Reputations [Flashback]

Yoshitsune

Green-Haired Failure
Jul 24, 2025
16
3
3
The rising sun bathed the valley in a gentle golden glow. The soft chirping of birds heralded the dawn and joined the chorus of the nearby babbling brook to create wonderful music as the nearby town - Yoshitsune couldn't be bothered to remember its name - was only just beginning to wake. Soon wafts of smoke would drift from the rooftops as the villagers stoked their hearths and made ready for the day's work. By contrast, Yoshitsune's work was coming to an end. He had been awake for two straight days as part of this mission. The higher-ups had told him to take it seriously, as it was his first mission as a newly-minted jōnin. To that end he had been assigned to a four-man mission cell being led by highly regarded Inoue Katsumi, certainly specifically designed to keep an eye on him. She had a perfect mission record, after all.

And, to her credit, the entirety of the mission went according to plan - until the end. A merchant in the Land of Tea had been making in-roads on new trade deals with the Land of Waves, which Kirigakure considered a part of its valuable monopoly. Supposedly, the merchant was backed by Konoha, and was moving merchandise from the Land of Fire into the Land of Waves at a discounted rate, undercutting sellers from the Land of Water. The higher-ups had determined that this could not stand. The mission itself was simple; assassinate the merchant and seize his goods. The only complication is that the merchant would likely be protected by shinobi dispatched from Konoha to prevent this very sort of counter-espionage. The two groups of shinobi had skirmished with each other several times over the last forty-eight hours with only light rest possible in-between, breaking into smaller fights and individual battles spread out across the countryside. Cycles of tracking, hunting, ambushing, and fleeing. An animal both on the hunt and being hunted.

Konoha's squad was a three-man cell, and when all was said and done Yoshitsune seemed to be the odd-man out. Violence was a necessity in the Bloody Mist, but that didn't mean he relished it. Had he the choice, he would have chosen to guard the northern road anyway. It was to his good fortune that the merchant came across his path, rather than stumbling across Katsumi or one of the others. He wouldn't have been so fortunate. In the end, Yoshitsune simply let the man pass and exit the valley. If he was running for his life it meant that the rest of the battle had probably turned sour, and that meant that the Kiri cell would be able to seize the warehouse in town without much of a fuss. Once they had the goods, how much of a threat would the merchant really be?

Returning to the designated staging area - a secluded hilltop clearing surrounded by a copse of trees just outside of town - Yoshitsune arrived just as dawn was breaking. His long green hair trailed behind him, a little disheveled though likely in much better shape than anyone who had seen intense combat. He was nineteen years old, dressed in plain, light-colored clothing that was at best unassuming and at worst a little raggedy. He assumed a respectful position on his left knee, head bowed, left hand curled to a fist and knuckles similarly pressed on the ground.

"Sudachi Yoshitsune reporting. The target escaped. My apologies, but it seems I fell asleep on watch duty."

A bold faced lie. No one who had successfully managed to make it to the rank of jōnin would make such a simple mistake. The tone of his voice, passive, disinterested, a little tired, didn't seem to indicate much by way of shame or regret, either, even as he bowed his head and phoned-in the motions.
 
Initially, while annoyed at the assignment of a new jōnin to her squad for this mission, Katsumi did not think very deeply about it. She had experience in this type of mission, and she could place the relative newbie where he would be out of the way but still useful. She and her more trusted companions could carry the bulk of the action, and keep this Yoshitsune person from ruining their dynamic. Once she met the young man, however, the Inoue scion immediately had a bad feeling. From his simple attire to his relaxed, unserious nature, something about him just made her feel as though she were a cat with her fur pet backward. His less than stellar mission record also seemed of note - like he were placed in her path as an additional obstacle. Still, she knew better than to balk, and accepted him with the same soft-spoken grace that she accepted most everything. To an onlooker, it would seem like each problem were simply a single raindrop into the perfect, calm water of the pond that was Katsumi, barely rippling.

The mission itself proved far too long. While assassinations were usually her specialty, Katsumi found her initial strike thwarted by a Konoha-nin with red and black eyes, someone who could seem to see through the Inoue-style Tenken and rescue her target at the last second. The presence of just this one shinobi among the trio on the other side proved vexing enough to draw out the mission from one or two strategic clashes to several small skirmishes which drained the resources of their team, and had limited the time they actually had to intercept the merchant before he escaped into enemy territory. Fire release of a power which she had yet to witness burned away their cover; exceptional skill of arms and a speed to match or exceed her own left Katsumi without clear advantage in one on one combat. It galled her, but she could not defeat him in a straight duel. Instead, she worked to catch another of their squad, a blonde young woman who had been treating their wounds, in the open. This time, when she struck with the Shidden'Issen, her blade pierced through the green flak jacket of the Konoha-nin and pierced her heart. The move had been risky, as the bloodline limit user on the other side could have taken the moment of opportunity to attempt the same on one of her own squad-mates, but luck was on her side. The move was too shocking in the moment, and the Kiri-nin dispersed into an obscuring mist conjured by one of them.

The loss crippled the morale of the merchant and the brown-haired ninja on the Konoha team. Only the red-eyed menace seemed even more determined by the act, a backfire that Katsumi did not initially calculate for. Still, numbers were truly on her side now, and she could comfortably send Yoshitsune to watch the road ahead of their next planned ambush. Despite the enraged enemy shinobi, who left them injured but standing, Katsumi's squad proved the victor. Catching the fleeing merchant was so simple a task that she did not fear even Yoshitsune's ability to complete his task, and thus she ordered the other two to secure the warehouse in town, and went on to meet her other subordinate in a place she had designated for the purpose.

Purple and white flecked with red, her flawless skin stained crimson, Katsumi nevertheless felt good about the mission for the first time since its inception. Though her own skill at Ijutsu had ensured no mark remained of the injuries she'd sustained at the hands of the now dead Uchiha-clan member, the ache, the memory of pain, still lingered in her flesh, sending phantom signals to her brain. Healing was like that - it eased the danger of a wound, but left the lesson. Soon after her arrival, the unharmed, almost nonchalant form of Yoshitsune appeared in front of her, kneeling in report. Judging by his easy nature, she assumed only the best from his upcoming report. Of course, she thought, he had the easiest job. If this dumbass expects jōnin missions to always end up this way, he's sorely mistaken.

What actually came out of his mouth, however, actually stunned the young woman. It was delivered too smoothly, too genuinely, to be a joke. For a moment, she was removed from this scene entirely, the backdrop of the sunrise over the trees on the hill in the misty morning faded, replaced instead by the tatami of her home dojo.

Katsumi was the one kneeling, looking up at a looming figure. Her long, thick hair braid coiled in front of her, she held its end nervously, as though she could raise it as a shield. Inoue Yoru, her father, crossed his arms over his chest, the dark gi he wore shifting and coiling over his muscles as he frowned down at her.

"Otou-san, I-"

"Silence, Katsumi. I will hear no excuse. It has been one year since your Chuunin exams, and you remain a Chuunin. This is unacceptable," he replied sharply. "It is a misstep. You are clearly slacking, and I did not raise a lazy daughter. You know how missteps are punished," he stated, unfolding his arms and reaching for a nearby wooden implement, a flexible cane with a tapered tip. Katsumi trembled, but sat up a bit anyway, allowing her bare feet to poke out behind her. As the cane struck her bare feet, she whimpered, but knew better than to cry out, even when she could feel wetness sliding down her sole. "One thousand swings," Yoru ordered after two strikes to each foot. He then left the dojo, leaving Katsumi to leave bloody footprints to the boken near the wall, and begin her punitive training. Though tears slid down her young face, the sting, the pain in her feet, was minor compared to the disgust and disappointment in her father's words, and later, in her mother's eyes.

"You DENSE motherfucker," Katsumi blurted out, snapping herself from her reverie. The pain, exhaustion, and the revelation that it would all end in failure caused her serene identity to shatter. "I should kill you. How pathetic do you have to be to let a fat normie merchant get away from you? I know you weren't asleep, what were you doing, jerking off? Did you LET him go?"
 
He had been yelled at before. Many times, in fact, including before he had become a shinobi. Yoshitsune probably would have said that the civilians and merchants he interacted with as a child were worse than his superiors in that regard. The higher-ups of the shinobi world were governed by a - admittedly bare minimum - level of professionalism and decorum needed to maintain a general sense of order. They might threaten to withhold pay, reprimands, permanent marks on his record. Some of them disparaged him behind his back; Yoshitsune knew how many of them, especially from old families, felt about people like him. His superiors would give him worse assignments, maybe even a suicide mission if a particular boss disliked him enough. But that is why he was now a jōnin; he had come away from such a mission both alive and successful. The civilians from his youth, however, would call him slurs to his face. They'd beat him, kick him, spit at him. He had never been spit on by a superior officer before. Compared to a life on the street with nothing, reduced pay was practically a luxury, so he never felt that much grief from irritating his higher-ups.

Katsumi, however, was something entirely different.

"Haaah?" Came Yoshitsune's exasperated reply. He had been called pathetic before, and superiors had threatened him before. No one had ever accused him of jerking off on a mission, though. The passive tone of voice, tinged with a slight exhaustion, gave way to a loud incredulity. "What the hell did you just say to me, you rich asshole?"

His retort came before he could even think of another way to respond. It carried him to his feet, no longer taking a kind of supplicative posture that might convey any hint of remorse, no matter how feigned. Instead he stood fully, leaning in slightly and squinting his eyes in annoyance. A part of his mind knew that he was challenging someone more well-connected and influential than any of the previous shinobi that he might have antagonized on missions. Yoshitsune had antagonized several jōnin before. Some of them had even come from good families. The Inoue, however, were more than just another good family. They were one of the oldest and most respected in the village. Still, that didn't stop Yoshitsune from voicing his true feelings.

Despite the frequent chastising from superiors, Yoshitsune had never actually snapped back at one before. It didn't normally accomplish anything. He simply did as he willed and accepted the consequences given that they were never anything he couldn't handle. There wasn't much else to be done, in his mind. It's why he showed up and nonchalantly reported the news in the first place. But there was something about this particular interaction that rubbed him the wrong way. Maybe it's just because he was tired from the mission, maybe it's because of just how unmistakably rich and famous her family was, maybe it was just because getting called out like this was so completely unexpected that he didn't have the chance to gather his thoughts. He simply reacted. Looks could be deceiving, sure, but Katsumi had acted the part of the perfect little princess for the duration of the whole mission up until now. Such a sharp and sudden break left him more than confused.
 
Unlike Yoshitsune, no one had ever said anything so insulting to Katsumi - not if they were not about to die. The color in her pale pink cheeks deepened, and the younger jōnin found herself unable to calm, giving no space when he stood up and even leaning forward aggressively. "I asked," she replied, near trembling with outrage, "if you had your filthy peasant fingers wrapped around your pathetic shrimp-dick, or if you actually saw the target and let him go on purpose. It's not a hard question, though I guess for some loser moron with an even success-fail mission rate it might seem that way." Her voice dripped disgust and disdain, an unconscious adaptation of the tone with which she associated failure.

While the Inoue had often had a good reason for why she had not quite hit the mark on her family's strict standards, she had never had someone directly to blame, before. All at once, his image had become the face of her struggles, someone purposefully sabotaging her, standing in her way. Not only that, but he seemed to possess the gall to be angry about being called out for it. He somehow managed to find an insult for her, even when he deserved to be chastised. It was unthinkable, unforgivable, to be gifted with the ability of a jōnin and hold none of the sense of duty associated with such a rank. Adding insult on top of that made Katsumi's blood boil - as though she were to blame for the mission's failure. Even worse, their superiors would likely see it that way, that she could not handle command of a team unless conditions were ideal. This might set her career back years - a similar test of her ability seemed distant, and no promotion consideration would be had from this blunder.
 
"Heavens," came Yoshitsune's sarcasm-laden reply. "I guess my simple peasant mind just wasn't up to the challenge," he quipped, unable to stop himself from rolling his eyes as he spoke. He had been called a peasant before, but it was particularly irritating coming from someone from one of the wealthiest families in the village. And the insults that Katsumi hurled weren't just personal, they were vulgar in a way that just seemed to piss him off even more. He had grown numb to others insinuating that he was a failure, a wretch, or a worthless piece of trash. He had heard that a thousand times from half as many people. But no one had ever called him a 'shrimp-dick' before, and he hadn't grown numb to such new and creative insults.

Yoshitsune had expected she would be mad, of course. It was normal to be upset when things didn't go according to plan. But even compared to other superiors, her reaction seemed way over the top to what he would have expected. Just who was she to get so worked up? The only reason he could think of would have been because she had high hopes for her own advancement. "Get over yourself. You're never going to be Mizukage anyway, so stop taking out your self-worth problems on me. He. Got. Away." He punctuated each world slowly, a little self-satisfied. Through her strong reactions she had let him know that clearly this failure bothered her, and not just the normal amount. Now he was able to turn his 'failure' into a little knife to stab at her, which, in his opinion, she very much deserved. He had no qualms with standing up to her. He had stood up to much more physically imposing people before, but she was perhaps the most socially imposing person he had ever met. But that didn't deter him. Ever since he started taking the shinobi life seriously and working for the Bloody Mist he had promised himself one thing.

I will never let someone else control how I live my life.
 
He's enjoying this, Katsumi thought to herself. He really did sabotage me on purpose. The realization came with a narrowing of her violet eyes. reassessing him. Whereas before, he'd seemed calm, almost relaxed, he'd turned to annoyed, and then something more akin to gratification. "Just admit one of two things. You let the merchant go, or you were too busy edging to young girls' feet to notice him," she stated. "One of those is going in my report, and you get to choose, perv." As if to challenge his concentration, the Inoue scion crossed her arms under her chest, lifting it slightly, and shifted her weight to one side, cocking her hip and causing her disheveled kimono to flash smooth, creamy skin up to her thigh. The red-stained collar of her outfit slipped off her shoulder, leaving her seeming almost exposed. Of the two of them, she was definitely the worse for wear, but he didn't look like someone who had been napping for the last hour. Being completely honest, if Katsumi herself laid down right now, she likely wouldn't get up until after the moon's apex. If he'd wanted that lie to stick, he should've just actually gone to sleep and let me find him there.

Of course, while his words irritated her, and her personal consequences for failure were the most galling, bleeding out from that concern lay other problems. Kiri-nin almost died on this mission. Konoha-nin did die on this mission, and for what? So a man who had been intentionally doing something dangerous for profit could plot some other way to make money? Or so that Yoshitsune could level some personal grudge he held against her for some reason? Either way, she was determined that he wouldn't get away with it. Whatever punishment she had coming, she intended that his repercussions ended up far, far worse.
 
The green-haired man's face scrunched into a repulsive look as Katsumi levied her ultimatum. Once again it was not the first time that he had been threatened with an ultimatum, but it was the first time it had ever been done over something so juvenile. He had hardly expected for her to come across as so childish, but that was just another reminder that looks could be deceiving. As she threatened to label him a degenerate, Yoshitsune clicked his tongue. What did it matter, ultimately, what the cause of failure was listed as in the report? To their results-oriented superiors the only thing that mattered in the end was results. They had forgiven many vile things by Kiri shinobi, provided the shinobi in question was successful. Hell, they often overlooked killing each other if it was done quietly enough. To contest her accusations and admit the truth now would be to do so for nothing but a matter of pride. It wouldn't make a difference to their superiors, and while Yoshitsune was often nonchalant about how he was perceived, this particular woman hurling false accusations in his direction pissed him off.

"Fine, whatever. I let him go. Not that it's going to make any difference to the higher-ups," he said, quick to remind her that the failure was hers no matter how she tried to spin it. For a moment he felt a twinge of guilt. Katsumi was covered in blood, after all, but he quickly suppressed the thought. He was too angry to want to be sympathetic towards her. Which was a shame, because he did think she was pretty cute, but every time she opened her mouth it just seemed to annoy him, regardless of whether it was her formal way of speaking or this vulgar tirade. "It was a stupid mission, anyway."

His complaints came across as almost childish in their nature, his reciprocated rage blunted by a slight pout on the jōnin's face. A skilled shinobi could read in that moment that he was likely speaking true - he had tanked the mission not out of any sense of malice towards her, but simply because he really believed it to be true.
 
His confession gave rise to both satisfaction and a further, increased frustration. How had someone this obstinate and nonchalant risen to the rank of jōnin? How could she count this person her peer? Social station did not matter to her in most situations - she had known many very dangerous people who were born to lower castes, and honestly found herself, at times, envious of some of the abilities of those with Kekkei Genkai. How much easier might it have been to simply control the battlefield with Lava Release, or to melt their defenses with Boil? Her issue lay not with where Yoshitsune was born but his blatant disrespect - their difference in status was only a weapon to twist in his ribs. "Good boy," she replied to his confession, a further taunt. "Stupid mission or not, it was ours to do, and now it is failed. On the one hand, he is a fat normie merchant who probably just stuck to the road and only has... what, an hour? Two? His head start would only delay the inevitable," she stated, the stress of the situation causing her to reason out loud. "But if there was a reserve team from Konoha... or any random issue more potent than a couple bandits, we could be sorely compromised."

Her brow furrowed as her initial satisfaction waned, and the aforementioned frustration filled in the empty space it left. "Fuck," she cursed aloud. "I can't risk it," Katsumi calculated, running a hand over her face and smearing a few specks of congealed blood across her cheek. She wanted to scream, but now that she had gained some measure of self-control back, it would be an embarrassing tantrum to display - especially in front of the green-haired failure himself. No matter what, even blaming the entire thing on Yoshitsune, no slack would be allowed to her. She should have controlled him. She should have ensured he did not have room to fail. At least this way, she had a reason to request never running a mission with him again. What if he'd been fighting next to me? Would I even be alive right now? The thought caused a cold sensation to run down her spine, immediately followed by white-hot anger. Once again, it was either the exhaustion, the lingering pain, or the weight of failure - either way, she could not hold herself back. With a steady step forward, her right hand flashed out, palm open, to attempt to slap him in the face.
 
Compliments from his superiors were significantly rarer than criticisms, but Yoshitsune classified being called a 'good boy' in such a tone to be distinctly in latter category, even if his concession had temporarily abated her lust for revenge. Temporarily was the operative word, however, as the more she kept talking and the more she kept thinking, the more and more she seemed to work herself back up into a fury. After a moment it reached a climax when she stepped forward and lashed out with her hand. The green-haired shinobi's eyes widened, his body tensed - his automatic response was to try and step backwards to avoid the blow, but she was particularly fast. Even in her tired state she was still fast. He had not been present during the battle to see her alacrity first hand, but as he felt a sting of pain radiate from his cheek he could only estimate that her strike had been one of the fastest he had ever seen. And she wants to train more? He thought. What a monster.

Yoshitsune had, ever since his recovery, taken his shinobi work fairly seriously. He still executed that work entirely on his own terms, obviously, but he trained rather diligently. It was obvious to him that, if he wanted to live by his own rules, he would need to be able to back up that dedication with skill and force if necessary. A few superiors had attempted to lash out in moments of anger before, but Yoshitsune could scarcely remember a time after his youth where they had succeeded. That is why he was in the position that he was - he was usually always able to stay one step ahead of trouble. And yet here he was left with the distinct feeling that he was actually a footstep behind.

A hand raised up slowly to touch the cheek where he was struck, an almost stunned look on his face, eyes moving slowly from his own hand and back towards Katsumi. He could feel his blood beginning to boil, a feeling of helplessness that he had determined to kill off a long time ago, distinctly challenged by this person in front of him that represented almost all of the things that he hated. He didn't even think about what came next, he just reacted solely based on primal instinct and fury. He lurched forward, kicking off of his back foot, and made a head-first tackle towards the other jōnin in a bid that, if successful, would likely send them both toppling over like a pair of feuding toddlers.
 
The sensation of her palm cracking against his cheek left Katsumi with another conflicting set of emotions. Pleasure and relief from having taken her frustrations out on what she perceived to be the cause of her problems warred with embarrassment over having lost control, her temper getting the better of her. Still, even with the satisfaction somewhat muted, she did relish above all other sensations the fact that she flexed her prodigious, well-honed ability to simply slap him across the face. He even seemed shocked, as though the strike had grounded him in a reality he thought he'd left behind. No doubt he was used to fighting, and further, that the resort to violence in itself did not offend Yoshitsune. No, what his look conveyed was a sense of disbelief - it wasn't that he wasn't used to being assaulted for his defiance, but simply that he thought he'd evolved beyond the need to worry about it. In this case, however, he didn't let her hit him - he couldn't stop her.

Just as she was about to order him to follow her and turn away, however, she sensed a sudden tightening in his calves, a coiling of his core that brought her hand to her sword's hilt. Everything happened too quickly, however, and a moment of hesitation - Only draw if you intend to kill - left her open. She twisted and turned to get away, instead of unsheathing her sword. If she had committed to either right when he attacked, she would have been able to counter him. As it stood, he collided with her diaphragm, sending them both sprawling. Teeth bared in a snarl, she gave a soft grunt as she hit the grass, one hand coming up quickly to try and press her thumb into the place where his nose and upper lip met, to push him up and back. "Get... off of me!" she cried out, the struggling causing her already disheveled kimono to inch further toward indecency. She had never had hands laid on her in such a manner - grappling was not a common Taijutsu maneuver, and the Inoue had always been able to avoid its initiation in the rare times that it had come up. This wasn't even a proper takedown - it was simply manhandling her, causing them to slide against the grass while she squirmed to gain an upper hand.
 
Yoshitsune didn't really have a plan for what was happening, exactly. He just acted on impulse, and in this particular instance, found himself successful. He had managed to topple Katsumi over, and the two of them were now thrashing about on the ground. It maybe wasn't the most elegant display of shinobi combat, doubly so given neither of them were particularly strong in the first place, and an observer would be left with the scene of two people pushing and shoving at each other to little avail. What likely could have easily been a stalemate between them physically was probably only broken by the fact that Yoshitsune had gravity on his side, being the one on top. He felt her hand press against his face, and he could smell a mixture of blood, sweat, and scented oil as he felt the pain under his nose. He leaned his head backwards to try and escape her grasping hand, while his own attempt to grab at and restrain hers. He wasn't really fighting for his life, more just to win, and so he didn't really operate with any sense of shinobi tactics or combat training in this moment. He was just wrestling, and it seemed prudent to him in that instance that the best way to achieve victory would be to restrain her hands and pin her.

He shifted his legs, placing one on each side of her ribs and shifting into a half-sitting position to try and bring more of his weight against her. It also better allowed him to try and contend with just her arms - and maybe her mouth if she tried to bite him, which he didn't doubt she might try - without having to worry about her trying to kick with her legs. If a passerby were to happen upon them now it might make Yoshitsune look like a terrible person without context, and if one of their other squadmates were to return now he would certainly look insubordinate. But in the heat of the moment he did not care about either of those things. There was no witty retort or internal monologue, just grunts of effort as he tried to upstage her. To pin her to the ground just to show that he could, some kind of retributive vengeance for the smack to his face.
 

Users who are viewing this thread