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Chapter 1 - Prologue — Snow in a Shadowed World

Act 1 A Sun in Frozen Ground

The Third Great Ninja War did not end with peace.

It ended with survivors.

The battlefield lay silent beneath a gray sky, broken weapons half-buried in mud and frost. Smoke clung low to the ground, carrying the smell of blood and burnt chakra. Somewhere far away, the war was already moving on—but here, it had paused just long enough to leave its mark.

Nara Shigen should have died there.

The ambush had been Mist-made: precise, merciless, designed to leave no witnesses. His shadow techniques had bought him minutes at best. A kunai had torn through his side, numbing his chakra network before pain could even register. By the time the fog lifted, Shigen was on his knees, vision dimming, convinced that the Nara clan would record his name as another quiet loss.

That was when the temperature dropped.

Not suddenly—deliberately.

The mist crystallized midair, frost crawling across the battlefield like a living thing. Ice formed not as a weapon, but as a wall, separating hunter-nin from their prey. The air itself seemed to hesitate.

A woman stepped through the frozen fog.

Her hair was pale as winter moonlight, her eyes calm in a way that did not belong on a battlefield. Snow gathered at her feet without melting. She did not look like a soldier.

She looked like a decision.

"Don't move," she said, kneeling beside him. Her voice was steady, almost gentle. "Your shadow bought you time. Don't waste it."

Her hands glowed faintly blue as she pressed them to his wound. The ice that should have killed him instead stabilized the damage, sealing blood vessels, preserving what chakra remained. It was not healing the way medics healed—it was preservation, a refusal to let death claim what it thought was already won.

Shigen stared at her, breath shallow. "Yuki… clan?"

Her expression flickered, just for a moment.

"Yes."

That single word carried weight. Fear. History. A truth most shinobi pretended had already been erased.

The Mist hunter-nin regrouped quickly. They always did. The ice walls shattered under coordinated strikes, and the sound of pursuit echoed through the frozen trees.

The woman stood.

"You can walk," she said, helping him to his feet. "Barely. Follow my shadow, not yours."

Shigen realized then—this wasn't rescue by chance.

She had been moving through the war the way winter moved through the world: quietly, inevitably, and with no promise of mercy for those who chased her.

As they fled into the forest, ice sealing their tracks behind them, Shigen understood something that would not leave him for the rest of his life:

The war had already decided its winners.

But it was still deciding what it would destroy.

And somewhere, far from battlefields and politics, fate was already preparing the child who would inherit both shadow and snow.

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