The coronation ceremony had concluded. Now ca the real test.
Hanekawa sat in the Hokage's chair—no, the Emperor's chair—and felt the weight of it settle across his shoulders like a physical thing. The S-Rank entry "Emperor of the Ninja World" thrumd through his veins, and he understood now why so many people craved this position.
The power was intoxicating.
Note to self: Don't let it go to your head. That's how villains happen.
The court eting stretched before him like an endless scroll. Civil and military officials from all five nations filled the hall, each one carefully selected through the Ability System to ensure both loyalty and competence. It was efficient. Practical. Exactly the kind of thing an emperor should do.
It was also incredibly boring.
"The first item on the agenda," Kurenai announced, her voice steady as she presided over the proceedings, "concerns the redistribution of administrative duties."
Hanekawa had kept Konoha's organizational structure rather than adopting the Land of Fire's official system. Partly because it was familiar. Mostly because he was too lazy to redesign everything from scratch.
The Three Dukes—Grand Minister, Left Minister, Right Minister—would be replaced by the Hokage Advisor and Hokage Secretary system. Sakumo would handle military operations. Shikaku would manage civilian affairs. And Kurenai...
Kurenai would oversee the secretaries from every village.
"Yes, Your Majesty," she said with a smile that made his chest tighten. She'd earned this. She deserved this.
The eting continued. Announcents about the Police Departnt's expanded role. The Financial Market Departnt. Mineral Resources. Each one a piece of the puzzle that would hold the ninja world together.
Then ca his declarations.
"The ANBU will expand tenfold," he stated. Intelligence was crucial. The ANBU would be his eyes and ears across the entire world.
"The Ninja Academy will be formalized into the Ninja Sect, with myself as its head." Education was the foundation. Future generations would be shaped by what they learned there.
"A complete transportation network will be established." He paused, letting the weight of the next words sink in. "Including Flying Thunder God Formations in all major cities."
The room went silent. He could see it in their eyes—the realization that this single innovation would bind the ninja world to Konoha forever. Fast travel. Instant communication. Complete integration.
Probably should have warned them first, Hanekawa thought, watching Ohnoki's expression darken. Oh well. Too late now.
"Finally," he continued, "the Network Departnt under Tsunade will oversee culture and news distribution across the ninja world."
Tsunade's eye twitched. He'd deliberately not warned her. The look on her face was almost worth the inevitable complaint session later.
"Dismissed," he said, standing. His throat was dry. Being an emperor was fine. etings were torture.
---
The Hokage's office—still called that, despite its new grandeur—felt smaller once he was alone. Three tis the size of the old one, with a rest room attached, and sohow it still felt cramped.
At least the bed's big enough for two people, he thought, then imdiately caught himself. No. At least three. Definitely three.
A knock interrupted his increasingly chaotic thoughts.
"Co in."
The door opened and Rin stepped inside, carrying a steaming bowl of ran.
"Your Majesty, please have lunch," she said softly.
Hanekawa studied her. dical departnt head. Brilliant ninja. And here she was, playing delivery service.
"This isn't a formal eting. Just call Hanekawa," he said. "Why are you delivering food?"
"Kurenai was busy with the other secretaries," Rin explained. "I had less work, so she asked to bring this."
It made sense. The transition from ninja to administrator was chaotic for everyone.
"Who made this?" he asked, picking up the chopsticks.
"I did." A slight blush colored her cheeks. "It won't be as good as yours."
"Then eat with ."
"I couldn't—"
"That wasn't a request, Rin."
She hesitated only a mont before walking closer. The next second, she gasped as he lifted her onto his lap.
This is nice, he thought, wrapping his left arm around her waist. This is what all that power is actually for.
He fed her the ran, watching her eat with the kind of focus that made everything else fade away. When she finished, he kissed her cheek.
"Thank you," she whispered.
"You're welco."
Her body tensed slightly as his hand moved down her thigh. He felt her breath catch, saw the flush spread across her skin.
"Don't move," he murmured.
She tried to respond, but her words ca out incoherent. When her clothes fell away, she crossed her arms over herself, face burning.
"Rin," he whispered against her ear. "How about we go ho?"
"Okay," she breathed.
The world shifted. Her bedroom. Familiar ceiling. Familiar walls. And Rin, suddenly very aware of exactly how exposed she was.
She covered her eyes with her hands, but he could see her trembling.
Hanekawa smiled. So innocent. So perfect.
He pulled her close under the blankets, feeling her stiffen at the contact. She'd been held by him before, but never like this. Never without barriers between them.
"Rin," he said, stroking her cheek until she t his eyes. "You're so cute."
Her lips were soft when he kissed her, nervous at first, then eager. When they finally broke apart, she was breathing hard, unable to et his gaze.
He deepened the kiss, his hands moving with purpose. Her body responded, tensing and relaxing in turns.
"Rin," he called softly.
She looked up—and imdiately paled, sweat beading on her forehead.
"I'm fine," she said quickly, shifting her hips. "I'm a dical ninja. The Yin Seal can handle anything."
He believed her. Rin was extraordinary in every way.
The sun set outside her window, painting the sky in shades of fire. By the ti the last light faded, Rin had fallen into an exhausted sleep, her face still flushed, her body glistening with sweat.
Hanekawa brushed the damp hair from her forehead and kissed it gently. She'd sleep until morning. He had other matters to attend to.
With a gesture, he sealed the room with a barrier and vanished.
---
The ran on his desk had gone cold. A quick application of Fire Style heated it back up. He ate thodically, efficiently, his mind already moving to the next task.
The secretary's office was next door. Through the window, he could see Kurenai still working, papers spread across her desk.
"It'll be ready soon," she said without looking up as he entered.
Hanekawa didn't answer. He simply walked over, picked her up, and held her against his chest.
"Bad guy!" she exclaid, instinctively wrapping her arms around his neck and locking her legs around his waist. "What are you doing?"
"Work's over," he said, supporting her with one hand while the other settled on her thigh. "Ti to go ho."
"Hanekawa, put down! I still have—"
"No."
She huffed, but he felt her relax slightly, her fingers playing with the hair at the back of his neck.
This, he thought as he carried her toward the door, is what being emperor actually ans.
Not the power. Not the authority. This—the ability to take care of the people he loved, to make sure they weren't working themselves to exhaustion, to steal them away for a mont of peace.
Everything else was just details.
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