Splash.
The sound was a dull thud that broke the dawn's silence. A water balloon, instead of bursting, slipped from the hand of one of Naruto's clones and fell into the puddle already covering most of the inn's backyard.
Splash.
Another clone, concentrating so hard his eyes were crossed, lost his grip. The balloon shot upward and landed on his head, drenching him.
Splash.
One more broke prematurely, spraying three other clones who immediately started arguing.
"My turn! You're doing it wrong, you're just pushing!" one clone yelled, pointing an accusing finger at another.
"No, I'm not! You're spinning it like you're scrambling eggs! You have no finesse!" the second retorted.
"Hey, shut up! The boss is gonna dispel us if we keep failing!" a third intervened, trying to impose a non-existent order.
The original Naruto sat in the center of the chaos, shivering. The cold from the water and the exhaustion from being awake since before dawn had chilled him to the bone. His orange jacket, now a dark, heavy shade, clung to his skin. The pain in his shoulder was a dull throb, a constant reminder of the urgency that drove him.
"Everybody shut up!" his voice came out hoarse and rough, laden with frustration. "I need to concentrate!"
The inn's back door slid open, and Shizune appeared. Her face was etched with genuine concern. She carried a dry towel over her arm and a steaming rice ball on a small tray. Tonton, the piglet, poked his snout out from behind her legs, sniffing the air suspiciously.
"Naruto, please, stop for a moment," her voice was gentle, a balm in the midst of the clones' cacophony. "You're going to get sick. You've been at this since sunrise. Eat something."
Naruto didn't even look at her. His eyes, bloodshot from lack of sleep and concentration, were fixed on the water balloon he held in his hand. The rubber surface trembled with the rhythm of his irregular pulse.
"I can't, Shizune," he answered, his voice tense. "Thanks, but I can't. If I stop now... I'll lose my momentum. I have a promise to keep."
A mocking, cynical smirk appeared in the doorway.
"A promise? You call it a promise, I call it a spectacular waste of time."
Tsunade stood leaning against the doorframe. She held a bottle of sake by the neck, swinging it lazily. Her blonde hair was a mess, and her amber eyes, though clouded by a hangover, hadn't lost their predatory glint.
"Still haven't given up, kid? I figured you'd have drowned in your own incompetence by now."
Naruto turned. The exhaustion and failure hadn't managed to extinguish the defiant flame in his eyes. A tight smile, almost a grimace, formed on his face.
"Never! Granny Tsunade, one of the Sannin, is watching me! I can't fail in front of a legend!" his voice regained a sliver of his usual energy. "This is exciting! When I master it, you'll teach me an even more amazing jutsu, right?!"
Tsunade let out a dry laugh. She walked closer, her steps silent on the wet wood of the porch. The smell of sake preceded her.
"Exciting? The only exciting thing here will be seeing how long it takes you to admit defeat," she said, stopping a few feet from him. She surveyed the flooded yard, the army of drenched clones, and the shivering boy at the center. It was a pathetic scene. "Tell me, what's the big rush? You think becoming Hokage will make you immune to stupidity?"
The insult seemed to break something inside Naruto. The facade of optimism crumbled. His frustration, his fear, the true, heavy reason for his journey, finally burst forth.
"This isn't just about being Hokage!" his voice was serious, deep, stripped of all childishness. The change was so abrupt that Shizune flinched. Tsunade raised an eyebrow. "This is about my teammate! Sakura!"
The name hung in the air, charged with an unexpected weight. Naruto's clones, as if sensing the gravity of the moment, stopped arguing and fell silent, watching the original.
Naruto stood up. His body trembled, but his gaze was steel.
"She has incredible strength," he continued, his voice vibrating with absolute conviction. "A strength that could rival yours one day. But she has no one to teach her how to control it! No one who understands what it's like to have that much power! I'm doing this so you'll train her! So she won't have to carry that power alone! That's my motivation right now!"
His teammate?
The thought flashed through Tsunade's mind. The image of Jiraiya, always looking out for her and Orochimaru, always trying to hold the pieces of their broken team together, flickered in her memory, an unwelcome ghost.
This idiot... he's enduring all this humiliation... for someone else? Damn idealists... they're all the same.
The irritation inside her warred with her cynicism. The memory of Nawaki, of Dan, both with that same stupid, unbreakable light in their eyes, turned her stomach. It was supposed to be fun watching the kid fail. But now, it had become annoying. It had become... familiar.
She sighed, a sound of pure exasperation.
"You're a lost cause," she said, her voice harsh. She approached, skirting the main puddle, and stopped right in front of Naruto. She looked him up and down, this drenched, shivering boy who refused to fall. "Listen up, because I'm not repeating myself. Idiot!"
The word was a blow.
"You're still thinking of it as two separate forces. 'Power' and 'rotation'!" she made a sharp gesture with her hand, as if swatting a fly. "It's not a push and a tornado. That's what a brute would do. You have to make the chakra spin as it flows from your body to your hand. Don't create a storm outside, create the whirlpool inside. The power is the rotation. The rotation is the power. They're the same thing! Stop thinking and feel it!"
Naruto's eyes widened. Tsunade's words, so simple and direct, cut through the chaos of his thoughts.
The power is the rotation...
An image appeared in his mind: a steaming bowl of ramen at Ichiraku. Him, stirring the noodles with his chopsticks, creating a small vortex in the center of the broth. The motion wasn't forced. It was natural. The whirlpool wasn't something he added to the broth; it was the broth itself, in motion.
"Like the whirlpool in a bowl of ramen when you stir it..." he whispered, the realization lighting up his face. "I've got it!"
Without waiting for a reply, he sat down again and dispelled all but one of his clones. The sudden silence was almost as startling as the previous noise.
"Hey, you," he said to the clone. "Put your hand on mine. Don't push, just... flow."
The clone nodded, understanding the strange request.
Naruto held the water balloon in his right palm. The clone placed his left hand over Naruto's. They closed their eyes.
There was no explosion of chakra. This time, it was different. The original Naruto didn't try to spin anything. He focused solely on the feeling of the clone's chakra flowing into his hand, a steady, controlled stream.
Then, with his own energy, he didn't try to create a second current. He tried to divert the main flow, to create a curve within it. It wasn't force against force. It was control. It was finesse.
The water balloon began to tremble. The rubber surface tightened. Inside, the water stopped sloshing erratically. It began to spin. Slowly at first, then faster, forming a perfect, stable vortex.
"We're doing it..." the clone whispered, his voice full of awe.
Tsunade watched with her arms crossed. The sake bottle dangled from her fingers, forgotten. Her expression was unreadable, but her eyes were fixed on the small water balloon, on the miracle brewing inside it.
"Faster..." Naruto muttered, concentrating.
The rotation accelerated. The small whirlpool became a miniature tornado. The internal pressure increased exponentially.
And then, it happened.
The detonation wasn't a simple pop. The water balloon didn't break; it disintegrated. The water didn't splash; it exploded outward in a shockwave that sprayed Naruto, the clone, and Shizune, who had moved closer without realizing it.
The clone dispelled with a triumphant smile.
The original Naruto fell backward onto the soaked ground, his arms spread wide. He was completely exhausted, his chakra reserves nearly empty. But on his dirty, wet face was a smile so wide and radiant it seemed to light up the entire yard.
"I... I did it...!" he panted, his voice a triumphant whisper. "I did it, believe it!"
Shizune was the first to react. The worry on her face was replaced by pure, genuine joy. She ran to him.
"You did it, Naruto! That was incredible!" she said, helping him sit up. Tonton ran to his side, sniffing his hand curiously.
Tsunade didn't move. She remained in the same spot, her back to them. She raised the sake bottle to her lips and took a long drink.
"Hmph. Don't get excited, kid," she said, her voice trying to sound dismissive, but it lacked its usual bite. "That was just the first step. The easiest one."
She turned and headed back toward the inn. But before she disappeared through the door, an almost imperceptible smile formed on her lips.
Shizune leaned toward Naruto as she helped him to his feet.
"Don't mind her," she whispered, a knowing glint in her eyes. "She's impressed. I think she even had a little fun."
Naruto looked at the door where Tsunade had gone. His smile softened, losing its euphoria and gaining something deeper.
"I know."
He leaned on Shizune, suddenly feeling the weight of the whole day. The pain in his shoulder returned, and every muscle in his body protested. But the feeling of accomplishment was a warm fire that kept him on his feet.
"Now..." he said, his voice sounding distant with exhaustion. "You think the kitchen's still open? I could eat ten bowls of ramen!"
Shizune laughed, a clear, happy sound in the now-silent yard.
"I don't think the inn's kitchen is ready for your appetite, Naruto. But I know a place in town. Old man Katsu is a grump, but his pork broth is almost as good as your Ichiraku."
Naruto lit up.
"Almost as good! That's a challenge I have to accept! Let's go, Shizune!"
"Wait, wait," she stopped him, laughing. "First, get into some dry clothes. Tsunade is right about one thing—if you catch a cold, all this effort will have been for nothing."
Naruto looked down at his soaked clothes as if just noticing he was wet.
"Oh, right!"
As Naruto headed up to his room, stumbling on the stairs from exhaustion, Shizune entered the main hall. Tsunade was sitting by the window, staring unseen at the street, the half-empty sake bottle on the table.
"Lady Tsunade," Shizune said softly.
"What?" the reply was sharp.
"That boy... he's special, don't you think?"
Tsunade didn't answer. She took a swig directly from the bottle.
"He reminds me of them," Shizune continued, her voice barely a whisper. "Of Nawaki... of Dan. That same... stubbornness. That way of believing in something so strongly it forces you to believe too."
"Don't say their names," Tsunade's voice was a low, dangerous growl. "This kid isn't like them. He's just an idiot with more chakra than he knows what to do with. He won't last."
"He's not fighting for a title," Shizune insisted, approaching the table. "He said it. He's fighting for his teammate. So you'll train her. It's not selfishness. It's... loyalty."
Tsunade looked at her, and for an instant, the cynical facade cracked, revealing an old, deep pain. "Loyalty is the fastest way to find a grave, Shizune. You know that better than anyone."
She stood up abruptly, the chair scraping against the wooden floor.
"I'm going for a walk. And if that loudmouthed kid looks for me, tell him to get ready. The next step won't be so easy. I'm going to make him wish he'd never found me."
She left the inn, leaving Shizune with a heavy heart. She knew Tsunade's harshness was a shield. And she knew Naruto's stubbornness was the only force that might have a chance of breaking it.
A short while later, Naruto came downstairs, dressed in dry clothes and with his energy renewed by the promise of food. Shizune was waiting with a smile.
"Ready for the ramen adventure, Shizune?"
"Ready, Naruto. But I'm warning you, old man Katsu doesn't give out extra toppings as easily as they do at Ichiraku. You'll have to earn them."
"Challenge accepted!"
They walked through the bustling streets of Tanzaku. The city, which had once seemed a labyrinth of vice, now, under the midday sun, had an air of normalcy. Naruto, freed from the pressure of training, was back to his old self, pointing everything out with a child's curiosity.
"Look, Shizune! A mask shop! You think they have a Kyubi one? That'd be super intimidating!"
"I don't think that's a good idea, Naruto..."
"And over there! A dango stand! I wonder if they're as good as the ones in Konoha? We have to try them later!"
Shizune found herself smiling. Naruto's energy was exhausting, but also... refreshing. It was a simplicity she had forgotten existed.
Katsu's ramen stand was a small place tucked into an alley, with barely four stools. An old man with a scar over his eyebrow and a perpetually grumpy expression eyed them over a steaming pot.
"What do you want?" he grunted.
"Two of your best pork ramen, old man!" Naruto exclaimed, taking a seat with a grin.
The old man looked him up and down.
"A Konoha ninja. Don't bring me any trouble, kid."
"I only bring a legendary appetite!"
As they ate, the silence was broken by Shizune.
"Naruto," she began, her tone more serious. "Your teammate... Sakura. Is she really as strong as you said?"
Naruto loudly slurped a noodle.
"Stronger! She's amazing, Shizune! She has perfect chakra control. Perfect! She could perform surgery with a kunai if she wanted. And her punches... man, she hits hard! She made a whole forest shake once, believe it!"
The exaggeration was obvious, but the admiration in his voice was completely genuine.
"But it's... new to her," he continued, his tone softening. "Sometimes, I think she's scared of her own power. That's why she needs Granny Tsunade. To teach her that strength isn't just for destroying. It can also be for protecting, for healing."
Shizune listened, fascinated. He didn't speak of Sakura as a weapon or a tool, but as a person. With fears, with potential.
"And your other teammate?" she asked.
Naruto paused with his chopsticks halfway to his mouth.
"Oh... Sasuke," his tone shifted, becoming more complex. "He's a genius. Sometimes he's an arrogant jerk, but he's the strongest of us. He's fast, smart, and makes everything look easy. I hate him sometimes. But he's my teammate."
The final statement was simple, unadorned.
"You sound very proud of them," Shizune said with a smile.
"Of course! They're my team. They're my family," Naruto declared, as if it were the most obvious truth in the universe. "It doesn't matter if Sasuke's a jerk or if Sakura punches me for saying stupid stuff. When it matters, I know they'll be there. And I'll be there for them."
Shizune fell silent, moved. This boy, who had grown up alone, understood the meaning of family and team in a way deeper than many veteran shinobi. He understood what Tsunade had lost and refused to find again.
"That's... very noble, Naruto."
"It's not noble, it's the truth," he said, finishing his bowl with a final, loud slurp. "Another one, please!"
Old man Katsu, who had been listening silently, placed another bowl in front of him without a word, but the scowl on his face seemed to soften just a bit.
Later, as they were returning to the inn, with Naruto complaining that he was about to explode, Shizune felt lighter. Hope, a feeling that had been buried under years of debt and running, was beginning to sprout again.
Perhaps, she thought, watching the boy who was now trying to teach Tonton how to make the ram hand sign, this loudmouthed idiot was exactly what they needed. Not a savior, not a hero. Just a reminder that even in the deepest darkness, the people you care about were worth fighting for.
When they arrived, they found Tsunade at the door, her arms crossed. Her hangover seemed to have vanished, replaced by a lucid irritation.
"About time," she said, her gaze fixed on Naruto. "You're done lazing around. The second step of the training begins now. And I'm warning you, kid, this one is going to hurt."
Naruto grinned, a smile of pure excitement.
"Anytime, Granny Tsunade! I'm ready for anything!"
Tsunade looked at him, and for an instant, her expression softened. "No, you're not," she said, her voice an almost inaudible whisper. "But you will be."
She turned on her heel and led them back to the now-dry yard. The promise was no longer a bet. It was a contract. And the training to forge a future Hokage, and perhaps, to heal a broken Sannin, had just truly begun.