Hinata remained in the center of the arena, her breath ragged. The overwhelming power of the "Lioness Heart" receded from her veins like a violent tide, leaving her with an exhaustion that weighed on every fiber of her being. It was a weariness so profound she felt it could dissolve her bones, a weakness that made her knees tremble. She watched her cousin's retreat, a tight knot in her throat. In the stands, her friends erupted in contained euphoria, but that joy couldn't find its way to her heart. Instead, a quiet sadness settled in, a melancholic understanding of the price of her victory.
A tall, stern figure descended from the stands. His steps, deliberate and loud in the expectant silence, drew the attention of every Jōnin and genin present. The Hyuga clan elders, seated in the honored section with postures as rigid as statues, gave a tense, almost imperceptible bow. Hiashi ignored them, just as he ignored everyone else. His white eyes, identical to hers, were fixed on the solitary figure of his daughter.
He stopped a few feet from her, his face an impassive mask that, for the first time, failed to hide the storm raging within him. Confusion, disbelief, and something resembling pure bewilderment fought in his pupils. His gaze swept over the battlefield, the craters and scorch marks of a clash that defied everything he knew about his daughter's capabilities.
"That technique…" his voice was a low murmur, stripped of its usual sharp authority. It sounded strange, almost hollow, as if the words cost him physical effort. "The rotating chakra barrier… and that speed. That is not the Gentle Fist I taught you, nor is it the style of the main branch."
He paused, his eyes scrutinizing her, searching for an answer in her posture, in her exhausted expression.
"You've changed. Your chakra flow is different, more potent. I felt it from here. That isn't something achieved with simple training. Where… who taught you that?"
Hinata looked up. For the first time in her life, she met his gaze directly, without fear, without hesitation. The girl who trembled at his shadow was gone, and in her place stood a kunoichi who had bled for her conviction.
"No one taught me that technique, Father," she replied, her voice calm but with an edge of steel he had never heard. "It was born from necessity. It was born from the desire to protect the people who are important to me."
"Protect?" Hiashi frowned, confusion coloring his severity. "Do you think the duty of a Hyuga is reduced to such a simple sentiment? Our clan's strength lies in the purity of our techniques, in the tradition passed down for generations. What you did was… reckless, a deviation from everything we stand for."
"No," Hinata retorted, taking a hesitant step forward. The movement cost her, but she forced herself to stand firm. "I learned that strength doesn't come from techniques, Father. Nor from the purity of a bloodline. It comes from the unbreakable will to protect your comrades, to fight for someone other than yourself. Neji fights for the hatred they instilled in him, for a destiny he believes is sealed. I fight for my friends. That is the difference."
Hiashi was speechless. The silence stretched between them, a chasm no Hyuga technique could cross. He looked at her, but he no longer saw the daughter he had dismissed as a failure. He saw a stranger wearing her face. He saw the reflection of a will he himself had tried to extinguish, one that had somehow blossomed in the darkness to become a defiant fire. Without another word, he turned and walked away, his rigid silhouette outlined against the light. He left Hinata alone in the arena, having won much more than a simple match.
The moment her father disappeared, her legs finally gave out. Just before her body hit the ground, Kurenai was already there, catching her with a strong arm.
"Hinata, are you okay? Don't push yourself too hard," she said quietly, a mix of pride and concern etched on her face. "What you did out there was… extraordinary. Not just the fight, but standing up to him."
Hinata leaned on her sensei, grateful for the support. "I'm okay, Kurenai-sensei. Just… tired. Very tired."
"Come on, I'll help you up," Kurenai said, draping Hinata's arm over her shoulders and helping her walk toward the stairs leading to the competitors' balcony.
When they finally arrived, a small whirlwind of support broke the accumulated tension.
"Hinata, that was amazing!" Kiba barked with joy, rushing over and clapping her on the back with so much enthusiasm he nearly made them both stumble. "You beat the tar out of that smug jerk! Akamaru and I are treating you to barbecue for a whole month! I swear it!"
Akamaru yapped happily from inside his jacket, peeking his head out to confirm the generous offer with a wag of his tail.
Shino adjusted his sunglasses, though a tiny smile played on his lips. He approached with his calm gait. "Your strategy was logically flawless, Hinata. You anticipated his movements and exploited his overconfidence. You analyzed his reliance on the Sixty-Four Palms and created a counterattack he couldn't have foreseen. A deserved victory. My insects are… impressed."
Sakura gently pushed the exuberant Kiba aside. "Let her breathe, Kiba! Can't you see she can barely stand?" She handed her a water bottle, her face a complex mixture of astonishment and deep, sisterly pride. "You were incredible, Hinata. Seriously. You left everyone speechless."
Her tone turned more serious and professional as her eyes scanned her for injuries. "But are you okay? Really. You used an enormous amount of chakra. I can feel the fluctuation from here. Are you feeling any dizziness or blurry vision? Any sharp muscle pain?"
Hinata took a long sip of water, the cool liquid a balm for her dry throat and exhausted body. She offered Sakura a small, reassuring smile. She looked at her hands, which had finally stopped trembling.
"I'm fine," she said, her voice regaining its usual softness, though with a new resonance of confidence. "Thank you, Sakura. It's just exhaustion. But… I don't feel happy that I won."
Her gaze drifted to the entrance where Neji had been taken. "I just feel sad. I feel sorry for him. He's trapped in that cage of hatred and resentment that the clan itself built around him. I saw it in his eyes during the fight… there was nothing but pain."
"Maybe…" Sakura said, placing a comforting hand on her shoulder. Her voice was soft, understanding. "Maybe today you didn't just defeat him. Maybe you gave him the key to get out of that cage. Sometimes, a defeat is the only thing that can break the chains you can't see yourself."
Ino, who had been watching everything silently from a corner, walked over, leaning heavily on Sakura's shoulder to stay upright. Her own match had left her physically and emotionally drained, but her eyes shone with a newfound respect.
"Whatever the case, it was spectacular," she admitted, with a sincerity that would have been unthinkable days ago. She addressed Hinata directly, her tone devoid of its usual sarcasm. "I've never seen the great Neji so… lost. It looked like he was fighting a ghost he couldn't touch. You completely disarmed him, mentally and physically. No one in this village had ever managed that."
The arena's attention was reclaimed by the voice of Hayate, the proctor, who seemed to be fighting a coughing fit.
Karin watched with wide eyes, feeling a cold sweat run down her back. Her initial analysis of the weapon had been shattered. "She's… not even trying. She's not using her full strength. She's toying with Tenten, humiliating her."
With a bored expression, as if she had tired of the game, Temari opened the second moon on her fan. The wind changed. The defensive gust became an offensive vortex, a miniature tornado that formed instantly at Tenten's feet. The Konoha kunoichi had no time to react. She was lifted off the ground, spinning violently in the air along with her weapons, and then thrown like a rag doll against the far wall with brutal force. The impact echoed throughout the arena, followed by a deathly silence.
The match was over. It was a crushing, one-sided, and cruelly efficient victory.
As medics hurried down to carry away an unconscious Tenten, the coldness of Temari's victory left a sobering silence among the group. The Sand kunoichi snapped her fan shut and walked up the stairs without even a second glance at her opponent.
"They're… so strong," Ino said, her voice barely a whisper, stripped of all her previous bravado. "It's not just strength… it's cruelty. She didn't even see her as an opponent. Just an obstacle."
Karin swallowed hard, her hands visibly trembling. The color had drained from her face. "My match… it could be next. I… I don't know if I can do this. They're… on another level. Did you see her eyes? She felt nothing. No pleasure, no effort, just indifference."
"You are too," Sakura's voice was firm as she grabbed Karin's arm, trying to infuse her with some of her own determination. "You're on our level. You just don't realize your full potential yet. Don't let her attitude intimidate you. Arrogance is a weakness, we already saw that with Neji."
Hinata placed a hand on her other shoulder, a silent, comforting gesture of support. "You're not alone, Karin. We're a team. We'll have your back, no matter what. We'll be here screaming your name."
The promise, so simple and so sincere, seemed to anchor Karin, giving her a bit of the calm she desperately needed. She nodded, though her eyes remained fixed on the figure of Temari, now reunited with her brothers.
"Next match!" Hayate announced. "Choji versus Dosu!"
Choji walked down to the arena, a look of nervous determination on his face. He slapped his cheeks to psych himself up. Dosu followed, his pace slow and deliberate, the strange device on his right arm humming softly, a sinister sound that made the skin crawl.
"Come on, Choji! Turn him into a giant meatball!" Ino yelled from the balcony, her loyalty to her teammate overriding her exhaustion. "Show him what the Akimichi clan is made of!"
Shikamaru, beside her, sighed, stuffing his hands in his pockets. "What a drag… Be careful, Choji. Don't get cocky. That guy is all strategy, don't rush in without thinking."
The fight was uncomfortable to watch from the start. Choji, true to his style, used his Human Boulder Jutsu to become a human wrecking ball, rolling across the arena with enough force to pulverize rock. But Dosu was agile and evasive. He didn't try to stop him; he simply dodged, moving with an unnatural fluidity. And every time Choji passed by him, Dosu aimed his gauntlet.
A sharp, piercing sound filled the arena, a vibration that seemed to drill directly into the skull. Choji stopped abruptly mid-roll, undoing his technique and clapping his hands over his ears with a cry of pain. He stumbled, completely disoriented.
"Choji, move!" Sakura shouted in frustration, gripping the railing. "Get away from him! It's a trap! He's immobilizing you with sound so he can attack!"
"He can't keep his balance," Hinata said, her Byakugan active again, despite the headache it caused her. Her voice was tense. "That sound… it's not just noise. It's a concentrated chakra vibration. It's directly attacking the fluid in his inner ear. It's making him dizzy, completely robbing him of his sense of balance."
Dosu gave him no quarter. He closed in on the gentle giant, who was struggling to stay on his feet, and with a series of precise strikes combined with short, sharp bursts of sound, he brought him down. A final blow to the back of the neck, amplified by a sonic wave, was enough. The Sound ninja's victory was as efficient as it was ruthless.
With Choji's defeat, the atmosphere on the balcony grew heavier, almost suffocating. Three matches, two brutal losses for Konoha. Only a few bouts remained. Karin was as white as a ghost.
"I don't want to fight anymore," she whispered, her voice trembling. "I don't want to end up like that. I'm not like you guys. I'm not a fighter."
Ino, still leaning on Sakura, gave her arm a surprisingly comforting squeeze. "Don't say that. After seeing that, our fight wasn't so bad, huh, Billboard Brow? At least we didn't end up on a stretcher."
Sakura looked at her and a small, tired smile formed on her lips. "Not even close. At least we finished on our feet." She paused, looking at her friends—at Karin trembling, at Hinata worried but firm. "Hey, Ino…"
"Yeah?" the blonde replied, looking at her curiously.
"When this is all over… we should train together. For real. Stop all the nonsense and competing over Sasuke. Those Sand girls, the Sound guys… they've shown us there's a much bigger, more dangerous world out there. If we don't get stronger, we're going to get crushed."
Ino looked at her, surprised by the offer. The old rivalry seemed to evaporate in that instant, replaced by a mutual understanding forged in the heat of battle. Then she smiled, a genuine, exhausted smile.
"Deal, Billboard Brow. But just so you know, I'm still going to compete with you. And next time, I'm winning."
The newly forged camaraderie between them was a small light in the growing darkness of the preliminaries.
On a dark rooftop on the other side of Konoha, the night wind blew cold, oblivious to the tension of the exams. The moon hid behind scattered clouds, casting dancing shadows over the tiles.
"Did you find out anything about Hinata?" Orochimaru sat on the edge of the roof. He couldn't get the image of the girl who had managed to intervene in his attack on Sasuke in the Forest of Death out of his mind, a girl who showed a power that didn't match her record.
"Yes, Lord Orochimaru," Kabuto replied, adjusting his glasses as he consulted his mental notes. "I made some discreet inquiries, as you requested."
"And?" Orochimaru pressed, his interest piqued, an almost imperceptible hiss in his voice.
"It's baffling. No one can explain it. Her former instructors at the Academy, her clan members, even her own sensei, Kurenai, describe her as a failure until very recently. Timid, weak, with no will to fight. A cast-off from the main branch. Her transformation is an absolute anomaly. It's as if she's a completely different person. The same applies, to a lesser extent, to the Haruno girl. Her chakra control and intelligence were always high, but her combat application, her taijutsu, and her mental fortitude have improved exponentially in record time."
Kabuto paused. "I reviewed the mission reports from the Land of Waves. Something happened there. Something that Konoha's official reports deliberately omit. It was the trigger for their growth, but the details are a high-level secret."
Orochimaru turned slowly, the smile on his disguised face widening. "Heh heh heh… a mystery. I love mysteries, Kabuto. They mean there's an unknown variable. A hidden power at play that isn't in our reports." His tongue slid across his lips, a predatory gesture. "Perhaps Kakashi taught them something, but this is beyond his repertoire. This is something new, something… pure."
His voice dropped, becoming more sibilant, more hungry. "A power that I want… to study. To dissect. I want to understand the mechanism of that sudden evolution. And, if possible, make it my own."
Back in the arena, Hayate once again called for silence to announce the next pairing. The electronic board flickered, the names spinning randomly until they finally came to a stop.
SHIKAMARU VS. KIN
Shikamaru let out his characteristic sigh, a sound of pure resignation. "What a drag… Guess it's my turn to get up." He stretched and started down the stairs with the energy of a man walking to his own execution.
But before he could reach the bottom, the board flickered once more, preparing to reveal the final matchup of the preliminaries. The last fight that would decide the complete roster for the third exam.
The entire hall held its breath. Every genin, every Jōnin, every spectator felt the tension rise. This was the showdown that everyone, somehow, had been waiting for.
The names stopped.
LEE VS. GAARA
A deathly silence fell over the balcony. It was a silence so profound you could hear the hum of the overhead lights. All eyes fell on the two figures. On one side, Gaara of the Sand, who had remained impassive and silent through all the previous matches, wearing an expression of deadly boredom, his chakra emanating an almost palpable bloodlust.
The silence was broken, not by a cry of fear, but by Lee's voice, which contained not a shred of terror, but an almost manic excitement, pure and fiery.
"YES! FINALLY!" he shouted, clenching his fists so hard his knuckles turned white. "The chance to prove that my hard work can defeat absolute genius! My flame of youth burns with the strength of a thousand suns! Gaara of the Sand, I am honored to be able to face you!"
Across the room, Gaara, who had ignored everyone until now, lifted his head. And for the first time all day, he smiled.
It was not a smile of joy or confidence. It was a broken, terrifying smile, a crack in his mask of indifference that promised pain, sand, and blood. His eyes locked onto Lee, and the air around the balcony seemed to freeze.