[A/N] Sorry guys. My big boy job has been quite busy. Here's a beefy chapter for you all.
FYI, there's a scene with music at the end. I recomnd playing the linked song while reading the scene. ;)
INOICHI YAMANAKA
In the center of the Hokage's moonlit office, Inoichi Yamanaka stood at a respectful distance from Hiruzen Sarutobi. Not too far-such distance implied mistrust-and not too close, which would suggest disrespect. The space between them was subtle, carefully calculated. A detail most would overlook.
But then again, most were not clan heads.
Hiruzen, ever the symbol of control and composure—at least, in Inoichi's presence-
finished signing the docunt he'd been studying. Placing his brush down slowly, he exhaled, his gaze lifting to et Inoichi's.
"Apologies, Inoichi. Sothing unexpected ca up at the last minute that required my attention."
For the briefest mont, a shadow of a frown flickered across Hiruzen's face-so quickly that it might have been a trick of the light.
Inoichi acted as though he hadn't seen it.
"Apologies are not required, Hokage-sama."
As he spoke, Inoichi's gaze drifted to the kiseru Hiruzen was lighting. The Hokage brought the pipe to his lips and inhaled deeply, the embers casting a warm glow across his weathered face.
He exhaled, and a slow, steady stream of smoke filled the room, slowly wafting into Inoichi's nose-leathery, earthy, bitter. Unpleasant.
"You are quite busy." Inoichi finished.
Hiruzen leaned back in his chair, pulling slightly away from his desk. His gaze lifted-brown t green.
"Unfortunately, so, it seems."
Four simple words.
Words that held a myriad of anings.
Inoichi knew all too well. After the Second Shinobi War, they all hoped for a reprieve, so ti to regroup, to rebuild, to strengthen their young, to lick their wounds. But that peace had been fleeting, and they were not granted such a luxury.
Barely a year later, the Third War had erupted. Conflict after conflict. Destruction after destruction. Death after death.
The Second War had been for power, for influence, for territory. The Third was no different.
The Five Great Nations had found their hold on the world weakening, and so small skirmishes had begun-clashes between shinobi villages, small nations testing their borders. But the skirmishes grew, spreading like wildfire until the flas of war engulfed the world once again.
Inoichi had his opinions.
To him, this war was nothing but the greed of n made manifest-a bottomless hunger that consud lives daily. That tore apart families weekly.
To him, it was the pride of n that kindled the flas, ensuring the young had plentiful opportunities to taste its flesh and drink its blood.
To him, it was tragic.
But he was a shinobi. He fought for the village, for his clan, for his wife, for his son, for their future. For their safety. He would do what needed to be done without complaint or hesitation. This was his duty as a Konoha shinobi. His duty as a husband. His duty as a father.
A beat of silence passed as the two n let the moonlight and smoke bathe their bodies- their minds.
Two n-both warriors.
Two n-both tired.
"You and your clan have been instruntal in this war. I cannot thank you all enough for your efforts," Hiruzen said at last. "Your ti off is well deserved."
Inoichi lowered his head in a small, respectful bow.
"It is our pleasure, Hokage-sama."
And it was.
Inoichi was well aware of the advantage his clan provided on the battlefield, and the unique utility they brought to Konoha.
"As humble as ever, I see," Hiruzen replied with a soft chuckle, eyes crinkling in the corners.
Inoichi remained silent, but internally, his pride for his clan-for his son-shone like a blinding light.
Satoshi. His pride, his joy, his everything created a genjutsu that was so simple yet so effective. A genjutsu that quickly beca another arsenal in every Yamanaka's tool belt. Its uses were vast: espionage, ssage delivery, sound replication, enemy distraction, stealth communication, psychological warfare.
He heard Satoshi had been busy with other creations, too. He was excited to see what they
were.
Hiruzen took another slow puff of his pipe, smoke curling into the air. "I know you must be tired and ready to go ho. If I'm not mistaken, it has been quite so ti since you have
seen your family..."
He was right. It had been.
Inoichi was more than ready to see his wife and son. Hear about how their days have been, what they were up to, what Satoshi has learned; hear him play one of the instrunts he invented-which still felt sowhat surreal to think about, even now.
Inoichi did co ho from ti to ti-occasionally, though that word hardly captured the reality of it. Work was relentless, burying him in one task after another: reading minds, analyzing intelligence, writing reports for the Hokage, and then doing it all over again before being deployed back to the field.
He yearned
them close.
his family's laughter, their voices filling the house, the feeling of holding
"But before you go," Hiruzen began, his tone shifting slightly. "Your son has shown... remarkable talent and is approved to advance years ahead in the Academy."
"If I may ask, how many years ahead?" Inoichi asked, no hesitation.
Hiruzen, now leaning forward, ran his fingers along the armrest of his chair.
"Two as of now, but potentially more, depending on how well he performs in an assessnt next week. I wanted to inform you because parental approval is required before he can
officially advance."
Inoichi nodded, his thoughts wandering to his beautiful wife and her likely reaction. To be frank, they had anticipated this, of course. It was why the clan elders had put Satoshi through such grueling training over the past year-to prepare him for anything that might co his
way.
To shape him into the pride of the Yamanaka.
"Understood." Another shallow bow. "I will discuss this with my family. Thank you for this consideration, Hokage-sama."
Hiruzen waved a hand, brushing off the formality. He gave a small smile that reached his eyes.
"Enough, enough. Your son is a bright fla. That only reflects the care and dedication you've shown in raising him. But enough of that. It's late, and I'm sure your family will be overjoyed to see you. Enjoy your ti off, Inoichi, and well done."
Inoichi offered a final bow before excusing himself, exiting the Hokage's office with a slow
exhale.
As he made his way through the streets of Konoha, he felt a lightness return.
He was going ho.
Back to his family.
***
Before Inoichi could even reach the door, it slid open with a soft click, and a body collided
with his, arms engulfing him in a warm, intoxicating hug.
"Well, it's good to see you too, my love," he murmured with a light laugh, lifting a hand to
cradle the back of his wife's head.
Aiko didn't respond right away. She simply pressed her head against his chest, letting her
breath align with the rhythm of his heartbeat.
Both in sync. Both in love.
After a long mont under the crisp moonlight, she whispered, "I missed you."
Inoichi's hand trailed her locks, down her spine, finding its way to the small of her back.
He pulled her closer, his voice gentle.
"As have I, my love."
He bent to press a soft kiss to her golden hair, inhaling jasmine and lavender.
A beautiful, delicate fragrance-just like her.
He lowered his lips to her ear. "We should head inside... unless you would prefer to devour
you under the stars?"
Aiko shivered, her hands tightening slightly against his back through his Jonin jacket. But
after a beat, she pushed herself back, eyebrows faintly furrowed, and cheeks warm.
That sohow made her even more beautiful.
Inoichi chuckled, reaching out to pull her close again, but she had already turned, whisking
away back into the house.
"I kid." He followed her trail
"No, you don't," she replied over her shoulder.
He smiled-she really did know him.
"If you would like to play a ga of cat and mouse, I'd be happy to oblige. You do know how
much I like a good chase."
Though he couldn't see her face, he could practically feel the warmth radiating off her cheeks.
His smile widened. Aiko, who loved to tease others, was sohow the easiest to fluster
herself.
"Or if you'd prefer to be the pursuer, I can—"
His words held onto the back of his throat as he reached the warmly lit living room and saw
who was waiting there.
"Well, please don't let intrude on all the fun," ca a familiar voice.
There, seated in an armchair with a book in one hand and a steaming cup in the other, was his
son. Legs crossed, calm and composed. He looked up at his parents, face showing absolutely
no emotion.
The gleam in Aiko's eye shone bright as her lips quivered from what Inoichi assud to be
one-sided entertainnt.
Inoichi, one of the clan's best sensors, prided himself on his awareness. But ever since Akira had placed that chakra suppressant seal on Satoshi, his son had beco exponentially harder to sense-as if he enjoyed floating through the house and the compound like a ghost.
"Satoshi," Inoichi said, taking a step forward.
"Dad." Satoshi set aside his book and cup, rising from his seat.
Inoichi took another step, voice soft. "It's good to see you, son."
They stood before each other. Gray t green.
And then, with no hesitation, Satoshi wrapped his arms around his father, small but firm,
holding tight.
"Good to see you too, Dad." The words were quiet, almost whispered, but they filled Inoichi's
heart all the sa.
They held each other, letting the silence speak for them. In that quiet room, under the gentle
glow of the lamps, all of Inoichi's worries, stress, and exhaustion lted away, leaving only the warmth of family and the peace and gratitude of making it ho safely once again.
***
"So," Inoichi began, breaking the comfortable silence that had settled over them after their
reunion. Satoshi was perched back atop his stoop while Inoichi and Aiko sat close together on
the couch-hand in hand.
"Hokage-sama tells you've approved to skip two grades. Maybe more."
To Inoichi's surprise, Aiko's grip on his hand remained steady, visibly showing none of the
worry he expected.
Satoshi's gaze drifted upward from his book, his eyes flicking between them before he
replied.
"What do you think about that?"
Inoichi smiled, rubbing the back of Aiko's hand with his thumb, and returned the question to
his son.
"What do you think about that?"
"It was inevitable," Satoshi replied, voice matter-of-fact. "I'm ready."
Simple, efficient, and to the point. Classic Satoshi.
"I see," Inoichi replied, glancing at his wife through the corner of his eye. "Aiko?"
A mont of silence hung between the three.
"I agree." Two sets of eyebrows raised. "You are ready."
Obviously, they both weren't expecting that answer from her.
"I'll make sure to tell the elders to increase your training. Considerably."
Ah. There it was.
Satoshi took a sip from his tea. As did Inoichi. Peach-absolutely heavenly.
Inoichi found himself wondering if they should partner with the Akimichi to open a
restaurant soday. With Satoshi's talents and recipes, they would inevitably drown in
money.
A thought for another ti.
"How was training today?" Inoichi asked, bringing the conversation back to the present.
"Hm," Satoshi humd, his gaze drifting off for a mont. "It was good. Did you know
cockroaches can scream?"
Inoichi and Aiko blinked.
Cockroaches can... scream?
The idea was sowhat disturbing, but Satoshi was a peculiar child with peculiar taste-It fit.
"No, I didn't know that," Inoichi replied, glancing at Aiko.
"Neither did I until today." Satoshi flipped a page with a casual flick of his finger.
[Is that code for sothing?] Inoichi ntally asked Aiko.
[Knowing Satoshi, most definitely.] she replied.
"Well... that's good to know, honey," Aiko replied as she changed the topic. "But before it
gets too late, why don't you play a song for us? You've had waiting all this ti for Inoichi
to return."
Another flip of a page. Satoshi's eyes ran down both pages in seconds; then he closed the
book.
"Sure. Let's go to the studio."
They rose and followed Satoshi to his studio-a room in the house designed just for him. A sanctuary where he spent most of his hours creating whatever ca to mind. Painting, crafting, theorizing, and ditating (which is still bizarre, associating sitting in prolonged periods of silence with a five-year-old activity).
As they entered the large room, Inoichi was greeted by an array of paintings that lined the
walls and floors, canvases propped up on easels, and leaned against shelves filled to the brim with books.
Each different-all breathtaking.
So were portraits of people Inoichi didn't recognize, others were landscapes he knew
instantly—the Hokage Rock, the garden at dusk, a painting of him holding Aiko's hand in a field of flowers, a mory from last spring.
Every last one of his pieces was absolutely beautiful.
As if they held a world within.
Aiko and Inoichi settled onto a low, neutral-toned couch that flanked the space while Satoshi
approached a large wooden instrunt positioned in the center of the room.
"Is this one of the instrunts you had made?" Inoichi asked, his gaze lingering on the
unusual wooden fra before him.
Satoshi sat on the bench in front of it, facing them, and nodded. "Yes. I call it a piano."
He knew Satoshi had commissioned a set of new instrunts months ago, but Inoichi didn't
know it would turn out like... this.
His eyes trailed to the corner of the room, running over more wooden instrunts-so he
didn't recognize, and so he did carefully arranged.
The room was bathed in a low, warm light from lanterns strung across the ceiling, deepening
the shadows and making the room feel inviting and cozy.
Satoshi lifted a wooden flap on the piano, his fingers brushing on what lay beneath. He glanced up, and his eyes t theirs.
"I haven't practiced this piece, so... please lower your expectations to zero."
Aiko chuckled, her voice as soft as honey. "I'm sure whatever you play will be magnificent,
Satoshi."
A smile curved at his lips as he looked at her. Then he straightened, adjusting his posture,
hands hovered like birds poised for flight.
"I call this piece Vague Reason."
###
[A/N: I recomnd listening to the song while reading to feel the vibes] [link to the song -
Vague Reason, Jutsu Kaisen on YouTube: syoutube/watch?v=feNxXkHdZJ4]
###
He closed his eyes, and in that instant, he transford. It was as if the air itself shifted. The
room seed to hold its breath, waiting.
Then his hands descended, and sound filled the room-a sound so pure, so achingly beautiful
that Inoichi forgot to breathe.
The first notes hung in the air, delicate and crystalline.
The air seed to shimr, painting images in his mind, each note more vivid, and more real
than the last.
It was as if the lody defied words and left only feeling. Raw and powerful.
Inoichi could see it-images blooming in his mind. Scenes created by the rise and fall of the
song.
He was no longer sitting in the study; he was drifting through a different world. A shadowed landscape-vast and endless. The sky was fractured, streaked with impossible shades of blue, like shattered glass catching the light.
Around him, the air was thick, weighted with sothing unseen, sothing that clung to his skin and settled in his lungs like fog. And from that fog, mories surfaced-fragnted and half-forgotten.
Monts of pain and loneliness and anguish a sense of loss so deep it was almost primal.
Images surfacing that he hadn't dared revisit in years. He saw friends and comrades. Their faces were etched in mory, so laughing, so solemn, but all lost in war. He could see Ryota, his childhood friend, the one who'd been like a brother to him, falling
under an enemy's blade. He could still feel the bitter sting of the dirt as he dug his grave
himself.
The music pulled these feelings out of him, laid them bare, and made him confront them. And
yet, it was beautiful.
So. Damn. Beautiful.
The music drew him in. But the pace quickened, and the piece beca a storm. The notes rose, tangled, and clashed.
Satoshi's fingers danced over the keys, each movent effortless and perfect, not the movents of soone who hadn't practiced this piece.
The notes spiraled and soared, a flow of sound that filled every corner of the studio, leaving
no space untouched, and now he saw the face of Hana, his cousin, bright, full of life, even in
her final monts.
She'd been so young, and yet there had been no hesitation when she threw herself in front of an enemy jutsu to protect him-the clan heir. That mont replayed again and again and
again. Carving an emptiness in him that he'd learned to live with but never to fill.
Inoichi's heart pounded and thrumd in ti with the music.
He could feel it-this music. It wasn't just sound; it felt like sothing... alive.
His pulse thundered in his ears, his body vibrated with its intensity.
He looked over at Aiko and saw her face lit by the low, warm lights. Her hand was clenched
tightly on her knee, knuckles white. Her eyes were wide and red, staring at Satoshi as if she was seeing him for the first ti.
She was feeling it, too.
The beauty. The awe. The despair.
The near-painful ecstasy of hearing sothing beyond anything they had ever known.
The music swelled to a peak; it was so intense that Inoichi could feel it in his bones, rattling
through his chest. Consuming him.
He could feel the weight of all he had lost, the ache of mories too painful to touch, and yet
here he was, sitting with them, unable to look away.
And then, just as it seed the music had taken him to the very edge of what he could bear,
Satoshi slowed, softening, gentling, dissolving like mist in sunlight.
The storm faded, leaving a faint mory of the rain.
And then-silence.
Satoshi opened his eyes, glancing at them, but Inoichi and Aiko were frozen, held captive by
that final note.
For a long mont, no one moved. The only sound was the faint inhale and exhale of their
breath, the faint shimr of a world that had been shattered and remade. Finally, Satoshi tilted his head.
"Why are you both crying?" he asked, one eyebrow raised. "Was it that bad?" Inoichi blinked, feeling a wetness on his cheek he hadn't noticed. He raised a hand to his face, fingertips brushing the trail of a tear. He tried to speak, but no words ca. How could he explain what he'd just experienced? What he just witnessed.
Aiko managed a trembling smile, her own face streaked with tears.
"It was magnificent," she whispered. "... Just like I knew it would be." Inoichi nodded, his voice finally finding its way back, though it was barely more than a
whisper.
"Yes. It was... magnificent."
And it truly was.
[A/N] If you like the story, please consider leaving a review.
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