The walk home was a blur.
Iruka's congratulations, the faces of his classmates, the sour mix of envy and disdain from the other parents… it all swirled in the back of his mind, a dull noise beneath the roar of the new consciousness settling into his being. Naruto's apartment greeted him with its usual silence and the smell of instant ramen and dust.
But this time, it was different.
The loneliness of the place was no longer just the absence of others; it was the specter of a life he hadn't lived, one full of people, of noise, of a family. The small, unmade bed, the single cup in the sink, the milk on the verge of expiring in the fridge… every detail was a needle reminding him of the difference between the life he had and the one he had seen on that screen.
Naruto closed the door and leaned against it, the faint click of the lock sounding like a final slam on his old life. He slid to the floor, pulling his knees to his chest, trying to breathe.
"It's still me," he whispered to the stale air. "I'm still Naruto Uzumaki."
He got up, walked like an automaton to the small bathroom, and looked at himself in the stained mirror. He saw his own blue eyes, wide open, his rebellious blond hair, the whisker marks on his cheeks. It was his face, the face of a twelve-year-old boy. But the look in those eyes… that was new. There was a weight there, a twenty-five-year-old's fatigue, an understanding no child should have.
"I'm not someone else," he told himself more firmly, touching his reflection with his fingertips. "They're just… memories. Memories of a past life. Like reading a very, very long book about yourself."
The analogy was poor, but it helped him ground himself. He was the protagonist. What he had seen wasn't an unchangeable sentence, but a draft. The first draft of his life. And it was full of errors, of cross-outs, of entire chapters he wanted to rip out and burn.
A blue flash in his peripheral vision reminded him of his only editing tool.
[System: Falna Activated] [To perform a Status Update on a compatible subject, the host must perform the Falna bestowal ritual.] [Ritual Requirements:] [1. The subject must be willing and conscious.] [2. The host must establish direct skin-to-skin contact on the subject's back.] [3. The host must use a drop of their own blood, infused with their chakra, to draw the status on the subject's back.]
Naruto turned away from the mirror and began to pace in his tiny living room. The initial panic from the academy had given way to a frantic mental activity. Shock was turning into strategy.
"Willing and conscious," he muttered. "Skin-to-skin. On the back. With blood."
Each requirement was a wall. How could he ask someone for something like that? People already thought he was a monster or a freak. This would only confirm their worst suspicions. Who in their right mind would agree?
His mind cycled through the cast of characters he knew so intimately.
Sasuke was out of the question. He'd rather kiss him again than ask him to take off his shirt.
Sakura… The memory of her devotion to Sasuke and her disdain for him was too fresh. She'd call him a pervert and punch him so hard he'd probably end up in the hospital.
Ino was a long shot. She was pragmatic, but also incredibly vain and a Sasuke fangirl almost on Sakura's level.
Tenten was an interesting option. Dedicated to her weapons, practical. But he barely knew her. Approaching her out of the blue with this request would be a disaster.
And then, his mind always came back to the same point. To the same blushing face, the same lavender eyes.
Hinata Hyuga.
The girl who had secretly loved him for years. The girl who almost died for him. The girl whose main weakness, according to her clan, was her kindness. His twelve-year-old mind could barely comprehend it. How could anyone like him that way? But the twenty-five-year-old mind saw it with brutal clarity. He was everything she admired: loud, confident, never willing to give up. A beacon for someone constantly living in the shadow of doubt and disapproval.
The thought of exploiting those feelings made his stomach turn. It felt… dirty.
But then, the memory of Neji being impaled by wooden stakes, dying in his arms to protect her and him, flashed in his mind with nauseating clarity. The memory of Pain devastating the village, of his own failure to protect the Third Hokage, of Jiraiya sinking into the water…
The guilt was replaced by a cold determination. Ethics were a luxury he couldn't afford. The future was a slaughterhouse, and if he had to be a little dirty, a little manipulative to prevent it, then so be it.
"Hinata is the key," he said aloud, stopping dead in the middle of the room. "She's the starting point. If I can convince her, the shyest, most modest person I know, I can convince anyone."
A plan began to form. A crazy, stupid plan that would probably get him assassinated by Hiashi Hyuga on the spot. But it was a plan.
He needed to talk to her. Tomorrow. Before the team assignments. He needed to find her alone and roll the dice.
He spent the rest of the night in a state of strange meditation, sitting on his bed as the memories of two lives fought for balance. The image of a video game called Persona floated in his mind, the idea of forging "Social Links" to become stronger. He smiled bitterly. His life had become a dating JRPG, but with far more lethal consequences.
The next morning, Naruto woke before dawn. For the first time in his life, he didn't just feel tired, but exhausted to the bone. The weight of what he was about to do pressed down on him.
He got dressed, made sure his new ninja headband was tied securely, and headed out. He didn't go to the academy, but to one of the less crowded training grounds, one that bordered the Hyuga clan compound. He knew, from a vague memory of a filler episode that was now a personal memory, that she sometimes went there to practice away from her father's gaze.
He sat on a training post, pretending to meditate or rest. The morning air was cool and smelled of damp earth and leaves. Every minute that passed felt like an hour. His confidence from the night before was fading, replaced by an anxiety that twisted his stomach.
What if she didn't come? What if he remembered wrong? What if someone was with her?
Just as he was about to give up, he saw her.
She was walking alone, head down, her slender figure wrapped in the familiar lavender jacket. She carried a small bag, probably with training gear. The morning sunlight filtered through the trees, dappling the ground around her. For a moment, the twenty-five-year-old otaku's mind took over, and all he could think was, "She's real. She's real and she's exactly as I remember."
Naruto swallowed, forcing his heart to calm down. He got up from the post and walked towards her, trying to look casual, as if it were the most normal encounter in the world.
"Hey, Hinata!" he called out, his voice a little louder than he'd intended.
She flinched, like a startled fawn. Her shoulders tensed and she looked up. When her eyes met his, the blush that covered her cheeks was instantaneous and deep.
"N-Naruto-kun!" she stammered, stopping in her tracks and looking down at her feet. "G-good morning. And… c-congratulations on g-graduating."
"You too! Congrats!" he replied, moving a little closer. Her nervousness was almost contagious. "Fancy seeing you here. Were you heading to train?"
She nodded shyly, not looking up.
"Y-yes. A little… before going to the a-academy."
"Cool, cool." Naruto scratched the back of his neck, a gesture that felt both natural and calculated. "Hey, um… I was wondering if you had a minute. There's something I wanted to talk to you about. It's… well, it's important."
Hinata's head snapped up, her lavender eyes wide with surprise. Naruto-kun wanted to talk to her? About something important? Her mind went blank.
"W-with me?" she whispered, as if the idea were inconceivable.
"Yeah, with you." The seriousness in his tone seemed to surprise her even more. "But… maybe not here. Can we go somewhere a little more… private?"
Hinata's mind short-circuited. Private? Naruto-kun? With her? A hundred impossible and romantic scenarios bloomed and died in her head in the span of a second. Unable to form a coherent sentence, she simply nodded, her face burning.
Naruto gestured for her to follow and led her to a small clearing by a stream, hidden by a cluster of weeping willows. There was an old wooden bench there, covered in moss. The place was quiet, peaceful. The perfect setting for a conversation that would be anything but.
They sat on the bench, keeping a cautious distance between them. The silence stretched on, broken only by the sound of the water and the chirping of birds. Naruto could feel the tension radiating from Hinata; she was so stiff she looked like she might break.
He had to start. He had to say something. But how? His plan, so clear in the solitude of his apartment, now seemed like a lunatic's script.
He decided to start on common ground, something that affected them both.
"Now that we're genin, things are going to get serious, right?" he began, watching the flowing water. "Missions… they'll be more dangerous. It won't be like playing around at the academy anymore."
Hinata seemed to relax a little at the neutral topic. She nodded.
"Y-yes. I suppose so."
"And you… you're a Hyuga," Naruto continued, turning to look at her. He saw her flinch at the mention of her clan. Bingo. "That's incredible. You have the Byakugan. It's one of the strongest dojutsu there is. But… it must be a ton of pressure, right?"
She stared at him, perplexed. No one talked to her like that. People talked about the Hyuga clan with awe or fear, or to her with pity. No one had ever asked her about the pressure.
"I…" she started, but the words wouldn't come.
Naruto decided to push a little more, using his knowledge in a way he hoped would seem insightful, not omniscient.
"I see your cousin, Neji. He's a genius, everyone says so. But he always seems so… angry. So tense. And then… I see you. And you're the complete opposite. It must be hard. In your own family."
The impact of his words was visible. Hinata's eyes widened, and a wet shimmer appeared in them. How? How could this loud, clueless boy, the one who never seemed to notice anything beyond his next bowl of ramen, see her so clearly? See the invisible cage she lived in?
"How… how do you know…?" she whispered, her voice trembling.
"I just watch," Naruto lied, though in a way it was the truth. "I've spent my whole life being watched by people. You learn to watch back. And I see you, Hinata. I see that you're much stronger than everyone, maybe even you yourself, believes."
That was the line. The one that broke the dam. A single tear slid down Hinata's cheek. She wiped it away quickly, embarrassed.
"I'm n-not strong," she said quietly, but with a firmness Naruto had rarely heard from her. "My father… he says my kindness is a weakness. That I don't have what it takes to lead."
"Your father is wrong."
The sentence was so direct, so certain, that it took her breath away.
"Kindness isn't a weakness, Hinata. Caring about others, not wanting to hurt them… that's a strength. It's the most important strength a shinobi can have. It's what keeps us from becoming monsters. Your father doesn't see it, but I do."
Hinata stared at him, her lips slightly parted, her shyness forgotten. She was hanging on his every word. He had her full attention. It was now or never.
Naruto took a deep breath, preparing for the leap of faith.
"Hinata… the reason I brought you here… is because I think I have a way to help you. To help all of us. I've developed… well, it's not exactly a jutsu. It's something more. Something that can unlock a person's true potential. Make them stronger, faster… than they ever imagined."
Curiosity battled with confusion on her face.
"A… jutsu? What kind of power is that?"
"Okay, listen." Naruto ran a hand through his hair, a nervous, crooked smile on his face. This was the moment of truth. The "honest pervert" hour. "This is going to sound really, really weird. And I need you to hear me out completely before… you know, running away or thinking I'm the biggest freak in the world. Can you promise me that?"
His sincerity was so palpable that she could only nod, mesmerized.
"It's a technique that… inscribes a 'status' onto a person. Like a kind of living seal. This status helps your body assimilate experience, channel chakra more efficiently, learn skills at an absurd speed. It's… it's a shortcut to greatness. It can take your potential, all that power you have inside, and make it bloom."
It was a half-baked explanation, but it was the best he could do. Hinata frowned, trying to understand.
"How… how does it work?" she asked, her voice barely a whisper.
Naruto stood up from the bench, unable to stay still. He turned so he wouldn't have to look at her directly as he dropped the bomb.
"Here comes the weird part," he said, looking at the trees. "To… to activate this power in someone, it requires… uh… direct contact." He paused, letting the word hang in the air. "On the back."
The silence that followed was absolute. Naruto dared a glance over his shoulder. Hinata was completely motionless, her face as pale as paper.
"Like… on the skin of the back," he added, feeling like each word was a nail in his own coffin.
He waited for the scream. The fainting. The escape.
But it didn't come. Hinata just stared at him, and then, slowly, the color returned to her face. It wasn't a blush of shyness, but a deep red that climbed from her neck to her ears.
"M-my… my back?" she managed to articulate, her voice high-pitched.
"Yes! I know! I know how it sounds!" Naruto rushed to say, turning back to her and gesturing with his hands. "I swear on my life it's not… I'm not trying to be a pervert! I have no weird interest in people's backs, believe me! This is real! It's the only way to do it."
He knelt in front of her so they were at eye level. He looked directly into her eyes, trying to convey all the desperate sincerity he felt.
"Hinata, I'm telling you this because I trust you. And because I know what you want. I know you want to prove your father wrong. You want to be strong. You want to be acknowledged. This power can give you that. It can make you the kunoichi I know you can be."
He was playing all his cards. Appealing to her deepest insecurities, her most desperate desires. Knowledge he had no right to possess.
"There's one last detail," he added, lowering his voice, trying to make it sound as clinical and boring as possible. "The… the drawing of the status is done with a drop of my blood, mixed with my chakra. It's… it's like a very advanced type of medical ninjutsu. A biological activation seal. Totally technical."
He was improvising like crazy, mixing terms he'd heard in his other life. He hoped he sounded credible.
Hinata was silent for a long time, looking at her own hands, which were nervously twisting the hem of her jacket. Her mind was a battlefield. On one side, the shame, the fear, the modesty that had been ingrained in her since birth. The idea of a boy, of Naruto-kun, seeing her… touching her like that… was unthinkable.
But on the other side… there were his words.
He saw her. He didn't see the failed heiress, or the weird, shy girl. He saw someone strong. He trusted her. He was offering her the key to escape her prison. A chance not just to be strong, but to be strong for him.
"You said… 'to help all of us'," she whispered, repeating his words. "Why? Why do you need this?"
Naruto sighed, the weight of the future crashing down on him again.
"Because bad things are going to happen, Hinata. Terrible things. A darkness is coming that most people can't even imagine. And I… I can't face it alone. No one can. I need strong friends by my side. Comrades I can trust with my life. And right now… almost all of us are too weak. Myself included."
He looked at her again, his expression stripped of all mischief, all awkwardness. It was the look of a veteran in a child's body.
"I'm not asking this just for you, Hinata. I'm asking this for me. I need you. I need you to become incredibly strong. Because I trust your heart more than anyone else's. If I have to give power to someone, I want it to be someone like you."
That was the final blow.
It wasn't a favor he was doing for her. It was him, asking her for help. He, the boy she had admired from afar, the one who embodied strength and confidence, was telling her that he needed her.
The battle in her mind was over.
Hinata lifted her head. The tears were gone. Her face was still flushed, but her lavender eyes were filled with a steely resolve Naruto had never seen before.
She took a deep breath, a shaky sigh that seemed to carry away all her doubts.
"Okay, Naruto-kun."
Her voice was quiet, but firm. No stuttering.
"I'll do it."
Naruto was floored. He blinked. Had he heard right? Did it actually work? On the first try? A wave of relief so potent it almost brought him to his knees washed over him. a genuine smile, the first since graduation, spread across his face.
"Really? Hinata, that's… that's amazing! I swear, you won't regret this! This will change everything!"
His euphoria was so great he almost hugged her, but he stopped himself just in time. He jumped to his feet, filled with renewed energy.
"Okay! Great! So… we need a place. And a time. We can't do it here, obviously. My apartment… it's a total mess, but it's private. No one will bother us there."
Hinata stood up too, nodding slowly. She still couldn't meet his eyes, but she no longer looked like she was going to faint.
"After… after they announce the teams," she suggested.
"Perfect. After the academy, we'll meet at the gate and go to my place. Deal?"
"Deal," she replied, her voice barely audible, but the agreement was as solid as a rock.
They stood there for another moment, in a silence now charged not with tension, but with anticipation and enough awkwardness to power an entire village.
"Well… I… I should get going," Naruto said, breaking the spell. "I don't want to be late. See you later, Hinata. And… thank you. Really."
He turned and almost ran off, not looking back, his heart pounding a mile a minute.
Hinata remained in the clearing, watching him go. She placed a hand on her chest, feeling the frantic beating of her own heart. She had just agreed to let Naruto Uzumaki draw on her bare back with his blood.
Part of her was terrified.
But another part, a part growing rapidly inside her, felt more hopeful and alive than ever before.
Naruto, for his part, walked towards the academy with a newfound determination. He had taken the first step. The hardest one. He had convinced his first ally. But as the adrenaline faded, the full realization of what they had just agreed to hit him.
He had a date with the shyest girl in Konoha to perform a magical and potentially perverted ritual in his apartment.
His life was no longer a story he watched on a screen. It was a weird, high-stakes romantic comedy with world-domination potential. And he was the hapless protagonist who had to navigate it.
A slow, mischievous grin began to form on his lips as he entered the academy grounds. It was a smile that mixed his old exuberance with a touch of conspiracy.
This was going to be complicated. This was going to be incredibly awkward.
But for the first time, facing a future of death and destruction, Naruto Uzumaki felt that, somehow, it was also going to be very, very fun.