***Kaen POV
The house was quiet. The kind of silence that pressed on my ears and made the walls feel closer than they should. I moved slowly, each step measured, each breath shallow. My ribs ached, sore from yesterday's sparring. My father had said it wasn't enough. Every time I improved, I didn't get praise. Instead, he reminded me that Itachi had already mastered it by my age. Or he pointed out Shisui's accomplishments. He spoke like my effort didn't matter, like my progress was a nuisance he had to endure.
I knew I should be angry, but anger felt distant. Like it lived in a different body. All I could feel was the dull, constant ache, buried under layers of exhaustion. I folded my futon carefully, making sure there were no wrinkles. In this house, even a wrinkle could invite trouble. Discipline. Perfection. Strength. That was what was expected. That was the minimum.
Outside my window, morning sunlight cut through the mist and cast golden lines across the polished floorboards. It looked too gentle. Too cheerful. It didn't belong here. Not in a house like this, where shadows lingered long after the sun had risen.
I pulled on my training clothes. Dark. Clean. Pressed flat. My mother had laid them out the night before. Her face had been unreadable, her eyes didn't see. They just watched. She didn't speak. She didn't have to. Her silence always meant the same thing. Do better. Be better. Exceed the mark.
I walked to the mirror and looked at myself. My skin was marked with small cuts, and a fresh bruise bloomed across my cheekbone like a warning sign. My eyes were dull, tired. I touched the bruise without flinching. Pain didn't scare me. I'd lived with it long enough. My gaze lingered. There was nothing special about my eyes. Not sharp like Itachi's. Not powerful like Shisui's.
Their names pressed on me like weights. Heavy. Crushing. Inescapable. My parents echoed them like prayers. As if invoking their names would shame me into becoming something more. And just when I thought I'd caught up, they moved the line again. Set a new goal. A more impossible one. Another reason I wasn't enough. Was I just walking in circles now? Thinking the same thoughts, failing the same way?
I left my room in silence. My footsteps made no sound on the hallway floor. I passed doors that stayed shut year-round. Rooms I wasn't allowed to enter. Rooms that might as well have been walls. My pace slowed near the training room. I paused, then slid the door open.
The scent hit me first. Sweat. Dust. Blood. Familiar, but not comforting. The wood floor was spotless. It always was. My mother scrubbed it clean, even if training ended past midnight.
Wooden practice dummies stood in the corner, marked and gouged from years of abuse. The weapon rack glinted faintly, every blade polished to a mirror shine. My father's katana sat at the top. Immaculate. Perfect. Unreachable. Just like him.
A voice snapped across the room.
"Admiring your failures won't change them."
I turned. My father stood in the doorway, arms crossed, framed by shadow. His posture rigid. His gaze sharp. His presence heavy enough to fill the room by itself.
"I'm preparing," I said, keeping my voice even.
"You're hesitating," he replied. "You fear tomorrow. You fear facing them."
"No," I lied. "I don't."
He stepped in. The floor creaked under his feet.
"Fear is weakness. And your weakness shames this family. It shames the clan."
"I won't fail." I tightened my fists at my sides.
"You already have." His tone dipped lower. "Every bruise is a lesson you refused to learn. Every defeat is proof that you're still not enough."
I stared ahead, jaw clenched.
"Tomorrow, you meet your team," he said. "I heard you'll be placed with him. The one the village chained to the Hokage's weak ideals. The one who's defeated you in every way. The one who humiliated you in battle twice. You'll face your weakness again. Will you fail like always? Will you shame us forever?"
"No." My voice came out stronger this time.
"Words are air," he said flatly. "Prove it. Prove you're the superior shinobi. A leader who demands respect. A warrior others will follow."
He turned and walked out. His footsteps faded, but the silence that followed was louder than anything he said.
I closed my eyes and drew a slow breath, holding it in my chest. Tomorrow, I'd most likely face Noa. And whoever else the village had decided to chain to me. I'd face the eyes that watched me fall. The teammates who would see through me. The memories that wouldn't die.
But I would rise above it.
Because in this house, weakness had no place.
And I would not be weak.
Kaen stood still, watching his father's tall frame disappear into the deeper shadows of the hallway.
He didn't know the truth.
To him, this house was just strict. Cold. A place where praise didn't exist and failure was always just around the corner. But behind the cold training and the impossible standards, something else lived in the silence. Something sharper.
His parents didn't want a son.
They wanted a weapon.
Not for the village. Not for Konoha's safety. But for a future they were quietly preparing for.
They whispered about betrayal. They spoke of the Hokage weakness dragging the village down. A man who turned his back on their clan. Who allowed suspicion to grow. Who let the other clans isolate them.
The bitterness had grown like rot, quiet, slow, but steady.
In their eyes, the Uchiha had been pushed aside. Treated like threats. Cut out from the heart of the village. They didn't say it openly, but the path they saw was clear. The village wouldn't welcome them again. Not really.
So, they prepared.
Every insult. Every bruise. Every standard raised higher than humanly possible. It wasn't just training. It was shaping. Sharpening. Forging a tool for war.
Kaen didn't know. But his parents expected him to fight when the time came. To bring victory to the clan, no matter the cost, no matter who stood in the way.
So, making friends would be a liability.
And if he couldn't?
Then his death would be the only fair price for his weakness and failure.
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***Noa's POV
I stood in front of the mirror, giving my reflection a satisfied nod.
"I'm starting to look handsome as hell in this world," I muttered. "I bet once I grow up, I'll give Kakashi a run for his money."
I laughed. It was stupid, but fun. I wasn't bad-looking in my old life either, but this was definitely a glow-up. Maybe that 'world-transcending beauty' thing wasn't just nonsense after all.
Still chuckling, I stepped out into the house.
Empty.
Genta didn't show up yesterday. Said he'd turn in early so he'd be fresh to meet his new team and sensei. Knowing him, he was probably already standing at the meeting spot, arms crossed, looking way too serious. Gotta love the first impression tryhard attitude. He practiced that 'team leader' scowl on me more times than I can count. I gave plenty of feedback. He's got it down to an art now.
I stretched, heading out into the backyard. The morning air was cool and clean, the kind that made your lungs feel like they were being politely punched awake by nature. Dew clung to the grass. I dropped down and sat on it without a second thought. Cold, a little wet, but worth it.
I leaned back, hands in the grass, eyes staring at the sky.
My fuinjutsu was going well. Really well, actually. My kenjutsu? Acceptable, in Master Tetsuya's ever-encouraging words. My storm ninjutsu had already proved itself. And taijutsu? Solid. I wasn't quite at Genta's level, but I was close. Which wasn't bad, considering I started way later.
Even Takemura-san had said it.
"Kid, you're impressive."
That meant something. Coming from him? It really did.
I wondered who my teammates would be. Takemura-san had no idea. Said the list was locked tight. Figures. The Senju clan might be declining, but they'd fallen so far they couldn't even pull strings to sneak a peek at the team lists for poor old Genta or me.
I grinned, shaking my head.
I was ready.
Ready to take on missions. Ready to make a name for myself. My feats would be…Wait for it…Legendary.