Snow. Thick, silent flakes drifted down from a heavy grey sky, blanketing Konoha in a pristine layer of white. From his perch atop the Fourth Hokage's stone head, Ryuu watched the village transform.
Rooftops donned soft white caps, familiar training grounds became smooth, untouched fields, and the bustling streets below seemed hushed, muffled by the snowfall.
He liked the snow. He'd discovered this unexpected affinity during his first Konoha winter. While other children bundled up, complaining about the cold, Ryuu felt… comfortable.
The biting air didn't seem to penetrate his layers quite as sharply, the chill a familiar echo rather than an uncomfortable intrusion. A quirk of his Yuki blood, Kasumi had confirmed curtly when he'd asked, another small, indelible link to the heritage she tried so hard to ignore.
He breathed in the crisp air, the coldness feeling clean, sharp, focusing his thoughts.
Kasumi was gone. Dispatched on a multi-day reconnaissance mission near the Fire Country's northern border – vague details, standard procedure for the discreet tasks Minato now assigned her.
It left Ryuu with a rare, precious commodity: unsupervised time. Time to think, to analyze, to simply be without Kasumi's constant, anxious vigilance or the structured demands of the Academy.
He pulled his knees up to his chest, wrapping his arms around them, his goggles resting on his bandaged forehead. Life had settled into a routine utterly alien yet strangely mundane. Academy drills, history lessons steeped in propaganda, Taijutsu spars he still mostly lost through lack of instinct rather than speed, relentless private training with Kasumi focusing on control, stealth, and just recently, Kekkei Genkai Jutsu.
He was stronger, faster, his chakra control significantly improved. He could reliably stick multiple leaves, maintain basic Henge for several minutes (though the drain was still considerable), and execute Kawarimi with near-perfect timing.
His sensory skills were developing steadily, allowing him to pick out individual chakra signatures within the Academy grounds, filter background noise, even sense residual emotional traces left on objects if he concentrated hard enough. Yet, compared to the threats he knew were looming, he felt pathetically weak.
His social integration was… functional. He maintained a cautious distance, observing the complex web of friendships and rivalries forming amongst his peers. Kenjiro remained his most consistent point of contact. Daichi was still loudly friendly, Ren still mostly asleep, Asami still precisely perfect. He existed amongst them, participated adequately, but remained fundamentally apart, an outsider looking in, burdened by knowledge they couldn't comprehend.
The timeline divergence was profound, unsettling.
Minato and Kushina lived. Naruto was growing up with parents, likely altering his entire personality, his motivations, his power progression. Ryuu recalled the 'Road to Ninja' movie, the alternate 'Menma' – would this Naruto be similar? Confident, perhaps slightly arrogant, carrying the weight of being the Hokage's son and Jinchuriki? Or would Kushina's presence temper him differently? Impossible to know.
The Uchiha situation was the biggest variable. Minato's proactive, less confrontational approach, combined with Danzo's earlier marginalization or future defection, might avert the massacre.
But Ryuu knew the seeds of resentment were deep, sown long before the Kyuubi attack. And figures like Obito, manipulated or not, still harbored immense hatred towards the village and the Uchiha's role within it.
Black Zetsu, the ultimate manipulator, would undoubtedly seek to exploit any remaining friction. And Danzo… even sidelined, a man like Danzo Shimura never truly relinquished his ambition or his clandestine network. The potential for disaster remained terrifyingly high.
And beyond Konoha? Akatsuki was forming, guided by Obito/BZ, hunting Jinchuriki. Kiri was descending further into its Bloody Mist era, purging bloodlines. The other villages postured and rebuilt, nursing old grudges. This "peace" was just the quiet inhalation before the next war.
He felt like a man trying to shore up a crumbling dam with handfuls of mud, knowing a tidal wave was coming. His interventions felt small, insignificant against the vast, complex machinery of fate and hatred driving this world. He needed more power, more influence, faster than his small body could currently provide.
A soft crunch of snow nearby jolted Ryuu from his contemplation. He hadn't sensed anyone approaching. His head snapped up, instantly wary, his hand instinctively reaching for the pouch where Kasumi insisted he keep a few practice kunai.
Standing a few feet away, almost blending into the grey, snowy backdrop despite his traditional robes, was Hiruzen Sarutobi. The Third Hokage looked older than when Ryuu had seen him at the Academy ceremony, the lines on his face deeper, etched not just by age but by recent grief – the loss of his wife, Biwako, during the Kyuubi attack was still fresh.
Yet, there was also a lightness to him that hadn't been there before, the crushing weight of daily command lifted, replaced by a contemplative weariness. He offered Ryuu a small, kindly smile, though his eyes held their characteristic sharp intelligence.
"Forgive me, young one," Hiruzen said, his voice gentle, carrying easily over the quiet hiss of falling snow. "I did not mean to startle you. You were lost very deep in thought."
Ryuu scrambled to his feet, automatically bowing respectfully. "Sandaime-sama!" He cursed his lapse in awareness. To be approached so easily, even by a figure like Hiruzen known more for wisdom than pure speed like Minato, was unacceptable. Kasumi would flay him for such carelessness.
Hiruzen chuckled softly, a warm sound in the cold air. "No need for such formality now, Ryuu-kun. I am merely an old man enjoying the snow." He gestured towards the panoramic view of the snow-covered village below. "A beautiful sight, is it not? Konoha at peace, blanketed in white. It almost makes one forget the hardships."
Ryuu nodded mutely, unsure how to respond. Why was the legendary 'God of Shinobi', the retired Hokage, speaking to him, a six-year-old refugee? This wasn't a chance encounter.
"Your mother, Kasumi-san, speaks well of your diligence," Hiruzen continued, his gaze sweeping over the village. "She tells Hokage-sama you show great promise."
"I try hard, Sandaime-sama," Ryuu replied cautiously, sticking to polite deference.
"Good, good," Hiruzen nodded, turning his gaze fully towards Ryuu. His eyes, though kind, were intensely perceptive. Ryuu felt like his carefully constructed facade was being peeled back layer by layer. "Control is important. Discipline is important. But tell me, Ryuu-kun, as you look down upon this village, your village now... what do you feel?"
The question was unexpected, probing. Ryuu hesitated, choosing his words carefully. "It is... large, Sandaime-sama. Strong. Safer than where we came from." He kept it simple, factual, reflecting his refugee background.
Hiruzen smiled faintly. "Safer, yes. Konoha strives to be a sanctuary. But safety is not passive, child. It is earned. It is protected. By the sacrifices of those who came before," he gestured towards the Memorial Stone, barely visible through the snow down below, "and by the dedication of those who live now."
He took a step closer, his gaze becoming more focused, more pedagogical. "Every leaf on every tree contributes to the forest's strength, Ryuu-kun. Every citizen, every shinobi, plays a part in upholding the Will of Fire – the spirit that binds us, that makes us protect our comrades, our village, our future generations, as if they were our own family. It is this will, passed down from the First Hokage, that allows Konoha to endure, to rebuild, even after terrible tragedies."
Ryuu listened silently, recognizing the rhetoric instantly. The Will of Fire. The core ideology of Konoha, preached relentlessly at the Academy, used to justify countless sacrifices.
Hiruzen wasn't just making small talk. This was indoctrination, subtle but deliberate, aimed directly at him, the outsider, the refugee granted sanctuary. He was being gently guided towards adopting Konoha's values, towards feeling indebted, towards becoming another loyal 'leaf'.
"Even young leaves," Hiruzen continued, his eyes twinkling slightly, "have a role to play. By studying hard, by training diligently, by respecting your comrades and your leaders, you contribute to the village's health. You become part of that strength." He placed a gentle, age-spotted hand briefly on Ryuu's shoulder. "Kasumi-san chose well in seeking refuge here. Konoha looks after its own, especially those who show promise and loyalty."
The implication was clear: conform, be loyal, show promise, and you will be protected. Deviate, question, prioritize yourself over the collective... and that protection might prove conditional.
"I understand, Sandaime-sama," Ryuu murmured, bowing his head again. "I will work hard to be worthy of Konoha's protection." He played the part of the grateful, diligent refugee child perfectly.
Hiruzen smiled, seemingly satisfied. "Good lad." He looked out over the snowy village again, a melancholic shadow crossing his features. "War takes much from us," he said softly, perhaps thinking of Biwako, perhaps thinking of the generations lost. "Peace requires constant effort, constant vigilance... and the willingness of new generations to carry the flame."
He turned back to Ryuu one last time. "Enjoy the snow, Ryuu-kun. But do not forget the lessons beneath it." With a final nod, Hiruzen Sarutobi turned and walked away, his figure slowly disappearing into the swirling white flakes, leaving Ryuu alone once more atop the monument.
Ryuu stared after him, his earlier contemplative mood shattered, replaced by a cold, analytical clarity. The encounter hadn't been random. Hiruzen, likely at Minato's request or with his knowledge, had sought him out.
To assess him? To gauge his loyalty? To begin the process of integrating him fully into Konoha's ideological framework? Probably all three.
The Will of Fire. Protect your comrades. Sacrifice for the village. Noble ideals, perhaps. But Ryuu knew the dark side of that ideology – how it could be twisted to justify atrocities, demand unreasonable sacrifices, suppress dissent. He remembered Danzo, a product of Hiruzen's own generation, twisting the Will of Fire into a shield for his ruthless ambition.
He remembered the Uchiha, isolated and ultimately destroyed (in the original timeline) partly because their clan loyalty clashed with the village's demand for absolute fealty.
Hiruzen's words, though delivered gently, felt like carefully forged chains, attempting to bind Ryuu's loyalty to Konoha. Ryuu understood the necessity of playing along, of appearing grateful and diligent. Konoha offered the best chance for survival, for training, for accessing the resources he needed.
He needed Konoha, for now.
But loyalty? True loyalty, the kind that demanded sacrificing oneself for the collective without question? Ryuu felt a cold certainty settle within him.
His loyalty belonged only to himself, and to Kasumi. His goal wasn't to become another leaf burning brightly for Konoha's sake. His goal was survival – survival against Akatsuki, against Madara, against Obito, against the Ōtsutsuki.
Survival on his own terms.
He would learn Konoha's ways, wear its headband eventually, fight under its banner when necessary. He would use its resources, learn its techniques, gather its knowledge.
He would even protect its people, if doing so aligned with his own preservation. But he would never blindly embrace the Will of Fire. He would never forget he was an outsider, playing a long, dangerous game on a board rigged against him.
He looked down at the village again, the picturesque snow covering the recent scars but not the underlying tensions. Hiruzen saw hope and enduring spirit.
Ryuu saw a complex, dangerous machine, filled with potential allies, potential enemies, and countless threats, both known and unknown. He took a deep breath of the cold winter air, the brief feeling of peace gone, replaced by the familiar weight of his knowledge and the cold clarity of his singular purpose.
Survive. Strengthen. And never, ever let them see the calculating mind behind the child's mask.