The morning sun poured over the inn's backyard, a pale light that did little to dispel the chill that had seeped into Naruto's bones. The ground, once a chaotic mud pit, had dried, leaving patches of dark earth as a reminder of the previous day's battle against the water balloons.
Naruto sat shivering on the porch, wrapped in a dry towel Shizune had brought him along with a steamed rice ball that gave off a comforting aroma. His blond hair, still damp, dripped onto the fabric.
"That was awesome, Shizune! I could almost feel it! A little more and I would've gotten it without the clone's help!" he exclaimed, his mouth half-full, as his energy was already returning to alarming levels. He took a huge bite of the rice ball, chewing with an enthusiasm that seemed to belie the exhaustion visible in the dark circles under his eyes.
Shizune offered him a genuine smile, one that no longer seemed so tired. Tonton, at her feet, sniffed a crumb of rice with interest, letting out a small grunt of satisfaction.
"You did it, Naruto. It was a big step," she said in a soft voice. She sat beside him on the porch, maintaining a respectful distance. "This morning, when you started, I thought you were going to flood the whole street."
Naruto laughed, swallowing the mouthful of rice.
"Really? I almost did! But the key is to never give up!"
"You have an incredible amount of chakra, Naruto," Shizune agreed, a hint of seriousness in her voice. "It's almost... overwhelming."
"That's a good thing, right?! It means I'm super strong!"
"It is, but..." she hesitated for a moment, searching for the words. "It's like a gale-force wind. Lady Tsunade always says that power without control is just noise. Seeing your determination... it reminds her of a lot of things. That's why she didn't look away for a second. Lady Tsunade never admits when she's impressed, but she was."
Naruto puffed out his chest with pride.
"Well, she'd better get ready! Impressed is nothing compared to what she's gonna see today! Today's the day! Today I master the Rasengan and we go home!"
"Don't get ahead of yourself, brat."
Tsunade's voice boomed from the doorway. It wasn't a shout, but it carried the weight of an avalanche, dragging a palpable air of a hangover and irritation with it. She held a sake bottle by the neck, swinging it lazily as if it were a pendulum marking the hours of her patience. Her blonde hair was a mess, and her amber eyes watched him with a disdain that could freeze fire.
"That was the warm-up. Now the real work begins."
With a flick of her wrist, she threw an object at him. Naruto caught it on pure instinct. It wasn't a balloon. It was a solid rubber ball, heavy and dense. It felt dead in his hand, without the elasticity and promise of an easy explosion. The density of the object surprised him.
Naruto weighed it in his hand, his smile faltering for a split second. The surface was smooth, but hard as a rock.
"Piece of cake!" he declared, recovering his bravado and squeezing the ball hard. "This is nothing for the next Hokage!"
Tsunade let out a dry, joyless laugh, a harsh sound that seemed to scrape the morning air.
"Keep shouting that stupid title. Maybe if you say it enough times, the ball will explode from boredom."
She sat on the porch step, uncorked the bottle, and took a long swig. Her eyes were fixed on him, awaiting the inevitable failure.
Naruto swallowed hard. Tsunade's gaze was a more intimidating challenge than the ball itself.
Alright, here we go!
He sat on the ground, cross-legged, and placed the ball in the palm of his right hand. He closed his eyes, visualizing the image that had been seared into his mind: the swirl in the ramen bowl, the perfect vortex.
The power is rotation. The rotation is the power. Like a whirlpool... Don't push, guide.
He summoned a shadow clone beside him. The clone appeared with a poof and nodded, understanding the maneuver without needing words.
"Ready, boss!"
Naruto placed the ball in his right palm. The clone placed its left hand over Naruto's, covering it.
"I'll provide the flow, you provide the spin!" the original Naruto ordered.
They concentrated. Silence fell over the yard. Naruto felt the torrent of the clone's chakra flood his hand, a river of pure, constant energy. With his own energy, he tried to divert that river, to curve it, to force it to spin as he had done with the water.
The rubber ball trembled. It vibrated. But it didn't give. It was like trying to spin a rock.
"Harder!" Naruto yelled, gritting his teeth.
The clone pushed with more chakra. Naruto forced the rotation with all his will, concentrating so hard his face turned red. The ball grew warm in his hand, the rubber resisting the pressure with an inert stubbornness.
Suddenly, the energy spiraled out of control. The ball, instead of bursting, shot out of his hand like a cannonball. It bounced off the back wall with a BOOM! that shook the structure, then off a tree, tearing off a chunk of bark, and finally landed in a puddle with a dull, disappointing plop.
"Dammit!" Naruto complained, looking at his reddened, vibrating hand. "This thing is tougher than the old Hokage's skull!"
Shizune suppressed a giggle, covering her mouth with her hand. Tsunade didn't even flinch. She just took another drink.
"Giving up already?"
"Never!"
Frustration took hold of him. If finesse didn't work, he'd use brute force. It was his usual logic.
Poof. Poof. Poof.
A dozen clones filled the yard, each with a rubber ball in hand. The chaos returned with renewed energy.
"We gotta crush it!" one shouted, trying to squeeze the ball between its hands with no result.
"No, we have to throw it really high so it explodes when it falls!" suggested another, tossing the ball into the air only for it to land back on his head.
"What if we all bite it at the same time?" proposed a third, with a logic only a Naruto clone could conceive of.
"There has to be a trick! Maybe if we yell at it enough, it'll give up!" a fourth clone theorized, getting close to the ball and screaming, "GIVE UP, YOU STUPID BALL!"
"SHUT UP AND FOCUS!" the original roared, on the verge of despair.
What followed was a symphony of comical and painful failures that escalated quickly.
"I've got it!" one clone exclaimed, placing the ball on the ground. "If we all jump on it at the same time, the pressure will make it pop!"
"That's the stupidest idea I've ever had!" another clone replied, just before a dozen of them jumped in unison.
The result was a massive rebound. The ball shot upward, hit a tree branch, and then fell like a meteor on the head of another clone, which dissipated with a poof and a cloud of smoke.
"Step aside, amateurs! This requires delicacy!" shouted a third clone. He sat in a lotus position and began to spin the ball slowly on his index finger like a basketball. "Watch and learn. The trick is in the centripetal spin..."
The ball slipped, bounced off his knee, hit a wooden fence with a loud CRACK!, and rolled to a stop next to Tsunade's sake bottle. She didn't flinch, simply nudging it aside with her foot.
"You're spinning it counter-clockwise, you idiot!" a clone yelled from the other side of the yard.
"The ramen whirlpool spins clockwise! I remember it perfectly!"
"Only at Ichiraku! At other shops, it spins the other way! It depends on the hemisphere!"
"WHAT DOES THE HEMISPHERE HAVE TO DO WITH ANY OF THIS?!"
The original Naruto clutched his head, feeling a migraine brought on by his own multiplied stupidity.
"You're an embarrassment to myself!"
The balls kept flying. One hit Tonton, who let out an indignant squeal and hid under the porch. Another landed on the roof and rolled into the street, causing a street vendor to cry out. A third bounced and hit the original Naruto in the back of the neck.
"Hey! Friendly fire!"
"It wasn't my fault! He distracted me talking about hemispheres!"
Naruto fell to his knees, panting, surrounded by the disaster. The morning's confidence had evaporated, leaving only the bitter taste of failure and the smell of rubber.
Tsunade watched the scene, drinking from her bottle. The spectacle had ceased to be amusing. It was pathetic. And, for some reason she didn't want to admit, it was irritating. The kid's will was so stupid, so unbreakable... so familiar. It reminded her of herself as a child, trying to master a medical jutsu everyone said was too complex.
Finally, her patience exhausted, she stood up.
She approached, dodging a stray ball with an almost lazy movement, and stopped in front of Naruto. With a simple, annoyed glance, she dispelled all the clones. The sudden silence was almost as overwhelming as the previous noise. The only sound was the dripping of water from Naruto's clothes.
"Your problem isn't a lack of power, brat," she said, her voice serious, almost clinical. "It's that you have too much."
Naruto looked up, confused, his face covered in sweat and dirt.
"Too much? That's a good thing, right?!"
"Not when you can't control it," Tsunade replied, her tone sharp. She crouched down to his level, and her amber eyes pierced him. "You feel that? Inside you. That whirlwind that never stops. That hatred, that rage that isn't yours. You have the engine of a Bijuu pumping out vast, wild chakra. But your control is a disaster. It's like trying to fill a water glass with a fire hose at full blast. You splash everywhere, but the glass never gets full. All that raw power escapes through the cracks before you can shape it."
Naruto was speechless. The analogy, so simple and brutal, hit the nail on the head of his lifelong frustration. No one had ever explained it to him like that. No one had put into words the feeling of having a raging ocean inside a body that was too small.
Tsunade bent down and picked up one of the rubber balls. She held it in the palm of her hand.
"Watch, you idiot."
There was no burst of energy. Naruto didn't even see her chakra. He simply watched as she placed the tip of her index finger on the surface of the ball. There was no force, only absolute concentration.
And the rubber gave way.
It didn't explode. It deformed, sinking under her finger as if it were soft clay. A perfect, deep dent appeared on the solid surface, the rubber groaning under the controlled pressure.
"It's not about the force of the blow," she explained, removing her finger. The ball returned to its original shape with a soft sound. "It's about the pressure on a single point. Your chakra is a sledgehammer; you need to turn it into a needle."
She dropped the ball at Naruto's feet and turned away, ready to end the lesson.
"Give up. you don't have the talent. You lack the fundamentals."
Naruto remained sitting on the ground, staring at the ball. Tsunade's words were cruel, but the demonstration had been a revelation. A needle... not a hammer. He saw in his mind's eye Sakura, weaving her chakra threads, fine and precise. He saw Hinata, whose Gentle Fist strikes were delicate yet devastating. They had needles. He was the only one with a hammer.
The sun began to truly warm the yard, slowly drying it out. Shizune approached with the towel, this time to wipe the sweat from his forehead.
"Don't listen to her, Naruto. She just..."
"No," he interrupted, his voice strangely calm, devoid of its usual energy. "She's right."
Tsunade, who was about to enter the inn, stopped, her back to them.
Naruto stood up, his expression no longer one of frustration, but of a deep, cold focus. He dusted off his pants.
"Thanks for the lesson, Grandma Tsunade."
A vein throbbed on Tsunade's forehead, but she said nothing. She just watched, the sake bottle forgotten in her hand, as Naruto sat down again. He created a single clone. He repeated the process. But this time, something had changed.
He was no longer trying to force the whirlpool. He was trying to feel it, to guide it, to fine-tune it.
The sun crept across the sky. The hours passed. Naruto and his clone remained motionless, soaked in sweat, the ball trembling in their hands. There were no more chaotic explosions. Just a tense, concentrated silence, broken only by the sound of his breathing and the distant noises of the city.
And in that silence, Tsunade saw something she hadn't expected. She saw the birth, not of power, but of control. She saw a blockheaded idiot transforming, through sheer stubbornness, into a shinobi.
Naruto was sitting on the ground, completely exhausted. His chakra was nearly depleted, his vision was blurry, but the ball in his hands was no longer inert. It was vibrating. It was spinning. It wasn't enough to make it pop yet, but it was a start. It was proof that he could do it.
Tsunade was about to leave, to leave him to his obsession, but she stopped. The image of the boy, so stubborn, so alone in his struggle, stirred something in her chest. Something that had been dormant for a long time.
"Well, what now?" she asked, her voice sounding more tired than mocking. "Are you going to spend what little money you have left on ramen?"
Naruto, without looking up from the ball, tried to smile proudly, a gesture that was more a grimace of exhaustion.
"Of course! A ninja needs fuel to think!"
It was then that Shizune, who had been watching from a prudent distance, approached with a clean towel.
"Lady Tsunade," she said in a quiet but audible voice. "He... he confessed to me that he had to borrow money just to make the trip here."
The revelation hung in the air. Naruto blushed violently, shame overcoming his exhaustion. He felt exposed, his facade of self-sufficiency shattered. Why did she say that? Now they'll think I'm a total loser.
Tsunade stared at him, and the boy's sweaty, embarrassed face seemed to fade, superimposed with ghosts from the past.
She saw Nawaki's face, younger, with the same stubborn determination in his eyes. She saw him smile, his ninja headband crooked, bragging that he would be Hokage one day while she slipped a few coins into his hand so he'd stop bothering her and buy some dango. That same stupid, hopeful look...
Then, Dan's image, always calmer, but with a passion that burned inside. She remembered him in his small apartment, surrounded by scrolls, explaining his plans to put a medical-nin in every squad, so absorbed in his cause that his own well-being was secondary. "Money doesn't matter, Tsunade, what matters is protecting them." A dreamer who spent everything he had on his ideal.
Dreamers. Both of them. Stubborn, stupid dreamers who threw themselves headfirst at the world and were broken. And now, this kid. The same idiotic light in his eyes. The same empty wallet. The same refusal to give up.
A deep sigh of frustration escaped her, a sound that was more for herself than for them. A sound that admitted a personal defeat.
"A ninja who can't even afford his own food is pathetic," she stated, her tone sharp to hide the crack in her voice. "And no student of mine is going to make that kind of impression. Get your things. You'll be staying with us. I don't want to hear any complaints."
Naruto's head shot up, his blue eyes wide as saucers. The exhaustion, the frustration, the shame... it all vanished, replaced by a disbelief so pure it left him speechless.
Shizune gasped, covering her mouth with her hand, her eyes shining with joy.
"F-for real?" Naruto stammered, getting to his feet with difficulty, leaning on the porch. The surprise gave way to a gratitude so immense, so overwhelming, that his eyes filled with tears he struggled to hold back.
"FOR REAL?! THANKS, GRANDMA TSUNADE! I KNEW YOU WERE A GOOD PERSON DEEP DOWN!"
A vein throbbed furiously on Tsunade's forehead.
"Call me 'Grandma' again and you'll sleep on the roof," she hissed, turning away to hide the strange warmth that threatened to rise to her cheeks. "And hurry up. I don't have all day."
The walk back to the luxury inn where they were staying was a spectacle. Naruto, revitalized by the unexpected offer, was a whirlwind of energy and questions. And his target wasn't the legendary Sannin, who walked with a grumpy expression, but her long-suffering apprentice.
"Hey, Shizune, are you a super-strong ninja too?" he asked, walking backward to face her and nearly bumping into a merchant. "Can you break trees with one finger like Grandma Tsunade? What about Tonton? Is Tonton a ninja pig too? I bet he knows jutsus! What's your favorite food? Do you hate vegetables like me? Because vegetables are the true enemy of the ninja world, believe it!"
Shizune, accustomed to a life of stress and debt, was completely disarmed. Naruto's curiosity was genuine, childish, and absolutely overwhelming.
"Well... I... I'm a medical-nin, mainly," she replied, stumbling over her words, a shy smile forming on her lips. "And no, Tonton doesn't know any jutsus. He's... he's just a very smart pig."
"A ninja pig!" Naruto insisted, convinced. "I knew it! So what about you? What's your most incredible jutsu? Can you spit poison? That would be so cool!"
For the first time in what felt like years, Shizune relaxed. A laugh, shy at first and then clearer, escaped her lips.
"I don't spit poison, Naruto," she said, laughing. "My most incredible jutsu is probably making sure Lady Tsunade doesn't gamble away our entire inn on a bad hand of cards."
"That's an S-rank jutsu for sure!" Naruto exclaimed, completely serious, which made Shizune laugh even harder.
"I wouldn't put it like that. I'm her apprentice. And... her friend, I suppose."
"And did she teach you how to break rocks with one finger too?" he insisted, his eyes shining.
"My training is different," she explained patiently. "Medical ninjutsu requires extremely precise chakra control. It's the opposite of brute force. It's about healing, not destroying."
"Oh..." Naruto said, processing the information. "So you're like Sakura-chan, but a grown-up version?"
"You could say that," Shizune smiled. The comparison, though simple, made her feel a strange sense of pride.
They walked in silence for a few seconds, until Naruto started up again.
"And Tonton... where did he come from? Is he a summon? Is there a secret land of ninja pigs?"
Shizune let out a laugh.
"No, Naruto. Lady Tsunade won him in a bet a long time ago. The owner didn't have money to pay her and offered the only thing he had. He thought it was a joke, but she accepted."
"She won a pig in a bet?" Naruto repeated, incredulous. Then, a giant grin spread across his face. "That's the coolest thing I've ever heard in my life!"
Tsunade walked a few steps ahead, pretending to ignore the conversation, but she heard every word. She heard Shizune's laughter, a sound that had become as rare as a lucky streak. She saw, out of the corner of her eye, how her always-tense and worried apprentice straightened up, how the smile reached her eyes. And all because of the nonsense from that loud-mouthed kid.
They arrived at the hotel suite, a place of silks and fine woods that contrasted violently with Naruto's humble apartment in Konoha. While Shizune showed him his room ("Whoa, it has a window that isn't broken!"), Tsunade poured herself a glass of water, not sake, and looked out the window, watching the bustle of Tanzaku.
She heard Naruto ask Shizune if she'd ever tried to eat noodles with senbon needles, and the laugh from Shizune that followed. The question was stupid, but the camaraderie forming between them was real.
A long, deep sigh escaped Tsunade's lips. It wasn't a sigh of anger. It was a sigh of strange, resigned amusement, a sigh that acknowledged a defeat that had nothing to do with strength, but with the persistence of a will that refused to be extinguished.
"That kid..." she murmured to herself, her gaze lost on the street below. "He's an exasperating plague. A plague that, for some reason, it seems Shizune needed."