The morning sun beat against the great gate of Konoha, but it failed to dispel the chill emanating from the small group gathered at its feet. The tension was an invisible beast, crouched in the silence, feeding on Sasuke's humiliation. Kakashi, leaning against the wall, pretended to read his orange book, but his single visible eye was a lens, recording every movement, every held breath. Beside him, Tazuna, the client, reeked of stale sake and the impatience of a man who would rather be anywhere else.
Sasuke was a statue of frozen fury. He looked at no one, but his resentment was so palpable it warped the air around him.
It was into this sepulchral calm that Naruto and Sakura arrived, their sprint ending in an abrupt halt that seemed to break a spell.
"We're here!" Naruto announced, his smile a little too wide, a little too bright. "Konoha's coolest team is ready for its first real mission!"
Silence was his only answer, a wall of indifference that swallowed his enthusiasm whole.
Sakura adjusted a glove, feeling the hum of her new power under the skin. It was a strange confidence, a secret weapon that made her feel strong and, at the same time, an imposter. She glanced at Sasuke, expecting the usual disdain, but he didn't even deign to acknowledge her existence.
"Late," was the only word Sasuke uttered, sharp as a shard of ice.
"No way! We're right on time!" Naruto retorted, scratching the back of his neck. "Besides, being a little late adds a dramatic flair. Heroes always show up at the last minute!"
Tazuna snorted, crossing his arms. "Can we get moving already? I don't get paid by the hour to watch a bunch of kids play ninja."
Kakashi snapped his book shut, the soft sound echoing in the tension. "It seems impatience is contagious. Alright, team, it's time to head out."
Naruto swallowed hard. This was the moment, the point of no return. His outburst in the Hokage's office had left an open wound on the team; he could feel it, a rift of mistrust that made them vulnerable. He had to try to close it, even if just a little.
"Hey," he said, and his tone shifted. The clown's energy dissipated, leaving behind a seriousness that made even Sasuke look at him. "Before we go, I want to say something."
Sasuke's black eyes locked onto him. "More excuses, dobe? Or are you going to tell us you have a 'bad feeling' again?"
"No," Naruto said, his voice firm, calm—like it was during his talk with Sakura in the park. "I want to apologize."
The word hung in the air, so unexpected that Kakashi lowered his book slightly.
"Earlier, in the Hokage's office, I let panic get the best of me," Naruto continued, his blue eyes fixed on Sasuke's, unwavering. "I didn't know how to explain what I was feeling and I ended up making us all look like idiots. I cast doubt on the team, and that was a mistake. I'm sorry."
Sakura stared at him, her heart skipping a beat. This was new. This wasn't the Naruto who yelled for attention; this was someone taking responsibility.
Sasuke narrowed his eyes, suspicion etched into every line of his face. "And we're supposed to believe you? That the big coward has suddenly found his courage?"
"I was never afraid of the mission," Naruto corrected, his voice gaining intensity. "I was afraid we weren't ready. That I wasn't strong enough to be useful to you. But I was wrong to think I had to carry that alone." His gaze softened for an instant as he looked at Sakura. "Things have changed. I know I can trust my teammates. And I know that even if you're an arrogant jerk, Sasuke, when things get ugly, you'll fight alongside us. Because that's what a team does."
A wave of pride washed over Sakura. Naruto's words were a balm, a declaration of principles she shared. She took a step forward, aligning herself with him.
"He's right. Earlier was a disaster, but we've learned from it. We're ready, sensei."
Sasuke let out a bitter laugh. "Speak for yourself. I've always been ready. You're the ones who need to catch up."
"Maybe," Sakura replied, a defiant glint in her eyes that was entirely new. "Or maybe you're the one who needs to learn to see the strength standing right beside you."
The tension was about to snap again, when a soft voice, yet one with the weight of a boulder, cut through the air.
"Please, wait."
They all turned. Hurrying toward them from the heart of the village was a figure in a lavender jacket, her long, dark hair flowing behind her. She didn't run with her former hesitation; every step was certain, every movement efficient.
"Hinata?" Sakura exclaimed, surprised.
Hinata stopped before the group, slightly out of breath, but her posture was straight. Her lavender eyes didn't fix on the ground; they met Kakashi's directly.
"Hinata-san," Kakashi said, closing his book with a soft click. "What is it? A message from the Hokage?"
"No, Kakashi-sensei," she replied. Her voice, though still soft, carried a steeliness that no one, except Naruto, had heard before. "I am here on my own behalf. I request permission to join Team 7 on this escort mission to the Land of Waves."
The request was so unexpected that the silence that followed was absolute. Tazuna was the first to break it. "Another brat? Is this a joke? I need ninja, not a school field trip!"
Kakashi held up a hand to silence him, his gaze fixed on Hinata. "Hinata, you know that's impossible. Team assignments are fixed. A genin can't just decide to join another unit for a mission. It breaks all protocols."
"I understand protocol, sensei," Hinata replied calmly. "But protocols also exist to maximize a mission's chances of success and ensure the safety of the shinobi and the client."
"And what does that have to do with you?" Sasuke's voice was pure venom. He had turned to face her, looking at her with monumental disdain. "What is it? Is Naruto's cowardice contagious? Now you have a 'bad feeling' too?"
Naruto clenched his fists. "Don't call her that, teme!"
But Hinata didn't flinch. She didn't back down from Sasuke's hostility. Instead, she looked him straight in the eye. "This isn't about a feeling, Uchiha-san. It's about tactical logic."
She turned back to Kakashi, her argument as precise as a Gentle Fist strike. "This is an escort mission through potentially dangerous routes. The primary threat in such a scenario is an ambush. The ability to detect threats before they materialize is the most valuable asset a team can have."
She paused, letting her words sink in. "My Byakugan offers a nearly 360-degree field of vision and the ability to see through obstructions over long distances. I can detect chakra flows, hidden traps, or ninja lying in wait long before they would enter a standard sensor-type's detection range. My presence on this team would not be a burden; it would exponentially increase the survival rate of everyone. Including yours, sensei."
The argument was flawless. So logical and professional it left Sakura speechless. This wasn't the Hinata who stuttered and fainted; this was a strategist.
Kakashi looked at her, and for the first time, Naruto saw a flash of genuine interest in his teacher's eye. "An impressive argument," Kakashi admitted. "But theory isn't the same as practice. Your academy file describes you as… hesitant. Timid. Not suited for front-line combat."
"My file is outdated," Hinata said, without a trace of doubt in her voice.
Sasuke let out a bitter laugh. "Bold words for someone who could barely make eye contact a week ago. What did he do to you, dobe? Did his stupidity transfer to you through osmosis?"
The insult seemed to light a fire in Hinata's eyes. She turned to Kakashi once more, her expression a mask of unbreakable determination. "Test me, sensei."
Kakashi raised an eyebrow. The situation was spiraling out of his control in a fascinating way. He had a bipolar Naruto, an Uchiha on the verge of spontaneous combustion, a confused Sakura, and now a defiant Hyuga. This team was a disaster, but an entertaining one.
"Very well," he said, pulling one of the bells he still kept from his pocket. The small metal object glinted in the sun. "Let's settle this. I'll give you a test. An impossible test."
He held the bell between his fingers. "You have ten seconds. If you can take this bell from me, you can come. If you fail, you will return to your training field, and we will not speak of this again. Do you accept?"
It was a challenge designed to humiliate her. Ten seconds against an elite jōnin. Not even Sasuke had lasted that long in a direct confrontation. It was a polite way of saying "no."
Naruto held his breath. Don't do it, Hinata. It's a trap. Sakura shook her head. It's impossible. She's making a fool of herself. Sasuke smirked. We'll see how long that confidence lasts now.
To everyone's astonishment, Hinata nodded. "I accept."
Kakashi smiled under his mask. "Brave. Or foolish. I'll start counting when you're in position."
Hinata needed no further instruction. She took a few steps back, finding her center on the dusty path. She didn't adopt the rigid Gentle Fist stance; hers was more fluid, more relaxed, almost as if she were waiting to dance. She activated her Byakugan, the veins around her temples bulging visibly.
The world around her transformed into a web of chakra flows. She saw Sakura's calm, steady energy, Sasuke's boiling, furious chakra, and Naruto's overwhelming, deep reserve. But all of that was background noise. Her focus was on Kakashi. She saw his chakra system, a vast and calm ocean, but she also saw something else: the almost imperceptible tension in his right shoulder muscles, the way his weight shifted slightly to the ball of his left foot. She saw his intent.
"Ten," Kakashi began, his voice lazy, almost bored. Hinata didn't move. "Nine." Kakashi remained still, holding the bell out like bait. "Eight." Hinata exhaled, and the air around her seemed to shimmer for an instant.
The second Kakashi thought "Seven," Hinata moved.
It wasn't a charge or a sprint. She vanished. Using her «Flowing Step» ability, she glided to the right, her movement as natural and unpredictable as a leaf carried by the wind.
Kakashi, whose brain had anticipated a frontal assault, had to readjust his defense in a split second. But Hinata wasn't attacking: she was flowing.
She spun in an arc that took her into Kakashi's blind spot. The jōnin, trusting his instincts, ducked and threw a spinning kick to where he expected her to appear. But her Byakugan's prediction had already shown her that kick. Before Kakashi's leg reached its full extension, Hinata had already changed direction, using the momentum of her own dodge to propel herself forward, directly toward him.
"Six." Kakashi straightened, his eyes now wide with surprise. The girl was inside his guard. She was incredibly fast. He reacted, throwing an open-handed strike to push her away, but Hinata had already seen the contraction of his pectoral muscle. She ducked under the blow, her body moving with a logic-defying grace. Her «Flowing Step» not only made her faster but also made her movements confusing, filled with involuntary feints that broke the rhythm of combat.
"Five." She was on him, too close for an effective counterattack. Kakashi tried to leap back, but Hinata's Byakugan saw the chakra gathering in the soles of his feet. The instant he began his jump, she struck. It wasn't an open-palm strike, not a flashy attack. It was two fingers, extended and firm, that jabbed with surgical precision into the tenketsu on the wrist of the hand holding the bell.
"Gentle Fist."
The blow was nearly silent. There was no great impact, just a touch. But to Kakashi, it felt like lightning had shot up his arm. Sharp, paralyzing pain. His chakra system at that point was violently disrupted. His fingers suddenly refused to obey, opening by pure neuromuscular reflex.
The bell fell.
"Four."
The small metal object described a short arc in the air. Hinata didn't watch it. Her hand was already there, waiting. She caught it with a softness that contrasted with the lethality of her attack. She straightened up and took a step back, returning to her relaxed posture. She held the bell in her palm, offering it.
The silence that fell over the Konoha gate was absolute and total.
Tazuna's jaw had dropped, his sake bottle forgotten. Sakura was blinking, trying to process the almost unreal dance she had just witnessed. It hadn't been a fight; it had been a dissection. Sasuke was frozen, his face a mask of pure, undeniable disbelief. The girl he had ridiculed less than a minute ago had just done what he couldn't: she had disarmed an elite jōnin with an ease that was, frankly, insulting. The logic of his world had been shattered.
Naruto was the only one smiling, a grin of pride so wide it almost hurt his face. That's my first believer.
Kakashi rubbed his wrist, where a tingling sensation lingered. He looked at Hinata, and his eye no longer showed laziness or amusement, but deep, genuine astonishment. Impossible. She didn't react to my movements. She moved before I did. She predicted it. Her Byakugan… it's not normal. And that speed, that fluidity…
He looked up and his eyes met Naruto's. He saw the knowing smile on the boy's face and, for an instant, Kakashi understood he was missing a very large piece of the puzzle.
"Well," he finally said, breaking the spell, his voice a mixture of defeat and amusement. "It seems your file really is outdated."
He walked over and took the bell from Hinata's hand. "An impressive display, Hinata. Very impressive." He glanced at his team: at a speechless Sasuke and an astonished Sakura.
Naruto didn't miss the opportunity. "Hey, sensei! A test is a test, and she passed with flying colors! Six seconds! That's a new record! Hinata's coming with us! Believe it!"
"Yeah!" Sakura added, finding her voice. Hinata's skill was undeniable, and the idea of having such a powerful extra set of eyes suddenly sounded like the best idea in the world. "With her Byakugan, we'll be so much safer!"
Kakashi sighed, a theatrical surrender. "Rules are rules. And a promise is a promise. Alright, Hinata. Go get your gear and let Kurenai know. You have ten minutes to be back here, ready to go. You are temporarily assigned to Team 7."
Hinata's face lit up with a relief so pure and a joy so radiant it transformed her. "Yes, sensei! Thank you, sensei!" She gave a quick bow and ran back into the village, moving with that new, astonishing speed.
Naruto watched her go, a whirlwind of emotions churning in his chest. The pride was immense. Seeing her like this, confident and strong, validated every decision he had made. But beneath the pride, a cold undercurrent of fear swirled.
I did it, he thought, as the rest of the team looked at him, the dynamic between them completely altered. I made her stronger. And she used that strength to walk right into the most dangerous mission of our lives.
He was worried; terrified, if he was being honest. He didn't want her to get hurt. Her presence here was a variable he hadn't anticipated, a deviation from the script that he himself had caused.
But then, he saw Sasuke's gaze. It was no longer one of pure contempt, but of confusion, of re-evaluation. He saw Sakura's look, no longer of doubt, but of awe and a budding respect not only for Hinata, but also for him, the boy who somehow seemed to be at the center of all these strange miracles.
He had broken the script, yes. But maybe… maybe he had made it stronger.
The new Team 7, now with four genin, waited. The silence was no longer tense. It was expectant. Something had changed forever at the Konoha gate that morning.