"Father… you were looking for me?"
Sarutobi Shinnosuke stepped hesitantly into the dimly lit temporary Hokage Office. The candlelight wavered faintly against the wooden walls, throwing Hiruzen Sarutobi's silhouette across the room. The old man sat silently at the desk, posture rigid, his face carved with shadows of worry and weariness.
The heaviness in the room pressed against Shinnosuke's chest, and his voice came out thin, tinged with unease.
Hiruzen slowly lifted his head, his sharp, weary eyes locking onto his son. He studied Shinnosuke in silence for several heartbeats, as though weighing not only his words but his very soul.
Finally, in a voice that was calm, measured, and almost too controlled, he asked:
"The Sharingan from Fugaku… you transplanted it, didn't you?"
The question struck Shinnosuke like a blade to the gut. His composure cracked, and his heartbeat thundered in his ears. A wave of fear—shame, even—rushed through him.
"F-Father, I… I only… I only wanted to help you…" he stammered, the words tumbling out like a plea.
His mind raced back to that day. He had been in the Hokage Office, sorting through the documents left behind after Fugaku's death. His original intent was only to move the container holding the Sharingan, to keep it out of sight, away from suspicion.
But when his hand touched the glass, something had stirred within him. A whisper, cold and persistent, threaded into his thoughts.
The Sarutobi clan has been in decline for too long… The village is slipping beyond your father's control… And you, the eldest son, will inherit nothing but weakness unless you take it. Strength. Power. Responsibility.
The voice had burrowed into his heart like a parasite, repeating itself until reason faltered. Almost as if possessed, Shinnosuke had yielded. He had taken the eye, sought help, and gone through with the transplant.
"…At that moment," Shinnosuke whispered now, trembling, "I told myself—the clan needed strength. That I had to shoulder that burden, or the Sarutobi name would fade into nothing…"
Hiruzen's face did not soften. His eyes remained fixed and unreadable, his voice quiet but heavy with meaning.
"Then… you went to Kakashi for help, didn't you?"
Shinnosuke froze, then nodded, his shame deepening. He recounted everything—his request to Kakashi, Kakashi's hesitation, the silence that followed. He laid it all bare before his father, hoping that honesty would ease the weight on his conscience.
When he finished, his eyes lifted, searching for judgment.
But Hiruzen merely exhaled slowly, nodding once. No anger. No scolding. Just a quiet, aching acceptance.
"It was… my weakness," Hiruzen murmured at last, his voice low, almost distant. "My weakness led you here."
"Father!" Shinnosuke's protest broke, his voice raw. "This was my decision, not yours! Don't—don't take the blame—"
But Hiruzen shook his head. His expression was calm, yet his eyes carried the weight of storms.
"You do not understand. That eye… even in its jar, it tempted me as well. Again and again, I heard its whisper urging me to wield it, to command its power. I resisted… but each hesitation left a crack. Perhaps… that is where Danzo was stronger than me. More decisive."
His words fell heavy in the silence.
Then, almost bitterly, he added, "And yet, what has that decisiveness brought him? Rebellion. Madness."
The air grew colder as Hiruzen continued, his voice sinking lower.
"When Tobirama-sensei returned… when Danzo finally revealed his treachery… it was all too much at once. And in that chaos, you transplanted the eye. Perhaps it was inevitable."
Shinnosuke's hands trembled at his sides. "Then… should I have it removed?"
But Hiruzen did not answer immediately. His eyes clouded, as though staring past his son into darker horizons.
"I cannot say. Removing it may not end its corruption. And Tobirama… if he learned of this, I cannot predict what he would decide. My greatest fear is not only for you, Shinnosuke, but for the village itself."
When Kakashi's name surfaced, Hiruzen's expression twisted faintly, complicated and unreadable. He respected the boy, trusted his will—but even that trust was laced with unease. The stillness Kakashi wore like armor might itself be the most dangerous sign of all.
Sometimes, when a man shows no cracks… that is the greatest warning.
Yet despite his doubts, Hiruzen clung to a stubborn ember of hope.
"Kakashi carries the will of a Hokage," he whispered to himself. "If he can break free from this curse, then perhaps Konoha still has a future."
But what of himself? Hiruzen's hands tightened around the edge of his desk.
He had already made his choice.
When the storm reached its peak, when the world demanded a sacrifice, he would offer his own life. Only through his death could the simmering chaos left by the Uchiha massacre and the present disasters be appeased.
For Tobirama-sensei, too—when his role was complete, he must return to the Pure Land. That, Hiruzen thought grimly, would be the final service he could render his teacher.
The so-called full part of his role.
His gaze hardened. He looked at his son—his eldest, his pride, his mistake, his hope.
"Shinnosuke." His voice was firm, carrying the weight of command. "For a time, you will go to the Daimyō's mansion. You will take Asuma's place there."
Shinnosuke stiffened, his chest tightening. "Father… are you… are you planning to—"
"Enough." Hiruzen's hand rose, silencing him.
"This is your duty, as the eldest son of the Sarutobi clan. At the Daimyō's side, you will steady the Land of Fire, safeguard its core. That is how you will serve the clan… and Konoha."
His tone softened only slightly at the end, though his eyes betrayed the true reason. By sending Shinnosuke away, he would remove him from Tobirama's scrutiny. He would keep him safe.
It was both exile and protection.
Shinnosuke lowered his head, the weight of both shame and duty pressing on his shoulders. "…Yes, Father."
"Yes, Father. I understand."
Shinnosuke bowed, his voice steady despite the turmoil within.
Hiruzen's stern gaze softened. A faint sigh left his lips as he leaned back slightly, the heavy mantle of Hokage pressing on his shoulders less for just a moment.
He nodded, his expression loosening into something gentler.
"Remember this, Shinnosuke," he said quietly. "The Sharingan may hold great power, but it is only the heart's resilience that can master it. Never forget—strength without spirit is nothing but ruin."
His tone carried both guidance and plea, as if he were not only instructing his son but convincing himself as well.
"I believe in you. And I believe in Kakashi. The two of you… you will find a way to break free of that curse. So long as the Will of Fire endures, Konoha will always have a future."
The words trailed off, lingering in the air like smoke. They sounded less like certainty and more like a prayer whispered to fate itself.
"Yes, Father!" Shinnosuke replied, his voice louder this time, full of earnestness that bordered on desperation.
He bowed again and turned to leave. The office door closed softly behind him.
For a long while, Hiruzen sat motionless, his old eyes fixed on the fading shadows of his son's departure. Then, with a heavy breath, he reached into a drawer and withdrew his crystal ball.
Mist shimmered within the orb before clearing, painting a new scene before Hiruzen's weary eyes.
A quiet stream wound its way through a meadow, its surface catching the gold of the setting sun. The light spilled across the clearing, dyeing the world in warm hues of amber and crimson.
By the water's edge, Naruto skipped along the stones, laughing, his boundless energy filling the air. His joy was unrestrained, pure—so bright it seemed untouched by the darkness threatening the shinobi world.
A few feet away, Kakashi sat in the grass, leaning back on his palms, watching the boy with a stillness uncharacteristic of him. Yet in that stillness there was no coldness, only quiet warmth.
Hiruzen's eyes softened as he observed the small shift in Kakashi's demeanor: the subtle curve of his visible eye, the corners of his masked mouth lifting ever so slightly.
Even he… even he is moved by Naruto's light.
Naruto suddenly stopped, his bright gaze snapping toward Kakashi. Then, with a burst of enthusiasm, he dashed over, his small hands clenched into eager fists.
"Kakashi-nii! Can you teach me ninjutsu?"
Kakashi blinked, tilting his head in mild surprise. "Ninjutsu? Why the sudden interest?"
Naruto puffed out his chest proudly, his tiny face scrunched into seriousness far too big for his age.
"Because—I want to become strong! I want to learn all kinds of amazing jutsu! I'll be a great ninja, just like you! Just like Hokage-Jiji!"
The determination blazing in the boy's wide blue eyes pierced straight through the crystal ball, straight into Hiruzen's heart. His lips trembled slightly, and for the first time in days, a fragile warmth replaced the iron weight in his chest.
Kakashi stared at Naruto for a moment longer, his visible eye softening. Then, with a small chuckle muffled behind his mask, he reached out and ruffled the boy's wild hair.
"Alright," he said, voice laced with unspoken affection. "If you're that determined, then I'll teach you something powerful."
Naruto's whole body lit up like a lantern. "Really?! That's great!"
He leapt into the air, punching the sky, his laughter bubbling out in waves. His joy was so raw, so earnest, that it painted the entire meadow brighter than the setting sun itself.
Hiruzen's old lips curved faintly as he watched the scene. Relief, pride, and sorrow swirled within him.
Yes… This child… this boy truly is Konoha's future.
And yet, quietly in the pit of his heart, the Third Hokage wondered:
What ninjutsu would Kakashi choose to teach Naruto?
Would it be something simple, or something that would one day shape the path of a boy destined for greatness?
The answer eluded him, but as the crystal ball glowed softly in the dim Hokage Office, Hiruzen allowed himself one rare, fleeting comfort:
Hope.