"Considering the art of sensing. Now, some say it's all about talent—that you're just born with a built-in, innate eye that picks up what the normal can't. But then again," she said, pausing for a moment, "what in this ninja world doesn't boil down to talent? Breathing? Probably."
"But!" she declared, her voice ringing with the authority of a woman who had seen everything. "The utterly predictable truth is that the universe adores those who work hard with resolve."
"For every born prodigy napping on a throne of their own greatness, there's some hard-headed nobody in a mist somewhere, training so hard they're literally sweating grit. And one day, that nobody steps out of the mist and politely knocks the prodigy right off his throne. So, remember that. Your talent is a head start, not a finish line."
She looked at the two immensely talented girls before her. "Which is why, for you two, the training is relatively simple. We'll break it down into five stages. Stage one: Externalization. For most, controlling the chakra in their own body is very hard. It takes ages. For you two, with chakra control that can compete for first place, it should be as easy as casting a normal jutsu."
As she spoke, a shimmering, cerulean aura of pure chakra enveloped her hand like a second skin. "You'll coat an object with your chakra—make it yours. Your first goal is to see just how far you can walk away before you can't feel the 'tug' anymore. The objective? Increase that distance by one full meter every single day."
She painted the next picture for them. "Once you can sense your chakra from a solid hundred meters away—blindfolded, backwards—we move to stage two. I will then proceed to hurl every manner of projectile at you while you dodge with your eyes shut, guided only by that sensory leash."
Mito saw their slightly wide eyes and grinned. "I know, I know. Normally, learning the Sealing Technique doesn't come with such... vigorous prerequisites. But I know you're not here to learn how to make storage scrolls. You want the kind of seals that can be woven in the heat of battle against someone who can level mountains with a punch."
To Azula, the entire explanation sent a jolt of thrilling familiarity through her. This is just like Observation Haki! she realized, her mind briefly flashing to a world of pirates and grand lines.
Sense the unseen, predict the attack... and isn't chakra itself just another form of life energy? The parallels were uncanny.
Mito's method seemed almost crude in its simplicity, but it was brutally logical. Talent set the pace—someone like her might gain a meter a day, another a meter every ten days, a third might struggle for a month. But the principle was universal: push, stretch, and grow.
A slow, competitive smile spread across Azula's face. She adored this. She lived for the tangible, measurable proof of improvement, for the raw data of her own growing power.
The idea of charting her progress meter by meter was intoxicating. One meter a day is 365 meters a year, she calculated, her inner strategist already mapping out a decade. That seemed almost... pedestrian.
But in twenty years? Forty? By the time those pale, alien freaks from the moon decide to descend for a visit? She would sense them before they even left their celestial driveway.
Before they could begin, Mito revealed she had, of course, prepared everything in advance, including—somewhat ominously—thick blindfolds.
"But those are for later!" she chimed, snapping them out of their reverie. "For the next few hours, you're not leaving this spot. Your only job is to truly, deeply, and utterly familiarize yourselves with your own chakra."
It was a bizarre thing to say. It was like being told to get to know your own spleen. You've lived with it your whole life, but could you pick it out of a lineup? Yet, it was the fundamental truth.
Every person's chakra was as unique as a fingerprint; it was why sensory types could pick out a friendly signature from kilometers away amidst a crowd.
It was at that moment that Tsunade, her eyes shining with the dazzling, dangerous light of a born gambler who sees a sure thing, nudged Azula. "Hey. How about a bet? First one to hit a hundred meters wins."
Azula's first instinct was to dismiss it as childish folly. But then she stopped. She remembered the legendary anomaly that was Tsunade's luck. The woman lost every coin toss, every card game, every casual wager—unless her loss would prelude a catastrophe, or the subject involved a certain blonde prince. To bet against her was to tempt the very fabric of probability.
A slow, cunning smile touched Azula's lips. This wasn't a bet; it was a strategic maneuver. "Alright," she said, her voice a smooth purr. "I accept. But the stakes? What could you possibly offer me that I'd want?"
Tsunade blinked, her confidence faltering for a second as she realized she hadn't thought that far ahead. "Uh... what do you want?"
Azula's mind raced, scanning through possibilities before landing on the perfect, future-proof prize. "The winner gets to ask one thing of the loser, anytime in the future. A single favor. No questions asked, so long as it doesn't violate any core principles. Deal?"
Tsunade's brain, already tasting victory, did the math: My talent vs. hers? This is a lock! She thrust out her hand, her grin back and wider than ever. "Deal! Prepare to lose, Azula! It's time I show you the legendary talent of the First Hokage's granddaughter!"
...
...
...
While Azula and Tsunade were training under Mito, Azula's newly acquired "team" wasn't less busy than her.
Instead of idly sipping tea, these women were mobilized with an efficiency that would make a well-trained soldier ashamed.
She had secured this team for a monthly equivalent to a successful B-rank mission. For a group of veterans who had traded their kunai for knitting needles and their mission reports for grocery lists, this wasn't just a paycheck. It was a financial sugar rush, a sudden and glorious return to a lifestyle not funded solely by coupon-clipping and haggling over the price of root vegetables.
That's right. On paper, it was a luxurious team of Jōnin and Chūnin. In reality, it was the most overqualified PTA meeting in the history of Konoha.
These were women who could simultaneously calculate the trajectory of a shuriken while pureeing sweet potatoes for a fussy toddler. Their killer instincts were now primarily used to hunt down the last pair of discounted children's shoes in a seasonal sale.
They were, for all intents and purposes, walking, talking, slightly exhausted daycare centers who had long forgotten what it felt like to have a mission that didn't end with someone spilling juice on their flak jacket.
Azula had always been morbidly curious about this peculiar tradition in the shinobi world. Why did incredibly powerful women, upon saying 'I do,' almost invariably trade their battlefield glory for domestic drudgery?
Only now did she understand it wasn't about weakness but a terrifyingly logical calculus of risk and love. They did it for their children.
The shinobi life was a brutal lottery where death was a frequent contestant. What mother would willingly choose a career where the employee benefits included a high probability of orphaning your child?
Furthermore, in a world this dark, children without a stable parental anchor had a nasty habit of growing into psychopaths with a penchant for atrocious actions.
And let's be honest—between the men and the women, the choice of who stayed home was a no-brainer. In a world that produced fathers like Fugaku Uchiha and Rasa of the Sand (who literally tried to assassinate his own son), it was a miracle any of the kids turned out halfway functional.
The women weren't abandoning their posts; they were conducting a strategic retreat to the home front to prevent the next generation from becoming a complete write-off. That, and this world seemed stubbornly stuck on an 'Ancient Japanese Society' setting, which didn't help matters.
Back in the command center (a generously named room that usually hosted playdates), the chief of this unprecedented operation, Kawara, let out a low whistle of admiration as she reviewed Azula's latest storyboards.
"A sight, I tell you," she began, addressing the small group of women around her. "I never expected the Uchiha Princess to be a woman of such... audacious vision. It truly is worthy of her title."
Her tone held genuine respect, not just the polite kind you offer to the person signing your checks.
As the chief coordinator between the anime artists and the manga artists, Kawara had seen it all. She had finished reading Azula's personal 'rewrite' of the Mugen Train arc—a project Azula solely designed to make her original character, the flame-wielding Azula Rengoku, more popular and her inevitable death scene even more soul-crushingly tragic than the original anime.
"You're not kidding," chimed in another woman, absently wiping a stray smear of crayon wax off her sleeve. "My kid says she's already a legend at the Academy. Shockingly approachable for an Uchiha, apparently. Then there's the whole Uchiha Tribunal she set up."
"But after actually working with her, negotiating with her feels less like talking to a child prodigy and more like getting a performance review from the Hokage himself. An unprecedented genius doesn't even cover it."
This wasn't empty flattery. The easy money was fantastic, but the genuine intellectual whiplash of working for a pre-teen mogul was its own unique form of compensation.
Kawara waved a hand, bringing the meeting back to order. "Alright, enough gushing. The real question: how is the construction of the grand theater coming along? The plan says it should be finished by tomorrow. Please tell me the plan is still accurate and we're not waiting on some contractor who got eaten by a rogue bear."
The theater was Azula's most ambitious physical project yet, funded by the roaring success of her bookstore.
It was her bid to recreate the cinemas of her past life. A place where moving pictures—'anime' or even 'movies'—would flash across a giant screen for a mesmerized public.
She'd broken ground on the idea the moment the anime concept was born. The blueprints included space for merchandise kiosks, leases for dango sellers, and even little alcoves for displaying figurines. It was a temple of entertainment, and according to the last estimate, it was supposed to be done...
This time, it was a blonde woman, who somehow still had glitter in her hair from a morning art project, who replied. "It's all on schedule, Kawara-sama. My team did a site walk-through this morning. Barring any unforeseen problems, we'll be cutting the ribbon tomorrow."
Kawara nodded, a slow, triumphant smile spreading across her face. This was it. This meant that in a few weeks, the very first episode of Demon Slayer would premiere to the public.
Azula's plan was to release one episode per week, playing it on a loop throughout the day for seven days straight until the next installment arrived. It was a strategy born from necessity—they simply didn't have enough content yet to do more.
But Azula had foreseen everything. She promised a future so flooded with animated content that they'd have headaches just trying to schedule it all. A time when the question wouldn't be 'What are we going to show?' but 'What are we not going to show today?' For now, that was a glorious problem for another day. Today, they had a theater to open.
(END OF THE CHAPTER)