Ninpocho Chronicles

Ninpocho Chronicles is a fantasy-ish setting storyline, set in an alternate universe World of Ninjas, where the Naruto and Boruto series take place. This means that none of the canon characters exists, or existed here.

Each ninja starts from the bottom and start their training as an Academy Student. From there they develop abilities akin to that of demigods as they grow in age and experience.

Along the way they gain new friends (or enemies), take on jobs and complete contracts and missions for their respective villages where their training and skill will be tested to their limits.

The sky is the limit as the blank page you see before you can be filled with countless of adventures with your character in the game.

This is Ninpocho Chronicles.

Current Ninpocho Chronicles Time:

Rat Trap [S-Rank; Flashback]

Shiruko Makoto

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Fourteen Years Old

Makoto wasn't quite the youngest full Warden ever, but he sure as hell was south of the average age. Kanashimi had told him not to get a swelled head over it, but honestly? This felt like a pretty good accomplishment. Saito hadn't even wanted him to take the rank-up exam yet, but he'd sure proved he deserved to.

To the point he was being assigned an actual mission barely a week out of it. Normally, that took longer. They had to have seen something in him, right? Right. He had some kind of talent (or, equally likely, intelligence) that they considered important for this particular mission.

And no one on his team would dare call him the annoying rookie, not with his family. They might be thinking it, but he didn't really care about that.

"...so we'll be tailing him from the docks," the man debriefing them finished. Makoto hadn't bothered to remember his name, since he wouldn't be on the mission with them. Anyway, if it was important he'd hear it later. "Any questions?"

One of the others, a tough-looking twenty-something called Rokuro, spoke up. "How do we know he's not going through the pirates for the shit he doesn't want us to see?"

"Either way he has to go to the docks," one of the others, a silver-haired woman named Shinju said, idly twirling a kunai on one finger. "It's not like there's anywhere else to park a boat around here, and it isn't as if he can manage to get any type of illicit cargo overland from the other coast." There was a distinct tone of disdain there, like she felt Rokuro wasn't worth her time.

The man laughed, seemingly unbothered, and scratched his chin. "Oh, right. Yeah, I knew that."

The other teammate, an older teenage girl--eighteen or so?--just smirked and shook her head, dark pink ponytail bouncing as she did. He thought her name was Hana or something else flowery.

"Anything else?" Their superior glanced at him, then at Hana, neither of whom said anything. "All right. Get out there, and see what's going on."

The four of them left the briefing area, walking quietly to the preparation area. Several times, Rokuro would cast a glance at one of them and then make like he wanted to say something, but the persistent sneer on Shinju's face stopped him.

Finally, they made it to the Warden's prep area, or rather one of several. It was a small room off the second hallway of the Wardens' training area, tables of equipment set out for those who did not have their own weapons or who needed arrows or bolts restocked and could not afford to do so themselves. Not that anyone on a Warden's salary should have been unable to afford ammunition, but some people were cheap.

Makoto did not need any of that, nor any of the other equipment either, given that his family were the ones who made half of it in the first place. Instead he pulled out and checked his parasol. He'd recently given it a tune-up, enhancing the fabric between the titanium spokes and threading it with metal fibers. They were woven in with chakra, something that had taken him multiple several-hour sessions to learn and later perfect. It was an unconventional weapon, but one he'd trained himself extensively in.

His family was pretty good at the unconventional weapons thing, too.

There was even a rapier embedded in the hilt that he could draw if he needed such a thing at any point. He might not be the best blacksmith in the family, but he'd been able to work in the forges since it was deemed safe for him to do so. He would likely have to do more over the years to perfect his parasol, but for now, it would more than suffice.

Especially in a mission that likely wouldn't involve a lot of combat. It had the advantage, here, of not appearing at first glance to be a weapon at all.

Satisfied everything was in working order, he turned back to the rest of the team, who were putting the finishing touches on their gear. He'd packed his that morning, at home. He really didn't want to be the one holding up the mission, so he had prepared himself not to be.

Well. It didn't look like he would be the one who was, anyway.

Hana was giving Rokuro a look, and mimed something with her hands. Shinju snorted, and nodded.

Apparently seeing no other recourse, Rokuro turned to Makoto and gave him a lopsided grin. "Hey, Kyou. First full mission, right?"

He scowled, gratified to see the smile falter. The other Wardens called him that because there wasn't an easy way to make a nickname off his name, and everyone in Moon knew his family's old clan name. But he'd always disliked it, and there was no point in hiding that fact. Especially when he wasn't any worse or less useful than any of them.

Especially that guy, apparently.

"Not really," he said, sheathing his parasol. "I've been on full missions before. Simply with more assistance."

"It's a bit different with this," Shinju said, and Hana nodded. "Not that this should be anything but a cakewalk--I've heard of this guy before, and he's small fry. Hana did the intel op that led us to him a couple weeks back."

Hana gave a jerky nod, a light smile on her face. Now that he was looking for it, he could see scarring on her throat. So she wasn't just quiet by choice, then.

"I don't ever underestimate anyone," Makoto said delicately. "But appreciated all the same."

No point ticking off the apparently competent people.

They headed down to the docks, ghosting through the lesser-traveled alleys and back pathways. Makoto had done stakeout duty before, and it was never particularly interesting. With a team of four, they could trade off where they were watching to avoid getting bored, at least. Or maybe not; it would be bad to miss something.

They reached the docks about an hour after lunch, and settled in to wait.

Most people thought all shady business on the docks went down extremely early in the morning, or after dark. This was not so, at least in Moon, as the Wardens well knew. Quite a few smugglers and thieves attempted to disguise their illicit goods trafficking with the hectic nature of the docks in full daylight on common shipping days. This had the tendency to backfire sometimes, as Moon's dock officials were very efficient, but it was a sight easier to pull off than doing anything after dark. There were always patrols in the hours when no one other than specially licensed boats were allowed to dock.

That didn't mean people didn't try it, of course, so they might be there a long time. But since they were after a specific person and not just anyone shady, they would be there until they saw him.

Which, as it turned out, was quite a while.

The main use the girls seemed to make of Rokuro was sending him out for food. As the youngest, this would normally fall to Makoto, but as his file indicated he had heightened senses and sharp eyes, not to mention that he was much smaller and less obvious, they wanted to keep him with them. Certainly most of his extra senses pertained to chakra, but he was assuredly better at it than the other man, by the way the others acted.

Either way, there was no way for a swordsman like that to contribute until they actually had eyes on the target. So, barely grumbling, he consented to be sent out on several runs for food and drinks--first a late lunch, then power bars for the afternoon, then boxed noodles for dinner.

The sun had long set and the docks traffic quieted to the end of day final stragglers, consisting mostly of the supply shipments from the southern farmlands. Shinju had pulled out a dark blue bandanna when the sun started setting and covered her hair with it, and Makoto had drawn the hood of his own jacket up over his head. Hana's dark pink hair and Rokuro's short black did not catch the setting sun and moonlight in the same way silver did, but the two of them had to be careful when on stealth duty,

Still, none of them so much as grumbled. Makoto's muscles ached from the tension of being ready to move yet not being able to do so for hours, but he wasn't going to mess this up.

Finally, Hana sat up as if a bolt of lightning had struck her, and flipped a knife out of her vest to point with. All of them silently looked where she pointed, to see a boat coming in. It was drifting, no sound of engines running, and seemed to have been deliberately covered with mud and dust in places so it did not reflect light well. As they watched, one of the dock guards stepped out, glanced around nervously, and waved it in.

"Bribe or blackmail, that's the question," Shinju murmured, voice barely a whisper. "Can't say as it's a surprise they have someone on the inside."

Hana made a single quiet clicking sound with her tongue. Makoto tilted his head, considering.

"Bribe, or on the payroll, I agree." Translating Hana's speech substitutions wasn't very difficult. "He seems willing enough."

"I'll mark him down then, and we can let someone else pay him a visit." Shinju flicked a notepad out of her inner pocket and scribbled a basic description of the guard down, along with his shift time. "Now...aha. Makoto, you have the best eyes here. Is that our man?"

There was a figure climbing down the ladder on the side of the boat, who briefly conferred with the guard. Both of them nodded, then the figure from the boat waved back up at the boat, and a ramp descended.

"That's him," Makoto confirmed, barely squinting. The moon meant business tonight; it wasn't hard for him to match that man to the picture they'd seen earlier. "Do we radio it in now, or tail him?"

"Tail him," Shinju decided. "We want to bust whatever ring he's trafficking to, not just him."

The rest of them nodded silently, though Rokuro shifted uneasily.

What is his problem, even, Makoto thought irritably. I'm fourteen and I know how to sit still; he's nearly twice my age.

They watched as the merchant unloaded his cargo with the help of three workers on the boat, then loaded it onto a rolling dolly. These were often used to ship legitimate goods, but something about those crates made him uneasy. The man seemed to keep checking them, to make sure they were all right. Finally he seemed reassured enough and handed a wad of bills to the guard, then smaller ones to each of the workers, before proceeding on alone, rolling his cargo down the docks to a bicycle which he swiftly attached it to and mounted.

The merchant was rather quick on a bike, and they waited for him to exit the dock area before following him. Fast ona bike or no, a ninja was much faster. He pedaled and they followed through the warehouse district, and then toward the north-central area of the city. Makoto's senses itched; this was 'neutral' territory, not fully controlled by either the Shrine or his family and their allies. This was where the smugglers who bypassed the warehouse district tended to go, he knew, and also explained why the man was doing this after dark.

They landed on rooftops around the alleyway that the man stopped in, Makoto and Rokuro on one side, Hana and Shinju on the other. He could see the grim set of Hana's expression and Shinju's scowl even across the alley thanks to the bright moonlight.

The merchant knocked in an apparent passcode to one of the wooden doorways bordering the alley. After a moment, a hole near the top opened and muted words were exchanged. The door clicked open, and the four of them moved.

Hana and Shinju touched the ground a bare second before he did, Hana already spinning knives out into her hands. They were dull and serrated, not reflecting the moonlight at all, especially compared to Shinju's polished kunai and Makoto's silver-lined parasol. And Rokuro's sword, no doubt, though he was in the back.

The merchant darted inside and a man inside stepped out, but Shinju jumped at him, flinging several kunai at the man. He attempted to dodge, but two of the knives shredded his sleeve and a third narrowly missed his side anyway. Now he was off-guard, that would be the perfect time for Rokuro to take him out so that Makoto and Hana, both smaller than the others, could easily duck around him and pursue while tracking everyone on the inside.

Except their swordsman wasn't attacking.

Makoto glanced backwards, and so was just in time to bring his parasol up to block a glancing blow from a heavy blade. Rokuro's expression was set, not friendly any longer.

What the...

"Shinju!" he managed to call. "Move!"

Her head whipped around and she narrowly dodged another swing of the blade. The man in the doorway was laughing.

"Nice, Ro," the man in the door said. "C'mon in, I'll get you your cut. We won't be here tomorrow anyway, thanks for the alert, so handling these three doesn't matter."

It didn't take much to translate. Our lives aren't worth shit if we kill three Wardens.

"Right then," Rokuro said after a moment, giving Shinju a look of contempt. "Was hoping for a few swings at the bitch, but I can wait."

"Fucking traitor," Shinju spat. "How much they pay you, huh?"

"More than the Wardens do," he said, unruffled. "But this isn't about the money. Don't get me wrong, the money's great, but this is about a lot more than that."

Hana lifted one of her knives and drew it across the air in front of her throat.

"Yeah, I'll kill you too, sweetie," Rokuro said, almost good-naturedly. "You'd be dead instead of mute if it weren't for me, but go on. Chalk this one up as a loss and get out of here."

Makoto's hands clenched around the hilt of his parasol, but he did not move a muscle. What could he even do? They were in close quarters, and neither of the others seemed like they wanted to push it.

Rokuro seemed to notice none of them were moving, then nodded and backed into the building. The man in the door chuckled, gave the three of them a mock salute, and slammed the door.

The adrenaline went out of all three of them at once. Hana slumped against the wall, and Shinju pulled her bandanna off, scowling.

Makoto broke the silence a few moments later. "Fuck."
 

Shiruko Makoto

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"That's one way to put it," Shinju snarled. "Let's regroup....dammit, have to assume we're completely compromised. Ideas?"

She was looking at him because he was the unknown, Makoto surmised. Or because his family was known to have connections. "Yes. Follow me."

Whatever the rest of Moon thought of his family--whatever these two thought of him--they at least provisionally trusted that he wasn't out to deliberately screw them over. They followed, Hana ghosting along behind him and Shinju a bare half-pace back.

Moon's cobblestone roads and the reflections in the puddles from the streetlights on the main avenues fell away behind them as they moved. None of them spoke or made a sound beyond their footsteps on the clay-shingled rooftops. Finally they reached the location Makoto had chosen, a warehouse near his family's unofficial territory that belonged, in deed, to them. It was remote and quiet enough to be safe, but they split up and double-checked around it to be sure before ducking inside.

"All right, that's as good as we're going to get," Shinju declared, when they were seated in a defensible corner of the warehouse, among boxes. "No one's going to want to start a fight in this area, anyway. Now, what do we do? Clearly we can't just leave this be."

Hana tapped out a rhythm on the crate she was seated on and lifted her hand in an expressive gesture, best read as 'why?'

"She has a point," Makoto said slowly. "We could always just report in everything, explain what happened." It rankled to say, even as he knew it was the smarter way to deal with it.

"And let them go to ground, with a traitorous Warden?" Shinju snapped at both of them. "We still don't even know what they're smuggling! What kind of intel can we even hand over? Where they were before, a corrupt guard's description? Come on!"

It was pride stinging her, he knew. He felt the sting of it himself. Hana's expression hadn't shifted as far as he could tell in the moonlight that seeped in through the high windows, but she had resumed tapping the crate. This was seemingly idle, with no real pattern of communication, and after a moment she shrugged.

Shinju continued to glare between the two of them before she exhaled sharply and tugged her kerchief off of her head. Running a hand through her hair, she shook her head slowly. "This can't...it can't end in failure, you two. It's not just because that stupid oaf threw us over for money, although that's part of it. If we don't stop these smugglers, it might take ages to find them again, and who even knows what sort of harm they're doing?"

Makoto exchanged a silent glance with Hana, who was frowning now. 'Who knows' indeed; they didn't even know what was being smuggled, although they all undoubtedly had their suspicions.

"All right," he said finally, "but without help, what can we actually do? We already know charging in there isn't going to work, and we would have to take Rokuro out quickly, which is hard when we don't know where in the building he is."

Not impossible, but hard. And it wasn't like they could just demolish the building. Not only would the Wardens frown on that sort of excessive force, it wouldn't enable them to retrieve whatever stolen goods the crooks were trying to fence. Plus, while it sounded like overkill, collapsing a building with them inside it wouldn't necessarily kill a ninja.

She glanced between them. "Well, we can do a lot even without help, as long as we plan it out properly. But we don't have a lot of time to do that. We have to strike tonight."

Hana flipped one of her knives out and drew it across the air directly in front of her throat--not the threatening gesture from earlier, but a different albeit similar one.

"We do have to expect they'll guess we're coming, and that they have us dead to rights if we don't do this properly," Makoto said, half-agreeing. "I don't suppose it will be entirely impossible, but it won't be easy--so we'll just have to do things they won't expect. How much of either of your capabilities is Rokuro aware of?"

Shinju and Hana exchanged a look, and Hana made a 'so-so' gesture.

"He knows what we're best at, but not our other specialties, unless he's somehow snooped out our files," Shinju said. "And given what we know of him--since Hana has snooped out his--he hasn't."

Makoto kept his expression neutral, but it was a near thing with the smirk that was threatening to pop out. "Oh, excellent. All right, I'll need to know a bit of it then. Anything you think might be worth using."

Hana made a gesture that took him a second to puzzle out, but then he shook his head.

"He's aware I'm a Ninjutsu user. But by the sounds of it, he won't be aware of my abilities in close range." Probably not equal to a trained swordsman, but he didn't need to be equal in skill for this. Just good enough. "His mistake, honestly. For close range, he'll be expecting Hana most likely, not me."

Shinju hummed. "All right then boys and girls. Let's put our heads together and pool our resources. Clock's ticking."

~

It would have been easier had they had someone who could walk through walls present, but they did not have either that or the ability to fetch them, so this plan would have to do. This time, all three of them were perched on the roof of the building across from the alleyway door, looking down at it. It would be best if they made sure Rokuro was in the first room before they headed in specifically to take him out. However, there were no windows, so all they had to go on was what little they could hear from their vantage point and the shadows under the light spilling out from the door--not nearly enough.

Still, they didn't have much choice. As Shinju had said earlier, the clock was ticking.

Makoto unfurled his parasol and leapt first--not straight down, as they had previously, but at the door, using the momentum and gravity from the fall as force multipliers. It worked, since he didn't so much crash into the door and bounce off as crash through it, splintered wood bouncing off the reinforced fabric and titanium spokes of his unorthodox weapon.

The rest of the force from the shattered door went straight into the man behind it, the guard from earlier, who let out a sort of deflated balloon noise as the wind was knocked out of him. Or at least, it sounded like it was coming out of him. It might also have been part of the whoosh sound as the combined force of the door imploding on him and the blow from the parasol immediately following it knocked him across the wood.

It was fairly academic, however, as he hit the far wall headfirst without even time to blink and slumped down with a bleeding head.

Shinju and Hana darted in behind him, but to their mutual disappointment, there was no one else in the room. That was sure to shortly change, however, as the guard had made a rather spectacular thud into the wall, not to mention the crash of the door opening and the table breaking.

(There had, apparently, been a table between the guard and the wall. This had not slowed his flight any, although the pool of blood under the man appeared to indicate that some of the pieces of the table were embedded in him, and even if he weren't dead, he would be soon.)

Plan overwhelming force: check. It's a pity we didn't get the traitor with that.

Hana was approaching a tack of crates off to the side of the room, near the stairs that they could dimly hear footsteps coming down--still two floors or so off yet, but coming. She was frowning, and spun a knife to hold it so the blade dug in under the lid to pry it open.

The boxes had air holes, Makoto noted abstractly. What the hell was inside them?

Hana finished prying the top crate open and her expression transformed into one of bewilderment. Makoto exchanged a quick tense glance with Shinju.

"Hana, what?" Shinju whispered. "What on..."

Hana lifted something out of the box with her free hand to show them before carefully putting it back down.

It was a penguin chick, still young enough to be covered in fuzz.

As their teammate closed the box again gently, Makoto felt his expression tighten, and heard Shinju snarling under her breath.

Yeah. These jerks were going down.
 

Shiruko Makoto

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Penguins.

Makoto's mind had blanked for a second, but he quickly worked on clearing it. The smugglers were shipping live animals...why? To sell? He could think of only a few things to sell live animals for, and 'exotic pets' was the least terrible, but still not very good in and of itself.

There was smuggling, and then there was smuggling things that could be terrified and feel pain. His hand gripped his parasol tighter, unconsciously.

The expression on Shinju's face as Hana rapidly but carefully moved the crates to a corner of the room where they'd be least likely to be hurt in the upcoming fight was murderous. Much as he felt, to be honest. Hana looked like she would rather be punching someone at the moment too, but that wouldn't help if they got the animals killed.

Hana finished pushing the crates to the safest-seeming corner and pulled out her blades again. Not a second too soon, either, as immediately after she did the thunderous footsteps sounded just on the other side of the door to upstairs, which burst open and flew off its hinges.

Unlike the other door, this one didn't hit any of them, as none of them were standing directly in front of it.

However, Rokuro was unsurprisingly one of the first ones through. He did not seem either surprised or happy to see them.

"Bitch," he snarled at Shinju. "Trying to get your entire team killed?"

"Just you," she snapped, shifting back on her heels. He growled and lunged at her, drawing his massive sword.

...and was blocked by the titanium spokes of a combat parasol.

Makoto kept himself expressionless as the traitor turned to face him with some slight bewilderment. Around them, Shinju and Hana moved on the unpowered troops, engaging them largely at melee with deft attacks a normal human could not hope to keep up with and not bothering to avoid fatalities.

This was part of the plan, after all.

"Why did you side with them, anyway?" Rokuro asked lowly. "Doesn't your clan do all sorts of shady bullshit?"

Makoto stepped back and swished his parasol, somewhat experimentally. The brawl around them--or rather, the somewhat one-sided mass fight--stayed out of his range, apparently not wanting to add a third ninja to their misfortune.

"Well, there is a slight difference between shady and animal smuggling," he noted, still expressionless though he was furious inside. "Also, I don't side with traitors."

The blade came whipping around, trying to catch his exposed side. With barely a twitch, Makoto flicked his parasol to block again.

Down to about 60% of the others. At 40, I can properly engage in this space.

"You think working for the Shrine is the right place for you, Kyou?" Rokuro leaned his weight into the blade, forcing Makoto to shift his stance and grip to compensate. The other man still wasn't as strong as his brother though, so he could deal. "It's not. It's not good for anyone. You know the garbage they pull."

"Pulling some of your own in return isn't exactly any better," he said coolly, as blood splattered against the fabric of his parasol from a particularly violent throat slash from Hana. Fifty percent.

"Gotta choose your sides, kid," the swordsman grunted. "Now what's it gonna be?"

Forty.

Instead of answering, Makoto took a half-step back and abruptly jerked his parasol away from the sword. Rokuro briefly lost his balance, tilting forward and scrambling to regain his footing. At the same time as he was doing that, Makoto brought his parasol up and smashed it into Rokuro's unprotected ribcage.

The man stumbled back several paces, barely maintaining his grasp on his sword, and coughed, then winced. By the sound of the impact, he had a couple of cracked ribs.

Clearly, he hadn't expected the parasol to be more than a shield. Which was silly; because even if it were a shield only, it was still a metal object that could hit people.

And it wasn't just a shield, anyway. Makoto was quite well trained in his unorthodox weapon, being as his much stronger brother was also a user of an unorthodox weapon himself.

He didn't pause in his attack, swinging again for centre of mass. Rokuro brought his blade up and attempted to parry, but the larger size and odd weight of the parasol threw him off and it slid partially past, the tip stabbing him in the arm. Instead of swinging again, Makoto took advantage of the distraction to form handseals with his other hand and send the man to the ground gasping as illusionary flames surrounded him.

He wasn't exactly a Genjutsu specialist, but that was one he'd worked on for its utility.

Makoto then brought his parasol down solidly onto the temporarily dazed swordsman's head, knocking him down and laying him out on the floor as the other two completed their sweep of the room.

Most of the guards lay around dead or dying, and Shinju had just apparently finished trussing up the man who had led them to the place originally. The three of them gathered around Rokuro's barely-conscious form without signaling to do so, exchanging glances once they did.

"We should probably bring him in alive," Makoto said after a second. "So we can find out how much he told them, that sort of thing."

Shinju scowled. "...Yeah. I'll tie him up, the two of you get those birds outside and radio in completion."

Hana gave a mock salute and Makoto nodded. It went without saying he'd be the one calling it in, of course, but he too wanted to check on the baby birds. Fortunately, the presumably safe corner had been actually safe, as the two had controlled the battlefield easily enough against unpowered fighters.

They moved the boxes one at a time, carefully, opening each to check to see the birds were all safe within. Most of them poked their heads up and made chirpy sounds, some of them making sleepy noises at them. Makoto did not generally consider himself a soft touch, but all the same he was glad to see the creatures were unharmed in their straw bedding.

On the last two crates, Hana signaled him to call it in and leave the rest to her, and he nodded, pulling his headset out of an inner pocket.

There was a dispatch agent back at headquarters, and he set his headset to the right frequency for them before putting it on and cuing it up.

"Mission control, this is Bravo team on the smuggling mission reporting in. Mission complete."

A crackling noise, and the dispatch agent came on. "Copy that, Bravo. Any mission casualties?"

Makoto thought of the unharmed birds. He thought of the traitor, lying inside being bound securely by his nemesis. He thought fo the bleeding, dying guards, including the one he'd blown right through the door.

"No friendlies," he said after a second. "But there were...complications."

"We'll deal with it at base. Give your location and we'll send pickup."

"Copy that," he said before giving his location down to the address. After receiving confirmation he flicked his headset off and tucked it back away.

Makoto tilted his head up to watch the stars and moon, slightly brighter without being in the main streets full of ambient light. His expression twisted when he thought of the 'complications', and he glanced back over at the crates of baby penguins, all now lidless with Hana watching over them. It could have gone a lot worse, he knew.

But that didn't mean he wasn't going to watch himself in the future.
 

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