Read light novels, web novels, Chinese novels, Korean novels, Japanese novels and books online for FREE.
Font Size
18px
Now reading: Chapter 96 96: Will You Live to See That Day? from Naruto: We Agreed on a Simulation, But They Actually Came to Life?, a Action novel by MiRnOuCh.

Morning.

Kitahara Kaede crouched beneath a crooked tree, fitting several wooden planks together.

The boards were uneven, but after a few precise cuts with a kunai, he managed to slot them into place. He layered dry grass at the bottom and propped a slanted board on top to shield the space from the rain.

It was incredibly crude, but it was still better than huddling under bare tree roots.

A cat padded over, rubbing its head against his calf. It had grown noticeably plumper since he first saw it; its ribs were no longer protruding.

Kaede poured so dry food from his pocket beside the nest, and the cat imdiately began to eat. He remained crouched and still, his gaze drifting to the muddy ground nearby.

A few small fish bones, licked perfectly clean, were scattered by the roots. He only ever brought dry kibble; he had never brought fish.

Kaede left the bones untouched. He finished setting up his things, stood up, and brushed off his hands.

She had been coming here too, and frequently.

The cat ate contentedly, its tail sweeping slowly across the ground. Once it finished the last bite, it curled into the new nest, circled once, and settled into a comfortable position.

The sound of footsteps approached.

Terumi i walked over, carrying sothing in her hand. She stopped by the cat nest and knelt, neatly arranging several small strips of torn fish at.

The cat poked its head out of the nest, sniffed the fish, and then retreated. It was clearly full.

i glanced at the cat and left the fish at the entrance of the nest.

"I've thought it through," she said.

Kaede stood still, looking down at her.

i didn't stand up. She remained kneeling, looking up at him, one eye visible beneath her bangs, staring intently into his.

"I want to beco strong. Not just to survive." She paused. "The approach of this village is wrong. The graduation exam is wrong. Assassinating your own teammates is wrong. Everyone lives in fear, constantly guarding against one another."

Her voice was a low whisper. In the Mist Village, speaking such words was practically the sa as being a missing-nin.

"Soone has to change it. And if no one else will—" She stood up. "Then I will."

Kaede looked at her in silence. For a few seconds, the only sound was the cat shifting in its nest with a soft huff.

"Fine," Kaede replied.

i's shoulders flickered.

"But I have one condition," Kaede added, his tone unchanged. "No matter what happens in the future, even if you discover this world is completely different from what you imagined... even if there cos a day when everyone you trust betrays you, and everything you fought desperately to protect shatters..."

He paused.

"You cannot change this resolve. Keep moving forward, until the day you rewrite the rules with your own hands."

i stared at him.

What did he an, 'everyone you trust betrays you'? What did he an, 'everything you fought to protect shatters'?

She opened her mouth to ask, but his expression gave her nothing. He simply watched her calmly, waiting for her answer.

"I promise," she said.

Kaede nodded. "This afternoon. The training ground on the north side of the village."

***

That afternoon.

At the northern edge of the Hidden Mist lay a training ground that had been abandoned for a long ti. After the Third Mizukage took office, new facilities were built closer to the village center, leaving this place forgotten.

Weeds pushed through the cracks in the rubble, and training posts stood crookedly in the mud.

When Terumi i arrived, Kitahara Kaede was leaning against a dead old locust tree, a small pile of pebbles at his feet. He tilted his chin, pointing toward the tallest tree at the edge of the field.

"Climb it."

i looked up. The tree was roughly seven or eight ters tall, its bark slick and covered in moss.

"Chakra tree climbing?" she asked, a hint of confusion in her voice. "I've practiced that on my own."

Kaede didn't explain. He bent down and picked up a pebble.

"Go up."

i didn't ask further. She stepped to the tree, concentrating chakra into the soles of her feet. Each step was steady.

Four ters. Five ters.

It was easy. She even had the ntal bandwidth to wonder what exactly he wanted her to practice.

Suddenly, a whistle of wind whipped past her ankle.

A pebble.

i's body jerked violently. She managed to dodge it, but her concentration snapped for a split second. The chakra beneath her feet dissipated.

She fell straight down.

She flipped in mid-air and landed steadily on one knee, then looked up.

Kaede still held a pebble in his hand, giving his wrist a light flick.

i stared at his hand. She understood.

This wasn't just about climbing a tree; it was about maintaining chakra stability under interference.

"Again."

She stood up and stepped onto the trunk once more. This ti, she was on guard.

At four ters, a pebble flew up from directly below. She gritted her teeth and ignored it, shifting her body slightly to dodge.

At six ters, two pebbles flew simultaneously, one from the left and one from the right. She dodged the left one, but the right one grazed the outside of her calf.

A voice in her head scread "dodge," but her rhythm was broken, and the adhesion at the soles of her feet collapsed instantly.

Fall.

Climb.

Fall.

Climb again.

The frequency of the pebbles increased, and the angles beca more erratic. So bounced upward, while others curved around the trunk from the opposite side.

Every single pebble was tid to hit her at her most vulnerable mont—either when she was shifting her chakra to a new point or in the gap between steps.

On her ninth attempt, she finally touched the lowest branch of the canopy. The mont her fingertips brushed a leaf, a pebble struck her instep with precision.

She had lost count of how many tis she had fallen. But each ti, she climbed a little higher than the last.

He didn't offer a single word of praise. No "not bad," no "you've improved." Every ti she fell, the only thing waiting for her was a cold "again."

Interspersed with the climbing was taijutsu sparring.

i charged in and was taken down.

She charged again, and was taken down again.

"When you throw a sequence of punches, the third one is always a right straight. After two rounds, an opponent will just wait to counter it."

She changed her combination and charged again. This ti, her knee was struck, sending her sprawling forward.

"Your center of gravity is too high when you rotate your hips."

The Mist Village did not lack training. Taijutsu, ninjutsu, and chakra control were all taught. However, at the Academy, instructors simply demonstrated a move once, and the students were left to figure out the rest.

If you did it right, you continued; if you did it wrong, no one cared. With thirty students standing before them, no instructor would spend their ti staring at a single person's movents over and over.

Those who could comprehend the logic moved up; those who couldn't were weeded out.

He was different.

He had watched her for the entire afternoon. He watched every punch she threw, and when she finished, he told her exactly where she had gone wrong.

***

Evening.

Terumi i sat on the ground, unable to get up.

From the afternoon until now, her chakra had been drained dry, her legs were weak, and her arms trembled too much to lift. Sweat poured from her forehead, dripping one by one onto the gravel.

She wanted to wipe her face, but her hand stopped halfway and dropped. She had no strength left.

Closing her eyes, she let herself collapse onto the ground.

Sothing was placed beside her.

i opened her eyes. Kitahara Kaede had already walked away, standing at the edge of the training ground with his back to her, looking at sothing in the distance.

She turned her head. A water bottle sat within arm's reach.

i extended a trembling hand and gripped the bottle. She took a drink. The water surged down her throat, sending a jolt through her system.

During the training, he hadn't said a single kind word to her, but once it was over, he provided the water.

The corner of i's mouth curled upward slightly.

***

Night fell.

The two of them walked slowly back.

The night fog grew thicker, leaving everything beyond the reach of the streetlights a blank, white void.

At the fork in the road, Kitahara Kaede turned left, and Terumi i turned right.

"Sa ti tomorrow," Kaede said simply, disappearing into the left-hand alley.

Terumi i remained where she stood.

The sound of his footsteps grew fainter and fainter against the stone pavent. Suddenly, she spoke.

"What about you?"

The footsteps didn't stop.

i tightened her grip on the water bottle in her hand.

'Will you survive until that day?'

Deep in the alley, the footsteps turned a corner and vanished. There was no answer.

Terumi i stood at the crossroads, staring at the empty alley for a long ti, motionless. The wind lifted her bangs and let them fall again. She lowered her eyes, looking at the water bottle in her hand.

***

You are reading Naruto: We Agreed on a Simulation, But They Actually Came to Life? Chapter 96 96: Will You Live to See That Day? on WuxiaFull. Use Previous, Chapter List, or Next to continue.
Share this chapter
Bookmark saves this novel to your account. Reading History keeps recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading

You May Also Like

Naruto: The Anbu Path to Kage cover
Same author

Naruto: The Anbu Path to Kage

MiRnOuCh ·Action

OnceyoujointheANBU,you'realreadyhalfwaytothegrave.Ifyoudon’tact,don’tlielow,anddon’tfakeit—you’redead.DuringtheSecondGreatNinjaWar,Yakotransmigrate...

My Arms Can Turn into Blades cover
Trending now

My Arms Can Turn into Blades

Ode ·Fantasy

ChenLuSifindsastrangestoneandmeetsastrangegirlduringhistombsweeping.Afterthegirlslasheshimwithasword,hefindsthathecouldn'tcontrolhiswholebodybuthis...

User Comments

0 comments from readers

Post Comment
By posting a comment, you agree to all relevant terms.
There are currently no comments. Join the community and start the discussion.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.