"My name is Ibiki Morino. And from this moment on… I am your worst nightmare."
A smile that held no kindness spread across his scarred face. The silence in Room 301 was so thick it seemed to absorb the air, an expectant void charged with the arrogance and fear of nearly a hundred genin.
"Welcome to the first stage of the Chūnin Exams. It will be a written test."
A murmur of relief and confusion swept through the room, a wave of nervous whispers. "A written test?" "Is that all?" "Too easy." Ibiki cut it off with a glare as sharp as a kunai. The murmuring died instantly.
"The first rule is simple: don't get caught cheating stupidly. My proctors, stationed at the edges of the room, are the elite of espionage and counter-intelligence. Their eyes miss nothing. If one of them catches you five times, both you and your teammates will be thrown out of this room and barred from ever taking the exam again."
His gaze landed for a moment on the table of Sakura and Sasuke, the only two-person team in the entire room. The pressure on them intensified, an invisible spotlight that singled them out and exposed them before the rest of the competitors.
"And just so we're clear," Ibiki continued, his voice booming with sadistic pleasure, "a two-person team has zero room for error. One mistake, one teammate ejected, and the game is over for both of you. There's no safety net for the incomplete. If your third member didn't have the guts to show up, maybe you shouldn't be here either."
The exams were passed out. Sakura flipped her paper over, her heart beating an anxious rhythm against her ribs. Her green eyes scanned the questions, and her analytical mind, now enhanced by the Falna, processed the information at a dizzying speed.
These questions… they aren't for a genin. Question two is about advanced cryptography, five is about projectile ballistics in variable wind conditions… and seven is a chakra physics problem that Iruka-sensei never even explained to us!
She felt a drop of cold sweat trickle down her temple.
It's impossible. Unless… unless answering isn't the test. The test is getting the information without getting caught. Ibiki isn't evaluating our knowledge; he's evaluating our skill as spies. He's evaluating our ability to steal vital secrets under the enemy's watch.
She made no attempt to copy. Instead, her "Analytical Eye" kicked in. She didn't read the questions; she read the room. She began to observe, to break down the classroom into a map of variables and patterns. Her mind didn't just identify the cheating methods; it cataloged them by efficiency and risk.
The Rain ninja's reflection jutsu is clever, she analyzed, watching a boy use a small pocket mirror hidden in his sleeve to see another's exam. But it depends on a constant light source and a perfect angle. One wrong move, one proctor changing position, and he'll be discovered. Risk: moderate. Too flashy.
The one from the Grass is using a sound jutsu to transmit answers, she observed, noticing a girl humming an almost inaudible melody whose notes changed in strange ways. Subtle, nearly undetectable to a normal ear, but a sensory-type shinobi or a ninja hound like Akamaru would pick it up instantly. Risk: low, but not zero.
"Don't fidget so much, Akamaru," Kiba whispered nervously beside her. The pup whimpered inside his jacket. "What is it? Do you smell something, or do you just need to get out?"
Suddenly, a choked gasp broke the general concentration.
"Number forty-three! First strike!" one of the proctors barked, pointing at a Grass genin who had tried to look over his neighbor's shoulder. The boy shrank in his seat, pale as a sheet.
The tension in the room skyrocketed. It wasn't an empty threat.
Sasuke clenched his jaw. Espionage? An Uchiha's specialty. Pathetic, but necessary. He activated his Sharingan. The stabbing pain behind his eyelids was a price he was willing to pay.
Damn it… keeping the Sharingan active is painful. It consumes chakra at an alarming rate. But it's the only way. I can't fail. Not here. Not in front of her.
The world was tinted in an analytical red. The chakra flow of everyone in the room became visible. He focused on the pencil of a student three rows ahead who was writing with absolute confidence. He didn't just see the movement; the Sharingan allowed him to predict the trajectory of the graphite tip, memorizing the shape of the kanji before they were even complete on the page. He copied four answers in less than ten seconds.
Too slow. The drain is too high. He deactivated his dōjutsu for a moment, discreetly massaging his temples. It was then that he noticed Gaara's method. The boy from the Desert was sitting motionless, his arms crossed. There was no movement, no sound. But Sasuke, with his heightened perception, saw the small third eye, made of sand, floating near the ceiling, shamelessly observing the exam of the smartest genin in the room.
Perfect, Sasuke thought with a mix of anger and begrudging respect. Effortless, risk-free. Absolute power. It's not a technique; it's an extension of his own being. The comparison infuriated him, stoking his need to prove the Uchiha's superiority.
Sakura, for her part, watched Kiba begin to panic. His attempt to whisper to Hinata was clumsy, almost suicidal.
"Hey, Hinata… question three… is it A or C?" he muttered, faking a cough.
She saw Hinata activate her Byakugan for a split second, the veins around her temples bulging almost imperceptibly before vanishing. An instant later, Hinata coughed three times in a row.
C.
That's real control, Sakura analyzed. Maximum efficiency, minimum exposure. She's trained that aspect to perfection since we got back. It's not just power; it's intelligence. Hinata's calm was a stark contrast to the silent chaos surrounding her.
Ino Yamanaka watched Sakura from across the room. My target is clear. Billboard Brow has always been a bookworm. Her answers will be perfect; I don't need to look anywhere else.
She closed her eyes. Mind Transfer Jutsu!
Her spirit shot across the room, an invisible psychic projectile. But when it struck Sakura's mind, it hit a wall. Sakura's own "Analytical Eye," now an instinctive part of her being, perceived the intrusion as an illogical variable, an error in the system, and repelled it with a mental force she didn't know she possessed. Ino was thrown back with a violence that left her breathless in her seat.
What…? She blocked me! Impossible! Panicking, she diverted her attack to an easier target, Chōji, only to find his mind was completely occupied with thoughts of what kind of barbecue he would eat later.
Time passed. The scratching of pencils was the only sound.
"Number twenty-seven, you're out! Five strikes!"
A Rock ninja was dragged out along with his two terrified teammates.
"Waterfall team, disqualified!"
The room was slowly emptying. Sakura hadn't written a single word, but her mind was full of information. She had all the answers, not on her paper, but in her head, gathered through flawless observation.
"Time's up!" Ibiki's voice boomed. "And now, for the tenth question."
The air grew even heavier.
"But first, one more rule. You have the option not to answer. If you choose not to, you and your team will be disqualified, but you can try again next year. However… if you choose to answer and get it wrong… you will be banned from taking the Chūnin Exams forever!"
The silence that followed was more terrifying than any scream. It was a silence filled with broken futures, of faded dreams. Sakura felt cold sweat run down the back of her neck. Forever? The word was an abyss. She looked at Sasuke. His face was an expressionless mask of pride, but she saw the tension in his jaw. Retreat was unthinkable for him, but what if they failed? Condemning him to be a genin forever over a gamble? The weight of that possibility crushed her.
"I… I quit!" shouted the Grass genin who already had one strike, his voice breaking with panic.
The sound of his voice broke the spell, and the dam broke.
"Team fifteen, out!"
"Us too! I'm sorry!"
With every team that surrendered, the space in the room felt larger, emptier. The pressure on those who remained multiplied. Kiba was trembling, looking at his teammates.
"Guys… I don't know. Forever? My mom would kill me…" he whispered, panic coloring his voice.
Hinata placed a hand on his shoulder. The touch was firm, reassuring.
"Trust us, Kiba-kun. Trust the team. We'll get through this together. Naruto-kun wouldn't give up."
Sakura observed that simple display of support. Trust. What was that for Team 7 right now? She looked at the empty seat beside her.
Her hand began to tremble, the pencil vibrating against the paper.
Maybe the smart thing to do is to withdraw. Live to fight another day. Keep Sasuke from hating me for ruining his future. It would be the logical, safe thing to do. I can't risk his dream of vengeance for my pride.
But then, the image of Naruto in the cave, wounded but smiling, with that blind faith in his eyes, filled her mind. "Your brain is the sharpest weapon we have, Sakura-chan. Don't let anyone make you think otherwise." He hadn't said it as an empty compliment. He had said it as a fact. He believed in her. He, who always threw himself headfirst into danger, trusted her to find the answer he couldn't see.
This isn't a question of knowledge, she realized with blinding clarity. It's a question of faith. Ibiki is testing whether you'll break under the responsibility of a decision with no turning back. A chūnin leads a team. Their decisions can get their comrades killed. If you can't bet on yourself here, how are you going to bet on them out there, on the battlefield? To withdraw is to admit you don't trust your own judgment. It's admitting defeat before the fight.
The fear didn't leave. It was still there, a frozen knot in her chest. But now there was something stronger. A promise. I won't fail you, Naruto. I won't fail us.
The trembling in her hand stopped. She raised it, the movement clean and decisive, cutting through the tense air. Ibiki fixed his eyes on her.
"Don't underestimate us!" Sakura's voice was clear and firm, without a hint of doubt, echoing in the silent room. "I accept the question! Team 7 does not withdraw!"
The declaration resounded like thunder. Kiba, who had been about to waver, straightened up, emboldened by her resolve. Hinata gave Sakura a look of pure admiration. Ino stared at her like she was crazy. Sasuke watched her from the corner of his eye, genuinely surprised by her firmness.
Withdraw? And admit defeat to her, to the Hyuga, to the memory of that idiot? Never. I'd rather be a genin forever than show a hint of weakness.
Sakura's resolution was contagious. No one else stood up.
Ibiki Morino looked at those who remained. And for the first time, a genuine smile appeared on his scarred face. It was a terrifying sight.
"For those of you who stayed…" his voice thundered, "…you've passed the first test."
A collective sigh of relief swept through the room. The tension broke so abruptly it was almost painful.
"What? What about the tenth question?" Temari asked from the back, confused.
"It never existed," Ibiki answered. "Or rather, the question was whether you dared to accept it. Doubt is a shinobi's worst enemy on a mission. A chūnin must make difficult decisions under immense pressure, decisions from which there's no turning back. Those who weren't willing to risk it for their future and their team's don't deserve this vest. Congratulations, you bastards. You've shown you have guts."
Just as the relief began to set in and the first murmurs of celebration arose, a deafening sound made everyone jump.
CRASH!
The classroom windows exploded inward in a shower of glass and black smoke. A black banner with purple lettering unfurled from the ceiling with a snap, covering the chalkboard. On it read: "Second Proctor: Anko Mitarashi!"
A female figure landed in the middle of the room with a wild grin on her face, her arms spread as if embracing the chaos.
"Alright, you maggots! The party's over!" she screamed, her voice full of a chaotic and dangerous energy. "There are still way too many of you! My test will take care of cutting that number down to less than half! I'm your next proctor, Anko Mitarashi! And the second stage begins… NOW! Follow me to the Forest of Death!"
The calm had been shattered. The psychological warfare was over. The war of blood and steel was about to begin.