I dropped silently from the tree, landing on the soft earth to the side of the house. She remained focused on her laundry, completely unaware of my presence as I approached.
"Excuse me," I called out softly, not wanting to startle her too badly.
Tsunami turned, one hand still gripping a damp shirt while the other shaded her eyes against the afternoon sun. Her expression shifted from mild surprise to polite wariness as she took in my appearance—the Konoha headband, the unfamiliar face.
"You're a friend of Naruto-kun?" she said, her voice carrying that careful neutrality people used when they weren't sure if they were in trouble.
I heard that line before.
"Eishin Sasayaki," I introduced myself with what I hoped was a disarming smile. "And you're Tsunami-san, if I'm not mistaken. Inari's mother."
"That's right," her posture relaxed slightly at the mention of her son. "Is everything alright? Inari isn't in any trouble, is he?"
A good mother. Worried more about her son than the stranger on her lawn.
"Not at all. Actually, I wanted to thank you personally." I said. "It was incredibly thoughtful. Naruto mentioned you'd prepared it for us."
"Oh, that." She smiled. "It wasn't much, just some rice and vegetables. I thought you boys might be hungry after traveling."
"Trust me, after a week of soldier rations and whatever Naruto considers 'cooking,' it was practically a feast." The lies came easily, and her smile widened. "You have excellent instincts for taking care of people."
You don't walk into a woman's soul, kicking down doors. You knock. With sweetness. With flattery. A compliment was the first key. It doesn't matter what the lock looks like—pride, shame, loneliness—it will always turn something.
….. or not.
There was a flicker of something in her dark eyes. Not the naively expected blush, but a subtle shift in her demeanor. Like I hit a mark, but not the intended one. Like the glass of water turned out to be vodka.
She pinned the shirt to the line with deliberate care before turning back to face me fully.
"You're very kind to say so, Sasayaki-san."
Hmm, was it too subtle perhaps?
"Eishin is fine. And I'm not being kind—I'm being honest." I stepped closer, letting my gaze travel appreciatively over her figure. "A woman who can manage a household, raise a son, and still think to feed hungry strangers... that's rare."
This time she did pause, her hands stilling on the next piece of clothing. She looked up at me, "My, my," she said, amusement coloring her tone. "Such flattery from someone young enough to be my son. What would your teammates think?"
The response caught me off guard in the best possible way. No stammering, no blushing maiden act—just the dry humor of a woman who'd seen enough of life to recognize a line when she heard one.
My grin widened even if my patience was in a foul mood.
"They'd think I have excellent taste." I moved closer still, close enough to catch the faint scent of cheap soap and something sweetly feminine beneath it. "And they'd be right."
Tsunami chuckled, a warm sound that somehow managed to deflect my compliment without rejecting it entirely. "You certainly know how to charm, don't you? I'm afraid it's wasted on me." She shook her head, gathering the remaining wet clothes back into her basket. "Come, let me make you some tea. It's the least I can do for all that you've done."
"I'd be honored," I replied, weaving appreciation into my acceptance. "Though I suspect your hospitality will spoil me for anywhere else I stay. A warm heart, a warm home."
She didn't catch it—or pretended not to. No blush, no stumble, no flicker of that feminine spark I was baiting. Just the careful grace of a woman too used to being polite and too practiced at keeping doors closed.
Someone half my experience may have fallen for it, but she meant it. Tea. Just tea.
Disappointing. So much for the easy conquest I'd been hoping for.
I liked a challenge, sure. Breaking down walls was its own reward. But right now? I wasn't in the mood for puzzles and locked hearts. I wanted something easy. Warm. Wet. Familiar. Something to take the edge off this constant, gnawing ache in my cock.
This woman was going to be harder than I thought.
And that made me want her even more.
I fell into step behind her, my eyes naturally drawn to the sway of her hips as she walked. The navy fabric of her skirt had seen better days—faded in places, with a small mend near the hem where it had likely caught on something.
But the way it moved over her curves told a story of its own. These were the hips of a woman who'd carried life, who'd borne the weight of motherhood and all its demands.
Her dark hair caught traces of sunlight as she moved, revealing subtle threads of premature silver that spoke to stress and hardship. The loose pink shirt had gone soft with countless washings, the fabric thin enough in places that I could make out the outline of her undergarments beneath.
When she shifted the laundry basket to her other hip, the motion pulled the material taut across her chest, revealing the full curves of a body that had known both abundance and want.
Everything about her was practical, worn, lived-in. And somehow that made her more appealing, not less.
A yukata will fit her well, indeed.
"The house isn't much," she said as we approached the sagging front steps, "but it keeps the rain out….. mostly."
"It has character," I offered, though we both knew that was a polite way of saying it needed work. "These old places have stories to tell."
The older woman glanced back at me with that same amused expression. "Oh, it has stories alright. Most of them involve things breaking at the worst possible moments." She pushed open the front door, which protested with a long creak. "Mind the loose floorboard there—second step in."
Great. Even the house is cockblocking me.
The interior was as I'd expected—clean but obviously struggling. Mismatched furniture arranged to hide worn spots in the tatami mats, carefully placed bowls catching drips from ceiling leaks that had been temporarily patched but not properly fixed.
And I had the strange urge to just…. do that? Take a hammer and nails and fix stuff. Not that I cared about the house or my inner carpenter woke up, but…. I wanted to help her.
Let's think about it once I've emptied my balls in that lonely widow's cunt.
"Please, sit anywhere you'd like," the lonely widow said, setting down her laundry basket and moving toward what I assumed was the kitchen area. "I'll put the kettle on."
I settled onto a cushion that had been expertly mended in several places, watching her move through the practiced motions of preparing tea.
There was something relaxing about her efficiency—the way her hands knew exactly where everything was, how she moved through her small domain with quiet confidence.
"You know," I said, letting my voice carry across the small space, "Inari's lucky to have someone who creates such a warm home for him. Not every mother could manage what you have here."
That reminded me of someone else. Mebuki would've ranked first in that list. It was no wonder Sakura turned out to be the way she was.
But then again, there are literally parents who sell their children to shinobi villages because they cannot afford that life, so it was hard to tell.
"Flattery again?" She didn't turn around, but I could hear the smile in her voice. I was starting to doubt its authenticity. "You really don't give up, do you?"
Because you're not supposed to be this resistant, I thought, frustration beginning to creep in. Most women—especially those who'd been alone as long as she had—would have at least shown some sign of interest by now.
Hell, even if she were into women, she wouldn't be this…. uncaring.
"I prefer to think of it as persistent appreciation," I replied smoothly. "There's a difference between empty compliments and recognizing something genuinely impressive."
The kettle began to whistle, and she moved to pour the water over tea leaves with the same careful attention she'd given everything else. "And what exactly do you find so impressive about a cursed old widow struggling to keep her house from falling down?"
The question caught me off guard with its directness. Most people deflected with modesty, not self-deprecation delivered so matter-of-factly.
"The fact that you're still standing," I said honestly. "That you've raised a good son, maintained your dignity, and somehow still have enough generosity left to feed strangers. That takes strength."
That felt short; I wanted to use better lines.
The older woman paused in her tea preparation, and for a moment, I thought I'd finally found the right note. But when she turned back to me, that amused expression was still firmly in place.
"My, such serious words from such a young man." She approached with two steaming cups, moving with a grace that made her worn skirt flutter around her legs. "You sound like you've given a lot of thought to what makes a woman worthwhile."
More than you know, I thought, it's my hobby, accepting the cup and letting my fingers brush hers in the exchange. Her skin was soft but marked by small scars—evidence of cooking accidents and household mishaps and perhaps even manual labor accumulated over years of managing everything alone.
"I've had time to observe what real strength looks like," I said, inhaling the steam and using the moment to study her face. Up close, I could see the faint lines around her eyes, the subtle weariness that no amount of dignity could completely hide. "And it doesn't usually come with fanfare or recognition."
"You flatter too easily, Eishin-san. I'm not used to such words." Tsunami settled gracefully across from me, tucking her legs beneath her with practiced ease. "Please don't say things like that. I've lived a quiet life."
The dubious smile finally slipped from Tsunami's face, replaced by a more guarded, albeit polite curve of the lips. Her fingers tightened slightly around her teacup.
I sighed, recognizing the subtle shift in her demeanor. The compliments weren't landing. It felt like an elementary school student trying to impress the pretty teacher with grass he thought were flowers.
"A harsh one as well," I said simply, abandoning the flowery language for a more direct tone.
"Life is what you make of it," she replied, her chin lifting slightly. "I've weathered storms before. I don't need pity. Not from someone so young."
This wasn't a woman who would respond to being treated as fragile or needy. Not by a stranger, at least. She'd built walls precisely to keep people from seeing any weakness.
Time for a different strategy. Instead of targeting her loneliness, something she'd armored herself against, I needed to find the one area where those defenses might crack.
"Speaking of making life what you want," I said, shifting my position slightly — Haku's needles injuries still sting a bit — and catching a glimpse of her ankle as she, too adjusted her sitting position, "I have to ask—how does a twelve-year-old boy end up working such a treacherous and precarious job? Traveling with merchants, dealing with bandits..." I let the question hang in the air, watching her carefully.
The teacup trembled slightly in her hands before she set it down with deliberate care. Her shoulders drew inward just a fraction, and for the first time, genuine emotion flickered across her features—worry, guilt, and something that might have been fear.
Every mother had one vulnerable spot, no matter how strong they appeared.
— — — — — — — —
Author's Note:
Yes, finally. Tsunami. Finally.
What was meant to be a neat little five-chapter plot has..... I don't know what happened. I'm just writing on vibes now. I give up forcing things into cubes.
Thanks for reading! Drop your thoughts if you feel like it.
PS. You can find 8 chapters ahead at patreon.com/vizem