[CENTER][color=ed1c24][h3]Seiji Onoda[/h3][/color][/CENTER] Seiji sat quietly by himself, preferring to stay out of the drama that had been unfolding earlier. Kanon had managed to piss off Asuka, which wasn't that hard to do but it was quite humorous to watch. Seiji was amazed that even with the village on high alert that they were allowed to just eat a meal casually , shouldn't they be helping the village? He figured that they would be needed for something, a squad of eight genin could definitely be of use to the hokage. Seiji's scarlet eyes observed his teammates interacting, and for a brief moment he thought of joining in, but thought better of it. He knew he wouldn't be able to compete with Toko's extrovert personality, he'd just stay quiet. The Onoda pushed his plate away once it was void of food, he did admit that the dinner had been quite delicious. Maybe it was because he had worked so hard that day or maybe the cooks were actually good at their jobs. Seiji would have gladly paid for his meal but he was beaten to it. Another genin, who's name he unfortunately forgot, stepped up and used a wad of ryo to pay for the whole squad. The boy must be loaded to be able to pay for nine people without breaking a sweat. He had heard of the boy, a puppeteer, Seiji believed. Seiji had only sparred once or twice with Taibushi in the academy, and he only remembered enough to know that he used puppets and water jutsu. With fighting on his mind he wondered how effectively the group would be able to work together. Eight people was a lot to keep track of so maybe some sort of system should be implemented to smooth out the kinks in the group. Seiji knew for a fact that he wasn't able to cover seven other people while still holding his own. The only positive that could come out of this was strength in numbers. It was going to take a sizable force to take down eight genin and a jounin working in conjunction. Seiji hoped that this would all work out okay, trusting his teammates with his life was a tough thing to do. He'd have to assess their prowess in the field before even thinking about trusting them.