Rei asked Naruto for one thing: trust. Naruto knew what it meant to befriend what others feared. He stepped between the sentinel and Kaito’s strikes, pouring a calming stream of affirming chakra through a fragile Rasengan—humbly shaped, but sincere. The guardian softened, the Vale’s tremors eased, and the black mist recoiled. Kaito, desperate, attempted to force the well’s awakening by sacrificing the captured shinobi’s chakra as a catalyst. But seeing the faces of those he had saved—men and women who had believed his cause—Kaito faltered. Naruto, offering a chance at redemption, stopped short of killing him. Instead, he exposed Kaito’s misdeeds: how ends cannot justify sacrificing others’ will.

Before they could secure the Chronicle, a darker presence revealed itself: an ancient jutsu within the stolen pages began to awaken the Vale’s seals early. Tendrils of blackened mist rose, coiling toward pockets of chakra wells—thin enough now to be manipulated. The ground trembled. The team pressed on to the Hollow Vale, where the air tasted like old rain and the echoes of past jutsu hummed. Beneath a broken stone altar they discovered a sealed spring of pure chakra: a well that had once fed a clan of elemental guardians. A second group—led by Kaito and his lieutenant, a former Orochimaru disciple named Sera—arrived in time to clash again.

Rei’s tracking led them through abandoned villages and overfields where sealed barrier marks still hummed faintly in the soil. Naruto, ever empathetic, paused at each ruined home to offer a quiet bow. His presence drew children from doorways who clutched small wooden toys carved in the shapes of foxes and wolves—remnants of clans long disbanded. The team’s camaraderie threaded through the journey: Shikamaru’s lazy strategems undercut by Sai’s deadpan observations and Konohamaru’s eager attempts to outshine Naruto with theatrics he had practiced since adolescence. At the Lotus’s camp they found not only mercenaries but missing shinobi from villages across the land—recruited or kidnapped to work the land around the Vale. Their leader, a bronze-masked tactician named Kaito, had no interest in conquest for glory. He wanted the power to make any land self-sustaining: to end famine and weakness forever, regardless of lives spent to achieve it.