"My most important person isn't dead. How could you possibly bring him back to life?" Tsunade raised her chin slightly, a wisp of sarcasm curling on her lips. Her gaze met Orochimaru's, unflinching, with the kind of steady confidence that made it clear she wasn't backing down. There was more than just a hint of humor in her eyes—this wasn't a battle she was going to lose.
Orochimaru's mockery of resurrection fell flat, like an ill-timed joke. She had suffered deeply, yes. But she had also learned to move on.Gojo Satoru, or as she preferred to call him, Gojo, was alive and well. That was all that mattered.
"Who exactly are you planning to resurrect, Orochimaru?" Tsunade's voice rang out with cutting precision, each word a deliberate jab. "You think you can fool me with your fantasies?"
Her words stung. Tsunade had faced death, loss, and regret—but she was stronger now, and nothing Orochimaru could say would drag her back into the shadows of her past. She was done grieving. She was living.
Orochimaru's expression twisted, and that familiar hunger sparked in his eyes again. The kind of hunger Tsunade knew all too well. A desire that could drive a person to madness.
"That ability of his..." Orochimaru mused, his voice thick with want. "It's truly something special. I'll acquire it. One day." His smile grew disturbing, as if he were savoring the thought, the madness in his eyes creeping closer to the surface.
Tsunade's lips curled into a small smirk. "My Gojo... is still alive." Her words were sharp, final. "Stop wasting your time chasing a ghost."
She let the words settle before shifting the conversation smoothly, her voice softening with a mix of pride and affection. "Gojo is my favorite," she said, as if the topic change was as casual as a stroll through the village. "He's my most important adopted son."
Orochimaru raised an eyebrow, his mocking grin resurfacing. "You've always been protective of those you love, Tsunade," he observed, his voice dripping with disdain. "But what exactly do you think you can offer him? You're his adoptive mother, after all. What makes you so special in his life?"
The question hit harder than she cared to admit. Tsunade had poured her heart into raising Gojo, giving him care, love, and wisdom—though there had always been a part of her afraid to let herself love too much. It had been so easy to keep the walls up, to avoid the kind of pain that losing Nawaki and Dan had brought her. But over time, those walls had softened. What she felt for Satoru wasn't just maternal—it ran deeper, to a place she hadn't fully allowed herself to acknowledge.
She clenched her jaw, recalling how, after everything, she had always tried to mask her feelings with anger when he teased her. It had been easier to keep her distance, to push him away and bury herself in her role as one of the legendary Sanin's. She had left the village to continue the Fourth Hokage's legacy, but in truth, she'd been running away from her own emotions. She hadn't been able to show him how much he truly meant to her—until it was nearly too late.
Now, Orochimaru's words cut through all of that, threatening to expose the vulnerable core of her heart.
Before she could respond, a blur of motion sliced through the air. Kabuto Yakushi lunged, his hand aimed at Tsunade's abdomen, swift and deadly.
Without missing a beat, Tsunade countered with a punch that sent Kabuto flying.
The sound of his impact with the ground was deafening. Kabuto slid across the dirt but quickly recovered, his chakra already working to heal the internal damage. He wasn't down for long.
Tsunade exhaled, her muscles rippling with the surge of chakra healing her wounds. "Chakra knife? You're a medical ninja too?" she muttered, clearly impressed and yet annoyed. Not only did Kabuto have a knack for the blade, but he could also manipulate chakra with unnerving precision.
Orochimaru chuckled from the sidelines, his eyes gleaming with approval. "Kabuto is my best subordinate. A true genius when it comes to chakra control."
Tsunade narrowed her eyes. "Then let's deal with you first, Kabuto." The words were like a promise, and before Kabuto could react, she was already in motion, her body a blur of power and speed.
"Your strength is undeniable," Kabuto said, unfazed, though his eyes flickered with calculation. With a swift motion, he flung his own blood toward Tsunade. It splattered across her face in a sickening splash, an unmistakable mark of intent.
Tsunade froze. Her pulse spiked. The sight of the blood was enough to send her mind spiraling back into the past. The blood of Nawaki. Dan. It was all there again—the guilt, the grief, the loss.
She was suffocating. The blood, the blood she could never escape, haunted her. Her breath became shallow, her body locked in a cold panic. Kabuto knew it. He knew exactly what it would do to her.
"You're a legendary Sannin," Kabuto sneered, his voice mocking. "But without your courage, what are you? Nothing. You tremble at the sight of blood—your greatest weakness."
Tsunade's heart pounded in her chest, her knees buckling beneath her as the weight of her trauma crushed her. She collapsed to the ground, trembling. The anger she had spent so long containing dissolved in an instant, leaving behind raw, vulnerable fear.
"Master Tsunade!" Shizune's voice broke through her haze of panic, but before she could reach her, Orochimaru's Kusanagi sword flashed, narrowly missing her.
"Damn it!" Shizune cursed, rolling to avoid the deadly strike.
Kabuto, despite his injuries, smirked, clearly enjoying the sight of Tsunade's broken composure. "Such power... But it's useless without your will to fight."
Tsunade struggled to steady her breathing. She couldn't escape the images of the past—Nawaki, Dan, Gojo. She could see it so clearly. What if Gojo was next? The thought sent a chill through her.
"What a disgrace," Kabuto sneered, taking another step forward. His voice dripped with contempt. "The great Tsunade, reduced to a trembling wreck over a little blood. How shameful."
He kicked her stomach, sending her sprawling further into the dirt.
"Stop!" Shizune screamed, rushing to her side. But Orochimaru's cold laughter drowned her words.
Tsunade's mind raced, trapped in the prison of her own fear. Her legs felt weak, her body trembling with the weight of her past. But then, just when it seemed as if she couldn't take another moment of it...
A surge of chakra flooded the battlefield. The oppressive weight of Tsunade's fear lifted as an unmistakable presence arrived.
"Gojo?"
Her eyes widened as the figure stepped from the shadows, a confident, almost cocky smile lighting his face. Gojo—her protector, her rock—stood there, towering over her with an easy grace that only he could carry.
With one hand on her shoulder, he helped her to her feet, his touch warm and reassuring. Tsunade felt a wave of comfort she hadn't realized she was desperate for.
"Are you afraid?" Gojo's voice was gentle, teasing, as he softly covered her eyes with his palm. "Close your eyes, Tsunade. Leave the rest to me."
For the first time in what felt like years, Tsunade did as he asked. She closed her eyes, leaning into his steady presence, letting herself trust in him.
Team 7 watched from a distance, stunned. The man they had known as their teacher—the distant, detached Gojo—was gone. In his place was something altogether more unexpected: a protector, a man who cared, and, perhaps most surprising of all, someone who was fiercely alive in a way they had never seen before.
Sakura, her voice a whisper of awe, leaned toward Naruto. "Who... who is this man?" she asked, her tone filled with wonder. "He's completely different from the teacher we know."
Gojo's smile widened, and with it, the world seemed to shift. The cold, calculating teacher was gone, replaced by something far more powerful—a lover, a protector, and a man who would stop at nothing to keep his promises.