Fuinjutsu. The art of sealing. This was the very foundation upon which Dan had built half of his entire strength. Over the past few years, this field had seen remarkable growth within the family. But surprisingly, Dan wasn't the only one driving this progress anymore.
His children had begun to contribute, so far more than others. One in particular stood out: Hoshi.
His fifth daughter, now thirty years old, bore a striking resemblance to him. She kept her long blue hair tied back in a high ponytail just like his, and possessed those sa piercing blue eyes—yet hers held sothing different: an unquenchable spark of curiosity. Her talent for research was nothing short of extraordinary.
It started logically enough. The training regin Dan set for the family required everyone to study Fuinjutsu to a proficient level. It wasn't an elective; it was a necessity. The reason was simple: The Vitality Seal.
Every one of his children would be given the chance to apply it at the age of thirty-five. This required a profound understanding of how seals are constructed, how they are layered, the role of each individual component, and how they interact with chakra pathways. Without this deep comprehension, the technique would be impossible to execute and would lead to certain failure.
So, they all studied. So did so with enthusiasm, others with complaints. But Hoshi? She was utterly consud by the subject. She didn't stop at just studying; she began to experint, to research, and to constantly ask questions. "Why does the seal use this specific pattern? What if we altered this section? Is it possible to rge two different types of seals?"
Dan encouraged this line of thinking in all of them. Everything he had achieved so far ca from his own solitary efforts, painstaking research, and years of trial and error—decades of working entirely alone. But he understood a vital truth: one hand cannot clap.
The family would never truly advance if it relied solely on one person. He needed researchers, innovators, and minds that could think and evolve. Even if his lifespan was incredibly long, his ti was still finite, and he couldn't investigate everything by himself.
Thus, he pushed them. "Think for yourselves. Do not accept what I say as absolute truth. Research, experint, make mistakes, and learn."
So responded to the call. Sam was good at Fuinjutsu but preferred physical training. Lyon was more interested in combat. Felix was talented but lacked the patience for long-term research.
But Hoshi? She had found her true passion.
After noticing her excellence, Dan began to ntor her personally. He started summoning her to his private laboratory—the family's "sacred ground," a place rarely entered by anyone without his explicit permission.
The first ti she stepped inside, her eyes widened in awe. "All these leather scrolls...?"
"The product of years of constant work." He gestured toward shelves overflowing with manuscripts. "Take what you want. You may read them as you please."
She began coming every day. She spent hours in the lab, poring over his notes and studying his diagrams. Dan would sit in the corner, working on his own research, answering her questions as they arose.
"Father, why did you use this spiral pattern here?"
"It increases chakra flow efficiency by 12%."
"And what if we made it tighter?"
"I tried that. It increases efficiency to 18%, but it weakens the seal's stability."
"What about—"
"Try it yourself," he interrupted calmly. "Don't take my word for it. Test your hypothesis."
And that is exactly what she did. Months of experintation followed. Failure after failure. She didn't give up. She adjusted, she changed, and she tried again.
Then, two months ago, she succeeded.
She developed an enhanced Chakra Storage Seal. It wasn't revolutionary, but it was better than the old version—it could store 23% more chakra and had higher stability. She ca to Dan, beaming with excitent. "I did it, Father! Look, all the tests—"
"I saw," he interrupted. He had been watching her progress from the start. "Excellent."
A single word. But the way he said it made Hoshi smile in a way he had never seen before.
Dan was happy. Not because the invention was groundbreaking—an improved storage seal was useful, but not extraordinary. His happiness ca from sothing else. His child was beginning to help him. She was lightening his load. As the patriarch, everything had been on his shoulders: research, developnt, training, decisions, and planning. Now, soone else was sharing that burden. It was a small start, but a start nonetheless.
Coming from his own daughter, it ant sothing special. He began to spoil her—slightly, and in his own way.
"Hoshi, co here."
She looked up from her notebook. "Yes, Father?"
He was holding a small object and reached out his hand. "Take this."
She looked down. It was a stone ring, but etched with incredibly fine engravings. A seal. "This is...?"
"The Chakra Storage Seal you recently developed. It will help you in your experints if you have it close and visible before you."
He had crafted it for her. Specifically for her.
She took the ring with slightly trembling hands. "Thank you, Father."
He simply nodded and returned to his work. But Hoshi saw sothing on his face—not quite a smile, as Dan rarely smiled—but a look of... satisfaction. A hidden pride.
Their conversations changed too. They beca longer, deeper.
"Father, I was thinking about the Vitality Seal."
"What about it?"
She sat across from him. "The first version targets the bones, the second the muscles, the third the organs. But what about the skin?"
He looked at her. "The skin?"
"The outer layer. The body's first defense. What if we applied a seal that strengthens it? Makes it more resistant, faster to heal?"
It was an intriguing idea. Dan had thought of it before but had set it aside; priorities were elsewhere. "Theoretically possible. Execution is difficult. Skin constantly regenerates; the seal needs stability."
"But what if—" and she launched into an explanation of her theory.
Dan listened. He corrected so points and added ideas of his own. The discussion lasted two hours.
In the end, Hoshi smiled. "I'll start the experints to try and develop the storage seal even further."
"Take your ti. Don't rush."
"Yes, Father." She stood up to leave, then paused. She turned back. "Father?"
"Yes?"
"I am..." she hesitated. "I am happy that I can share this side of you."
Dan looked directly at her. "You are more talented than I was when I started. With talent and effort, you will surely reach my level."
Her smile widened. "Thank you."
After she left, Dan sat alone. Hoshi would beco a great researcher. Perhaps even better than him one day. The thought didn't bother him; quite the opposite. The family was growing—not just in numbers, but in capability. Thinking minds, innovating hands. This was what he wanted: a strong, independent, and evolving family. Step by step, it was becoming a reality.
He returned to his work, but a small part of him—the part that rarely showed—was proud. Proud of his daughter.
In the weeks that followed, the lab witnessed a new sight: a father and daughter working side by side. Dan at his table, developing and occasionally testing brain-enhancent techniques on small mice; Hoshi at hers, refining her chakra storage seals.
Sotis they exchanged ideas. Sotis they worked in silence.
Dan's wives noticed the change. Hoshi was spending more ti with her father, smiling more, and carrying herself with more confidence.
"He's pampering her," Ren whispered to Kali.
"Finally," Kali laughed. "Maybe he just needed soone to share his work with. Hoshi is perfect for it."
They watched the lab from a distance. A father teaching his daughter. A daughter learning from her father. A legacy being passed down—not just of blood or power, but of knowledge. A ntal inheritance.
The Walt family was evolving. Slowly, but surely.
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