The coffin in the hidden chamber creaked as its heavy lid slid open. From within rose a tall, broad-shouldered man, his movements slow but purposeful, like a predator awakening after a long hibernation. His long, tangled hair spilled across his pale face. He parted cracked lips, coughed, and spat a small lump of flesh into his palm. For the first time in years, he felt the taste of life and power return to him.
It was Uchiha Madara.
The world had believed him long dead. Every child in the shinobi nations had been taught that Madara, the strongest Uchiha, had fallen in battle against Senju Hashirama. Even his own clan had accepted that his story ended there. But no one imagined that Madara Uchiha, founder of Konohagakure and the man who had challenged the Hokage himself, could claw his way back from death.
A faint, bitter smile curved Madara's lips.
"Perfect timing," he murmured. "It seems my guess was right after all…"
He stood in the damp chamber carved deep into a remote mountain. Shadows clung to the stone walls like old bloodstains. Madara tilted his head back and chuckled softly. In his mind, he mocked the man he hated most.
"Even if I lost to Hashirama… that conniving, hypocritical Senju Tobirama wouldn't simply discard my body."
His left hand rose instinctively to his face, brushing the socket of his right eye. One eye remained sharp and crimson; the other was a pale, lifeless gray — the mark of blindness. This was the price of his return from death, a sacrifice he had calculated long ago.
"I set up the Izanagi and timed it perfectly," he muttered. "Sealed the jutsu into the Sharingan with a Transcription Seal… delayed its release… and it worked."
The Uchiha clan's forbidden techniques were carved into his very bones. Izanagi — the power to turn wounds, defeat, even death itself into mere illusions. Transcription Seal — the ability to store a jutsu within one's eyes, ready to trigger automatically at a set moment or under specific conditions, even after death.
Years before his final duel, Madara had prepared for the possibility of defeat. He had hidden his trump card behind layers of deception and patience. Even so, he felt a twinge of regret as his fingers brushed the blind eye.
"A pity," he whispered, "to lose the Sharingan Izuna entrusted to me."
The image of his younger brother flickered in his mind: loyal, bright-eyed Izuna, who had given up his own eyes for Madara's dream. That memory burned like salt in an open wound. But Madara straightened, forcing the grief away. He had no time for sentiment now.
His gaze dropped to the piece of flesh resting in his palm — pale, pulsing faintly with a vitality that defied death. The corner of his mouth curled upward.
"Hashirama's flesh…"
More than victory or revenge, this grisly prize had been his true goal all along. Only by battling his friend-turned-rival to the brink could he seize what he needed: the cells of the man known as the "God of Shinobi."
"My plan succeeded," Madara murmured. "With these cells… with this chakra… I can complete what I began."
He squeezed the fragment, feeling its warmth. The union of Senju vitality and Uchiha will — positive and negative forces colliding. From that collision, new power would be born.
"The interplay of opposites creates all things," he said softly. "By merging our chakra… perhaps the power to save the world can finally be mine."
He lifted his head, eyes glittering.
"Hashirama. Don't disappoint me."
Before leaving, another thought struck him. He formed a rapid string of hand seals.
"Shadow Clone Jutsu."
A muted bang echoed in the chamber, and a perfect double appeared beside him. The clone climbed back into the coffin, its eyes closing as it feigned death. Madara smirked at the grim tableau.
"Hmph. Better to leave a clone behind. If Tobirama or his dogs come sniffing around, the clone will witness it. When it disperses, I'll know everything they tried to do to my 'corpse.'"
In the Warring States era, Madara had survived more ambushes and betrayals than most men could imagine. He knew better than to trust a single layer of deception. This clone was his alarm, his safety net, his silent spy.
Satisfied, Madara turned and strode from the chamber. He needed somewhere quiet — somewhere he could transplant Hashirama's flesh into his own wounds and begin the transformation. But before that…
"Just once more," he whispered. "I'll see him one last time."
The battle at the Valley of the End had been their most ferocious. Madara had fallen, yes, but not without leaving his mark. Hashirama must have been gravely injured as well. Even with his absurd healing ability, he could not have recovered so quickly.
This last visit would be a farewell — to his former friend, to his former self. Because when next they met, Madara would no longer hesitate. The power of Senluo Wanxiang, the all-encompassing force he sought, would be his, and Hashirama Senju would die for real.
"Hashirama," Madara muttered, recalling the moment he'd felt the blade slide between his ribs. "I learned it from you."
He clenched his fists. "Brother, friend, even my own child — to fulfill my dream, I can kill anyone. That's the lesson you taught me. This darkness… I accept it."
A strange calm settled over him. Choice brought clarity. Resolve dulled pain. By the time he reached the edge of the hidden passage, his expression was serene again. He stepped into the cool night air and moved silently toward Konoha.
The village lay under heavy guard, but to Madara the patrols were like children playing soldier. Only Hashirama posed any real threat.
Yet he failed to notice one presence — a darkness older than himself, sliding along the shadows like spilled ink. Black Zetsu had been watching from the very moment the coffin opened.
A soft chuckle rose in the darkness. "Heh… this Madara really is clever."
Black Zetsu's golden eyes glinted. Even he, the will of Kaguya, had nearly been fooled by Madara's scheme. But now he felt something unfamiliar stir inside him — excitement. Hope.
"I didn't expect to see my plan's possibility in him," Black Zetsu hissed. "What a delightful surprise…"
He had recognized the shadow clone in the coffin immediately. He understood exactly what Madara intended. And he approved.
"Let me help you," he whispered. "Tobirama has Madara's 'body.' He'll be too busy trying to dissect it. I'll make sure something… inconvenient draws his attention away."
If no one suspected Madara's survival, then everything would proceed smoothly. The transplant. The awakening of new eyes. The eventual emergence of the Rinnegan — the power of the Sage of Six Paths.
"When that day comes," Black Zetsu murmured, "my true purpose will finally begin."
A tremor of laughter rippled through his inky form. For the first time in a thousand years, he felt as if he were meeting an old companion — someone who could actually advance his mother's will.
But then, ahead of him, Madara slowed. His footsteps became silent, deliberate. He slipped into a shadowed alley and vanished from view.
Black Zetsu froze. "Huh?"
Had he been discovered? Impossible. His stealth was perfect — a gift from his mother herself. Not even the Sage of Six Paths had sensed him before.
Then he saw what Madara had sensed: two figures walking down a moonlit street in Konoha, speaking in low tones. One was unmistakable — Senju Tobirama, the very man Black Zetsu had planned to manipulate.
The other… Black Zetsu barely glanced at first. To him, all shinobi besides Hashirama were insignificant. But something about the second figure drew his eye.
He looked closer. And for the first time in centuries, his mind went blank.
"No… this can't be…"
It was as if time folded over itself, as if he were staring through a window to the distant past. His voice trembled.
"Is this… a thousand years later? Why do I see… Emiya Shihara?"
His laughter died. The streets of Konoha, the plans he had nurtured, the puppet strings he had prepared — all of it faded into a haze. He stared, unblinking, at the stranger who should not exist.
For a creature born of patience and manipulation, it was a rare and unsettling thing: shock.
To Black Zetsu, it felt like seeing a friend who had been dead for a thousand years.
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