Walking Around (Sharing the World), a Sakako Uchiha spinoff ficlet (2016-09-09)

Once, when she was younger, Sakako had asked Dad,

“Are you lonely?”

He had frozen in his seat, chopsticks halfway to his mouth, eyes gone wide with surprise.

Sakako knows her family isn’t like other people’s families. And not even in the way that clans are different from non-clans; or how Ino-oba, Sakura-oba, and Sai-oji are different from families with one mum and one dad.

People–even those close to her parents, even Baa-chan and Jii-chan and Shikamaru-oji–used to look at her and Dad with indignation on their behalf. Then with pity. Then just muted, ongoing confusion.

Dad put his chopsticks down, breathed, then turned his hand over so she could place hers in his.

“Why would I be lonely,” he had responded, fingers gentle around her own, “when we have each other?”

It’s not until later that she’ll realize that he didn’t answer her question.

She doesn’t ask again.

Sarada both is and isn’t her sister–shared genetics, but not shared homes or heritage or lives. She’s not quite a stranger–their parents are friends, after all–but despite blood, they’re not quite family either.

Yodo both is and isn’t her sister in a different way.

Sakako has never been to Sand–for somewhat obvious reasons, Dad’s jaw clenching at even the thought of it though he never says anything against it out loud–but Mum is still a shinobi of Konoha and besides, Temari-oba is Yodo’s aunt as well. Again, in a different way.

Whenever her siblings-but-not visit from Sand, they stay at the Nara compound.

Some nights, Mum does, too.

Sakako joins them, when Dad works night shifts, and it’s like having a sleepover. It’s nice.

“Your hair is so long and soft,” Yodo says, as she brushes the damp and wavy strands. Sakako leans into the touch.

They’ve pulled their futons together into a makeshift large one, their blankets mussed and overlapping. Mum’s futon is a few meters away, made up and untouched–she’ll join them later, after debriefing at the Tower.

“It’s hard to have long hair in Suna,” Yodo continues, exchanging the hairbrush for fingers, beginning to re-braid Sakako’s hair, “The wind and sand and all, but Mother taught me how to do this on her hair and I don’t think I’m too bad.”

Yodo is one year younger than Sakako and already one of Sand’s experts in engineering. Braiding hair is easily within her capabilities, but she sounds uncharacteristically shy, unsure.

When her hands pull away, Sakako checks her work: a single braid is more Mum’s style than Sakako’s, and it’s slightly loose and lumpy in places, but… it’s nice.

“My turn now,” Sakako says, wielding the hairbrush and a smile. Yodo gives a hesitant and somewhat bewildered smile back.

Mum returns to find both of them singing and dancing along to Yodo’s music player, short blonde braids and long dark braid bouncing in time to the music.

Once, when they didn’t know she was listening, Sakako overheard her parents fighting.

Fighting as in arguing, not fighting as in sparring. They let her watch their spars, so long as she’s finished all of her schoolwork and she stays behind the barrier seal. Arguing is a different story.

“I told you–years ago–that I’m not going to promise anything I can’t keep.”

“The situation has changed since then, Shikako, things are different now!”

“Things are always different, Sasuke! It’s only because you’re expecting something that I never agreed to.”

“You’re always away and she misses you, our daughter misses you–”

“Don’t put words in her mouth!” Mum shouts, a flare of chakra like the heat of a Grand Fireball, like the roar of an exploding tag. Sharp and bright and crackling like a sword.

The argument stops then, silence settling like ashes.

Her parents are too skilled as shinobi to make sounds when they move, but she knows they must have stepped closer to each other because their voices are quieter now. Intimate.

“I miss you,” Dad says, low and apologetic, confessing.

“I do love you,” Mum responds, steady and emphatic.

Sakako will wonder about the extra word for weeks.

Sakako doesn’t need to see Araya’s face to know what he looks like. Which is good, since she’s never seen behind his mask.

“He looks like me,” the ghost hovering behind Araya’s shoulder says, intangible hand resting fondly on his head, “Though he has Tomoka’s eyes.”

This must be his biological father, then.

The porcelain mask tilts, an obvious expression of confusion.

“Yes,” Sakako answers belatedly, “I’ve been learning kenjutsu from Dad. Sorry,” she says, pulling her eyes away from the ghost, “I must still be tired.” It’s earlier in the day than she’s usually awake, especially after a night of stargazing, but her siblings-but-not from Sand tend to rise with the sun.

Araya tilts his head in the opposite direction, this time emanating incurious skepticism. He shrugs, straightens out, asks, “Do you want to spar? Kenjutsu only,” he adds.

She hesitates, looks around. The clearing in the Nara clan compound isn’t technically a training ground–it’s okay to practice shadow jutsu in, but not much else. Unfortunately, the actual training grounds in the village can only be reserved by ranked shinobi, and both of them are Academy students still–Araya a foreign Academy student at that.

Sakako considers her options, before channeling chakra to her wrist. Kisuke-san appears after a moment and Araya startles back, sword at the ready.

“It’s okay,” she says, hands out in a pacifying gesture, readying herself to reveal one of her secrets. She took one from him, even if he doesn’t know it–it’s only fair that she give one in return.

“This is Kisuke-san,” she introduces, and her mentor bows shallowly. After a beat, Araya does the same, albeit with far more caution. “He’s a shinobi of Konoha… and a ghost.”

Araya takes to the revelation much better once she explains that Kisuke-san can reserve a proper training ground for them and supervise their spar. Afterwards, they are both equally eager for his observations and advice, the other ghost watching serenely from the side–no longer hovering, but definitely not forgotten.

A few days later when Araya and Mum leave, Sakako sees them off at the gates, even though it means she’ll have to run to get to the Academy before classes start.

Sakako gets a hug from Mum, breathes in her scent as she holds on tightly.

She pulls away, looks at Araya. “Until next time?” she asks him, offering her hand, the same one with her summoning bracelet looped around.

His grip around hers is firm. “Until next time,” he agrees.

Before they depart, Araya lifts a hand to his mask’s mouth–a promise to keep her secret. She grins back.

Once, when Dad had a break from work and Mum had returned from researching in Uzushio, the three of them went on a trip to Sora-ku.

Technically, it was a C-rank mission–transporting supplies for the Neko-baa–but while her classmates were jealous of her for going on a mission before graduation, she knows it’s really just the Hokage letting her family go on a vacation. They’ve been given more than enough time; they’re planning to visit Otafuku Gai on their way back.

For such a large city, there’s hardly any living beings. No ghosts, either, which is more unnerving to Sakako. She’s not afraid, because her parents are with her, but she can’t help the way she looks around, desperately trying to find a ghost, any ghost.

Ghosts, even without speaking to her, tell her much about a person or a place. Fallen enemies versus lost family members haunting a person; the old Uchiha compound has dozens of her kin, though they’ve begun to move onwards to the Pure Land in groups.

No ghosts, no knowledge–she’s going in blind.

Her parents notice her unease, glance at each other and nod. Dad takes point, Mum steps back, Sakako ends up in the middle of a standard protective formation.

Nothing actually happens–well, there was the whole thing with the black marketeers and Mum kind of demolishing a building and Dad ended up having to send a hawk to Konoha’s Police Force telling them to send a follow up team–but nothing they couldn’t handle easily and nothing to do with ghosts or the lack thereof.

Sora-ku is still unnerving for her, but she got a neat kusarigama out of it and she got to spend time with both of her parents, which makes it a trip she’ll remember fondly.

Until Araya and Yodo graduate from the Academy, Shinki is a genin without a team. Two years is a long time to wait, so until then, he’s to be Mum’s apprentice–an unusual arrangement given that they’re shinobi registered to different villages, but the few words of protest don’t actually have any power to prevent it.

Three days after Shinki and Mum arrive in Konoha–three days of Sakako splitting her time between the Nara compound and home–Dad goes to meet with Mum during work.

Sakako doesn’t know about this until she gets out of class for the day, coming home to find Dad and Mum and Shinki sitting around the table. It’s not a tense silence exactly, but she can tell that her arrival makes things easier, makes the air lighter.

“Dad,” she greets, his hand smoothing over her hair in return, “Mum,” she adds, leaning in for a brief hug.

She smiles at Shinki, silent, never sure exactly how to address him–if she should call him big brother or not–especially not with Dad in earshot. Shinki gives a nod of acknowledgement, which is about as much as she’s ever received from him before.

“Sakako,” Mum asks, “Can you help Shinki with the guest room?”

She knows that it’s really just a way to get the both of them out of the room, but the obviousness takes out any malice.

“Sure,” she says, because right now Sakako is glad for the excuse, on her behalf and on Shinki’s whose spine is rigid and hands curled into fists, “It’s upstairs,” she beckons, and her brother-but-not stands to follow.

The empty room next to hers isn’t really a guest room–they don’t really get overnight guests, and the occasional times that Naruto-oji sleeps over, he ends up sprawled on the couch downstairs anyway–it’s just a room waiting to be used.

Sakako knows Dad is keeping it available for a maybe-one-day potential sibling, though as far as she knows he’s never said as much out loud. She thinks maybe Mum knows it, too, and has been purposefully keeping just as silent on the matter.

When they get there, Sakako begins pulling out the futon, and Shinki shakes out of his weird robot act to help her.

With his help, they’re done in a few minutes, and they sit in not entirely comfortable silence. Mostly because they’re both sitting seiza style which Sakako hardly ever does–generally only during kunoichi lessons–but something about Shinki inspires proper manners even with his dusty brown clothes and armor.

“How long are you in Konoha for?” she asks. Usually Baa-chan or Jii-chan will tell her since, usually, that’s where her siblings-but-not stay when they visit. This is a new development and she’s not quite sure how to act.

“Another week,” Shinki says, “Mo-… Shishou said that she needs to formalize my apprenticeship so that I can get credit for any missions we do even if its from Leaf.”

“You can call her Mother, you know. I don’t mind. She’s your Mum, too, isn’t she?”

Shinki’s eyes flick in the direction of the kitchen, then back up to her face quickly. Nervously.

“She’s your Mum, too,” Sakako repeats, no longer a question. Firm and sincere and willing him to understand.

He nods in agreement, which is as much as she’s ever received from him before, but this time she thinks she sees the tiniest hint of a smile.

One day, when she’s old enough and strong enough and she can be sure that Dad won’t see it as some kind of betrayal, Sakako wants to go to the Village Hidden in the Sand and meet the Kazekage.

~

A/N: THROWS FEELS AT YOU THEN RUNS AWAY. I HOPE YOU’RE CRYING, ANON, LOOK AT WHAT YOU MADE ME DO!

Hahahaha, no, so… I hope I didn’t make anyone into a villain here, that’s not what I was trying to do.

The way I figure it is that Sasuke is monogamous. Suuuper monogamous–like, one and done. Maaaaybe he’ll make an exception for Naruto, but basically Shikako is it for him.

In contrasat, Shikako is poly, obviously, but more than that she doesn’t like being tied down. Technically I don’t think Shikako is married to either Sasuke or Gaara and I don’t think she’s likely to ever marry anyone. She’s very pragmatic about these kinds of things–she’ll make a vow to serve Konoha and the Nara clan and protect her teammates etc. But she won’t make a vow to love someone forever because even if she does love someone for the rest of her life, she doesn’t want it to become something that’s an obligation, you know? Something that’ll turn bitter and grudging with constant exposure.

Sakako is more like Shikako in that way–in the sense that she’d rather have her Mum only around one week every month and concentrated time together, than four weeks every month and maybe seeing each other only at dinners if that. Basically: the opposite of canon Boruto and Naruto.

I also realize that I kinda didn’t mention Kareru at all here. And that some parts wouldn’t really make sense if he did exist so… I mean… maybe he is mostly raised by Yoshino and Shikaku? Or at the very least, that’s where he lives and then the age gap between him and Sakako explains the rest of the distance?

Uh… I might have to reorganize Dreaming One Shots if I write more next gen stuff… or make a separate next gen collection on ao3

Your writing for next gen sand sibs gave me so many feels; like the resentment they must all low-key feel for Shikadai, cause no matter how good they are, no matter that he’s from a foreign nation, no matter that they call the Kazekage father there will always be people who insist that Shikadai is the rightful heir by blood. On that note, I could see a lot of pressure for the Kazekage after one of the next gen sand sibs to marry a child of Shikadai, to restore the proper line in Suna.

jacksgreysays:

Next Gen Sand Siblings (NGSS from now on) are so much more compelling if you interpret them as adopted; either canon or DoS. There’s just something fascinating about the idea that the position of Kazekage is restricted to a clan and yet the oldest child of the previous Kazekage has married into a clan of a different village entirely. It’s all the fun of aristocratic inheritance/successions but with ninja!

As I touched on in Our Share of the World, it’s probably Shinki that has the most resentment for Shikadai and even his is kind of tempered by the knowledge that his biggest competition is his younger sister. Yodo, I think, probably just doesn’t like Shikadai as a person–his possible claim on the position of Kazekage has nothing to do with it. Araya and Shikadai are friendliest by default.

I feel like, considering the Council favors Yodo over Shinki (even though, as I mentioned, he’s the one with the blood limit) that they’re not too focused on the matter of blood lines at this point. Especially since Shikadai has been raised as a Leaf shinobi. Though probably, earlier on when he was just born or even a little before then, there were negotiations to decide on that exactly.

They probably conceded to Shikadai being raised Nara because they figured that either Gaara or Kankurou would have biological children eventually (hahahahahaha, nope) and then by the time they began worrying, Gaara began adopting the NGSS and then a whole other round of debates were instigated on whether or not they were valid candidates and, if so, which would be the better one.

I can see them possibly considering an arranged marriage another generation down the line or some kind of Kazekage clan repopulation thing like what’s going on with the Uchiha repopulation in Walking Around (Like Regular People). But I also feel like, given the trend towards more liberal stances of marriages and families and that Temari has already no doubt flouted the Council’s authority and married Shikamaru despite their likely protests, an arranged marriage won’t hold up unless the NGSS that becomes Kazekage is just like, yeah okay why not.

(You may want to check out this post thread speculating how various Kages may be chosen in the Elemental Nations, which started with me wondering about Shikadai’s possible claim to the Kazekage position. This was before I discovered the NGSS existed, of course, but still relevant.)

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Yeah, Suna’s Council from what I understand are the stereotypical old men grouching at things they shouldn’t have any influence on. Unlike Konoha’s Council who were three old (evil) badasses who lived to see that age, Suna’s Council is probably mostly civilians.

I can actually see maybe one of the NGSS going for an arranged marriage–but with A LOT of veto power in the process. Like, they get to screen through who, they get to meet the other person multiple times, it’s a long engagement etc. etc. and at each stage either party can veto the arrangement. Like, arranged marriage isn’t always bad so long as those who are going to get married have power and aren’t just shoved together.

I can see either Yodo or Araya accepting such an arrangement, especially if they’re anywhere on the aro spectrum and don’t mind having a life partner so long as said partner understands and accepts that they’re aro. (Shinki for some reason I’m pretty sure is not aro. I don’t know why, I headcanon him as the kind of person who just falls in love–not frequently, but easily? If that makes any sense)

Your writing for next gen sand sibs gave me so many feels; like the resentment they must all low-key feel for Shikadai, cause no matter how good they are, no matter that he’s from a foreign nation, no matter that they call the Kazekage father there will always be people who insist that Shikadai is the rightful heir by blood. On that note, I could see a lot of pressure for the Kazekage after one of the next gen sand sibs to marry a child of Shikadai, to restore the proper line in Suna.

Next Gen Sand Siblings (NGSS from now on) are so much more compelling if you interpret them as adopted; either canon or DoS. There’s just something fascinating about the idea that the position of Kazekage is restricted to a clan and yet the oldest child of the previous Kazekage has married into a clan of a different village entirely. It’s all the fun of aristocratic inheritance/successions but with ninja!

As I touched on in Our Share of the World, it’s probably Shinki that has the most resentment for Shikadai and even his is kind of tempered by the knowledge that his biggest competition is his younger sister. Yodo, I think, probably just doesn’t like Shikadai as a person–his possible claim on the position of Kazekage has nothing to do with it. Araya and Shikadai are friendliest by default.

I feel like, considering the Council favors Yodo over Shinki (even though, as I mentioned, he’s the one with the blood limit) that they’re not too focused on the matter of blood lines at this point. Especially since Shikadai has been raised as a Leaf shinobi. Though probably, earlier on when he was just born or even a little before then, there were negotiations to decide on that exactly.

They probably conceded to Shikadai being raised Nara because they figured that either Gaara or Kankurou would have biological children eventually (hahahahahaha, nope) and then by the time they began worrying, Gaara began adopting the NGSS and then a whole other round of debates were instigated on whether or not they were valid candidates and, if so, which would be the better one.

I can see them possibly considering an arranged marriage another generation down the line or some kind of Kazekage clan repopulation thing like what’s going on with the Uchiha repopulation in Walking Around (Like Regular People). But I also feel like, given the trend towards more liberal stances of marriages and families and that Temari has already no doubt flouted the Council’s authority and married Shikamaru despite their likely protests, an arranged marriage won’t hold up unless the NGSS that becomes Kazekage is just like, yeah okay why not.

(You may want to check out this post thread speculating how various Kages may be chosen in the Elemental Nations, which started with me wondering about Shikadai’s possible claim to the Kazekage position. This was before I discovered the NGSS existed, of course, but still relevant.)

Sakuko’s Thoughts about her parents relationship / her relationship with araya,yodo and shinki ,thanks (・ω・)ノ

O_O

Anon, are you inside my mind? Do you somehow have a direct link to my feels, anon? Hooooooooow?

Okay, so, I somehow have a lot of thoughts about these kids even though it’s been less than a week so I will totally get on this prompt, but I should probably… warn is maybe too strong a word… inform you that I have somewhat liberal views of relationships and I’m fond of non-nuclear family structures. So just a heads up.

Mangekyo no Sakako being able to influence/talk to the dead she sees. Mangekyo no Sakako setting ameratsu on people’s SHADOWS and burning them spiritually. Mangekyo no Sakako using sealing techniques with her scary af Susanoo. I just need some Mangekyo no Sakako. That’s all.

jacksgreysays:

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(I don’t know if you’re the same anon, but since it’s regarding Sakako, I figured I might as well reblog it in this thread.)

Reincarnated!Sakako… hm… do you mean reincarnated from the real world or reincarnated from the Naruto world? Because on the one hand, I’ve always been interested in a SI!OC who has to deal with the repercussions of a previous SI!OC making changes in the world–what knowledge has been rendered useless, what information is still valid, etc–and the idea of Shikako finally having company in her biggest secret is nice, though probably a bit weird considering it’s her daughter. 

But then again, the idea of some canon character reincarnating as Sakako would be pretty interesting considering her now more and more likely power to see ghosts. Like… which canon character? Will they see the ghosts of people they knew in life? Is she confused as to why she’s not a ghost still? Is she a Warring Clans period Senju reincarnated as this new Uchiha clan heiress?

Buuuuut… I think her being able to see ghosts is already a big enough impetus for her own story that her being reincarnated would either overrun the ghost seeing or just might as well be redundant as an isolating trait. Like she’s already a newblood (term borrowed from Effloresco Secundus, a Hermione-reincarnated-as-Sakura!fic) in the fact that she’s the first of her ability to see ghosts so she’s not normal in the Naruto world (which is in and of itself overrun with weird abilities) she doesn’t need yet another layer of rarity.

… I’m going to have to write a Sakako ficlet now, aren’t I? (aaaaaaaah! i just made her up so Shikadai could have five cousins!)

edit: I wrote it. Well, I didn’t get up to her Mangekyo status, but it’s a Sakako ficlet so…

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Well, all of this generation are powerhouse children, but Sakako is probably the most frightening. Pure terror status not just “powerful and thus scary to fight,” but like: 

jacksgreysays:

Oh gosh, Mangekyo no Sakako would be frightening.

I kind of have an idea for what her “default Sharingan” skills are and I’ll probably write something with her so she gets her own ficlet (though a lot shorter, probably). But I did not consider a Nara mutated Mangekyo O_O

Tsukuyomi = target can now see all of the people they’ve killed/haunts them. Sakako let’s the ghosts get revenge. I’m definitely liking your Amaterasu of burning people’s shadows (that’s pretty in line with both of her parents’ “when in doubt blow it up/burn it)

Susanoo just seems to be fairly straightforward as a personalized massive chakra construct. I don’t know how a Nara/Shikako weirdness inheritance would change that much. I mean, I guess she could reinforce it somehow with seals or her Susanoo looks creepily a lot like the Shinigami?

~Mangekyo no Sakako~ 😀

When it’s late at night and you hear a noise and the wind rustles the branches of the trees.

You know better than to light a campfire, but a part of you wishes you had now. But maybe that would be worse–you near the fire as something moves in the darkness out of your line of sight. No fire means no shadows, right? You’re safer this way.

But another breeze catches you off guard, kicks up dust and fallen leaves, and you reflexively shut your eyes. That is your second mistake tonight.

You open your eyes and for a moment you think you see eyes in the trees–red and horrible and all seeing–but that’s gone as soon as you blink. You almost miss them, though because now there’s the shape of a man in front of you. Translucent and glowing and impossibly familiar because you know this man. You killed this man.

No, you think, backing away, forgetting your training, stumbling away in front of forces you cannot understand.

No, you scream, as the ghost descends, ready and eager to get its revenge.

In the treetops, a little girl waits as her enemy falls to the ground, clawing at his own face. Soon enough his cries stop, and she waits before approaching him, secure in the knowledge that he’s truly incapacitated.

She never even touched him.

edit: added as omake to the Walking Around (Like Regular People) ao3 chapter

(Not a prompt) I always imagine Shikako getting really tall in her late teens. It’s something about Shikabane-hime easily meeting you in the eye or staring down at you, exuding this strong and powerful aura, or being that pillar of strength and will, or something. (It’s also because I read somewhere that George Washington was described as powerful and scary-looking since he was really tall, and it matched the kind of person he was. Then I thought of Shikako earning the same reputation in battle)

jacksgreysays:

Hehehehe, that would be pretty amazing, anon! Especially if she grows to be taller than her teammates and brother (maybe even taller than the other Konoha Twelve?).

She’d probably be more of the Kakashi kind tall, though, you know like lanky and bean-pole-ish. She’d probably adopt his lazy slouchy stance just to put up with suddenly being so much taller than the people she used to cuddle into for safety (I mean, lazy slouchy stances are practically Nara currency, but she’d probably emanate a distinct Hatake flare to hers :P).

Though with her greatcoat she probably has quite the intimidating silhouette more along the lines of Ibiki’s… until she takes it off and then it turns out she’s just suuuper lanky with a lot of scrolls and armor underneath her coat.

I feel like it’d be funniest if she’s taller than Naruto and Sasuke–definitely one at least–and so she and Kakashi just kinda tease them about it even though the height difference is only like… two inches at most. “Do you need help reaching things from the top shelf?” “Oh, do you need help getting down from that tree?” etc etc

Ino and her mother despair because it’s even more difficult to get her to dress up now that most women’s yukata/kimono are made for people shorter than her.

Those Sakako snippets were up so fast! Thank you!

You’re welcome, anon!

With all the discussion going on about her, she was on my mind, so I thought it would be best to articulate all of my feels in a ficlet before I forgot what I wanted to establish for Sakako’s universe.

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I’m glad you enjoyed it, anon.

I do have a lot of other details about Sakako’s life that I didn’t get to, but not substantive enough to continue Walking Around (Like Regular People) quite yet. Mostly because I’d have to write about her team and I’m really really not impressed by Boruto. At all. Like… urgh, why did I write myself into that corner?

I mean, I’d probably alter everyone’s backstory a bit–or at least Konoha Twelve’s parenting skills because my god–and make it so that the motivations of next gen is less parent-based? Like, okay, Kishimoto I understand that you want to show continuity and how the next generation is built on the one before, but there’s a point where it’s just… illogical? Like, yes, people are shaped by their experience and their parents are a large part of that, but this generation is obsessed with it.

And yes, I acknowledge that good people don’t necessarily make good parents. Naruto probably wouldn’t be a good dad, especially if he’s also juggling the position of Nanadaime and likely depression, and Sasuke wandering around in semi-exile would understandably give a child abandonment issues–but it doesn’t make sense how much they take it out on their parents. Then again, I’m prone to sliding into apathy when I get disappointed/upset by people so maybe that’s just me.

But I digress. Sakako is arguably better off than canon Sarada because even though Shikako is off wandering around the continent similar to canon Sasuke, she makes frequent returns home. Definitely more often than once every couple of years (wth Sasuke)–and she’s pretty keen about spending time with Sakako when she is around. Also, Sakako has a lot of company in the form of ghosts… which maynot necessarily be a good thing mentally but probably emotionally. I dunno, it’s hard to make the call.

Sakako, in Our Share of the World, is mentioned having dark hair and braids, multiple, but that can be interpreted however you want.

Walking Around (Like Regular People), a Sakako Uchiha ficlet (2016-09-06)

She is born with this ability, doesn’t know it is an ability. Doesn’t know that it’s something that other people can’t do. Can’t see.

Dad says that even when she was a baby her eyes would track things that weren’t there–Mum corrects him and says that other babies do that, too.

But other babies don’t grow up seeing ghosts.

Her parents don’t realize something is different about her until she is six years old. She’s just had her first day at the Academy and finds it a lot more boring than she expected.

There’s far more talking than she likes, and not even about anything of interest–just things she’s already been taught at home or been told that is useless.

The downfalls of being the daughter of S-rank shinobi.

So when Dad comes home from work–earlier than she’s used to–he finds her practicing with his spare kunai.

He rushes to her, pulls the weapons out of her hands, throws them unerringly at a tree without looking as he kneels in front of her, checking frantically and futilely for injuries.

“What are you doing Sakako?” he asks, hands running over her arms, her hands. She squirms, doesn’t know why he’s being so weird. “I told you not to touch those without supervision.”

She pouts, doesn’t appreciate being scolded. “I am being supervised,” she says in her own defense, “Itachi-oji is watching me.”

Dad sends a hawk for Mum that night; she returns the next day, weeks ahead of schedule.

Sakako has an appointment with Ino-oba and Sakura-oba later that day.

They find she’s telling the truth: she really can see dead people. Ino-oba and Sakura-oba offer to keep it a secret, but Sakako’s parents shrug them off.

“When has keeping secrets ever helped us?”

Mum and Dad then explain to her that it would be better to keep her ability to herself, but if she wants to tell someone then they’re not going to stop her. They emphasize the importance of only telling people she can trust, but she’s a six year old with no friends yet.

Except for her parents and the ghosts she sees, she doesn’t trust anyone.

Sakako has a sister, though they’re not raised as such.

Sarada is Dad’s other daughter with Sakura-oba, because Konoha is trying to repopulate the Uchiha bloodline and Sakura-oba and Ino-oba can’t have children by themselves.

Maybe if it were just Sarada, she and Sakako would be close.

But Sarada has Inojin; Sakako has no one.

A few days later, Mum gives her a bracelet with an elaborate array of seals. It’s not the first–Sakako already has a bracelet with beads that can light up and a necklace that will summon one of Dad’s hawks in emergencies–but this one is a lot more complex.

She channels chakra through it and only startles a little bit when a strict looking brown haired man appears. What’s more surprising is that Mum can also see him.

His name is Kisuke Maboroshi, Konoha’s only ghost shinobi.

Mum mutters something about six senses and someone named Kuro-sensei, before stepping back so the two of them can get acquainted.

Sakako wouldn’t say she likes Kisuke-san better than Itachi-oji, but she likes how she’s not the only one who can see him, and Mum looks a lot less tense around the eyes.

Plus, he’s been teaching her some really cool wire traps which is way more interesting than her lessons at the Academy.

When Mum is out of the village and Dad is busy with work, Sakako goes to the Nara clan compound after school.

Most of the time, it’s nice: everyone there is alive, Baa-chan will show her earth jutsu or new recipes, Jii-chan answers even her silliest questions, and Shikadai will indulge her when she wants to go see the deer even though it must be such a commonplace sight for him.

Other times Boruto is there.

He’s arrogant and selfish and infuriatingly loud and she doesn’t know why Shikadai likes him.

He also brings with him three ghosts; she doesn’t appreciate the boundaries of her life being blurred.

Her favorite thing in the world is stargazing with her parents.

Dad tries to keep his work restricted to certain hours so he can be with her after school, but sometimes that’s not possible. He’s head of the Konoha Police Force, after all, and crime doesn’t stick to business hours. Mum is often out of the village–research trips, Dad says, she’s always been pushing her limits; Sakako thinks it’s just wanderlust–but when she’s around, she joins their stargazing as well.

Sakako likes those times best, when she’ll tell them stories of the stars–of constellations that don’t really match the sky, but which are entertaining nonetheless.

In the rare times when it’s just Sakako and Mum, stargazing becomes more like observing the darkness that just happens to be interrupted by pinpricks of light. These times have different stories, too.

Years pass: she learns, she grows.

She graduates.

She gets put on a team with Boruto and Mitsuki–who is some kind of weird fanboy of her parents–and wishes desperately she were put on another team.

At least Mitsuki doesn’t have any ghosts haunting him.

Or not of the literal kind, anyway.

It takes a long time for Sakako to activate her Sharingan, long enough that she thinks maybe she doesn’t have it.

She’s as much Nara as Uchiha, after all, and shadow jutsu come to her as easily as it does others of Mum’s clan. Maybe that side is more prominent.

Plus, neither side of her heritage can see ghosts, so she thinks maybe that’s what she has instead.

It turns out, it’s just because she’s never been stressed enough to activate it. Until now, obviously.

The enemy nin she’s up against meets her newly red eyes for a brief moment, but that moment is enough.

She knows what genjutsu to put him under. Sakako has been fighting him long enough to memorize the appearance of his ghosts.

And ghosts have always been on her side.

~

A/N: Not too keen on the ending but… it’s fifteen past and I didn’t know what else to write… whatever! Sakako Uchiha! Hooray!

Mangekyo no Sakako being able to influence/talk to the dead she sees. Mangekyo no Sakako setting ameratsu on people’s SHADOWS and burning them spiritually. Mangekyo no Sakako using sealing techniques with her scary af Susanoo. I just need some Mangekyo no Sakako. That’s all.

jacksgreysays:

Oh gosh, Mangekyo no Sakako would be frightening.

I kind of have an idea for what her “default Sharingan” skills are and I’ll probably write something with her so she gets her own ficlet (though a lot shorter, probably). But I did not consider a Nara mutated Mangekyo O_O

Tsukuyomi = target can now see all of the people they’ve killed/haunts them. Sakako let’s the ghosts get revenge. I’m definitely liking your Amaterasu of burning people’s shadows (that’s pretty in line with both of her parents’ “when in doubt blow it up/burn it)

Susanoo just seems to be fairly straightforward as a personalized massive chakra construct. I don’t know how a Nara/Shikako weirdness inheritance would change that much. I mean, I guess she could reinforce it somehow with seals or her Susanoo looks creepily a lot like the Shinigami?

~Mangekyo no Sakako~ 😀

image

(I don’t know if you’re the same anon, but since it’s regarding Sakako, I figured I might as well reblog it in this thread.)

Reincarnated!Sakako… hm… do you mean reincarnated from the real world or reincarnated from the Naruto world? Because on the one hand, I’ve always been interested in a SI!OC who has to deal with the repercussions of a previous SI!OC making changes in the world–what knowledge has been rendered useless, what information is still valid, etc–and the idea of Shikako finally having company in her biggest secret is nice, though probably a bit weird considering it’s her daughter. 

But then again, the idea of some canon character reincarnating as Sakako would be pretty interesting considering her now more and more likely power to see ghosts. Like… which canon character? Will they see the ghosts of people they knew in life? Is she confused as to why she’s not a ghost still? Is she a Warring Clans period Senju reincarnated as this new Uchiha clan heiress?

Buuuuut… I think her being able to see ghosts is already a big enough impetus for her own story that her being reincarnated would either overrun the ghost seeing or just might as well be redundant as an isolating trait. Like she’s already a newblood (term borrowed from Effloresco Secundus, a Hermione-reincarnated-as-Sakura!fic) in the fact that she’s the first of her ability to see ghosts so she’s not normal in the Naruto world (which is in and of itself overrun with weird abilities) she doesn’t need yet another layer of rarity.

… I’m going to have to write a Sakako ficlet now, aren’t I? (aaaaaaaah! i just made her up so Shikadai could have five cousins!)

edit: I wrote it. Well, I didn’t get up to her Mangekyo status, but it’s a Sakako ficlet so…