The child became lost in a train of thought, however brief. Her facial expression looked numb, her pupils appeared to be more dilated than constricted and her stance was thoughtless. She looked as though her conscience had abandoned her, as though she was desperately searching for herself in some 4th dimensional void, momentarily oblivious to her current situation. Shibirin danced his gaze past the girl to snatch the unsettling stare of an older-looking man seated two tables away to the girl's left. The man was as hairy as he was tall and his outfit looked revolting from his proximity - lord knows what it'd look like from up close - but it was far from garbage. The white-haired swordsman used this opportunity to thoroughly browse over the child's attire and general appearance. She had stated her financial status earlier on at the start of their conversation, but her attire didn't reflect it. Her clothes made poor armour if that's what they were made for, although they were decent clothes; the material used on her garments was cheap to afford, but it was durable and didn't look too bad from a distance. He couldn't identify any weapons on her or spot any bulges that'd allude to such a reality, nor could he see any scars on her body that'd suggest she needed them. She didn't hide too much of her body under cloth, but he would have expected nothing less from a girl her age.
Open flashback ~
"You could do with a little armour on you," his master said, his eyes averted and fingers busy with themselves as always. Raishi had never been the type of guy to look a man in the eye and tell him his fly was open; he'd always find a better place to lay his eyes whilst he gave the man hints towards the unfortunate truth. Shibirin thought he was mocking his frail body by the remark, but as always with his sensei he could never tell for sure what was on the Jounin's mind. "Thus far i've never needed to shield my body from my foes," the boy replied, his eyes piercing through the man's inattentive gaze and demanding it's audience. They had managed to push through half an hour of training before the Jounin had decided to attack yet another one of his student's many flaws, but for the first time he hadn't been so direct. His jaw sharpened and his eyes met with the boy's. His lips were sewn into a light smirk the kid almost mistook for a frown. "When such a time comes you'll wish you had taken precautions." Shibirin purged a snicker and pushed the idea aside. "I couldn't afford it if i wanted it anyway," he said, but his master insisted on pulling the thought right back. "Then be glad you have a generous sensei like myself, who will look after you when you can't look after yourself," he said, his smirk evolving into a smile and his eyes more focused than ever. 'He bought me armour, but when?' A grin manifested itself across the young boy's lips and his grip gave up on his sword. The metal dropped to the ground before him - protesting in sound as it stroke the hard surface - before dancing to a slow and gradual stop. "You didn't," Shibirin started, but the man unexpectedly agreed. "I didn't. Of course, you'll have to get the armour off of me yourself, otherwise this wouldn't be much of a training session at all, but I can't say i'll be able to take the armour back if you succeed," he said, his smile finally justified. The unexpected words shot out of his sensei at blinding speeds and stroke his thoughts without resistance. "You're wearing it?" he asked, but all the Jounin did in response was take a few steps backwards and readied himself in a defensive stance. 'What an ass hole,' the young boy thought, before charging towards the man - picking his sword off of the ground as he ran past it - and throwing a series of swings against his posture.
Their fight lasted a little over a minute, but every second felt like torture to the young swordsman. His master seemed calm and composed, unharmed by any of his futile attempts, but more disappointed of his pupil's failure to beat him than he was proud of winning. Shibirin had never felt more useless: the feeling was as embarrassing as succumbing to the harmless taunts of a pre-primary-aged child, but not quite as meaningless. His body had taken multiple beatings from the man's bare fists and palms alone, though none of his hits had even come close to touching the Jounin and the few that did had led to his own failure. Every swing he made opened himself up to an attack from the opposite side and no matter how well he guarded that side with his free arm, it was never enough to stop the unexpected counter blows. Whenever he put his blade in-between he and his foe the latter always found a way around it, manipulating the small blind-spot the gesture would create for the former and striking his body where he least expected it. Shibirin now lay on the ground in pain, body covered in deep bruises and shallow cuts across every major part of his body, not one limb left unaffected by his sensei's attack. His breath was hurried and his gaze was troubled by the sweat that rolled down from his forehead and passed through his eyebrows and lashes. His stare was cold and fixed on his disappointed sensei. "Why, why are doing this to me? Why promise me something you aren't even willing to give me," he asked, tears now rolling down his cheeks mixed in with the sweat. "You are way stronger than me, how am I supposed to beat someone that is too strong for me to beat? Why didn't you just give me the armour?" The Jounin turned his back on the chunin and started walking away slowly. "Answer me!" the boy demanded, but Raishi didn't flinch. "Why!!?"
The Jounin finally stopped in his tracks, but he didn't look back at the beaten child. "Easy come easy go, kid. Things that are merely handed to you won't last you a day in this world, if that day lasted for your entire life. A defence that is easily put up can be easily put down and an attack that has little thought invested into it will require little thought to intercept. This fight wasn't about the armour kid, it was about teaching you the difference between a sword that you bought from the shop and a sword you made by hand, a house that you inherited and a house you built from scratch, an attack you threw for the sake of throwing an attack and an attack with meaning behind it and has direction. You fought me with the intention of beating me, not winning the fight, and believe me kid there's a difference. That's why I was able to avoid every attack you threw at me and even fit in a counter move each time; it wasn't because I am stronger than you, but because I put meaning behind all my actions and didn't act with reason alone." The young boy was embarrassed, more so than before, more so than ever. How could he have missed it? Raishi Kanetsu had never done anything for nothing - there was always some greater meaning behind his actions and words - but Shibirin had been such a lousy student that he hadn't even recognised his sensei's pattern and now it had cost him his pride and skill. The armour was by now the last thing on the chunin's mind, though he hadn't completely forgotten it. Raishi let out a small sigh before continuing to walk in the same direction as before, both hands in either pockets and his head bowed low. "That's enough training for today," was the last thing Shibirin heard from the man before the sun had set...
Close flashback ~
Shibirin snapped himself out of his short trance and quickly looked around for the girl before meeting her glare. The swordsman was lucky enough to return in time to hear the girl apologise for her own periodic absence. "Sorry about that," she said, before she placed a finger to her chin, threw her gaze to the ceiling - as though searching for her response within the timber above - and began to share her story. “I don’t really remember the name of the village, to be honest," she started. "I just know it’s to the south or south-west of Konoha. It’s not really a village as much as it’s a group of people who got fed up with civilisation, but it did trade with some of the bigger cities around it to get by. I’m pretty sure you wouldn't have heard of anything like that though,” she was right, the description of the place didn't sound any bells in his memory. She then asked, “So why is someone from a far away place, too far to remember, but feels at home anywhere and everywhere doing in Konoha?” The swordsman could have sworn he picked up a hint of comedy in the way the girl rephrased his statement, word for word, into a question he'd probably later on regret answering. Shibirin took a second to think, though in his mind it felt somewhat longer than that. When he was ready to speak he moistened his lips and began by saying, "When you've walked the type of path i've walked you realise there's no other destination in life apart from death. Our goals and dreams are merely checkpoints we give ourselves to occupy our interests during our journey through life, but what would one do if they ever ran out of checkpoints, but hadn't quite reached the end?" He let the thought sink into the girl's head, but didn't wait long enough to give her time to respond before continuing. "I have ran out of reasons to void travelling, and the promising activity has never been more appealing to me than now." The swordsman kept his eyes on the girl throughout his speech, but once he had stopped he'd allow his gaze to wonder once more around the girl and onto the dirty man to her far left. Something about the man kept demanding the swordsman's attention, though the stimulus wasn't obvious enough to justify. Still, he listened to the girl's response to his follow up question. "How large his your debt, in exact figures?"