The air in the hideout was stale, a rancid mix of expensive tobacco and damp wood. It reeked of money and rot, a combination that Gatō had always considered the perfume of power. Sitting in a leather armchair that seemed out of place in the rickety structure of the Land of Waves, he swirled the ice in his glass, the sharp clinking echoing in the tense silence.
"Useless," Gatō hissed, his voice a low, greasy growl. "A couple of brats with circus swords. 'The Demon Brothers,' what a farce! They couldn't even handle an old bridge builder and a squad of kids. How much did I pay them? And for what? To be taken out by some small-time shinobi."
He slammed the glass down on a wooden crate, the amber liquid spilling over his bejeweled hand. He didn't bother to wipe it off. His frustration was a restless beast inside him, clawing to get out. His entire empire, built on fear and economic manipulation, depended on one thing: isolation. That damned bridge was a dagger pointed at the heart of his monopoly.
"Tazuna is still alive. The bridge is still under construction. And I'm here, paying fortunes to circus freaks who can't handle a simple job."
He stood up, his short, stout figure casting a grotesque shadow in the light of the single oil lamp. He paced the room, his expensive leather shoes creaking on the uneven floorboards.
"I need someone who understands the language of fear. Someone who doesn't play games. Someone who gets the job done."
A voice, deep and resonant like the tolling of a funeral bell, emerged from the darkest corner of the room, an area Gatō had assumed was empty.
"Fear is a tool, Gatō. But like any tool, it requires a craftsman who knows how to wield it."
Gatō stopped dead, the hair on the back of his neck standing on end. He turned slowly. From the shadows emerged a silhouette that seemed to absorb what little light there was. He was a tall man, powerfully and sharply muscled, with pale, grayish skin. His face was almost completely covered in bandages, leaving only dark, intense eyes that gleamed with a cold, predatory intelligence. He was shirtless, his torso crisscrossed with leather straps, and wore baggy pants with a camouflage pattern. But the most imposing thing was the weapon resting on his shoulder: a gigantic sword, as wide as a man's torso, with a circle cut out near the tip and a long hilt. The Kubikiribōchō.
"Zabuza Momochi," Gatō exclaimed, trying to keep his voice from betraying the jolt of genuine terror he felt.
He had heard the stories. The Demon of the Hidden Mist. A man who had slaughtered his entire graduating class just to prove his worth.
Zabuza took a step forward, the floorboards groaning under his weight. There was no sound to his movement; it was as if he glided. He leaned the enormous sword against the wall with a dull thud that vibrated through the room.
"The Demon Brothers were amateurs," Zabuza said, his voice devoid of any emotion. "Brute force without any finesse. They left a mess, and worse, they left witnesses who now know you're after Tazuna."
"I hired the best money could buy," Gatō defended himself, straightening up to reclaim some of his arrogance.
"No," Zabuza replied with cutting coldness. "You hired loud thugs. The best don't advertise; they get the job done in silence." He walked to the table, ignoring Gatō completely, and poured himself a glass of water from a nearby pitcher. "Your problem isn't just Tazuna; it's the shinobi protecting him. The Demon Brothers were chūnin—clumsy, but chūnin nonetheless. To be defeated like that, Tazuna's protector must be a jōnin from Konoha."
Gatō scowled. "A jōnin? So what? He's still just one man."
Zabuza drank the water slowly before answering, his calm more intimidating than any threat. "An elite jōnin isn't a street thug. He's a trained killer, a strategist. He's the reason your 'best men' are out of commission. This complicates things. And it raises my fee."
"I already paid you a considerable advance!" Gatō protested, his greed warring with his fear.
Zabuza turned to look at him, and for the first time, Gatō felt the full pressure of the man's killing intent. It wasn't the clumsy rage of a thug; it was the absolute calm of a predator who knows its prey has no escape. It was suffocating.
"The advance covered the elimination of an old man and his escort of children. A jōnin is a different caliber of opponent. If you want me to take care of him—and I will—it will cost you double. And I want half of it upfront."
Gatō swallowed hard, sweat beading on his forehead. The air around him seemed to have grown thick and cold. He nodded slowly, defeated. "Fine. Whatever it takes. But I want it fast and clean. And I want you to bring me the bridge builder's head as proof."
Zabuza managed something that might have been a smile under his bandages. "Don't worry, Gatō. When the mist clears, your problem will have disappeared. The jōnin, the brats, Tazuna... all of them. They'll just be a bad memory."
He turned and picked up his Kubikiribōchō with an ease that betrayed the weapon's massive weight.
"Get the rest of my payment ready," he ordered without looking back. "I'll be back to collect it soon."
And with the same stillness with which he appeared, Zabuza Momochi dissolved back into the shadows, leaving Gatō alone with the sound of his own racing heart and the smell of fear, which now far overpowered that of money.
The fog was an opaque white wall that swallowed sound and sight. The small rowboat glided over the water in near-ghostly silence. The only noise was the soft splash of the oars, handled with tired expertise by the ferryman, a gaunt, silent man who seemed a part of the misty landscape itself.
Onboard, the silence was different. The tension from the fight with the Demon Brothers had shattered the shell of a simple C-rank mission, and what lay exposed was something far heavier and more dangerous. It was no longer a quiet loaded with suspicion toward Tazuna, but the shared gravity of knowing they had crossed a threshold.
Kakashi leaned against the boat's edge, his one visible eye scanning not just the fog, but his students. He watched the small shifts in their body language, the micro-expressions that betrayed the storm of thoughts behind their apprentice-ninja facades. The mission had become real, and with reality came the weight of mortality.
Though Sasuke maintained his calculated distance, something had changed. He no longer ignored the group. His dark gaze moved with a new intensity, flicking from Kakashi's relaxed but alert form to the thick curtain of fog, and then to Tazuna's hunched back. It wasn't just arrogance on his face anymore, but a cold concentration. He was processing information, calibrating the threat. The clear killing intent of their first enemies had elevated the situation from a simple exercise to a true battlefield. He was in his element, a place where strength and skill were all that mattered.
Sakura was quiet, her hands clasped in her lap. Unlike Sasuke, her silence wasn't distant, but absorbed. Her green eyes, normally full of vibrant energy or childish adoration for Sasuke, were now serious. She studied the boat, the grain of the worn wood, the ferryman's calloused hands, the look of infinite fatigue on Tazuna's face.
Naruto was a knot of contained energy. He sat cross-legged, his hands clenched into fists on his knees. Beside him, Hinata sat still, her gaze lowered, but her fingers nervously toyed with the hem of her jacket, feeling the tension radiating from everyone.
Finally, the silence broke. But not with an accusation. It was Sakura's voice, surprisingly firm and clear. She addressed Tazuna, who sat at the prow, staring into the foggy nothingness as if he could see the fate that awaited them through it.
"Tazuna-san."
The bridge builder flinched slightly, as if pulled from a nightmare. He turned to face her, his tired, red-rimmed eyes meeting hers.
"You told us why Gatō wants you dead," Sakura continued, her tone respectful; it was that of an investigator, not an angry child. "It's because of the bridge. We understand that. But we don't understand the how. How can one man bring an entire nation to its knees? Military strength alone isn't enough to break the spirit of a whole people. There has to be something more. Something you haven't told us."
The question hung in the cold, damp air. It was logical, insightful, and above all, empathetic. It didn't demand a confession but invited the sharing of a burden.
Naruto looked at Sakura, surprised by her maturity. Even Sasuke seemed to pay closer attention, tilting his head slightly. Under his mask, Kakashi smiled. This was the kind of shinobi he hoped they would become: not just strong, but smart and compassionate too.
Tazuna watched Sakura for a long moment. He saw the sincerity in her eyes, the sharp intelligence behind the question. The facade of a grumpy, stubborn old man—an armor he had worn for so long—cracked. Beneath it, a man devastated by grief was laid bare.
He let out a sigh, a deep, trembling sound that seemed to carry years of contained suffering with it. He rubbed his face with a shaky hand and looked at his calloused palms, as if the story were written on them.
"You're right, girl," he finally said, his voice hoarse and broken. "There's much more. A story I didn't dare tell in your Hokage's office because... because saying it makes it real all over again."
He took a deep breath, the cold air filling his lungs. The boat continued its silent advance, becoming a floating confessional lost in the fog. And Tazuna, the ferryman of his own tragic story, began to speak.
"Gatō didn't arrive at our island on a warship. I wish he had. People know how to fight an army. They unite, they defend themselves, they die with honor. No, he arrived like a savior."
The rowing ferryman nodded grimly without looking up from the water. He remembered, too.
"He came with ships full of goods and a wallet full of money. He offered loans to our merchants, to our fishermen. He promised to modernize our ports. He spoke of prosperity. And we, poor and forgotten by the rest of the world, believed him. We drank his poison as if it were fresh water."
Tazuna paused, his gaze lost in memories. "He bought the shipping lines, one by one. At first, he lowered prices, driving our local haulers out of business. Then, once he had a monopoly, the prices skyrocketed. The loans he had given started to accrue impossible interest. He bought up the businesses that couldn't handle the debt for a pittance. In less than a year, he controlled everything that came in and out of our island. Food, materials, medicine... everything passed through his hands. He didn't conquer us with swords; he strangled us economically, so slowly we barely noticed until we couldn't breathe anymore."
The boat rocked gently. Tazuna's story painted a far more sinister picture than that of a simple tyrant. Gatō was a disease that had infected the nation's bloodstream.
"When people started to despair, to whisper about resistance, he was already prepared. He brought in his thugs, rogue ninja. He crushed any small attempt at rebellion with exemplary brutality. Fear did the rest. People locked themselves in their homes, trying to survive one more day. The spirit of the Land of Waves... it broke."
His voice cracked on the last sentence. He took a moment, clearing his throat.
"But there was one man who didn't break. A man who refused to kneel."
Tazuna's expression changed. The pain was still there, but now it was tinged with a fierce pride.
"His name was Kaiza."
Naruto leaned forward instinctively. The story had completely captured him.
"He wasn't a shinobi, or a samurai. He was a simple fisherman who came to our island looking for a quiet life. A man with an easy smile and an iron will. He had nothing, but he gave everything. If a neighbor's net was torn, he'd mend it. If a family didn't have enough to eat, he'd share his catch. He became the heart of our community without even trying."
Tazuna looked out into the fog, but now he seemed to be seeing a face. "My grandson, Inari... his biological father passed away when he was just a baby. My daughter, Tsunami, raised him alone. Inari was a sensitive child. One day, some older bullies cornered him on the pier. He had a little dog named Pochi who was everything to him. The boys threw it into the sea. Inari, without a second thought, jumped in after it, even though he couldn't swim."
A heavy silence fell over the boat. Sakura brought a hand to her mouth.
"They were both drowning. People watched, paralyzed by fear. No one moved. No one, except Kaiza. He jumped into the freezing water without hesitation. He saved my grandson and his dog. From that day on, he became a part of our family. To Inari, he wasn't just his mother's boyfriend. He became his father. He taught him to be strong, to not cry unless it was for joy. He told him that a real man is someone who has something precious to protect."
Tazuna smiled, a sad, beautiful smile. "Kaiza was the first to speak out publicly against Gatō. While everyone else whispered in the shadows, he stood up in the town square and called him what he was: a thief, a tyrant, a coward. His words were like a spark. He gave people a sliver of the hope they had lost. For a moment, we believed again. He became our hero."
Tazuna's smile vanished, replaced by a shadow of pain so deep it was almost physical. His voice dropped to a hoarse whisper. "And Gatō, being the coward that he is, decided to make an example of him. He didn't kill him in secret. He captured him and announced a public execution."
Kakashi clenched his jaw. Sasuke balled his fists. This was a type of cruelty he understood all too well.
"It was raining that day," Tazuna continued, his voice trembling. "A cold rain, as if the sky was weeping for us. Gatō gathered the whole town in the square. He made us watch. They brought Kaiza out, chained between two posts. He was beaten, but his head was held high. He looked at the crowd, and his eyes... his eyes showed no fear. They showed defiance. Gatō stood before him and said that this was the fate of anyone who dared to challenge him. He said heroes don't exist. And to prove it... to destroy our spirit forever... he ordered his men to cut off his arms."
Hinata choked back a sob and instinctively clung to Naruto's arm. He didn't pull away. He placed his hand over hers, his own throat tight with emotion.
"They did it. Right there, in front of everyone. In front of my daughter. In front of my little grandson." Tazuna's body shook with a choked sob. "We heard his screams. And then... silence. The forced silence of hundreds of people too terrified to do anything but watch as our only beacon of hope was extinguished. That day, my grandson didn't just watch his father die. He watched the word 'hero' die."
The story hung in the air, thick and poisonous as the fog. This was no longer a mission. It was a matter of honor.
Naruto remained deathly silent. Hearing the story from Tazuna's mouth, loaded with the unbearable weight of real pain, was completely different. He saw Kaiza's face, a man he didn't know, superimposed on the blurry image he had of his own father, Minato Namikaze. The Fourth Hokage. The word "hero" suddenly took on a new meaning for him. It wasn't about being acclaimed. It was about sacrifice. About protecting those you love, even at the cost of everything. The mission was no longer about proving himself; it became a sacred duty. He felt Hinata's tears soak his sleeve and squeezed her hand tighter, finding a foothold for his own pain in hers.
Sakura was crying openly, silent tears rolling down her cheeks. Her heart broke for Tazuna, for Tsunami, for little Inari. Empathy washed over her, a wave of sadness and helpless rage. The logic of the mission, the ranks, the rules... it all seemed meaningless now. This was about people. About justice.
Even Sasuke, the solitary avenger, was affected. The story of a powerful man destroying a family for sheer greed resonated in the depths of his own tragedy. Gatō's face merged with Itachi's in his mind. No, Gatō was inferior. Itachi, in his twisted perception, had a purpose. Gatō was just a parasite. Sasuke's anger, normally focused on his brother, broadened. For a moment, his enemy wasn't just Itachi Uchiha. It was all tyrants who fed on the suffering of others for their own aggrandizement. It didn't soften Sasuke, but it gave his fury a new dimension.
Tazuna finally looked up, his eyes meeting those of the three young ninja. He saw the resolve forged in the fire of his story.
"The bridge..." he said, a thread of strength returning to his voice. "It was Kaiza's dream. He believed if we could connect our island to the mainland, we would break Gatō's hold. We would be free. After he died, everyone's will was shattered. But I... I couldn't let his sacrifice be in vain. I couldn't let Inari grow up in a world without heroes. So I took up the project. I became the master builder to finish what he started. To give my grandson, and our people, a reason to believe again."
He looked at Kakashi. "That's why I lied. Because you were my last, desperate hope."
Just then, as if fate itself had decided the confession was over, a gentle breeze began to blow, pushing away the dense banks of fog.
"Land in sight," the ferryman announced quietly.
Slowly, like a rising curtain, the fog receded, revealing a rugged, green coastline. And there, stretching from the shore into the distant haze, an incomplete structure of wood and steel rose defiantly against the gray sky: the Great Bridge.
It was no longer just a construction project. It was a monument to a fallen man. A battlefield soaked in a nation's tragedy. And now, thanks to Tazuna's story, it had become what Kaiza always wanted it to be.