"Would you trust me, Sensei?"
Naruto's question hung in the cold night air, simple and direct. Kurenai stared at him, her jōnin brain processing the request at dizzying speed. Every manual, every protocol, every rule they had drilled into her since the Academy screamed a single word: no.
"Naruto, do you understand what you're asking me?" Kurenai said, her voice barely a whisper, careful not to break the stillness surrounding them. "This isn't just about trust. This is insubordination."
"I know it sounds crazy," he admitted, not letting go of her hand. His grip was firm, stubborn. "But, Sensei, you saw it. You saw how they move. That guy, the one who attacked us at the river, he doesn't fight fair. He uses tricks, traps, and attacks from a distance."
"Your analysis was correct, I don't deny that," she conceded, though every instinct told her to walk away from this conversation. "But that doesn't justify breaking the chain of command. Sakura is Kakashi's student. I have no authority to train her, much less in the middle of a mission of this caliber."
"And what if Kakashi-sensei doesn't see what I see?" Naruto replied, his voice thick with a frustration Kurenai recognized as genuine. "He's amazing, the best, I know. But he thinks like an elite ninja. He thinks in terms of one on one combat. These guys aren't like that. They hide, they wait, and they attack who they think is weak. They attacked Tazuna, not Kakashi-sensei."
Kurenai fell silent. Naruto's logic was, once again, simple and painfully accurate. The enemy wasn't targeting their strongest member, Kakashi, but their most vulnerable ones.
"If something goes wrong..." Kurenai began, weighing the consequences. "If Sakura gets hurt under my supervision, in an unauthorized training session I hid from her own jōnin-sensei... Naruto, it wouldn't just end my career. I could be accused of treason."
"She won't get hurt," he said with conviction, and his eyes didn't lie. They were the eyes of someone who cared more about others. "The jutsu I want to teach her... it'll make her stronger. It'll make her indispensable. We need Sakura. Now more than ever, we need her to be stronger."
Kurenai looked away toward the dark outline of the trees. She remembered the way Naruto had comforted Hinata without a single word, just a hug. She remembered how he had tricked the enemies, managing to verify the path was clear of traps. This kid didn't follow the rules, probably because no one had bothered to teach them to him in a way that made sense. He made his own as he went.
Could she follow the manual, knowing it could lead to defeat? Or could she bet on the one variable the enemy could never anticipate?
She squeezed his hand, a tiny gesture that sealed the pact.
"Alright, Naruto."
The relief on the boy's face was almost childish, but it vanished as quickly as it appeared, replaced by a seriousness Kurenai was beginning to respect.
"I don't like this. It goes against my judgment and all my training," she continued, her tone hardening. "So here are my conditions. I will be present for every second of this... training. I will supervise every move. And if, for a single moment, I believe Sakura is in the slightest danger, I'm stopping it. No questions, no arguments. Is that clear?"
"Crystal clear, Sensei!" Naruto answered, his usual energy returning in a rush. "I swear, you won't regret it! Believe it!"
Kurenai released his hand and took a step back, crossing her arms. "You'd better be right, Naruto. Because I've lied to people far less dangerous than Kakashi for much better reasons than this, and it has never ended well."
******
The morning light filtered through the windows of Tazuna's modest house. Tsunami moved silently around the kitchen serving miso soup and rice, her face tense with worry. Inari sat at the table, pushing food around with his chopsticks without taking a bite.
The dull, rhythmic sound of a kunai being sharpened filled the silence. Sasuke sat in a corner, completely absorbed in his task, ignoring everyone else. Kakashi, meanwhile, was already standing by the door, his inseparable orange book in hand, as if he had been ready to leave for hours.
Kurenai took a deep breath and approached him. It was time.
"Kakashi. I need to ask you a favor."
He lowered his book just enough to reveal his one visible eye, which curved in amusement. "A favor? Kurenai, the sun is barely up. You usually wait until after lunch to start making demands."
"I'm completely serious," she cut in. Her tone, devoid of any lightness, made the sharpening sound stop. Sasuke had looked up.
"I'm listening," Kakashi said, snapping his book shut. His interest was now genuine.
"I need Sakura for a special training session today," Kurenai said, direct and to the point.
The statement made Sakura, who was organizing her medical supply pouch for the tenth time, turn around with an expression of pure confusion. Kiba, who was giving Akamaru a piece of dried fish, froze with his hand midway.
"Sakura?" Kakashi repeated, his eyebrow arching. "Special training? Now? With the threat of more professional assassins out there, it doesn't seem like the most opportune time."
"That's precisely why it's the best time," Kurenai replied, holding his gaze. She had rehearsed her argument all night. "The ninja who ambushed us at the river was a strategist. He used the environment, traps, long-range attacks. We need countermeasures for that, not just brute force."
"Go on," Kakashi urged, his posture now fully attentive.
"Sakura's mind is her greatest weapon. She's a very intelligent girl. Her chakra control is, frankly, the most precise and stable of any genin I've ever seen," Kurenai explained, her voice sounding completely professional. "There's a high-level sensory perception technique based on projecting a thin layer of chakra to detect presences. It requires exquisite control, not power. I think she can learn it quickly. It could give us advance warning of any ambush, detect chakra traps before we trigger them. It's a tactical advantage we can't afford to ignore."
The cover story was solid. It played to Sakura's known strengths and addressed a tactical weakness they had all witnessed. Kakashi watched her in silence for a long moment.
"Interesting proposal," he said finally. "And what about protecting Tazuna and his family? If you take Sakura, the team in charge of guarding Tazuna's family is weakened."
"On the contrary," Kurenai answered without the slightest hesitation. "I'll leave Kiba here. His sense of smell and Akamaru's senses are much more effective for close guard duty in one location than on a noisy, open bridge. Shino will establish a surveillance perimeter with his kikaichū around the property. The house will be sealed. We'll know if anything gets within a hundred meters."
Kiba jumped to his feet, puffing out his chest. "You can count on us, Sensei! No one's getting near this house! Right, Akamaru?" The dog barked energetically in agreement.
Shino, who had remained completely still, simply nodded. "The sensei's logic is sound. It is the most efficient deployment of our resources."
Kakashi sighed, a barely audible sound. Kurenai's plan was strange, but tactically flawless. And the determination in her eyes told him arguing would be pointless. Besides, his curiosity was eating at him. What was Kurenai Yuhi really planning?
"Alright," he relented, opening his book again. "Sakura is yours for the day. But if anything goes wrong..."
"The responsibility will be entirely mine," she interrupted, her tone final and absolute.
A scoff came from the corner. "A waste of time," Sasuke muttered, returning to his kunai, though his movements were now more aggressive. "Special training for her? She'll just slow us down."
Sakura blushed, feeling the sting of Sasuke's words, but her confusion outweighed her embarrassment. She approached her sensei as he and Tazuna headed for the door.
"Kakashi-sensei, are you sure? I should go with you to protect Tazuna..." she began, her voice filled with uncertainty.
Kakashi stopped and gave her one of his closed-eye smiles. "Kurenai-sensei is one of Konoha's finest kunoichi, Sakura. If she thinks you can master a technique that will help us all, then I trust her judgment. Learn everything you can."
With that, he and Tazuna left, followed by a Sasuke who didn't bother to look at anyone.
Sakura stood there, completely bewildered. She turned to the red-eyed jōnin.
"Kurenai-sensei..." she whispered. "What is this perception technique? I've never heard of it."
Kurenai walked over and placed a hand on her shoulder, her gaze intense but, for the first time, with a touch of warmth. "It's a training that requires something more than chakra control, Sakura. It requires trust." She paused, then added in an even lower voice, "Trust me. And, for today, trust Naruto."
Before Sakura could process that strange request, Kurenai turned to the others.
"Naruto, Hinata. It's time for us to go. Kiba, Shino, you have your orders."
"Yes, Sensei!" Kiba responded energetically. Shino nodded again.
Naruto walked to the door, and as he passed Sakura, he gave her a quick, awkward pat on the shoulder. "Don't worry, it'll be fine. You'll see."
And with that, they left the house, leaving behind a Sakura who was more confused and anxious than ever, heading toward a secret training session she knew absolutely nothing about.
They headed deep into the forest, following a barely perceptible trail that Kurenai navigated without hesitation.
They walked in silence for several minutes, a tense silence, heavy with the questions Sakura was dying to ask. She watched the backs of her companions. Kurenai walked in front, her stride confident and determined. Behind her, Naruto was unusually quiet. There was no trace of his usual boundless energy; instead, there was a grim focus Sakura had never seen from him. And next to him, Hinata moved with a grace and calm that unnerved her. She didn't seem nervous or confused. She seemed... prepared. As if she knew exactly where they were going and why.
What is going on here? Sakura wondered for the tenth time. I feel like there's something important they haven't told me. Nothing has made sense since we got to this land. What do the three of them have in common that I don't know about?
Curiosity and the feeling of being excluded gnawed at her. Unable to stand it any longer, she closed the distance to Hinata.
"Hinata..." she whispered, making sure her voice didn't carry to the front. "Do you know what this is all about?"
Hinata looked at her, her lavender eyes serene. "Kurenai-sensei will explain when we get to the right place," she answered quietly, but with a firmness that invited no more questions. "It's important that we're somewhere safe."
The answer only deepened the mystery. Sakura frowned and decided to try Naruto. She moved to his side.
"Naruto, Kurenai-sensei said to trust you. Don't you think I deserve to know what I'm trusting you with?"
Naruto glanced at her, a small smile pulling at the corner of his mouth. "Of course you do. But it's something... that's better to show than to tell. If I explain it now, you'll think I'm crazy."
"I already think you're crazy half the time," she shot back, a bit of her usual exasperation showing.
"Exactly. So just wait a little, okay? I promise it'll be worth it," he said with a wink, and his tone, though light, held an undercurrent of sincerity that made her fall silent.
They continued their walk, and after what felt like an eternity, the dense foliage of the forest began to thin. The light filtered through more intensely, and the soft, almost imperceptible sound of water reached their ears.
Suddenly, they emerged from the forest, and Sakura's breath caught.
They had arrived at a small, hidden lake, a circle of turquoise water nestled in a hollow of gray, moss-covered rocks.
They stopped on a small, white-sand beach at the water's edge.
Kurenai turned around slowly, her face impassive, her red eyes fixed on Naruto. The maternal warmth she sometimes showed her students was completely gone. In its place was the piercing gaze of a jōnin commander who had taken a monumental risk and was now demanding justification.
She took a moment to scan the surroundings, her eyes moving methodically over the rocks, the treetops, the surface of the water. Sakura realized she was checking, with an expert's skill, that they were truly alone. Satisfied, her gaze locked back onto the blond boy.
"Alright, Naruto. We're here." Her voice was clear and sharp in the pure air. "We're alone. Kakashi won't follow us. There isn't a soul for miles. You're in the safe place you wanted."
She paused, letting every word settle in the silence of the place.
"Now is the time for you to explain what exactly this 'secret jutsu' is that I just lied to a fellow jōnin for, risked the cohesion of my own team for, disobeyed the chain of command for, and broken half a dozen fundamental rules of the shinobi code for." Her voice dropped, becoming more dangerous. "Start talking. And it had better be good."