The morning air in Konoha was cool and faintly fragrant with pine. Compared to the images of prosperous cities one might imagine, this village felt rough and unpolished. Many of the houses were simple wooden frames hastily thrown together, their walls uneven, as though each family had built what they could with whatever time and resources they had. Yet beneath the rustic exteriors there was an energy—a hum of quiet determination—that bound the people of the village together.
Emiya Shihara, walking at Senju Tobirama's side, didn't seem to mind the village's plainness. Instead, he looked around with the curious eyes of a man who had been asleep for a thousand years. He studied the crooked eaves, the narrow alleys between houses, the children darting past with wooden practice kunai. It was not a grand city, but it was alive.
"This is the village we live in now," Tobirama said, his voice steady as he signaled to an ANBU squad to tighten patrols. The shinobi vanished onto nearby rooftops as quietly as shadows, while Tobirama turned back to Shihara. "It's been over a thousand years since your time, Emiya-sama."
"A thousand years?" Shihara's steps slowed. He stared at a cluster of low houses roofed with cedar shingles. "No wonder everything looks so different. The style of the houses, the layout of the streets… even the air feels different." A faint, almost wistful smile flickered across his face. "But if a thousand years have passed, then medical ninjutsu must be wonderfully advanced now. At least back then, there were no techniques for resurrecting the dead. The wisdom of later generations is truly astonishing."
Tobirama's expression turned subtle. "I'm… a little ashamed," he admitted at last, exhaling slowly. "The forbidden technique that revived you is not a medical one. It was created for battle. Even I was fortunate just to bring you back with your mind intact. The level of medical ninjutsu now is not so different from when you created it."
Shihara's expression darkened, the lines of his face stiffening. "So humans have used the power of chakra for fighting after all."
For a healer, war was the ultimate perversion of their art. Shihara, the man once hailed as the sage of medicine, had built his life on the idea that chakra was a means to heal and understand, not a weapon to wound. Tobirama, who had grown up hearing stories of Shihara's legend, felt a twinge of guilt at seeing the disappointment in his eyes. But he pressed on. The past was what it was; the present demanded acceptance.
"It's all about survival," Tobirama said firmly. "To live through the brutal Warring States era, we had to refine chakra for combat. Otherwise, our clan would have been erased."
He glanced sidelong at Shihara and softened his tone. "Thankfully, the war is over—at least for now. My elder brother, Senju Hashirama, used his power to end the chaos of the Warring States period. He forged a new system, one where ninja villages and nations coexist under mutual agreements instead of endless bloodshed. We invited other clans to join us here, to build Konoha as one community rather than as rivals."
Tobirama let the weight of his words settle before adding, "If my brother recovers from his wounds, his prestige will guarantee peace in the ninja world. And with peace, medical ninjutsu can finally flourish again."
Shihara said nothing at first. His gaze wandered over the dirt road ahead, where two women were tending a herb stall and an old man was mending a net. Peace, prestige, medical progress—how easily people wove these promises together, as if human nature would change simply because a single man declared it so. Yet he did not voice his doubt. Instead, he exhaled softly. "Don't worry," he said at last. "I have never failed my patients. And… your family name is Senju."
Tobirama kept his face neutral, but inwardly he was alert. Shihara had reacted to the Senju name with more than recognition—almost with relief. Did this saint from a thousand years ago have some hidden tie to their clan?
"Sir Emiya," Tobirama said carefully, "our clan has always kept your crystal coffin. Children of the Senju grow up on your stories. Is there some connection between you and our family?"
"There is… a little connection," Shihara replied, his voice low but steady. "If you are the descendants of Ashura…"
"Ashura?" Tobirama repeated, brows knitting.
"Yes." Shihara walked a few more steps before speaking again, almost as if recalling something long buried. "I had a friend named Ashura. He could not use the surname left by his father, so I created two surnames for his descendants to choose from."
He turned his head and met Tobirama's eyes. "One was Senju. The other was Uzumaki. It seems the descendants of Ashura have chosen the name Senju."
Tobirama stopped walking. His pupils widened. The revelation struck him like a thrown kunai. Those two surnames—Senju and Uzumaki—existed to this day. Their clans had always been distant relatives, bound by an unspoken tie. Now the origin was clear. The ancestor of both clans had been a single man: Ashura.
Shihara's words rolled on. "Both surnames were used. The Uzumaki clan are your distant relatives. Two branches of the same legacy."
Tobirama drew a long, controlled breath. "How unexpected," he said solemnly. "The names of both the Senju and the Uzumaki came from you, Lord Emiya."
He could already hear his brother's teasing if Hashirama learned Tobirama had resurrected someone who had personally known their ancestor. But Tobirama also recognized the opportunity. This was no ordinary elder; this was a man who had shaped the course of ninja history.
"Time flies and the world changes," Shihara murmured, his eyes reflecting a deep nostalgia. "I never thought the descendants of Ashura would still be here."
Tobirama stayed silent, sensing the weight behind the words. Shihara and Ashura must have been close friends. That could only work in Konoha's favor. Still, Tobirama's instincts held him back. No matter how noble a reputation someone had in legend, trust had to be earned in the present. He had learned that lesson from bitter experience—especially regarding the Uchiha clan.
Only days ago, Uchiha Madara had returned to Konoha after years of absence and unleashed the Nine-Tails upon the village, nearly killing Hashirama. Madara had died in the end, but the incident proved how dangerous a single individual could be. Though the remaining Uchiha might be innocent, Tobirama could not forget that within their bloodline lay the potential for another Madara.
After all, even Hashirama's gifts were unique among the Senju. It was not impossible that another monstrous genius could arise within the Uchiha clan—perhaps even someone worse than Madara. Their Sharingan was a bloodline limit born from chakra twisted by intense emotion, capable of evolving without warning. That unpredictability was a threat Tobirama would never ignore.
As these thoughts turned in his mind, Shihara spoke again, almost idly. "I wonder… are Indra's descendants still around?"
"Indra?" Tobirama prompted, unfamiliar with the name.
"Indra and Ashura were brothers," Shihara explained, slowing his pace as if stepping back into the past. "Indra and we held different beliefs. Ashura and I believed chakra should be a force for understanding and salvation. Indra believed it was a force for ruling the world. In the end, we parted ways."
He gazed up at the sky, lost in memory. "I don't even know the surnames of Indra's descendants. But they should have inherited a powerful bloodline limit—a chakra that manifests in their eyes, with techniques of great and terrible power."
"That eye technique is called the Sharingan," Tobirama said quietly.
Shihara turned to him in mild surprise. Tobirama's own expression had darkened. So Indra's descendants had indeed survived, and they were the Uchiha. The revelation reframed everything: the rivalry between clans, the cycles of conflict, even Madara's attack. The ancestor of the Uchiha had been the brother who sought domination. Compared to the righteous Ashura, Indra's legacy was a lineage of power born from ambition.
Even a healer as noble as Shihara had distanced himself from Indra's ideals. To Tobirama, it confirmed what he had always suspected: the Uchiha's danger was not just in their eyes but in their very heritage.
Shihara did not condemn Indra outright, but his sigh carried the weight of centuries. "I only hope that one day chakra will be used as Ashura wished—for understanding, not control."
Tobirama gave a short nod but said nothing. His own heart was already set on his policies. He would protect Konoha from any threat, even if it meant measures others called harsh.
As they neared the Hokage's residence, the air grew quieter, the bustle of the village fading behind them. Shihara's eyes lingered on the great tree at the compound's edge, its trunk wide enough for a dozen men to stand around. Even in this new era, nature endured.
"Come," Tobirama said at last. "My brother awaits. He is gravely injured. We need your help."
Shihara inclined his head, his expression unreadable. "Lead the way."
Behind his calm demeanor, something flickered deep within his eyes—an ember of power and purpose that had survived a thousand years. The world might have changed, but some missions endured.
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