Chapter 2

The days following the fever bled into one another, marked by the rhythm of Kasumi's quiet movements and the bitter tang of medicine. Ryuu's strength returned like sap rising slowly in a winter tree – almost imperceptibly, yet undeniably there. 

The bone-deep exhaustion receded, replaced by the restless energy of a mind trapped in a body lagging frustratingly behind.

He could walk now, albeit with the unsteady gait of a toddler discovering gravity anew. His small hands could grasp objects, manipulate the simple wooden blocks Kasumi sometimes provided. 

Yet, every action felt mediated, filtered through layers of unfamiliar muscle memory and underdeveloped coordination. It was like trying to pilot a complex machine with only half the instruction manual and controls designed for someone else entirely.

His voice, too, was gaining strength. The raw scrape in his throat healed, leaving behind the clear, high tones of a young child. 

And here lay one of the deepest veins of unease that ran beneath his waking thoughts. He understood Kasumi perfectly. He understood the gruff pronouncements of Kenji-sensei. When he spoke – hesitant, simple phrases at first, then gradually more complex requests or observations – the words formed correctly, the grammar innate.

He knew, with the certainty of his twenty-six years of reading, studying, and living in an entirely different world, that he should not understand this language.

It wasn't English, not Japanese, not any of the half-dozen languages he'd dabbled in during college electives. Yet, it flowed into his ears and out of his mouth as naturally as breathing.

Where did this knowledge come from? He searched the hazy corners of his new consciousness, probing for echoes of the boy whose body this was, the original Ryuu. 

There was nothing. 

No flashes of memory, no favourite toys, no familiar faces beyond Kasumi. 

Just a blank slate, completely overshadowed and consumed by his own personality. It was profoundly disturbing, another layer of wrongness in a world already fundamentally askew. Was the language imprinted on the very cells of this body? A side effect of whatever bizarre cosmic event had landed him here? 

He had no answers, only the unnerving fluency.

Kasumi watched him constantly. Her dark eyes missed nothing – the slight improvement in his balance, the growing complexity of his spoken requests, the long periods he spent simply sitting and observing, his gaze unnervingly focused for a child his age. 

She never questioned his rapid recovery or his quiet intensity, but her vigilance remained, a palpable aura around her. She drilled him relentlessly, framing it as play. Stacking blocks became exercises in balance and fine motor control. Fetching herbs from the garden became lessons in silent movement. Simple games of hide-and-seek involved holding his breath, masking his presence, skills far beyond typical child's play. 

She was training him, he realized, subtly but deliberately. Training him for what? Survival? Escape?

As his physical condition improved, Kasumi began allowing brief excursions outside the stifling confines of their small house. Always, the ritual was the same. Layers of clothing, the soft cotton gloves, the oversized straw hat, and finally, the dark blue umbrella, Kasumi wielding it like a shield against the sky.

The village – he learned it was called Shiosai, "Tide's Roar," a name both poetic and grimly literal – clung precariously to a rocky strip of coast. It smelled perpetually of salt, drying fish, and damp, rotting wood. Roughly hewn houses, patched with driftwood and tarred canvas, huddled together as if for warmth against the relentless wind that swept in from the grey, churning sea. 

Fishing boats, scarred and weathered, were pulled high onto the stony beach, their nets spread like macabre webs to dry or be mended by patient hands.

Life here was etched onto the faces of the villagers. They were lean, tough folk, their skin leathered by sun and sea-spray (a stark contrast to his own shocking white), their eyes holding the weary pragmatism of people locked in a constant struggle against the elements.

They moved with the economy of effort born from hard labor, their bodies often bearing the marks of their trade – missing fingers, jagged scars from errant hooks or knives, the stooped shoulders of hauling heavy nets day after tedious day.

His appearance, even bundled and shaded, drew attention. 

Children would sometimes stop their games to stare, their expressions a mixture of curiosity and apprehension. Adults would offer Kasumi curt nods, their eyes lingering on Ryuu for a moment too long, sometimes accompanied by muttered whispers he couldn't quite catch but whose tone was easily decipherable. He was being treated as an anomaly, something strange and somehow scary to them. They were afraid of those who were different.

Kasumi handled it with practiced neutrality, offering polite, brief greetings before moving on, her hand always resting lightly on his shoulder, a silent warning and reassurance.

He learned names, faces, roles. 

There was Old Man Takeda, perched perpetually on an overturned crate near the docks, mending nets with surprising dexterity despite the two missing fingers on his left hand. His face was a mask of disapproval, carved by decades of hardship, but occasionally, when Kasumi traded some potent herbs from their garden for a string of dried fish, Ryuu saw a flicker of something else in the old man's eyes as he looked at him. 

Once, Takeda had silently offered Ryuu a small, chewy piece of dried squid. It tasted overwhelmingly of salt and sea, not that different to the squid he was used to. Ryuu had accepted it with a solemn nod, mimicking Kasumi's reserve. Takeda had merely grunted, turning back to his nets.

He also met Emi, a girl perhaps a year or two older than his body's apparent age, with tangled brown hair perpetually escaping its ties and bright, inquisitive eyes. Her father mended sails, his fingers stained dark with pitch. Emi, unlike the other children who kept their distance, was relentlessly curious.

"Why do you always hide?" she'd asked him one day, boldy stepping into the shade of Kasumi's umbrella as they passed the sail-mending area. Her own clothes were patched, her feet bare despite the chill dampness of the ground.

Ryuu instinctively shrank closer to Kasumi. Kasumi placed a hand firmly on Emi's shoulder. "The sun is not kind to his skin, Emi-chan," Kasumi said, her voice polite but firm. "It is best he stays shaded."

Emi tilted her head, studying Ryuu with disconcerting intensity. "He looks like a ghost," she declared, not unkindly, just matter-of-factly. "Are you sick?"

Before Ryuu could formulate a response his childish mouth could manage, Kasumi steered him away. "We must be going. Stay well, Emi-chan."

He could have responded to her, but the bluntness had taken him by surprise and it clearly made his mother uncomfortable. It was more obvious once he thought about his condition. He had obviously interacted with other children before his possession, but it was obvious that things didn't pan out too well.

He instinctively felt it. His body was afraid.

It recoiled without his control whenever a stranger approached, fearing for it's survival.

The harshness of Shiosai wasn't just in the environment, it was woven into the fabric of daily life. 

He saw arguments flare over shared fishing spots or dwindling supplies. He saw the worry etched on faces when storms kept the boats ashore for days, meaning less food, less income. He learned that Kenji-sensei, the village physician, mostly dealt in herbs and barely knew any medical arts. Serious injuries or illnesses often meant a slow, painful decline. There was no hospital, no advanced care, just the sea's bounty and the villagers' resilience, stretched thin.

One evening, a palpable tension hung over the village. The wind howled fiercely, driving sheets of icy rain against their paper screens. Kasumi seemed even more on edge than usual, pacing the small room, frequently pausing to listen intently at the door. Ryuu, huddled under his blankets, felt a prickle of unease mimic hers.

Hours later, long after darkness had fallen, there were shouts outside, carried on the wind. Kasumi swiftly blew out the single oil lamp, plunging the room into near blackness. She pulled Ryuu close, her body tense, one hand resting near a loose floorboard Ryuu hadn't noticed before. He could hear the heavy thud of running feet outside, fragmented cries.

"...lost! The waves took her!"

"...nothing we could do..."

"...search party at dawn, if the storm breaks..."

The sounds eventually faded, leaving only the drumming rain and the mournful cry of the wind. Kasumi didn't relax her vigil until the first grey light of dawn began to seep through the screens. She said nothing about the commotion, but Ryuu saw the exhaustion deepening the lines around her eyes.

Later that day, under the weak, watery sun, the village felt subdued. He saw a woman weeping openly by the shore, comforted by others. He saw Old Man Takeda staring grimly out at the still-choppy sea, his net-mending forgotten. A fishing boat hadn't returned. Lost to the storm. Lost to the unforgiving sea that was both their lifeline and their executioner.

Ryuu watched it all, the quiet grief, the shared hardship, the stark reminder of mortality.

This wasn't a storybook village. This was a place where survival was a daily struggle, where loss was an expected companion. 

It solidified a cold truth within him. Staying here, hiding, was merely delaying the inevitable. This small, isolated village offered no real safety, no path to the strength he needed. Kasumi's paranoia wasn't unfounded, it was practical. They were vulnerable here, not just to the elements, but to whatever she was truly running from.

He needed to know more about the situation. It was impossible for her to act in such a guarded manner if it was just for his condition.

Yes, his condition was unique and required care, but not to the extent she was going. It was as if she was a criminal, doing her best to hide her tracks and actions.

First, he needed to acquire about the time, at what period did he enter the naruto world? Was this before the main canon events or after? Where exactly was he? 

Second, he must move closer to the main story, or at least main characters, sine then his survival would be more guaranteed.