Kakashi sat cross-legged on a cushion as he held a steaming cup of tea. Across from him, the Ancient One sat with the same calm authority she'd exuded in their mirrored-dimension spar with a tea of her own in her hands.
The silence between them was comfortable, but Kakashi's shinobi instincts urged him to probe, to understand the woman who knew his name and wielded powers that he did not know about and definitely was not chakra.
He set his tea down, one of his eyes narrowing slightly. "How do you know my name?" he asked, his tone casual but edged with curiosity.
The Ancient One's lips curved in a faint smile, her eyes glinting with ageless wisdom. "I've been keeping an eye on you since you arrived in this world, Mr. Kakashi."
"Why?" His voice was steady, but his mind raced.
'Surveillance. She's been watching me. And I had no idea about it? Is it some kind of sensory ability?' The thought did unsettle him but it also raised questions about her motives which Ancient One answered in her next sentence.
"To see if you were a threat to this universe," she replied, her tone matter-of-fact. "Your arrival was… unusual. A fracture in the multiverse, caused by forces beyond your world and mine. I needed to ensure you weren't an agent of chaos."
Kakashi's eye flicked to her, catching the word "universe" but choosing to sidestep it for now. I
nstead, he zeroed in on the question that had haunted him for months, the one that kept him awake on Hell's Kitchen rooftops staring at alien stars. "You seem to be able to use space-time jutsu," he said, his voice carefully neutral.
"Would you be able to send me back to my home world?"
The Ancient One's expression softened, a trace of regret in her eyes. She set her tea down, folding her hands in her lap. "I'm afraid not, Mr. Kakashi. In simple terms, your world is not part of the multiverse as we understand it here. It exists beyond the tapestry of universes I can access. The phenomenon that brought you here—was under very unusual circumstances that created a unique rift.
To send you back, we'd need to replicate that exact event, simultaneously in your world and ours. Someone in your world would need to break the dimensional barrier as you did, while someone here does the same. Even then, the odds of landing in your precise world are less than one percent."
Kakashi's eye remained steady, his face unreadable beneath the mask. He digested her words, the weight of them settling like a stone in his chest. 'No way home.' He'd suspected as much—Sasuke's Rinnegan hadn't found him, his summons couldn't bridge the gap—but hearing it confirmed was a quiet blow.
'Naruto, Sasuke, Sakura… I may never see you again.' The thought stung, but he pushed it down, his ANBU training keeping his emotions in check. "I see," he said simply, his voice calm, almost detached.
The Ancient One tilted her head, studying him. "You're quite a calm and analytical one, aren't you? Even during our little spar, you never lost your composure. I wish some of the apprentices at Kamar-Taj were like you." She paused, a spark of amusement in her eyes. "Oh, and by the way, we don't use ninjutsu. We use magic."
Kakashi raised an eyebrow, the gesture subtle but expressive. 'Magic?' The word conjured images of stage performers pulling rabbits from hats, not the reality-warping power she'd displayed.
"Well," he said, his tone dry, "I've been fighting and killing since I was five. You learn a few things about staying calm."
Her eyes widened slightly, a rare crack in her composure. 'Five?' The number hung in the air, and her gaze softened, a flicker of empathy breaking through her.
' He's lived in a cruel world.' She saw the weight behind his words, the scars hidden beneath his mask—not just physical, but the kind carved by loss and duty.
'He is a child soldier, forged in blood.'
Kakashi continued, unfazed by her reaction. "And magic? As in what magicians do? Card tricks and smoke mirrors?"
The Ancient One chuckled, the sound warm and genuine. "Not quite. We are sorcerers, Mr. Kakashi. We harness mystical energy drawn from other dimensions of the multiverse to cast spells, conjure shields, and wield weapons. The sorcerers of antiquity called it 'spells,' but if that word offends your shinobi sensibilities, think of it as your hand signs—a source code that shapes reality."
Kakashi leaned back, his eye crinkling in faint amusement. "Source code, huh? Sounds like something the tech nerds in this world would love." He thought of the internet, the endless streams of data he'd studied in his Hell's Kitchen apartment.
'She's not wrong. Jutsu shapes chakra through signs and intent. Her 'magic' sounds like a different language for the same idea.'
"So, you pull energy from other dimensions. Like chakra from the body?"
"In a way," she said, sipping her tea. "Chakra, as you call it, is the life energy within all beings. We call it chi, qi, or prana in different traditions. Your world has refined its use into an art form—ninjutsu, genjutsu, taijutsu. Here, we Sorcerers channel external energies, often from realms beyond mortal reach. The Shinto gods I sensed in your Sharingan, for instance—they're echoes of divine forces, much like the entities we draw upon."
Kakashi's eye sharpened at the mention of his Sharingan. "You felt that? The gods?" He'd never thought of his eyes in those terms.
'Susanoo, Izanagi, Izanami… are they tied to the Uchiha's power?' The idea was unsettling, but it fit with the myths of his world, where gods and spirits shaped the shinobi's history.
"Yes," she said, her voice thoughtful. "Your eyes carry their essence, though you wield them independently. It's remarkable. Your multiverse must be rich with such power."
She paused, her gaze probing. "Tell me, how did you come by such eyes? They're not… natural to you, are they?"
Kakashi's hand twitched, a reflex to guard his secrets. 'Obito's gift.' The memory of his friend's sacrifice was a wound that never fully healed, but he wasn't ready to share it.
"A long story," he said, his tone light but firm. "Let's just say they were a gift from someone who trusted me to use them well."
The Ancient One nodded, respecting his deflection. "Fair enough. You're a man of many secrets, Kakashi-san. I suspect that's served you well."
He tilted his head, his eye crinkling. "It's kept me alive." He sipped his tea, the warmth grounding him. "So, what now? You've tested me, decided I'm not a threat. Why the tea party?"
She smiled, setting her cup down. "To understand your intentions. You're a shinobi, a warrior trained to serve a purpose. In this world, without your village or comrades, what will you do? Will you protect, destroy, or simply survive?"
Kakashi considered her words, the question cutting deeper than he'd expected.
'What am I doing?' In Konoha, his purpose was clear: protect the Hidden Leaf, guide his students, honor the fallen.
"I'm a shinobi," he said finally. "I protect what matters, even if it's not my home. If this world needs defending, I'll lend a hand. If it needs a blade in the dark, I can do that too."
Her eyes gleamed with approval. "A practical answer. You remind me of myself, in a way—balancing duty and necessity. But be warned, Kakashi-san. This world is complex, with threats beyond the Hand or street gangs. There are forces—cosmic, demonic—that dwarf even your skills."
Kakashi's lips twitched beneath his mask. "I've fought a god before. Didn't enjoy it, but I survived."
Ancient One chuckled a little at that.