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Sunlight never reached the circular chamber beneath the Kazekage's residence. The council members sat in the glow of brass lamps, their faces half-shadowed, half-illuminated against the backdrop of sandstone walls etched with the history of Sunagakure. Eighteen days had passed since their failed invasion of the Hidden Leaf—a catastrophe they now pinned entirely on Orochimaru's deception after the discovery of their Fourth Kazekage's mutilated corpse in the desert wastes.
The council table, carved from a single massive piece of desert stone, bore the weight of scrolls, maps, and the invisible burden of a village at its most vulnerable. Eight council members, two elders, and the jonin commander—their faces grim in the amber light, their shoulders tense beneath ceremonial robes and tactical vests.
"The diplomatic envoys from the Hidden Stone arrived this morning," Councillor Joseki announced, his weathered face stern in the dim lamplight. He adjusted the traditional head wrap that marked him as a senior advisor, the fabric rustling in the chamber's silence. "They've expressed 'concerns' about the Leaf's growing collection of Jinchuriki."
The statement hung in the air for a moment before Elder Chiyo responded. Her diminutive figure belied decades of legendary status as both puppeteer and poison master. Age had bent her spine but not her razor-sharp mind.
"How convenient," she said before snorting. The sound echoed off the chamber walls, mingling with the soft hiss of the oil lamps. "The Fence-Sitter discovers his conscience precisely when it aligns with his interests."
Baki stood at attention near the empty Kazekage's seat—a throne-like chair that dominated the chamber's northern edge. The vacancy served as a constant reminder of their precarious position; a village without its shadow. The cloth covering half his face concealed his expression, but the tension in his shoulders was unmistakable.
"Convenient or not," he interjected, "this makes four villages now that have formally questioned the Leaf's actions regarding Jinchuriki. Not to mention that the Hidden Waterfall's accusations regarding their missing Jinchuriki have gained significant traction throughout the elemental nations."
The subtle scratching of a desert scorpion against stone somewhere in the walls punctuated his words. Even the creatures of the Sand seemed restless these days.
Councillor Yura leaned forward, the movement causing his chair to scrape against the floor. His features, sharper than most Suna natives, caught the lamplight in a way that emphasised the calculating gleam in his eyes. The emblem of the Sand etched into his forehead protector gleamed as he shifted position.
"And we've made sure to emphasise that our Gaara was taken captive rather than killed—despite him being their enemy," he said, his voice carrying an undercurrent of satisfaction. "It raises questions about their intentions. Our messengers to the Daimyo have been particularly effective in planting these seeds of doubt."
Several council members nodded in agreement. Their strategy had been multi-pronged—official diplomatic protests combined with whisper campaigns and carefully orchestrated "leaks" of information to the various lords.
"The rumours are serving their purpose," Elder Ebizo noted quietly from his position beside his sister. His age-spotted hands rested on the table, steadier than his appearance would suggest. He adjusted his spectacles, peering over them at the assembled council. "The Leaf's international standing is deteriorating, and Danzo's appointment hasn't helped matters. Few have forgotten his reputation."
The mention of the new Hokage's name sent a subtle ripple through the chamber, narrowed eyes and tightened jaws.
Baki moved toward the centre of the chamber, his footsteps barely audible against the stone floor. From within his vest, he withdrew a scroll sealed with a stylised leaf emblem. The wax had been carefully broken and resealed—the contents already analysed by the Sand's intelligence division.
"Their response arrived an hour ago," he announced, unrolling the document with practised precision. The parchment made a soft sound as it opened, drawing all eyes to its contents. "They've agreed to our terms. Gaara will be returned first, followed by Kankuro and Temari in separate exchanges over the coming weeks."
He placed the scroll on the table, available for inspection. The formal diplomatic language couldn't disguise what they all recognised—a concession from the Leaf. A small victory in the grand scheme of things. None in the room were so delusional as to believe they were in a more favourable position.
A murmur of satisfaction rippled through the council chamber. Two younger Councillors exchanged barely perceptible nods, while a senior member allowed himself a small smile before returning to a neutral expression. The air in the chamber seemed to lighten, if only fractionally.
"So the pressure campaign worked," Joseki remarked with thinly veiled pride. He straightened the ceremonial medallion hanging from his neck—a symbol of his three decades of service to the council. His fingers, still strong despite his age, traced the edge of the metal. "For an invasion that failed, we've managed to turn the situation remarkably in our favour. For all that we invaded them, it was a Leaf Village rogue ninja who spearheaded that effort and killed both the Hokage and Kazekage. The entire Jinchuriki situation has only drawn the shinobi world's suspicion upon them."
The water timekeeper at the centre of the table marked the passage of minutes with rhythmic drops, each one hitting the collection basin with crystalline clarity. In the desert, water—like time—was too precious to waste.
Elder Chiyo's eyes narrowed as she studied the faces around her. The puppet master's gaze was known to unnerve even seasoned jonin—too perceptive, too knowing. Her hands, capable of manipulating the most complex puppets with invisible chakra strings, lay flat against the stone table.
"Don't celebrate prematurely," she warned, her voice carrying the weight of someone who had witnessed the rise and fall of multiple Kages across the elemental nations. "Danzo Shimura doesn't yield ground without reason. Gaara's return came with the notice that the Leaf will be expanding its border outpost and pushing it further into our country. He's allowing us to reclaim Gaara first because it suits that purpose."
Her gaze swept across the chamber, meeting each pair of eyes directly.
"Do not forget that our excuse for consorting with Orochimaru is just that—an excuse," she continued, each word deliberate and pointed. "We did willingly participate in the invasion, regardless of how we frame it now. Nor is the Leaf at all weak—their next generation eclipses ours. To say nothing of the Fourth Hokage's son being their Jinchuriki. Danzo Shimura knows this, and he will make sure to wring us dry. The question is not if, but when and how."
The warning cast a shadow over their momentary satisfaction. Even the air seemed to chill despite the desert heat above them. The council chamber had witnessed countless strategies over generations, but few situations as precarious as their current position.
From the far end of the table, a relatively young Councillor with fewer battle scars than most cleared his throat. "Perhaps he believes returning a Jinchuriki will quell the rumours," he suggested, his optimism marking him as one of the newer appointments to the council. "A diplomatic solution to save face."
Several of the more seasoned members exchanged knowing glances at the naïveté.
"Or perhaps," Yura countered, leaning further into the light cast by the central lamp, shadows playing across the angles of his face, "he's done something to Gaara that makes keeping him more trouble than it's worth."
The suggestion landed in the chamber much like a poisoned kunai. No one moved. The only sound was the steady drip of the water timekeeper and the distant howl of wind across the desert surface far above them.
But the thought of such a possibility created a momentary silence as everyone present contemplated the avenues of attack—tampering with an already psychotic Jinchuriki's seal, some kind of Yamanaka mind technique that could trigger at a later date, or worse. Even for hardened shinobi, the thoughts alone were disturbing.
Gaara had been unstable before; what might he be now after weeks in enemy hands?
"What of the Waterfall girl?" Baki asked, his tactical mind seeking to address all variables. His question cut through the uncomfortable silence, bringing them back to practical matters. The soft clink of concealed weapons in his uniform was barely audible as he shifted his stance. "Our intelligence has seen neither hide nor hair of her."
Chiyo's lips curved into a smile that held no warmth. Her fingers absently traced a pattern on the table—a habit from decades of puppet manipulation. Those familiar with her techniques recognised it as the basic movement pattern for a combat puppet's initial attack sequence.
"Let that rumour grow," she instructed, her voice pitching to carry to every corner of the chamber. "I'm sure the other villages could also put a modicum of effort into investigating the girl's disappearance to discover the truth. So long as the shinobi world at large believes they had something to do with her disappearance, the better for us. Every voice questioning the Leaf's intentions strengthens our position in the negotiations."
The strategy was clear—allow suspicion to fester, encourage speculation, and position the Sand as equally concerned about the Leaf's overstepping. Ebizo nodded slowly in agreement with his sister, his head moving with the deliberate care of someone who had seen nearly nine decades pass.
Despite their occasional disagreements, the siblings presented a united front in council matters.
"I believe the Hidden Cloud is already increasing their military presence along the Land of Fire's borders," he observed, his voice softer than Chiyo's but no less authoritative. The light glinted off his spectacles as he tilted his head. "Much like Onoki, their Raikage was also quick to express 'concern' about Jinchuriki being collected, though his concern came with a rise in shinobi presence and not a mere envoy."
As per their reputations, the Cloud was positioning for potential advantage while the Stone merely tested waters with diplomatic measures before waiting for one side to falter.
It was the third war all over again.
"Not out of any moral consideration," Joseki added dryly, shifting on the stone bench that generations of Councillors had polished smooth. His eyes, still sharp despite his age, reflected the lamplight. "The Cloud has always coveted powers beyond their reach. They've attempted kidnappings across the lands more than once."
The unspoken reference to the more recent Hyuuga Incident hung in the air. All present knew the history—the Cloud's failed attempt to kidnap the Hyuuga heiress and the diplomatic crisis that followed. The Cloud's ambitions were a constant in the shinobi world's ever-shifting landscape.
The water timekeeper marked another passage of minutes. Their allocated session time was drawing to a close, and practical matters needed addressing.
Baki cleared his throat, drawing attention back to immediate concerns. "Should we discuss preparations for Gaara's return? He'll be escorted to our border in three days according to the terms." His tone remained professional, but those who knew him well could detect the underlying tension. Gaara had been his student, if such a relationship could ever truly exist with the troubled Jinchuriki.
"Yes," Chiyo said firmly, her authority silencing side conversations that had begun around the table. "Councillor Yura, assemble a reception team. Select jonin you trust; there will be a team to assess Gaara's condition upon his return."
She fixed Yura with a penetrating stare, unblinking and evaluating. The instruction was both a test and an assignment.
Yura met her gaze without flinching, his own expression professionally neutral. Years of shinobi training allowed him to maintain composure under scrutiny. "And if they've tampered with him or his seal?" he questioned, giving voice to the concern that had been circulating through the room unspoken.
"Then we use that as further evidence of the Leaf's duplicity," Chiyo answered without hesitation. Decades of experience heading the Medical Division alongside the Puppet Corps had taught her to see every circumstance as potentially advantageous.
"Worst case, we remove the Shukaku from Gaara and seal it into someone else," she continued, the casual manner in which she suggested such a dangerous procedure revealing how Suna viewed their Jinchūriki—as weapons first, humans second. "Either way, we strengthen our position while recovering our weapon."
The final drop fell in the timekeeper, signalling the end of the allocated meeting time. As if choreographed, the council members began gathering their materials. The scrape of stone chairs against the floor mingled with the rustle of robes and the soft clink of concealed weapons as they rose.
Conversations in hushed tones erupted as they filed toward the heavy stone door, discussions of preparation and contingency plans already beginning among smaller groups. Alliances within the council were as shifting as the desert sands, and these post-meeting conversations often revealed more than the formal session.
Baki remained behind with the Elders as the chamber emptied, his stance relaxing fractionally now that only the three remained. The lamps seemed to dim as the door closed, casting longer shadows across the now-vacant seats.
Chiyo waited until the sound of footsteps faded before she spoke. Her gaze sharpened as she turned to the jonin commander, her voice dropping to ensure it wouldn't carry beyond the chamber walls, not even to the ANBU guards surely stationed outside.
"Baki," she said, the familiarity of using his name without title marking this as a different kind of conversation. "Have Yura lead Gaara's reception personally. I want to observe how he handles it."
Surprise flickered across Baki's visible eye—the only part of his face not concealed by cloth. His posture straightened reflexively at the implication. "You suspect him?" he asked, his voice pitched equally low, though the surprise was evident.
Chiyo's ancient face hardened as she rose slowly from her seat, joints creaking audibly in the quiet chamber. Despite her physical fragility, her eyes remained sharp and clear—the eyes of a kunoichi who had survived three wars and countless assassins.
"His eagerness to fan these flames against the Leaf seems... convenient," she said, gathering her simple robe around her shoulders against the chamber's perpetual coolness. "Almost as if he wants to ensure no alliance between Sand and Leaf could possibly recover despite our position."
She paused, measuring her next words carefully. Trust was a rare commodity in the shinobi world, especially now. The implications hung in the still air of the chamber—possible traitors, hidden agendas, puppets whose strings were pulled by unseen masters.
Shadows in the hall's corners seemed to deepen as the final lamp flickered.
Behind them, the empty Kazekage's seat loomed larger in the fading light—a throne awaiting its next occupant, while the village navigated the treacherous politics that threatened to engulf them all.
.
— — —
.
The wind carried the scent of steam and fresh mud, but it no longer masked the undertone of cold iron. Once a place where Leaf ninja honed their edge against predictable threats, the outpost now buzzed with grim preparation.
Toridasu stood at the overlook of the southern watchtower, his small fan resting across his shoulder like a relic of a calmer age. He was broad-shouldered despite the stoop that time had given him. His beard, once black and coarse, now bore streaks of silver that matched the stark hair tucked under his forehead protector. A long, narrow scar ran down the right side of his face—a souvenir from the Second War.
He squinted as another caravan of shinobi trudged through the gate below.
"So that's another squad from Tactical Analysis?" he muttered to no one in particular.
"That makes three this week," came a voice at his side. Lieutenant Suda, younger and leaner, freshly promoted to jonin but already weary of the new rotation. "They've set up shop in the northwest barracks. Brought more sensor-type ninja. Paperwork says 'strategic redeployment.'"
Toridasu grunted. "They say a lot of things. Every time the wind shifts, someone back in the village decides we need new maps and new men. And our new Hokage is the chief of that class of man."
He tapped the edge of his fan against the railing. Down below, his own patrol units—those who'd trained here for years—looked increasingly out of place among the fresh uniforms and stiff movements of the new arrivals; men and women who smelled of ambitions and bloodthirst.
"That boy there," Toridasu pointed with his fan. "He was a chuunin only last season. He was skilled, but generally green. Now, he's commanding a field squad, and they're calling him 'Captain'."
Suda hesitated. "Orders come from up top. Things are shifting, Commander. Word is, the Hidden Cloud's increasing their border presence on the northern side of the Hot Water range. Some say they're mobilising a full battalion."
Toridasu exhaled through his nose. "Of course they are. They smell blood and weakness."
The wind picked up, scattering a handful of orange leaves from the trees clinging to the valley edge. The sound of metal on metal echoed faintly—a weapons drill.
"We used to send the new kids to the Hidden Steam on weekends," Toridasu said. "Hell, we used to bathe there once in a while. Now look at this place. Every kunai's got a name scratched into the hilt, and the young ones carry themselves like they're already ghosts."
"Maybe that's what we need," Suda said quietly. "Shinobi ready for war."
Toridasu's gaze sharpened. "You want to fight, lieutenant? Go out and claim a few scalps for a pat on the back?"
"No, sir. I want to survive."
"Then stop mistaking bloodlust for strength."
He turned back toward the camp, the chill settling into his bones despite the steam rising from the distant springs. His fan closed with a snap.
"Too many of these new arrivals don't remember what war is—or worse, they don't know," he said. "They see glory in it because that is all they've been told. Honours and titles. But they aren't told about the stink of burned hair or the weight of names you have to memorise just long enough to write on a wall."
He paused, squinting toward a figure in the distance—a thin man in dark grey robes, a visor pulled low over his face, standing still as a statue. He'd seen him three times today. Never moving. Always watching.
Suda followed his gaze. "That one's from Strategic Division, I think. Name's Yamaoka. He doesn't say much."
"They never do," Toridasu said flatly. "Danzo's always liked quiet ones. Easier to fill them up with his noise."
"Sir—"
"I know who they're placing around me, lieutenant. I've seen this game before. When they can't beat you, they crowd you. Bit by bit. So you step aside, and they don't even have to lift a blade."
Suda looked uneasy. "Do you think you'll be forced out, sir? Surely not you."
Toridasu didn't answer for a long while.
He turned from the overlook, descending the wooden steps with deliberate care. Suda followed. The camp around them had grown dense—tents pitched between buildings, mess halls crowded with unfamiliar faces. The crackle of radios, coded chatter, drills and sharp barks of order layered over what used to be silence, the occasional laughter, and mostly open space.
"He's not the first I've seen," Toridasu said, voice quiet as they walked. "There's a new quartermaster in storage who used to run errands for Sae's old unit. A logistics chunin in the field tent, I don't recognise—but she knew my name and my usual orders. And the last three mission reassignments I signed off on? Not a single one came from my desk."
Suda furrowed his brow. "You're saying someone's routing around you?"
"I'm saying I've already been routed," Toridasu muttered.
They passed an old training yard—a rectangle of dirt and cracked stone where younger ninja once practised without fear of live steel for at least a few weeks. Now, a squad of hard-faced newcomers trained with blunted spears, one of them barking kill orders with a cadence Toridasu recognised from war-time drills.
One of the older camp medics, Hisayo, sat nearby with a lowered gaze like she didn't belong anymore.
Toridasu stopped. Watched for a beat longer. Then:
"This used to be a place for growth. A border bastion, yes—but also a sanctuary. We trained them with patience. Some even found purpose. Now... we're just another front line waiting for an excuse to send out fresh-faced genin and hapless promotee chunin."
Suda gave him a sidelong glance. "You blame the Cloud?"
He didn't answer.
They reached the old mess hall—one of the few structures left untouched, for now. It smelled of tea and old wood, and Toridasu poured himself a cup as they settled at a weathered table.
Suda leaned in. "You said you've seen this approach before. When?"
Toridasu swirled his tea slowly, eyes distant. "Third War. Back when the fighting stalled, and politics started creeping into the ranks. Danzo called it realignment."
He took a sip, not looking up.
"Said some commanders were too 'set in their ways.' So he'd start reassigning their aides. Then their logistics officers. Before long, they were surrounded by people who reported to someone else. Their own orders got delayed, overridden, or ignored. Eventually, they stepped down — or were 'encouraged' to."
There was a beat of silence between them. Outside, the wind howled through the old beams.
Then Toridasu smirked. "He never forgave me either. Not after that prank I pulled when we were genin—smeared his sandals with fermented dango paste. Smelled like a corpse's footlocker for a week. It was the first time I saw him break composure."
Suda blinked. "...You did that to the Hokage?"
"I did worse. I made it look like Hiruzen did it."
The two shared a brief, tired laugh—thin and brittle, but genuine.
Toridasu's smile faded. "I started our ill-fated relationship over a prank. He'll end it with a whisper no one hears."
"You could push back. Confront the Hokage directly."
He shook his head. "And give Danzo the excuse he wants to expel me outright? No. If I bark, I become the 'obstructionist relic.' A man in the way of progress. No. I'll watch. I'll memorise his plays and note his moves. And when I retire—when, not if—I'll make sure the right eyes are watching who steps into my seat."
Toridasu stood, straightening his shoulders. Though older, he still carried the weight of a veteran—a man who knew the cost of miscalculated pride.
"But make no mistake, lieutenant: if I find even a shadow whispering into this camp's soul before I'm gone…" He narrowed his eyes toward the western barracks. "…they'll remember I'm not that soft."
Suda nodded slowly, not quite reassured, but steadied by the fire that still simmered in the old commander's voice. Outside, the first snow began to fall, thin and scattered.
It was a sign of winter—and war—on the horizon.