fyodor666
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Creating a Jutsu - Earth Release: Stone BarrierNushi awoke after three days of learning to talk to the stone and control it, and felt terrific. No longer would any intruder surprise him in his own home, for Banjaku didn't sleep. Nushi stepped outside and just listened, hearing stories of everywhere there was stone. He listened for a full ten minutes before getting to work.
He wanted to further improve his understanding and control of stone, and for that he had to be focused. He ate his meal while talking to Banjaku, reflecting on the past few days. The sentient sword gave him the idea of creating walls of stone, but Nushi was skeptical. He could separate and even control stone, but creating it was a different matter altogether.
As he suspected, when he asked the stone to reproduce itself, it was confused. It did not know reproduction, and it did not have the ability to grow. So Nushi had to think outside the box. He sat cross-legged and channelled chakra into the stone, pulling out a large slab. The problem was, this would not work without a large supply of stone, and it took too much chakra to keep it up.
He channelled the chakra a different way, forming several rocks into a wall. Still, it took too much chakra and focus, and it had gaps that water and fire could get through. He had to find away to create new stone, and root it into the ground. He formed a few seals he thought would help flow the chakra better, and on the fifth three-seal combination it worked.
A stone wall rose from the ground in front of him when he struck the ground. It seemed solid, and he stopped the flow of chakra. It stayed there, almost as if it were a natural formation. It was two feet thick, as well as taller and wider than him. He knew he could make it bigger or smaller, but he wasn't sure he could control thickness.
He performed the jutsu a few more times, increasing and decreasing the size but, as he suspected, the thickness didn't change. He could even make an eight-foot square cube if he limited the chakra enough. This entire process had taken most of the day, and he hadn't realized it until just then.
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