"Twelve hours have passed since Anko's report. Twelve hours, and our ANBU teams haven't found a single trace of Orochimaru."
Hiruzen Sarutobi's voice was a deep murmur, as heavy as the smoke from his pipe that swirled slowly in the dim light of the meeting room. This wasn't his office. It was a secure room deep within the tower, windowless, a place designed for conversations that were never to leave its walls. The air was thick with a tension that not even the smoke could dissipate.
Across from him, the Jonin-sensei of the Konoha rookies formed a tense semicircle.
Asuma Sarutobi, an unlit cigarette between his fingers, rapped his knuckles on the table. His frustration was a palpable energy.
"My students were nearly killed in there, Father! Choji is injured, Ino was unconscious when the other team found them. And we're going to throw them into a one-on-one tournament? It's sending them to the slaughter. We should postpone the preliminaries. Right now."
"Asuma is right, Lord Hokage," Kurenai intervened, her usual calm replaced by a sharp concern. "My own genin are at their limit. Hinata is trying to keep her composure, but I know she's exhausted. Kiba and Shino hide their fatigue with bravado and silence, but it's obvious. Orochimaru is a master of deception. He could be disguised as any one of the proctors right now. The security we think we have is an illusion. Every genin out there is a potential target. We don't know his status, or how many of his subordinates have infiltrated. To proceed with the exam is to serve the genin up on a silver platter."
Hiruzen exhaled a long column of smoke. His face, normally that of a benevolent grandfather, was a mask of granite.
"And canceling the exams—what signal would that send?" His question silenced the protests. "To the feudal lords, to the dignitaries from other villages who are already on their way. It would send the message that Konoha has lost control of its own house. That a single shinobi can paralyze our military structure. Doubt would breed mistrust. Mistrust, conflict. We could be sowing the seeds of a war to avoid a battle that has not yet begun."
"Letting Orochimaru move freely while our kids are trapped in an arena is the real insanity," Asuma retorted, his voice rising. "What kind of image will we project if one of the genin dies in a preliminary match at the hands of an infiltrator? That would be a far greater humiliation."
"CANCELING THE EXAMS WOULD BE EXTINGUISHING THE FLAME OF THEIR YOUTH!" Might Gai's voice, though contained, vibrated with a passion that made the air tremble. "It would be a victory for the enemy without him throwing a single punch! It would prove that fear can conquer the will of Konoha! Our precious students have overcome hell, Lord Hokage! Trusting in their strength and in our ability to protect them is the answer! We must continue, and our vigilance will be the armor that protects them!"
"A large-scale sweep would only let him know we've found him out," Kakashi's voice was a cool, calm counterpoint to Gai's energy. He had remained silent until now, leaning against the back wall, his single visible eye dark and emotionless. "He would hide deeper, or accelerate his plans. It would be like trying to put out a fire by blowing on it. We'd only scatter the embers."
Asuma turned to him, his irritation on edge.
"So what do you propose, Kakashi? That we just stand by while that monster picks his next victim?"
"Postponing only gives him more time to prepare his real attack, Asuma," Kakashi replied, his tone purely tactical. "It's better to have him in a controlled environment where all our eyes are on him, rather than letting him hide and choose the time and place of the attack. The preliminaries, with the right security, aren't a silver platter. They're a cage."
"A cage for him, or for the genin?" Asuma snapped. "I'm not convinced."
Kakashi said no more. His gaze was distant, as if he were seeing something the others couldn't. Watch him. And if necessary… The rest of the ANBU's order was an icy echo in his mind. His silence was so heavy, so full of an unusual gravity, that Kurenai and Asuma exchanged a worried glance.
"The exams continue," Hiruzen decreed, his voice ending the discussion. "But security will be tripled. The ANBU will form an invisible perimeter. Every one of you," he said, his gaze passing over each Jonin, "will be on duty, watching. Not as sensei, but as the elite of this village. Anko is already in the field. Orochimaru has come to hunt. We will be the hunters waiting for him. Now, let's go. Our genin are waiting."
The meeting dissolved. The Jonin filed out, their faces marked by a new, grim determination. Kakashi was the last to move, the weight of his true mission—one he couldn't share with anyone—crushing him like a mountain.
****
The large circular hall at the top of the tower was a hive of exhaustion and anticipation. The twenty genin who had survived the Forest of Death instinctively grouped together, forming small islands of camaraderie in a sea of strangers. The Sand team kept to themselves; Gaara's presence was a vacuum of pressure that everyone else avoided.
The group of nine from Konoha, the largest faction, had gathered near one of the large windows. But their unity was an illusion. Sasuke stood several feet away from the rest, his silence a declaration of independence. The tension following Shikamaru's warning in the forest was a palpable crack in their fragile alliance.
Ino, instead of orbiting Sasuke as usual, stayed close to Sakura, with an awkwardness that wasn't like her.
"Hey, Billboard-Brow," she began, her voice lower than normal. "Are you okay? You look tired."
"We all are, Ino-Pig," Sakura replied, not taking her eyes off the room. Her Analytical Eye was active by instinct, scanning the other competitors. "You look worse, though."
"Shut up," Ino shot back, but there was no force in her insult. "Seriously. What you did for us in the forest…" She paused, swallowing her pride. "Thanks."
Sakura turned, surprised. The sincerity in her rival's voice disarmed her.
"We're from the same village. It's what we're supposed to do."
That's when Karin saw them.
Two Grass ninja, her former teammates, were walking toward them. One of them, a burly kid named Zakuya, had a cruel smile on his face as he led the way. Karin instinctively shrank, trying to make herself smaller, seeking Hinata's protective shadow.
"Well, well. Look what the wind blew in," Zakuya's voice was like dripping poison. "The useless girl who abandoned us in the forest."
His companion let out an ugly laugh that drew a few glances.
"I thought a sloth-bear would've eaten you, Karin," the other one said. "Did you think you'd survive on your own, you piece of trash? I guess you had to leech onto a bigger group like a parasite."
Karin didn't answer. Fear, an old acquaintance, closed her throat. The trauma of her abandonment, the terror of being alone, resurfaced with a force that made her tremble.
"We left you behind because you're dead weight, Karin," Zakuya continued, enjoying her humiliation. "A team is only as strong as its weakest link. And you were always ours."
Before Hinata could intervene with a quiet word or Kiba with a threatening growl, Sakura took a step forward. She placed herself between Karin and her former teammates. Her posture was relaxed, but her gaze was icy.
"The only trash here is someone who can't recognize strength when it's right in front of them," Sakura said, her voice calm but as sharp as glass. "Karin is part of our team now. If you have a problem with her, you have a problem with me."
Zakuya scoffed.
"You? The little pink-haired girl? What are you gonna do, cry until I give up?"
The Grass ninja didn't see the movement. No one did. A thin, invisible thread of chakra shot from Sakura's finger and latched onto Zakuya's kunai pouch. With an imperceptible tug, Sakura applied minimal tension.
Zakuya took a step forward to intimidate her, but his balance failed him. He tripped, as if his own foot had gotten tangled, and fell flat on his face with a dull thud.
The silence was absolute. His teammate stared at him, stunned. Sakura didn't move. Her expression didn't change. Several Konoha ninja had instinctively positioned themselves behind her. Kiba had stepped forward, Akamaru growling. Shino had subtly moved to flank them. Hinata stood directly behind Karin, a silent guardian.
"As I was saying," Sakura continued, her voice frigid, "get lost."
Zakuya scrambled to his feet, his face red with fury and humiliation. He saw the predatory look in Kiba's eyes, the threatening stillness of Shino, the lazy but calculating smirk of Shikamaru, and even the intense, disinterested gaze of Sasuke, who was now watching the scene. They were outnumbered and, in a way he couldn't understand, outclassed.
Muttering a threat, Zakuya and his teammate retreated, defeated without a single blow thrown.
Karin looked at Sakura. The words wouldn't come out of her mouth, but her eyes, filled with absolute gratitude and loyalty, said everything.
"Thank you, Sakura-san," she whispered, her voice trembling.
"Don't mention it. We're teammates," Sakura replied with a small, confident smile.
Hinata placed a reassuring hand on her shoulder. Her place in the group was sealed.
"That was awesome, Sakura!" Kiba exclaimed, breaking the tension. "You put him in his place without even breaking a sweat! Did you see his face? He almost wet himself!"
"Your logic is interesting," Shino commented, adjusting his glasses. "You used a tactic of psychological destabilization combined with a subtle physical intervention. Efficient."
Ino looked at Sakura, then at Shikamaru. "Since when is she so… decisive?" she muttered.
"What a drag," Shikamaru responded, though a small, interested smile touched his lips. "She's becoming troublesome."
Sasuke watched the scene from a distance. He saw Sakura's new authority, how she had drawn Karin and even Ino into her orbit.
At that moment, the main doors swung wide open. Hiruzen Sarutobi entered, flanked by the exam proctors and the Jonin-sensei. The atmosphere instantly turned official.
All the genin formed ranks. The Hokage stood before them, his gaze sweeping over each of the survivors.
"Congratulations on completing the second test," he began, his voice filling the hall. "You have shown remarkable tenacity and skill. However, the number of you who have made it this far is greater than expected."
He paused, his gaze lingering for an instant on the two-person team from Konoha.
"Normally, we would proceed with a smaller number, but this year, twenty of you have shown the courage to make it here. Therefore, before the third and final test, we will be holding preliminary rounds."
A murmur of surprise ran through the room. Kiba grinned with excitement; Shikamaru groaned in annoyance; Sasuke remained impassive.
"The third test will consist of one-on-one combat, in front of an audience that will include the feudal lords and leaders from other villages," Hiruzen explained. "The preliminaries will serve to cut your number in half. Participation is voluntary. If anyone does not feel prepared, you may withdraw now with your team."
No one moved. The silence was a declaration of intent.
"I withdraw."
Kabuto Yakushi's voice surprised everyone. The glasses-wearing ninja stepped forward.
"Lord Hokage, I'm exhausted. My injuries from the forest… I'm not in any condition to fight."
As Kabuto gave his excuse, he shot a nearly imperceptible glance at Sasuke. It was a fleeting gesture, but Sasuke's Sharingan, which activated by instinct at any anomaly, caught it. He didn't understand its meaning, but the feeling that something was wrong settled in his mind.
Anko looked at him with suspicion, but the Hokage nodded.
"Understood. Your decision is respected. Kabuto's team is disqualified."
As Kabuto walked away, his eyes met Kakashi's. The Jonin didn't see an injured ninja. He saw one of Orochimaru's pieces moving on the board, making a strategic retreat. Too convenient, he thought.
"Very well," Hiruzen said. "If there are no further withdrawals, we will begin the preliminaries. Watch the board."
A large electronic screen on the wall came to life. The sound of the mechanism activating was an electric hum that made everyone's hair stand on end. The names of the remaining twenty genin began to flash, swirling at an unreadable speed.
"Oh no, I'm up against the Sand guy!" a Rain genin was heard choking out.
"Yes, I got an easy one!" celebrated another.
The tension in the room was so thick you could chew it. Sakura held her breath, searching for her friends' faces, hoping she wouldn't have to fight them. Hinata clenched her fists, her expression a mix of fear and resolve.
The board stopped.
Two names remained illuminated in the center of the screen, large and clear, a sentence and a challenge.
SASUKE UCHIHA VS. YOROI AKADŌ
The room's attention focused on Sasuke's face. There was no surprise in it. No fear. Only a cold, predatory focus. His moment had arrived. Sakura and Hinata looked at him, their faces a mixture of concern and a newfound faith.
From a distance, Kakashi watched him. The weight of his new, terrible mission was reflected in the seriousness of his single visible eye. The test wasn't just for Sasuke. It was for him, too.