MINATO NAMIKAZE
His desk, Minato came to learn through nearly two decades as Hokage, was his most ardent enemy. One that had never and would never surrender.
Merely two days, and the stack he hadn't avoided but tried to ignore had accumulated to take up half his desk. Complaints piled like barricades, each stamped with clan seals, merchants' signatures, or the more furious scrawl of civilians.
Most were petty crimes that should have been easily handled by the Konoha Military Police Force. Yet here they were, piling up like autumn leaves, each one a testament to the growing unrest in his village.
He picked up the first report, scanning the familiar complaints about missing goods from merchant stalls. The handwriting was neat, official, but the underlying frustration bled through every carefully chosen word. These weren't just crimes—they were symptoms of something deeper, something that gnawed at him whenever he allowed himself to think beyond the immediate paperwork.
The decision to remove Fugaku Uchiha from his position as head of the Military Police had been long overdue and necessary. He was merely fixing what Lord Second overlooked.
Minato believed that, even as the consequences mounted before him. The Uchiha clan's monopoly on law enforcement had created a rift between them and the rest of the village, breeding resentment on both sides. Citizens feared and resented the Uchiha's authority, while the Uchiha grew increasingly isolated and bitter. Diversifying the force with Sarutobi Enzen at its head had seemed like the logical solution—a way to bridge those gaps and create a more unified Konoha.
The Uchiha hadn't seen it that way, of course. Their pride, that double-edged sword that made them formidable in battle, had turned the change into a personal slight. Fugaku's controlled politeness during their meeting had been more cutting than outright anger. The man's dark eyes had held a disappointment that Minato still felt like a weight in his chest.
Give it some time. Surely they would come around eventually. They had to see that this was for the good of the village, for their own good.
Minato set down the report and reached for his tea, now cold. The bitter taste matched his mood. Crime rates had indeed increased since the transition, but that was to be expected during any period of change. What troubled him more was the pattern, or rather, the lack of one. These weren't crimes of passion or desperation. They felt orchestrated, planned, as if someone was pulling strings just beyond his vision.
His Anbu investigations had turned up nothing. That alone was telling. Either there truly was nothing to find, or someone with considerable reach was covering their tracks. Someone who could influence even his most trusted operatives.
The only one that comes to mind…. Orochimaru.
The Snake Sannin had coveted the Hokage position; that much had been clear during the selection process. Nearly two decades of resentment could fester into something dangerous, especially when combined with the restrictions Minato had placed on his research. The memory of that underground laboratory still haunted him—the stench of decay and chemicals, the sight of things that should never have existed. Should never have been allowed. Some smells never leave you, no matter how much time passed.
Shaking off the unwelcome recollection, Minato returned to his work. The morning passed in a blur of reports, approvals, and responses. His hand cramped from writing, and his back ached from hunching over the desk, but he had long grown used to that, just how the stack never seemed to diminish.
When he reached the complaints about Suna refugees, his shoulders sagged. Suspected spies, hidden weapons, children who moved too quietly—the paranoia was understandable, given the circumstances. The destruction of Sunagakure had sent waves of displaced people across the continent, and Konoha had opened its doors to them. It was the right thing to do, but righteous decisions rarely came without complications.
Minato leaned back in his chair, feeling the familiar ache in his lower back. The late nights were taking their toll, but the village needed him. Kushina would understand—she always did. At least, he assumed she would. When had he last actually asked her opinion on village matters?
Their dinner conversations — when he was not sleeping at the office — had grown shorter and shorter, more focused on logistics than intimacy, but that was temporary. Once things settled down, once the reforms took hold and the current crises passed, they would have more time together.
A voice at the back of his mind asked how many times he'd used this excuse in the past decade. He had no answer, so he buried it alongside all the others he couldn't afford to waste time on.
The subtle shift in chakra signature alerted him to a presence before the door opened. Only one person could approach the Hokage's office barriers like that.
"Hiruzen-sensei," Minato said, a small smile playing at his lips. "Was it already time?"
The Third Hokage entered with the measured steps of someone who had once carried this same burden. His lined face held the wisdom of experience, but also the weariness that came with it. "You look buried," The older man said with a faint smile.
"I thought I had dug myself out last night," Minato replied. "Turns out paperwork multiplies in the dark."
"It does." Hiruzen-sensei chuckled, low and worn. "I once considered sealing it away. But the scrolls grow teeth when ignored."
"You could have warned me before I took this chair."
"I did," Hiruzen-sensei said, amused. Minato was sure he didn't. "You were too eager to listen." He walked with his wooden cane and settled into the chair across from Minato's desk.
"Was I that transparent?" Minato asked, though his tone held genuine fondness rather than embarrassment.
"You reminded me of myself, years ago. But….. that is something all old bones say at least once a weak, so don't worry much about it." He laughed, and Minato smiled.
They shared a brief silence, the kind only two Hokage could hold without discomfort. Then Hiruzen's voice softened. "Trading years of life for senjutsu, huh?" He grabbed his pipe and tapped the rim against his palm. "Even this old and worn-down world still finds ways to impress and expand."
"You are not old at all," Minato answered reflexively. The clone's report had been thorough, if disturbing. Minato had shared the preliminary findings with his predecessor almost immediately—some decisions were too weighty to bear alone. "You've never heard of such a technique?"
Hiruzen shook his head slowly. "Though I suppose I shouldn't be surprised. We tend to forget how vast and unknown this world truly is. Shinobi villages guard their secrets jealously, but there are creatures and contracts that predate our organized understanding of chakra." He paused, put the pipe in his mouth, and took a drag. "I'll need to consult with Enma-sama about this.… if he chooses to remember."
Minato hummed. Eishin Sasayaki…. He had hoped that raising the Academy graduation age to fifteen would protect prodigies like him, give them time to develop wisdom alongside their skills. But some people were simply too stubborn, too driven to be protected from their own talents.
Yet reckless as he was, he had somehow managed to survive an encounter that should have killed him ten times over. But…. How many like his didn't? How many had died because of Minato's softness? How many promising young shinobi had he failed to shield from their own abilities?
"You're troubled by more than just this… exceptional new finding," Hiruzen observed, reading Minato's expression with the ease of long practice.
"Eishin Sasayaki, the jounin in question, represents everything I've been trying to prevent," Minato said quietly. "Young shinobi burning themselves out in pursuit of strength, sacrificing everything for the mission. I thought if I could just create better systems, better safeguards..."
"You cannot save them all from themselves, Minato. Some will always push beyond reasonable limits."
"The irony is that he chose to step back from active duty to teach at the Academy. Maturity, he called it—wanting to pass on knowledge to the next generation. I thought it was a good sign, most owe to have that in them." Minato's voice carried a note of bitter disappointment. "Then I recalled him back, and he traded three years of his life in a single fight."
"Perhaps teaching gave him perspective on what's worth protecting," His predecessor suggested gently.
"Perhaps," Minato considered this, his mind drifting to his personal interactions with the young jounin. Eishin had always been respectful during mission briefings, professional yet personable. "He's... charismatic, I'll give him that. A shinobi who can make even the most serious briefing feel conversational. And he's certainly popular with the kunoichi around the village."
"Ah," Hiruzen's eyebrows rose with amusement. Perhaps remembering his student. "A charming young man with an appreciation for feminine company?"
"According to the compiled profile, yes. Though apparently with more subtlety than Jiraiya-sensei ever managed." Minato found himself smiling at the memory of his son's exasperated descriptions. "Naruto seems torn between admiration and embarrassment when he talks about Eishin's social skills."
"And his other qualities?"
They weren't trading gossip; leaders couldn't afford that. This was orientation. A strategic assessment. Evaluating an asset that had just become one of the most significant shinobi in the current political landscape. Whether Eishin wanted the attention or not, his actions had made him a name that would be whispered in council chambers across all five great nations. In Konoha and the Mist mostly, but in the other villages as well. Killing a Kage is not a small matter.
As leaders, they needed to understand exactly what kind of person they were working with, what motivated him, and how he might handle the pressure that was about to descend upon him.
"Intelligent, adaptable, surprisingly good with teamwork despite his independent streak. Exceptional mission record—forty-seven C-ranks, eighty-three B-ranks, and twenty-two A-ranks, three, now four S-rank completed with various degrees of success along with nine failures." Minato paused, consulting a mental file. "He's also demonstrated exceptional fuinjutsu aptitude. Created three original barrier seals during his short Academy stay, and his chakra control precision ranks in the top percentile of active jounin."
Minato's expression grew more serious. "The tactical situation left him little choice—holding the Anbu was necessary for his team's extraction, and by the time Yagura arrived, he was too injured for retreat to be viable." He paused, something unreadable flickering in his eyes. "Though I suspect that even if circumstances had been different, his psychological profile suggests he would have chosen engagement over withdrawal regardless."
"Dangerous thinking, arrogance, or boldness? But effective if he survived it," Hiruzen-sensei noted dryly.
"That's what worries me. Success like that can be addictive, especially for someone with his particular combination of skill and confidence."
"You speak as though you know the feeling personally."
Minato met his predecessor's knowing look and found himself laughing. "Perhaps I do. Perhaps…."
"Speaking of Jiraiya," The older man took another drag from his pipe. "What is he saying?"
Minato's expression sobered. "Complete confirmation of our suspicions. Yagura was indeed the Three-Tails' jinchuriki, and he's definitely dead. Jiraiya found traces of the bijuu's chakra, but no sign of the creature. It's likely yet to reform or did somewhere else."
"What I still don't understand," Hiruzen said, tapping his pipe thoughtfully against his palm, "is what brought Yagura to the Land of Waves in the first place. A Kage doesn't personally hunt missing-nin without exceptional cause."
Minato's expression grew thoughtful. "We've been working on that. The timing suggests it wasn't a coincidence—too soon after the latest uprising attempts in Kiri." He paused, organizing his thoughts. "Ibiki-san and our intelligence division believe it was due to Zabuza Momochi, a missing-nin of the Mist."
The possibility that Yagura had been targeting Naruto was also brought up during the strategic analysis meeting. But the timeline didn't support it. Even if someone had leaked information, mobilizing a Kage and a full Anbu platoon would take weeks of planning. It was also too much power for too little leverage.
"A missing-nin?" Hiruzen-sensei's eyebrows rose.
Minato leaned forward, his analytical mind engaging with the puzzle. "Zabuza Momochi's been a thorn in Yagura's side for years. Sabotage, recruitment of dissidents, and the suspected coup attempt some months ago. His second. It ended in failure, but he played a leading role in it, apparently. For a man like Yagura, having a symbol of rebellion operating freely for so long would be... intolerable."
"Ah." The older man took a slow drag from his pipe, considering. "You think Yagura finally decided to solve the problem himself?"
"It fits. Zabuza's been operating in and out of Wave Country for a while now." Minato paused, considering his words. "Though I'll admit, it's largely conjecture."
"Conjecture built on reasonable foundations." Hiruzen-sensei took a slow draw from his pipe. "Yagura was many things, but he wasn't reckless with his own life. Or at least I fail to see a keg behaving so. If he left the village personally..." He let the implication hang.
"He expected to end a threat that had plagued his rule for years. Instead, he walked in to be our problem child." Minato's voice carried dry irony. "Poor timing on everyone's part."
"Or exceptionally good timing, depending on your perspective." The Third's weathered face held the hint of a smile.
Minato smiled back, but it was more out of good manners. "Jiraiya-sensei might find more concrete evidence, but for now..."
"For now, we work with what we have." Hiruzen nodded slowly. "And the battle?"
"Only two parties involved—Eishin and the Kiri forces. No third-party intervention, no backup that arrived at the last moment. He fought a full platoon of their Anbu, then engaged their Kage while already injured and exhausted." Minato shook his head in a mixture of admiration and disbelief. "The physical evidence suggests he completely overwhelmed Yagura in the end."
"Remarkable. Though I suppose trading years of one's life for senjutsu would provide considerable power."
"Seven minutes," Minato said quietly. "Seven minutes of sage mode in exchange for three years of his natural lifespan. I can't decide if that's brilliant or insane."
It must be worth it at least; he did save his team. Unlike you. A voice added in the back of his mind.
Again, he brushed it off. Though that sacrifice saved his son, and he was deeply grateful for that, Minato now wore the hate; he was Hokage first. Gratitude felt like a weakness he couldn't afford—personal debts had no place in political calculations.
Eishin had just become either Konoha's greatest asset or its most expensive liability. The boy's loyalty was proven, his power undeniable, but loyalty meant nothing if the village burned for harboring him.
"Perhaps both. The line between genius and madness is often thinner than we'd like to admit." Hiruzen-senei paused, studying Minato's face. "And?"
Minato's lips twitched. When did he become this predictable? He touched his face self-consciously, then sighed. "He killed Yagura with a Rasengan."
"I see." Hiruzen's tone was carefully neutral, but his eyes showed understanding.
"He learned it by watching Naruto make use of it. Saw it once, maybe twice, and somehow reverse-engineered the entire process." Minato's voice carried a mixture of impressed frustration. "Do you know how complex the chakra manipulation required for that technique is? Even with the Sharingan, a Uchiha couldn't simply copy it without an expert level of Chakra Control."
Minato wouldn't admit it outright, but the needled his pride. The Rasengan was his creation. His contribution to the shinobi arts. To have someone master it through casual observation feels like having his work trivialized.
"And yet it speaks to the boy's extraordinary talent."
The technique wasn't even officially complete. It was registered as experimental, not as a finished jutsu. That was why it wasn't included in the clan techniques he ordered disclosed—it was not technically a secret because it was not technically finished.
A convenient oversight he wasn't too happy to have exploited. The Rasengan can be dangerous to the user if not properly controlled. Losing fingers, even an entire hand. He wanted to protect it until he could develop proper teaching methods and safety protocols.
"Not only learned it on his own, but used it to kill a Kage."
"That brings us to the larger problem, doesn't it?" Lord Third leaned forward, his expression grave. "A Konoha shinobi has killed the leader of another village. Regardless of the circumstances, that's not something the other nations will overlook."
"Iwagakure will see it as an opportunity," Minato said, his mind already racing through potential scenarios. "Onoki's been looking for any excuse to move against us, and this gives him the moral high ground. He can claim we're becoming too aggressive, too willing to assassinate other villages' leaders."
"The old man does enjoy his righteous indignation when it suits his purposes," Hiruzen agreed. "What about Kumogakure?" he asked, or rather tested, the profesor never stoped his tests.
"The Fourth Raikage will use it as justification for his own aggressive policies. If Konoha can kill a Kage, then clearly everyone needs to be more militaristic, more prepared for war. It feeds perfectly into his worldview."
"And he'll likely demand that we hand over Eishin-kun as a gesture of good faith. They probably all would."
"Which we cannot do." Minato's voice hardened. "I won't sacrifice a loyal shinobi to appease foreign powers, especially not when he was acting in self-defense and protecting his team."
"Self-defense that resulted in a Kage's death. The other villages won't care about the circumstances—they'll only see the outcome and weakness to exploit." Hiruzen-sensei's tone was grim. "They'll unite against us, at least temporarily. Nothing brings enemies together like a common threat."
"Sunagakure won't be joining any coalitions anytime soon," Minato pointed out. "They're too busy trying to fend off the One-Tail's recurrent rampages."
"True, but that also means we can't count on them as allies if things escalate. We'd be facing a potential three-village alliance with only our own resources."
"Another great war, huh?"
"We must prepare for that possibility while hoping diplomacy can prevent it." The older man's eyes held the weariness of someone who had seen too many conflicts. "The question is whether we try to minimize Eishin-kun's role or embrace it as a show of Konoha's strength, or….."
"Either approach has risks," Minato said, he ignored the third implicit choice, for now. "If we downplay it, we look weak and potentially dishonest when the full truth emerges. If we embrace it, we look like warmongers."
A heavy silence settled between them, the weight of unspoken implications filling the office.
"That leaves us with Kirigakure," Hiruzen said quietly, the words hanging heavy between them. "The offended parties themselves, we cannot ignore them if we were to approch any kind of diplomacy."
Minato's jaw tightened. He'd been avoiding this particular aspect, but his predecessor wouldn't let him. "They may have hated Yagura's rule, but..."
"But he was still their Kage. Their symbol. Their honor." The older man's pipe had gone cold in his hands. "Even if half the village celebrated privately, they'll demand justice publicly."
A Kage cannot be killed by foreign shinobi without consequence, regardless of internal politics.
"Blood for blood," Minato murmured, the old shinobi way echoing in his mind. A way his sensei was ardent to end.
"They'll want Eishin-kun's head, or at minimum, his exile and disgrace. Anything less will be seen as Konoha spitting on their sovereignty."
The silence stretched again between them, filled with implications neither wanted to voice. Minato's fingers drummed against his desk. The village's needs came first. They always did. That was what the hat meant, what the title demanded.
"The village must survive," he said finally, the words tasting like ash.
Hiruzen-sensei nodded slowly, understanding passing between them without elaboration.
Some conversations were better left unfinished. Some decisions better left unspoken.
….. until absolutely necessary.
— — — — — — — —
You can read up to 8 chapters ahead at patreon.com/vizem