"Heroes aren't born in glory, they're forged in monts of quiet terror."
The night was damp and windless, the air hanging thick with salt and silence. Haji stood at the mouth of his hidden tunnel in the woods, eyes narrowed against the darkness. The earth was undisturbed, the narrow opening sealed with chakra-compacted soil. No signs of pursuit. Not yet.
He knelt beside the entry, placed one hand to the ground, and breathed out slowly.
"Alright. In, extract, retreat. No combat."
His voice was barely a whisper, more for himself than anything else.
He wore only the lightest layers: cloth wraps, a dark tunic, and a head covering to muffle his outline. At his hip, two kunai. On his back, a compact pouch with ergency rations, a sealing scroll, and a small set of chalk sticks. A ration pill tucked inside his sleeve.
Haji pressed his palm forward, and with a pulse of chakra, the earth uncoiled. The tunnel split open like the jaw of a beast, revealing the descending dark. He slipped inside, resealing it behind him, leaving the surface utterly unchanged.
The tunnel was silent.
Dirt scraped lightly against his forearms as he crawled, using controlled chakra in his limbs to keep movent smooth and quiet. He counted the seconds in his head. Every ten heartbeats, he paused, listened.
No sounds from above. No footsteps. No shouting.
Good.
The viewing slit he'd made three nights ago remained intact, hidden beneath the port warehouse. He reached it and poured a thin stream of chakra into the hardened soil, watching as the dirt lens rotated and cleared.
Dim lantern light filtered through cracked floorboards. Haji saw movent, the sa two rcenaries as before, laughing over a crooked ga of dice and chewing on roasted eel. Their weapons leaned lazily nearby.
No sign of Haku.
He shifted the angle. In the corner of the warehouse, children huddled together. Pale, fearful eyes. Dirty clothes. Koji' among them. One girl looked on the verge of sobbing.
Haji gritted his teeth.
He reached upward and perford the jutsu he had refined specifically for this night: Earth Release: Soft Grip Tunnel.
Chakra swirled through his fingers. The soil above softened, reshaped, then peeled upward like the petal of a flower, lifting an unseen trapdoor into the wooden floorboards. Quietly. Carefully.
He erged into the warehouse shadows like a ghost.
The guards were still laughing.
With careful gestures, Haji crept to the children, eyes flicking between them and the guards. He pressed a finger to his lips. One of the older boys nodded, understanding.
He worked quickly.
One by one, he cut the ropes binding their arms and motioned for the first pair to follow him back to the tunnel.
The smallest ones went first, a girl no older than five and a trembling boy who couldn't stop rubbing his arms. Haji whispered gently, urging them along the sloped passage. He kept a hand on the tunnel wall, feeding a slow chakra stream to hold the shape.
Back and forth he moved. Each trip a test of balance, silence, and control. He tid his returns with the guards' distractions, a mont of argunt, a burst of laughter, or the clatter of their ga.
Third trip. Fourth. Fifth.
Sweat clung to his spine. His breathing slowed with discipline, but chakra fatigue pricked his fingers and toes.
Almost done.
Only one child left, Koji now slumped beside the crates. The boy looked dazed, sickly pale.
"Co on," Haji whispered, kneeling beside him. "We have to go."
The boy didn't respond.
No ti.
Haji hoisted him onto his back, careful not to let him stir too much. The weight was manageable, but his arms trembled.
He turned, stepping back toward the tunnel, the trapdoor already peeled open and waiting.
One step. Two. Three more and they'd be gone.
Then a voice, soft as falling snow.
"That's quite a clever escape route."
Haji froze.
He looked up.
Perched in the rafters above the crate stack was a figure, tall, masked, cloaked in mist. A porcelain face glead faintly in the low lantern light. The air chilled.
Haku.
The tunnel was behind him. The child was on his back. No guards had seen. No one had spoken but them.
Still. He could not run.
He could not speak.
He stood, unmoving, eyes locked upward, heart pounding like war drums.
End of Chapter 12: The Silent Rescue
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