Chapter 18 – Across the Wake
The boat rocked gently as it cut through the waves, wind tugging at sails stretched above like outstretched wings. The sky was pale with dawn, the sea quiet but purposeful, rolling like the breath of something ancient beneath the hull. Hajime stood at the stern, hands on the railing, his cloak fluttering at his sides.
He hadn't spoken to the other passengers much. Most were common folk, merchants with crates of tea and fabrics, laborers ferrying between provinces, and two ronin who kept mostly to themselves and eyed everyone with quiet suspicion. Hajime didn't mind. He welcomed the silence.
The Land of Waves was behind him now. His underground base sealed beneath the earth. Koji was safe, returned to his family. Gato was dead. Zabuza and Haku were gone, for now, the thread connecting them still taut but not tugged. That chapter had ended, and something larger was stirring beyond the horizon.
Hajime's eyes were fixed ahead. The mist had thinned with the sun's rise, revealing a dark line in the distance, the Land of Fire. And beyond that, deeper inland, was a city teetering between decay and splendor.
Tanzaku Quarters.
But he wasn't interested in the city itself.
He was chasing a legend.
Tsunade.
Her name rang like a thunderclap in his mind: The Legendary Sucker. A healer like no other. One of the legendary Sannin. The future Fifth Hokage. A woman who could crush boulders with her bare hands and then stitch a broken man back together with chakra as fine as silk. More than that, she was the epitome of medical knowledge in this world.
And Hajime needed her.
He didn't seek her power for glory. He didn't care for fame. But hidden deep within his soul, behind layered seals in his mental plane, was a truth too vast for this world: the gene-seed of a Grey Knight. A fragment of the Emperor's legacy, a blueprint of a being beyond comprehension.
But knowledge was the key.
Medical knowledge. Chakra biology. Surgical skill.
Without the ability to alter and prepare his body, the gene-seed was useless. Dormant. A treasure sealed behind a door he could not yet unlock.
Tsunade was the key.
And more than that, through her, there might be a way into Konoha. Officially. Peacefully. With guidance. No deception. No infiltration. If he could convince her, prove himself, gain her trust, he might walk into the Hidden Leaf Village not as a threat, but as a student.
The sea wind was bracing, slapping against his cheeks and pulling at his thoughts like strands of hair. Hajime closed his eyes, letting the cold cut through him. He inhaled deeply.
His path was set.
The boat docked by midmorning in a bustling port town on the southern coast of the Land of Fire. The pier creaked under heavy carts and bustling travelers. Voices clashed in the air, merchants, children, sailors shouting orders. Hajime stepped off the boat with his cloak pulled tight, blending into the noise.
He traveled inland with patience and purpose. For three days, he journeyed across lowland plains and wooded hills, staying off the main roads when possible. He shared trails with pilgrims and tradesmen, eating when he could, sleeping near firelight under simple cover. He kept his chakra masked, his head low, his pace steady.
Then, on the evening of the third day, Tanzaku Quarters came into view.
The city was a tangle of contradictions. Towering shrines beside sake dens. Loud music beside silent alleyways. Firelight flickered off tiled rooftops and neon signs. It was both ancient and gaudy, spiritual and vice-ridden. A thousand desires drifted through the streets like smoke.
Hajime secured a room at a modest inn tucked behind a ramen shop and beside a rundown fortune teller's hut. The walls were thin, but the futon was clean, and the innkeeper asked no questions.
That night, he set out under the lantern-lit sky.
His goal was clear: find Tsunade. If she was anywhere in this country, this was her likely haunt. Known to chase bets and debts in equal measure, she wasn't the type to hide in a monastery or seek politics in courts. No, she'd be in the dice halls.
He visited every gambling house he could find, one by one. He didn't announce his purpose, didn't ask openly. He observed. Listened. Moved with quiet purpose.
At the Silver Tiger, a veteran gambler with a crooked smile muttered over her dice, "Another brat looking for the sucker? You ain't the first. She left two days ago."
At the Iron Bell, a pit boss laughed and said, "She lost a hundred thousand yen here. Not a single win. Typical."
But at the Golden Carp, Hajime got a lead.
He sat near the wall, quietly sipping cheap tea and watching the crowd. Two men at a nearby table whispered between rounds:
"She was here, alright. Short woman, big presence. Came in with a girl trailing behind her carrying a little pig."
"A pig?" Hajime noted the word.
Shizune.
Confirmation.
That meant he was close. He didn't speak, didn't draw attention. Just stood and walked back into the humid night, heart firm.
Tsunade was near.
And tomorrow, he would find her.
And when he did, he'd do more than plead for help. He would ask for the knowledge to be able to reshape his body. He would offer what he could, train where she guided, and prepare for the day he would be ready to implant the legacy sleeping inside his soul.
A legacy not of chakra, but of the Emperor's Will.
End of Chapter 18 – Across the Wake