Font Size
15px

Two days slipped by without incident.

Instead of following Tsunade to the casinos—where his presence as her "luck charm" would inevitably result in her winning enough money to bankrupt half the village—Hanekawa spent his ti drilling water jutsu with Kurenai. The work was thodical and exhausting, exactly what he needed.

His current arsenal was respectable: Chunin-level entries across Wind, Water, Lightning, Earth, and Fire styles. But respectable wasn't good enough. To reach special jonin status, he needed to push each one to mastery. Lightning Style was already at eighty percent proficiency—he'd been grinding that one the hardest—but Water and Earth were climbing steadily. Both were prerequisites for Wood Style synthesis, even if it was only Yamato's version.

Still, Hanekawa thought as he ford another hand seal, Wood Style is Wood Style. Can't complain about that.

The morning of the third day found him and Kurenai heading to Tsunade's house together. Rin was already there, waiting with the kind of eager energy that made Hanekawa slightly nervous. Breakfast was quick—Tsunade didn't believe in lingering over food—and soon the four of them were standing in the open space behind the house.

"Kurenai and Rin, practice on your own," Tsunade said, her eyes already fixed on Hanekawa with that particular gleam that ant pain was incoming. "Ask if you get stuck."

"Yes, Teacher Tsunade!" they chorused, though Kurenai's enthusiasm was noticeably less genuine than Rin's.

Tsunade jerked her head toward the far side of the clearing. "You. Co on."

Here we go, Hanekawa thought, rolling his shoulders. Ti to get my ass handed to by the legendary Sannin. Again.

He'd stopped counting how many tis this had happened. The bruises were becoming a permanent feature at this point.

---

They faced off across the open space, Tsunade rolling her shoulders with the casual confidence of soone who'd never t a problem she couldn't solve by hitting it harder.

"Ready?" she asked.

"Yes, Teacher."

Hanekawa didn't waste ti with courtesy. He triggered his Body Flicker Technique at full speed, the world blurring around him as he closed the distance in a heartbeat. The ground cracked beneath his feet from the explosive force of his movent.

Tsunade stepped back—just one step, casual as breathing—and raised her leg in a simple kick.

Hanekawa didn't see it coming. One mont he was mid-punch, the next his entire body was weightless. He twisted in mid-air, channeling chakra through his legs to stabilize his landing, but the force still sent him skidding backward, his heels carving furrows in the dirt.

Okay, he thought, shaking his head to clear it. Still not fast enough to keep up with a jonin. Good to know. Again.

"Co on," Tsunade called, crooking a finger at him with an amused smile.

He stepped forward—and the ground exploded beneath his feet.

The shockwave from his movent sent a spiderweb of cracks radiating outward. Tsunade sidestepped it with ease and flicked him on the forehead as he passed.

The impact felt like being hit with a sledgehamr wrapped in silk. His head snapped back, vision swimming.

That's going to leave a mark, he thought distantly. Pretty sure I saw stars.

"Focus," Tsunade said, not unkindly.

Hanekawa shook it off and ca at her again. This ti he was ready for the speed difference. He couldn't match her velocity, so he'd have to out-think her instead. He pivoted, using a spinning back kick—sothing he'd learned from Might Duy—to create distance and force her to respond.

This story has been stolen from . If you read it on Amazon, please report it

Fist t leg. Both of them slid back half a step.

"Who taught you that?" Tsunade asked, genuine curiosity in her voice.

"Might Duy," Hanekawa replied, breathing hard. "Guy's father."

Tsunade's eyebrow rose. "He's not a jonin?"

"No, ma'am. Just a genin. But he knows the Eight Gates."

"The Eight Gates?" Tsunade actually paused mid-strike, surprise flickering across her face. "How in the world did a genin learn that? And why is he completely unknown?"

Hanekawa dodged her next kick, feeling the air crack where his head had been a mont before. "Because no one will team up with him. Can't take missions solo."

"That's..." Tsunade threw a punch that he barely slipped. "...ridiculous."

"When you're Hokage," Hanekawa said between dodges, "you should recruit him. He won't let you down."

Tsunade stopped mid-motion, her eyes narrowing. "Why do you keep saying that? About becoming Hokage?"

"Because—"

"Never mind." She cracked her knuckles. "Looks like we need to fight about this."

She moved like lightning, and the world beca a blur of fists and kicks and the constant pressure of trying not to get flattened. Hanekawa held his own through pure technique and experience, but he was acutely aware that Tsunade was barely trying. One mont of genuine effort and he'd be eating dirt.

From the sidelines, Kurenai watched with wide eyes. "Did he make her angry?"

"No," Rin said softly, her dical training allowing her to read the subtle signs. "She's holding back. This is just training."

Kurenai nodded, though she still looked worried.

---

"Rest," Tsunade finally said, stepping back with barely a hair out of place.

Hanekawa, by contrast, felt like he'd been through a blender. Every muscle ached. His shoulders throbbed. His ribs were definitely going to be spectacular colors by tomorrow.

Rin was at his side before he'd even caught his breath. "Let help. Where does it hurt?"

"Everywhere," Hanekawa said honestly, but he rolled up his sleeve to show the worst of the bruising. "Here's probably the worst."

Rin's hands glowed with soft green chakra, and the warmth of her healing jutsu washed over his skin. It was soothing, almost hypnotic. He could feel the bruises fading, the inflammation receding.

"I should learn dical ninjutsu too," Kurenai muttered to herself, watching the process. Then she seed to realize how much she was already learning and gave up the thought with a small huff.

"Hanekawa's such a show-off," she said loudly, turning back to her water practice. "Learning everything under the sun."

Hanekawa would have smiled if Rin's hands weren't still on his arm. He gently pulled away before things got awkward. "That's enough, thanks. I'm almost recovered."

Rin's face turned bright red. "Oh! I—sorry, I didn't an—" She practically fled back to her practice spot.

Girls in the ninja world mature way too fast, Hanekawa thought, not for the first ti.

The afternoon brought more of the sa: Tsunade hitting him, him trying not to get hit, occasional monts of success that felt like victories even though they weren't. But there was progress. His taijutsu proficiency was climbing steadily. At this rate, he'd have the B-Rank Special Taijutsu Jonin entry within a few months.

It was late afternoon when Uchiha Shisui arrived, watching the tail end of a particularly brutal exchange. The Uchiha prodigy's expression was unreadable, but Hanekawa caught the flash of sothing—determination, maybe, or renewed resolve.

After Hanekawa and Tsunade finally called it quits, Shisui stepped forward with the kind of formal politeness that ant official business.

"Lady Tsunade," he said, producing an invitation. "The clan leader asked to deliver this."

Tsunade glanced at it, her expression shifting to sothing more neutral. "Tell Fugaku I'll be there."

"There's one for you too, Hanekawa-senpai," Shisui added, handing over a second invitation.

Hanekawa opened it and found himself staring at an invitation to Uchiha Itachi's hundred-day celebration. The irony wasn't lost on him. He had exactly zero connection to the Uchiha clan, which ant this was purely political—a gesture toward Tsunade or the Hokage's inner circle.

"I'll go with Teacher," he said simply.

Shisui nodded and left, and Hanekawa tucked the invitation away without much thought.

---

July beca August. Hanekawa turned twelve—a birthday celebrated quietly, since most of his friends were out on missions. Nothing special, nothing morable.

August beca September.

The Uchiha compound began to bustle with activity. Servants moved between buildings. Decorations went up. The hundred-day celebration was approaching, and this year it was different from previous years. The Leaf Village's leadership—Hiruzen at the head—had decided to show the Uchiha clan more respect. More attention. More... consideration.

It was a shift that had started with Shisui and Obito, two young Uchiha who'd caught the eye of powerful ntors. The village was beginning to realize what it had been overlooking.

Hanekawa filed that observation away with all the others. The spy in him never really stopped working, even when he was getting his face rearranged by the legendary Sannin.

Interesting, he thought. Very interesting indeed.

You are reading Naruto: A Spy Who Got a System Chapter 119: A Spy Who Got a System on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
Share with your friends
Library saves books to your account. Reading History saves recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading

You may also like

Death Notice cover
Trending now

Death Notice

Gluttonous Monk ·Horror

Heisagiftedandintelligentyoungman.Heisamurdererthatenjoysthebloodshed.He...Readmore Heisagiftedandintelligentyoungman.Heisamurdererthatenjoystheblo...

No reviews yet. Be the first reader to leave one.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.