CH_7.6 (224)
Hajime, a sensory-nin of the Hidden Leaf stationed at Camp Banana, strolled across the makeshift earthen perimeter wall that covered the village center. In his case, the stigma surrounding sensory-ninâ that they were only good at their sensory capabilitiesâwas somewhat true. After all, they were hired solely for their special capabilities and nothing else, working extremely long hours that left them very little time to develop their other skills.
Hajime embodied the stereotype to the highest degree. He was only useful because of his sensory capabilities, but he didnât mind because he was outstanding at it, even compared to other sensory-nin. He was content with being a hyper specialist as thatâs what got him good jobs and he didnât see that changing anytime soon.
Putting all his time and effort into his sensing capabilities allowed Hajime to clock the chakra signature, moving rapidly toward Camp Banana. He turned to the thick woods bordering the camp, where he sensed the chakra. He judged it to be a high Grade-1 on the sensory-nin scale, but it took him by surprise because the chakra felt was nothing like he was used to feeling from most Grade-1 threats.
Despite that, he rang the alarms and notified the entire base about a potential intruder and incursion.
He felt people in the base flare up their chakra, which overwhelmed his senses for a moment. In the handful of seconds it took to steady himself, he lost track of the chakra signature. He sharpened his focus and quickly re-confirmed his senses on the signature, only to realize it was next to him.
Hajime looked around, but he didnât find anything.
âBe careful; the target might be a master of stealth,â Hajime warned the others on guard duty.
As he continued to look around with a kunai in his hand, he heard a hissing sound. Hajime looked at the wall around his feet and froze up when he saw the slitted, sickly-yellow eyes of a forest green snake as thick as his arm and as tall as he was.
Before he could move or scream, the snake lunged at him, completely trapping and immobilizing Hajime in its coiling, serpentine body.
âYou have sharp senses, human,â the snake hissed, its head a few centimeters away from Hajimeâs face, âbut those senses are a big problem for a predator like myself⦠maybe I should make you into a meal.â
Hajime was beyond terrified and couldnât produce a peep from his mouth. He could only stare at the snake with his quaking wide eyes. The other guards couldnât move as the snake had Hajime in its grasp as a hostage.
The snakeâs forked tongue touched Hajimeâs cheek, making his entire body flinch and break out in cold sweat. Just as he thought he was about to become its dinner, the snake laughed loudly, and Hajime found his legs free as the snake coiled its entire body around his torso, arms, and neck.
âUnfortunately, Iâm not here for a meal,â the snake said. âMitarashi Anko has sent me. Walk me to the humans named Shirakumo and Toridasu. I bring them news from her.â
Hajime, of course, knew Anko and also knew that she was infamous for her snake summons. Hearing Anko was the one to send the snake, he calmed down from utter terror to stiffness from fear.
âI-Itâs okay, Chunin Mitarashi has sent the snake,â Hajime announced loudly as he awkwardly turned his body to face the other guards because the snake was still coiled around his neck, and he didnât want to make any movements. He spoke respectfully to the snake, âCan you please let me go? Iâll happily lead you to the jonin.
âNo, you take me,â said the snake, and Hajime could sense that the snake wasnât going to take a no for an answer.
âO-Okay,â Hajime gulped. He announced: âIâm talking the snake to see the jonin. Clear a path.â
Hajime jumped down the wall, and by then, the shinobi in the base had already gathered near the wall, fully decked in combat gear. They cleared a path for Hajime, who didnât need to walk much as Shirakumo stood in the middle of the road.
âRelease my shinobi,â Shirakumo said, sounding dead serious.
âNot with all these human shinobi around me, ready to hunt me down,â the snake hissed. âMy time with Orochimaru hasnât left a great impression of you humans. I like my Anko, but I canât say the same for all of you⦠Most of the time when she calls me, I end up killing and eating your species.â The snakeâs yellow eyes scanned the entire area, and the weak-willed in the crowd looked nervous or looked away when their gaze met the snakeâs.
Shirakumo frowned with displeasure at the mention of Orochimaru. The shinobi gathered around and looked nervous and scared at the mention of the Snake Sannin.
âYouâre the one called Shirakumo, correct?â asked the snake. âGive me your word that I wonât be harmed, and I will release this human.â
âDoes that mean my words mean nothing in Ankoâs eyes,â said Toridasu.
The slits in the snakeâs eyes narrowed as he turned his head back to see Toridasu standing behind Hajime. The snake moved around Hajime in agitation, coiling a bit tighter, making Hajime grunt in pain; the fact that he couldnât sense someone as dangerous as Toridasu standing so close to him wasnât something the snake welcomed.
âWhat⦠scared?â asked Toridasu, tilting his head.
Shirakumo felt a growing tension between the snake and Toridasu and interjected before it became a problem.n/o/vel/b//in dot c//om
âI give you my word that you wonât be harmed. I assume you have word from Anko; letâs talk about it inside,â said Shirakumo.
The snakeâs eyes remained affixed on Toridasu for a moment before he opened his maw and sank his fangs into Hajimeâs shoulder.
âââ
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âRest assured; I will give him the anti-venom when weâre done. As you humans put it, itâs insurance,â said Mara, the snake.
Mara sat with Shirakumo and Toridasu in the war room. Neither of the Hidden Leaf jonin looked very pleased with Mara injecting Hajime with his snake venom. Their sensory-nin was in a fatal condition after getting injured inside the base while the two jonin stood by and watched.
âWhat does Anko want?â asked Shirakumo.
Mara sat coiled on the large table, taking nearly half of the tabletop. He opened his maw for a scroll tube to emerge from his body and drop down on a table covered in spittle. Mara flicked the scroll tube across the table with his take.
The scroll tube stopped in front of Toridasu, who used a handkerchief to pick it up and opened the tube to retrieve a scroll from inside. Toridasu read the scroll and then handed it to Shirakumo.
âItâs legit,â said Toridasu. The scroll had Ankoâs handwriting and a secret code to validate the legitimacy of all communication between the Yu team and the base. âShe wants us to print posters for them.â
âThey moved quick,â said Shirakumo. He looked to Mara. âWe give you the posters, and she summons you into the city.â
âThatâs the plan,â Mara said, hissing.
âSummons sure are convenient,â Shirakumo said with a deep exhale.
In the shinobi world, summons were in high demand due to their sheer usefulness, but contracting a summon species was an extremely rare opportunity that only a few were lucky to have. And even those who had signed summon contracts had to pay a prize in return for having intelligent animals capable of using chakra at call.
There was a rumor revolving around Orochimaru that the bigger, more powerful snake summons required human sacrifice every time they were summoned, and Orochimaru very happily sacrificed a large amount of people every time he needed help from the behemothian serpents that struck fear in the hearts of his enemies.
âYou have three days; I will come to collect the posters sealed in a scroll that fits in that tube around this time of day in three days,â said Mara, pointing at the scroll tube covered in snake spittle.
âOh, youâre leaving. What a pity,â said Toridasu, his words dripping in sarcasm.
âIâll be in the nearby forest. Warn your humans to be careful if they visit; I might mistake them for prey,â Mara laughed and then slithered off the table, heading towards the door.
âThe anti-venom,â Shirakumo stood up, looking ready to stop and grab Mara on a momentâs notice. Mara might be a big snake, but he wasnât a jonin.
Mara laughed again, louder this time. âDonât worry. He doesnât need it. Iâm not a venomous snake.â The snakeâs hilarious laughter was audible from outside the war room for several seconds before they couldnât hear it.
Toridasu and Shirakumo looked at each other in silence. A snake had made up a fool out of both of them.
There was a knock on the door, and the chunin iryo-nin, who was looking after Hajime, stepped inside.
âSir⦠uhm, Hajimeââ
Toridasu cut him off. âHajime is fine, we know.â
ââ¦Yes, sir,â the chunin iryo-nin got the message and immediately stepped out of the room, leaving the two jonin alone
âThis is why I donât like that girl,â Toridasu said to Shirakumo. âDamnable snakes.â
âââ
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Because of her duties as Chinatsuâs handmaid, Rikku hadnât had the opportunity to visit the base of operation in the abandoned factory.
She was happy to be out of the handmaidâs attire and back into her usual clothes. Unexpectedly, the handmaidâs uniform was comfortable and easy to move around in, which made sense to her after she worked in them as the job required moving around doing a lot of tasks from preparing Chinatsu and maintaining the houseâ but she was simply more comfortable in her vest and pants that she had been wearing since she became a shinobi.
As she entered the building, she saw Takuma on the other end of the long floor. The base was situated in the most isolated part of the buildingâin the corner with other abandoned buildings adjacent to it. The factory Gaku had chosen was abandoned because a few years back, a dangerous chemical leaked into it killing six people, which led to the factoryâs closure. The team wasnât a fan of the location despite Gaku assuring the locationâs safety. The other option was a haunted warehouse, but Anko rejected it because she was worried that children might use the warehouse for âtests of courageââthus leading them to choose the factory.
Takuma was staring at a huge plan wall he had made. Because he was the only one not tied to Chinatsu for cover, he had the most amount of time to gather information and intelligence via observation and exploration.
Rikku didnât want to disturb the thoroughly engrossed boy and moved silently, but when she was close enough, Takuma turned, and his eyes snapped toward her as though she was a threat. The sudden movement from him gave her a pause, but since she didnât have to worry about disturbing him, she greeted him.
âHey,â Takuma returned her greeting.
âYou should make it more readable,â said Rikku as she stopped beside Takuma and gazed over the surprisingly large plans on the wall.
âItâs not readable?â Takuma looked at her, his brows furrowed.
âMaybe to you; it doesnât make much sense to me.â Rikku tried to look closer, but it all seemed like a huge, chaotic mess of information thrown on a wall. âWhat is all of this?â
âIâm trying to make sense of the city in my mind,â said Takuma, pointing at a rudimentary city map in the middle of everything âI want to know whatâs where so Iâm more comfortable with operating here. Not knowing how this city works is scary. The more I know, the more comfortable I am.â
âMakes sense,â said Rikku, nodding. As she looked at the plan-wall, she couldnât see the connections between the many clusters of notes that he had made, but she could roughly see that Takuma was focusing on areas and people in those areas.
And as she thought of people, a question rose in her mind.âI didnât think sticking posters would be the first big thing we would do in the city,â she said.
âOh, what did you think weâd be doing?â he asked, his eyes stuck to the plan-wall as though he was obsessed with the clustered mess he had created.
âHonestly⦠I thought we would be killing one of the enemy shinobi,â Rikku shrugged. She knew her answer was blockheaded, but thatâs what she thought was the entire objective. Weaken the enemy from the inside before the main force came knocking from the outside.
âYouâre not wrong; thereâll be plenty of time for that,â Takuma chuckled.
âSo⦠weâre doing this because we want the residents to help us, right?â asked Rikku. âWouldnât we accomplish the same if we killed a couple of enemy shinobi? Wouldnât they be happy that someone was finally doing something?â
Takuma removed his eyes from the wall to look at Rikku.
âYes, weâre doing this so that we would have the residentâs support, but thatâs just an outcome of something else weâre trying to prevent. The city of Yu still considers the Land of Frost as the enemy, but if we allow whatâs happening, that would change, and the city would start looking at them favorably.â
âI donât get it,â Rikku shook her head. âWhy would they look at invaders favorably?â
âBecause we as a species arenât logical beings. After months of limited food and disrupted lives, if they returned to abundant food and their lives back on track, and the enemy claims that they did solve the problem Land of Hot Water created, the people would side with the side who âsolved the problem.â
Takuma paused for a moment as he mulled on something.
âFor example, thereâs a helpless old man whoâs running away from a goon whoâs trying to kill him. And you have the option to let the old man escape. Would you help?â
âYeah, I would help,â said Rikku.
âBut what if I told you that the helpless old man raped the goonâs sister who took then took her life. The goon was just trying to exact revenge for his sister. Would you have still helped?â
âOf course not!â
âBut you just said you would.â
âBecause I didnât knowââ Rikku realized what Takuma was trying to explain. âThe city people donât know that the old man is the real scum and will instead think of the goon as the scummy one.â
âYes,â he nodded. âImagine if our main forces come to free the city, but the city people who have been deceived get in the way. They try to help their âliberatorsâ and get in between a conflict between two shinobi forces. Do you think we will mow the civilians down to get to the enemy?â
Rikku shook her head.
Takuma continued. âLetâs say we somehow got rid of the enemy without causing a civilian massacre. What now? We leaveâ but the Land of Hot Water is left with a city near the border full of Land of Frost sympathizers and supporters. Do you think the Hot Water Daimyo and the Hidden Steam would be able to see Yu as anything but a potential security threat? They would be left with a timebomb waiting to explode.
âSo yes, Iâm hoping by revealing the truth, the people will help us when we need their help, but mostly, itâs because weâre trying to rescue the city, and I donât want them to be doomed at the end of it all.â
Rikku looked at the plan-wall, and unsurprisingly, nothing had changed, and it still seemed like a chaotic mess to her.
âI⦠donât think Iâll be much help here. I wouldâve killed the goon,â she said.
âYou donât need to help with this. You just need to be there ready when itâs time to kill the scummy old man,â said Takuma. âI think youâll be a very good handmaid who does some killing on the side.â
Rikku smiled.
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