Tsunade leaned forward, her chin propped on her fists, fixing Azula with a look of pure, unadulterated bewilderment. It was the kind of look usually reserved for particularly perplexing jutsus or someone who voluntarily ate the cafeteria's mystery meat stew.
"So," she spoke brashly as usual. "Let me get this straight. It's already the last few days of our first year. Every other kid with decent talent could graduate. I've applied. But you… you, who could probably pass the chunin exams by accidentally tripping and forming a perfect hand sign on the way down… you want to stay? Are you sure your chakra lines aren't tangled?"
She wasn't wrong. The academy, much to Azula's own immense surprise, had been… fun. A concept as foreign to her original life plan as a polite conversation with a Uchiha.
She was sure Tsunade was also enjoying it, but her plan to graduate was probably masterminded by the ever-scheming Tobirama, a simple but cold equation: enter, excel, exit in one year. A political statement wrapped in a child prodigy. Hiruzen, the Hokage with a spine about as firm as a warm noodle, needed a win.
What better PR than having the legendary First Hokage's granddaughter as his star disciple? It would shore up support from the villagers, make him look like a visionary, and generally annoy all the right people. Azula could practically smell the Machiavellian sweat on that idea.
From Azula's perspective, it was a no-brainer to graduate earlier. The longer she stayed, the longer she operated under the village's protective, training-focused umbrella.
Graduation meant swapping theory for tedium—endless missions weeding gardens or chasing lost cats, all while her precious training time evaporated. It was far more efficient to hoard power first and then, fully armed with terrifying new abilities, descend upon the unsuspecting world of ninja combat later.
Plus, her… father, Tajima, had made his feelings on the matter abundantly clear without using many words at all. His disapproval had been about as subtle as a fireball jutsu in a library. So her answer to Tsunade was simple.
"Yes, Tsuna, my chakra lines are perfectly aligned, thank you for your concern," Azula said, her voice a smooth, dry counterpoint to Tsunade's energetic confusion. "I believe I'll be enjoying the academy's… vibrant educational offerings for a while longer."
"But my reasons are my own. Why the desperate rush to flee this bastion of learning?"
She knew about the political pressure from Mito and Hiruzen, of course. But Tsunade's own personal, genuine desire to leave was the curious part. The girl clearly had her own motivations.
To her surprise, Tsunade straightened up, puffing out her chest. Her eyes took on a zealous gleam, shining with a conviction so bright it was almost physically painful to look at.
"I'm going to get strong! Like Grandpa! So strong that I can protect everyone I care about!" she declared, her voice ringing with the power of a poorly written, yet incredibly sincere, motivational scroll. "And then one day, I'm going to be Hokage! The greatest one ever!"
It was a truly staggering display of naivety. This wasn't the future gambling, sake-loving, trauma-riddled Tsunade of her memories.
This was a pure, uncynical prototype. Azula mused that perhaps this version hadn't yet had her soul repeatedly run through a meat grinder of loss, or maybe her own presence had already butterflied away that grim future.
Azula never once assumed events would play out like that silly 'anime' in her head; the butterfly effect was no joke, especially when the butterfly was a dragon with a penchant for pyrotechnics and psychological warfare.
Feigning a casualness she didn't entirely feel, Azula arched a single, perfectly sculpted eyebrow.
"An admirable, if tragically generic, goal," she retorted. "But does it require graduating at the tender age of six? Correct me if I'm wrong—and I'm not—but didn't your grandfather literally invent this entire village so children wouldn't have to rush off to war and could, I don't know, enjoy a few more years of playing tag before taking on the burden of national security?"
A sliver of genuine concern underpinned her sarcasm. Her mere existence was a ripple; what was to say it wouldn't become a tidal wave?
What if, because Konoha now had one too many geniuses, some external enemy decided to cull the herd early? And if they came hunting, who would be the brightest, most obvious target?
Not Azula, safe within the academy's walls. It would be the Hokage's prized disciple and the descendant of the First, the one constantly sent out on missions. The Hokage couldn't very well hold her hand on every D-rank mission to find a missing fluffball, could he?
Tsunade's mouth opened, then closed. Then opened again. A fish out of water would have been more eloquent.
Seeing the internal struggle flash across her face—the dimming of that starry-eyed hope—Azula knew the battle was already over. Tsunade's mind was made up. The pull of destiny, or perhaps just sheer stubbornness, was too strong. With a tiny, internal sigh, Azula decided to retreat. No point in kicking a defeated idealist.
"Never mind," Azula said, her tone softening a fraction into something almost resembling warmth. "Forget I said anything. Just… try not to get yourself killed by an exploding tag. That would be truly embarrassing."
A knowing, gentle smile played on Tsunade's lips, but she wisely let the subject drop.
After months of being practically glued to Azula's side—and after a very illuminating, slightly terrifying lecture from Grandma Mito on the psychological intricacies of the Uchiha clan—Tsunade was becoming fluent in the complex language of Azula.
She had it all figured out. When the fire princess truly didn't care about something, she would dismiss it with a flick of her wrist and a look that could freeze lava.
But when she did care? That was a different story. Then she'd perform a whole elaborate mental dance, trying to downplay her own interest as if it were a trivial, passing fancy. It was her way of maintaining control, of never showing a hand she considered weak.
The fact that Azula had even asked why Tsunade wanted to graduate early was a screaming, banner-waving confession of care. She was invested but too proud to say, 'Please don't go, I'll miss our daily sparring sessions where I effortlessly humiliate you.'
Speaking of which… Tsunade's smile twitched as her thoughts drifted to their last training match. A familiar, frustrated sigh built up in her chest.
How? How was it that she, the granddaughter of the God of Shinobi, a prodigy of the Senju clan known for their monstrous strength, couldn't last more than a few rounds against Azula when she was going all out?
Logically, she got it. Grandma had explained it in that infuriatingly calm way of hers: "Tsunade, dear, you are a hammer. A magnificent, powerful hammer. Azula… she is a scalpel. A lightning-fast, precision-guided scalpel that knows exactly where to strike to make a hammer miss its nail and bonk itself on the thumb."
The analogy was sound. It made sense. It was also utterly, profoundly annoying.
Thank the Sage for her Second Grandfather, Tobirama. His notes in Water Release were the only thing keeping her ego from being a completely flat, pancaked ruin. She was actually pretty good at it! If not for that newfound prowess, she might have started genuinely doubting her entire life's purpose.
Just as Tsunade was mentally composing a eulogy for her bruised pride, the silence was shattered.
"I'VE GOT IT!"
Azula's sudden exclamation wasn't a shout; it was a sharp, triumphant crack of lightning, perfectly suited to its owner. Tsunade jumped a full inch off the ground, her heart attempting a frantic drum solo against her ribs. "Oh god, Azula! Warn a person! Are you trying to finish what the training ground started?!"
But Azula wasn't listening. Her 'black' eyes were wide, gleaming with the fierce, terrifying light of a breakthrough.
For months, she had been obsessively tinkering with the incomplete illusion technique that her mother taught her. The progress was good, even by her impossible standards, but it wasn't perfect. And for Azula, anything less than perfection was a personal insult.
She wanted to project the most perfect version imaginable, a version that would surpass the original animation itself. She wanted viewers to feel the chill of the mountain air, smell the charcoal, and feel their hearts clench as if they were walking alongside Tanjiro themselves.
So far, her attempts, while technically brilliant, felt… static. Like a beautiful painting instead of a living world. It lacked soul.
But now—now she understood her fundamental error.
Before Tsunade could demand an explanation, the world around them shifted. The familiar training ground blurred at the edges.
Suddenly, a boy was walking towards them. He had kind eyes, a checked haori, and a basket full of charcoal strapped to his back. The detail was breathtaking—Tsunade could see the grain of the wood, the faint sheen of sweat on his brow.
Instinctively, she almost sidestepped to make way for him before her brain caught up. Illusion. It's an illusion. The boy walked straight through them, and as Tsunade turned, she saw a woman with a gentle smile waiting for him at the end of the path.
Tsunade's jaw went slack. As a dedicated fan who had pestered Azula for spoilers from the mysterious 'manga' more than once, she recognized the scene instantly. But this was different. It wasn't like watching a drawing on paper; it was like being a ghost, present in the moment. Azula hadn't just projected a scene; she had projected a memory from a world that felt utterly real.
The illusion faded, leaving the two girls back in the quiet training field. Azula's smirk was one of pure, unadulterated victory.
It was because Azula realized her error was one of perception. She was trying to project a cartoon. A fiction.
But if she, as Azula of the Fire Nation and then as Azula of the Uchiha, was real… then it stood to reason that the world of Demon Slayer existed somewhere in the infinite tapestry of the multiverse.
She wasn't trying to create art; she was trying to be a documentarian. She needed to project not an anime, but a story from a real world. A world where a boy named Tanjiro simply… went home to his mother.
She waved a hand dismissively, as if it were the most obvious thing in the world. "Those who know, will know."
Already, her mind was racing ahead, plotting world domination—or at least, entertainment domination.
"This changes everything," she murmured, more to herself than to Tsunade. "Recording the full story will be exponentially easier now. I can finish scripting the second arc and simply hire a team of illustrators to handle the tedious drawing."
Tsunade's eyes lit up with a spark that rivaled Azula's. The technical talk was interesting, but she'd latched onto one glorious, shining phrase: second arc.
"You mean… I get to see what happens next? Soon?" Tsunade asked, practically vibrating with excitement, all thoughts of bruised pride and early graduation vanishing in the face of impending, glorious storytelling.
Azula's smirk deepened. "Patience, Tsunade. Perfection cannot be rushed. But… yes. Soon."
(END OF THE CHAPTER)
I received few complain about me dragging the story with too much internal monologue and all, I'm sorry for this and am trying to change it as I think many would have feel the change in this chapter but reciprocally, it was also shorter and don't forget to vote guys.