Leaf District

Frea

Chunin
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She watched Soichiro mirroring her pain. She placed a comforting hand on his shoulder and rubbed it, giving him some form of comfort. She nodded at his words, though, why the kun part? Did she really look like a boy? Oh well. She looked at Gensaku as he spoke, wanting to move on, which she understood and began to move.

Once they got to the halls of Konoha’s intelligence division, where all the main research was happening behind the scenes, Kageko never once set foot into the halls of the place. She looked around, everything was clean with no cracks in the walls, not even a sight of mould or even spillages on the floor or walls. Everywhere the trio stepped, the place was immaculately clean. Kageko indulged in the smell of chemicals that the place hosted - bleach, alcohol to keep the place clean and sterile. After all, it was a place where experiments were held and amongst other things.

As they entered the room with an elderly man in a white lab coat with a name tag with his name, “Moritake”, and a monocle, she bowed towards the elderly man in respect as she heard the two males accompanying her telling them about the situation. Kageko was looking around the place. So sterile, so clean with very much equipment that she did not understand how they worked or even what some of the substances in the containers were. Her eyes shifted towards the ultraviolet light that shone brightly within the darkened room; it immediately piqued the young lady's interest.

Her gaze shifted to the scientist, who was in a state of shock at the discovery, and the way the bead of sweat went down his forehead meant one thing. He discovered the outcome, but it wasn’t like any other. Kageko gripped onto the older Nara’s sleeve. Gulping at the fact it wasn’t a poison was a relief to hear, but rather it was a moulded chakra that moulded into a toxin-based toxin. Which, in her ears, was worse than poisoning. Could she have prevented the death of her mother if Kageko had remained in place?

One thing is for sure, she did hear rumours and gossip amongst townsfolk about a shady figure leaving the village. Could this be the culprit, and if so, where would they be now? Kageko parted her lips and provided information that could be critical to the three males.

“I did hear from the shop vendors and other folks that there was a shadowy figure that left the village. Could they be the culprit for my dear mom’s death?”

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Jeriah

Owner and Founder
Staff member
Administrator
LEGENDARY

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Inoka remained seated at his desk long after Moritake’s report had ended, fingers steepled before his lips, aqua eyes lowered in thought. For once, the weight of uncertainty pressed heavier than the title of Hokage itself. A chakra-forged toxin. Foreign. Unregistered. Alive. The implications churned through his mind with relentless precision. He could accept an enemy at the gates. He could accept war in the open. But infiltration, silent, undetected, beneath the notice of both himself and the entire Sensory Division, was something he could not tolerate.

He could not fathom how such a presence had entered Konohagakure without triggering the layered sensory barriers woven across the village’s perimeter. Those barriers were his design. His calibration. His signature embedded within their detection web. If foreign chakra had passed through unnoticed, then either it had been masked beyond conventional comprehension… or it had never crossed the barrier in a way that registered as foreign at all. That possibility unsettled him more than he allowed his face to show.
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Without rising from his chair, Inoka closed his eyes. His consciousness expanded outward like a silent tide, brushing against the mental signatures of the Sensory Division captains and the stationed guard units. "Lock down the village immediately. Seal all gates. Activate internal sweeps. No one leaves without clearance. We are hunting an infiltrator." His mental command was calm, but it carried no room for hesitation. "This is not a drill. Treat all anomalies as hostile until confirmed otherwise."

Across Konohagakure, shinobi stiffened as his voice echoed through their minds. Within moments, warning bells began to toll. Barrier teams reinforced the perimeter seals. Patrol units doubled in number. Civilian movement slowed into confused clusters as armored shinobi redirected traffic with firm efficiency.

Inoka rose from his desk in one fluid motion. He knew better than to remain behind polished wood while his village trembled beneath unseen threat. The Hokage’s office was a vantage point, not a cage. In a blur of motion, he flickered from the room, reappearing along the rooftops that lined Konoha’s central district. His sandals struck tile in steady rhythm as he moved, cloak trailing behind him like a shadow.
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His body traveled almost on instinct, cutting through streets and across rooftops, chakra flowing steadily through his system. As he advanced, several off-duty members of the Sensory Division joined him without needing verbal instruction. They fell in formation behind him, their own awareness spreading outward like overlapping nets, scanning for the faintest distortion in chakra flow.

Inoka remained at the forefront. His breathing slowed deliberately; inhale, exhale, measured and controlled. Panic dulled perception. Calm sharpened it. Subtly, almost invisibly, he wove micro-gestures with his gaze alone. His pupils shifted, focusing and unfocusing in calculated intervals. Through those minute movements, he slipped threads of his consciousness into the minds of villagers and shinobi alike as he passed them. Not invasive enough to be felt. Not forceful enough to alarm. He skimmed surface memories from the past hour, faces glimpsed in alleys, unusual presences in market stalls, fleeting sensations of unease. He searched for inconsistencies, for fragmented recollections that did not belong.

A delivery vendor recalling a tall stranger, A child remembering a shimmer in the air near the eastern well. A patrol shinobi noting a brief lapse in barrier sensitivity. Each fragment flowed into him, catalogued and sorted with frightening speed.​

Back within the Intelligence Division laboratory, a piercing siren shattered the sterile quiet. Red lights flashed violently across the walls, bathing white coats in harsh crimson glow. Researchers froze for a fraction of a second before panic rippled through them.

“What’s happening?” one shouted.

“Village lockdown protocol!” another responded, clutching a clipboard to their chest as though it might offer protection. The reinforced containment chamber hummed louder under emergency power. The purple residue within pulsed once, almost imperceptibly, as if reacting to the rising tension.

Moritake clenched his jaw, adjusting his goggles again. He understood the severity. A lockdown meant the Hokage himself had determined the threat immediate and internal. Scientists scrambled to secure documents and seal secondary labs, whispers of fear spreading like wildfire.

Amid the chaos, Gensaku stood near the chamber’s far wall. The red lights reflected dimly off the bandages wrapped around his lower face. While others moved in frantic bursts, he remained still. Then, slowly, the corners of his eyes creased. Beneath the cover of cloth and shadow, a faint smile formed.​

Outside, Inoka paused mid-stride atop a high rooftop. His sensory field expanded again, stretching beyond the usual radius. He searched for distortion, any chakra that vibrated at the same unnatural frequency Moritake had described.

For the first time in years, something in the village did not feel entirely within his grasp. And that unsettled him more than the war ever had.
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Discordia

Academy Student
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The lab echoed in chaos, fear radiating in the pulsing of red lights and piercing sirens. While they had prepared drills in the past for lock downs and security measures, there was a huge difference between a planned drill and an actual emergency. The scientists were not privy to the exact reason for the lockdown and were unable to hypothesize the potential threats they may face. They rushed to protect what needed to be protected, the lab containing information and technology that was priceless and directly affected national safety. Despite the havoc on the surface, there was organization amongst the discord. Everyone seemed to know exactly what they should protect… except Riki.

Riki hadn’t been working at the lab for more than a matter of days… and while science was his strong suit… emergencies and critical thinking were not. His brain was more like a computer and he had not been programmed how to handle the lock down. Instead, he focused his efforts on staying out of more knowledgeable people’s ways. He was graced with agility and fluidity in his movements that allowed him to easily maneuver around the chaos. Unfortunately, it was not maintainable and he did not go unnoticed for long.

“Hey, Hey you.” A box of random canisters and jars were thrust into Riki’s hands by a more seasoned lab tech. “Get these out of here now, they are too volatile to be here in an emergency.”

Before Riki could explain he had no idea where a safe place might be, the lab tech had already darted off, forgetting Riki’s existence as soon as he had finished his sentence. With his box of dangerous treasures, Riki left the room he was in and made his way through the hallways. People rushed here and there, focused on their own tasks and leaving no room for Riki to interrupt them to ask for assistance. The hallways were a maze he hadn’t mastered yet and as he trusted his gut to decide when to turn left and when to turn right, the people became sparser and the lights became dimmer.
It had seemed that Riki had made his way to a much older, less used part of the building. He peeked his head into the doors that didn’t require any sort of security to enter, looking for a suitable home for the box. Finally, he reached a dead end with nowhere else to go but a lone door. Behind it were shelves and tables, cluttered with items time had forgotten. It seemed like the best place for his little box. Unceremoniously, he dropped the box onto a table and headed for the door, passing a shelf that contained countless scrolls.

Curiosity got the best of Riki as the smell of ancient parchment hit him. Most of the scrolls looked like they would crumble if you touched them, some of them already had. They clearly had reached a level that would be considered ancient. As a scientist, he had to know what secrets they possessed. What harm would it be to just take a quick look? He plucked one of the scrolls out of a box and began examining it. It was easy enough to decipher that something had been sealed in the scroll… his mind wondered at all the possibilities. Surely, it couldn’t be anything too dangerous or it wouldn’t be just lying in a box in an unlocked room. He could just check really quickly then reseal it back into the scroll after he confirmed what it was.

He cast a glance towards the door, checking for privacy as his hands began forming the seals to unlock the mystery. The movements with crisp as his slender fingers worked to release the seal. With a little bit of chakra and a soft pop, Riki was no longer alone in the room.

“Well, fuck.” he muttered under his breath as a small girl and a massive dog appeared at his feet with a little pop and a puff of a cloud. He didn’t need to hypothesize about her clan, clearly marked on her cheeks were the red fangs of the Inuzuka. She was so petite that her curls almost consumed her. She couldn’t possibly be part of the shinobi that had been frozen in time. They had been thawed out for generations. Her leather and fur shinobi garb clearly screamed she very well could, being from an era long past. Riki stood on the cusp of a moral dilemma… how much trouble would he be in for messing around with things he shouldn’t? How much work would it take to deal with this? He briefly considered just resealing her, but guilt held him back.

As soon as Shippo had been exposed to air, thawing had started. While her body was still stiffly contorted, her senses had begun to function long before her ability to move. Much like a comatose patient trapped in their own body, she was like a helpless audience privy to the world around her but unable to interact with it.

The very first sensation to breach her consciousness was a coldness so fierce that it burned throughout her in agonizing pain, losing all characteristics of the cold and tricking the mind into believing one was consumed by the fiery pits of hell. As the iciness receded like the tide being pulled back into the ocean, a hollow emptiness was left behind. It was the kind of void that was so raw and all consuming that if it lingered, it could plunge one into mental disparity and madness. She tried to fill it and her lungs with a gasp of air, but her body still wasn’t following commands.

Instead, the emptiness dissipated on its own as her senses came alive. Her mind had gone from complete and utter silence to an entire village worth of noise brutally battering her ear drums, an onslaught that hijacked her mind and blurred the lines between her own consciousness and the siren infused symphony. If the noise alone was not overwhelming enough, her sense of smell was her greatest enemy in those moments of rebirth.

Being of the Inuzuka clan, her physiology was far superior when it came to senses. She was able to smell things for miles and construct images and build stories from the layers of scent. The new world she had awoken in was bursting with scents that she was unable to place. It was like waking up in a country where you didn’t know the language. Other than Kokeiromaru, she didn’t recognize any of the scents of the shinobi she heard around her. Even the smells of grass, trees and flowers had shifted. While she could at least name them, they were alien to the fragrances she remembered. It was all too much and moisture welled behind and escaped her eyelids, trickling from her lashes and tracing over the red marks on her cheeks.

The massive frame of Kokeiromaru twitched as he regained the ability to move. After a few uncontrolled spasms, he exploded into a protective stance. He positioned himself between his shinobi and the random stranger who stood over them. Every muscle tensed and his eyes were filled with a menacing threat. Confusion had fogged the ninken’s mind. However, it was evident that there were tears on Shippo’s face and she was suffering and unable to defend herself. A growl poured out of him and filled the room with his warning.

Ri-ki put his hands up and slowly backed away, trying to prove he wasn’t a threat. Fighting a massive ninja dog was not something on his bucket list and he highly doubted he had any sort of chance in surviving a scuffle without at least some injuries. Pain wasn’t exactly something he enjoyed. In the most soothing tone he could summon he cooed “It’s okay boy. It’s okay.”


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Jeriah

Owner and Founder
Staff member
Administrator
LEGENDARY
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An unknown chakra signature pierced through every sensory barrier at once. Inoka had been searching for it, tracing disturbances across the village with growing urgency, and now… he had it. The source. He moved instantly. Before the sensory division could fully react, before protocols could be completed, Inoka was already gone; his body vanishing in a blur of speed that outpaced even the barrier team’s response. “Lord Inoka...” the captain of the sensory division called out telepathically.
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“I know.” Inoka’s voice cut back immediately, sharp and controlled, ending the transmission before it could continue.In the next instant, he appeared behind Shippo. A kunai rested just inches from the back of her neck. Inoka’s light green eyes scanned the room in a single sweeping motion, calculating, dissecting. Ri-ki stood frozen, fear etched into his face. Nearby, a containment pod hung open empty. The faint hiss of escaping vapor lingered as cryogenic liquid pooled across the floor, evidence of something, or someone...recently released. The room told a story. And Inoka read it in seconds. Slowly, he lowered the kunai, retracting it into his sleeve as his posture shifted; not relaxed, but reassessing. His gaze lingered on the pod, then the puddle, then finally returned to Ri-ki. The threat wasn’t immediate, but something had gone very wrong.
His expression hardened. “Ri-ki… explain yourself.” The command wasn’t loud, but it didn’t need to be.

Before Ri-ki could answer, the room filled with presence. Multiple jonin-level shinobi flooded in, weapons drawn, chakra flaring, ready to engage and detain anything deemed hostile. Their eyes darted between Shippo, Ri-ki, and the broken containment.
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Inoka didn’t even turn. “Stand down.” The order came without hesitation. Immediately, the jonin obeyed, lowering their weapons, though their stances remained alert. The room shifted from battlefield to tribunal in an instant, all eyes now falling on Ri-ki, and the mystery unfolding before them.

Inoka remained still, his mind already moving ahead, piecing together what he didn’t yet know. Then, without looking away, he reached out through comms. “Captain Yaju, I need your assistance with an important matter.” There was no patience in his voice now, only urgency. Whatever had been released… wasn’t ordinary.
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Location: Leaf District, Konohagakure (Labatory)
Main Posting Order:
Shippo → Inoka →Yaju
Post Time Limit (PTI): 1-3 Days.
Skip Points: lI​
 
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