Interlude IV - The Shadow's Hand

Hey, I'm pretty ahead on Patreon, so read these instructions carefully if you're interested in supporting the story: go to patréon.com/eternalyujin and go to Collections —> The Cycle of Hatred.

After that, enjoy your reading!

— — —

.

The Land of Hot Water's warm mist clung to Danzo's white and red robes as he ascended the winding mountain path, his cane striking stone with measured precision. Two ROOT operatives—officially registered as his guard—flanked him, their blank masks reflecting what little sunlight penetrated the morning fog. Behind them, a small delegation of administrative assistants and diplomatic attachés followed at a respectful distance.

All theatre, of course. The Fifth Hokage needed no protection, and the assistants were merely for appearances. The real work had begun a year ago, when he'd first identified the border outpost as a weak point in his vision for the Leaf's expansion.

Time and patience, Danzo thought, allowing himself the smallest curve of satisfaction as the outpost's gates became visible through the mist. The twin blades that cut deeper than any kunai.

"Lord Hokage," a young jonin called, bowing deeply as he approached the entourage. "We weren't expecting you until this afternoon."

"Circumstances change," Danzo replied flatly. "Your commander is ready to receive us, I trust?"

"Yes, Lord Hokage. Commander Toridasu has prepared the eastern mess hall for your meeting with the Hot Water envoy."

Danzo nodded once, dismissing the jonin with a glance. As they proceeded through the gates, he took careful note of the camp's transformation. Where once stood a modest outpost suited for training and border patrol, now rose a fortified compound bristling with activity. Prefabricated structures had replaced canvas tents. Weapons drills echoed across training grounds. The air carried the metallic scent of freshly forged weaponry.

Preparations for the upcoming conflict that Danzo had foreseen, piece by incremental piece.

"Quite the change since your last visit, Lord Hokage," came a gravelly voice from his left.

Toridasu stood with his arms crossed, still broad-shouldered despite his years and the slight stoop to him. The commander's eyes, sharp and knowing, met Danzo's unflinchingly. A remnant of the old guard, a holdover from Hiruzen's era of complacency.

"Change is the only constant in our world, Commander Toridasu," Danzo replied, not bothering to disguise the coldness in his tone.

Things were never friendly between them, even in their youth

Toridasu gestured toward the eastern building. "The envoy from the Land of Hot Water will arrive soon. He's quite eager to discuss the Daimyo's... concerns."

"I'm sure he is."

The two men walked in silence through the camp, the space between them purposefully empty and even heavier. Danzo allowed his mind to drift back briefly—to a time when they had been students, and then genin, together, when Toridasu had been the jokester. How the man had never understood that leadership required sacrifice, not just camaraderie.

How Hiruzen had favoured men like Toridasu, soft where they should have been steel. Such sentimentality had nearly cost them everything during the invasion—would have cost them.

"Your reinforcements seem to be settling in well," Toridasu remarked as they passed a group of ninja in training. "Though I can't help but notice many of them operate outside the standard chain of command."

"Efficiency often requires new structures," Danzo replied. "Something you've resisted for quite some time."

"I've resisted turning a training outpost into a forward operating base, if that's what you mean."

Danzo stopped, forcing the commander to do the same. Around them, several ninja paused in their activities for a brief moment until a glare from Toridasu forced them into mechanical practice. Then, they walked, far from prying eyes and eavesdropping ears as they made their rounds of the camp.

"Tell me, Commander Toridasu," Danzo said, his voice low enough to prevent eavesdropping. "When the Cloud amasses forces across the border, do you still believe this should remain a training outpost?"

Toridasu's eyes narrowed. Danzo merely smiled thinly.

"The envoy awaits," he said, resuming his walk. "Let's not keep him waiting any longer."

The eastern mess hall had once been a simple gathering space—now it served as an impromptu diplomatic chamber. At the centre stood a large table, and seated at it was a thin man in elaborate robes that spoke of wealth without taste.

"Lord Hokage," the envoy said, rising quickly and bowing deeply. "I am Tanaka Nobuo, personal envoy to Lord Daimyo Kichida of the Land of Hot Water. It is an honour to—"

"I've read your missive," Danzo interrupted, taking a seat at the head of the table. With a gesture, he dismissed his entourage save for one assistant who remained standing behind him. "Your Daimyo wishes us to reduce our shinobi presence within his borders."

Tanaka blinked, clearly thrown by the directness. "Yes, that's... correct, Lord Hokage. Our Daimyo feels that the growing military presence disrupts the peaceful nature of our land and may negatively impact the hot spring tourism that sustains our economy."

"I see." Danzo's single visible eye studied the man. "And what of the Cloud ninja who have been sighted within your northern territories? Does their presence also disrupt the peaceful nature of your land?"

Colour drained from Tanaka's face. "I-I'm not aware of any Cloud shinobi within our borders."

"Precisely the problem," Danzo said, his voice hardening. He did not buy the man's ignorance for a moment. "Your Daimyo's awareness does not extend beyond his palace walls. The Raikage moves his pieces carefully, but he moves them nonetheless."

Tanaka stared at the images, swallowing hard. "This is... concerning. But my instructions—"

"Your instructions were given without full information," Danzo cut in. "I will speak to your Daimyo directly this evening. Until then, I suggest you study these reports carefully." He gestured to the folder his assistant placed on the table. "You may find they alter your perspective."

The envoy nodded slowly, clearly overwhelmed. "Yes, Lord Hokage. I will... study them thoroughly."

"You are dismissed."

As Tanaka gathered the materials with trembling hands and departed, Toridasu folded his arms. Though he doesn't speak until they are in the main command tent, where maps litter the tables and boards.

"Convenient timing," the commander said once they were alone. "Those reports—"

"Speak to the reality of our situation," Danzo finished. "The world shifts beneath our feet, Commander. We must either move with it or be buried."

"And what reality would that be?" Toridasu asked, voice hard with suspicion. "The one where war benefits those who've been preparing for it all along?"

Danzo turned to face him fully, allowing his bandaged eye to be visible—a reminder of sacrifices made that men like Toridasu could never understand.

"War is inevitable," he said quietly. "It has been since the moment the Third died. The only question is whether we enter it on our terms or someone else's."

"And who determines those terms, Lord Hokage? Those who now outnumber the regular forces in my own outpost?"

Danzo's patience, always thin, began to fray. "Your outpost? This camp belongs to the Hidden Leaf Village. To me. Your attachment to it is merely sentimental."

"My attachment is to the people who serve here," Toridasu countered. "The genin and chunin who come to train, not to die in a war you seem determined to provoke."

"Provoke?" Danzo allowed a rare flash of emotion to colour his voice. "I have spent fifty years watching peace built on sand. The Stone, the Cloud, even the Sand—they all wait for weakness. They circle like vultures, and men like you and Hiruzen called it 'diplomacy' while they sharpened their knives."

He gestured to the maps on the wall. "The Cloud takes territories piece by piece. They absorbed half the Land of Frost through 'protective occupation.' The Stone inches closer to our western borders each year. And the Waterfall Village openly accuses us of taking their Jinchuriki while their own leadership likely killed the girl themselves."

"So your answer is to become what you claim to fight against?" Toridasu asked, his expression hardening. "To militarise border outposts, to create phantom threats when real ones don't materialise quickly enough?"

Danzo's eye narrowed to a slit. "Admitting your scouts haven't confirmed what my intelligence reports doesn't speak well to your leadership, Commander."

"Or perhaps my scouts are simply honest men, not puppets who see what their master wants them to see."

The silence that followed was thick enough to cut with a blade. Danzo studied the older man, noting the tension in his shoulders, the way his hand rested near his hip where a weapon might be concealed. Still a soldier, despite his years behind a desk.

"Walk with me, Commander," Danzo said finally, his tone deceptively mild. "Let us inspect this outpost you've managed for so long in detail, then."

Without waiting for a response, he moved toward the door. Toridasu followed after a moment's hesitation, the weight of inevitability settling on his shoulders. They walked through the grounds, past training fields where jonin instructors drilled chunin in formation tactics. Danzo noted with satisfaction how many of them were his own people—placed strategically over the past year, each one a thread in the web he'd been weaving.

"Tell me," Danzo said as they approached the northern perimeter, once more away from people, "when did you first realise I was replacing your staff?"

Toridasu's step faltered slightly, but he recovered quickly. "About three months after you took office. The new quartermaster was too efficient, too familiar with my routines. He'd been briefed."

"Yamaguchi," Danzo nodded. "One of my better operatives. And yet you said nothing."

"What was there to say? The Hokage has the authority to assign personnel as he sees fit."

"Indeed." Danzo paused at the edge of the camp, looking out over the misty valley that separated the Land of Fire from the Land of Hot Water. "And what do you think will happen today, Commander?"

Toridasu's jaw tightened. "I think you'll remove me from my position. I think you've been planning it since before you visited."

"And yet you stand here, knowing this." Danzo studied him with something approaching academic interest. "Why?"

"Because I am a shinobi of the Leaf," Toridasu answered simply. "My personal feelings don't outweigh my duty."

Danzo allowed himself a small nod of acknowledgement. "If more had your sense of duty without your sentimentality, perhaps we wouldn't be where we are."

"And where are we, Lord Hokage?"

"At a crossroads." Danzo turned to face the camp again. "This outpost will become the southern command centre for our operations in the coming conflict. It requires leadership aligned with that purpose."

"And my replacement is already here, I assume."

"He will be before the day's end. Asuma Sarutobi will take command effective immediately."

Toridasu's eyes widened slightly. "Hiruzen's son? I wouldn't have thought—"

"That he would align with me?" Danzo finished. "Asuma understands what his father never did—that peace must be protected by strength, not hope. His tactical mind is wasted on a genin team."

"And my fate?"

"You will return to the village," Danzo said. "Your experience will be valuable in training the next generation of jonin. You will be treated with the respect your service deserves."

Toridasu sighed long and hard, then nodded once, resignation settling into the lines of his face. "May I address my staff before I leave?"

"Briefly," Danzo allowed. "You depart within the hour."

As Toridasu walked away, straight-backed despite everything, Danzo permitted himself a moment of silent victory. Another piece removed from the board, another position secured for what was to come.

.

— — —

.

"The Land of Hot Water has always valued its independence," said Daimyo Kichida as servants cleared away the lacquered dinner trays. His tone bore the inherited weight of nobility, but the way he shifted in his seat betrayed a man unaccustomed to being pressed.

Danzo sipped his tea in silence, studying him. Kichida was younger than most Daimyo, having inherited the title only five years prior. The boy-king of a buffer state. His eyes flicked too often to the clock on the far wall—impatient, uneasy.

"Neutrality," Danzo said at last, setting his cup down with deliberate care, "is not strength. It is the luxury of delay."

"You speak as though conflict is inevitable, Lord Hokage."

"It is."

Danzo nodded to his aide, who stepped forward and placed a folder between them. The same one Tanaka had seen. "These are scouting reports from two weeks ago. Northern range."

Kichida opened the folder and froze.

"…Cloud shinobi?" His voice was quiet now.

"Moving in small squads. Not far from your northernmost villages." Danzo's words were measured, his gaze unblinking. "The Raikage's methods are not unknown. What he did in the Land of Frost, he will attempt here."

Kichida swallowed. "They said it was a defensive occupation. That the Frost Daimyo invited it."

"And what did the Frost Daimyo say a week before he vanished?" Danzo asked softly. "They left him alive, true—but under guard, stripped of command. A flag with no pole."

"But the Cloud—" Kichida paused, as if hearing his own words too late. "We have no quarrel with them."

"They had no quarrel with Frost either. Only opportunity." Danzo leaned forward, just slightly. "Your territory narrows the gap between them and the Land of Fire. That makes it valuable. That makes you… negotiable."

Kichida stiffened. "We have treaties. With both your nation and theirs."

"Treaties," Danzo said, voice touched with disdain, "are kindling for war's first fire."

Silence stretched between them before Kichida spoke again, slower now, testing the waters. "And what would you have me do? Declare open allegiance to the Leaf? That could be taken as provocation."

A year.

A year since he had last used Shisui's eye on the Uchiha boy, Sasuke. A gamble then, to forestall the boy's collapse, to keep him useful long enough to become dangerous to the right people. The eye's cooldown was a curse, but one he'd planned around, as always.

Now it pulsed again. Ready. His thumb slipped beneath the bandages wrapped around his head and lifted them just enough for Daimyo's shoulders to tense at the sight, ensnared.

"I would have you consider reality," Danzo said. "Our outpost at your southern border is not an incursion. It is a line drawn in the snow. The Cloud has not crossed it—for now—because we are there to be crossed. They will test how far they can walk, but still, we remain."

Kichida glanced again at the map Danzo had unfolded. The old road networks, the chokepoints. He frowned. "My advisors are concerned that your increased presence may invite conflict."

Danzo's gaze sharpened. "Some advisors, yes. I wonder—do they counsel caution… or have they already been counselled themselves?"

Kichida froze. "You imply betrayal."

"I imply foresight." Danzo's tone remained even, almost dispassionate. "If I were a man surrounded by options, I might hedge too. A meeting here. A message there. Insurance. Some might even call it prudent."

The room chilled.

"Perhaps you should ask yourself," Danzo continued, "which of your counsellors most strongly urged us to withdraw. And why."

Danzo let the silence work. Kichida was no fool—just young. And young men made mistakes when they assumed everyone else was still playing fair.

After a moment, the Daimyo exhaled shakily. "What do you propose?"

"A new agreement," Danzo said smoothly. "The Leaf will maintain its current outpost—though we'll give it a new name for diplomacy's sake. The Southern Joint Command Centre. We will increase border security. In return, we ask only freedom of movement along agreed supply routes."

"And if the Cloud objects?"

"Then they object to a sovereign alliance," Danzo replied. "Let them send envoys, not scouts."

Kichida's eyes lingered on the map, his certainty eroding.

"I will need to bring this before my council."

"Of course," Danzo said, standing. "Though I suggest you choose carefully which of them to trust with details. Influence, once bought, seldom returns to its owner." As his assistant gathered the documents, Danzo added, almost as an afterthought:

"There is wisdom in choosing a side before one is chosen for you."

He bowed and turned to leave, his voice as quiet as falling snow. "I return to the Leaf tomorrow. I trust you will have made your choice by then."

A small, satisfied smile touched his lips as he stepped from the room.

The hook was set. And the line, once taut, would pull harder than any blade.

The next day, dawn broke over the mountains as Danzo made his way back to the outpost, his guards flanking him silently. The mist that perpetually clung to the Land of Hot Water's valleys created an ethereal landscape, ghostly and otherworldly.

Fitting, he thought, for the birth of his next phase.

Asuma Sarutobi waited at the gates, hands clasped behind his back. The son of Hiruzen had grown into a formidable jonin, his tactical mind and combat prowess worthy of his lineage, if not his father's naïve idealism.

"Lord Hokage," Asuma greeted him with a bow. "The transfer of command is complete. Commander Toridasu departed last night."

"Any issues?" Danzo asked as they walked into the compound.

"None," Asuma replied. "He addressed his staff briefly, advised them to continue serving the Leaf with honour, and left without ceremony. Even wished me good luck. He seemed nice enough."

"Good." Danzo glanced around at the activity already buzzing through the camp. "And your assessment of our readiness?"

Asuma's expression grew serious. "We have sufficient forces for defensive operations, but offensive capabilities would require reinforcement. The sensory barrier needs expansion—simply put, we need more sensors—and our logistics chain is stretched thin."

"All will be addressed," Danzo assured him. "This position will become the Southern Command Centre. You will have whatever resources you require."

They reached the command building, where a group of jonin waited for their new commander's instructions. Danzo noted with approval how many were either his own operatives or those who had demonstrated alignment with his vision.

"One last matter," Danzo said before they entered. "I'll be assigning most of the former Team 10 members to this camp."

Asuma's cigarette paused halfway to his lips.

"This will be a good experience for them."

He watched Asuma's face, seeing the internal conflict play out. Concern for his students warring with duty to the village. Naruto Uzumaki not being mentioned said enough of his existence; both he and Asuma knew that the boy existed to be on the frontline, but as he was now, it would do him no good.

He would master his Tailed Beast powers before he saw the warfront and the Cloud's Jinchuriki. To that end, he'd send Tsunade here instead as a cautionary measure in case the Raikage saw fit to throw either of his Jinchuriki at the warfront.

And, of course, Tenzo—or Yamato, or whatever he called himself these days.

"When should I expect them?"

"When Chunin Akimichi and Chunin Uzumaki return from their missions, I will give them one week's break before sending them here, along with several other specialised units. In other news, the Daimyo has agreed to our continued presence—hence the rebranding," Danzo informed Asuma as they entered the command centre.

Asuma raised an eyebrow. "That's unexpected. The missive seemed pretty certain that we should leave."

"Perspectives change when properly informed," Danzo replied simply. "Now, show me your current deployment strategy."

As Asuma led him to the tactical maps, Danzo allowed himself a moment of satisfaction. Pieces were moving into place. The Land of Hot Water was secured. The outpost transformed into a forward command centre. Asuma was installed as a commander who would follow orders without Hiruzen's sentimentality. And soon, the Nine-Tails Jinchuriki positioned exactly where he needed to be.

The board was taking shape exactly as he had envisioned it.

Later, as he prepared to depart for the Hidden Leaf, Danzo stood at the northern edge of the camp, gazing out toward the border with the Land of Lightning. Storm clouds gathered on the horizon, darkened with the promise of rain. An appropriate omen. The coming storm would reshape the shinobi world, washing away the weakness of prior generations.

And when it cleared, the Hidden Leaf would stand stronger than ever before, with himself as the architect of its new strength.

"Lord Hokage," one of his guards approached. "Your escort back to the Leaf Village is ready."

Danzo nodded, turning away from the view and leaving the tent. "Tell Asuma I expect weekly reports on the readiness of this outpost. And inform our operatives in the north to increase their activities. I want the Raikage's attention fully on our northern movements."

"And the Jinchuriki?"

"Proceed as planned," Danzo confirmed. "The boy responds better to carrots than perceived sticks."

As he made his way to the waiting escort, Danzo's thoughts turned to the village—to his old comrades who still resisted his vision, to the clan heads who maintained their traditional autonomy. They would learn, as Toridasu had, as the Daimyo had, that resistance was ultimately futile.

The world was changing. Those who couldn't adapt would be swept aside. And he, Danzo Shimura, Fifth Hokage of the Hidden Leaf, would ensure that his village emerged from the coming conflict not just intact, but dominant, no matter the cost.

The Will of Fire required fuel to burn. And sometimes, that fuel was one of sacrifice.