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    The Hokage Monument looked out over all of Konoha.

    Four enormous stone faces carved into the cliff—each a Hokage, watching the village below. Forest stretched to the horizon in every direction, broken only by the main gate road and the thin paths winding through the trees.

    Shin took it in quietly.

    He could pick out the Hokage building from up here, that wide familiar roof. His own house. The Inuzuka compound, not far off. The main street was alive with midday traffic, people moving like water.

    “How does it feel?” Fugaku asked.

    He was standing a little to Shin’s right, hands folded behind his back.

    “Open,” Shin said. A beat. “Windy.”

    Fugaku made a low sound—not quite a laugh.

    He has something to say. Shin had been wondering since they started walking. Tsume had warned him just this morning—stay away from the Uchiha. And here he was at the top of the village with the Uchiha clan head. If she found out, she’d have words for both of them.

    He didn’t smile at that.

    “Lord Fugaku,” Shin said. “Was there something you wanted to tell me?”

    Fugaku glanced at him. “Just Fugaku. Uncle, if you prefer. You don’t need the formality with me.”

    Shin didn’t answer.

    “Your father and I had a relationship that was—not ordinary.”

    The wind moved through the gap between them.

    “Your name.” Fugaku looked back out over the village. “I was the one who chose it.”

    Shin went still.

    He knew almost nothing about his father’s life before the end. No one had told him—there was no one left to ask. But to have named him. That meant Fugaku had known Tsukasa closely enough for that. More than a friend.

    “After your parents died,” Fugaku continued, “I wanted to bring you into the Uchiha. To raise you there.”

    Shin looked at his profile. Adopt a child from outside the clan. The politics alone would have been a fight—and Fugaku was already clan head in all but name. He knew what those conversations looked like.

    Fugaku seemed to read the silence. “It fell through, in the end. Complications. That’s how you ended up with Tsume.”

    A pause.

    “How are you and Sasuke getting along at the Academy?”

    The shift caught Shin slightly off guard. “We don’t interact much. Some competition in academics.”

    Fugaku made that same low sound.

    He raised one hand and pointed north—toward the part of Konoha that sat apart from everything else. A cluster of buildings that felt like a separate village within the village.

    “The Uchiha compound,” he said. “Do you know why it was built there?”

    Shin looked. Even from this height, you could feel the distance.

    “That was the Second Hokage’s decision. In his mind, from the very beginning—the Uchiha were to be placed outside. Separate.” His voice was flat. Stating a fact. “The Third. The council. They were all his students. They’ve kept his policies.”

    A pause.

    “The Fourth wanted to change that. He died young.”

    Another pause.

    “I had imagined,” Fugaku said, quieter now, “that you’d grow up there. That you and Itachi and Sasuke would be something like brothers, supporting each other. That I’d watch you all become something remarkable.”

    Shin didn’t respond. There wasn’t anything to say.

    “I would have taught you. Made you a proper shinobi. It was something I’d promised myself—for an old friend.”

    Old friend.

    “Do you know anything about your father’s history?” Fugaku asked.

    Shin shook his head.

    Fugaku looked at him for a moment, then looked away.

    “Tsukasa Takami.” He said the name slowly. “We were in the same year at the Academy. Him, me, Tsume Inuzuka, Shibi Aburame. He was—average. Unremarkable grades. Average performance. I was the top student at the time. I had no reason to pay attention to someone like that.”

    A faint, self-mocking edge entered his voice.

    “After graduation, he ended up in a recon unit with Tsume. I was placed with other Uchiha. We went our separate ways.

    “But after graduation—he was exceptional. Among the first in our year to make chunin. Under wartime conditions, our units were reorganized. We ended up working together.”

    Fugaku’s gaze drifted over the rooftops.

    “Tsukasa Takami. Water-style jutsu. Sensory type. An upper jonin of the Hidden Leaf.” He recited it like a formal record. “His strength wasn’t raw power. It was strategy. A kind of intelligence that shouldn’t be possible in a single person. In the battles we fought, he contributed more to Konoha’s victories than most people will ever know.

    “He had no pretension to him. No rank to his manner. The shinobi under him respected him. His peers respected him. Even the Fourth—Minato Namikaze—held him in high regard.” A brief pause. “And Shikaku Nara, who leads the jonin corps now. That position was supposed to be your father’s.”

    Shin watched the village below. A vendor’s cart moved along the main street, small as a fingernail from here.

    “Then something happened,” Fugaku said. “And he lost it.”

    The air between them went quiet.

    Shin waited.

    “During the Third Shinobi World War,” Fugaku said at last, “your father had already built real standing among Konoha’s leadership. I was on a classified mission. We were ambushed—compromised intelligence. Heavy losses. The conclusion was that we had a mole. Primary suspect: an Uchiha clansman.”

    His jaw tightened.

    “We interrogated him ourselves. Through the Sharingan. He was clean. We were certain. And I—I defended him. Led the defense.”

    He stopped.

    “But that was a convenient opportunity for certain people.” Something cold came into his voice. “Almost every jonin in that room came out against us. Your father—”

    A pause.

    “Your father chose to believe me.”


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    Shin said nothing.

    “He knew the risks. He was intelligent enough to model every possible outcome. Including the one where the man was guilty.” Fugaku exhaled slowly. “And yet he still stood on our side.”

    The silence stretched. A bird crossed the sky above the stone faces.

    “In the end,” Fugaku said, “the clansman was handed to the Yamanaka for a secondary interrogation. Their verdict was—”

    He stopped again.

    “—guilty.”

    Shin didn’t move.

    “Your father lost a great deal after that. Power. Standing. The respect of people who should have known better.” Fugaku’s voice was level. Precise. “And they only remembered his worth after he was gone.”

    Something settled heavily in Shin’s chest.

    “I don’t think,” he said carefully, “that my father was wrong.”

    Of course he wasn’t.” The laugh was short and sharp. “One man’s mistake, made to fall on an entire clan. Your father became the spare target. That’s what Konoha was, in those days.”

    He caught himself. Went still.

    Shin was listening. Fugaku was saying things he shouldn’t be saying to a child who wasn’t yet nine years old. Things that weren’t meant for him—or were precisely meant for him. The question was which.

    He knows exactly who he’s talking to. The thought settled quietly.

    “Only after Tsukasa was gone,” Fugaku said softly. “Only then did people remember to speak kindly of him.”

    A low, hollow sound.

    Then Fugaku turned to look at him.

    And Shin saw his eyes.

    Red. Three black tomoe turning slow in the irises—the Sharingan, fully active, catching the light.

    The wind stopped.

    Color bled out of the stone and came back too bright, too layered, each shape inconsistent with the ones beside it. The four stone faces looked up at him with the wrong depth to their expressions. Above, the sky had opened into something dark and enormous—and in the center of it hung a moon he had never seen: crimson, marked with three shadow-comma shapes, and it felt like it was breathing.

    Fugaku stood before him.

    Not a man anymore. A presence. Something the eyes couldn’t hold, that the mind tried to contain and couldn’t. The pressure of it pressed on Shin’s chest like a hand on a chest.

    He couldn’t find the ground.

    Shin.

    His name, in Fugaku’s voice. Low and measured.

    ……

    The color came back the right way. Stone and wind. A clear day.

    Shin blinked.

    He turned. Fugaku was standing beside him, looking out over the village, hands clasped behind his back. Ordinary dark eyes.

    “What?” Shin tilted his head. “Did you say something, Uncle Fugaku?”

    Something moved behind Fugaku’s expression. Not quite a smile.

    “Just thinking aloud.” A pause. “Are you feeling all right?”

    “I’m fine.” Shin looked back out over the rooftops. He felt perfectly fine. “Sorry. What were you saying?”

    “After this current period passes,” Fugaku said, “you’ll come to us. To the Uchiha.”

    Shin considered this. “That would cause problems for you.”

    “Don’t concern yourself with that.” His voice shifted—almost gentle. “Tsukasa’s son. I won’t let you be treated poorly.”

    Shin was quiet.

    “There’s one more thing I wanted to ask you.”

    “Yes, Uncle.”

    “You and Shisui,” Fugaku said. “You two have been in contact.”

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