[A/N: 1832 Words]
-000-
The Senju compound used to smell like dust and sake.
Tonight it smells like grilled fish.
Sometimes miso. Sometimes rice. Once, miraculously, Shisui baked a cake—lopsided, poorly frosted, smudged with his tiny fingerprints, and looked to be within an inch of its life.
Satoshi had knocked it off the table towards a trash can on principle alone, claiming it was unfit for consumption even for an Inuzuka hound.
Shisui caught it midair, and Shizune ended up hitting both of them with a ladle.
Tsunad laughed at that. It was deep and genuine.
She hadn't laughed like that in years.
It's been ten months. Ten months since she agreed—reluctantly, foolishly, maybe selfishly—to take them as students. She didn't plan to teach them for long.
But things changed.
The compound doesn't feel like a tomb anymore. The air moves. The windows open. The walls echo now—not with the ghost of her ancestors, but with footsteps, running, laughing, arguing, living. Her hallway is still lined with portraits of the dead, but the dead have started to share their space.
There are shoes at the entrance now, three pairs, neatly lined up. A fourth pair sits beside them—hers. She doesn't remember when she started doing that again. It used to be a habit, then it wasn't. Then it was again.
She has begun to smile again, too.
She remembers a time when she smiled without thinking. Before she learned to count the number of bodies she couldn't save.
Before she learned what it meant to stand in a tent full of dying soldiers and know that her chakra wasn't enough, would never be enough.
There was a time when life was something simple. When her brother's laugh filled the compound. When her lover held her hand beneath cherry blossoms.
But the dead do not hold hands, and the blossoms bloom without them.
Tsunade was never naive. She knew what it meant to be a shinobi. But knowing doesn't make the loss any softer.
Her family died. Her lover died. Her faith died sometime after.
Orochimaru promised her Kawaki would be safe under his protection. He promised.
That was a lie. Or maybe it wasn't. Maybe the world simply broke its word before Orochimaru had the chance to keep his.
But promises meant something, once.
She learned not to believe in anything. Gods. Men. Words.
Jiraiya had always been nearby—loud, lecherous, loyal. He made her laugh. He made her angry. He made her feel… something.
That was the problem, perhaps. Feeling meant hurting. So she stopped.
She drank instead.
The alcohol burned, but it numbed her feelings. It blurred the edges of her thoughts. It kept her from hearing ghosts in the dark.
She had been a wreck, then. Functional, yes. She could still identify 54 poisons by scent alone, could still shatter stones with a finger.
But she wasn't alive. Not really. Just a depressed gambler, drinking to remember and drinking to forget.
Now, she drinks Satoshi's tea instead.
Three children sat at her table, their plates full and their mouths fuller.
Satoshi, slate-eyed and seemingly all-knowing, is explaining something about synapses and his Super Beast Imitating Drawing Jutsu. Shisui interrupts with something vaguely responsible. Shizune is rolling her eyes.
Tsunade watches them. Three children, not even up to her chest.
Her eyes eventually drift up to Satoshi's forehead. He sits across from her, pale-golden curls catching the moonlight, and just beneath the messy strands—there it is. The seal.
The same one that sits between her brows. No. Almost the same one.
He doesn't try to hide it. His hair just falls forward on purpose, too messy to be intentional. But she sees it.
It took her two years—two years of storing chakra, over and over and over again—to solidify it.
It took him five months.
He had memorized her notes in a day. Had rewritten them in his own shorthand the next. By the end of the week, he was correcting her jutsu. Making it better. More efficient. Better suited for his brain's development, or so he said.
It didn't take her long to realize that Satoshi doesn't just learn. He improves. He looks at something once and understands it. Twice and changes it.
It was his Kekkei Genkai, she soon figured out. A Kekkei Genkai that, in time, will perhaps make him stronger than even her Grandfather.
His speciality is the brain, naturally. Genjutsu. Neural mapping. Chakra conductivity in synaptic pathways.
He's managed to rewire Shizune's fear response mid-combat, rendering her a limp and screaming mess in under ten seconds. He's made Shisui forget how to move his own body in under five.
He's triggered pain receptors so acutely that even a whisper of air against their skin sends them into agony.
He hasn't yet weaponized this to its full extent.
But he could.
Inevitably, he will.
One day, nine months ago, he brought her tea and a sandwich. She hadn't eaten that day. She was nursing a bottle she had hidden behiend medical text.
He didn't say anything. Just set the food and drink on her desk, looked at the bottle in her hand, then left. Didn't lecture. Didn't judge. Just saw too much.
She drank the tea.
She hasn't touched sake since.
She looked at Shisui next—leaning back in his chair, balancing it on two legs as he spars verbally with Satoshi.
It's always those two. Competing over everything: From training times to who can heal or learn new jutsu the fastest. But beneath, there's a bond. And a budding rivalry that keeps them both sharp.
Shisui has taken to speed like a second skin. His chakra scalpel is no longer limited to the clean cuts the medical text teaches. It's become an extension of his tanto. He's learned how to strike on the move, never getting hit, always targeting arteries, organs, or nerves.
Shizune, across from him, clicks her tongue at the two and nudges her empty plate closer to the center of the table. Polite as always, but firm in the way only a medic can be. She's grown, too—more than Tsunade expected.
Her chakra control is sharper than some adults now, and she's taken a particular interest in poisons. Tsunade caught her dissecting a scorpion last month, muttering about enzume resilience and toxin binding rates.
She has Shizune memorizing antidotes and recovery protocols in the morning, and synthesizing new poisons in the evening. Shizune never complains. She just nods, takes notes, asks questions, and learns. Always learning.
They all are.
And they've come so far. Understandably so, considering how hard she's trained them. It was never something they, or their bodies, couldn't handle, though.
There were days they vomited from near chakra exhaustion, days they bled onto the training field. Days they couldn't hold a spoon because their hands were still trembling from what she put them through.
But they never stopped. Never asked for less. Never once looked at her like she'd gone too far.
She healed them, every time. Cleaned their wounds, rebuilt their torn muscles—the few that hadn't already healed for Satoshi—reset their chakra flow. And then she made them do it again.
Not because she's cruel. But because she knows what's out there.
Satoshi and Shisui are nearing seven. Shizune is now ten. They're children. But they won't be treated like children once the headbands go on.
The world doesn't care how young they are. The enemy won't care either. And war doesn't hesitate.
They'll become pillars, Tsunade thinks. Strong ones. Bright ones. They'll hold up the village long after she's gone. She believes that now. Not because she's trained them, but because they're special.
But she's still afraid.
God, she's afraid.
They graduate tomorrow.
They'll be assigned missions soon. They'll see the world outside the safety of this village. They'll walk into war.
And so will she.
Hiruzen hasn't said it outright, but he doesn't need to. The suggestion's already in his eyes when he talks to her, quiet and grave. He needs her on the battlefield. The medics are stretched thin.
They need the last Sanin.
He needs her.
And worse—he'll need her students.
Tsunade takes another sip of her tea. It's gone lukewarm. Her hands tremble, just slightly, at the thought.
She sets the cup down, pretending she didn't see the glance Satoshi sent her way. He's always been too perceptive. It'll save his life one day.
Might even get him in trouble the next.
She doesn't want them to go.
She doesn't want to go.
She would give anything to keep them here. In this kitchen. In this moment. Safe.
But shinobi do not get to want.
Tsunade knows the battlefield. Knows what it looks like when the sky turns red and the dirt drinks blood. She knows the smell of burning hair. The sound of lungs giving out. The silence that follows a scream.
They don't.
And she would burn the whole world before she lets them learn it the way she did.
If it comes to it—if the mission goes wrong, if the enemy is stronger, if someone must die—
It will be her.
She's already decided.
Let her bleed, not them. Let her fall, not them. Let the legacy of Tsunade Senju be the shield that kept three children alive.
They still smile. That's the worst part. The most beautiful part.
They still smile like the world hasn't broken them. Like they believe in a future where people survive.
She wants to protect that smile. All of them.
She will.
Even if it kills her.
Tsunade exhales, long and slow. Outside, the trees her grandfather grew sway in the wind. Tall, proud, alive.
Once, the compound mourned.
Now, it breathes.
The sun has long since set. The moonlight shines bright tonight, making the room glow a beautiful white. They all glow.
They look so young.
They look like hope.
She never intended to take on students. She told herself she was too broken, too tired. She told herself that children would only remind her of everything she had lost.
She was right.
They did.
But they reminded her of everything she had forgotten, too.
Laughter.
Light.
Possibility.
Tomorrow, they will wear headbands. They will be shinobi in name, and she their Jonin instructor. But tonight, they are just children, eating fish, arguing about jutsu, alive.
She will let herself have this moment. She will let herself smile. She will let herself love them fully, even if it hurts. Especially because it hurts.
Her fingers drift to her forehead. The seal thrums beneath her skin. Quiet. Present.
She doesn't know what the future holds. Only that she will meet it, fists raised, a body ready, heart already breaking.
She takes another sip of her tea. It tastes like the end of something. And the beginning of everything else.
And hides the small smirk at the thought of the Genin test she prepared for the three tomorrow.
Just a simple spar.
One against Team Minato.
Ha. She thinks. That should be fun.
-000-
[A/N: Team Tsunade VS Team Minato next chapter.
Finally, it's time to see how much Satoshi has developed after having ten months of access to Senju and Uzumaki archives, medical texts, and jutsu and Fuinjutsu scrolls. Oh, and the best healer in the Naruto world.
I'm looking forward to it. Are you?]