I'm happy to announce that we are only 5 chapters away from reaching chapter 100.
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*****
The sun was setting on the horizon, painting the sky in deep shades of orange and purple. The journey from Tanzaku hadn't been a frantic escape, but a deliberate and steady march. There was no sense of pursuit, only the rhythmic pace of Tsunade's steps on the earth and the soft breathing of the boy she carried on her back. Naruto had completely collapsed; the weight of his unconscious body was a tangible reminder of the incredible display of power she had witnessed.
Beside her, Shizune walked in stunned silence. Her eyes, normally fixed on the path or on her master, constantly darted about, scanning the forest canopy, the leaf-strewn ground, the very air itself. An expression of pure, almost childlike wonder was etched on her face, one Tsunade hadn't seen in over a decade.
Finally, she broke the silence, her voice barely a whisper laden with disbelief.
"Lady Tsunade… it's… it's overwhelming."
Tsunade glanced at her from the corner of her eye, an eyebrow arched in a silent invitation to continue.
"The forest," Shizune went on, gesturing vaguely with one hand. "I've never… perceived it like this. It's not just a collection of trees and plants. I can feel it. I can hear water flowing in an underground stream beneath our feet, I can feel the pattern of that oak's roots fifty meters away… It's as if the world is speaking to me in a language I'm only beginning to understand."
The Sannin nodded slowly, her analytical mind already at work, cataloging.
"Describe the sensation in more detail. Is it like using chakra to enhance your senses? A more potent version of the sensory techniques you know?"
"No," Shizune answered immediately, shaking her head. "No, it's deeper, more fundamental. With sensory ninjutsu, I actively search for information. I extend my chakra and probe the environment for specific signatures. Now… the information just comes to me. It's a constant flow. I look at a simple leaf," she said, pausing for a moment to touch one hanging from a low branch, "and my mind tells me its chlorophyll level, that it has a slight nitrogen deficiency, and the exact chemical composition of the sap running through its veins. It's the 'Analytical Mind' ability Naruto mentioned, but it's… instinctive. I don't have to activate it; it's just active."
Tsunade stopped as well, her gaze fixed on her apprentice. She saw a genuine excitement, that of a scholar who had just been granted access to an infinite library.
"Try to control it. The constant flow of information can be exhausting, even dangerous in a battle. Focus on a single thing. On that bird on that branch."
Shizune closed her eyes for a second, taking a deep breath. When she opened them, her gaze locked onto the small sparrow. Her expression sharpened.
"I can… hear its heartbeat. It's fast. One hundred eighty beats per minute. I can feel the tension building in the muscles of its legs just before it jumps to fly. I know it's going to fly west in… three… two… one."
At that precise instant, the bird flapped its wings and launched into the air, flying in the exact direction she had predicted. Shizune let out a choked laugh, a mixture of surprise and pure joy.
"This is incredible!" she exclaimed.
Then she moved. She didn't run; she flowed. With an agility and precision she hadn't possessed that morning, she leaped to a low branch, then to a higher one, moving through the foliage with the silent grace of a cat. Her feet seemed to instinctively know where to land to make no sound. It was the manifestation of her new Dexterity and Agility, a perfect coordination between mind and body that made her feel more alive than ever.
Tsunade watched her, a thoughtful expression on her face. It wasn't just the information; it was the efficiency. Shizune had always been competent, but now her movements were flawless, without a single ounce of wasted energy.
"Your chakra control…" Tsunade began as Shizune landed softly beside her. "How does it feel?"
"Different," Shizune admitted. "More… dense. More my own. I've always had good control; you trained me for it. But now it's as if I can feel every particle of chakra within me. I can shape it with a thought before it even reaches my hands. The 'Healing Chakra Threads'… I think I could perform a remote vascular anastomosis with them. Internal surgery without opening the patient. The level of precision I feel…"
Her voice trailed off, lost in the possibilities. Tsunade nodded, resuming her pace. The Sannin's mind didn't dwell on the wonder; it went straight to the implications. This isn't a simple enhancement jutsu, she thought. He didn't give Shizune power. He rewrote her potential from the ground up. He optimized her system at a cellular level. The applications for medicine, for intelligence, for combat… they're limitless. And terrifying. What exactly is this power that a brat like him has in his hands?
The weight of Naruto on her back suddenly felt much heavier.
When Naruto awoke, it was to the crackling of a campfire and the comforting aroma of hot soup. He opened his eyes slowly, feeling a profound weakness in every muscle, an emptiness that told him his energy reserves had hit rock bottom. He was wrapped in a blanket by the fire. Shizune was beside him, stirring a small pot, while Tsunade was on the other side of the flames, sharpening a kunai with a whetstone, her face illuminated by the dancing light.
The atmosphere was calm, peaceful. There was no urgency or tension.
"You smell that, don't you?" Tsunade said without looking up. "Your stomach's been growling for over an hour."
Shizune smiled and served him a steaming bowl of soup.
"Drink slowly, Naruto-kun. Your body needs to replenish everything you used."
Naruto sat up with an effort, accepting the bowl with trembling hands. The warmth spread through his chest, and the taste of vegetables and broth anchored him to reality. He ate in silence for several minutes, slowly regaining his strength. When he finished, Tsunade had put away the kunai and was watching him. Her gaze was no longer skeptical, but intensely curious.
"When you're ready, Naruto," she said in a calm voice—an invitation, not an order—"I want you to tell me everything. Not as a report, not as a justification. Just… tell me your story."
Naruto swallowed, the last sip of soup settling in his stomach. He looked at Shizune, who gave him a small, encouraging nod. Then he looked at Tsunade, at the legendary Sannin who now saw him not as a troublesome brat, but as an enigma she needed to solve. And for the first time, he felt no need to hide.
He took a deep breath.
"I don't know where it came from, really," he began, his voice a bit hoarse. "It just… appeared one day. A blue screen, right in front of my eyes, that only I could see."
"At first, I thought I'd gone crazy. It talked to me about 'Levels' and 'Experience Points.' I thought it was a genjutsu or that I'd hit my head too hard. I tried to ignore it, but… it was always there. It was… weird."
He paused, remembering the confusion of those first days.
"Then, it explained the Falna to me. The ability to… update others. To give them a push. And the first person I thought of was Hinata. I always saw… the people of the Hyuga clan, even some in the village, they looked at her like she was weak or a failure. And she's not. She never has been. She's incredibly strong and kind, but she lacked confidence. I thought… I thought if I gave her tangible proof of her own growth, something she could see, like those stats, maybe she'd start to believe in herself as much as I believed in her. And it worked. Seeing her change, become more confident… it was the best feeling ever."
A small smile formed on his face.
"After that was Sakura-chan. She's brilliant, the smartest on our team, but she was always frustrated. She felt like Sasuke and I were leaving her behind in terms of strength. I hated seeing her like that. I wanted to give her the tools to defend herself, so no one would ever make her feel like a burden again. I wanted her to be as strong on the outside as she already was on the inside."
Tsunade listened, motionless, processing not just the facts, but the motivations. There was no arrogance in his voice, no desire for power. Only an almost desperate longing to help the people he cared about.
"At first," Naruto continued, his tone turning more serious, "my plan was to not do anything else. I was scared. A power like this… if I changed something important, could I make things worse? What if someone got hurt because of me? What if I accidentally erased someone from existence? The idea terrified me. So I decided to let everything happen the way it was supposed to. I would just strengthen my friends in secret, without interfering in the big events."
"But things don't work that way. I tried to avoid the mission to the Land of Waves. I knew it was dangerous, that we would run into elite ninja like Zabuza and Haku. I did everything I could to get us assigned D-rank missions, but Sasuke-teme got fed up and demanded a real mission. And the Third Hokage gave us that one, anyway. We ended up there, just like it was supposed to happen. That's when I realized… there are things that are going to happen, no matter what I do. As if destiny is a river with a very strong current. You can swim to the side a little, but in the end, it keeps carrying you in the same direction."
He stared at the flames, his blue eyes reflecting the fire.
"And that's where everything changed. Seeing Haku protect Zabuza… seeing Zabuza cry for him… I couldn't stand it. Not after living through it once. I talked to Kakashi-sensei, told him my worries—not everything, but enough. And he helped me decide. He told me we couldn't live in fear of the consequences, that we had to make the decisions we thought were right in the moment and deal with what came next."
"So we did. We changed things. We saved Zabuza and Haku. I don't know what changes that will bring to the future, what ripples it will create. But I felt it was the right thing to do. Letting two people who clearly loved each other have a second chance… that couldn't be wrong, right?"
He finished his story, and the silence that fell over the camp was profound, broken only by the crackling of wood. He had emptied his pack, had shared the burden he had carried alone for months. The fear, the uncertainty, the impossible decisions. Tsunade didn't move, her face a mask of contemplation. She was processing the scale of it all: a power that could rewrite people, a boy who had prior knowledge of the future, and the forced maturity of having to decide on life and death based on it. The burden was monumental.
Naruto waited, his heart pounding in his chest. He had exposed his greatest secret, his greatest vulnerability. Shizune looked at him with a new, deep empathy, now understanding the pressure he had been living under. Tsunade's face remained unreadable.
Finally, Naruto made a decision. He stood up, his legs still a bit shaky, and walked around the fire until he stopped in front of the Sannin. With an audacity that left her momentarily paralyzed, he knelt before her.
"I've told you all this because… I trust you, Granny Tsunade," he said, using the nickname with a naturalness that would disarm anyone.
And then, he did something that shattered all barriers of protocol and hierarchy. He held out his hand and, with unexpected gentleness, took hers. Tsunade's hand, a weapon capable of shattering mountains, felt strangely small in his.
"I want to offer you the same thing I offered Shizune-san."
Tsunade stared at him, her amber eyes searching for any hint of deception, but finding only a raw, overwhelming sincerity.
"The system calls it 'Falna'," Naruto continued, his voice firm and clear. "And the people who receive it, it calls them 'followers' or 'believers.' I think that's stupid. I don't want followers. I don't want anyone to serve me or follow me blindly. I want a team. I want… a family."
He gently squeezed her hand.
"People who watch each other's backs. Being strong is useless if you're alone in the end. The shinobi world is dangerous, it always will be. But it's a little less scary if you don't have to face it alone."
His gaze was direct, that of an equal, of someone offering an alliance, not a subordinate asking for a favor. In his eyes, Tsunade didn't see the loud-mouthed brat, nor the container of the Kyubi. She saw a will of fire, an unbreakable determination that painfully reminded her of other people, from other times.
Tsunade's breath caught in her throat. The feeling of her hand being held with such frankness, the lack of decorum, the familiarity with which he spoke to her… it all disarmed her. A strange shame washed over her, not for him, but for her own reaction; for the wall of cynicism he was effortlessly tearing down.
Dan's hand, as warm as this one… Nawaki's gaze, so full of impossible dreams… Jiraiya's stupid, stubborn determination…
All of them were there, reflected in the blue eyes of the boy kneeling before her.
Slowly, as if waking from a long dream, she raised her other hand. Shizune watched, holding her breath, witnessing a gesture she had never seen before. Tsunade's hand came to rest on Naruto's unruly blond hair, stroking it with an awkwardness that revealed how unaccustomed she was to such tenderness.
Then, on an impulse that sprang from the deepest part of her being, from a place she had kept locked away for years, she pulled him toward her and hugged him.
It wasn't the bone-crushing, rib-shattering hug one would expect from her. It was a protective, almost maternal embrace, a refuge. Naruto was stiff with surprise for a second before relaxing into it.
"You're an incredibly troublesome… and stupid brat," Tsunade whispered, her voice muffled against his shoulder. She paused, composing herself. "I'll think about it. I promise, I'll think about it."
She let him go, and the moment of intense emotion dissipated, leaving a new, quiet understanding in the camp air. A warmth that didn't come from the fire.
Tsunade cleared her throat, regaining a sliver of her usual authority.
"Now, get some rest. Both of you. It's been a long day. We'll continue our journey at a good pace tomorrow."
They settled down to sleep. Naruto curled up in his blanket, feeling lighter than he had in months, as if the weight of the world had eased a little. Shizune looked at her master with new eyes, seeing the woman behind the legend.
And Tsunade stayed awake a while longer, watching the dying embers, Naruto's promise and the warmth of her own surprising reaction lingering in her heart. The camp fell silent under a blanket of stars, a new family, fragile but real, having been born in the heart of the Land of Fire.