The sun had not yet decided to rise. The sky over Konoha was a deep indigo, dotted with the last stars that refused to disappear. The air was cold and clean, with that particular silence that only exists in the hour of the wolf, just before the world awakens.
Hinata shifted on her futon, not from a dream, but from an awareness of her own body that was entirely new. Even at rest, she felt the energy within her, a river of chakra that now flowed full and steady, no longer the uncertain trickle of before. She could feel the wood of the floor beneath her, the tension of the fibers, the faint draft that slipped through the edge of the window. Her senses were a symphony that threatened to overwhelm her.
A light tap on the glass startled her.
She sat up with a jolt, her heart hamring in her chest. Her instincts, much sharper now, told her there was no threat, but the surprise was enough to wake her completely.
Another tap, softer this ti. Tap, tap, tap.
She stood, moving with a silent grace that still felt foreign to her, and approached the window. She opened it carefully, and the cold morning air gave her goosebumps.
Down below, in the impeccably manicured garden of the Hyuga compound, an orange silhouette was waving at her with a contained energy.
Naruto.
Her heart skipped a beat, not out of shyness, but out of a strange excitent, a sense of conspiracy.
“N-Naruto-kun?” she whispered into the air, more to herself than to him.
He brought a finger to his lips in a sign for silence and then pointed toward the compound walls, indicating that she should et him outside.
Hinata nodded, her heart racing. Was everything alright? Without hesitation, she dressed in her training clothes with lightning speed. Every movent was efficient, precise. As she slipped out the window, she didn’t feel the vertigo of before. She landed on the dew-damp grass with a whisper, making no more noise than a falling leaf. She could hear, much farther away than she should have been able to, the rhythmic breathing of a branch family guard making his rounds. She could feel the change in air pressure that betrayed the rustling of tree branches. It was a new world, full of information. Dodging the patrol routes was child's play, a silent dance that would have left her breathless just a week ago. In less than a minute, she was outside the walls, the freedom and the weight of her new power on her shoulders.
Naruto was waiting for her, leaning against a tree. He wasn't wearing his usual radiant smile. His face, in the pale pre-dawn light, looked tired.
“Hey, Hinata,” he said, his voice lower than usual. “Sorry for waking you up so early.”
“D-don't worry, Naruto-kun. Is sothing wrong? Are you okay?”
He tried to smile, but the gesture didn't reach his eyes.
“Yeah, it’s just… I needed to talk to soone. And you’re the only one who… well, who knows my secret.”
Hinata nodded, understanding. She found herself standing straighter, her natural shyness warring with a new instinct that told her he needed her. Ready to listen.
“Let’s go sowhere else,” he said. “I know a quiet place.”
They began to walk, heading into the forest that surrounded the village. The silence between them wasn't uncomfortable. It was a shared space, filled with the words they couldn't speak in front of anyone else. Naruto walked with his hands in his pockets, stumbling once on an upturned root and catching his balance with an annoyed mutter. Hinata, in contrast, moved with an unfamiliar grace, her feet seeming to always find the perfect place to land.
He led her to a small hill that offered a perfect view of the village. At the top was a single smooth, flat stone, worn down by ti.
“I co here sotis,” Naruto admitted in a low voice, sitting down. “Nobody bothers .”
Hinata sat beside him, keeping a respectful distance.
“You look tired, Naruto-kun.”
He let out a long sigh, the vapor of his breath visible in the cold air.
“It’s just… my head won't stop spinning. Kakashi-sensei's test was yesterday.”
“The one with the bells?”
“That’s the one,” he confird. “And we passed. But… Ugh! It was so frustrating!”
He ran his hands through his hair in a gesture of pure exasperation.
“I knew we had to work as a team! I felt it in my bones, believe it! But nobody would listen to . Sasuke…” his voice was tinged with annoyance, “he acts like he's all alone in the world. He thinks asking for help is for weaklings. But it's not! It's for smart people! Why carry everything yourself when you have two people by your side? During the test, I saw how he looked at Kakashi-sensei. He didn’t see an opponent, just an obstacle to his revenge. And that’s blinding him.”
He paused, looking down at the waking village below them.
“And Sakura-chan… she’s so smart, Hinata. Always has been. But as soon as Sasuke’s around, it’s like she forgets everything. She just wants his approval. And that’s why Kakashi-sensei broke her so easily. Because her weak point was on display for the whole world to see. I had to act like a fool, let them tie up, just to force them to look at each other. To look at . So that for one second, we were a team. And it worked! They gave their food in the end. But it felt… weird. Like I had to trick them into doing the right thing.”
He looked at her, and his blue eyes held a confusion and vulnerability he rarely showed.
“A team is supposed to trust each other, right? Why is it so hard?”
Hinata watched him, seeing past the loud boy. She saw soone who cared deeply about his friends, to the point of carrying their frustrations and scheming in the shadows to bring them together.
“B-but you did it, Naruto-kun,” she said softly. “You made it work. In your own way. That… that’s what matters. You gave them a chance to stay a team.”
Naruto looked at her, and so of the tension in his face softened.
“I guess… Thanks, Hinata.”
A small, genuine smile, the first of the morning, appeared on his face.
“And then… I was with Sakura in the afternoon,” he continued, scratching the back of his neck with a nervous gesture. “I went on a date with her.”
Hinata’s eyes widened slightly.
“Well, not a date-date!” he rushed to correct, waving his hands. “It was just… paying off a bet. I took her to Ichiraku.” His expression turned grim. “Kakashi-sensei was really hard on her during the test. He used a genjutsu and made her think Sasuke was… badly hurt. She was a wreck.”
Hinata gasped, covering her mouth with a hand.
“So I talked to her. I told her she wasn't weak. That her ability to care for others was her greatest strength. And it was weird, Hinata. Knowing what’s going to happen… sotis it’s like it gives a push. Like I know exactly what to say to help soone because I know what’s coming. And it worked. She… she listened to . But… is it okay to use what I know like that with my friends? It feels like cheating.”
Hinata shook her head, her expression serious.
“I-it's not cheating, Naruto-kun. Y-you just… told her the truth. Sakura… is strong, and she cares about others. You helped her see that. That’s… being a good friend.”
Her words seed to lift a weight from his shoulders. He looked at her with such open gratitude that it disard her.
“You’re amazing, you know that?”
The complint made her blush violently, and she looked down at her own hands, which were nervously fiddling with the hem of her jacket.
They sat in silence for a mont, watching as the first sliver of orange light began to cut through the darkness on the horizon.
“You look different too, Hinata,” he said, changing the subject. “More… confident.”
Her blush deepened, but her face fell. She sighed.
“My team… Team 8. It’s… a little difficult.”
“Difficult? But Kurenai-sensei is great, and so are Kiba and Shino!”
“Y-yes, they are. And that’s why it’s difficult,” she explained. “They’re very observant. In training yesterday, Kiba-kun attacked . It was during taijutsu practice, he used his charge, the one that always used to knock down.”
She paused, reliving the mont.
“But this ti it was… different. I saw him coming, every muscle in his body tensing, the turn of his hip… it was like ti slowed down. I took one step to the side, that’s all. And he flew right past, stumbling over his own montum.”
She looked at her hands as if they didn't belong to her.
“He just stood there with his mouth open. Akamaru was barking, all confused. And then… then he started yelling.”
Her voice dropped, thick with sha.
“‘AMAZING, HINATA! THAT WAS AWESO! KURENAI-SENSEI, DID YOU SEE THAT?!’ Everyone turned to look at . Kurenai-sensei was smiling, and Shino-kun… he was just standing there, but I knew he was analyzing . Suddenly, I was the center of attention. Everyone was expecting to do it again.”
A tremor ran through her.
“Kurenai-sensei asked to punch a tree. I tried to hold back, I really did. But the wood splintered. It made a loud, sharp crack. She smiled at and said, ‘Excellent, Hinata. With that kind of strength, you should be taking the lead in our fights.’ She wants to be in the front!”
She looked at Naruto, panic in her lavender eyes.
“I don’t want to be in the front. I like… I liked going unnoticed. Now Kiba won’t stop challenging to test my strength and Kurenai-sensei is giving instructions I don’t know if I can follow. Everyone is looking at . And I… I feel like a fraud. I didn't get this power by training until I dropped. You gave it to . And they're praising for sothing I feel like I didn't earn. It’s… it's awful, Naruto-kun. It’s like having a treasure, and everyone is forcing you to show it off when all you want to do is keep it in your pocket.”
Naruto nodded slowly, understanding. Not with the mind of a strategist, but with the heart of soone who also knew what it was like to have attention he didn't want.
“It’s not a fraud, Hinata,” he said, and his voice was surprisingly firm.
She looked up, confused.
“Yes, it is. It’s your…”
“No,” he interrupted her, sothing he never did. “The power didn’t co from nowhere. The system… the Falna… it just uses what you already have. It turns your experience, your effort, your soul, into numbers. Do you think your Dexterity and Agility ca from my blood? No! They ca from all the tis you trained alone, in secret, away from your father’s eyes. From all the tis you pushed yourself to be better. Your skill, the ‘Lioness Heart,’ it’s not mine. It’s yours. It was born from your desire to protect others.”
He leaned toward her, his gaze intense.
“They’re looking at you because they’re finally seeing who you’ve always been: strong. All I did was give you the key to open the door. You walked through it yourself.”
Naruto’s words hit her with the force of a revelation. Was that true? That this strength, deep down, had always been hers?
“But… the attention… I don’t like it.”
“I don’t always like it either,” he admitted with a shrug. “Everyone looks at for being the fox boy, or the idiot who yells all the ti. I promise you, it’s better to be looked at because you’re incredibly strong. You just have to get used to it.”
He stood up and offered her a hand to help her.
“When they look at you, don’t look down. Look back at them. When Kiba challenges you, beat him. When Kurenai-sensei asks you to lead, try. Show them it’s not a fluke. Show them that this is you now.”
Hinata took his hand. Her grip was firm. She stood up, feeling taller than before.
“Thanks for listening to , Hinata. Really.”
“Th-thank you for… for everything.”
He looked at her, and for an instant, his smile turned mischievous.
“Hey, this whole secret eting thing is aweso! It makes us seem like real spies! Super secret!”
Hinata laughed, a soft sound that seed to make the morning even brighter. The weight on her chest had lightened.
“I suppose so.”
“We have to do this more often!” he said, more seriously. “To tell each other stuff. To help each other deal with… all this. We’re a secret team! No one can know!”
Hinata liked the idea. A secret team with Naruto-kun. Her face turned red, but this ti, it was a warm blush, not one of sha.
“Wh-whenever you want. J-just… let know.”
“It’s a deal! Now, let’s get out of here before anyone notices. I don’t want your dad to think I kidnapped you!” He paused, a foxy grin spreading across his face. “Though it would be a good way to test my new strength!”
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