The world dissolved from the stark, brutal geotry of the badlands into the warm, golden light of Hatake Manor's main living area. Kakashi kept his arm around Aha's shoulders as they sat on the large, sunken sofa.
Two won were already there, a picture of dostic tranquility. Konan, her signature paper flower tucked behind one ear, sat with her usual serene poise, a cup of tea cooling on the low table before her.
Beside her, i Terumī was sprawled more languidly, her auburn hair a vibrant splash against the cream-colored cushions, a mischievous smile playing on her lips as she watched them appear.
"So," i drawled, her voice a smooth, lodic tease. "You managed to reel in the workaholic, Kakashi." Her green-colored eyes shifted to Aha, who stood stiffly beside her father, her expression the carefully cultivated neutral mask of the intelligence director.
"No dramatic last stand in so forgotten canyon? No secret files clutched in your hand?"
Aha t her gaze, her face giving nothing away.
i let out an exaggerated tsk, shaking her head. "So serious. You were much cuter when you were little. All big, quiet eyes and silver pigtails."
A flicker of sothing, long-suffering affection, passed through Aha's dark eyes. She simply shook her head at i's antics, a gesture so familiar it was its own form of greeting. Then, the professional mask softened. She stepped forward first to Konan, bending to wrap her mother in a firm, silent hug.
Konan's arms ca around her, one hand coming up to stroke her daughter's back, a wordless communication passing between them. When Aha pulled back, she turned to i and gave the redhead an equally sincere, if slightly quicker, embrace.
"Auntie i," she murmured.
"Welco ho, sweetheart," i replied, her teasing tone gone, replaced by genuine warmth.
With the greetings done, Aha's focus imdiately returned to Kakashi. She fell into step just behind him as he made his way towards the sprawling, open-plan kitchen that was the true heart of the manor. Konan and i shared a look, soft smiles touching their lips as they watched them go.
"So things never change," Konan said softly, picking up her tea.
"Rember?" i's voice grew fond, distant. "When she was, what, four? She'd trail after him like a tiny, silent shadow. Wouldn't say a word to anyone for hours, but the mont Kakashi went into the kitchen…"
"She'd drag that little wooden stool over," Konan continued, the mory vivid. "He'd lift her up onto the counter. She'd watch him with those huge, serious eyes, handing him ingredients with such grave importance. 'The salt, Father.' 'The knife, Father.' And when he'd let her stir sothing… that tiny, fleeting smile."
They lapsed into a comfortable silence, the sounds from the kitchen a familiar symphony: the click of the stove igniting, the sizzle of oil in a pan, the rhythmic thump-thump-thump of a knife on a cutting board. It was a sound that spoke of normalcy, of a god who chose to express his care not through cosmic power, but through perfectly diced vegetables and a simring broth.
"She still loves his cooking more than mine." Konan sighed, a gentle, wistful sound.
i chuckled. "Join the club. All of them do. Raiden, Shirayuki, Byakumi, Haruki, Hakuo… It's a universal law of this household. Kakashi's miso-glazed cod defeats all maternal culinary efforts."
But there was no real bitterness in the observation, only a deep, abiding understanding. They watched, from a distance, as Kakashi moved with easy grace in the kitchen, Aha now perched on a stool at the large central island, her chin resting in her hands, watching his every move with the sa rapt attention she had as a child.
He was explaining sothing about the sear on the at, his voice a low, patient rumble.
Konan knew why. It wasn't just about the food. It was about him. Kakashi Hatake, the Rokudai, the god admired by countless, the man who had rewritten the bitter reality of this world. To the world, he was a deity. To his children, he was the father who had made a conscious, relentless effort to never let that divinity beco a wall.
In a household with so many mothers, each brilliant and powerful in their own right, he had been the constant, grounding presence. He had spent hours upon hours with each child, not training prodigies, but building people.
He taught Raiden politics by having him diate argunts between the manor's cats. He taught Aha strategy through complex board gas, letting her win only when she truly outmaneuvered him.
He had ensured none of them ever felt their achievents were rely reflections of his glory, or that their lives were gifts from a generous god.
He taught independence, critical thought, and the quiet confidence that cos from being seen and challenged by the person you respect most.
That was why the bond was so profound, so unshakable. It was earned, not bestowed. And yes, sotis it made the hearts of the won who loved him ache with a sweet, helpless jealousy, not for his affection, which he gave freely and fully to each of them, but for that specific, focused, utterly present connection he forged with each of his sons and daughters.
In the kitchen, Kakashi plated the al, a simple-looking but incredibly nuanced dish of grilled river fish with a mountain herb crust, roasted root vegetables glazed in a sweet-salty reduction, and a mound of fluffy, steaming rice. He set it before Aha with a soft, "Eat up."
Aha, who had been watching the process with the intensity of a master analyst, finally looked away from her father and glanced towards the living room. She saw her mother and Aunt i, both watching her with soft, thoughtful expressions.
Aha's brilliant, tactical mind, honed for subterfuge and threat assessnt, processed their looks through a lens of imdiate, primal concern.
'They are eyeing my food.'
Without a word, she picked up her plate, slid off the stool, and carried it to the far corner of the kitchen, near the pantry door. She turned her back to the room, creating a small, defensive fortress of her own body between her and the perceived threat, and began to eat with swift, deliberate efficiency.
A loud, genuine laugh burst from Kakashi. He leaned against the counter, his shoulders shaking.
In the living room, Konan and i blinked, their reverie shattered. They processed the scene: their formidable, world-class kunoichi daughter, hiding in a corner to protect her dinner from her own mother and aunt. For a mont, they were utterly speechless.
Then i snorted. A giggle escaped Konan. Soon, both won were laughing, the sound bright and unfettered, filling the manor with joy. Aha, hearing it, paused mid-bite, her shoulders relaxing slightly. A faint, almost imperceptible blush tinged her cheeks, but she did not stop eating.
When she was done, the plate spotless, she let out a small, completely unselfconscious burp of deep satisfaction. She carried her plate to the sink, rinsed it ticulously, and then walked back into the living room.
Kakashi had settled back on the large sofa, Konan on one side, i on the other. Aha didn't hesitate. She walked over and insinuated herself into the space between Kakashi and Konan, wriggling until she was snugly nestled against both of them.
The residual tension from weeks of relentless pursuit, the cold focus of the Kara investigation, the adrenaline of the fight, it all seeped out of her. She was surrounded by the warmth of her parents, a scent combination of old books, ink, ozone, and sea salt that ant ho.
Her head found a comfortable spot against Kakashi's shoulder, her legs curling up. Within minutes, her breathing deepened, evening out into the slow, steady rhythm of profound sleep.
Kakashi looked down at her peaceful face, then at Konan, who was watching their daughter with liquid, loving eyes. He leaned over and pressed a soft kiss to Konan's forehead. She smiled, her own eyelids growing heavy, and let her head rest against his, drifting off beside their child.
On his other side, i watched the scene, her expression soft. She shifted closer, tucking herself against Kakashi's free side, her head on his chest. The day's playful energy drained from her, replaced by a contented drowsiness. Soon, her breathing synced with the others in a slow, sleeping harmony.
Kakashi remained still, a pillar amidst his slumbering family. He felt the weight of Konan's head, the steady rise and fall of Aha's breath, the warm pressure of i against his side.
He looked at them, the origami artist who built dreams from paper, the Mizukage who lted mountains with her will, the daughter who hunted shadows to keep the light safe, and then his gaze swept inward, towards the rooms where his other wives and children rested, loved, lived.
The quiet hum of the manor was the sound of his life's work. Not the Genesis Seal, not the defeated wars, not the godhood. This. The trust, the peace, the unguarded sleep. The knowledge that Raiden was managing a continent, that Byakumi was evolving under Kaguya's watch, that Madara was sowhere grumpily forging a new generation of guardians.
All his efforts, every impossible choice, every ounce of pain and power, had been for this mont, and the infinite string of monts like it that would follow.
He had a big family. A complicated, magnificent, powerful, and beautifully human family.
What more could he possibly ask for?
He closed his eyes, not to sleep, but to simply be, to feel the reality he had built resting safely in his arms. A small, perfect smile lingered on his face, unseen by anyone, a silent testant to a victory no scroll would ever record.
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