"Who do you think you're looking down on, Sarutobi?!" Danzo's voice was a low snarl, fraying at the edges. He shot to his feet, the wooden legs of his chair scraping harshly against the floor. The impulse to flip the table surged through him, a physical manifestation of his boiling frustration, but a sliver of ingrained deference to the office of the Hokage held him back. The table remained upright. "There is no one in Konoha more qualified for ideological reinforcent and guidance than I am!"
"I am the Hokage," Hiruzen stated, his tone flat and final, leaving no room for debate. "I have the final say."
He let the declaration hang for a beat before continuing, his gaze turning analytical, probing. "Furthermore, there is another matter. I have noticed an… unusual level of interest from you regarding the candidate for the new Nine-Tails Jinchuriki. Do you have intentions there? Speak them now. If I later discover any untoward actions directed at the vessel of the Nine-Tails…"
Sarutobi didn't finish the threat. He didn't need to. The calm, unwavering pressure in his eyes was threat enough—the promise of consequences from the most powerful shinobi in the village.
Danzo's face, already dark, seed to absorb the remaining light in the room. How? The plan to secure influence over the new Jinchuriki—a re Uzumaki orphan, so much more malleable than the formidable, untouchable Mito-sama—had been a silent calculus in the deepest recesses of his mind. He had barely begun to move pieces into place. To have it laid bare here… Was there a leak in Root? Impossible. His organization was a sealed vault. Unless… the infiltration went both ways. Could ANBU have turned one of his? No, the old cigarette-smoker wasn't that cunning. Was he?
If Hiruzen could have heard Danzo's internal turmoil, a grimly satisfied smile might have touched his lips. You fear my ANBU, Danzo, but you forget who they ultimately serve. A double agent is a simple tool for a Hokage who needs to know everything.
"Ahem." Koharu Utatane cleared her throat deliberately, breaking the tense stare-down. "Danzo, control your temper. To even contemplate ddling with the Nine-Tails vessel… Mito-sama still draws breath. Your ambitions have limits."
Homura Mitokado nodded slowly from his seat, his expression grave. "Such matters are the Hokage's prerogative alone. You would do well to rember your place, Danzo. Do not overstep."
Danzo's jaw tightened. The alignnt was clear, the walls closing in. Three against one.
He swallowed his imdiate retort, the taste of copper and bitterness on his tongue. But he could not let the larger issue go. "Setting aside the Jinchuriki," he forced out, his voice grating, "what of the boy Ragnar? What happens when his power grows further? When he surpasses even the White Fang?"
He leaned forward, his single eye boring into Hiruzen's. "His rate of growth is a statistical anomaly. It has shattered every expectation we have ever held for a shinobi. If he becos truly uncontrollable, what then? Do you think the shadow of Uchiha Madara is so easily forgotten? He could beco a calamity unto himself!"
"Enough!" Hiruzen's voice cracked through the room like a whip. The placid Hokage was gone, replaced by a man whose will had shaped the village for decades. "To block a river only forces it to find new, destructive paths. To guide its flow is the duty of leadership. Your solution is born of fear, Danzo, not wisdom."
He took a slow breath, reasserting his calm, but the firmness remained absolute. "Your perspective is noted. Your attitude, however, requires adjustnt."
To be chastised like this, in front of their peers—to have his lifelong dedication to Konoha's security frad as re fear—was an acid burn on Danzo's pride. A hot wave of righteous indignation and profound unfairness washed over him. He opened his mouth to retort. "I—"
But Hiruzen was already moving, as if Danzo's objection was an irrelevant insect to be waved away. "The council has reached its consensus. We will proceed with a asured and welcoming hand. This eting is adjourned."
With that, Koharu and Homura rose smoothly and exited, their steps echoing a finality. Hiruzen followed, hands clasped behind his back, leaving for the quiet solace of his office and a pipe to steady his nerves.
"…"
Snap.
The sound of Danzo's knuckles popping was loud in the sudden emptiness. He sat alone in the silent council chamber, stunned. Consensus? What consensus? When had he agreed to anything? Was it all just a formality, a play where his part was to be the dismissed antagonist?
Finally, with a wordless roar of fury, he slamd his palm down on the sturdy conference table, the impact shuddering through the wood. "Sarutobi…" he whispered to the empty air, the na a curse and a promise. "You will regret this."
His departure from the room was a solitary march, his silhouette against the dimming hallway light looking not powerful, but strangely isolated.
In his office, Hiruzen Sarutobi stood before the large window, watching the village below bathed in the amber glow of sunset. The peaceful scene—children running ho, smoke rising from chimneys, the distant hum of life—clashed violently with the turmoil in his heart.
On ordinary matters, he could afford to let Danzo's obstinacy slide. But when it touched the foundational pillars of Konoha—its ultimate weapon and its most dangerous new talent—there was no room for compromise. He had leveraged the full weight of his authority, the accumulated respect of a lifeti as Hokage, to silence him.
And Danzo's fears were not entirely without rit. Hiruzen knew this. The thought had crossed his own mind in the quietest, most secret hours of the night. What if Ragnar becos another Madara?
But Danzo's thodology was poison. It created the very enemies it sought to prevent. Even if Ragnar bore no initial ill will, to be hunted, dissected, and controlled by Root would inevitably breed a hatred that could consu the village.
Hiruzen's calculus was different. Ragnar had no reason to turn on Konoha. The village had saved him, taught him, given him a ho. Bonds were forming—with Okamoto-sensei from the Academy, with Tsunade who saw him as a brother, with Sakumo who ntored him, with Might Dai who fought beside him, with Nawaki who idolized him. These ties were not chains, but roots. They would anchor him to the village, make its safety his own.
Overall, the potential benefit Ragnar represented—a shield of unimaginable strength for Konoha—far outweighed the abstract risk.
And as for the Nine-Tails Jinchuriki… that was the inviolable line. Danzo could sche in the shadows over many things, but the stability of the Tailed Beast was the bedrock upon which the village's safety rested. That, he would not tolerate.
"Such trying tis," Hiruzen sighed, the smoke from his pipe curling into a weary cloud. Why could Danzo not see that his heavy-handedness was itself a threat to the village's unity? The burden of balancing these volatile forces, of diating between light and shadow, was a weariness that settled deep in his bones.
On the battlefields of the Land of Rain, the climactic clash between the three great villages had drawn the gaze of the entire shinobi world. Even the non-participants—Kumogakure across the mountains, Kirigakure across the seas—watched with intense, calculating interest.
When the result of that battle swept across the continents, carried by fast riders and ssenger birds, it did not rely cause a stir. It sent a seismic shock through the very foundations of the ninja world's understanding of power.
The na Rakshasa was whispered. The na Ragnar was shouted.
A single shinobi, barely more than a child, had not just influenced a battle, but had decided a war. He had carved his na into history with fire and lightning, and in doing so, had beco a new axis around which fear and speculation would now rotate.
In the Konoha forward camp in the Land of Rain, a certain exuberant young Senju was holding court.
"You know, I've got a boss. A real big brother!" Senju Nawaki declared, chest puffed out, to a group of weary but intrigued chunin. "One's ANBU, the Rakshasa! The other's the Furious Buddha—Ragnar! You know, the one who cleaned the whole battlefield!"
In his mind, the connection was flawless. Tsunade-nee had claid Ragnar as her little brother. Therefore, Ragnar was his big brother. He was now under the dual patronage of the two most terrifyingly powerful individuals associated with Konoha. His future back in the village was a glorious vision of awe-struck peers and limitless admiration.
"Idiot!"
A familiar, potent fist connected with the top of his skull. Tsunade lood over him, her brow furrowed in a mix of exasperation and concern. "Stop running your mouth and go train! Now!"
The circle of listeners evaporated at her appearance, scattering like leaves in a gale. The Legendary Sucker's reputation for bone-breaking corrections was its own form of Conqueror's Haki.
Rubbing his head, Nawaki didn't look chastised, but grinned up at her with pure, undiluted enthusiasm. "Nee-chan! You ca to see !"
"I ca to stop you from making a fool of yourself," Tsunade grumbled, though her eyes softened slightly. "Don't waste your ti on nonsense."
"But it's not nonsense!" Nawaki insisted, his eyes shining. "I'm serious! I want to officially recognize Ragnar-nii as my big brother! You have to help !"
Tsunade could only stare at him, then press a hand to her forehead with a deep, soul-weary sigh. This guy... honestly. Could he make this any more complicated?
(End of Chapter)
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