Saihō stood with one hand looped lazily on her hip, the other coiled with Nuibari’s thread, as she watched the guards haul the unconscious blonde away like a sack of silk someone had tried—and failed—to pass off as high-quality. Her gaze followed them just long enough to catch the faintest twitch of movement from Yuihime’s fingers, before she turned away, disinterested. “Flimsy fabric,” she muttered, flicking her wrist to draw Nuibari’s thread taut again before biting it clean off with a neat snap between her teeth. She spat the frayed end onto the floor near the cracked marble and shook her head.
Known for her quip remarks and euphemisms, Saihō instead on a rare occasion held back her tongue and chose to slid her gaze towards Saburō as he spoke. She tilted her head faintly, as if weighing the gesture of his pat on Aōi’s shoulder. An attempt at comfort, maybe. Or just a calculated pressure check. Hard to say with the icy ones. Their compassion was always kept in cold storage. Still, her gaze shifted next to Aōi, lingering this time. He was composed—outwardly. But she’d walked beside him long enough, stitched through enough missions with him, to see where the seams strained. His breath had been shallow earlier, his eyes unfocused for a blink too long. And now he stood like a man pretending the stitch hadn’t popped. “Snowflake,” she said, nudging him lightly with the back of her knuckles. “You need to mend that expression. You’re starting to wrinkle.”
She didn’t wait for a retort.
With a flick of her wrist, she slid Nuibari back into its sling on her back, the oversized needle settling into place like it belonged there—which it did, as naturally as her hand belonged to a bolt of cloth. She began to pace slowly through the lobby, her steps echoing in sharp rhythm, each one falling with precision as if she were measuring out a runway line no one else could see.
“Somebody oughta tell the receptionist to stop yelling like that. Shoddy acoustics in this place—echoes throughout the foyer and out onto the street. You'd think this tower would have better sound proofing."
She paused by a decorative display vase that had fallen in the chaos, 'Probably some overpriced Kirigakure ceramic monstrosity' she thought to herself before righting it with one hand. She then turned her sight at the entrance door, "We oughta stich up that PR disaster out front", she added, before noticing Nozomi and other Shinobi re-assuring the crowd, with people leaving while the more curious stayed; more noticeably the reporters. "Though, Kid's doing a fine job." Turning back to the group, she began walking again—but not away. No, her steps curved toward the inner hallways towards the lifts, the furthest one on the right which only responded to certain key cards. They're passed down by the Mizukage to the Seven Swordsman, and those that work in the Tower who have authority to schedule her appointments and organise her calendar, such as the receptionist.
Beep.
With the sleight of her hand over the pad, it registered hers. The meeting with the Mizukage, after all, still loomed.
"Coming, boys?" Her hand raised to keep the elevator doors from shutting, extending an invite for the two to join her on the 91st Floor. The Mizukage's Office.




