Hiruzen lowered himself into his seat with a quiet sigh, exhaustion pulling at his frame. He felt the weight of the day settle into his bones. Team assignments were never easy. They were always a balancing act between clan demands, political favor, and the practical needs of the village. But this year, the situation was worse than usual. Everything felt heavier, like every choice carried the risk of igniting a war no one had declared yet.
Across the wide council table, his three oldest companions sat in a rare, simmering silence. Reports, folders, and recommendation sheets were scattered before them like discarded game pieces after a bitter match. The candlelight flickered off their expressions, casting long shadows on the walls.
Danzo broke the quiet first. His voice was cool, measured, almost indifferent. "I support continuing the Advanced Class. It has produced exceptional candidates. Possibly the strongest group of academy students we've ever had."
Hiruzen didn't respond. He already knew where this conversation would go. He glanced at Homura, waiting for the rebuttal.
Homura leaned forward, his tone as smooth as ever. "It's a fine idea on paper. But if you want us to pull another elite shinobi off the frontlines to run it, you're asking too much. We're already short-staffed. Losing Daiken hit us harder than you care to admit."
He tapped the edge of one file absently. "He succeeded where others would've failed, but don't let that mislead you. Most elite shinobi don't belong in a classroom. Especially not one like that. Daiken was the exception, not the norm."
Koharu folded her hands in front of her and nodded in agreement. "And let's not ignore the pressure that class endured. Several students came close to breaking under it. The clan heads were not pleased. Frankly, we were lucky things didn't go worse."
Hiruzen drew in a long breath and let the smoke curl from his pipe. The real battle was beginning now, and it was the part he had been dreading most.
Danzo let the moment linger before speaking again, his tone deceptively casual. "That's acceptable. If you're opposed to continuing the program, then so be it. I only wanted to voice support for it. That said… I do have a suggestion concerning the boy. Noa."
The three old friends were stunned that Danzo hadn't pushed back at all. It put them on edge. Someone like him never gave ground so easily. But the moment he mentioned Noa's name, the tension in the room sharpened. That was the clue. He hadn't backed off. He was simply shifting his aim.
All three heads turned toward him at once, the conversation freezing around the table. Hiruzen held back another sigh. There it is. The one topic we all danced around, hoping to delay just a little longer.
Danzo didn't flinch under the attention. "I propose we place him on a team with Kaen Uchiha and Genta Senju."
The silence deepened. It wasn't shock that held them, it was suspicion.
Hiruzen's thoughts moved quickly. Danzo, of all people, trying to put the Uchiha and Senju together? That's not like him. He's spent years pushing for the Uchiha to be isolated from the core structure of the village. So why tie Noa to them?
His mind drifted for a moment to Tsunade, his estranged student. Genta was the last bearer of her clan's legacy. Tsunade had abandoned the village, but her clan's blood remained. And now it was being tied to two boys who might shape Konoha's future. It was a volatile combination.
"I'll approve Sena Yamanaka for Noa's team," Hiruzen said calmly, as if the matter was already settled. He ignored Danzo's earlier suggestions without so much as a glance.
Homura gave a small nod, unsurprised. He had been "convinced" by her father, Hirotaka. The man had lobbied hard to have his daughter placed near Noa, likely counting on Noa's strength to offer her both protection and room to grow.
Hiruzen suspected deeper motives. Hirotaka Yamanaka was no fool. He saw the same potential Hiruzen did. Noa wasn't just strong. He had the drive and ability to become something rare.
Koharu, however, frowned sharply. "That girl belongs in the council training program, not on a combat team. I could guide her properly. With her talent, she could advise future Hokage, not run around getting her hands dirty on low-level missions."
Hiruzen agreed with her in principle. Sena had a gift for politics and people. But Hirotaka had pressed the issue relentlessly, and in truth, Noa needed someone with her instincts watching his back. Or perhaps the old merchant was simply planting seeds, aligning his daughter early with someone who might climb far in the future.
Danzo gave a nod of agreement. "Homura is right. Sena should be placed on a safer team. Preferably one that escorts political delegations. She would observe and protect, and she would be exposed to real diplomacy early."
Hiruzen turned to him slowly, his eyes narrowing just slightly. "Sena will be assigned to Noa. That is final."
Danzo stared back, unmoving. The silence stretched until Hiruzen gave a thin, unreadable smile.
"I have another suggestion," Hiruzen said, as if the topic hadn't grown sharp around them. "Let's assign Shisui Uchiha as their sensei." Hiruzen added, his voice calm but final. "Shisui will be formally removed from active ANBU duty. His record will reflect a transition to official jonin status, effective immediately. The regulations are clear. Only a jonin or higher can lead a field team, and we'll avoid giving the clans any room to challenge this on a technicality." Koharu's brow twitched, but she said nothing. Beside her, Homura exhaled quietly, calculating. On paper, it was clean. But in practice, this was the move. Hiruzen wasn't just assigning a gifted shinobi to Noa. He was tightening the leash. Shisui, already tied to the ANBU, was now placed in direct contact with Sena Yamanaka and the Uchiha boy. A prodigy commanding other prodigies, all within the Hokage's shadow. If Noa was swayed, and Sena followed his lead, the Hokage's influence would stretch deeper into both clans. It was subtle. Strategic. And entirely in character.
The room changed instantly.
Koharu's brows drew tight, and Homura leaned back with a quiet breath. Danzo sat still for a moment, then spoke, his voice dark. "He may be one of the most talented Uchiha we've seen in a generation, but he still lacks the age and status for that level of responsibility. Putting him in a leadership role now, with tensions already rising around the clan, will only give the clan council more fuel. They'll see it as favoritism."
Koharu followed, her tone pointed. "That Noa boy already has close ties to the Senju, the Yamanaka, the Nara, and now you want to put an Uchiha at his side? If I didn't know better, I'd think you were grooming him for the Hokage seat."
Homura gave a small, humorless chuckle. "The next Hokage is a delicate matter. If only your students…"
"Careful," Hiruzen said, his voice low and edged with warning.
Homura fell silent, his lips pressing together. He looked away, but the fire in his eyes had not dimmed.
Danzo leaned forward. "You know I don't trust the Uchiha. Give them someone like Noa and they'll twist it to their benefit. They'll claim him. Use him."
Koharu and Homura nodded in agreement.
But Hiruzen stood his ground. "No one will understand what Noa needs better than someone who shares his burden. Shisui is a prodigy, just like Noa. And unlike most jonin, he'll know how to guide him. I'm not choosing him because of his age. I'm choosing him because of his insight. He's composed under pressure, trusted by his peers, and already respected within the ANBU, even without official rank. He carries the weight of his clan's expectations and hasn't let it twist him. That kind of balance is rare. Most jonin would try to mold Noa into their image or test him to prove a point. Shisui won't. He'll know when to step in, and when to let the boy grow on his own. This team isn't going to be easy. It will draw attention from every direction. I don't need a war hero. I need someone who knows what it means to walk the path of a prodigy, and hasn't forgotten the price it carries."
The other two elders exchanged glances, clearly weighing the logic in his words.
Danzo, however, had gone still. Inside, his thoughts churned "I was already planning to remove Shisui. He's too dangerous to leave alive. And that Kaen boy is growing fast, too."
A faint smile tugged at his lips as he spoke. "Very well. Kaen Uchiha should be placed on the same team. If Shisui is going to lead them, then giving him another Uchiha to manage is only logical. That boy is showing great promise, after all."
Hiruzen's eyes narrowed. Koharu and Homura both paused, thrown off by Danzo's sudden support. The man had never once advocated for Uchiha integration. His goodwill only deepened their unease.
Danzo let the silence linger a moment longer, watching the others carefully. Outwardly, he appeared cooperative. But inside, his mind was already moving. "If that Noa kid wises up and joins Root, then I'll arrange an accident where the rest of the team appears to get killed. I'll capture the Uchiha boys and experiment on them. That Sena girl would serve as a good lesson to that fool Hirotaka, who doesn't know when to keep his mouth shut and stay out of my way. And if Noa doesn't wise up, then a full team wipe would be a tragic event, one that would spark outrage, drive a wedge between Hiruzen and the Uchiha, and give me the momentum I need to push him out of the Hokage seat."
The others couldn't hear his thoughts, so they struggled to grasp his true intentions. Hiruzen studied Danzo carefully. He didn't trust him. Not for a second. But even so, this arrangement might be an opportunity. A rare chance to ease the tension with the Uchiha, one he intended to use wisely. With Sena on the team, the Yamanaka clan's influence would help legitimize the arrangement. If the village saw an Uchiha working seamlessly alongside heirs from respected clans, it would speak louder than any decree. True cooperation between bloodlines carried weight in ways no words ever could.
"I agree," Hiruzen said finally. "This team has the makings of something powerful. If they learn to work together, they'll go far."
Koharu and Homura looked uneasy. But when both Hiruzen and Danzo stared them down, two old lions briefly united, they backed down. They didn't protest, but neither of them truly approved. Sometimes, you had to give ground to win it back later. There would be other teams to assign, and other battles to fight across the Tactical Support Division, Intelligence and Interrogation, Reconnaissance, and Research and Development. The real game was far from over.
And so, the night wore on. The four old friends remained seated at that table, locked in quiet battle not with blades or jutsu, but with words, glances, and intentions. Morning light would greet them eventually, but peace would not.