1 Long Walk on the Beach [Solo|Training] Mon Aug 20, 2018 9:06 am
Tezuka
D-rank
Both oars had ended up with Tezuka after the youth decided rowing himself would be a great workout, something the old man who offered to take him across was all too quick to agree with. The two held a quite conversation since they left the dock as the stranger, known as Kani though he admitted it was a pseudonym, shared bits of info on Mizu no Kuni and it’s Hidden Village in exchange for bits of his passenger’s past. Waves lapped against the short raft leaving puddles on the smooth pine floor; the midday sun slowly beginning to descend shined through the thin clouds that hung in the sky, making the sea calm and placid. Or so it appeared, as Kani warned of the strong currents that swept through certain spots and occasionally directed Tezuka to paddle around those he could spot. The dark-haired foreigner seemed to be doing well enough as the older man looked unconcerned, trailing a hand in the water as he watched their path of travel over his shoulder. A few miles of open ocean had separated the island chain from the continent itself, but the tranquil weather made the journey rather relaxing. Sailing did not bother Tezuka as much as he thought it would, as the constant rocking of the boat from waves caused no illness.
“These seas never freeze over, unless there’s a Yuki fighting on ‘em,” Kani remarked upon hearing his passenger describe the cold harbors of Tetsu, his deep baritone voice cutting through the sounds of waves against carved wood. It contrasted with his rather slim, wiry build as the man looked much quieter than he was. “Doesn’t happen often.” He pointed a darkly-tanned, salt-dried hand to point to the right and Tezuka paddled an oar to travel that direction around a current. They had yet to encounter a whirlpool, lucky enough, but he’d have to hand the oars over if they did.
Giving the water a hard push with the oars to speed up, Tezuka maintained a steady breathe to pace himself with the moderate activity. His surprise when the old man seemed even stronger than he was when they had first set off from the dock spurred him to take on the work himself. “Yuki are a ninja clan I assume?” he asked between strokes. Learning about the various bloodlines that each village contained, and those that scattered the globe such as his own, was more fun than he expected due to how varied each of them could be. The fun would end when he encountered and battled those bloodlines himself, of course, which meant he needed to gather information to counter each he came across.
Kani nodded absently as he watched the water, his long gray hair specked with its natural black shade swaying in the ponytail it was held in with a red knot of cloth. “Ice users, they call theirs Hyōton. Mizukage’s blood runs strong with it; been around years and doesn’t look like she’s leaving soon.” This time he pointed to the left side of the boat where a bluish-black fin broke the surface and grinned at the way Tezuka stared at the spot it disappeared from with concern. “What’s yours made of, fire and earth?”
Ignoring the creature they’d seen, while trying to scoot away from the edge of the raft without the stranger seeing him do it, Tezuka nodded in return. “Ice doesn’t worry me. It’s all the other stuff I’ve heard that lives here.”
“Gossip, probably.” Kani shrugged, though it did not reassure his younger counterpart. “‘cept for the spiders. Those are worse than the stories of ‘em.” Tezuka had yet to hear about anything regarding spiders and looked at the man with a puzzled look, having had enough of the pests while in the stony mountains of Iwa. He must have been seen from Kani’s peripheral vision, as the grizzled sailor made a dismissive motion after. “Don’t cause problems, don’t go wandering off alone and don’t visit the island: do all that and you’ll be fine.”
“Somehow that doesn’t reassure me,” the youth muttered under his breath as he rowed around the spot pointed out to him. Countless islands of all sizes had passed by and Kani did not bother talking about them as apparantly there were thousands, most without real names.
“You know what you get yourself into, ronin. Must not be too bothered if you’re travelin’ alone.” The local reached into his loose black Shitagi-style shirt and retrieved a black container from a pocket within, sipping the water inside before replacing it. He turned around to meet Tezuka’s wary look with a look of his own, a moment of tension passing. Kani turned to look behind him again and the black-haired exile rowed with strong, stiff strokes.
A larger trader vessel rounded the corner of a densely-forested island, moving much faster than they did as it’s two sails and the hidden propellers sent it on its way towards the village as well. The ripple of water left in its wake swept towards them languidly at an angle and as it drew closer Kani leaned his end of the boat towards it, keeping the vessel upright as it bobbed up and down. Now Tezuka was beginning to feel unwell, more from the reminder of the boat’s size rather than any seasickness though.
They continued along the way the ship traveled, just a short distance from the village according to the native of Mizu which amounted to an hour of travel with the raft. “I hope it’s not inconveniencing you to take me across,” Tezuka spoke again, despite feeling a bit inconvenienced himself from the long journey, but Kani waves his concern away.
“I live in the village, just had some business on the mainland. You’re lucky you caught me before I left.” According to his watch Kani had been fishing at that dock they met upon for just under an hour and had planned to leave just a few minutes before the foreigner arrived. Tezuka had just assumed the man lived close by, made his living as a fisherman and ferryman, but apparantly he was neither; was only an angler as a hobby, and didn’t mind taking someone across the waters with him so long as they paid. Tezuka had questioned just how much he usually charged people for the service, feeling like the amount he paid was only fair if portions of it were being taken
by the village as taxes, but Kani pretended to be too busy navigating the water to pay attention. His right hand trailed in the water beside him, sweeping back and forth routinely.
A distant cloud in the sky signaled the fair weather would soon pass but the two continued on at their sedate pace, close enough to their destination that they need not bother worrying if the dark grey blob brought storms with it. The Mizu native gave the cloud only a glance before dismissing it, so the burly foreigner continued to row. “Our laws hold just as much weight as they do anywhere else,” Kani stated as the boat glided past across the shallows of a nearby island, circling around a reef formation that just barely poked out from the water’s surface. “Citizens don’t worry like you do, there’s consequences if they’re harmed. I’m sure you’d be approved if you applied.”
Tezuka rowed silently as he looked across the water past Kani, taking in the view; the cloud was not truly a cloud but a straying wisp of mist, which he now could see hung too low above the islands to truly be a cloud. A massive haze of suspended, smoky water droplets created a wall of white that was completely impossible to look into which broke the otherwise clear blue horizon. Kani pointed with his free hand at what seemed a random spot of the mist, and Tezuka adjusted their course to match his direction. “You should think about joining one of the Four anyway, kid. No one sheds a tear when a wanderer ends up dead. Actually, it’s one less threat to worry about.”
“I’m aware,” Tezuka huffed as he rowed, taking the oars out of the water to stretch his muscles before placing them back in and shoving the raft across the lapping waves. “Just not eager to get involved with any of the villages. The sooner the better, I suppose. But why join Kiri?”
Kani smirked, his wispy mustache quirking from the motion. “Why take some nobody? Kiri invests in its shinobi, so what makes you worth accepting?” His smirk widened to a smile at the way his passenger grit his teeth and glared, and continued on as though he hadn’t noticed. “You gotta pull your own weight, so what can you do?” The older man’s questioning look at the youth was met with distress Tezuka.
“You mean as a shinobi?” he asked, suddenly feeling embarrassed at just how short his list of abilities would be, and Kani nodded.
“Any sort of skill. Combat or otherwise.” The hand in the water slapped the surface and splashed water on the boy, which forced Tezuka to barely restrain himself from splashing back with both oars.
He wiped the saltwater from his face and glared at the man who was too amused for his own good. “What would a sailor know about combat? I thought pirates wouldn’t prowl any waters Kiri claims.”
Kani shrugged, turning back to watch as the veil of mist slowly grew closer to enveloping them. The sheer wall that could not have been naturally formed shimmered and smoked just a few hundred meters away. “Who said I’m just a sailor?” The sound of oars churning the water ceased as the boat slid along slower and slower, but started again after a few moments.
“Where’s your headband?” Tezuka asked, deciding it didn’t change anything about the situation enough to bother. “Don’t have to wear it all the time, ‘specially on the mainland,” Kani responded as he retrieved his bottle again and sipped it. He held it in his hand between drinks, swirling the liquid inside in a clockwise motion. “Are you supposed to just reveal that sort of stuff?” the youth asked rhetorically with his own amusement beginning to form.
The man shrugged and stowed his bottle back in his pocket. “Not like you couldn’t have figured it out. And now you know just how easy your drowning would be.” He grinned despite the threat dropped and Tezuka couldn’t help but chuckle at the dark humor of it, recognizing the validity of his statement regardless. “This is just a henge anyway. Lots of old sailors on these waters.”
The exile nodded, seeing the sense that made as he really wasn’t going to attempt revealing the man’s identity, not out on the open water at least. His narrow train of thought brought him to wondering what sort of Kiri-nin the man was, but he knew too little of the ranks and divisions to guess close enough. “Business on the continent?” Tezuka questioned, almost rhetorically, but the raised eyebrow Kani turned on him could only mean ‘Don’t expect an answer to that’. Nodding again, he continued to send the boat closer to the veil of mist just ahead. “Why exactly am I rowing again?”
“You offered, and frankly you could use the excercise. You’d have tipped the boat over getting in if I wasn’t heavier than I looked.” Kani laughed to himself quietly at his expense and Tezuka grumbled under his breath, the raft drifting into the cloudy haze that gave the village its name. “Just keep heading straight ‘til it clears,” the local ordered before being enveloped by the mist, a wall of gray that swept past Tezuka a moment later. “Tie this raft to a smaller dock, someone’ll use it eventually,” Kani’s disembodied voice advised from just a few unseen feet ahead.
The shroud of mist that contained the village of Kirigakure was vast according to all publications regarding the location, serving to hide the shinobi who dwell within from foreign invasions. And, had it not been for following the path that Kani had specially said to take going in a straight line, Tezuka may have rowed his vessel directly into one of the countless rock jutting from the water that he only learned where there when his oars smacked against them unexpectedly. The route to the village they followed must have been limited to smaller boats such as this raft, which held insinuations regarding to who used this path, but he would let Kani worry about that.
“So”, the stranger’s voice quietly echoed off the water in a way that made it seem omnipresent all around Tezuka. “What can you do? You mentioned your Kōton, but how much have you been trained?” To the foreigners disappointment the man had seemed uninterested in what he had to say about the samurai or his clan, only in his training using chakra.
The motion needed to keep the vessel moving straight was muscle-memory at this point, and he had difficulty thinking of all he had learned related to Ninjutsu while rowing. “Your Academy jutsu,” he said before his oar caught on a rock, nearly pulling it from his grip. The boat lost velocity and sagged to the right, straying from the course that would make it through the mist safely, but before Tezuka could even think of a way to correct it’s path of travel something was pushing the boat back into position. The thick mist reduced visibility to the point he was no longer sure if they were on the right path they had entered the veil in, so Tezuka trusted that Kani had corrected his mistake and began paddling again while taking care to keep his oars free from the rocks. “There’s little beyond those and my Steel worth mentioning.”
After several minutes of sliding through the thick haze the boat emerged from the mist without warning, visibility clearing up instantly as he broke through to the other side. His first glimpse of Kiri was ruined by the fact that Kani no longer sat in the boat; the black-haired youth stared at the spot he had occupied just minutes before, wondering at what point the stranger had gotte off the raft. He shook his head and continued to row towards the island just ahead of him.
Kirigakure stood just higher than sea level as it loomed across the harbor, the sky above clear from the veil of mist so the sun shined down over the village’s stone buildings rising above the surrounding vegetation. Many buildings were shaped like giant cylinders with flat tops containing trees and other greenery that made Tezuka wonder if this nation ever received snowfall; the flat roof of buildings could never hold the weight of fallen snow back in Tetsu, which must mean the Mist did not experience a cold season. He wouldn’t complain. The endless snow was the part he missed the least.
His raft sailed closer to a small dock for vessels his size that stood at the edge of the harbor adjacent from where he had exited he veil if mist from and he steered towards the end of it where two men dressed in gray vests with porcelain masks stood. They watched his approach without visible reaction, the figure on the left catching the rope Tezuka tossed onto the dock to tie the boat left with. “Can I assume you’ve spoken to Kani?”, he questioned as the boat was pulled against the dock and secured to a post. If they had they did not say so, for they had simply motioned for him to step out of the boat and to follow them. Unsure about the reception but knowing he should abide by their commands, Tezuka stepped up onto the dock and followed behind one of the men into the village while the other walked a few meters behind him.
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“These seas never freeze over, unless there’s a Yuki fighting on ‘em,” Kani remarked upon hearing his passenger describe the cold harbors of Tetsu, his deep baritone voice cutting through the sounds of waves against carved wood. It contrasted with his rather slim, wiry build as the man looked much quieter than he was. “Doesn’t happen often.” He pointed a darkly-tanned, salt-dried hand to point to the right and Tezuka paddled an oar to travel that direction around a current. They had yet to encounter a whirlpool, lucky enough, but he’d have to hand the oars over if they did.
Giving the water a hard push with the oars to speed up, Tezuka maintained a steady breathe to pace himself with the moderate activity. His surprise when the old man seemed even stronger than he was when they had first set off from the dock spurred him to take on the work himself. “Yuki are a ninja clan I assume?” he asked between strokes. Learning about the various bloodlines that each village contained, and those that scattered the globe such as his own, was more fun than he expected due to how varied each of them could be. The fun would end when he encountered and battled those bloodlines himself, of course, which meant he needed to gather information to counter each he came across.
Kani nodded absently as he watched the water, his long gray hair specked with its natural black shade swaying in the ponytail it was held in with a red knot of cloth. “Ice users, they call theirs Hyōton. Mizukage’s blood runs strong with it; been around years and doesn’t look like she’s leaving soon.” This time he pointed to the left side of the boat where a bluish-black fin broke the surface and grinned at the way Tezuka stared at the spot it disappeared from with concern. “What’s yours made of, fire and earth?”
Ignoring the creature they’d seen, while trying to scoot away from the edge of the raft without the stranger seeing him do it, Tezuka nodded in return. “Ice doesn’t worry me. It’s all the other stuff I’ve heard that lives here.”
“Gossip, probably.” Kani shrugged, though it did not reassure his younger counterpart. “‘cept for the spiders. Those are worse than the stories of ‘em.” Tezuka had yet to hear about anything regarding spiders and looked at the man with a puzzled look, having had enough of the pests while in the stony mountains of Iwa. He must have been seen from Kani’s peripheral vision, as the grizzled sailor made a dismissive motion after. “Don’t cause problems, don’t go wandering off alone and don’t visit the island: do all that and you’ll be fine.”
“Somehow that doesn’t reassure me,” the youth muttered under his breath as he rowed around the spot pointed out to him. Countless islands of all sizes had passed by and Kani did not bother talking about them as apparantly there were thousands, most without real names.
“You know what you get yourself into, ronin. Must not be too bothered if you’re travelin’ alone.” The local reached into his loose black Shitagi-style shirt and retrieved a black container from a pocket within, sipping the water inside before replacing it. He turned around to meet Tezuka’s wary look with a look of his own, a moment of tension passing. Kani turned to look behind him again and the black-haired exile rowed with strong, stiff strokes.
A larger trader vessel rounded the corner of a densely-forested island, moving much faster than they did as it’s two sails and the hidden propellers sent it on its way towards the village as well. The ripple of water left in its wake swept towards them languidly at an angle and as it drew closer Kani leaned his end of the boat towards it, keeping the vessel upright as it bobbed up and down. Now Tezuka was beginning to feel unwell, more from the reminder of the boat’s size rather than any seasickness though.
They continued along the way the ship traveled, just a short distance from the village according to the native of Mizu which amounted to an hour of travel with the raft. “I hope it’s not inconveniencing you to take me across,” Tezuka spoke again, despite feeling a bit inconvenienced himself from the long journey, but Kani waves his concern away.
“I live in the village, just had some business on the mainland. You’re lucky you caught me before I left.” According to his watch Kani had been fishing at that dock they met upon for just under an hour and had planned to leave just a few minutes before the foreigner arrived. Tezuka had just assumed the man lived close by, made his living as a fisherman and ferryman, but apparantly he was neither; was only an angler as a hobby, and didn’t mind taking someone across the waters with him so long as they paid. Tezuka had questioned just how much he usually charged people for the service, feeling like the amount he paid was only fair if portions of it were being taken
by the village as taxes, but Kani pretended to be too busy navigating the water to pay attention. His right hand trailed in the water beside him, sweeping back and forth routinely.
A distant cloud in the sky signaled the fair weather would soon pass but the two continued on at their sedate pace, close enough to their destination that they need not bother worrying if the dark grey blob brought storms with it. The Mizu native gave the cloud only a glance before dismissing it, so the burly foreigner continued to row. “Our laws hold just as much weight as they do anywhere else,” Kani stated as the boat glided past across the shallows of a nearby island, circling around a reef formation that just barely poked out from the water’s surface. “Citizens don’t worry like you do, there’s consequences if they’re harmed. I’m sure you’d be approved if you applied.”
Tezuka rowed silently as he looked across the water past Kani, taking in the view; the cloud was not truly a cloud but a straying wisp of mist, which he now could see hung too low above the islands to truly be a cloud. A massive haze of suspended, smoky water droplets created a wall of white that was completely impossible to look into which broke the otherwise clear blue horizon. Kani pointed with his free hand at what seemed a random spot of the mist, and Tezuka adjusted their course to match his direction. “You should think about joining one of the Four anyway, kid. No one sheds a tear when a wanderer ends up dead. Actually, it’s one less threat to worry about.”
“I’m aware,” Tezuka huffed as he rowed, taking the oars out of the water to stretch his muscles before placing them back in and shoving the raft across the lapping waves. “Just not eager to get involved with any of the villages. The sooner the better, I suppose. But why join Kiri?”
Kani smirked, his wispy mustache quirking from the motion. “Why take some nobody? Kiri invests in its shinobi, so what makes you worth accepting?” His smirk widened to a smile at the way his passenger grit his teeth and glared, and continued on as though he hadn’t noticed. “You gotta pull your own weight, so what can you do?” The older man’s questioning look at the youth was met with distress Tezuka.
“You mean as a shinobi?” he asked, suddenly feeling embarrassed at just how short his list of abilities would be, and Kani nodded.
“Any sort of skill. Combat or otherwise.” The hand in the water slapped the surface and splashed water on the boy, which forced Tezuka to barely restrain himself from splashing back with both oars.
He wiped the saltwater from his face and glared at the man who was too amused for his own good. “What would a sailor know about combat? I thought pirates wouldn’t prowl any waters Kiri claims.”
Kani shrugged, turning back to watch as the veil of mist slowly grew closer to enveloping them. The sheer wall that could not have been naturally formed shimmered and smoked just a few hundred meters away. “Who said I’m just a sailor?” The sound of oars churning the water ceased as the boat slid along slower and slower, but started again after a few moments.
“Where’s your headband?” Tezuka asked, deciding it didn’t change anything about the situation enough to bother. “Don’t have to wear it all the time, ‘specially on the mainland,” Kani responded as he retrieved his bottle again and sipped it. He held it in his hand between drinks, swirling the liquid inside in a clockwise motion. “Are you supposed to just reveal that sort of stuff?” the youth asked rhetorically with his own amusement beginning to form.
The man shrugged and stowed his bottle back in his pocket. “Not like you couldn’t have figured it out. And now you know just how easy your drowning would be.” He grinned despite the threat dropped and Tezuka couldn’t help but chuckle at the dark humor of it, recognizing the validity of his statement regardless. “This is just a henge anyway. Lots of old sailors on these waters.”
The exile nodded, seeing the sense that made as he really wasn’t going to attempt revealing the man’s identity, not out on the open water at least. His narrow train of thought brought him to wondering what sort of Kiri-nin the man was, but he knew too little of the ranks and divisions to guess close enough. “Business on the continent?” Tezuka questioned, almost rhetorically, but the raised eyebrow Kani turned on him could only mean ‘Don’t expect an answer to that’. Nodding again, he continued to send the boat closer to the veil of mist just ahead. “Why exactly am I rowing again?”
“You offered, and frankly you could use the excercise. You’d have tipped the boat over getting in if I wasn’t heavier than I looked.” Kani laughed to himself quietly at his expense and Tezuka grumbled under his breath, the raft drifting into the cloudy haze that gave the village its name. “Just keep heading straight ‘til it clears,” the local ordered before being enveloped by the mist, a wall of gray that swept past Tezuka a moment later. “Tie this raft to a smaller dock, someone’ll use it eventually,” Kani’s disembodied voice advised from just a few unseen feet ahead.
The shroud of mist that contained the village of Kirigakure was vast according to all publications regarding the location, serving to hide the shinobi who dwell within from foreign invasions. And, had it not been for following the path that Kani had specially said to take going in a straight line, Tezuka may have rowed his vessel directly into one of the countless rock jutting from the water that he only learned where there when his oars smacked against them unexpectedly. The route to the village they followed must have been limited to smaller boats such as this raft, which held insinuations regarding to who used this path, but he would let Kani worry about that.
“So”, the stranger’s voice quietly echoed off the water in a way that made it seem omnipresent all around Tezuka. “What can you do? You mentioned your Kōton, but how much have you been trained?” To the foreigners disappointment the man had seemed uninterested in what he had to say about the samurai or his clan, only in his training using chakra.
The motion needed to keep the vessel moving straight was muscle-memory at this point, and he had difficulty thinking of all he had learned related to Ninjutsu while rowing. “Your Academy jutsu,” he said before his oar caught on a rock, nearly pulling it from his grip. The boat lost velocity and sagged to the right, straying from the course that would make it through the mist safely, but before Tezuka could even think of a way to correct it’s path of travel something was pushing the boat back into position. The thick mist reduced visibility to the point he was no longer sure if they were on the right path they had entered the veil in, so Tezuka trusted that Kani had corrected his mistake and began paddling again while taking care to keep his oars free from the rocks. “There’s little beyond those and my Steel worth mentioning.”
After several minutes of sliding through the thick haze the boat emerged from the mist without warning, visibility clearing up instantly as he broke through to the other side. His first glimpse of Kiri was ruined by the fact that Kani no longer sat in the boat; the black-haired youth stared at the spot he had occupied just minutes before, wondering at what point the stranger had gotte off the raft. He shook his head and continued to row towards the island just ahead of him.
Kirigakure stood just higher than sea level as it loomed across the harbor, the sky above clear from the veil of mist so the sun shined down over the village’s stone buildings rising above the surrounding vegetation. Many buildings were shaped like giant cylinders with flat tops containing trees and other greenery that made Tezuka wonder if this nation ever received snowfall; the flat roof of buildings could never hold the weight of fallen snow back in Tetsu, which must mean the Mist did not experience a cold season. He wouldn’t complain. The endless snow was the part he missed the least.
His raft sailed closer to a small dock for vessels his size that stood at the edge of the harbor adjacent from where he had exited he veil if mist from and he steered towards the end of it where two men dressed in gray vests with porcelain masks stood. They watched his approach without visible reaction, the figure on the left catching the rope Tezuka tossed onto the dock to tie the boat left with. “Can I assume you’ve spoken to Kani?”, he questioned as the boat was pulled against the dock and secured to a post. If they had they did not say so, for they had simply motioned for him to step out of the boat and to follow them. Unsure about the reception but knowing he should abide by their commands, Tezuka stepped up onto the dock and followed behind one of the men into the village while the other walked a few meters behind him.
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