Naruto found Tsunade standing on one of the training rooftops, her gaze lost in the vastness of the moonlit village. She didn't seem to be meditating, but rather containing a fury that made the very air around her vibrate. He landed a few feet from her without a sound.
She didn't turn. "What do you want, brat? You should be sleeping."
"I wanted to see if you were okay," he said, approaching cautiously. "You seemed... upset."
Tsunade let out a dry laugh, devoid of humor. "Upset? No, Naruto. Upset is what you feel when you lose a bet. This is different." She turned to face him, and in the moonlight, Naruto saw the icy certainty in her eyes. "You were right. About everything."
Naruto nodded slowly, his own expression hardening. There was no triumph on his face, only the grim confirmation of a fear. "So, it's him." It wasn't a question.
"He's hiding behind Rasa's face, but there's no mistaking that energy," Tsunade confirmed, crossing her arms. The movement tensed the muscles in her shoulders. "He'll deny it to the end, of course. He threatened war if Konoha made a single false move against him."
"He won't," Naruto said immediately, with a certainty that made Tsunade raise an eyebrow.
"And how are you so sure?"
"Because it's not his style," Naruto explained, his mind racing, connecting the dots that had been bothering him since the Forest of Death. "Think about it, Grandma Tsunade. He could have taken Sasuke in the forest. He had the perfect opportunity, yet he only tested his strength and provoked him. Why not take him then?"
Tsunade looked at him, listening intently. The question hung in the air between them.
"Because he doesn't want a prisoner," Naruto continued, his voice dropping to a conspiratorial whisper. "He wants a follower. He wants Sasuke to come to him of his own free will, seeking his power. And for that to happen, Sasuke has to feel like he has no other choice. He has to believe that the power Konoha can offer him isn't enough."
Understanding hit Tsunade. She saw the entire game board, the pieces moving in her mind. She completed Naruto's thought, her voice filled with a new and terrible comprehension. "The humiliation... The battle against Gaara. That unstable monster isn't just here as a weapon for the invasion."
"He's the instrument to break Sasuke," Naruto finished. "Orochimaru isn't going to let Sasuke win. He'll use Gaara to show Sasuke how weak he is, to crush him in front of the entire village. He'll humiliate him in such a way that the only way out he'll see is the power Orochimaru promised him. He'll seek him out after his crushing defeat."
Silence fell. The strategy was diabolical, twisted, and worst of all, it made perfect sense. It wasn't just an attack on the village; it was an attack on the soul of one of its ninja.
Tsunade looked at Naruto, and for the first time, she didn't see the loud, empty-headed brat. She saw someone who understood the darkness of things. She nodded, just once. "I have to talk to the old man. Stay here. Don't tell anyone about this. Not a soul, you understand?"
"Understood," Naruto replied without hesitation.
Tsunade vanished in a flicker, leaving Naruto alone on the rooftop.
The balcony door to the Hokage's office slammed open. Hiruzen Sarutobi, who had been standing by his desk, turned slowly. The pipe in his hand trembled almost imperceptibly. The look on Tsunade's face was all he needed to see.
"Your face tells me everything," he said, his voice barely a tired whisper.
"It was him, sensei." Tsunade's voice shattered the tense silence. She entered and slid the door shut behind her. The soft moonlight followed her, casting a formidable silhouette on the wooden floor. "There's no doubt."
Hiruzen closed his eyes, a gesture of profound exhaustion. He set the pipe down on the desk. "What have you done, Tsunade?" His voice wasn't a reprimand, but the murmur of a man watching his worst nightmare materialize before him.
"I did what had to be done," she replied, her voice vibrating with contained energy. "I went to his quarters. I confronted him."
"Directly. Of course you did," Hiruzen sighed, rubbing his temples. "Subtlety was never your strong suit, not even as a child."
"Subtlety is for diplomats, not for doctors cutting out a cancer," Tsunade snapped. She approached the desk, her face a mask of contained fury and absolute certainty. "He didn't admit it, of course. The coward hid behind Rasa's face, threatening war if I kept pressing. But I saw it. Beneath the transformation, beneath the layers of fake chakra... I saw his eyes. Those snake eyes. There's no hiding that evil, that corruption. It was Orochimaru."
The tension in the room became palpable. The suspicion Hiruzen had tried to rationalize had solidified into a terrifying fact. His former student wasn't just plotting against Konoha; he was inside Konoha. Not hiding in the shadows, but walking in broad daylight, protected by the title of a Kage whom he had, in all likelihood, murdered and impersonated.
"You've shown him our hand, Tsunade," Hiruzen said, his voice regaining some of its Kage-like firmness. He straightened up, the posture of the village leader replacing the tired old man. "Now he knows that we know. We've lost the element of surprise. He might accelerate his plan. He could attack tonight."
"He won't," she contradicted with unshakable confidence. "He's too arrogant. He thinks that even if we know, we're too weak or too bound by politics to act. My visit didn't scare him, sensei. It infuriated him. It made it a personal challenge. He'll go through with his invasion plan during the finals because he wants the spectacle. He wants to see this village burn while the world watches. He wants to humiliate you."
Hiruzen walked to the large window overlooking the sleeping village. Below, the lights of Konoha flickered, spread out as far as the eye could see. So many innocent lives, completely unaware of the serpent coiling in their heart.
"You've forced a decision," he murmured, more to himself than to her. "We can no longer just watch and wait. To act openly is war. To not act is suicide." He turned, his aged face hardened with a steely resolve he hadn't shown in years. "So, we will act in the shadows."
He struck a small gong on his desk. The low, resonant sound seemed to be absorbed by the walls. Less than a second later, a figure in a cat mask and an ANBU uniform knelt in the center of the room, having appeared without the slightest sound.
"Lord Hokage."
"Summon an emergency council. Only the elders, Homura and Koharu. And bring Captain Hatake. Use the Night Crow protocol. Absolute silence. No one is to know of this meeting. No one."
"Understood, Lord Hokage."
The ANBU vanished as silently as he had arrived. Tsunade crossed her arms, nodding in approval.
"What are you planning to do, sensei?" she asked.
"Tonight," Hiruzen replied, his gaze lost on the village lights, "we will decide the fate of Konoha."
The wait was short but filled with a palpable tension. Hiruzen remained standing by his window, a sentinel watching over his city.
The first to arrive were the councilors. Homura Mitokado and Koharu Utatane entered together, their faces stern and wrinkled by decades of service. They were not warriors, but politicians, the bureaucratic pillars that upheld the village's structure. Their gazes fell first on the Hokage and then on Tsunade, a mixture of surprise and disapproval in their eyes.
"Hiruzen," Koharu began, her voice as sharp as ever, "what is the meaning of this meeting in the middle of the night? The security for the exams should be the priority, not secret gatherings." Her gaze fixed on Tsunade. "And with her here... Has something happened?"
"Something that requires your presence, Koharu," Hiruzen answered calmly, offering no further explanation.
Before the councilwoman could protest, the final piece of the puzzle arrived. Kakashi appeared in the center of the room in a swirl of leaves. His posture was relaxed, but his single visible eye was sharp and alert, taking in the scene: the Hokage, the legendary Sannin, the two most powerful councilors. He understood instantly that he hadn't been summoned to discuss his surveillance progress on Sasuke.
"You summoned me, Lord Hokage," he said, his calm voice hiding the sudden quickening of his pulse.
"Thank you for coming, Kakashi," Hiruzen said, finally turning to face his small war council. The expression on his face erased any lingering questions about the gravity of the situation. "What I am about to say does not leave this room. Revealing it will be considered treason of the highest order. Understood?"
There was a murmur of assent.
"Our village is facing the gravest threat since the Kyuubi's attack," Hiruzen began, his voice resonating with an authority that silenced the councilors. "A threat that currently resides within our walls, under the guise of an ally."
He recounted the situation with concise and brutal precision. The initial suspicion, Tsunade's confirmation, and finally, the inescapable conclusion: Orochimaru was posing as the Fourth Kazekage and planned to use the Chūnin Exams as a cover for a full-scale invasion, in collusion with the Sand Village itself.
The silence that followed his revelation was deep, heavy, and cold. Homura adjusted his glasses, his face pale. It was Koharu, as always, who broke the silence, her fury aimed directly at Tsunade.
"This is a disaster!" she hissed, her eyes locked on the Sannin. "Confronting a Kage, with no proof other than your 'instinct'! You've pushed the village to the brink of war with your recklessness, Tsunade! You've always been this impulsive, ever since you were a girl!"
"Recklessness?" Tsunade retorted, taking a step forward, her own anger simmering. "Recklessness was letting that snake escape in the first place, Koharu! Recklessness is sitting around debating politics while he plans our annihilation from a luxury suite paid for with our taxes! Stop talking about diplomacy! Orochimaru is using the Kazekage's face as a human shield to walk freely through our village! The war isn't 'on the brink,' it's already at our doorstep!"
"And your accusation could be the very reason it comes knocking!" Homura countered, his voice strained with pragmatism. "If Suna learns of this suspicion, even if it's false, they will withdraw their ninja and a full-scale war will erupt. If they don't find out and we act against the Kazekage, we will be seen as the aggressors by the entire shinobi world. We are in an untenable position, Hiruzen. We can't win!"
"Homura is right," Koharu added. "We cannot act. Our hands are tied by treaties and politics."
"Then we'll cut off our hands if we have to," Hiruzen said, his voice calming the escalating dispute. The Hokage looked at the silent figure in the group. "Kakashi. You've heard the situation. As one of our most experienced Jōnin, I want your tactical assessment. No politics. No emotions. Just the facts."
Kakashi, who had remained motionless, processing every word, looked up. His single visible eye was cold and calculating.
"The situation is a strategic nightmare," he stated, his calm, analytical voice cutting through the emotion in the room. Everyone looked at him. "Orochimaru has chosen the perfect time and place. The exams force us to lower our guard and fill the village with potential enemies. The presence of foreign dignitaries prevents us from carrying out an evacuation or an open military mobilization without causing a panic and a massive international incident."
He paused, letting the reality of his words sink in. "His primary weapon is obvious: the Sand's jinchuriki, Gaara. He's not just a powerful ninja; he's a weapon of psychological and literal mass destruction. Unleashing him in the packed stadium would create chaos that no ANBU force could contain instantly. The stampede alone would cause hundreds of civilian casualties before the first kunai is even thrown."
His gaze hardened. "The objective isn't a simple battle. He wants to destroy the symbol of our strength, kill the Hokage and the clan leaders in a single blow, while the entire world watches. He wants to sow chaos and then take what he came for in the midst of the confusion. It's a brilliant plan. And if we don't act with precision, it's nearly foolproof."
Kakashi's words, devoid of emotion, were more terrifying than any of Tsunade's outbursts. They painted a picture of almost certain defeat.
"So, what do we do?" Homura asked, his voice barely a whisper. "Do we surrender? Cancel the exams? Evacuate in secret?"
"No," Hiruzen said with a firmness that surprised everyone. "The Chūnin Exams will continue as scheduled."
"Hiruzen, that's suicide!" Koharu exclaimed, slamming her palm on the table. "Have you lost your mind?"
"No. It's our bait," the Hokage explained, his gaze sweeping over every face in the room. "Canceling the exams now would confirm his suspicions, and we would lose control of the situation. He could decide to attack immediately, on his own terms, anywhere in the village. If we proceed, he believes he still has the advantage. He'll follow his script. And that allows us to prepare. We will control the battlefield because he is handing it to us on a silver platter."
A bold and terribly risky plan began to form.
"We will not be sitting idle," Hiruzen continued. "Starting tomorrow, the village will enter a Level One silent alert. All available Jōnin and Chūnin not directly involved in the exams will be assigned to rapid-response positions, disguised as civilians in the crowd. We will deploy ANBU sealing squads on the rooftops surrounding the stadium. Genma, Raidō, and the rest of my guard will form an invisible inner perimeter. We will turn that stadium into a cage."
"A cage can trap the hunter, but also the prey," Kakashi pointed out with cold logic. "The civilian population will still be at risk. If Gaara fully transforms, the stadium walls won't hold him."
"A calculated risk," Tsunade admitted, understanding and approving of the Hokage's logic. "It's better to fight in a cage we've prepared than across the entire village. We can minimize casualties if we control where the fight begins."
Hiruzen nodded. "Exactly." He leaned back in his chair, the weight of the world on his shoulders. "The plan is decided. We will maintain appearances and prepare for war."
The council was dismissed. The elders left, their faces grim, reluctantly accepting the only dangerous option they had. Only Hiruzen, Tsunade, and Kakashi remained in the office. The atmosphere, while still tense, became more personal.
"Kakashi," the Hokage said, his tone softer now. "Your role in this will be the most difficult of all."
Kakashi waited in silence, his gaze fixed on the Hokage.
"Your primary task is the one you're already assigned: prepare Sasuke Uchiha for the finals," Hiruzen said. "Orochimaru's main weapon in the stadium will be Gaara. From what we've seen, and from what the Sand's reports tell us, Sasuke—with his Sharingan and his speed—is our best and perhaps only chance to neutralize Gaara in a one-on-one fight before he can unleash his full power."
Hiruzen paused, letting the weight of the next order settle in the room.
"Your second mission, Kakashi, is S-Rank, classified beyond even the ANBU. You are to monitor Sasuke Uchiha. And you have the authority to make the final decision regarding him."
Kakashi's eye narrowed. "The final decision, sir?" The implicit meaning was clear.
"Don't misunderstand," Tsunade clarified, stepping in harshly. "We know the boy is loyal to Konoha. But he's vulnerable. Orochimaru wouldn't risk this much just to destroy the village. His real prize, his obsession since he defected, has been the Sharingan. He wants Sasuke's body. He wants him as his next vessel."
Even though Kakashi already knew it, it was an uncomfortable thought for him. This wasn't just an invasion. It was a personal kidnapping mission, with the destruction of Konoha as a mere diversion.
"Sasuke's defeat at Gaara's hands, if it happens, won't just be a defeat," Hiruzen continued. "It will be the humiliation Orochimaru has orchestrated to break his spirit. Sasuke's desperation for power, his hatred for his brother... all of it makes him the perfect target for Orochimaru's temptation. We cannot, under any circumstances, allow him to fall into his hands."
Kakashi had to push his student to the limit of his power, knowing that every step he took toward strength could also be a step toward the darkness Orochimaru offered. He had to turn him into a weapon sharp enough to defeat a monster, while making sure that weapon didn't turn against them. If he saw the slightest sign that Sasuke was wavering, that Orochimaru's temptation was too strong... he had to eliminate the threat. He had to eliminate his own student.
He remembered his sensei's face. The promise he made to protect the village, his comrades. A promise he felt he had broken so many times.
"You have less than a week, Kakashi," Hiruzen said, his voice grave. "Train him. Prepare him. Make him the ninja we need. But watch him. If you believe there is any chance he will choose Orochimaru's path, if his thirst for power eclipses his loyalty to the village... you must stop him. Permanently."
"Understood, Lord Hokage," Kakashi said, his voice a firm murmur. There was no hesitation. Only the acceptance of a heavy burden.
"Good. You are dismissed," Hiruzen concluded.
Kakashi vanished, leaving the two Sannin and the Hokage alone once more.
Outside, on the tower roof, Kakashi reappeared. The night air was cold. He gazed at the sleeping village, a maze of lights and shadows. Down below, somewhere, was his student, likely training to the point of exhaustion, consumed by demons Kakashi knew all too well.
He had less than a week to forge a hero out of an avenger. And if he failed, he would have to become his executioner.