct, Tsumugu—there is something specific. Several things, actually."

He leaned forward, elbows on the table, fingers steepled.

"First: trafficking routes and operations. The Barons are moving people—children, young adults, forced laborers—into the Sanctuary regularly. We know they arrive through the eastern gate after sundown, but we don't know where they're coming from, how they're being acquired, or what the full scope of the operation looks like. Names, routes, schedules, any documentation you can access—all of it matters."

"Second: security infrastructure. Guard rotations, patrol patterns, alarm systems, defensive capabilities. The information in your folders is incomplete and possibly outdated. We need current, actionable intelligence. Where are the weak points? When are shift changes? Who commands the security forces, and what are their capabilities?"

"Third: the Barons themselves. We know very little about their personal habits, their routines, their vulnerabilities. Where do they spend their time? Who do they trust? What are their priorities? Any insight into their psychology or operations could prove invaluable."


Shin paused, letting the weight of those objectives settle.

"And finally—this is the most dangerous part—if you can determine where they're holding prisoners or forced laborers, and what the conditions are like, that information could save lives. But I want to be absolutely clear: you are not authorized to attempt a rescue. Observation only. If you see an opportunity to free someone and it compromises the mission or puts you at risk, you walk away. Do you understand?"

His expression was firm, almost stern, but not unkind.

"I know that will be difficult. I know your instincts will scream at you to act. But three genin cannot dismantle a trafficking operation, and getting yourselves killed or captured serves no one. Your job is to be my eyes and ears. Nothing more."

He reached for his tea, taking a slow sip before continuing.

"Ryuni, you mentioned you recently returned from the Diamond Ocean with your father. That experience will be valuable—you'll have a sense of the terrain, the culture, the way people move and speak in that region. Use that. You'll likely be the most naturally comfortable in that environment."

"Rika, your tactical instincts are sharp. You're already thinking about enemy countermeasures, about how they might try to deceive or trap you. Keep that edge. You'll be the one who spots the traps before they spring."
He paused, and his expression shifted to something more formal. "Which brings me to an important point. On the recommendation of your Academy Sensei, and based on your demonstrated capabilities and tactical acumen, I'm promoting you to Chūnin, effective immediately. You'll serve as squad leader for this mission."

Shin let that announcement settle for a moment before continuing.

"Tsumugu, your preparation and foresight are excellent. You're thinking about sustainability, about the long game. That discipline will keep the team alive when things get difficult. And they will get difficult."

He stood and moved toward an open space in his office, raising both hands. Chakra gathered at his palms, golden and warm, more substantial than the delicate finches he'd summoned earlier. Three forms began to materialize—larger, more complex. Within moments, three magnificent Sandrunners stood before them, their scaled legs clicking softly against the office floor. Each bird stood nearly seven feet tall, their plumage displaying unique, dazzling color patterns—one with azure and gold streaks, another with deep crimson and amber, the third with emerald and silver.

"These are my Sandrunners," Shin explained, moving to stand beside the birds with obvious affection, scratching at their plumage. "Fully domesticated, bonded to my chakra signature, and trained for long-distance desert travel. They're intelligent, fiercely loyal once bonded, and can sustain speeds of sixty miles per hour across open sand. Each one is named Uma—a bit confusing, I know, but they respond to their rider's chakra more than verbal commands."

He gestured to each bird in turn.

"They'll cut your travel time significantly and conserve your energy for the actual mission. Sandrunners are also common enough in the Diamond Ocean region that they won't draw undue attention—many merchants and travelers use them. You'll blend in better mounted than on foot."

Shin ran a hand along the neck of the azure-and-gold bird, which chirped softly in response.

"They're omnivores and can forage for themselves, so you won't need to carry additional feed. They're protective of their riders and have excellent instincts for danger. If your Uma becomes agitated or refuses to proceed in a certain direction, trust that instinct."

He turned back to face the genin—no, the team. Rika, now Chūnin and squad leader. Ryuni and Tsumugu, her subordinates but equals in risk.

"You'll depart tomorrow at dawn. That gives you the rest of today and tonight to study the files, prepare your gear, coordinate as a team, and bond with your Sandrunners. I recommend you spend time together—not just planning the mission, but getting to know each other. Trust is built in the quiet moments, not just the dangerous ones."

"When you return—and I expect you to return—you'll report directly to me. No one else needs to know the details of what you find until I've been briefed. Operational security is critical. The Barons have spies, and we don't know how deep their network runs."


He moved back to the window where the artificial sun cast golden light across the subterranean city, his back to them for a moment.

"One final thing," Shin said quietly. "If at any point you feel the mission has been compromised, if you believe your lives are in immediate danger, you abort. You extract. You run. There is no intelligence valuable enough to trade your lives for. Do you understand me?"

He turned back to face them, his luminous eyes reflecting something that might have been paternal concern beneath the Kazekage's authority.

"You are shinobi of Sunagakure. You are my responsibility. And I will not sacrifice children for information, no matter how desperately we need it. If you have to choose between the mission and your lives, you choose your lives. Every time. Rika, as squad leader, that's your call to make. Don't hesitate when the moment comes. Is that clear?"

The three Sandrunners shifted slightly, their brilliant plumage catching the light as they waited patiently for their new riders.

Shin waited as well, patient and present, ready to hear their final questions, their final concerns, before sending them out into a world that had already proven it would kill them without hesitation.
 
A sense of pride flooded the young Yamashiro boy. He didn't have questions like the others but he could not contain the smile on his face. His teammates were smart, much smarter than he was, but he could hold his own. He would show his worth in this conversation and in the field. Hopefully he wouldn't he any rash decisions that would compromise them... hopefully. At any rate, Ryu would listen intently upon where this conversation would lead. 'So, we have communications with Kage-sama's bird. We will have rationed water and military pills. And I have a good feel of the layout in the area. Hm...' Ryuni thought for the moment the embers within his brain firing off and building his anticipation.

'Hell I can cook anything we find out there if we need to,' another thought passing over the boy as he listened. Ryuni looked down at the documents for the first time, aiming to essentially retain them to memory as best he could. He certainly couldn't take these on the mission, it would be too costly if they were mishandled, forgotten, dropped, or otherwise compromised. He could feel the seal pressed against his forehead pulse from his dealings with his father in the Diamond Ocean, but he did not reach to touch it. Not now. Would he even tell his teammates about it? Could he trust them with such a secret? He was about to embark on this mission but he could not trust them with something so personal... they were going to be risking their lives together for this... how daft was Ryuni to hold this information back.

It was a struggle.

Shaking his head and frowning Ryuni only huffed as he'd continue to listen to the mission briefing. It was alot to take in and Ryuni felt like he might make a rash decision but he also felt like he could be the one making the call to ensure the team was properly placed. They were smart, but Ryuni was battle ready by comparison to them, right? He felt like that was... more valuable for this in case things got heated. There were many dangerous elements to this many moving pieces, and the chess board was only being set. A chill washed over Ryuni as he thought, 'Its like were going at a full set with only a few good pieces. We are strong, and maybe can catch some of those people off guard, but... this could lead to a loss on our end if we dont do this just right...' the Yamashiro boy's ears would catch Shin bringing up his name and it perked Ryu up.

'Rig-' a thought cut off by the talk of Rika. A girl that he hadn't seen much of in the academy days and he felt like she would be an asset to he and Tsumugu's team... but she certainly wasn't the type that could turn the course of any battle or mission. Ryuni wasn't the best student but he certainly was better than h-... an then she got a promotion. Blink.

blink.

bl..in...k....

He managed to keep the heat within him from bursting out, but... the heat in his fists would raise for a moment as he would simply eye Rika. Blinking a few times then moving his gaze to his clenched fists in his lap. This was on the recommendation of the Teachers in the academy? What had the teachers said about him? Had they spoken down on his academics? His battle prowess? Had he not worked similarly hard? Shown his worth?

So she was to be the squad leader, she belonged to no real clan... yet she would lead them? Something smelled off, but maybe he would see soon what she had. Her meddle. Ryuni's jealousy would be evident and because it was Shin's call, even if the Kage was wrong, he would follow it.

For now.

The Sandrunners were interesting, because he'd seen them before and wanted to tame and ride them himself as a child going back and forth between Suna and the outer village areas. A sparkle glinted in the genin's eyes causing him to temporarily forget the moments before. It caused Ryuni to stand himself and go out to reach a hand to the huge creature's legs and plumage. "May I?" He'd ask before actually touching the bird that towered over him and his teammates. Everything about these birds were awesome, and he knew they were fast... like really fast.

"Question, with it being just us three... will it be odd? Three kids in the area with little to no parental or guardian? I know of some orphans in the area... just want to make sure we have a plan for watchful eyes...?" Ryuni'd question looking back to his... no Rika's Team then to the Kage. Maybe it wasn't the question itself, but the idea to be considered. They would need to have a contingency for anyone who questioned them. Though whomever answered he would nod and take their answer without truly questioning it for now.

A lump formed in Ryu's throat again as it had earlier, the Kage's words cutting into his heart, not that he was telling them to be careful... but that he cared. Ryuni knew he cared first hand but the man was, very caring. More than his father. Ryuni was inspired by the man every day.

"We wont let you down Shin-sama." Ryu'd turn to the girl before smirking slightly, "...Welp our lives are in your hands Chunin." And the stage would be set, the characters would have their mission detail, what would they do? What was Ryuni going to do..? Who knew, but the details would make this episode of Sunagakure Chronicles... Delicious.
 
Rika smiled as Shin answered her question, a hawk and sandrunners, perfect. It was more than she'd hoped for. Perfect for a quick escape, and if any of the other two got hurt, she wouldn't have to carry them. Their odds of success on a mission were going up with these birds. "Thanks, Shin-sama," Rika said with a thumbs-up.

Rika leaned back in her seat again as she listened to Tsumugu's questions. Tsumugu brought up a good point about food; she hadn't considered it since she could go a few days without food. She figured he'd be the water boy, though, considering where he came from. She glanced over at Tsumugu as she grabbed another sandwich and took a bite. Knowing what they were looking for, goals, was also a good point. She glanced at their Kage as he answered. She looked at the pill cases, then at Tsumugu.
"You can carry them," she stated. He asked, so he could carry them. They would be useful, no doubt, but she also kept her load light.

The goals, trafficking routes, patrols, the Barons themselves, and whether they were holding prisoners or forced laborers. The fact that they would just be documenting would be hard, depending on how soft her teammates were. It would be hard for her to walk away, but she wasn't going to go against orders. Rika knew that was a lot of ground to cover. She could use her time-warping abilities to get in and out of tight spaces, but she wouldn't be able to bring the other two with her. She wasn't going to disclose her ace to them either; she'd spent most of her life keeping this secret. She was judged enough for the lack of clan backing. The thought alone made her blood boil a little. She had worked hard to push past every test, every insult, and every barrier others put up.

Then Shin promoted her, and Rika sat up straight, surprised. She was recommended by her sensei? She didn't know what they'd said about her, but it was hard to believe they'd said anything positive. Hearing it from the Kage, though, was a small rush of pride.
'They noticed my hard work,' the thought alone made Rika's chest tighten. She pushed those feelings down. "Thank you, Lord Kage. I won't disappoint you," she replied with a nod and a grin. A genuine grin she couldn't hide. It was a lot of weight on her shoulders, but it made her feel more confident. She did notice the temperature rise slightly, suddenly. She looked around, gauging whether the others noticed, but her attention went back to Shin quickly.

As Shin summoned the birds, Rika watched, her eyes widening slightly. They were more magnificent than she'd imagined. She watched as Ryuni stood to approach the birds. The heat went away.
'Jeeze, it's hot enough in this desert. We have a walking heater with us,' Rika thought, her brows furrowing slightly. She didn't know how hot it'd be outside the dome, but she knew it was hotter than inside. She hated it when the dome was open.

Rika snapped out of her thoughts as Ryuni questioned whether it'd be odd for three kids to be out without guardians.
"Well, I don't think so. I've read that some merchant families send their kids out on errands. If I were as short as you two, it might be odd, but I can pass as a 14-year-old," Rika said as she stood. She grabbed a sweet red bean pancake and chewed on it. "If we go in with confidence, I'm sure some fools will believe us," Rika added. If they acted like they belonged, it would be easy to fool anyone. They just needed to be confident.

Rika then looked at Shin.
"To recap; we'll go in on the birds. Observe what we can, then leave. Our main goals are to gather information and come back alive." Rika looked at Ryuni and took another bite of the sweet red bean paste pancake. "We can pretend to be passing through and just stopping for a break. If anyone asks, we're on our way to Soon's Havan to meet up with family. If they think people are waiting for us, they'll be less likely to try to take us. Though it's not guaranteed. We can work on details to build on the lie and make the act more believable later," Rika explained, then looked at Tsumugu to see if he had any input. She was open to ideas. She planned on using this downtime to plan and prepare. She wasn't keen on getting all cozy and sharing childhood stories. Like when Shin asked how they were doing, she didn't open up. She didn't need to; the job would get done without getting mushy. The fact that they would have to leave behind anyone they found meant she needed to harden herself further. There was no room for error.
 
Tsumugu listened quietly, absorbing every word as Shin outlined the mission. The weight of responsibility settled over him like water pressing against his chest. The details of trafficking routes, security rotations, and the Barons’ habits were enough to make anyone’s head spin, yet he didn’t flinch. His mind instead traced the maps trying to apply them to memory. He studied the pills, the hydration tablets, and mentally ran through how he’d ration them for three days.

The emphasis on observation over intervention resonated deeply. Patience, control, efficiency all traits he valued and traits he possessed. As Shin’s warnings settled in, Tsumugu would take note and would keep it on the surface of his mind, simply nodding in silence towards the Kazekage. He understood the stakes and the rules, and he was ready to apply every bit of discipline and foresight he had to see this mission through.

When the Sandrunners appeared, eyes flicking over their form immediately with interest. They were the perfect creature for the terrain, that much he could tell without it being explained. When Ryuni interacted with the Sandrunners or voiced practical concerns, Tsumugu would respond quietly, nodding slightly, listening, and filing the details away. It was strange seeing the minute details of someone he disliked, something that planted seeds of doubt in how he'd been acting towards others in the back of his mind.

Tsumugu would watch Ryuni carefully his subtle reaction catching his attention from the side of his gaze, the way water studies the shape of its container. Ryuni wasn't loud or expressive about it, but he would notice the slight tension, the pride, and the simmering irritation that flickered across Ryuni’s features when Rika was named squad leader. Something he only noticed because of his familiarity with that look, he'd seen it plenty times before within the academy. Ryuni was clearly battle ready and confident in his own skills and that would earn Tsumugu’s respect slightly. But Tsumugu would also sense that Ryuni’s emotions might cloud judgment if the team faced problems. He’d make a mental note to watch for it without making it obvious, his facial expression remaining calm though his mind was anything but.

Tsumugu listened when Rika spoke, quiet as ever, his eyes drifting between her and Ryuni rather than the Kazekage. He didn’t interrupt, he didn't change his facial expression, he just listened. When she finished laying out the plan, he gave a small nod, acknowledging the logic behind it but keeping his reservations just that. “…It works,” he said after a moment. His voice was calm, even, but thoughtful. “People tend to believe in confidence faster than they believe in strength. If we hesitate, we will look like targets.”

Tsumugu absorbed the Kazekage’s final words to them in silence. They were to begin at Dawn, his very first mission, and a critical one at that. That gave them only a handful of hours which was enough time to prepare but not enough to feel comfortable about it. His fingers curled slightly at his side as the weight of the mission settled in. This mission dealt with spies, trafficking and any matter of underground activities they weren't privy to knowing about. When Shin spoke of returning alive, something tightened in Tsumugu’s chest.Yet when he realized Shin had spoke with certainty, not fear, that calmed his heart and settled his spirit.

He glanced toward Ryuni and then Rika. Different personalities. Different tempers. But all standing here for the same reason. Tsumugu made a silent note to pay close attention to them because once the mission began, quiet would be the first thing to disappear with how their personalities were. For some odd reason a smirk crossed his lips without him thinking about it...

Once everyone had become silent, Tsumugu would take this moment to address Shin again, a question lingering in his mind. "A settlement this big must have access to water...piping, a reservoir..channels something. I doubt they are living there without an easily attainable source of water....right?", the question posed as the gears of his young brain were turning. If the Kazekage hadn't thought about this before then a Renmei bringing it up just might make what Tsumugu was implying easier to understand

[WC: 704].
 

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