The old clinic had once been little more than a dust-choked room, forgotten behind a gambling hall. Its shelves were warped, instrunts dulled by rust, and scrolls curled tight like dried leaves. But now, a month later, it breathed again.
Haji stood at its center in a freshly scrubbed coat, sleeves rolled up, pale light filtering in from the slatted windows. Clean linens were folded in a crate to the side. Herbs lined the walls, labeled with Tsunade's neat calligraphy. The faint scent of antiseptic clung to the floorboards.
The transformation hadn't co easily.
Every morning, Haji rose with the sun, cleaning, boiling water, sharpening scalpels, and practicing diagnostic hand seals until his fingers cramped. He reorganized the entire supply cabinet, catalogued every scroll and herb, and sterilized tools under fire and chakra. All under the keen eyes of Shizune, who watched silently from the doorway or across the room, always present, always precise.
Tsunade herself had yet to step inside. She hovered on the periphery of the clinic like a ghost of its future. She asked questions, set standards, but she never entered when there was blood.
The first patient ca in limping.
A fisherman, line caught in his leg, wound already festering from seawater and neglect. Haji didn't flinch. He bowed, welcod the man in, and gestured to the cot. Shizune stood nearby, arms folded, gaze sharp but not unkind.
"Diagnosis," she said simply.
Haji nodded. He pressed his palms together and molded chakra.
Mystical Diagnosis Technique.
His chakra spread out in thin pulses, sweeping through the man's leg like sonar. He closed his eyes, visualizing layers of tissue, the way the infected area pulsed slightly warr, the shifting pressure where swelling pushed against vessels. No shattered bone. Foreign material lodged near the calf muscle.
He exhaled slowly. "Hook fragnt still inside. Inflammation progressing. Minor infection, but treatable."
Shizune said nothing, only watched as he moved to the next step.
Hemostasis Technique.
His fingers glowed a faint green as he stemd the bleeding. He murmured calming words to the man while cleansing the wound, chakra threading into blood vessels to clamp and seal them without invasive cutting.
Next, he activated the Anesthetic Palm Technique, his chakra flowing into the area to numb pain receptors, and made a single, deliberate incision with the Chakra Scalpel. The energy blade shimred at the tips of his fingers, precise, controlled. He retrieved the hook's broken end and closed the wound with slow, focused healing using the Mystical Palm Technique.
The man blinked, groggy but whole.
"I didn't even feel it," he muttered in disbelief.
Haji bowed. "You won't have to limp tomorrow."
Shizune pulled Haji aside after the patient left. "You knew when to use chakra and when not to. That matters more than flashy jutsu."
He didn't smile. He just nodded and began cleaning the tools.
As the weeks rolled on, the clinic began to see a steady stream of people, farrs with pulled muscles, children with bruises or burns, travelers with chakra fatigue or fever. Haji treated them all, learning not just with his hands but his senses.
His dical ninjutsu sharpened rapidly
With the Basic First Aid Technique, he stabilized sprains and cuts quickly, often before even applying bandages.
His control over the Anesthetic Palm grew refined enough to isolate individual pain centers in the body.
Chakra Scalpel work extended to light tendon work and muscle adjustnts, under Shizune's ever-watching eyes.
The Mystical Palm Technique was still draining, but he could now use it long enough to seal cracked ribs or deep gouges.
What surprised Shizune most wasn't just the technique, it was the speed.
One night, after closing the clinic, she watched Haji clean tools and recite muscle groups aloud, correcting his own errors mid-sentence.
"How are you learning so fast?" she asked quietly.
He hesitated, then answered truthfully, "I have a strong mory. Maybe stronger than I should for soone my age. I've seen things… thought differently… before I ca here."
Shizune said nothing for a long mont. Then only: "You'll burn out if you don't rest."
"I'll rest after I'm ready," he replied softly.
Each night, Tsunade sat alone on the upper balcony of the inn, sipping sake and listening to Shizune's reports. She rarely reacted. But so nights, when Shizune left, she would mutter things to the moon.
"Severed tendon… and he didn't nick the nerve?" she said one night, brows furrowed.
She rembered learning to do that herself. It had taken her months. Even Shizune had required guided practice over several surgeries.
Now this boy was replicating it after only diagrams and observation.
Too fast.
Too precise.
Yet there were no signs of cheating, no shortcuts. He worked for every inch of progress.
One evening, she stood at the top of the stairs and looked down through the half-open clinic door. Haji was seated at the rear table, pen in hand, cataloguing herbal extracts and correlating chakra suppression effects from patient reactions. The candlelight reflected in his eyes, tired, but unyielding.
Tsunade didn't enter.
She just watched.
"…You're either gifted," she whispered to herself, "or you're not human."
A few days later, a young man arrived at the clinic, collapsed at the doorway, injured from a boar hunt gone wrong, bleeding from the thigh and coughing blood from bruised lungs.
Shizune wasn't with him. She had stepped out for dicine.
And Tsunade, as always, was absent from the treatnt room.
Haji didn't panic. He locked the doors, sterilized the tools, and began treatnt.
Mystical Diagnosis. Hemostasis. Incision with Chakra Scalpel to remove splinters of bone. Regeneration with Mystical Palm. His chakra was drained by the end, And the man walked out of the clinic that evening with breath in his lungs and gratitude in his eyes.
When Shizune returned and heard what had happened, she stood still for a long ti.
"You acted alone?"
Haji nodded.
"…And he walked out?"
"Breathing," Haji said. "Fully stabilized."
Shizune reported everything to Tsunade.
She listened in silence, then took a long drink of sake.
"He's ahead of schedule," Shizune said softly.
Tsunade stared out the window. "He's Progressing very fast."
That night, Haji sat in the clinic alone, wiping down the counters. A small dical coat now hung on a peg by the door, his size, worn from daily use. He washed his hands and stared into the water basin.
His reflection looked back.
Steady.
Sharper.
Older, sohow.
The mory of the geneseed stirred within his mindspace, humming like a silent bell.
Not yet, he thought.
But soon.
He had learned to heal others.
And soon, he would learn to heal himself.
He still need Surgeries Experiences.
The blade would co. The cut would be made.
And Haji would be ready.
End of Chapter 23 – White Coats and Iron Will
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