Disclaimer : I don't own anything related to Naruto.

I'm sorry, but I had to remove it last time. I couldn't access my account properly for some reason, might've been my ISP or something else. Even when I managed to get on the site, I couldn't use it properly after a few minutes. I genuinely thought I'd lost this account or my account was being blocked, so I asked a friend to post the story on their profile and continue it from there.

Now that the issue's been sorted, I'm going to continue it here. You can trust me on that.

Summary: His dream of peace ended in betrayal and blood. Now, cast back in time, Madara wants nothing more than to fade into obscurity. But when he sees a lonely orphan boy, ignored and mistreated by the very village he once helped build, he begins to wonder... maybe his dream wasn't flawed... maybe it was the way it was carried out.


=Prologue=

Uchiha Madara's consciousness drifted in a haze, the endless black void around him stretching beyond to a place that even his sharingan could not see. The place he was in was still and time held no meaning here. He couldn't feel his body, his armor, his weapons, nor could he sense any chakra around him. The only thing he could feel at that moment was a gnawing awareness at the back of his mind, something that was making him scowl.

He was stuck. Uchiha Madara was stuck, a prisoner in a place that was neither close to the afterlife nor could be called the mortal world. It was similar to a limbo, perhaps, or something even worse.

His thoughts, fragments of broken memories, and anger were the only thing keeping him sane here. How? By reminding him that he, the greatest Uchiha to ever live, had been defeated and humiliated by a creature that he once thought was his will.

How did it come to this?

The answer was simple, yet bitter to swallow.

'Black Zetsu.'

He was a creature that had always been there, lurking in the shadows behind him, whispering about a plan that would create a new world, a world where no one would suffer and die. The very idea of having such a world was exciting, so much so that Madara ended up believing those hollow words of that creature. He placed his trust in that creature, his will, and allowed it to manipulate every minor detail of his plan, thinking that it was in the best interest of his war ridden world.

'Foolish. So incredibly foolish.'

He spent years, decades sculpting that plan for the future, one where the cycle of pain, death, and war would finally end. But his belief that his will, that creature, was only his to control, ended up becoming his greatest mistake.

'I should have known better.'

The betrayal hit harder now, sharper than it ever had in the moments leading up to his death. He had put his faith in the wrong thing, in a creature born of hatred and deceit, a creature that had used him like a puppet. Uchiha Madara was used like a puppet, and that fact alone was enough to bruise his ego and humiliate him deep within his core.

'Why did I even believe its words?'

For a moment, the great Uchiha's mind wandered back to that day—the day he was betrayed. The creature's hollow voice had echoed in his ears as it stabbed his heart from behind. Madara could do nothing but stand there, frozen, unable to comprehend that he had been so easily betrayed.

'The will of the Uchiha... The will of Uchiha Madara.'

How absurd that sounded now?

"I... was a fool," Madara muttered to himself with a faint smile on his face, the words bitter in the hollow space around him. "I thought it was my will... my vision. But it was never mine. Not really." His eyes, two burning red orbs of hatred, raked across the empty space, trying to find something to unleash his anger upon, but could find nothing. The surrounding space was empty, just like his soul.

'That creature was the mastermind behind everything.'

Black Zetsu was the creator of the plan, a plan Madara had thought was his from the beginning. For centuries, that creature pulled countless strings from behind the scenes and manipulated many individuals. Unfortunately for Madara, he was one of those many people. Black Zetsu was the one who altered the tablet in the shrine to execute his plan, and Madara, being so consumed with the idea of a perfect world—his perfect world — failed to see the truth until it was too late. That creature had never been on his side. It had always been working to mold him into the instrument of its own twisted agenda, a tool to enact the resurrection of Kaguya Ōtsutsuki.

'Maybe Hashirama was right…'

Madara closed his eyes, though he couldn't feel the warmth of his eyelids closing. His mind was still coming to terms with what had transpired and was filled with the mocking words of Black Zetsu.

"You always thought you were in control… but you were nothing but a puppet. The Uchihas were built to be used, and you, Madara…you were the easiest to manipulate. A God? No… you were a stepping stone, a pawn, and now? Just one more forgotten name in her story… My mother."

The words echoed in his mind, twisting his stomach. Uchiha Madara, the man whose name sent shivers down spines across the world, was used like a puppet. And worse, he had been blind to it.

'I should have listened to Hashirama…'

He was consumed by his hatred and ideals so much that he never gave a second thought to the words of his dear friend. But now, there was nothing left. Only this endless limbo, an eternal punishment for his arrogance until he reaches the afterlife.

"You can't escape yourself, Madara. No matter how much you try, the world doesn't bend to your will. You have to understand… peace can't come from force alone. It has to come from the unity of power and bonds." Madara's mind lingered on Hashirama's words, the voice of his old friend cutting through the voice of that creature.

Hashirama was always the hopeful one among them two, the one who believed in the goodness of people, in the possibility of a world that didn't have to be built on a land that was ridden by wars. Madara, on the other hand, was the complete opposite of him, always brushing Hashirama off as weak and naïve. He always believed that the only way to achieve peace was through control, through dominance over others. But now, standing on the edge of nothingness, those words of his friend, so full of warmth and sincerity, rang louder than his own words ever could.

'Maybe he was right.'

The thought was like a poison, insidious and hard to swallow. He could almost hear Hashirama's laugh behind him but dared not to look in that direction.

'I should have listened to him.'

It was a thought that was going to haunt him for eternity, and Madara knew that. He was beginning to feel the weight of that realization press on him as he realized there was no escape now. No more battles to fight. No more villages to conquer. Just silence and the weight of his failures to carry to the afterlife.

'Afterlife…'

Madara blinked and looked around again. He was sure he had been dead for hours now, yet he hadn't crossed into the afterlife. For some reason, he was still suspended between two worlds, stuck in a place where nothing could reach him, where no sense of time or place existed.

'Maybe I'll be here for a while,' he thought bitterly, sinking into that strange space of waiting, knowing that, eventually, he would move on. The afterlife would come for him, and he would face whatever punishment awaited him for his countless sins. He had long accepted that there would be no escaping judgment. It was his fate, one he had sealed long ago.

'When will this end?'

But the stillness grew unbearable. Madara exhaled, trying to calm himself down. With nothing left to do, he just wanted a swift end.

Where is the afterlife?

He waited. And waited for hours. But no light came to guide him. No voices called to him, no heavenly realm stretched out before him. He had heard stories of the afterlife, of the peaceful rest that awaited those who had passed, whether they were good or bad. But there was none of that here.

'What is this place?'

The question echoed in his mind, and yet, no answer came. It felt like he was traveling to nowhere and the more he stayed still, the more he realized he was not even in the realm of the dead, but somewhere else entirely, somewhere unknown. A place for failures like him? A faint smile spread across his face.

'Maybe this is my punishment…'

The smile vanished from his face as the unsettling possibility that his words might come true settled upon him. As far as he knew, he wasn't going to the afterlife. So, there was no way he would join the countless souls of his family members there. And with that option eliminated, the only plausible explanation was that he was being punished for his actions.

'No…'

A chilling realization swept over him, colder than any of his past regrets. He had been fooled by the fate again. His body, his spirit, his soul, were not on their way to some peaceful rest with his family members. No. They were stuck here, a place more unforgiving than anything he had ever known.

'This can't be possible…'

Madara's pulse quickened as he tried to focus his mind, but could not. The more he tried, the more he understood the situation. The place he was in was a prison. There was no escape from this. No return to the living. No final peace. He had tried to become a God and change the fate of his world. And now, his own fate was being decided by someone else.

=X=

The crushing weight of the surrounding was cruel. It was as if the space around him was trying to swallow him whole. For what felt like an eternity now, Madara had been drifting in this void, powerless and immobile. His eyes, once sharp and commanding, now were devoid of any emotion.

'It's useless.'

The stinging realization that he was stuck in a prison, that he wasn't in the afterlife, was still fresh and raw, leaving him with a constant, dull ache of sadness.

But then… something changed.

"Huh?"

A flicker of light pierced the utter darkness, kindling hope and curiosity in his red eyes. It was small, like the faintest glimmer of a star far beyond his reach, but as time went by, it grew brighter, stronger, as though it were coming toward him. Initially, he suspected it was merely a trick of the mind, a final fantasy before his demise. But the light kept pressing forward, cutting through the darkness like a blade.

As it began to reach closer, he realized it was engulfing everything in its path. "No…" Uchiha Madara tried to move, to push himself away from the oncoming charge, but his body refused to obey him. His limbs felt like they were frozen, struggling to even move an inch.

For the second time in his life, he found himself frozen, powerless to fight or flee.

"Move away…" The light was almost close to him now, and suddenly, it felt as though the very air around him was shifting. His heart skipped, an odd, almost physical sensation of something unknown.

'What is this strange sensation that I am feeling?… Is it fear?' He only had a moment to think before the light engulfed him, a blinding wave that left him no time to resist, no chance to escape. It crashed over him, pulling him into its warmth. "Agh…" His body tensed in response, but no matter how hard he fought against it, no matter how he screamed in his mind, the light consumed him.

And then—then it began.

Madara felt a shift in his skin, a strange tingling sensation, like warmth returning to a cold, lifeless body. His skin, which had once been bleached a ghostly white by the Ten Tails' influence, began to change. Slowly, his pale, alien-like flesh began to take on a more familiar tone. It was the same natural, smooth complexion he'd once known, something that was more human, more real. It was as if the life that he had lost decades ago was returning to him, bit by bit.

His fingers twitched rapidly, a sensation he hadn't felt in what seemed like years. His chest, which no longer had his friend's face protruding from it, rose and fell as the chakra inside him began to increase. It felt... odd, almost alien, but still undeniably his own.

The light shifted, enveloping him further, and he could feel his body reforming. Slowly, painfully, he felt his limbs pulling and reshaping, the unnatural energy of the Ten Tails loosening its grip on his chakra coils. 'No... this should not be possible.' He thought, eyes wide with surprise.

But the changes continued.

"Haa!" His bones creaked as the muscles around them began to take a familiar shape. The strange, weightless feeling he had been carrying—the empty, hollow form of a man who had given everything for his own twisted vision—was slipping away.

His reflection, or what was probably a reflection of someone, started to form in the light. It wasn't the body of a broken shell—the twisted, monstrous version of himself that had been transformed by the Ten Tails. No, what stared back at him was something far younger, yet more familiar. His face, once covered with anger and those godly eyes, had returned to a younger form of himself.

His eyes could no longer see the lines of age on his face, the scars of battles fought and lost, the weariness of a man who had seen too much and fought too hard. No… they were all gone. Now, the only thing that remained unchanged were his dark eyes, the eyes of the Uchiha. They had lost none of their sharpness and power, yet they now seemed more peaceful.

'This is me… This is who I was before I was manipulated by that creature.'

Madara couldn't grasp what was happening, but he knew something had changed within him. He could feel it in the way his body was burning. His very essence, the feeling of being an Uchiha, was being drawn back into him. He was feeling how he used to feel long before the ambition and the madness had consumed him.

Madara wanted to scream out, to demand answers. But no sound came from his mouth, no voice, no words. The light, now a pure, radiant force, kept him locked in place, still reshaping him against his will, molding him back into the person he once was—or perhaps, the person he should have been.

Slowly by slowly, his body continued to grow younger, returning to the point where he was a young man again, a man who could still stand tall and fight. The last changes were to his eyes. His vision sharpened as his hair grew longer again, a familiar, wild mass of black strands framing his face. His once hardened, blank eyes carried spark of hope and youth within them, yet beneath them lay the knowledge of every mistake, every failure and every betrayal.

'I am me... but not quite.'

The process slowed, but the change was undeniable. The remnants of the Ten Tails' power slipped away entirely from his body, leaving behind a man, not a God, who the world once feared. He wasn't fully healed, fully restored, but he was, undeniably, human again.

He was the Uchiha Madara again.

Yet somewhere deep within his heart, an unsettling question lingered.

'Why?'

Why was he being returned to this form? Why was the light offering him a hope when there was nothing left that he could change? There were no answers, only the unbearable pull of that light, still enveloping him like a blanket.

Then, suddenly, the light enveloped him completely. It was blinding, suffocating, and the no matter how hard he tried, he could not escape from it. His body, his new body, felt like it was being pulled in every direction at once, while he could do nothing but scream in pain. The pain was so sharp that he, Uchiha Madara, was on the verge of passing out.

=X=

The pain stopped as fast as it had started. Madara gasped when his closed eyes could no longer feel the warmth of the light anymore. Now, there was something else that was echoing in his mind. 'A sound?' It was soft, barely a whisper, but he could hear it.

'A child's voice?'

The remaining warmth faded, leaving him chilled, as a sudden gust of wind swept through the air around him. His senses immediately snapped back to action as soon as he felt he could move now. 'Huh?' He opened his eyes and realized he was no longer floating in that void anymore. He was somewhere, somewhere unknown, but not where he had expected.

'Is it the afterlife?'

Madara blinked, his vision still disoriented. The ground beneath him was solid and, as he sat up slowly, he could feel his body still aching from the transformation, still adjusting to the changes it had gone through in the void. 'Do the concepts of day and night carry over into the afterlife?' The night sky stretched above him was eerily similar to the sky of the mortal world. There were no signs of his brother or father here and the only sound he could hear at that moment was of a crackling fire from behind.

'I think I heard a child's voice a while ago…'

Madara strained his ears, but could no longer hear anything. His sharp black eyes darted around, scanning the surroundings for that voice's owner. In his search, he noticed he was surrounded by trees, lots of trees. It was a small clearing by the looks of it, nothing much more than a patch of grass surrounded by dense forest.

He continued his search for a few seconds more before stopping when he saw something unusual.

A child.

A skinny boy, maybe four or five, with messy blonde hair that seemed to glow faintly in the firelight. His big blue eyes were wide with curiosity and concern, staring at him like he had seen a ghost. The kid's small hands were gripping a small stick, the kind you would use to poke at a campfire, though he wasn't using it now. He was just standing there, staring at him with his wide eyes.

For a moment, Madara did nothing before his eyes narrowed at the child. 'What is this? What is this child doing here? Is he dead too?' He shook his head. This wasn't a place a child should be at. The afterlife was supposed to be a place for men and failures like him.

Suddenly, the fire crackled beside them, sending out a sharp scent of fish roasting on the flames to divert his attention. He stared at the fish for a while before looking at the boy again. Madara noticed that the child didn't seem scared of him, though he was clearly unsure. The child's gaze was flickering between him and the fire, almost as if trying to decide whether to run with the food or approach him.

"Are you okay, mister?" the child finally opened his mouth and asked, his voice soft but steady, his eyes still fixed on Madara.

Madara blinked, the question catching him off guard. Was he okay? He opened his mouth, but no words came out. His throat felt dry, as though he hadn't spoken in years. He swallowed and tried again, but his voice didn't want to cooperate. Instead, he just gave a sharp nod, more of a reflex than anything.

The boy took a step closer to him, though he kept a wary distance, still holding the stick like it might protect him. He seemed to examine Madara, his expression unsure, but more curious than afraid. Madara's mind, on the other hand, was racing with countless thoughts, questions spinning in every direction inside it, but his body remained still.

There was something strange about the way the boy was looking at him, like he recognized him in some way. As if Madara wasn't just a stranger in the woods, but someone who he knew from somewhere. The Uchiha couldn't put his finger on it, but there was something familiar about those wide blue eyes too. He knew he had seen them somewhere.

The fire beside them crackled again, the fish sizzling on the flame, oblivious to the interaction that was happening in front of it. The boy's gaze shifted to the food for a moment, and then back to Madara. His lips parted, like he wanted to say something more, but then he hesitated, probably unsure of what to say next.

Madara, too, was intently studying the child's face. The child looked familiar. He could feel it in his soul, but couldn't explain why. There was something about him, something that was making it clear that this boy mattered.

While the Uchiha was busy thinking, the boy blinked at him, his expression softening, as if deciding Madara wasn't an immediate threat.

Soon, a strange silence fell over the surroundings and in that silence, the strange feeling inside Madara grew. Why was he here? What was happening? He was supposed to have lost everything, to have failed completely, but now he was back in his younger body. Sitting before a child he didn't recognize, in a place that felt utterly foreign yet familiar to him.

'It's not the afterlife…' He glanced back at the fire, then back at the boy, still unsure of what to do, or even who he was anymore. But something about the situation felt comforting. Maybe it was the fact that he was not locked in that void anymore, or maybe it was him getting his body back. Madara did not know.

As the flames of fire danced in front of him, Madara realized he had forgotten something. The child was still silent and watching him because he was waiting for him to speak.

So slowly, almost against his will, Madara's lips parted.

"I'm... fine."

It wasn't a great response, but it was something.

The boy took a cautious step closer, his eyes never leaving Madara's face, his small fingers fiddling nervously with the stick in his hand. His gaze relaxed more, almost as if he was still trying to figure out this strange, older man sitting before him who had appeared here out of nowhere.

"Do you... want some fish, mister?" The child's voice was gentle but hopeful, his eyes wide as he held up the small stick to him. It was a simple offer, one that was given without hesitation, yet there was something unusually earnest about it.

Madara blinked, momentarily taken aback by the child's genuine question. He was a man that was used to taking, not receiving, but the child's innocence managed to leave him at a loss for words. Before he could respond, Madara's sharp ears caught the soft, low sound of a stomach grumbling. It wasn't his. It was the child's.

The boy's face turned red, and he clutched the tiny stick a little tighter, his eyes dropping to the ground in embarrassment. Madara raised an eyebrow at that, his lips twisting into something like a frown. "You're hungry," he noted, his voice hoarse, still not used to speaking in this new body.

The boy nodded quickly, his fingers tightening around the wooden stick. "Yeah, but... you look injured and more hungry than I am. I just... I thought you probably need it more, mister." His voice was weak, but there was a tinge of stubbornness hidden in it—something that was enough for Madara to know that the child was trying to hide his own discomfort.

Madara's gaze softened slightly. He could feel the boy's hunger, even if he didn't admit it outright. But there was still a question that was roaming freely in his mind. "Why are you offering me your fish?" he asked, the words almost slipping out without thinking. "You're hungry too. I would expect you to eat it yourself, boy."

The boy hesitated, then smiled timidly, a hint of sadness remaining in his gaze. "I'm used to it," he whispered. "I don't mind being hungry, mister. So take it and eat because you look like those cool shinobi and they need to be strong, right?" He paused, the firelight dancing in his eyes, reflecting the warmth of the flames. "Also, I want to make lots of friends. I thought... maybe if I give you this fish, you would be my friend."

Madara's brow furrowed, and for a moment, he just stared at the boy in silence. There was something off about the words—too pure, too selfless for someone so young. What kind of child thought he had to give something up just to be liked? He had seen war twist people, had watched men trade blood for loyalty. But this? This wasn't a child learning kindness—this was a child who thought he had to earn it.

"Why do you want me to be your friend? Don't you already have friends?" Madara asked, a frown tugging at his features. The question felt strange on his tongue, almost unnatural. 'Friendship?' It was never something that had meant anything to him. Not really. Other than Hashirama, he never tried to form bonds. The idea always seemed pointless—an unnecessary weakness. People were unreliable. They left. They died. They betrayed. Weaklings like that could never be friends to someone like Uchiha Madara.

The child's smile faded, replaced by a soft sadness that made his childish face seem so much older than it should have been. He lowered his gaze to the ground, kicking a small stone with the toe of his sandal, and when he spoke again, his voice was quieter, tinged with loneliness.

"Because... no one wants to be my friend in the village." His words were so simple, yet they managed to clear all the thoughts from Madara's mind instantly. The boy's small shoulders slumped as he looked away from him, probably trying to hide his tears. "I try to talk to them," he continued quietly, "but they just… ignore me. Call me a monster. Or laugh. They say I'm not like them."

There it was. The truth and the reason why a child was sitting here in this dense forest all alone. The child, despite his cheerful facade, carried a burden far heavier than his thin frame should carry.

Madara's heart,still a stranger to compassion,twisted faintly in his chest. It was a foreign feeling, unwelcome and unfamiliar, yet impossible to ignore. His eyes darkened, not with anger, but with something heavier. Sadness, perhaps. Or understanding. He could see it in the boy's eyes… that quiet, desperate longing. A need not for power or praise, but for something far simpler.

To be seen. To be acknowledged. To matter to someone.

The boy wasn't just offering him a fish. He was offering his kindness wrapped in it. 'Kindness…' A word Madara hadn't thought of in years.
He had known it once, long ago, with someone he had called a brother. Someone who had believed in him. But that bond, like everything else was crumbled, shattered by pride, by war, and by his own choices.

The boy in front of him was trying to do the same—form a bond—but unlike him, he had no one to share that bond with. Madara didn't know how to respond to the question. The words were stuck in his throat.

Finally, he just nodded, his voice low but steady. "I... understand," he murmured, though it was more to himself than to the child.

The boy looked up at him again, hope flickering behind those wide eyes of his, as if he was waiting for proof that his offering hadn't been meaningless. Madara's gaze, against his better judgment, softened. Just slightly though. "Here," the boy whispered, holding the stick out once more with both hands. "Take it, mister." His smile was still touched by sadness but it was brighter now.

Madara reached out slowly, taking the fish from the child's hands, his fingers brushing against the boy's in the process. It wasn't much—just a small offering—but at that moment, it felt like something more to the boy.

The wind around them hummed softly, and for a brief moment, the world went still. Madara's eyes moved to the boy's hopeful face and narrowed when he saw him holding his stomach. He was trying so hard to not look hungry.

Madara watched the boy for a moment longer, his onyx eyes catching the subtle way the child's small hands clutched at his stomach. He was trying to hold the hunger in, bury it beneath politeness.

The boy's gaze flickered toward the fire, just for a second, before snapping back to Madara…too quickly. The Uchiha's eyes narrowed slightly at that, a faint frown pulling at the corners of his mouth. He could see it now, the silent, stubborn pride trying to make his hunger seem like nothing at all.

Without really thinking, he spoke, his voice unusually mild, almost gentle. "Are you still hungry?" he asked, his eyes narrowing just slightly.

The boy's face flushed again, and he quickly looked away, shuffling his feet awkwardly. "I'm fine," he said, though his voice was a little too loud to be convincing. "I'm not that hungry."

The Uchiha didn't buy it for a second. The boy was still starving, anyone with eyes could see that. And the way he was trying to swallow it down, to act like it didn't matter, only made it more obvious. Madara had long since learned how people wore their pain, especially the lonely ones. They masked it behind jokes, behind false smiles, behind stubborn pride and this boy was no different.

'Loneliness...' Madara stared at the fish on the wooden stick, still warm from the fire, and without a second thought, he broke off a piece, the tender meat steaming slightly in the cool night air. He held it out to the boy, his dark eyes meeting the child's with an almost unspoken understanding. "Here," he said, his voice steady but soft, "you can share this with me."

The boy blinked at him, surprised, his eyes flickering between the piece of fish and Madara's face. He hesitated for a moment, his small hands trembling as he reached out. "I… I told you I'm fine, mister…" he said, his voice barely above a whisper.

Madara shook his head, his long hair stirring with the wind. "You were the one who hunted it, weren't you?" he said, voice firm and final, leaving no room for debate. "So it's not just mine to take."

The boy looked at the piece of fish in Madara's hand, then slowly, almost reluctantly, he took it. He then opened his mouth and bit into the fish cautiously, his eyes closing for a brief moment as if savoring the taste. He didn't speak for a few moments, just ate, almost hungrily, though his movements were still controlled, like he didn't want to seem too desperate.

Madara watched him in silence, trying not to disturb the child. After a moment, the boy looked up at him again, his face flushed but with a tiny smile tugging at the corners of his mouth. "Thank you," he said, his voice soft, a little shy.

Madara gave a slight nod, a small smile blossoming on corners of his lips. "Never thank someone when you're the one helping, boy." He paused, letting the silence sit between them for a while and then looked at the boy. "That fish was yours. You hunted it. You chose to give it to me. If anything…" his voice dipped, quieter now, "I should be the one thanking you."

The boy blinked up at him, eyes wide and thoughtful. It looked like he was genuinely processing Madara's words. "Yeah… I guess," he murmured after a pause. The usual cheer had slipped away, just for a moment, leaving something more vulnerable in its place. "Also… I'm really glad you stayed," he added, looking down at his hands. "You didn't run away from me like the others. I was starting to think no one would ever talk to me." He gave a small, sheepish laugh. "So… thank you for that. Hehe."

Madara didn't know how to respond to that. He simply nodded, his eyes returning to the fire for a moment, lost in thought.

The boy finished the last of the fish, wiping his hands on his worn-out pants before looking up at Madara again. "Also!… don't tell anyone you talked to me," he said, a little more serious now. His voice wasn't bitter, but there was something behind it. He sounded quiet and tired for some reason. "People in the village don't like it when someone talks to me." His eyes dimmed, sadness flickering in them like a shadow before he closed them tight, as if trying to shut the feeling away. "They already look at the old man Hokage kinda weird when he does... I don't want that to happen to you too."

Madara watched the boy with an unreadable expression on his face. Then, slowly, he leaned forward, just enough to really see the child's face. The caution, the hesitance, and that flicker of reserved hope behind his eyes, it stirred something buried deep within him. A memory, not of faces or names, but of a feeling he had long since tried to forget.

Loneliness.

It clung to people like a second skin, and for all his strength, all his convictions, Madara wasn't immune to it either. In truth, it was one of the reasons he had wanted to create a perfect world. A world without that silence. Without that ache.

"I don't care what people think, boy. Neither should you." His voice was low but there was a steel edge to it, something that made the child attentive. "What matters is what you think of yourself. Confidence isn't just strength… it's a shinobi's armor," he paused, eyes narrowing slightly. "Doubt is contagious. The moment you start questioning your own worth, the rest of the world will follow.

The boy blinked up at him, lips parted slightly as if a reply was on the tip of his tongue. But nothing came. So, he looked down instead, eyes tracing the lines on his small hands to keep him busy. Madara's words had struck something, he didn't fully understand them, not yet, but he felt them

Madara took in a deep breath and sighed to himself, still trying to understand what he was doing here with this child. "Why do they hate you?" he asked, his tone cutting through the silence like a blade.

The boy's small frame tensed. He didn't look up as his eyes remained fixed on the dirt at his feet, lips pressed into a thin, trembling line. For a moment, Madara wasn't sure if he would speak at all. Then, with a soft, almost weary sigh, the words came. "I don't know," he murmured, voice uncertain. "They've always hated me… for as long as I can remember." He paused. "I don't know why," he added, even softer now. "I've never done anything to them."

Madara remained silent for a while, trying to make sense of what he had just heard. He knew hate was a powerful emotion, but what could make someone hate a child? "What's your name, boy?" he asked, hoping to get some answers from the boy himself.

The child paused, his hand stilling as he looked up at Madara, his wide blue eyes meeting the older man's gaze. After a beat, he gave a small, fake smile. "Uzumaki Naruto," he said, his voice softer now, almost as if he was scared to answer the question.

Madara's heart stilled for a breath. 'Uzumaki Naruto…!' The name echoed in his mind like a thunderclap. The boy in front of him, this small, lonely child offering him food and fragile conversation, was the same person he had once faced on the battlefield. The one who had defied him.

'It can't be…'

His thoughts spun violently, colliding with one another as the weight of recognition sank in. This wasn't a stranger. This wasn't just some orphan in the woods. This was him. 'This child… this world… I've gone back?' His gaze sharpened as he looked around, suddenly more aware of the trees, the air, and the energy that pulsed in the soil beneath his feet. He could feel it now. Familiar. Steady. 'Konoha.' There was no doubt. He was in the past.

'But how…'

Without thinking, his sharingan flared to life, the red eyes gleaming in the darkness. The three tomoes inside them spun menacingly as he moves his gaze back at Naruto, ignoring how the boy was looking at his eyes. 'It should be here then…' He thought as the deep, crimson pattern of his eyes scanned the boy's chakra network, searching for something only they could see.

It didn't take long for his sharingan to reveal what Madara had already suspected. 'There it is…' His fingers twitched as he felt the unmistakable presence of the Kyūbi, the Nine-Tails, sealed within this boy. 'But something is different. Something is strange about it.' Madara's eyes narrowed as his sharingan dug deeper. The Kyūbi was there, yes, but it was not the same monster he had fought against many times. No. This was only the Yin half of that creature, the darker, more malevolent portion, sealed away deep within the boy's very being.

"Umm… mister?"

Madara blinked and gazed at the boy, his eyes still doused in red color. "Yes?" he asked, not sure what the boy wanted now.

Naruto's small hands pointed eagerly toward Madara's eyes, his gaze filled with unfiltered wonder. "Your eyes... they look so cool!" The boy's enthusiasm was somewhat endearing, but Madara couldn't help the fleeting sense of annoyance that stirred within him now that he knew who he was. Still, he tolerated it. "I've seen these before on some people with black hair, but those people never talk to me."

Madara's eyebrow twitched, his mind momentarily racing. 'Others with black hair?' The boy was referring to his clan, the Uchihas. A flicker of irritation passed through him at the thought of his clan being reduced to cold, uncaring strangers who wouldn't offer the boy—a boy destined to be like Hashirama—a single word.

"Really?"

Naruto nodded earnestly, his blue eyes still locked on the swirling tomoes of Madara's sharingan. "Yeah! I've seen them before. Do you know those people, mister?" His head tilted to the side, eyes narrowing with curiosity. "Also, what's your name?"

There was a heavy pause that stretched between them. Madara's gaze lingered on the boy for a long moment, considering the question—considering the boy himself. He knew exactly who the boy was, of course. In another time, another life, he had fought him. And yet, sitting here now, in this world where everything had shifted, Madara couldn't help but feel... oddly out of place with him.

"My name..." Madara's voice dropped into a near whisper, a bitter laugh escaping him before he spoke the words that would forever change the history of this new world.

"My name is Uchiha Madara."

=Prologue End=


Done.

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