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Chapter no.61 Naruto New
Chapter no.61 What the Fox doin?!


Kurama's first memory was not of the world, but of himself.

He opened his eyes to endless darkness, only to realize that the darkness was not the sky or the earth, but his own shadow stretched out across the land. His body was vast. His tails churned behind him like storms. Every step he took made the ground groan, every breath he drew seemed to shake the air. He was alive, yet already burdened with the truth that his existence would never be small. He was too large, too loud, too powerful to ever belong.

To him, Hagoromo was not just the Sage of Six Paths. He was a father. The one who named him, who taught him, who spoke to him as though he were more than a mass of chakra and teeth. Kurama cherished that bond, but it also weighed heavily on him. He wanted to live up to it. He wanted to be the proof that the Sage's dream of Ninshu was not in vain.

Unlike his brothers and sisters, Kurama did not hunger for power alone. He sought understanding. Where others used their chakra as raw might, Kurama honed his in another way. He learned to feel the hearts of humans. He stretched his chakra into the air, the soil, the space between people, and discovered that human hearts always beat in rhythm with something unseen. Hope, fear, anger, love. These were currents he could sense, as real to him as the tides of the sea.

When Hagoromo's time neared its end, he gave Kurama a duty. A temple, and the responsibility to guide the humans who gathered there. Kurama accepted. He sat beneath the stone eaves, the humans kneeling before him with trembling hands and wary eyes. He felt their fear, but bore it in silence. He told himself it did not matter.

What mattered was the Sage's dream.

What mattered was Ninshu.

If these humans could learn, if they could understand, perhaps one day his father's faith would be justified.

But humans are fragile and short-lived.

Kurama watched them grow old. He watched them wither and return to the earth while children took their place. He watched whole generations rise and fall like waves. Their lives burned quickly, but not brightly. For all their fleeting time, they wasted so much of it in conflict.

They quarreled over borders. They killed over food. They fought over pride. And when Hagoromo's gift of chakra spread among them, instead of using it to understand each other, they sharpened it into weapons.

That was the moment Kurama broke.

His voice rattled the stones of his temple. How dare they. How dare these ungrateful creatures sully his father's dream. Chakra was meant to connect. Chakra was meant to heal. It was supposed to be the bridge that ended loneliness. And yet they bent it toward slaughter and conquest, spilling blood with the very thing that was meant to bring them peace.

Kurama's anger burned hotter than fire. He left the temple behind.

He wandered. He sought to understand what his father had seen in these humans. Perhaps he had missed something. But wherever he went, disappointment followed.

He crossed barren deserts, only to see villages turn their faces away in terror. He carried food into famine-stricken lands, only for the survivors to call him a harbinger of disaster. He frightened away bandits who preyed on the weak, and those very same weak raised trembling hands toward the heavens, praying in fear that the beast wouldn't devour them next.

Kurama did not know when the name began, but soon it spread from mouth to mouth like fire in dry grass.

Demon.

Monster.

Calamity.


A beast of ill omen who appeared only when ruin was near.

And all Kurama felt was anger.

For centuries, he bore their fear. For centuries, he endured their whispers. He saved them from storms, from earthquakes, from enemies, and they spat his name as though he was the one who brought such things upon them. The longer it went on, the more that anger curdled into something heavier.

Apathy.

If they would always see him as a demon, then why should he care for them? If they would curse him no matter what he did, then why bother at all?

So he turned away. He stopped trying. He stopped saving. He stopped searching for the spark that Hagoromo swore existed in humanity.

And in the silence that followed, Kurama asked himself the question that haunted him through the ages:

Was his father wrong?

Or was Kurama simply too blind, too angry, too tired to see what the Sage had seen?



Coming back to his temple did not bring comfort. It brought fury.

What had once been his last tether to Hagoromo was no longer his.

A clan of humans had claimed his temple for their own. And worse, they dared call themselves... the Kurama clan.

When Kurama learned why, his rage boiled over.

They had broken into the sealed chambers where his carvings lay. Stone walls etched with claw marks, deep furrows across pillars, and great slabs scorched with his chakra. Signs where he had tried to grasp the mystery of what Hagoromo called the Creation of All Things.

But the humans forged something he had never intended out of his thoughts.

A genjutsu that could paint fantasy into reality. A hollow echo of the Creation of All Things.

And because they believed he was the origin of their technique, they named themselves the Kurama clan.

All of this caused something inside the fox to break.

His tails tore through the temple.

Some of the humans fought. Most ran. None mattered. To him, they were defilers, parasites gnawing at the bones of his father's power and mocking his name.

By the time his fury cooled, the temple was gone.

All that remained was grief.

He curled himself among the broken pillars and asked the air if Hagoromo could see him. If the Sage would be disappointed. But no voice answered. Only silence.

And in that silence, Kurama made his choice.

Humanity could burn itself to the ground for all he cared. He would not lift a claw to stop it again.

For a time, his wish was granted. No humans came near him.

But peace never lasted in the world of men.

The first tremors came as clans swelled into villages. Shinobi started buying and selling death in the name of survival. Wars were born in every direction, and in time, eyes turned to him again.

Kumogakure sent two of their own. The Gold and Silver Brothers, shinobi who believed their village would rise higher if they claimed the fox's power. Kurama fought them, swallowed them whole, and thought it was finished.

But humans never died easily.

For two weeks they clung to life in his belly, feeding on his flesh, gnawing on the very essence of his body. Kurama could feel their persistence, their stubborn will not to vanish, and it sickened him. Eventually he regurgitated them. And when they emerged, they laughed, holding fragments of his chakra in their veins as if they had earned it.

Kurama watched them run away and felt a hatred colder than anything he had ever known.

Even swallowed whole, even broken and helpless, humans would find a way to consume and corrupt.

While Kurama brooded over whether he should hunt down the two brothers, he felt it. A ripple in the world as he came to his forest.

Madara Uchiha.

Kurama knew before he saw him. The chakra was unmistakable, drenched in the scent of Indra's bloodline.

Old grudges stirred in his chest.

"Nine-Tails. This transient form of yours is but a node of chaos. You are ignorant power, unshaped and undirected. That is why you need us. The Uchiha were always meant to guide you. You beasts are nothing without the eyes to master you."

Kurama's lips peeled back, a snarl splitting the air. The forest bent under the pressure of his chakra.

But then Madara's eyes turned, the tomoe spinning, glowing red like the heart of a furnace.

The world bent.

A genjutsu wrapped around Kurama's mind like chains.

He resisted. Oh, how he resisted. But it was like trying to claw apart the ocean. No matter how he raged, his body betrayed him. His claws ripped through forests not by his will, but by Madara's.

And in that chaos, he saw the clash of gods between Madara and Hashirama.

And then, at last, Madara fell.

For one breath, Kurama tasted freedom again.

But Hashirama stood before him, eyes heavy with something between sorrow and judgment. "Nine-Tails. Your power is too great. We cannot let you roam free."

"Who are you to decide my fate, you damned human?"


The answer never came from Hashirama's mouth. It came from the weight of reality itself. He had the strength. That was all that mattered.

Kurama was overwhelmed. His rage, his endless chakra, none of it stopped the might of Mokuton and sealing arts, until the light vanished and all that remained was a cage.

Mito Uzumaki.

"If you use your power, only hatred will come. Stay tranquil. Sleep deep inside me."

Kurama did not answer.

What was the point?

He turned his back to her voice, curling into his hatred like a blanket. Time bled into itself. Seasons shifted. Her red hair went white. And when her life finally sputtered to its end, the fox was dragged into another prison.

A new host.

This one was not like Mito. She was fierce, sharp-edged, and she carried him not as a burden to be ignored but as a weapon to be wielded.

Kurama hated her for it.

"You stupid human. I would rather rot here than be your blade."

But the seal did not care for his hatred. He was chained and crucified, his chakra siphoned no matter how much he resisted.

Kushina, unlike Mito, never tried to dress her prison in pretty words. She looked straight into his eyes and spat truth.

"Neither of us have any luck, huh? You keep the world at bay, and I keep you at bay."

Kurama recognized it. She despised being a jinchūriki as much as he despised being the beast inside her. That was the cruel joke of their bond.

It was hell. A prison within a prison.

And none of it mattered.

Kindness, honesty, hatred... it all circled back to the same truth. Humans wanted his power. They feared him, and they chained him.

After Kushina's pregnancy, Kurama felt the seal loosening. For the first time in a long time, joy surged through him.

Freedom.

But the feeling died the moment he saw him.

"You."

The masked man. The damn Sharingan, burning red in the dark.

Kurama knew that power. The same cursed technique Madara had used to chain his will. His body was stolen again, being turned into someone else's weapon. He roared as he tore through Konoha, but the sound was hollow, because it was not his.

When the genjutsu finally shattered, there was no freedom waiting for him.

The shinobi of Konoha still clung to their defiance, throwing themselves against his fury. Before Kurama could retreat, the world bent, teleportation, and the next instant, he was bound. The Uzumaki's adamantine chains wrapped around his vast form, pinning him in place.

He heard Kushina's voice, weak but steady, demanding that he be dragged back into her dying body.

Kurama almost welcomed it. Death, then rebirth, a few years of silence before he returned. Better that than this endless cycle of human control.

But the Fourth Hokage had other plans.

The Reaper's hand tore into him, splitting him apart. He felt his essence shatter as his Yin half was sealed inside Minato, while his Yang half was prepared for the body of a crying newborn.

No... No! Damn you humans. How much more indignity must I suffer?

Desperation fueled him. He lunged, aiming to kill the infant before they could turn him into a prisoned tool once again.

But they stopped him. Not with chains this time, but with flesh. Minato and Kushina used their bodies as shields. Their bloodied figures stood between him and the child.

Kurama paused because of that action. Just long enough.

The seal closed.

Darkness swallowed him, and when he opened his eyes again, he was caged inside the body of the infant.

A new jailer.

A new prison.

The same chains.

The same role.

Exploited. Used. Nothing more.


At least it was quiet. Kurama found some cold comfort in that. But the next twelve years blurred into a cycle of shallow sleeps and brief wakings, the dull consequence of having his chakra split. It was not the weakness that gnawed at him most, but the sheer monotony. A prison with no sound but his own thoughts.

Then, one day, something changed.

Kurama felt it first as a disturbance, a presence sliding into the seal. The sensation was uncanny, like standing in an empty field at night and realizing something unseen was staring at you from the dark.

He opened his eyes. Beyond the cage bars, standing upon the water of Naruto's mindscape, was the intruder.

The figure hovered just beyond the seal. Its head was swallowed by a deep hood; where no face existed, there was only a void of blackness. From its back stretched massive wings, as though an angel had descended. Its upper half was humanoid, fur running thick across its shoulders like a mantle of shadow. But below the waist, the illusion of man ended. Dozens of tendrils flowed downward instead of legs, writhing like serpents in water, curling without end.

The creature floated in silence, so profound that even Kurama's low growl seemed swallowed.

The fox bared his fangs.

"You are not my jailer," he rumbled, his voice crashing through the mindscape like thunder. His killing intent rolled outward, suffocating, the kind of force that shattered the wills of armies.

The angel did not move.

It lifted one of its six arms, and something flickered into existence.

"That's my jailer's soul," Kurama muttered, fury igniting. Then he roared. "What the hell are you doing?"

The angel produced a severed skull, its hollow sockets weeping black blood. This blood began seeping through Naruto's body, curling through the chakra pathways. It was not chakra. It was not nature energy. It was not anything Kurama had felt before.

"What the hell are you doing?!" Kurama snarled, thrashing against the bars of the Eight Trigrams Seal. "You bastard, what are you putting into the kid?!"

Still no reply.

The entity inserted the darksoul into Naruto, into his very soul.

Kurama felt it settle.

A darkness that did not roar or screech, but simply existed, as if it had always been there, waiting for the right moment.

Kurama's instincts screamed.

Whatever it was, it was not just dangerous. It was beyond his understanding.

Kurama waited for the boy's death.

Whatever that entity was, whatever dark poison it had injected into Naruto's body, there was no way a twelve-year-old child could survive it.

"Why are you doing this? Do you want my power too? Is that what this is? Another greedy thief trying to wear the mask of a god?" His snarl deepened. "No... you are not even human."

But the angel did not speak, flinch, or even acknowledge him.

That silence unnerved Kurama more than any shouting ever could. For decades, he had stood tall before the might of Madara Uchiha. He had raged against Hashirama Senju's forested wrath.

But this thing?

This entity cloaked in void, dripping tar-blood into the soul of a child, dwarfed them all. Red chakra bled outward, lashing toward the angel to stop whatever ritual it was weaving.

The figure only lifted one hand.

In an instant, time itself froze. The air turned to glass, still and brittle, locking Kurama in place as though the world had been buried beneath ice. Then, without hesitation, the angel grasped Naruto's soul and tore something out.

Ashura Ōtsutsuki's soul.

Kurama's eyes widened in shock. His thoughts scrambled, racing. The implications were impossible. Unthinkable. And yet, here it was before him. He watched as the angel raised Ashura's soul high. Symbols of deep violet unfurled around it, twisting like scripture written by the stars themselves.

And then, a voice. "Verily, to be summoned unto such a realm… what fate is this?"

Even frozen in time, Kurama trembled as recognition sank into his bones. He knew that voice. He knew that man.

His robes were white as moonlight, flowing behind him like clouds. Six magatama adorned his collar like silent prayers. A long braided lock of hair swung before his ear, and horned protrusions curled from his forehead. Upon his brow rested the red, spiral mark of the Third Eye.

The Sage of Six Paths had summoned.

Hagoromo's gaze drifted from Kurama to the angel, then settled on the soul of his son. His eyes narrowed. "So… thou hast taken my son's soul to summon me. Speak, stranger, what seekest thou?"

The angel gave no reply, drifting closer to the seal.

"Ah, is it my cadence? Too old for thine ears, perhaps. Then let me speak more plainly. Tell me, why use my child's spirit for this?"

But the angel did not care. It raised its hands and pressed them against the seal. In an instant, the Eight Trigram Divination Seal unraveled, its formula scattering like sand on the wind. Chakra swirled about the angel's palm.

Kurama felt it. Kushina's chakra. And strangest of all, from this terrible being, he sensed… love.

"What are you?"

The angel ignored him, crafting a new seal. Darkness spread and folded in on itself until a vast box of shadow swallowed Kurama whole. His cage replaced by another. Time lurched forward again. Kurama blinked, staring at his prison walls before letting out a bitter laugh.

"Well. When I wished for something new, I was not hoping for another damn cell."

The angel gave a sound like a snort, then turned to Hagoromo. With casual indifference, it tossed Ashura's soul into the sage's hands before stepping toward a portal shaped like the gaping jaws of some beast. Without a word, it walked inside, vanishing into the maw.

Silence lingered, heavy and suffocating. Hagoromo and Kurama looked at one another, both caught in the same thought.

What in the world had just happened?

Hagoromo drifted closer to the walls of darkness that now bound Kurama. "I did not think we would meet again like this, Kurama."

"What happened to you, Sage? How are you still here?"

"My body has long since returned to dust," Hagoromo said. "What you see is but a remnant of spirit. I endure for one purpose alone, to guard against my mother should she ever rise again."

"Then was that thing… that angel… connected to her? Was it part of the Rabbit Goddess' schemes?"

Hagoromo's face turned grave. "I do not know. Who or what that being was lies beyond me. Its intent is veiled. Yet I know this much: the boy's soul has been merged with a power not of this world. And you, Kurama, are caught within a seal that is more intricate than even the Sun and Moon formulas."

Kurama growled, pressing his massive claws against the walls of darkness. "You are saying even you cannot break it? That monster acted without effort, and now you stand here telling me you do not understand? That cannot be. You are the Sage of Six Paths."

The old sage closed his eyes. "My dear Kurama, even if I were in my prime, when I bore the power of the Ten Tails within me, I would not claim the confidence to demand answers of that being. There are heights of existence above mine. Above my mother. Perhaps even above the Ōtsutsuki. This truth I cannot ignore."

Kurama struck the wall with his claws, the sound ringing like iron. His voice was low, almost desperate. "At least tell me what this seal is for. What has it done to me?"

Hagoromo studied the shifting symbols across the box of shadow. "From what I can discern, it is not meant to consume you, nor to strip your power. It severs you from the boy's chakra network, yet it ties your souls together more intimately than before. You are not being used, Kurama. You are only… contained."

"Then why? Why cage me, if not to exploit my power? What purpose does it serve?"

"I do not know."

Kurama's fangs bared. His voice thundered through the void. "Then do you know anything at all? You are the Sage, the one who spoke of peace, the one who made us what we are. And here you are, admitting ignorance. What good is your wisdom now?"

The Sage did not flinch beneath the fury. "You are afraid."

"Afraid? You think me afraid? I have fought Uchiha Madara himself. I have seen my temple defiled and my name stolen by insects who twisted my words into weapons. I have been chained, branded, forced into cages, and sealed into infants who cry louder than battlefields. I have felt humans worship me as a god in one breath and curse me as a demon in the next. Do not speak to me of fear, Sage. I am fury. I am hatred. I am all that remains when compassion is wasted."

Hagoromo's eyes softened, as though he looked upon a child throwing a tantrum. "And yet beneath your roar, I hear the tremor. You fear that you are nothing more than what they call you. That you are only the demon they name you. That every sacrifice, every attempt to guide them, every moment you tried to live up to my dream, has been spat upon."

Kurama growled low, but did not deny it. "You speak of dreams. Look at humanity, Hagoromo. Look at what they have done. They took your ninshū, a gift to connect, and turned it into a weapon of war. They use chakra not to understand one another, but to sharpen blades and burn villages. They build clans like cages, and when those are not enough, they build villages of stone to chain themselves further. They preach loyalty, yet betray for scraps of power. They prayed to me in fear when I saved them, and they cursed me when famine struck despite my help. What do you see in them that I cannot?"

The Sage's reply was calm. "I see the same flaws you name. I do not blind myself to them. But I also see sparks among the ashes. The boy whose soul you now share, for instance. Though young, though shunned, though burdened by your presence, he still reaches toward others. He does not curse the world for what it has done to him. Instead, he seeks bonds. That is ninshū. That is the dream I left behind."

"Do not speak to me of bonds. I have felt them. Fragile, fleeting, always breaking. Tell me, Sage, what bond exists between beast and man when all they give in return is chains?"

"It is true that men are frail. They are short-lived and full of folly. Their fears make demons out of shadows. Yet it is that very fragility which gives meaning to their lives. They fail, yes, but they also try again. They fear, yet they love despite it. Their bonds are not eternal, but while they last, they give strength greater than any chakra. The world is not changed by those who hold power alone, Kurama, but by those who share their hearts despite the risk of being hurt."

"You speak like a poet, but I have lived it. And what I have seen is betrayal. I am chained because of their weakness. I am hated because of their fear. Do you expect me to forgive them?"

"I do not ask forgiveness," Hagoromo said. "I ask only that you see them as more than their flaws. The cycle of hatred has roots in pain, and you have borne more than most. Yet, Kurama, even you are not only hatred. You are my son, born of chakra, born of the hope that you would understand connection as deeply as I. If you deny them, you deny yourself."

For a long time, silence filled the prison. Kurama lowered his head, the gleam in his eyes uncertain. He wanted to roar, to tear at the walls until they shattered, but instead he whispered.

"Then tell me, Sage. If your dream is not already dead, why does it always feel like I am the one paying for it?"

"Because dreams worth carrying always demand more than we wish to give. Perhaps you will see why I never gave up on humanity."

Kurama's eyes glowed in the dark cage, two burning suns that carried centuries of bitterness. His voice was lower now, more like a growl caught between anger and resignation. "So tell me, Sage… are you disappointed in me? That I gave up on your precious humans? That I spat on the dream you gave us? That I could no longer care?"

"No, Kurama. I am not disappointed. How could I be? You have carried wounds that would break the spirit of any man. And still, despite it all, you endure. I cannot call that a failure."

"Endure? Endure is not living. Endure is not freedom. Endure is not hope. It is surviving in spite of shackles, in spite of hatred, in spite of being nothing but a weapon for men too weak to fight their own battles. You say I endure, but that is all I have ever done. And endurance feels like another name for despair."

"Perhaps it is so. But endurance is also what allows the world to change. A fire endures the wind by clinging to the smallest ember, and in time that ember grows into flame again. If you had truly given up, Kurama, you would not still question me now. You would not rage at the unfairness. Rage is proof that you still care, even if you do not wish to admit it."

"You speak as though my hatred is some hidden hope. But I tell you this, Sage… my hatred is all I have left. It is the only truth that has never betrayed me."

"And yet hatred is a chain as heavy as any seal," Hagoromo said. "You have worn it for so long that you do not notice the weight. One day, Kurama, when you meet one who bears the courage to reach through your rage and touch the truth beneath it, you will know that you are not only hatred. That is why I am not disappointed in you. I am only waiting."

Kurama let out a long, bitter laugh, shaking the walls of his new cage. "Waiting, are you? You sound as though you think some miracle child will stumble into this prison and convince me to care again. You've seen humanity, Sage. You've seen what they've done to me. Why would I ever believe in them again?"

"Because one day, Kurama, you will not have to believe in them first. One of them will believe in you."

The conversation between the Sage and the fox ended abruptly as a ring of fire carved itself into existence upon the boy's soul. It seared across the surface of Naruto's spirit like a living brand, the flame circling until it formed a perfect eclipse. Within that eclipse, the darksoul stirred and settled, as though the fire itself had chosen to chain it.

Before either Kurama or Hagoromo could speak, the pull began. Naruto's soul, and with it Kurama's, was dragged into a rift, swallowed by a void that was neither time nor space. The fox vanished, the boy vanished, and only silence remained.

Hagoromo hovered in the empty astral plane, the aftershocks still trembling in the currents of chakra. His eyes fell upon Ashura's torn soul, flickering faintly in his palm. The Sage's expression darkened as he spoke, his voice weighted with foreboding.

"I foresee that this other realm will twist the course of all things. The boy and the beast are no longer bound to the world I left behind, yet their absence will not erase their influence."

His gaze lifted toward the unseen horizon, as if sensing another presence lingering in the far distance. His tone sharpened, grave and unyielding.

"And you, my son… you no longer belong to this new world. Your soul has no place in the path that lies ahead. For the shadow of Indra still walks the earth, his vessel unbroken, his hatred unspent. Without you to temper him, the scales lean ever darker. I fear this other dimension is not a refuge, but a crucible. And what is forged within it may return to consume all."


Coming to Lordran was like dying and being remade. Kurama felt it in every fragment of his being. The tearing apart, the reshaping, the sudden stillness after chaos. Yet there was something different this time. For the first time in decades, he could see outside his jinchūriki without being filtered through dreams or forced summons. It was as if his eyes had been set in Naruto's skull, peering into a prison that was no longer only his own.

At least I won't be bored now, he thought dryly as he observed the boy stumbling through this strange new place. He watched Naruto save a wounded knight, Oscar, and then face down the towering Asylum Demon.

Kurama tested the air with his senses, reaching out in the way he always had.

"That… thing has no chakra. Not even a drop."

He widened his perception, pushing further, but the world resisted him. His awareness stuttered and buckled like a man drowning in deep water.

"This whole world has no chakra."

The thought disturbed him more than he wanted to admit. Still, he kept watching. Slowly, uneasily, Kurama began to realize he was not just a prisoner observing his jailer. Through the strange tether of Naruto's soul, he felt each clash, each jolt of impact, each step like echoes resonating in his own body.

When Naruto spoke with Oscar, Kurama noticed something else. The boy's tongue was foreign, yet the words flowed clearly into Kurama's understanding, as if the system itself bent to translate them.

Another trick of that angel? Kurama mused. Then the first Hollow shambled forward. Kurama's hackles rose immediately. There was no life in the thing. Only a wrongness, like a shadow wearing a corpse.

When Naruto struck it down, the body collapsed into nothingness, leaving behind glowing orbs. Oscar gestured toward them.

"This is a soul. Souls can be used to strengthen your abilities."

Kurama scoffed, unimpressed until the boy absorbed it.

Kurama's eyes widened. The energy didn't travel through chakra coils. It sank directly into the Darksign branded upon Naruto's soul. Kurama traced the flow, following it deeper and deeper, until he realized he was staring into an abyss that had no bottom.

"That… wasn't chakra."

For once, the great fox had no answer.

And as the boy pressed on, fighting through the undead asylum, Kurama found himself silent.

Kurama had to admit, he liked that his jailer was not an idiot. The boy had figured out how to use his shadow clones not just for fighting but for training, multiplying his effort in ways that even the fox found clever. That kind of cunning wasn't what Kurama expected from Naruto. It was promising.

And then there was the knight. Oscar.

Kurama had known countless humans across the ages, and most of them disgusted him in one way or another. But this one was different. Oscar treated Naruto with a decency that was rare, a respect that came with no fear or false reverence. Both Naruto and Kurama noticed it. Both of them appreciated it.

Kurama observed as the two of them trained together in that forsaken place. Oscar's style was foreign to Kurama's eyes, yet elegant in its simplicity.

Kurama found himself impressed despite his natural disdain. To think a human could reach this kind of precision without chakra.

He saw them fight and flee from the Asylum Demon. Kurama laughed when Naruto almost got impaled by an arrow. Then there was Naruto's first magic ring.

"You're using some cheap trinket to create footing?!" he barked, voice echoing through the boy's subconscious. "You're a shinobi, damn it! Learn a proper technique!"

But Naruto couldn't hear him yet.

Then came the moment that silenced Kurama.

Naruto caught a glimpse of his reflection, and the hollowed appearance of the boy made the fox stop cold. "...That isn't right."

And then Oscar said it. "Naruto, you're not from this world."

Kurama's ears perked. "...Not from this world?"

The thought chilled him deeper than anything else.

He had once believed chakra was the foundation of all things. That no world could exist without it. But now, watching this strange place full of monsters and madness, of souls instead of chakra, he realized something terrifying. This world didn't need chakra. And yet, somehow, it had Naruto.

"...Why did that angel send you here?"

He had no answer.

Later, Kurama sat silently as Oscar spoke of the Age of Ancients, of the Age of Fire, of the Lords and their war against the Everlasting Dragons.

Kurama narrowed his eyes, tail swaying behind him in thought. The war. The first fire. The disparity of time. The chosen undead… It all sounded mythic. Familiar in a way Kurama couldn't quite place, but disturbing too. He thought about the angel, that grotesque, impossible thing that had placed the Dark Soul in Naruto. And suddenly, something Oscar said clicked.

"...The Furtive Pygmy…"

Kurama's ears twitched.

"You've got to be kidding me. That thing was the Pygmy?" he muttered, trying to wrap his head around it. "No. No, I don't like where this is going."

Just then, Naruto picked up the Pyromancy Flame and Kurama jolted. A flicker of twisted fire ignited within Naruto's mindscape.

"For the love of the Sage, stop jamming every weird relic into your body, you reckless dumbass!" Kurama shouted.

The pyromancy flame spread its influence across Naruto's mindscape as creeping vines wrapped around the strange ember that had taken root within the boy's soul.

The moment Kurama extended his senses toward it, he regretted it. This was no ordinary fire. Beneath the chaos and the hunger, he felt something older, something that reminded him of the life force at the heart of all creation. A shard of the life soul itself, burning endlessly, gnawing at everything around it. And the strangest part was how it reacted to chakra. The fire didn't resist it. It welcomed it. Chakra was nothing more than kindling, fuel to be devoured, twisted, and reshaped into something unrecognizable.

Kurama shuddered, though he would never admit it aloud. Instinct howled at him. If not for the barrier of darkness that now cocooned him, he would already have been consumed, reduced to ash within this inferno.

The fox tore his gaze away from the ember, suppressing the unease rising in his chest. That thing was dangerous beyond comprehension. He did not want to think about what it meant for Naruto or for himself.

So instead, Kurama turned his attention outward, to the boy and his strange knight teacher. He watched through Naruto's eyes as they plunged into the broken courtyard of the asylum.

Kurama watched intently until Naruto got flattened like a pancake.

Kurama flinched.

Then blinked.

And blinked again.

Because now they were suddenly back in the Elemental Nations, standing face to face with some white-haired bastard spouting Jinchūriki secrets like it was a school assembly.

Kurama howled with laughter when Naruto thought he was a demon. He watched the boy kill Mizuki, then start talking to the Third Hokage. Kurama lost interest soon after and dozed off until Naruto used the Darksign again.

When he woke up and realized Naruto could actually return to Lordran, Kurama blinked in surprise. "Wait... it's not a one-way trip? Huh. That changes things."

He stayed quiet during Naruto's farewell to Oscar.

There were few humans Kurama would ever admit to respecting, but this strange knight had left an impression. Oscar's dignity, his calm in the face of despair, lingered like an echo. Yet the boy believed him dead. Still, the thought gnawed at Kurama.

Was the knight truly gone? Or would his story continue in some twisted form?

Kurama had no answers, and no way of tempting the boy into asking them. All he could do was watch.

So he watched as Naruto hurled himself once more into the battle with the Asylum Demon.

Kurama felt the boy's anger, his desperation, his wild willpower surging like fire through veins too small to hold it. The fight was brutal, savage, each strike a defiance against a foe that should have crushed him. And against his own better judgment, Kurama found himself caught up in it.

"Yes! Fuck him up!"

"Break his ugly hammer!"

The words tore from his throat as Kurama watched with a smile while the Asylum Demon was killed.

"You did it, brat! You actually—" Kurama stopped, ears flattening.

Wait. What was he doing?

He stared in silence, the realization settling like a stone in his gut.

Was he… cheering for the boy? No. Just momentary entertainment to fight the boredom.

But even as he turned away into the shadows of the cage, his tail flicked with a restless rhythm, betraying him… as Naruto escaped the Black Knight, buried his friend, and took his first steps into Lordran.

Kurama didn't go back to sleep.

For the first time in decades, one of his hosts was actually interesting. Not because Naruto was special, but because the world he was tangled in was downright insane. And frankly, watching the kid get smacked around in brutal, creative ways was good entertainment.

When Naruto met that priest-looking idiot, Petrus, Kurama let out a low growl.

"Oh great, another god. Just what we need. If you're going to keep collecting divine nonsense, you could at least free me, you inconsiderate gnat," Kurama muttered.

He watched as Naruto was baptized into the Way of White, a white ring forming around his soul like a glowing leash.

A branding mark, probably. Something to say property of the gods. Kurama snorted.

Then came the graveyard.

Watching Naruto get torn apart by skeletons over and over again was like watching someone try to fight a blender with a toothpick. Hilarious and somehow tragic.

Kurama tilted his head, amused, as Naruto used souls to level up. The sight of the Darksign glowing, absorbing energy and pumping it through the boy's soul, made the fox's hackles rise.

"Forbidden technique? Ancient soul magic? Who even cares anymore," Kurama said. "At least it's working."

Then Naruto jumped off a cliff to return to Konoha.

Kurama rolled over in his cage and muttered, "Idiot," before going to sleep.

That became their rhythm.

In Konoha, Kurama napped.

In Lordran, he watched Naruto die.

Simple. Efficient. Weirdly satisfying.

Until the Black Knight.

Watching Naruto try to learn from the Black Knight was like watching a toddler try to teach themselves algebra by punching the chalkboard. The number of deaths? Countless. The level of suffering? Glorious.

It was like someone flicking the lights on and off in a dark room. Kurama wasn't directly affected, but oh god, was it annoying.

When Naruto finally killed the knight, Kurama muttered, "About time, you stubborn little dung beetle. Hope it was worth the brain damage."

Then came the Taurus Demon.

Naruto died. Again.

Kurama yawned. "Good riddance."

When Naruto returned and tried to befriend a tiny crystal lizard, Kurama felt genuine curiosity. The creature was unlike anything he had ever sensed. Its body shimmered with crystallized soul fragments, and beneath that brilliance lurked a strange darkness.

Kurama leaned forward in his cage, ears twitching. "What are you, little thing?"

He was fascinated, so much so that he almost forgot about the brat holding it. Watching the crystal lizard was like staring at a riddle given flesh. In time, though, his attention drifted. Through Naruto, he observed more and more of this world, and in doing so, his jailer's memories bled into his awareness.

When he learned of the Uchiha massacre, Kurama laughed, his tails shaking the prison with mirth. "Ha! Finally, a human with some sense. Itachi, eh? I'll remember that name. The Uchiha killer. My favorite mortal so far."

Naruto, of course, remained oblivious. He only smiled at the lizard and, with childlike reverence, named it Oscar after the knight who had saved him.

Kurama didn't know why, but a small smile tugged at his snout. He didn't fight it.

For a while, he allowed himself to drift into slumber. But his peace shattered when his senses screamed awake. Naruto was experimenting with the pyromancy flame. Kurama watched, ears high, as the brat coaxed a flicker of life out of the ember. For a few heartbeats, something demonic and raw shambled into existence.

And then it crumbled.

"Hnh. I wonder if he'd get better results with nature energy," the demon fox grumbled, settling back down to rest. But the truth gnawed at him. Naruto was reckless, foolish, and infuriating, but more than any jailer before him, he was… entertaining.

Fun to watch. Even fun to watch die.

Kurama's snout curled in the ghost of another smile as he drifted back into sleep.

Everything was going great until the Zabuza fight.

Kurama was fairly surprised by how much Naruto had grown, and he liked the fact that his container was strong. But during the battle, Naruto was put in a position where, accidentally, he poured chakra straight into the Chaos Flame.

Kurama sat bolt upright as the fire in the mindscape twisted, convulsed, and turned into wood.

Vines erupted through Naruto's right arm, gnarled and smoldering, glowing with ember veins. And the vines had eyes. Dozens. Blinking. Staring straight at him.

Kurama froze.

"...There goes my sleep," he muttered.

The vines blinked back.

"Damn you, Naruto."

Lordran, for once, seemed to offer Kurama a sense of justice—or so the fox liked to believe. He watched Naruto get hunted down by a Black Knight wielding a greatshield. He saw the boy meet Siegmeyer and Andre, watched him travel through the Darkroot Garden and Basin.

When Naruto grappled with his ideals as a knight, Kurama paid attention. Tsunami's nihilistic ramblings irked him. Kurama didn't tolerate weak-minded fatalism.

Naruto's response? Kill the gangs. Clean the rot. No grand speeches. Just action.

Kurama grinned. "Now that's how you fix a problem. Chop it down."

He didn't realize it at first, but watching Naruto in Lordran made him… invested.

More than he ever wanted to be.

Watching the boy train for Gato's forces.

Watching him take down the Moonlight Butterfly with Beatrice.

Watching him train under Andre, learn magic, crawl through the Valley of Drakes.

Kurama laughed—giggled, really—when Naruto grafted the soul of a hawk and gained sharp golden hawk eyes.

"If he grafted a fox soul," Kurama muttered, "would he grow ears? A tail?"

He snorted.

He was entertaining himself now.

The true moment of joy, though, came during Naruto's fight with Kakashi. The way the copy ninja's expression crumbled when Naruto came at him like a one-man army.

Kurama howled with laughter in his cell.

But the fun didn't last.

Kakashi's betrayal hit harder than expected. Kurama watched it unfold silently, the laughter gone. He saw the betrayal not just as Naruto's teacher turning on him, but as proof.

Humans never change. Even now, even after centuries, they still hide behind rules and fear when faced with something they can't understand.

Kurama waited for Naruto to lose it.

To burn it all down.

That's what he would've done. What he had done.

And Naruto was angry. He fought the Capra Demon like a feral beast. He experienced the death of the Undead Merchant. But afterward, he said something that caught Kurama off guard.

"I'm going back to the Wave Country. I'm going to look Kakashi in the eye... and ask him why."

A beat passed.

Naruto's fists clenched lightly. "No more silence. No more guessing. I need the truth."

He looked at Oscar.

"Whatever happens next... we face it together. Sound good?"

Kurama snarled. "Fool. He'll lie."

But the fox knew the truth. That deep desire to understand… it was familiar. Too familiar.

Kurama began to wonder: Would Naruto try to understand me? Would he still see me for what I am? For what I've done to his parents, to him?

He growled and turned away from the thought. When did I start caring?

He watched the boy clash with the Black Knight and its halberd. He watched the lame fight with the Hydra. Lordran never slowed, and neither did Naruto.

Then came the cursed seal. The offer of the dragon's power.

Kurama watched Naruto hesitate. "Damn it, brat," he muttered. "You trying to make this permanent? I'm supposed to be your ultimate weapon, not some damned reptile. Why the hell do you want to be a dragon instead of asking me for power?"

A humorless laugh rumbled through his chest. So many people had craved his strength. And here was Naruto, the only human Kurama had ever truly wanted to give it to, hesitating.

Then the presence came.

Havel.

Even sealed within Naruto, Kurama felt the weight of that aura: space bending, crushing, like gravity given form. His hackles rose. It rivaled Hashirama. It rivaled Madara.

"Brat… you're in danger."

And then Kurama saw: Havel wasn't moving toward Naruto. He was coming for Oscar. Naruto fought, but against someone like that he was an ant pushing against a mountain.

"I can't…" the boy whispered, shaking. "I can't protect anyone like this."

Kurama's claws scraped the bars of his cage. "Move, you damn brat! Move!"

But Naruto wasn't listening. His hand closed around the cursed seal.

"I promised Gato I'd show him what a true monster looked like," Naruto muttered. "Guess I wasn't lying after all."

Kurama watched grimly as Naruto pressed the curse mark against the dragon scale. Nothing happened.

Of course it didn't. The mark was crude, an incomplete vessel for storing nature energy. Even fully realized, Kurama doubted it could touch something as ancient and absolute as the bloodline of an everlasting dragon.

They needed something far greater. Something on another level entirely.

Oscar's fear trickled faintly into the fox's senses. Naruto's desperation blazed hotter. Kurama slammed his chakra against the black walls of his prison, snarling as sparks of crimson lightning crackled across the void. He clawed at the cage, tried to hurl even a fragment of himself toward the boy.

Nothing.

"Damn you, angel!" Kurama roared at the void. "Let me help him!"

Naruto's trembling hands raised the Estus Flask. Golden fire spilled down his throat, knitting torn muscle, binding broken bone.

But Kurama felt something else ignite.

The chaos vines coiled around Naruto's mindscape shivered. Twitched. Then burned. Kurama's ears pricked, his senses sharpened to steel. Naruto's chakra had sparked them like dry kindling.

And then the flame answered.

The chaos flame in the boy's right arm flared alive, drawn to the dragon's bloodline. The shard of the Life Soul buried within it stirred, a dark heart beginning to beat. Kurama felt it seeping into Naruto; corrupting, remaking, transforming.

The boy was becoming something else.

An everlasting dragon.

The vines lashed outward, their heat slamming against Kurama's prison. The fox recoiled, then blinked in shock. The sealing knot the angel had woven, that impossible binding of darkness, was burning away.

He was getting free.

A wild laugh tore from his throat. At last. He could finally stand beside the brat; tear Havel apart fang by fang, and fight with him. He readied himself to burst forth then stopped.

Naruto's body was only half-changed, trapped between boy and dragon. His chakra was too small, too thin. If the fire guttered out now, he would die from madness.

Kurama stilled. The choice stared back at him.

Slowly, he remembered his father's voice. Because dreams worth carrying always demand more than we wish to give.

"Father," he whispered, "I think I've found what you saw in humanity. I think I've found it in this boy. And I… I want to fight for it."

He inhaled once more then gave.

His chakra flooded the chaos fire, reigniting it, holding it steady. Agony ripped through him as the blaze devoured his essence. It was like being burned alive from the inside out, each tail unraveling into embers.

For an instant, he wondered was this the angel's plan all along? To keep him as fuel, a sacrifice for the boy's ascension?

He didn't care.

Naruto was mortal. Fragile. Infuriating. And yet, in the endless dark, he had been Kurama's first spark. Even as his chakra crumbled, the fox grinned through bared fangs.

"Heh-heh… brat… guess you're not human anymore. I wonder, with your new eyes… what you'll think of me?"

And for the first time in centuries, the thought made him smile. If Naruto truly became an everlasting dragon, then perhaps—just perhaps—Kurama had found a friend who could walk beside him, beyond the fleeting breath of human life.

It took more than a minute. Naruto's body writhed between human and dragon. Kurama roared as his chakra burned away, stoking the chaos flame, keeping it alive when it should have guttered out.

And then Havel moved, helping Naruto finish his dragon ascension.

With Havel's actions and Kurama's efforts, the change was sealed.

When the light faded, Naruto stood tall. His form was wreathed in scales that shimmered like obsidian laced with magma.

Kurama slumped inside the boy's mindscape, smoke rising from his fur. His body felt thin, hollow… his chakra nearly drained to ash. He should have cursed. Should have growled at the unfairness of it all.

Instead, he stared.

For the first time in all his long life, Kurama felt something he could only call beautiful.

That boy now stood as something eternal. A being beyond time, beyond human frailty.

Kurama's muzzle curled into a smile.

"Next time… when I reform… I want to meet you again, brat. Not as your prisoner. Not as your burden. Just… as me."

He closed his eyes, and a softness came to his face that hadn't been there for centuries.

"I wonder how much you'll have grown when we meet again. Maybe next time… you will be strong enough to stand beside me as an equal."

His body began to turn to vapor.

"Even if I vanish now… I'll still carry this. You changed something in me. You made me remember what it felt like to care. To hope."

A last breath.

A final thought, cast into the silence of Lordran: When will the dragon and the fox meet again?


Author's Note:
And that wraps up the Kurama POV! I hope you all enjoyed it. I know a lot of you were expecting something different from this chapter. I've actually gotten a bunch of messages asking if Kurama would go off on his own adventure, like wandering into Astora or something. Honestly, that would have been cool, but I have a story to tell, and this was always the path I wanted for him. I hope you still found it enjoyable.

Now, let's jump into the Q&A.


Q: Who is the Angel?

…(crickets)

Did you really think I was going to answer that right now? No. The Angel is one of the most mysterious figures in the story, and they do not properly come into play until the later half. So no identity reveal yet.

Here is a little hint: Kushina is connected to the Angel in some way, shape, or form.


Q: Is the Angel stronger than prime Hagoromo?

Yes. That is basically confirmed in the chapter already. The Angel casually stopped time. So yes, they are definitely one of the strongest characters I have planned for this story.


Q: Why did you add the Kurama Clan into Kurama's backstory?

Good question. For those who do not know, the Kurama Clan is a filler-only clan from the anime. They are extremely skilled in genjutsu, thanks to their kekkei genkai. Once every few generations, someone is born with such overwhelming genjutsu ability that their illusions literally become real, basically letting them kill with genjutsu.

So why connect them to the Nine-Tails Kurama?

Honestly, because I have always loved that filler arc. The Kurama Clan was one of my favorite additions in the anime, and I always thought they were cool. Since canon already has the Kaguya Clan, connected to Kaguya herself, I always assumed the Kurama Clan must have been named after the Kyuubi. And since foxes in folklore are known for illusions, the connection felt natural.

What you saw in this chapter was me adding lore and worldbuilding to tie that filler-only clan into the main mythos. The Kurama Clan's ability to turn genjutsu into reality is kind of like a knockoff version of Hagoromo's Creation of All Things Jutsu. To reconcile their broken ability, I connected it back to the Sage in the lore, but made it clear it is only an imitation.


And that is the important Q&A for this chapter.

If you have more questions, feel free to ask. I will happily answer.

Let me know what you thought about Kurama's characterization and development here. Did you like his reactions to Lordran? Also, when do you want Naruto and Kurama to actually meet face-to-face again?


That's It… For Now.

And if you can't wait for the next update, the next chapter drops on Oct 7th! You can read ahead to Chapter 104 on Patreon.

As always, I want to thank you all for taking the time to read, comment, and follow along with this story. Your feedback means more than you know, and it helps push me to make each chapter bigger, sharper, and more true to the worlds of Naruto and Dark Souls.

Until next time, Be safe, friend. Don't you dare go Hollow..

—Adam
 
Chapter no.62 Naruto New
Chapter no.62 Goodbye to the Wave, Hello to the Whirlpool!


With the chaos of the Nine-Tails incident finally behind them, everyone found themselves standing among the gathered crowd before the great bridge.

"Damn, that's a lot of people," Kiba muttered, eyes wide. It really did look like the entire nation had shown up.

Team 7 and Team 8 couldn't help but admire the sight before them. The bridge stretched across the misty waters like a silver ribbon, gleaming under the early morning sun.

"Pat yourselves on the back, everyone," Kakashi said, his single visible eye creasing with pride. "Both you and the workers had a hand in making sure the bridge was completed."

Jiraiya teased, leaning lazily against the railing. "So, what do you think? You kids gonna name this bridge after one of yourselves?"

"Hey! No cheating from you two!" Kiba barked, pointing at Sasuke and Hinata.

Shino tilted his head slightly. "Cheating? In what way?"

Kiba jabbed his thumb toward the cloth-covered sign at the bridge's entrance. "Those two can probably see the name already with their fancy eyes!"

Hinata flushed, waving her hands. "I-I would never...!"

Sasuke's smirk was instant. "Hn. Don't need to look. Everyone already knows whose name is on it."

Everyone's eyes drifted to Naruto. The boy, however, seemed to be lost in thought. He couldn't stop wondering if the Nine-Tails would somehow reform back in that cursed Northern Undead Asylum.

Maybe I should go back someday… visit the Asylum, pay my respects at Oscar's grave. But how? He'd been brought to Lordran by that giant crow that didn't exactly take requests for return trips.

Naruto sighed quietly, his hand brushing the edge of his bow. Guess I'll have to figure that out later.

The sight of Oscar, the tiny crystal lizard, sleeping peacefully on top of Naruto's long hair while the boy wore such a serious expression, drew a quiet laugh from the genins.

"Okay, but maybe they'll name it after the Archer," Sakura said playfully, and soon enough the genin were all arguing over whether the bridge should be named after Naruto or his alter ego, Archer of Providence.

Their chatter fell silent when several workers stepped forward onto the small stage. At the center stood Tazuna, and beside him, guarded by samurai, was the Daimyo of the Land of Waves himself.

It didn't take a genius to see that the crowd wasn't exactly thrilled to see their ruler.

"I would like to invite bridge builder Tazuna to say a few words."

That announcement alone earned a ripple of relieved laughter through the crowd. At least they wouldn't have to sit through a long political speech from a man they didn't respect.

Tazuna stepped forward, clearing his throat before pulling out a small canteen whose contents were unmistakably alcoholic. He took a swig to steady himself.

Tsunami groaned and covered her face. "Dad…" she whispered.

"I'm just an old man," Tazuna began, his voice gravelly but full of heart. "An old man who lost his son to a tyrant… who watched his nation crumble under fear… and who nearly lost himself to despair."

The crowd quieted, every eye fixed on him.

"This bridge was my dream," Tazuna continued. "A dream to give the people of this land a path... one that breaks the chains of tyranny."

He gestured to the workers standing behind him. "My dream was shared by these brave men who gave everything to see it finished."

The crowd erupted into cheers, the workers smiling through tears and exhaustion.

"And," Tazuna said, turning to face the shinobi, "our dream was protected by these young heroes."

He pointed to the Konoha shinobi standing together in the crowd.

The applause that followed was deafening.

"And through the unseen help of the daimyo."

The crowd went quiet. No one clapped. No one cheered. The silence that followed spoke louder than any words could.

Tazuna cleared his throat, pretending not to notice the tension. "Now!" he shouted, voice booming across the bridge. "A bridge this grand deserves a name that'll stand the test of time!"

With a sharp tug, Tazuna and the workers grabbed the ropes and pulled.

The cloth fell away in a sweeping motion, revealing the very top of the entrance hung with a large rectangular signboard, bold black kanji painted in broad, confident strokes.

The characters stood out sharply against the pale stone, impossible to miss even from afar. Below it, the bridge stretched forward like a gleaming ribbon, vanishing into the soft veil of morning mist. A pathway that seemed to lead not only to another shore, but toward a better future.

The Great Naruto Bridge.

A wave of murmurs rippled through the crowd. Civilians and even the daimyo looked confused, whispering among themselves at the unusual name.

Then Tazuna let out a loud belch that echoed across the bridge, catching everyone's attention. The crowd sweatdropped in collective disbelief, and even the daimyo's expression twisted into disgust. Tazuna, of course, didn't care in the slightest.

"I know, I know," Tazuna began, voice rough but steady. "A lot of you wanted the bridge named after the Archer of Providence. And honestly, I was tempted to call it the Quiver of the Archer myself." He paused, taking another swig from his canteen before continuing. "But to me, that archer was one of many heroes who stood for this nation. This bridge, though... this bridge was the start of it all. If it hadn't been started, Gato wouldn't have acted, and none of those heroes would've stepped up. This bridge became the maelstrom that changed everything."

He raised his arm dramatically, his face flushed with pride. "So, we'll call it the Great Naruto Bridge!"

There was a brief silence before murmurs of approval spread through the crowd. Many began nodding, agreeing that the name carried a poetic sense of meaning.

From where he stood, Naruto caught Tazuna's eye. The old man winked at him, a smirk tugging on his lips. Naruto grinned in return, realizing that the entire explanation was a clever lie as Tazuna had named the bridge after him all along.

Wow, that drunk old man's kinda smart.

Meanwhile, the daimyo started motioning to the samurai beside him. One of them produced a sealing scroll, unfurled it, and placed it near the bridge's entrance.

With a sharp release of chakra, a puff of white smoke erupted, silencing the crowd.

Naruto blinked as the smoke cleared and took a deep breath.

A twelve-foot statue of the Archer of Providence towered over the bridge's entrance, carved from pale stone that shimmered faintly in the mist. Every chiseled line radiated purpose from the tension in the drawn bow, the fierce determination in the archer's stance, the wind-carved cloak that seemed ready to flutter at any moment.

The crowd fell silent.

For the people of Wave, this was no mere monument. It was a reminder of the night they took back their freedom, of the hero who defied despair and turned their hopelessness into strength.

Some wept openly. Others bowed their heads in reverence.

It was a solemn, powerful moment… until Naruto broke it.

"They got my jawline wrong," he said flatly.

Everyone turned to stare at him.

"Really?" Sakura said, exasperated. "That's what you're focusing on right now?"

Naruto crossed his arms, frowning at the statue. "I mean, yeah. What else am I supposed to focus on when they gave me such a pointy chin?"

Sakura groaned and rubbed her temples, reminding herself for the hundredth time that her teammate was not normal.

"You guys are just jealous you don't get a statue after your first mission."

"It's not your statue," Kiba muttered. "It's your persona's."

"Tomato, tomato. They still gotta sculpt my buttcheeks."

Hinata looked at the statue.

"They also made your biceps bigger than they actually are."

Naruto blinked, then grinned and threw an arm over Sasuke's shoulder. "Oh, that's fine. That part's accurate enough."

Off to the side, Jiraiya said. "Looks like Naruto's quite the handful." His eyes lingered on the towering statue, a rare look of pride softening his features. "Still… the daimyo commissioning something this big, this detailed, in such a short time... that's no small thing."

"You don't know the half of it, Jiraiya-sama."

Before either could say more, the daimyo stepped up once again, the samurai standing at attention behind him. The crowd hushed as he prepared to speak.

"The Archer," Hondo began, "is a man that needs no introduction."

He paused, letting the words linger in the air as hundreds of eyes turned toward him. "He saved my wife and son's lives," he continued, "and gave Gato the end he deserved."

For a brief moment, the daimyo's composure cracked. He could still hear the man's screams as he was tortured. He closed his eyes, exhaling through the memory.

"He is the hero who changed this nation in more ways than one."

The people listened, though their faces were mixed. They weren't listening to their daimyo out of respect, but because of the name he invoked. Still, Hondo pressed on.

"The Land of Waves," he said quietly, "is just a small island nation. A humble place, surrounded by endless sea. And yet, despite its simplicity, we were brought to our knees by a single man with coin and cruelty in his hands. A merchant; nothing more, nothing less. A man named Gato."

Murmurs rippled through the crowd, memories of hunger and fear flashing in their minds.

"I often wondered," Hondo continued, voice trembling, "if I was ever truly worthy of being called a noble. What is nobility, when a man like me allowed a tyrant to live and prosper beneath my very nose? What pride is there in a title when I could not protect my own people?"

He took a slow breath, gaze falling to the planks beneath his feet. "I spoke with the Archer before he left. We spoke not of heroism or war, but of duty. Of responsibility. His words… cut deeper than any blade."

The crowd grew still again.

"I realized that I had worn my crown as an ornament, not as a burden. I called myself a daimyo but never bore the weight that title demanded. Perhaps a true leader," he said, looking out toward the sea, "would have abandoned his family for the sake of his people. Perhaps such a man exists somewhere. But that man… is not me."

He placed a hand over his heart, his voice breaking slightly. "I am not a ruler forged from steel and sacrifice. I am a man. A husband. A father. And I have failed both my family and my people."

The samurai shifted uneasily, glancing at each other. Kakashi's visible eye narrowed, and Jiraiya straightened, recognizing the tone in the man's voice. The kind of tone that came when someone was about to burn bridges behind them.

Hondo raised his head. "The people of the Wave deserve a leader who will not cower behind gold or status. You deserve a leader who walks among you, who knows your pain and your struggle. And I," he said firmly, "am not that leader."

He took a single step forward, his robe trailing in the wind.

"With the Archer of Providence as my witness," he declared, "I, Hondo of the Wave, renounce my title as daimyo. From this day forth, the Tadakatsu family relinquishes its claim to rule. The power of this nation will return to where it belongs... to its people!"

Gasps erupted from every corner of the crowd. The samurai froze, unsure what to do. The shinobi exchanged glances, stunned.

Jiraiya pressed a hand to his forehead, muttering under his breath, "That's a first… even for me."

"What did you do now?" Kakashi whispered sharply.

Naruto blinked, holding up his hands. "Hey, don't look at me. I didn't tell him to give up being king. I'm innocent!"

Hondo raised his hand again, commanding silence. "Do not fear," he said, his tone softening. "Even without my title, I will not abandon you. My final act as your lord will be to build something greater than a man or a throne. Together, we will create a government by the people, for the people. One where no tyrant, no noble, no merchant can ever again claim dominion over your lives."

He paused, his voice trembling just slightly as he finished. "This is my atonement. It will not undo what I had allowed. But perhaps… it can be the first step toward a better tomorrow."

For a heartbeat, there was only silence.

Then the crowd erupted. Applause thundered across the bridge, echoing against the sea.


After lunch, Tazuna's family gathered one last time to say goodbye to the shinobi teams.

Tazuna made a point to shake each of their hands, lingering a little longer with Naruto. The old man handed him a dark glass bottle sealed with red wax. "This is the finest wine in my collection," Tazuna said. "Thanks for… everything."

"Hopefully it's better than the first time you tried to poison me."

Tazuna let out a snort and ruffled Naruto's long hair. "You never let me live that down, huh?"

Tsunami stepped in next, wrapping Naruto in a warm hug and placing a gentle kiss on his forehead. "Eat well. Sleep well. And stay safe, Naruto."

"I will," he said softly.

Then came Inari, eyes red but fighting back fresh tears. "I… I don't want to say goodbye."

Naruto crouched down and smiled. "It's not goodbye. It's see you later." He ruffled the boy's hair. "That's what my friend Solaire says."

"When will I see you again?"

"Probably when we have to go to Konoha to pay the shinobi," Tazuna grumbled from behind him.

"Well, when you come to Konoha, I'll show you around. And you have to try the best ramen in the world."

"Looking forward to it," Tazuna said as he waved them off.

The two teams stood at the base of the Great Naruto Bridge, the sea breeze carrying the scent of salt and wood as waves gently lapped against the stone supports.

"Alright, everyone," Kurenai said. "This is where we split off. Team 8 will head back to Konoha to report in, while Team 7 joins Jiraiya-sama on his trip to the Land of Whirlpools."

Kiba frowned. "Wait...why here? Isn't the Land of Whirlpools closer to the Fire Nation? Shouldn't we be leaving from there?"

Everyone gave him a look.

"What? I can't be good at geography now?"

Jiraiya snorted, waving a hand. "There's actually a direct sea route from the Land of Waves to the Land of Whirlpools. Shorter and safer. And," he grinned, pointing his thumb toward the docks, "I got us a boat."

Naruto and Oscar immediately pumped their fists. "Woo! Boat trip!"

Oscar squeaked happily in agreement from Naruto's shoulder.

Kakashi closed his book with a lazy snap. "Before that, say your goodbyes. Once we leave port, there won't be another stop for a while."

Sasuke and Shino exchanged a nod. It was their version of "take care."

Sakura and Hinata hugged tightly. "So… You didn't confess, huh? You told me you were ready this time."

Hinata flushed, looking down at the Hornet Ring on her finger. "I thought I was," she said quietly. "But then I realized… I still want to grow more before I do."

"At least you and Naruto have something special," Sakura teased, nudging her shoulder. "If Ino hears about that ring, she's going to die of jealousy."

"It's not like that… but thank you."

Nearby, Akamaru sniffed at Oscar curiously, giving a playful bark before the little crystal lizard tilted his head and gently booped the pup's nose.

"Would you look at that? Even the pets are saying goodbye."

"Guess they get along better than we do."

"Hey!" Kiba said, pointing at him. "I'm perfectly likable!"

"Sure, dogbreath," Naruto shot back, smirking. "You keep telling yourself that."

"Hard to believe it's over, huh? My sister always says your first real mission changes you. Guess she was right. Feels like we've been gone for months."

Naruto nodded. "Yeah… It's weird. Feels like we started this as kids and came back a little older. Guess seeing people fight for freedom does that to you."

"Listen to you. Getting all philosophical on me now."

Naruto laughed. "I'm full of surprises."

"Yeah, like how you went and got yourself a bridge named after you," Kiba said, smirking. "You think the people of Wave are gonna start worshiping you, Dragon Boy?"

"Nah, that sounds like a headache waiting to happen. I don't want people bowing every time I visit. I just want them to live free. That's enough for me."

Kiba snorted. "You say that now, but wait till they start carving statues of you in every town square."

"They already made one, remember?" Naruto said, crossing his arms. "If they make another one with that ugly chin again, I might destroy it myself."

Kiba burst out laughing. "You're hopeless."

"Yeah, but at least I'm funny," Naruto said with a grin.

Kiba shook his head, smiling as they bumped fists. "Stay alive, you dumb lizard."

"You too, mutt."

Meanwhile, Kurenai looked at Kakashi with a grave expression, her tone lower now that the genin were out of earshot. "What exactly am I supposed to tell the Hokage? Especially after what happened with the daimyo publicly abdicating his title?"

Kakashi sighed and rubbed his temple. "Just tell the truth. The Hokage's no fool. He'll understand how delicate this situation is. The old man's been walking the line between the Fire Court and the shinobi council for decades. He'll know how to play it."

"Play it? This isn't a game, Kakashi. A feudal lord giving up his rule voluntarily? That hasn't happened... ever. Every daimyo across the mainland is going to hear about this within the week. They'll all start wondering if their own people are going to rise up next."

Jiraiya nodded thoughtfully, his tone uncharacteristically serious. "She's right. The Land of Fire might act composed, but its noble structure is built on precedent and fear of instability. If one of the lesser nations proves they can survive without a daimyo, the rest might start thinking they can do the same. The Fire Daimyo won't sit quietly and risk that kind of contagion."

Kakashi's visible eye narrowed. "Exactly. That's why we need to get ahead of it. Wave owes Konoha. The Hokage can frame this as a stabilization effort... that Konoha's shinobi stepped in to prevent foreign intervention after Gato's fall. It gives the Fire Daimyo the illusion of control. He'll see it as an opportunity to extend his influence through Konoha's presence rather than an outright rebellion to suppress."

"So we turn the Wave's independence into a diplomatic shield."

"Precisely. Make it look like cooperation, not defiance."

Jiraiya rubbed his chin. "That might buy time, but it's not a permanent solution. The Fire Daimyo has advisors from the nobles whispering in his ear. Men who think shinobi have too much power already. They'll see this as proof that ninja are manipulating smaller nations for their own gain."

Kurenai's gaze hardened. "And that could spiral into a recall order on majority missions from the Land of Fire. Or worse, funding cuts to Konoha."

Kakashi nodded. "Which is why the Hokage needs to remind the Fire Daimyo that the Wave situation prevented economic instability. Gato's company had trade routes tied directly to the Fire ports. The Land of Fire benefits from Wave's new trade freedom."

"You've been thinking like a spymaster lately, Kakashi."

"I just pay attention," Kakashi said dryly. "And right now, the real danger isn't politics rather it's Naruto."

"Naruto?"

Kakashi gave a small nod. "He operates by his own moral code. It's not complicated as he does what he thinks is right. That's admirable, but it's also unpredictable. If he finds out that the Fire Court tries to exploit the Wave's new government or interfere with its freedom, he might act."

Jiraiya frowned. "You're saying he'd go against the Fire Daimyo?"

"I'm saying," Kakashi said quietly, "that if Naruto believes the Wave is being oppressed again, he won't ask permission to fix it. And I don't want to imagine what that would look like. The boy's not malicious but he's powerful, and he's got a temper when it comes to injustice."

Jiraiya ran a hand through his hair, muttering, "I can't believe we're having this conversation. The idea that one genin could be a political concern to a daimyo… that's new."

Suddenly, all three adults turned sharply, their senses flaring in unison. Something had shifted in the air as a presence unlike anything they had ever felt before.

It came from Naruto.

He had taken out a small, crystal vial filled with golden liquid.

The aura that radiated from it was indescribable. A wave of warmth and serenity rippled outward, washing over them. For a brief moment, their minds quieted, their breathing steadied, and every ache in their bodies eased.

The Divine Blessing's presence alone soothed their very souls.

Jiraiya blinked. "What in the name of the Sage is that…"

Naruto, completely oblivious to the effect he was causing, smiled as he held it out to Hinata.

"And this is for you."

"What is it?"

"It's called a Divine Blessing," Naruto said with his usual cheer. "One of the strongest healing items I've got. I know I promised I'd heal your mom myself, but since I'll be heading to Uzushiogakure, maybe you can use this to help her sooner."

Hinata hesitated, glancing at the golden light swirling inside the bottle. "Thank you, Naruto… but I'm not sure I should use something like this without you there."

"But it's going to take at least a week or more before I'm back. I just want you to have options."

Hinata took a slow breath. "I've waited years for my mom to wake up," she said quietly, but there was steel in her tone. "I can wait a few more weeks."

"You're really brave, Hinata."

"Thank you."

For a moment, everything felt calm again.

Then Kurenai exhaled, her gaze flicking toward Jiraiya. "I think that's all the proof you need, Jiraiya-sama," she said quietly. "You shouldn't underestimate that boy. You trained Minato-sama. You of all people should know how one man can reshape nations. The father had the power to change world, what makes you think the son can't."

Jiraiya didn't respond at first. His eyes were fixed on the glowing vial in Naruto's hand, reflecting in his pupils like sunlight on gold.

He finally let out a quiet chuckle that sounded more like a sigh. "Fair point," he said.

But the faint unease in his voice told the others that, deep down, he understood exactly what that meant.


While Team 7 made their way toward the docks, the sun hung low over the ocean, painting the water gold.

"Hey, Naruto," Kakashi said lazily, though there was a curious edge to his tone. "Mind explaining what that Divine Blessing was back there?"

"Oh, that? It's holy water from the goddess Gwynevere."

Everyone stopped walking.

"…"

Sakura blinked. "I'm sorry, did you just say goddess?"

"Yup," Naruto said cheerfully.

"Holy water?" Kakashi repeated slowly, as if he were making sure he heard correctly.

"Uh-huh."

"From an actual goddess?"

"Pretty much."

"How did you even get it?"

"Oh, I bought it from this cute girl in a cult," Naruto said casually.

Kakashi pinched the bridge of his nose and sighed. "Of course you did."

Jiraiya's eyebrow twitched. "Wait, wait, wait. Back up a second. A goddess, you said? Who is this Gwynevere?"

Naruto looked up at the sky, thoughtful. "She's the daughter of the Lord of Sunlight. And she's gorgeous."

He said it so flatly and honestly that it made Sakura blink. No blush. No hesitation. Just a statement of fact.

Jiraiya immediately perked up, eyes gleaming. "Hold on. Gorgeous, you say? How gorgeous? Describe."

"She's… really pretty?"

"Be specific," Jiraiya said, already fishing a notebook and pen from his sleeve. "How tall? How curvy? How big were her..."

"Stop," Sakura snapped. "Finish that sentence and I'll throw you in the sea myself."

Jiraiya ignored her, leaning dangerously close to Naruto. "Come on, kid! For research purposes!"

Naruto took a step back, eyes narrowing. "You're way too close, Pervy Sage."

"Come on! Be a good brat. Give me a visual. Round or perky? Proportional or..."

"I regret talking to you."

"Come on, I've got a brilliant idea! Transform into her using the Transformation Jutsu!"

Naruto stared at him. "…No."

"Come on! Just once! For art! For study! For—"

"I'd rather die."

Jiraiya clasped his hands together pleadingly. "Please, Naruto! Let this old man witness the goddess's glory!"

Naruto's eye twitched. "…Tell you what. If the boat you got us is actually impressive, I'll consider it."

That shut Jiraiya up instantly.

They rounded the corner, and Naruto's face lit up. Docked beside the pier was a massive, sleek ship with white sails catching the sunlight, polished wood gleaming like gold.

"Whoa! You actually did it, Pervy Sage! This is..."

"Turn around," Jiraiya interrupted quickly.

Naruto blinked and looked behind him… only to find a small, creaky fishing boat rocking gently in the water, missing half its paint.

"…This is it?"

"Yep!" Jiraiya said cheerfully. "Just a temporary mode of transportation. Buying a big ship is a waste of money!"

Kakashi interjected. "A waste of money? You literally have stacks of it from all your books!"

Jiraiya ignored him, rubbing his hands together mischievously. "Anyway! Now that we've settled that... Transformation Jutsu time!"

"You know what? Sure," Naruto said with a grin.

A puff of smoke exploded around him as everyone leaned forward, waiting to see what kind of divine beauty he'd turn into. Instead, a hand shot out of the smoke, grabbed Jiraiya by the collar, and hurled him clean off the dock.

Splash!

The ripples echoed across the harbor.

"Take that, Pervy Sage!"

Oscar chirped triumphantly from his shoulder.

Jiraiya surfaced, sputtering and drenched, hair plastered to his face. "That was cheating, you damn brat! We had a deal!"

"Yeah," Naruto called back, smirking, "and your boat sucked."

A sphere of golden lightning sparked to life in his palm, crackling and humming with power.

"How about you do the transforming, old man? Let's see you turn into a croaked toad!"

Jiraiya immediately began to sink back into the water. "On second thought, maybe I'll… stay down here and cool off a bit."

Team 7 collectively sweatdropped.

Sakura shook her head. "Every day with you all is like an acid trip."

Sasuke's eyes, however, stayed on the spear in Naruto's hand. "When did you learn to use lightning jutsu?"

Naruto looked down at his hand like he'd forgotten it was there. "Oh yeah! Picked it up after joining my Sun Bro's covenant."

"…Your what?"

"My Sun Bro! Solaire," Naruto said, doing the praise the sun gesture with Oscar. "He's awesome. Really wise guy, loves the sun, kind of glows all the time. We praise the sun together."

"You joined a cult with another guy?"

"It's not a cult," Naruto protested. "It's a brotherhood. Totally different. He's my number-one bro."

Sakura teased. "Jealous, Sasuke?"

"No," Sasuke said quickly.

"Yeah, you are," Sakura teased. "You can't stand that Naruto's got a number bro."

Naruto laughed and slung an arm around Sasuke's shoulder. "Don't worry, teme. Solaire might be my number-one bro, but you'll always be my number-two bro. My emo bro."

Sasuke stared at him with deadpan eyes. "I should have let you drown in Wave."

"Aw, come on," Naruto said with a grin. "You love me."

"Hn."

Jiraiya, still dripping wet, floated nearby muttering, "I should've taken up drinking instead…"

Kakashi sighed, pulling out his orange book. "Just another normal day with Team 7."

As they boarded the creaky little boat, Oscar chirped one last time at the horizon. Naruto smiled, already leaning into the ocean breeze.

"Next stop," he said, "Uzushiogakure."


It took Team 8 three long days to finally reach the familiar forests surrounding Konoha. The sun had just begun to dip below the horizon, casting the gates in a warm, orange glow.

"Man, it feels good to be home. First thing I'm doing is finding a hot meal and a long nap."

Akamaru barked in agreement from Kiba's shoulder.

"A mission that long will require a full debrief. Rest will have to wait."

Hinata smiled softly at the two of them. "It was a good mission. I'm just glad everyone made it back safe."

They didn't even make it to the gate guards before two ANBU appeared out of thin air.

"Team 8," one of them said curtly. "Where is Genin Naruto Uzumaki?"

The group froze.

"Naruto?" Kiba blinked. "Don't you mean Team 7? He's not even part of our team."

The ANBU didn't answer. Their attention shifted to Kurenai, whose calm expression faltered for just a moment. She noticed the chūnin guards nearby watching intently, their faces expectant. It wasn't just curiosity; rather, it was tension. Everyone wanted to know where Naruto was.

"Team 7 is currently traveling with Jiraiya-sama. Their location and status are for the Hokage's ears only."

The ANBU exchanged a quick glance before nodding. "Understood. You are to report to the Hokage's office immediately."

The air shifted as they prepared to use the Body Flicker Technique for the genin, but Kurenai lifted a hand.

"There's no need," she said evenly. "My team has already mastered Shunshin no Jutsu. We can manage on our own."

That earned her a rare reaction. One of the ANBU tilted his head slightly, and the chūnin gate guards exchanged looks of surprise.

Kiba smirked, catching the look. "Heh. You heard her. We're not amateurs."

"Very well," the ANBU replied, his voice clipped but respectful. "Proceed directly to the Hokage Tower."

And with that, both masked figures vanished in a swirl of leaves.

"Alright, you heard them. Let's move."

As they moved through the darkening village, Kurenai couldn't help but notice the way everyone seemed more alert—from shinobi on rooftops to civilians whispering, even the guards more focused than usual.

Something had changed in Konoha.

And she had a feeling it had everything to do with Naruto Uzumaki.


Leaving her team outside the Hokage's office, Kurenai followed the secretary's polite but firm instructions, as the Hokage had ordered to see her alone.

The door slid open with a soft creak, and the familiar scent of tobacco and parchment filled her senses. Hiruzen Sarutobi sat behind his desk, pipe in hand, his robes wrinkled and eyes sunken. The man looked as though he hadn't slept properly in days.

"Kurenai. I'm glad to see you returned safely."

"You might not be so glad once you hear my mission report, Hokage-sama."

He gave a tired chuckle at the joke. "I'll take my chances. Was the mission a success?"

"Yes. But… there were complications."

The Third leaned forward slightly, pipe resting between his fingers. "I've heard that Team 7 has been accompanying Jiraiya. Is that correct?"

Kurenai nodded. "Yes. They are currently en route to the ruins of Uzushiogakure. The Kyūbi is… gone. Naruto also believes that both the Fourth Hokage and the Uzumaki clan have connections to Lordran."

Hiruzen's brows furrowed deeply. "Wait. Wait, slow down." He raised a hand, rubbing his temple. "What exactly is Lordran?"

"It's a summoning realm that is the source of all Naruto's… uniqueness."

Hiruzen froze mid-inhale. The pipe wavered in his grasp. "A summoning realm connected to Minato…?"

"It would seem so," Kurenai replied. "I'd recommend speaking with Kakashi for more context. He's more informed about what transpired before we separated."

The Hokage leaned back heavily in his chair, exhaling smoke through his nose. "Yes. I think… I'll have to."

He snapped his fingers once. "Cat," he called.

A shadow shifted behind him, and an ANBU with purple hair and a cat mask stepped into view, kneeling.

"Tell my secretary to clear the next hour," Hiruzen ordered. "Then activate the sound barrier seal."

The ANBU nodded silently and vanished.

When the hum of the barrier filled the room, Hiruzen turned back toward Kurenai. "What is the status of the Kyūbi?"

"Unknown," she replied honestly. "That's part of the reason Team 7 is heading to Uzushiogakure—to find clues about its condition. Or… if it's even recoverable."

The Hokage's complexion paled slightly, and his jaw tightened. "And Naruto? Is he… alright? Normally, when a bijuu is released, the jinchūriki doesn't survive. I know the Uzumaki have incredible vitality, but even they have limits."

"There's nothing to worry about, Hokage-sama. Naruto is alive and doing well."

"Thank god. I don't think this village could bear another loss like that."

Kurenai hesitated, her mind flickering back to all the strange and unbelievable things she had witnessed, from his hawkeyes to his dragonic physiology.
She opened her mouth to speak, then closed it again.

"And I thought the situation couldn't get more complicated."

Kurenai gave Hiruzen a sympathetic smile as she reached into her pouch and pulled out the mission report scroll. She began unrolling it.

And unrolling it.

And unrolling it… until it slid off the desk, rolled across the floor, and curled neatly at the base of a potted plant.

Hiruzen stared at it, his pipe nearly falling from his mouth. "That's not real!"

"It's not," Kurenai replied with a mischievous smirk. "Naruto gave me twenty ryō to prank you. I figured a little levity would do you some good, Hokage-sama."

For a moment, the Third just blinked, then a quiet chuckle escaped him. "That brat," he said, shaking his head. "If he's back to pulling harmless pranks, that means his anger toward me must be fading."

"Seems so."

"I appreciate it nonetheless," Hiruzen said as he took the real mission report from her hands. He began reading it… and within seconds, the color drained from his face.

The first line read: Mission Report: Initial C-rank escort of Tazuna of the Land of Waves, re-evaluated as S-rank by Jonin Kakashi Hatake, Jonin Kurenai Yuhi, and Sannin Jiraiya.

The Hokage opened his mouth, then closed it again. He tried once more, but no words came. His pipe wobbled dangerously in his hand. Finally, he managed to croak out a single word. "How?"

Kurenai sighed, brushing a strand of dark hair behind her ear. "Let's just say it involved a stupid crime lord, several rogue shinobi, an unexpected revolution, and somehow... don't ask me how... political reform."

She paused, then added dryly, "But if I had to simplify it, Naruto happened."

Hiruzen stared at her in silence for a long moment, then leaned back in his chair, rubbing the bridge of his nose. "Naruto happened," he repeated under his breath.

"That's the short version."

"I genuinely do not know if I should laugh… or cry."

Kurenai nodded. "Let's decide after you read the entire report."


Meanwhile, outside the Hokage office, the air felt… off.

Every shinobi that passed cast them sidelong glances. A few chūnin even paused like they wanted to ask something but then thought better of it and moved on.

Kiba finally snapped. "Okay, what the hell is going on? Why is everyone looking at us like we're about to drop a bombshell?"

The Hokage's secretary adjusted her glasses and leaned forward slightly. "They're not looking at you," she said, voice low. "They're hoping he's with you."

"Who?" Hinata asked, already suspecting the answer.

"Uzumaki Naruto."

Kiba's brows furrowed. "Wait, what? Why? Don't tell me something from the Wave leaked. Please don't tell me the Archer thing made it back here already."

"Not sure what you are talking about," the woman said, reaching into a drawer. "But you should see this."

She handed over a thin leather-bound folder, marked with the black-and-red seal of the Intelligence Division.

The latest Bingo Book.

Kiba opened it slowly and flipped to the marked page. His eyes widened as he read:

[ BINGO BOOK DOSSIER — TARGET #007: "UZUMAKI NARUTO" ]

[ STATUS: ACTIVE CONTRACT ]
[ ISSUED BY:
MULTIPLE HIDDEN VILLAGES ]
[ DISTRIBUTION LEVEL:
HIGH ]


[ IDENTITY FILE ]
[ NAME:
Uzumaki Naruto ]
[ AFFILIATION:
Konohagakure no Sato ]
[ SUMMONING AFFILIATION:
Unknown – data suggests a nonstandard summon ("Oscar") ]
[ CLASSIFICATION:
Confirmed Jinchūriki of the Nine-Tailed Fox ]


[ LINEAGE RECORD ]
[ FATHER:
Minato Namikaze – The Yellow Flash of Konoha ]
[ MOTHER:
Kushina Uzumaki – The Crimson Valkyrie of Chains ]
[ NOTES:
Direct descendant of two high-priority combat-class assets. Subject possesses abnormal chakra reserves, unknown medical ninjutsu, and hidden jutsu. ]


[ KNOWN ALIASES ]
[ "Son of Calamity" – Iwagakure Designation ]
[ "Knight of Konoha" – Otogakure Designation ]



[ RANK & THREAT ASSESSMENT ]
[ KONOHA RANK:
Genin ]
[ IWAGAKURE CLASSIFICATION:
B-Rank Threat ]
[ OTOGAKURE CLASSIFICATION:
B-Rank Threat ]
[ THREAT SUMMARY:
Despite low official rank, displays tactics and combat potential comparable to a jōnin. Subject's use of Nine-Tails chakra elevates potential to S-Rank if controlled. ]

[ ENGAGEMENT ADVISORY:
Avoid prolonged contact. Subject demonstrates high adaptability and unknown techniques. If cornered, terminate swiftly or disengage. ]


[ ACTIVE BOUNTIES ]
[ IWAGAKURE:
10,000,000 Ryō – DEAD OR ALIVE ]
[ OTOGAKURE:
5,000,000 Ryō – Uzumaki Naruto ]
[ OTOGAKURE:
5,000,000 Ryō – "Oscar," Crystal Lizard summon (Specimen Retrieval Preferred Alive) ]


A small boat skimmed across the churning waters, carried forward by a massive toad swimming just behind it.

The toad's skin was a deep mossy green, covered in black swirling markings that looked almost like tattoos. His arms were thick and muscular, webbed fingers slicing through the waves with the power of a small engine. With each powerful kick of his hind legs, the boat surged forward, cutting through the mist. Every few seconds, his wide golden eyes would flick up toward the humans on board, croaking in rhythm with the waves.

"You're doing great, Gamasui," Jiraiya called out, bracing one hand on the boat's railing as spray hit his face. "Ten more minutes and I'll switch you out!"

The toad croaked in acknowledgement, tailing off into a long rumble that sounded like thunder beneath the sea.

Jiraiya turned back to the group. Sakura looked miserable, pale as chalk and gripping the side of the boat like it was her last lifeline. Sasuke was next to her, steadying her with a hand on her back. Kakashi sat cross-legged under the shade of his orange book, fast asleep or pretending to be.

"Alright, listen up, brats," Jiraiya called out, his voice cutting through the roaring wind. "We're entering Uzushiogakure's waters now, and there's a damn good reason this place is called the Land of Whirlpools. Even experienced sailors refuse to come within miles of this coast. But that's not the worst part."

He looked out across the stormy expanse, his face grim. "The entire coastline is wrapped in layers of fuinjutsu that have been active for centuries. The closer you get to the ruins, the more the water reacts to movement, chakra, even sound. The whirlpools form as a defense mechanism, targeting anything alive that comes too close. Ships vanish here without a trace, sucked into the sea before anyone can even blink."

As if to prove his point, Sasuke's eyes flicked toward the horizon. "Whirlpool forming, a hundred meters to the left."

"Heh. Didn't know the Sharingan could see that far."

Sasuke's expression didn't change. "It can't. Not normally. My eyes can now see at a greater distance due to having the traits of the Byakugan."

"Wait, what? How in the world did that happen?"

Sasuke only tilted his head toward Naruto, who sat silently at the front of the boat. The blond boy was holding Oscar high above him. The little crystal lizard chirped happily, enjoying the salty wind rushing past.

"You've been awfully quiet, brat," Jiraiya said as Gamasui moved the boat sharply to avoid another whirlpool that was forming beneath the surface. "That's not like you."

"It's nothing," Naruto said quietly. His hawk eyes were focused ahead, where the fog began to part. Through the haze, he could just make out the faint outline of broken towers rising from the waves… his ancestral home.

The ruins of Uzushiogakure.

"If a loudmouth like you goes silent," Jiraiya muttered, "it's usually something."

"I guess I'm just thinking. I don't know much about my clan or what this place really means. But seeing it like this… it hits differently."

"Don't hold it in," Kakashi said, lowering his book. "If you want answers, Jiraiya-sama's the man to ask. Despite how he looks, he's one of the greatest spymasters alive. He probably knows more about your clan than anyone still breathing."

"Yeah…" Jiraiya began, scratching the back of his head. Then he froze, glaring at Kakashi. "Hold on. What do you mean 'despite how I look,' huh?"

"Just saying what everyone's thinking, Jiraiya-sama."

Naruto snorted, trying and failing to hold back his laugh.

"East, fifty meters," Sasuke said suddenly. He was sitting upright now, eyes glowing faintly as he mapped the currents.

Jiraiya adjusted the rudder, and without missing a beat, Gamasui moved with the boat, dodging the swirling waters.

"Well, my first question is… how did Uzushiogakure even get destroyed? I mean, if this is what the ocean around it looks like, who could even get close enough to attack it?"

Jiraiya's expression darkened. "During the era of war and unrest, when the power of the jinchūriki began to rise, every major village started fearing the Uzumaki. Their knowledge made them too dangerous to be left alone. So, naturally, they became a target."

Naruto frowned, pointing toward the massive whirlpools that twisted and crashed around them like hungry beasts. "But how? They had defenses like this. These seals could tear apart fleets."

"It wasn't brute force that broke Uzushiogakure. It was betrayal."

Sakura looked up, pale from seasickness but listening intently. "Betrayal?"

"Yeah," Jiraiya said. "The village wasn't like the others. It was built by the Uzumaki, but not everyone there was Uzumaki by blood. There were civilians, refugees, and shinobi from smaller clans who came to the islands seeking protection. Over time, envy started to grow. The Uzumaki could live for decades longer than most, they healed faster, their chakra never seemed to end, and their sealing arts could make or unmake clans. The outsiders felt small in comparison. That envy festered into fear, then hatred. Civil war broke out within the village walls. And when the fighting started, the great villages saw their chance."

The group fell silent. Even the sound of crashing waves seemed distant. Naruto sat quietly, eyes lowered. Sasuke watched him, understanding more than he liked to admit. They were both survivors of dead clans.

"Alright," Jiraiya finally said, his tone sharp again. "Enough history. We're officially in the danger zone. Time to pull your weight."

He pointed at Sakura. "Pinky, I need a chakra barrier. Sphere formation, cover the whole boat like a shell."

Sakura took a shaky breath, wiped her mouth, and nodded. "Right." Glowing paper tags flew into the air, carried by chakra threads as they attached themselves to the hull and sides of the boat as it formed a barrier.

"Sasuke," Jiraiya continued, "you're our eyes. Guide us through this death trap. Use your eyes to spot currents before they form."

Sasuke's tomoe spinning rapidly as he scanned the sea. "There's a vortex forming thirty meters to the right. Another one ahead, smaller but growing fast."

"Got it," Jiraiya said, turning the rudder sharply. "Kakashi, on me!"

Kakashi closed his book with a sigh, already forming hand signs. "Fire Style?"

"Fire Style," Jiraiya confirmed.

They both exhaled twin waves of fire toward the rear of the boat, propelling them forward like a rocket. The little ship leapt over the swirling currents, skimming just above the deadly whirlpools.

"East, fifteen meters!" Sasuke called. "The next current's shifting!"

The team adjusted course instantly. The sea around them glowed faintly, patterns of old Uzumaki seals appearing beneath the water's surface. The glowing symbols pulsed with a rhythm, like a heartbeat.

Naruto stared at the churning sea, his reflection fractured by the violent motion of the water. The whirlpools spun endlessly, like eyes staring back at him from the deep.

A whirlpool holds its shape, unchanging, like a memory etched in stone. But a spiral breathes and grows, shifting with each turn. What begins as a simple swirl transforms, as the vortex gives way to the spiral… ever deeper, ever evolving.

For even if it seems to spin the same, every turn carves a new path. The floor beneath it changes, the air thickens, and the scenery shifts. In each twist lies a new truth, in each descent, a hidden strength. So, too, does life shift and flow, as we are bound not to the flatness of fate but to the living spiral of choice and change.


The Uzumaki walk this spiral, unbroken and ever-reaching.

His thoughts broke when Oscar chirped sharply in a warning.

A monstrous whirlpool was forming ahead of them, dwarfing everything they'd seen before. It stretched across the horizon, a vast circle of black water devouring the light. The roar of the sea grew deafening as the air itself trembled.

"Shit!" Jiraiya barked, gripping the rudder. "We're not getting around that thing! We'll have to destroy it with a powerful jutsu!"

"Leave it to me!" Naruto yelled, already leaping to the bow of the boat. He thrust his hand out, chakra swirling violently in his palm. A rough, unstable sphere of blue light began to form as the Rasengan. The chakra wobbled and sputtered, unable to maintain its shape.

"Tch." Jiraiya clicked his tongue, shouting over the wind. "Naruto, your chakra's not rotating right! You need multiple rotations at once to keep the sphere stable. It's collapsing on one side!"

"How do I fix it?"

"Your chakra rotation depends on your natural flow — clockwise or counterclockwise — it's tied to your hair growth pattern! Sasuke, check it with your eyes!"

"Right rotation! Move your chakra clockwise!"

Naruto adjusted instantly, his energy twisting tighter, denser. The Rasengan steadied but still flickered. Then he looked up, and the answer hit him like lightning.

The whirlpool ahead wasn't spinning in one direction. It was colliding forces of multiple flows crashing together, forcing each other to turn.

That chaos was the spiral.

That was what it meant to be Uzumaki.

He grinned, his blue eyes blazing. "Got it."

Naruto's chakra roared as he jumped while altering his flow, forcing his chakra to move in opposite rotations, currents crashing against each other to form perfect balance. The sphere solidified, a perfect Rasengan glowing like a star in his palm.

Then, midair, he formed a single seal. "

Shadow Clone Jutsu.

In an instant, the sky erupted with smoke as hundreds of Naruto clones appeared around him, each holding a Rasengan of their own. The sight was breathtaking. A storm of blue light suspended over a sea of darkness.

"Now!"

Together, over a hundred Rasengans crashed into the giant whirlpool.

The impact was thunderous. The air exploded with sound as blinding blue light burst across the sea. The water surged upward in colossal waves, the whirlpool screaming as its spiral unraveled under the assault. The surface of the ocean twisted and rippled outward, shockwaves racing across the waves like an echo of power.

The whirlpool shuddered, then collapsed inward as the roaring silence that followed felt like the world holding its breath.

The boy was flung through the air, spinning before crashing onto the sandy shore. His clones vanished in bursts of smoke.

For a long moment, no one spoke. The ocean had gone still. The whirlpools around them began to subside, their furious spirals slowing into calm, rhythmic waves.

Naruto groaned, sitting up on the beach, sand clinging to his clothes. Jiraiya and the others watched from the boat, speechless.

The setting sun bathed everything in gold and red, its light glinting off Naruto's damp hair. In that moment, his blond strands caught the glow of dusk, burning crimson as the same red as the Uzumaki"s hair.

It was as if the island itself was welcoming a young Uzumaki back home.


Author's Note: And with that, we have finally arrived at Uzushiogakure. I hope you all enjoyed this chapter, it was one of my favorites to write. The Q&A section will be short this time, but there are a few interesting points I want to go over.

1. Was the Uzumaki Clan in a Civil War?

Answer: In the manga and anime, there is never any clear confirmation of a civil war in Uzushiogakure. However, in the official Naruto databook, Kushina's entry includes a very interesting line:

"A former kunoichi from the Land of Eddies, she gave birth to Naruto. Having grown up during the turbulent civil war years, Kushina fervently wished for days of peace and calm."

That single mention of a civil war really caught my attention and opened up a lot of creative potential.

So, I decided to expand on that idea. Think about it, the Uzumaki clan had long lifespans, incredible vitality, and some of the most dangerous sealing jutsu in existence. It makes sense that envy and resentment could grow among those who did not share their gifts.

If Uzushiogakure was a proper shinobi village, it could not have been made up entirely of Uzumaki. There must have been civilians and other clans who lived under their rule, and that sort of imbalance often leads to conflict. Envy turns to fear, fear turns to hatred, and hatred turns to rebellion. The civil war within the village gave the great nations the perfect opportunity to strike and finish what internal conflict had already started.

It also ties well into canon. We already know that the Uzumaki were wiped out because their sealing jutsu were feared by the other nations. A divided village would have made that outcome inevitable.

I also plan to explore the Uzumaki in much more depth.

If any of you have ideas about the Uzumaki clan's history, culture, or techniques, feel free to share them. If something fits the tone and direction of the story, I would love to include it.


2. How Will DS Naruto Use the Rasengan?

This one is more of an open question to all of you because it touches on one of the key points of this crossover: the fusion of the Naruto and Dark Souls power systems.

In the Dark Souls world, magic does not simply make something stronger, it changes the very nature of what it touches. For example, when the Transformation Jutsu is amplified by magic, it becomes true shapeshifting. Naruto could literally alter his body into another form, like a hawk or even a woman.

The same idea applies to every jutsu. If chakra techniques are fueled by magic, their effect could evolve beyond what they were originally meant to do.

So here is the question: What would a magic-infused Rasengan look like?

How would elemental Rasengans, such as Wind, Fire, or Lightning, behave when combined with the influence of the Dark Soul, magic, or even chaos itself?

Would a Lightning Rasengan pull the energy of a storm straight from the sky?Would a Fire Rasengan act like a miniature sun, burning everything it touches?Would a Dark Rasengan twist the space around it and swallow the light itself?

Remember, in this world, magic amplifies the concept behind a jutsu. It takes what the technique represents and makes it physically real.

So, I want to hear from you. What do you think the ultimate evolution of the Rasengan would look like in this story?

Share your ideas in the comments, and let's shape the next stage of this crossover together.


That's It… For Now.

And if you can't wait for the next update, the next chapter drops on Oct 17th! You can read ahead to Chapter 106 on Patreon.

As always, I want to thank you all for taking the time to read, comment, and follow along with this story. Your feedback means more than you know, and it helps push me to make each chapter bigger, sharper, and more true to the worlds of Naruto and Dark Souls.

Until next time, Praise the Sun.

—Adam
 
Chapter no.63 Naruto New
Chapter no.63 The Legacy, the Mystery and the Tragedy!


"So where are we supposed to go first?" Jiraiya asked, crouching near the campfire as he unrolled a weathered parchment across the sand. The old map fluttered in the ocean breeze, its edges cracked with age and the ink faded to brown.

Naruto leaned forward. "Where did you even get this?"

"And what's with the colors?" Sakura added, pointing at the splashes of red, blue, and green marked all across the circular island that was once Uzushiogakure.

"One question at a time, brats," Jiraiya grumbled, slapping his hand down on the map to keep it from blowing away. "This was drawn by Mito Uzumaki herself. I sent one of my toads back to Konoha to fetch it from the Hokage's vault. It's the only surviving full record of the village's layout."

"What are the colors for?"

"They represent danger levels," Jiraiya explained, tapping the red zones. "Blue areas are safe, mostly ruins or neutral ground. Green means mild traps and some sealing jutsu hiding a trap. But red…" He paused, his tone heavy. "Red zones are death traps. Mito's own note says even a Kage could die there if they make one wrong move."

That got everyone's attention. Sakura swallowed. "So basically… stay away from the red ones."

"Is there treasure hidden there?"

"Treasure? Kid, the only treasure here is a quick death."

Kakashi spoke up. "After Uzushiogakure fell, most of its valuables were scattered. Some were looted by enemy shinobi during the war, some taken by fleeing Uzumaki clansmen, and the rest... what was left, was sealed and sent to Konoha under Lady Mito's orders."

"So nothing's left?"

"Only ruins," Jiraiya confirmed. "And the defenses those ruins still hold."

Naruto hummed under his breath, studying the map. "Maybe there's nothing for you all," he said softly. "But there's something I need to see for myself."

"Something?"

Naruto stood, stretching his arms behind his head. "Yeah. I'll check Lordran later. Maybe Alvina can point me toward a clue about the fox. But right now, I just want to see the ruins."

He started walking toward the treeline, Oscar perched on his shoulder.

Jiraiya watched him go, the boy's silhouette fading into the misty ruins ahead, followed by Sasuke and Sakura.

When Team 7 was out of earshot, Kakashi asked, "You have something on your mind, Jiraiya-sama."

"I'm just trying to figure out why Minato or Kushina would leave clues about the Kyuubi here, of all places."

"Given that Lordran is apparently tied to their secrets," Kakashi said quietly, "it's safe to assume there was more to them than anyone knew."

"There's also the chance that Naruto's not telling us everything either."

"You think he's hiding something?"

"Come on, Kakashi," Jiraiya said with a half-smirk. "You and I can read that brat like an open book. He's been feeding us half-truths since we got here. He knows more than he lets on."

Kakashi didn't deny it. Instead, he gave a small shrug. "Maybe. But I trust him. Naruto's reckless, sure, but his heart's in the right place. Whatever he's hiding, it's probably something he thinks he has to deal with alone. Besides," he added, his tone turning a bit pointed, "he's not the only one sitting on secrets."

Jiraiya met his gaze, then laughed dryly. "I'm building up to it eventually."

"Eventually for the last decade?"

Jiraiya ignored the jab and tapped the map again. "I'm going to start by checking out the places Minato and Kushina used to visit every time they came here. They had their rituals, you know... always made a pilgrimage to Uzushiogakure once every couple of years. A day of mourning for the fallen clan."

"Yeah. Minato-sensei used to get quiet for days after those trips. I never knew why."

"Then it's only right that we visit them too. Maybe the dead have more to say than the living ever did."

The waves crashed louder against the shore, as if the sea itself was listening.

Meanwhile, Team 7 stood atop a massive tree that jutted out from the cliffs like the last sentinel of a dead land. Below them stretched the ruins of Uzushiogakure.

Even from above, the sight was haunting.

As children of Konoha, they were used to the warmth of timber, the living pulse of wooden homes, and trees woven into their architecture. But Uzushiogakure was stone.

The kind of craftsmanship that was meant to last forever, and yet here it was, broken and silent.

A great river wound through the ruins in a perfect spiral, the water still following the paths carved by the clan's founders. Around it, what had once been a majestic village now lay scattered across the valley like the bones of a titan.

Massive stone pillars lay shattered and tilted, their spiral markings weathered but still faintly visible beneath moss and decay. Some leaned against fractured walls, others lay snapped in half like fallen trees. The buildings themselves were hollow husks with roofs collapsed, walls missing, doorways gaping open like silent screams.

Sakura whispered, "It's… so beautiful and sad at the same time."

Her words hung in the wind.

Naruto said nothing. His hawk-like eyes traced every detail from the faded murals to the cracked towers and the empty plazas. His vision was so sharp that he could see the smallest carvings on the stone of old seals and clan markings now half-consumed by nature.

A strange heaviness filled his chest.

These ruins felt familiar.

Not just because they were his ancestors' home, but because they reminded him of Lordran, of the endless decay, the ruins filled with ghosts of a brighter age. Only, this place didn't carry the eternal cycle of rebirth that haunted Lordran.

This was a story that had ended.

And yet… in the quiet destruction, Naruto saw beauty. It all told a story of something that once mattered. Something that had lived, fought, and been loved before it was forgotten.

Maybe that was a gift Lordran left him. The ability to find meaning in ruin.

He didn't realize how long he'd been staring until Kakashi spoke, breaking the silence.

"Alright, team, I've got a copy of the map. The village is divided into sectors, so we'll start by scouting the outer ruins and move inward."


An hour later, the team stood by the river that coiled through the ruins like a silver serpent, its waters glinting faintly under the filtered sunlight. It was beautiful in its desolation.

Naruto sat apart from the others on a broken pillar near the riverbank, one knee pulled up to his chest, his chin resting on it. His gaze lingered on the slow swirl of the current, expression unreadable. Oscar sat beside him, tail curled around his leg, mimicking his partner who hadn't spoken in an hour. Not a word.

Sakura, trying to ease the heavy atmosphere, looked to Kakashi. "Sensei… what was the relationship between Konoha and Uzushiogakure really like?"

"That's a good question, Sakura. The Senju and Uzumaki clans shared distant blood ties. In fact, Mito Uzumaki's marriage to Hashirama Senju wasn't just personal; rather, it solidified an alliance. The two villages became as close as siblings. Konoha even relied on Uzushiogakure for its sealing arts. They were unmatched."

Sakura blinked. "Then… why didn't we learn that in the academy?"

"Because, Sakura, in the shinobi world, information is currency. History is rewritten, withheld, or forgotten depending on who's paying for it. You only get the full picture once you're high enough to handle it. Chunin and above learn the truth about Uzushiogakure and about the shame tied to its fall."

Sasuke frowned. "What did Konoha do when the village was attacked?"

That question hit the group like a stone dropped into still water. Even Naruto turned to look at Kakashi, his expression finally showing the faint edge of anger—or maybe disappointment.

Kakashi was silent for a long moment, the sound of the river filling the gap. "…It's a complicated question for me to answer."

Sakura tried to break the tension with a small joke. "You say that like you were personally involved, Sensei."

Kakashi didn't laugh. His single visible eye didn't even move. The air grew heavier.

After a beat, Kakashi straightened, his voice turning lighter, more deliberate shift in tone meant to move them forward. "Well… because of our history, the spiral symbol of the Uzumaki was added to the back of every Konoha flak jacket. It's a mark of friendship and a reminder of what was lost."

The explanation didn't quite land.

Sakura and Sasuke exchanged uncertain looks. Naruto's jaw tightened. If the spiral symbol was supposed to honor his clan… why did no one ever talk about the clan itself?

The silence that followed was incredibly uncomfortable.

"Alright, everyone. How about I show you something special? A place only a handful of shinobi even know exists."

Oscar chirped, the sound bright and curious.

Kakashi chuckled softly. "Even the little guy's excited. This spot was shown to me by the Fourth Hokage."

That got their attention. Sakura's eyes widened. Sasuke straightened. Naruto finally stood and brushed the dust from his cloak.

"The Fourth?" Naruto asked. "He came here?"

Kakashi nodded. "Several times. And what he found… well, it's something he only ever shared with a few people."

They began walking, the sound of their footsteps echoing faintly through the hollow streets. Moss-covered archways and broken bridges framed their path as they descended deeper into the ruins.

After a while, Kakashi slowed, his tone softer now. "Naruto," he said, "I know you want to understand what happened here… why Uzushiogakure fell and Konoha's history with this fall. And I promised I'd tell you the truth."

Naruto turned his head slightly.

"But… some truths aren't easy to say out loud. Give me a little time… to gather the courage to face the ghosts of the past."

"Alright, Sensei. I trust you. Just… don't make me wait too long, yeah?"

"I won't."


Near the edge of the inner ring of Uzushiogakure stood two colossal stone pillars. Their once-smooth surfaces were now cracked and pitted, spiral carvings half-swallowed by moss and age. The tops of the pillars were broken, jagged, and hung with spindly rock spikes that looked almost like teeth.

Between them stretched a vast, circular pit carved into the earth itself. Smooth stone walls curved downward into what seemed like endless darkness, layered in concentric rings of old craftsmanship. A narrow bridge of stone spanned the abyss, leading to a circular platform at its center.

Team 7 stood in silent awe.

"This is incredible…" Sakura breathed, stepping closer to the edge.

"Minato-sensei told me that Lady Mito's dying wish was for the Uzumaki clan to never be forgotten. With the help of the Senju, this place was built as a memorial."

Sakura frowned. "Wait… so this isn't part of Uzushiogakure?"

"No. It was made to look like part of the ruins. Hidden in plain sight."

"Then what's the point of making fake ruins? Wouldn't that make it easier for people to overlook it?"

Naruto, who had been staring into the pit with his hawk eyes, spoke up quietly. "It's not fake. It's a seal meant to hide something."

Kakashi threw a handful of kunai into the air, into the darkness below. The weapons clinked against unseen points in the walls.

A heartbeat later, the pit began to stir.

Lines of red and gold light unfurled like veins awakening under the stone, spiraling down the walls in intricate patterns that twisted into moving seals.

Sakura clutched her head, groaning. "The formulas… they're overlapping layers of sealing matrices. I can't even read half of them."

Before anyone could respond, the platform beneath their feet blazed with light.

In an instant, everything vanished.

When Naruto opened his eyes, the air was cold and damp.

They were standing in a dark forest. The trees were tall and thin, their trunks like black pillars rising into an endless void. The ground was uneven, tangled with roots and stones slick with moisture. A low mist hung over everything, glowing faintly blue under an unseen moon.

And all around them were figures.

They glowed softly, pale silhouettes shaped like people. Some stood, others sat cross-legged, others leaned against invisible walls. They didn't move, didn't speak. Each radiated a quiet, ghostly light, their forms fading into the fog the farther they were from view.

"Where… where are we?"

Sasuke's eyes flickered crimson as his Sharingan activated. "It's not real. We're inside an overlapping genjutsu. The seal must've released a projection made from stored yin chakra." He looked around, analyzing the faint chakra threads that connected each glowing figure to the darkness above. "This is a genjutsu graveyard. Each of those lights probably contains the information of an Uzumaki."

Then, an elderly voice rolled through the forest like the whisper of wind through ancient halls. "That's correct, young man."

The team turned sharply.

[ Name: Mito Uzumaki ]

[ HP: 1400 / 1400 ]


Naruto's heart skipped.

Mito was a young woman with long, vivid red hair, styled in elegant twin buns with intricate hairpins and three delicate clips in the front. A high-collared kimono of silken white and crimson clung to her tall form, and on the back of her obi, the spiral of Uzushiogakure was stitched in gold. Her lips were a deep shade of red, and a single rhombus-shaped mark shimmered on her forehead.

"Who are you?" Sakura asked carefully.

"My name is Mito Uzumaki. What you see before you is not truly me, but a chakra signature left behind to guide those who find this place. I cannot answer questions beyond what I was programmed to say, so do not bother asking too much. This seal exists only to preserve memory, not to reveal secrets."

Her form flickered slightly as she raised a translucent hand, gesturing toward the countless shimmering figures among the trees.

"Each of these lights represents a fallen member of our clan. They will not speak beyond simple introductions or memories tied to their lives. Do not expect forbidden techniques or hidden knowledge here. This forest is a graveyard, nothing more. Show respect to the dead, and you will be safe."

Her body stilled, the glow around her dimming into quiet stillness once more.

Team 7 exchanged uncertain glances.

Sasuke was the first to break the silence. "We should look around and pay our respects. This place went to great effort to preserve their legacy. It's the least we can do."

Sakura nodded. "Agreed. It's kind of amazing… all these people, all this history, and it's just been sitting here waiting."

Naruto didn't respond. He stood still, his expression unreadable as the faint blue light danced across his face. "You guys go ahead," he said finally. "I just need a minute."

As his teammates drifted off among the pale lights, Naruto crouched down and picked up Oscar. The little lizard's gem gleamed faintly.

"Yeah," Naruto murmured. "It's just like we thought, huh?"

Oscar chirped once.

"My name's Naruto Uzumaki."

The spectral Mito, who had stood still as a statue moments ago, seemed to linger faintly on his hair.

"One of my parents was blonde, I guess."

"I am not… capable of responding. I am just a chakra imprint, nothing more."

"No, you're not."

She tilted her head slightly.

"You're not just some recording," Naruto continued quietly. "You're Mito Uzumaki or at least, the soul that wanted to be remembered. That's why you're here."

The light around her shimmered faintly, almost like it flickered in surprise, before her form dissolved into mist.

When the air cleared, she was standing closer now, older.

Her hair had grown long and deep maroon, cascading down her back in thick waves. She still wore her twin buns, but they drooped slightly, fastened by only two delicate pins. Her face was aged, lined with wisdom and weariness, her eyes deep as the river outside. A loose lavender kimono draped over her frame, tied with a dark obi. The rhombus-shaped seal on her brow glowed faintly, its light faded but not extinguished.

"I apologize for that. It has been… difficult to sense your lineage. Your chakra feels unlike any Uzumaki I have known. There is power in you, yes, but it does not seem like human life."

Naruto blinked, realization dawning on him.

"Yeah," he muttered, rubbing the back of his neck. "That's… probably the dragon blood."

"Did Ryūchi Cave succeed in raising a dragon?"

"I don't know what you're talking about, Granny, but I got my dragon powers from Lordran."

"Lordran? What is that, dear? Some new village that popped up while I was busy being dead?"

Naruto looked at her with genuine surprise. Someone of Mito's power, stature, and knowledge not knowing about Lordran? That didn't make sense. He was pretty sure Lordran had to have some connection to the Uzumaki clan.

So why didn't Mito know? Did that mean Lordran invited the Fourth Hokage into its world?

Oscar's low chirp brought Naruto back to the present.

"So… Gran-Gran-Mito, are you going to teach me something? Like a secret Uzumaki fuinjutsu? Some super-cool family fighting style or something?"

"Oh heavens, child. Always expecting something flashy. You Uzumaki boys never change." Mito shook her head fondly. "No, I didn't seal a part of my soul to teach you spells or fancy chakra tricks. I'm here to guide you, the way a grandmother should."

"Guide me? To what?"

"To your rite of passage," she said, her voice dropping slightly, becoming more serious.

"Funny you say that. I actually came here for that exact reason. Tobirama's journal mentioned it, but it was all vague and said he wasn't allowed to witness it." He rubbed the back of his neck. "So… how do I get my rune?"

"At the heart of Uzushiogakure lies the altar of beginnings. It's in ruins now, like much of our home, shattered by the passage of time. Your task, my dear boy, is to restore it." Mito lifted her hand, and a faint image shimmered in the air. A spectral map of the ruined village, glowing in soft red light. The center pulsed like a heartbeat. "When the altar stands whole again, the seal will awaken and recognize your blood. That is when your true trial begins."

Naruto squinted at the image. "So… fixing the altar is part of the test?"

"You could say that. Think of it like lighting the first candle before a long night. The start of something greater."

She turned, her eyes distant, her tone softening with memory. "Ever since Oden Uzumaki carved the first rune after enduring six days and nights hanging from the Great Tree, we have all been tested. Each generation must walk through their own darkness, face their fears, and etch their mark upon the world. That is the Uzumaki way."

Naruto stood a little taller, that fierce glint of determination sparking in his eyes. "I like a good challenge." He grinned, thumb pointed at his chest. "Dattebayo."

A strange look crossed the elder's face. Something like pain, something like joy. "…You said that just like her," she whispered.

"Said what?"

"Dattebayo." There was something tender in the way she said it, like a string pulled from the past.

"I was reminded of a little girl I used to take care of," she said with a fond smile, though her eyes shimmered. "She had this tick at the end of her sentences… always slipped out when she was flustered or excited. Dattebane."

Naruto tilted his head. His mind was already spinning, something tugging at the back of his thoughts. "Was she… your daughter?" he asked slowly.

"No. But I considered her family. I loved her like she was my own."

Naruto took a breath, the air in the genjutsu suddenly feeling heavier. "Why?... Why did you take care of her?"

"She was brought to Uzushio as a child, as she was chosen to become the next jinchūriki of the Nine-Tails… after me."

Naruto's eyes widened. His mind stumbled, thoughts crashing into one another. "…What was her name?"

"Kushina Uzumaki."

Something broke in Naruto. His lips trembled first, barely perceptible, and then his hands clenched into fists at his sides. His knees buckled slightly as the realization sank in like a blade to the gut. His throat tightened. His chest ached. He collapsed to his knees, shoulders shaking violently as the dam finally broke. Tears streamed down his cheeks in thick, hot rivulets. He didn't sob loudly. It was quieter than that. More fragile. Like the kind of crying a child does when they don't want to be heard. When they're not sure they even have the right to cry.

Oscar immediately nuzzled up against his hand, chirping anxiously, wrapping his tiny body around Naruto's arm like he could shield him from the hurt.

Mito knelt beside him without a word. She didn't say anything right away. She simply opened her arms, and Naruto leaned into her. The older woman held him close, arms wrapping around him in the kind of hug that only a grandmother could give.

"I think… I think Kushina was my mom…"

Mito's hand gently stroked his hair. "I think you are right."

Naruto's breath hitched again, and more tears followed. His hands clutched at the fabric of Mito's sleeve like a child desperate to keep the moment from slipping away. "I never… I never knew her. I never saw her face," he whispered. "Why didn't anyone tell me?"

"I don't know."

Naruto shook his head, pressing his face into her shoulder.

"But I knew her well. Better than most. She was fierce, loud, stubborn. Oh, that girl could throw a tantrum like a hurricane. But her heart… her heart was so full. She had so much love to give. So much fight in her."

She smiled down at Naruto. "She would've loved you more than life itself, Naruto. I can say that without doubt."

"Do you… do you think she'd be proud of me?"

Mito leaned back slightly and cupped his face with both hands. Her thumb brushed the tears from his cheeks.

"She'd be proud of your every breath. Of your strength. Of your stubbornness. Of your kindness. And your weird little lizard."

Oscar chirped proudly, causing both of them to chuckle through the tears.

"She would have doted on you," Mito said, eyes distant. "Probably fed you until you burst. Yelled at you for skipping your training. Sang lullabies off-key until you fell asleep anyway."

Naruto's laughter broke through his sobs like sunlight through storm clouds. He clutched Mito's hands tightly, holding on to the moment like a life raft.

"I'm… I'm not the Nine-Tails' jinchūriki anymore."

"What do you mean, dear?"

He avoided her eyes. "I used to be. But… something happened. I died."

Mito sucked in a deep breath.

"I came back," he added quickly. "Due to… circumstances. Complicated ones I don't really understand yet. But when I died, the fox got released. I'm not carrying it anymore."

Mito stared at him for a long moment, her expression unreadable.

Naruto laughed bitterly, wiping at his eyes. "You'd think I'd be crushed, right? Losing a power like that? But when I realized I wasn't the jinchūriki anymore… I felt ecstatic. Like a weight I didn't know I was carrying was finally gone."

He looked to the floor.

"But then you told me about Kushina."

His voice trembled.

"You told me she was the Nine-Tails' jinchūriki. And I realized... if she had it before me… if she died… then that means she died entrusting me with that burden."

He looked up at her with tearful eyes, voice cracking under the weight of it all.

"And the first thing I felt after losing it… was relief."

Naruto's fists clenched. "Would she… would my mom be disappointed in me?"

Mito didn't respond with words at first. Instead, she gently sat him down and pulled his head into her lap without a word, letting him cry. Oscar chirped softly, draping himself across Naruto's chest like a cold blanket.

Mito's fingers ran through Naruto's messy golden hair, soothing and slow, like she had all the time in the world. "Oh, child…"

Her voice was gentle, filled with sorrow and pride. "No, Naruto. She wouldn't be disappointed in you. Not for a second."

Naruto sniffled.

"No mother wants her child to suffer with her burdens. She didn't entrust you with the Nine-Tails so that you'd love it, or carry it like a badge of honor. She did it because she probably had no other choice and because she believed you were strong enough to survive. To live."

She smiled down at him, brushing a lock of hair from his eyes. "And you did. You lived. You endured. And you're still standing. That's all she would've wanted."

Naruto's lip trembled as he closed his eyes, letting the grief wash over him slowly instead of drowning in it.

Mito chuckled after a moment, fingers still toying with his hair. "You remind me so much of her, you know. Not just in your chakra or your soul… but in how stubborn and loud and ridiculous you are."

"Gee, thanks."

"She used to punch walls when she was angry. Once, she kicked a hole through a training dummy and got her foot stuck. We had to pry it off with a seal breaker."

Naruto laughed weakly.

"She once swam across the entire Naka River because someone told her Uzumaki couldn't swim. Nearly drowned, but she crawled back with seaweed in her teeth and screamed, Take that, jerks!"

Naruto was openly smiling now, tears still falling.

"She was fire and thunder and chaos," Mito said softly. "But she was also warmth. And heart. You've got all of that, Naruto. You carry it better than anyone I've ever seen."

There was a pause. Naruto hesitated, eyes still closed.

"…Gran-Gran-Gran Mito?"

"Yes, dear?"

"Can I stay a little longer?"

Mito's smile faltered a little, and she looked up toward the ceiling of the memory seal space. "I wish you could. But we're reaching the limit of what I can hold together. I still need to guide you to the astral plane."

"I still have so many questions."

"I know. And I want to answer them all. But you've got a long road ahead, and I think your friends are about to wake up."

"…I'll go. But... one last thing."

"Of course."

"What was my mother's relationship to someone named Minato Namikaze?"

Mito blinked again, then smiled slowly. "Now there's a name I haven't heard in a while. I didn't see Kushina much after her late teens, but I remember she was absolutely smitten with that boy."

"Really?"

"Oh yes. She used to complain about him all the time, so naturally I knew she liked him."

Naruto tilted his head. "That makes no sense."

"It does when you're a teenager." Mito laughed. "He was quiet, talented and humble. Annoyingly polite. She used to say, That pretty boy's too perfect. Makes me want to punch him in the face. Then she'd blush for no reason."

Naruto chuckled softly, but something was slowly connecting in his brain. His eyes narrowed slightly. "Blonde… spiky hair. Blue eyes…"

Mito squinted at him, then gasped lightly. "Wait a minute. Come to think of it..."

"You think Minato might be… my father?"

Mito looked at him like the thought had just clicked for her, too. "Well, you've got his hair. And his eyes. But Kushina's personality, through and through. I don't want to say for certain, but… it would explain a lot."

Naruto stared into space, stunned. "I… might be the son of Kushina Uzumaki and Minato Namikaze…"

Then he promptly flopped back onto the floor, Oscar clambering up his chest in confusion.

Mito laughed, clapping her hands together. "Oh dear. I broke the boy."

Naruto muttered, "Yeah, definitely not processing all that at once…"

Mito bent down and kissed his forehead softly.

"You'll be fine, sweetheart. You're an Uzumaki."

Naruto smiled faintly, eyes heavy with exhaustion and heart full of new questions, grief, and hope all tangled together.

And then the genjutsu began to flicker, the memory space dimming around them like a dream at dawn.

"Go. The altar awaits. And so does your legacy."

Naruto sat up slowly, Oscar hopping onto his shoulder.

"Thank you, for everything."

Mito smiled one last time. "Now go show the world who you are, Naruto Uzumaki."

And with that, she was gone.


As night rolled around, Naruto sat silently near the campfire, the flames casting soft shadows across his face as they danced against the growing darkness. The crackle of burning wood filled the quiet, broken only by the occasional chirp of night insects or the distant rush of waves against the shoreline.

But Naruto barely heard it amidst his thoughts.

Minato Namikaze… the Fourth Hokage… might be my father.

The pieces were falling into place, and Naruto couldn't stop the ache growing in his chest.

It explained so much.

Why he was chosen to bear the Nine-Tails. Why the Fourth sealed it in him at all. Why the Hokage had insisted that the child be treated like a hero. Those weren't the words of a leader thinking of the village.

They were the desperate, hopeful wishes of a dying father.

Naruto exhaled shakily, staring at the sea as if it could offer answers. If that's true… then what does that make me?

He didn't want to believe it at first. But the more he thought about it, it was too much to be coincidence.

And now his thoughts were loud and racing: Didn't they leave anything behind for me? A letter? A message? Something? Where were their friends? They were famous. Respected. They had to have allies, comrades. Why didn't anyone come to help me when I was alone? Why did I grow up hated and ignored?

Where was Kakashi? He was the Fourth's student. Where was he back then?

What about Jiraiya? Wasn't he the Fourth's teacher? Where was he when I needed a family?


His chest tightened, breath catching in his throat as frustration and confusion threatened to overwhelm him.

"Naruto!"

The young knight blinked, snapping back to the moment.

Sakura sat across the fire, pointing. "You're burning your marshmallow."

Naruto looked down at the stick in his hand. Sure enough, the marshmallow at the tip was blackened and sizzling. He stared at it for a moment, then said flatly, "It's fine."

"Are you okay, dobe?"

"I'm fine," he muttered, flicking the charred marshmallow into his mouth. It was crunchy on the outside, gooey inside. It was bitter and sweet all at once. Kind of like how he was feeling.

"You've been spacing out a lot since we came here."

"I just have a lot on my mind."

"Like what?" Jiraiya asked casually from the other side of the fire, trying to sound nonchalant, but Naruto could hear the edge in his voice.

Meanwhile, Oscar was now stuffing twelve marshmallows into his tiny mouth at once and puffing up like a ball of fluff. Naruto couldn't help but chuckle at the little lizard's determination. He reached over, gently plucking one marshmallow from Oscar's cheeks, only to have the stubborn lizard steal it back.

That helped a little.

"You've got that blank, brooding face again," Sasuke commented, glancing at him from across the fire.

"Yeah?"

"It doesn't suit you, dobe."

Naruto rolled his eyes. "I'll have you know I'm an incredibly deep and intellectual person. What goes on in my brain is beyond your comprehension."

Oscar choked in disagreement.

"Pretty sure eighty percent of your brain is ramen."

That actually made Naruto laugh, and Sakura too. The tension around the fire cracked just a bit.

Naruto leaned back, arms behind his head as he stared at the stars. The laughter faded as quickly as it came, though, as he asked quietly, "Sensei, I know you wanted time to face your ghosts… but please, just tell me one thing. Did Konoha really stand by while Uzushiogakure was destroyed?"

Jiraiya replied with a serious look. "That kind of intel is above your rank, kid."

There was a pause.

"…It was because of a failed mission," Kakashi said suddenly, startling Jiraiya. He wasn't just talking to a genin anymore. He was talking to a boy who deserved the truth.

"During the Third Great Ninja War, Konoha was spread thin, fighting small but constant battles along every border. The Uzumaki, meanwhile, were caught in their own civil war. And that's when the invasion came."

"Okay… but how does that explain why we failed them?"

Jiraiya shifted where he sat. "You really going to tell him?"

"…He deserves to know."

Naruto tensed.

"The Uzumaki Clan discovered the invasion before it began," Kakashi explained quietly. "They managed to prepare a highest-priority scroll. A request for reinforcements from Konoha. At that time, a small Konoha squad was stationed in Uzushio, and it became their duty to deliver that message back home."

He took a slow breath. "But the squad was ambushed on the way out by the enemy."

Naruto leaned forward.

"The team leader had a choice; complete the mission, or save his comrades."

Sakura swallowed hard.

"He chose his comrades."

And the silence fell again, deeper this time. The fire crackled, the night air cold around them.

"The scroll never made it back. Uzushio was overwhelmed. By the time we even heard the village was under attack…" Kakashi exhaled slowly. "It was too late. The heart of the Uzumaki Clan was already gone."

Naruto stood slowly, his hands clenched at his sides. He didn't look at anyone as he asked, "What happened to that team leader?"

"He was shamed. Vilified. Not just by the Land of Fire… but by his own village. Even the comrades he saved turned against him. The shame… broke him." Kakashi poked at the fire with a stick, watching the sparks float away. "His skills deteriorated. He lost his will to fight. And eventually… he took his own life. He committed seppuku to preserve his son's future so the dishonor wouldn't follow him."

The fire flickered softly in the stunned silence.

Naruto stared at Kakashi, disbelief and sorrow tightening in his throat. Sasuke's expression was unreadable, but his eyes never left Kakashi. Sakura's eyes shimmered with tears, her hand over her chest.

Jiraiya didn't speak because it wasn't his story to tell.

"The man was the White fang of Konoha." Kakashi lifted his head, meeting Naruto's gaze. "… Sakumo Hatake. He was my father."

The world fell out from under them.

You could almost see the tectonic shift in Naruto's mind. …You're serious?

Kakashi didn't answer. He didn't need to.

"I'm… I'm gonna go to sleep," Naruto muttered, his voice cracked and uneven. He looked dazed, like he couldn't hold up the weight of everything he had just learned. "I just… I don't know what to think right now."

"Wait, Naruto..." Sakura started, taking a step toward him.

"I'm okay. Just… tired. Everything hit me at once. I just need to lie down."

Oscar gave a chirp and scampered after Naruto as he trudged to his sleeping bag. The boy curled up with the little lizard, pulling the blanket over both of them. Oscar nestled close, coiling around Naruto's chest in a gentle, silent hug.

The fire crackled behind them.

"Hn," Sasuke grunted, eyes still glued to the darkness beyond the firelight.

Sakura sat down again slowly, visibly shaken.

Kakashi said nothing, merely watching the boy disappear into sleep, or at least into silence.

"He took it better than I did," Kakashi said softly, after a while.

"You never had someone to explain it to you," Jiraiya replied.

They let the fire burn.

Let the stars listen.

Let the ghosts of fallen clans and shattered legacies drift with the wind.

And Naruto dreamed of a red-haired woman with a loving voice and a man with blonde hair; two faces he might never fully know, but who, tonight, felt just a little closer.


Morning came quiet and still, save for the soft rustle of waves hitting the shore. Team 7 stirred one by one, stretching out of their sleeping bags, only to find one conspicuously empty.

Naruto's.

A folded note rested neatly atop his bedroll, the handwriting messy but familiar. Gone to Lordran. Need to clear my head and maybe find more clues about the Uzumaki stuff. Don't wait up.

Jiraiya frowned deeply, the lines on his face tightening. "I don't like this. Not one bit."

Sakura yawned. "Like what? You think he's in danger?"

"I don't know. But with that boy? I'm more worried about him doing something. Like… not coming back."

Sasuke, who was calmly packing his gear, glanced over with his usual cool expression. "I wouldn't worry about it. Naruto's stronger than you think. If he survived being alone his whole life, he can survive anything else that comes with the truth."

"Relax, Jiraiya-sama. Naruto's the type who runs off to think, not to vanish. He'll come back when he's ready."

Sure enough, by the afternoon, the blond knucklehead came trudging back into camp, Oscar perched on his shoulder. He looked tired but calm, which only made Jiraiya more suspicious.

Over a fire-roasted fish meal that Jiraiya had prepared, Naruto spoke between bites. "So, uh, I asked around in Lordran. The answers I got were kinda weird. Something about how the spiral of Uzushiogakure and the fox's seal are mirrors."

Everyone stared at him.

"That's… vague."

Naruto shrugged. "Pervy Sage, finding anything not vague in Lordran is like trying to find a straight noodle in a bowl of ramen. It just doesn't exist."

He reached into his bag and pulled out two worn pages. One looked like a half-finished map of Uzushiogakure, the other was an unevenly drawn version of the Eight Trigram Divination Seal Formula.

There were a few obvious mistakes on both.

"You redrew these from memory?"

"Yeah," Naruto said, feigning nonchalance. "I've been trying to see if there's a connection. The patterns are kind of similar if you squint hard enough."

Jiraiya crossed his arms, watching him carefully. The boy was hiding something, that much was clear.

Before he could say anything, Sakura's eyes lit up with curiosity. "Wait a second. What if the Eight Trigram Seal isn't just a sealing formula, but a map? Look, if we overlay it on the village layout—"

She took a brush and began sketching over Naruto's map, aligning the outer lines of the seal with various points across the ruins.

Naruto grinned, all enthusiasm and praise. "Sakura, that's genius! I think you might actually be onto something here."

"Thanks!"

She was onto nothing. Not even close.

Naruto hid his amusement well. This was exactly what he wanted, to send them chasing ghosts while he went straight to the altar of beginnings alone. The less they knew about that place, the better.

Jiraiya, still skeptical, tapped the edge of the map. "I don't know… this feels too random. I can't imagine Minato leaving behind something like this."

Naruto shrugged, feigning uncertainty. "Maybe. It could mean nothing, or it could point to something we're missing. Either way, it's worth checking out."

"Alright. Seven of these spots fall in the red zones. I'll handle those myself. They're too dangerous for you kids."

"What about the center?"

Jiraiya frowned and unrolled his own copy of the map. His finger traced the inked spiral until it landed on the central point. Unlike the rest of the diagram, it was completely blank, just an empty space ringed by thick patches of red zones.

"I think if I can get a good vantage point, I'll send a few shadow clones ahead to scout it out. If it looks promising, we can all go."

Jiraiya looked up from the map, studying the boy's face. The eagerness was there, barely masked beneath a layer of forced calm. Naruto wasn't just offering; rather, he was angling. Whatever lay in that blank space, he wanted it.

"Hmm," Jiraiya hummed, eyes narrowing ever so slightly.

Kakashi, who had been watching the exchange silently, caught the look.

"That's very responsible of you, Naruto," Jiraiya said at last, rolling the map back up. "But something about this doesn't sit right with me. The center's surrounded by red zones for a reason."

"All the more reason to send clones first, right? I won't do anything reckless. Promise."

Jiraiya snorted. "You saying that doesn't make me feel better, brat."

"Come on, Pervy Sage. You think I'm that bad?"

"Yes," Jiraiya and Kakashi said in unison.

"You guys have no faith."

Jiraiya sighed, rubbing the back of his neck before finally conceding. "Fine. Kakashi, you and Naruto will check out the center. But keep your distance until you're sure it's safe. I don't want either of you setting off some ancient death trap or waking up a seal we can't put back to sleep."

Kakashi nodded, his tone easy. "Understood. We'll move carefully."

"Good. Sakura, Sasuke... you two take the eighth point on the outer ring. It's close enough to the safe zone that you shouldn't run into anything too nasty."

The two genin nodded, already preparing their gear.

As the teams began to split, Jiraiya gave Kakashi one last meaningful look.

Watch the boy. Whatever's in that center… it's calling to him.


The eighth point of Uzushio was once a place once meant for training.

Sakura and Sasuke stepped through the cracked stone archway that led into what must've been a training ground centuries ago.

At the center of the clearing stood a broken statue.

It was half-swallowed by ivy, its once-polished stone skin now dulled by time and rain. What remained of the figure showed a tall warrior frozen mid-strike, a long spear clutched in both hands. The tip was missing. Only one eye of the statue remained intact, smooth and expressionless, staring eternally toward the horizon.

There was nothing else to note in the area.

Sakura kicked a pebble ahead of her and watched it bounce into a pile of shattered brick. "Kind of overwhelming, isn't it?"

"What is?"

"Everything we're learning about Naruto," she said, her voice soft with disbelief. "I mean… he's always been this chaotic, loud idiot, but it turns out his past is..." She stopped, searching for the word. "...bigger. He's the ex-jinchūriki of the Nine-Tails. A member of the Uzumaki Clan. He's… important."

"Hn."

Sakura gave him a sidelong glance. "Don't you think that matters?"

"No."

"Seriously?"

"It doesn't change anything. He's still the same moron who couldn't do the clone jutsu two months ago yet he has grown strong enough to save the wave."

"Yeah, but… it makes you think, right? Like maybe there was something in him all along."

"He didn't need a pedigree for that," Sasuke said simply. "People keep looking for reasons to explain him. But Naruto's strength? That's his. He built it."

"Maybe you two aren't so different."

Sasuke raised an eyebrow. "We're completely different."

"You say that," she said with a knowing tone, "but look at it. You're both from powerful clans that were nearly destroyed. You both carry something you didn't ask for. You both act like you aren't alone, but… you are."

"You've been writing poetry, huh?"

Sakura gave him a little shove on the shoulder, smiling. "I'm serious."

Sasuke looked forward again as the wind tugged at his hair.

Sakura waited, watching him.

"He's a loudmouth idiot who never knows when to quit. He dives headfirst into danger like death's just a rumor. He's stubborn to the point of madness when it comes to doing what he thinks is right. But that... that's Naruto. Not the jinchūriki of the Nine-Tails, not the heir of some lost clan. Those things are just fragments of him, not the whole picture. It doesn't matter if he's the son of a Hokage or a goddamn bowl of noddles. I know exactly who that knucklehead is."

He paused, hands still in his pockets as he stared out at the wreckage of the past.

"…He's someone I know I can rely on. Someone who won't die on me."

Sakura's eyes softened. "You're getting weirdly sentimental lately."

"Hn. Must be the ocean air."

There was a pause as they stepped over the remains of a broken bridge, water glinting below.

"You gonna tell him you said all that?" Sakura teased.

"Not unless I want him crying and hugging me for the next three days." Sasuke side-eyed her with a half-annoyed, half-embarrassed look. "Which is why you're not going to tell him."

She grinned. "Only if you answer one little question first."

"No."

"Aw, come on... just tell me how you feel about me." She gave him big, sparkling eyes, clasping her hands under her chin like an overly dramatic heroine. "It can't be that hard, right?"

"…You're annoying," Sasuke said flatly.

Sakura giggled. "You already said that last month. Come on, something new."

He smirked faintly. "Fine. You're ugly."

Sakura gasped, then laughed. "You know, I've paid Naruto to fix my axe, and it's conveniently in reach right now."

"I think I hear the Nine-Tails barking," Sasuke said quickly, bolting in the opposite direction down the ruined path.

"GET BACK HERE, SASUKE!" Sakura shouted, chasing after him with a grin on her face and vengeance in her step, her voice echoing through the empty halls of a lost village.

And for a moment, as the shadows of their laughter drifted through the ruins, it felt like Uzushio breathed again, through the bonds of friends.


Meanwhile, Kakashi and Naruto made their way through the overgrown cliffs.

Their goal was simple: reach the vantage point high enough to see the center of the village. The climb had been long, but when they finally reached the ridge, the view made both of them pause.

The heart of Uzushiogakure lay below, and it was a wreck.

The Altar of Beginning was nothing but a crater of broken stone and shattered walls. Great slabs of rock were strewn across the clearing like the aftermath of a battle. Charred marks scarred the ground, and even from afar, the air shimmered faintly with unstable chakra.

"It's a mess," Kakashi muttered, lowering Naruto's binoculars. "Looks like someone intentionally blew it up."

Naruto nodded grimly, as it made sense. If the altar was that important, the clan probably destroyed it themselves. Better broken than stolen.

The boy squinted, focusing his vision. His hawkeyes caught faint etchings along the ruined walls; small, almost invisible seals scribbled like desperate handwriting. They pulsed faintly with chakra, the same pattern he'd seen before in the memory graveyard.

Naruto figured that those seals would've allowed Gran-Gran-Gran Mito's soul to get to the Altar of Beginning.

"Did your hawkeyes pick up anything?"

Naruto didn't respond right away. He took a deep breath and exhaled slowly, letting his focus shift from the physical to something deeper.

What he saw with Soulsight made his stomach twist.

The entire landscape changed before his eyes. The ruins vanished, replaced by a glowing web of chakra lines and intricate symbols woven into the very earth. At the heart of it all, he saw a massive seal, far larger than anything human hands could ever hope to create.

The design was breathtaking and terrifying.

A vast spiral lay at the center, pulsing faintly with dormant energy. From it, circular patterns spread outward in concentric layers, each one etched with foreign symbols that glowed faint blue under his gaze. A vertical line bisected the entire pattern, linking all the rings together like a spine. Along that line, smaller spirals—each one distinct—shimmered like chakra nodes.

Thin hooks and branching symbols extended outward, forming connections between the rings, their purpose precise and deliberate. It wasn't just a seal. It was a map, a system, a network linking the astral and physical planes together.

Oh, you've got to be kidding me… Naruto felt a bead of sweat slide down his forehead as the weight of what he had just seen hit him.

A village that doubled as a seal to another plane of existence? That was beyond anything he'd ever imagined. And now he was supposed to fix the door to this place.

Man… my ancestors were crazy. And Gran-Gran-Gran is insane if she thinks I can fix this somehow.

A crooked grin tugged at his lips.

Good thing I've got a few tricks from Lordran. Plenty of magic and shiny junk that can fix almost anything.

He blinked once, letting his Soulsight fade away. The glowing web of energy vanished, and the ruins returned to simple, broken stone.

Naruto turned back to Kakashi, forcing a shrug. "Yeah, I got nothing. Guess we got the wrong spot after all."

Kakashi hummed softly, clearly not buying it. He tucked his hands into his pockets and started walking. "Naruto," he said casually, "are you hiding something from me?"

"Sensei, we're shinobi. Hiding stuff kinda is the job description."

"Fair enough. Just make sure you know what you're doing."

Naruto watched him walk ahead. For a second, he thought about saying something—about telling Kakashi the truth about the altar.

But the memory of that mysterious figure of the hawk flashed in his mind. The deal they made.

It's not like the hawk will know if I tell Kakashi, Naruto thought for a moment.

"Hey," Kakashi called from ahead. He hadn't turned around, but his voice softened. "You don't have to tell me everything right now. Just… keep yourself safe, alright?"

"I will, sensei. It's complicated, ya know?"

Kakashi gave a small nod. "Trust me, I can imagine. Everyone's got their secrets, and some of them weigh a little heavier than others."

Naruto glanced at him then, wondering if Kakashi was thinking about the Fourth Hokage and about the truth of their connection.

He didn't press.

"Maybe one day," Naruto said finally, falling into step beside him, "when we're both ready… we'll share a few of those secrets."

"I'll hold you to that, Naruto."

"Same here, sensei."

They walked for a while in a comfortable silence.

"Hey, Sensei… can I ask you something weird?"

"With you, Naruto, that could mean just about anything. But sure, go ahead."

"Do you think your father was a good person?"

"Yes. Yes… I think he was."

Naruto nodded, eyes thoughtful.

Kakashi exhaled quietly. "I'm sorry that my father's choice led to something so tragic," he said, voice low. "But even with everything that happened… I can't see him as a villain."

"I don't expect you to," Naruto said. Then, with that natural bluntness that always managed to cut straight through the heart of things, he added, "What kind of man was Papa Hatake?"

Kakashi stopped mid-step, blinking once before a small smile tugged at his lips. "Papa Hatake?"

"Yeah. Sounds friendlier than 'The White Fang.'"

Kakashi shook his head slightly, but there was a warmth in his tone. "He was a simple man. Honest. Quiet. He didn't care about titles or glory. He loved his home, his comrades… and he loved me more than I probably deserved. For all his skill, he was the most humble man I've ever known."

Naruto smiled faintly. He could hear the pride behind Kakashi's calm words. "How strong was he, really?"

"Strong enough to make the Sannin nervous."

Naruto's jaw dropped, eyes shining. "No way. That's awesome!"

"Yeah," Kakashi said softly, though his voice carried a trace of something bittersweet.

"You sound like you miss him a lot."

"I do." Kakashi's voice grew quieter. "There are days when I still hear his voice. But… it's complicated." He hesitated, then asked, "You don't despise him, do you?"

Naruto looked confused. "Why would I? I mean, I don't even know the guy, but from what you said, he sounds like someone I'd want to have ramen with."

Kakashi blinked, caught off guard by the honesty in the boy's tone. "You don't blame him? Not even a little?"

"Sensei, I'm not dumb. There's no way one man could be the reason Uzushiogakure fell. We were already a target long before that. My clan was powerful, and power makes enemies. Let's say Sakumo-san completed his mission. Maybe Konoha sends reinforcements just in time. Maybe they push the invaders back. But then what? Another army comes later. Or the same one comes stronger."

He paused, his tone calm and almost too mature for his age. "That kind of thing doesn't end because of one decision. It's bigger than one person. Bigger than one choice. So blaming him…" Naruto shrugged. "It just doesn't make sense to me. He already paid a heavy enough price for trying to do what he thought was right."

Kakashi's steps slowed until he stopped completely. For a long moment, he said nothing. Then he murmured, "That's more understanding than most grown men ever managed to show him. Maybe if they had… I wouldn't have come home to find him dead on that day."

His voice trembled slightly at the end.

Naruto's expression softened. Without saying anything, he reached out and grabbed Kakashi's hand, giving it a small, firm squeeze.

"I'm fine," Kakashi said quickly, though his tone betrayed him. "I just… hate that memory."

"Yeah. I get it. Some memories don't fade no matter how much you want them to."

For a while, they stood there, the sound of the wind filling the silence.

"You know, I think Papa Hatake would've liked me."

"Oh? And why's that?"

"Because he and I are alike," Naruto said simply. "We're both humble and strong."

"Humble, huh? You sure about that, Naruto?"

Naruto grinned. "Okay, maybe not all the time. But we both care about our friends. We'd risk our lives for them without thinking twice."

"That… sounds about right."

Naruto's voice grew quieter. "And we both made choices we thought were right… even if they ended up making a bigger mess."

Kakashi stopped walking for a moment. The breeze tugged at his flak jacket as he looked out over the broken horizon of Uzushio's ruins. "Maybe," he said quietly. "But your mess ended better than my father's. You brought hope to a place that didn't have any left. He… didn't get that chance."

"I don't blame your father for anything, ya know. He was just one domino in a whole line that was already falling."

Kakashi let out a slow breath. "Thank you. I never carried his sins, but… hearing that still means something. More than you probably realize."

Naruto kicked a loose pebble, sending it skipping down the dirt path. "I guess lately I've been thinking about stuff like that. About being angry and being bitter. They're not the same thing. I think I can live with being angry. But I don't want to be bitter anymore."

He smiled faintly, the kind of small, honest smile that felt older than he looked, and nudged Kakashi's shoulder with his own. "Besides, if your dad raised you, he couldn't have been that bad, right?"

"You've got a strange way of comforting people, you know that?"

"Yeah, but it works," Naruto said, shrugging.

"It does," Kakashi admitted. He looked at Naruto then, really looked at him, and reached out to rest a hand briefly on the boy's shoulder. "He would've liked you, Naruto. You're exactly the kind of person my father wished there were more of in this world."

"I don't know about that, sensei. I'm one of a kind."

Kakashi chuckled softly and reached out, ruffling the boy's hair with an almost brotherly gesture.

"Yeah. You really are, Naruto."


Author's Note

Well, here we are again. Some of you love this part, some of you probably hate it, but either way, let's dive in.

Q: Why did I link Sakumo Hatake to the destruction of Uzushiogakure?

Yeah, that plot twist probably caught a few of you off guard, and that's exactly what I was going for.

Here's the thing: Sakumo's suicide in canon always felt undercooked to me.

I get what Kishimoto was aiming for thematically as the tragedy of a man crushed by the hypocrisy of the shinobi world, someone who did the right thing and still got destroyed for it. It's meant to reflect how harsh and morally twisted that society is.

But from a writing standpoint? It doesn't land. We never meet Sakumo. We never see the mission. We never feel the consequences. We're just told, "He saved his comrades, failed a mission, everyone hated him, and he killed himself." That's it. There's no emotional weight behind it because we have no context.

So I started asking myself: how big was this mission? What could possibly cause such widespread condemnation, not just from the higher-ups, but from the entire village, including the comrades he saved?

Think about that. Even the people whose lives he saved turned against him. That tells us whatever mission he abandoned must have been big. And when you look at the worldbuilding we do have, there's a huge blank spot that could fit right in there: the destruction of Uzushiogakure.

Canon tells us Uzushio was allied with Konoha through the Senju-Uzumaki bond. Their sealing techniques were unrivaled. And one day, they were just destroyed. And Konoha, which was their supposed sister village, didn't send help or maybe they did but kishimoto never bothered exploring this side of canon.

So I connected the dots.

What if Sakumo's mission was tied to aiding Uzushiogakure? What if his decision to save his comrades allowed the invasion to succeed?

That one change recontextualizes everything.

It turns Sakumo's failed mission into a true tragedy of scale, not just political fallout, but the loss of an entire nation. Suddenly, the hatred and shame make sense. The world saw him not as a hero who saved his friends, but as the man whose choice led to the death of an entire allied clan.

Now, about his death. Canon shows him committing suicide, but if you look closely, it reads a lot more like seppuku.

For those unfamiliar, seppuku is a form of ritual suicide in Japanese culture, historically performed by samurai to restore honor after a perceived disgrace or failure.

So if we frame Sakumo's death through that lens, it makes perfect sense. He wasn't just ending his life out of guilt; he was also trying to protect Kakashi from inheriting his shame and to restore his family's honor. And if you add the Uzushio connection, his suicide becomes even more layered. He wasn't just a broken man, rather he was someone crushed by the weight of something massive, something no one man could fix, but everyone blamed him for anyway.


Well, that was my attempt at adding some nuance to the whole Uzushiogakure destruction storyline while also fixing something that's always bugged me in canon.

The whole idea wasn't just about rewriting canon for shock value. In canon, the Uzumaki's fall is brushed over, and Sakumo's death is this vague moral lesson that never really gets explored. Tying the two together gives both stories more purpose and emotional grounding.

It also naturally deepens Kakashi and Naruto's relationship. They're two sons shaped by legacies they didn't ask for, both living in the shadow of men who made impossible choices.

Their conversation wasn't just about forgiveness; it was about recognition. Naruto doesn't excuse the past, but he understands it. And that empathy, especially coming from someone who's lived through isolation, loss, and responsibility beyond his years, hits harder than simple absolution.

I wanted this moment to feel like a turning point for both of them. Naruto finally gets a glimpse of the humanity behind Konoha's mistakes, and Kakashi gets to hear that his father's story wasn't just one of failure.

If that came across as logical, consistent, and meaningful within the story so far, then I'd say it did what it was meant to.


That's It… For Now.

And if you can't wait for the next update, the next chapter drops on Oct 22th! You can read ahead to Chapter 106 on Patreon.

As always, I want to thank you all for taking the time to read, comment, and follow along with this story. Your feedback means more than you know, and it helps push me to make each chapter bigger, sharper, and more true to the worlds of Naruto and Dark Souls.

Until next time, Praise the Sun.

—Adam
 
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