The return to Konoha was met with quiet praise from the higher-ups, but for Aizen, the true "reward" was the shifting atmosphere of the village. As he walked through the training grounds a few days later, carrying a stack of medical scrolls, he felt a sudden, cold drop in the ambient temperature. It wasn't a physical cold, but a predatory aura—viscous and sickly sweet.
Aizen didn't stop. He didn't even adjust his pace. He simply smiled to himself. So, the first snake has crawled out of the grass.
Leaning against a stone pillar near the library was a man with long, raven-black hair and skin the color of parched bone. His golden, slitted eyes tracked Aizen with a hunger that surpassed mere curiosity. This was Orochimaru, one of the legendary Sannin and the favorite pupil of the Third Hokage.
"You have a very peculiar rhythm, Sosuke-kun," Orochimaru hissed, his voice like sandpaper on silk.
Aizen stopped and turned, offering a polite, slightly surprised bow. "Lord Orochimaru. It is an honor to meet one of the Great Sannin. To what 'rhythm' do you refer?"
Orochimaru pushed off the pillar, moving with a fluid, boneless grace until he was standing just inches from Aizen. He leaned in, sniffing the air. "Most shinobi pulse like a drum—steady, loud, and obvious. But you... your chakra doesn't pulse. It flows like a deep river under ice. It's almost as if you are... wearing a mask made of your own energy."
Aizen's expression remained as calm as a summer pond. "Perhaps it is just the result of my meditation, Lord Orochimaru. I find that a quiet mind leads to quiet chakra. Is there something I can help you with?"
Orochimaru's tongue flicked out, a brief flash of red. "I saw the report from Sakumo-san. A Genjutsu that erases the mind? A seal that collapses the chakra network? Such things are not found in the 'old texts' you claim to study. I know every scroll in this village, little boy. None of them contain what you did to that Iwa captain."
"Then perhaps I am reading between the lines," Aizen replied smoothly.
The air between them grew heavy. Orochimaru's killing intent flared for a split second—a test that would have sent a normal Genin to their knees in terror. Aizen didn't flinch. He didn't even blink. He simply looked into Orochimaru's golden eyes with a terrifyingly vacant kindness.
"Fascinating," Orochimaru whispered, his eyes widening in genuine delight. "You aren't afraid. Not because you are brave, but because you don't see me as a threat. Tell me, Sosuke... what do you see when you look at this world?"
Aizen adjusted his glasses, the glare of the sun momentarily turning them into two white discs. "I see a world built on the fear of death, Lord Orochimaru. Everyone is looking for a way to stay relevant, to stay alive. They cling to villages, to clans, and to teachers... because they are afraid to stand alone at the top."
Orochimaru froze. This was the philosophy he was only just beginning to form—the obsession with immortality and the truth of all jutsu. To hear it from a child was both exhilarating and disturbing.
"You and I... we are very similar," Orochimaru said, a dark smile spreading across his face. "I am currently conducting certain... private research. Into the nature of the soul. I believe someone with your 'unique' perspective could be quite useful."
"I am flattered," Aizen said, his voice dropping to that hypnotic, velvety tone. "But I believe I have my own path to follow. However, I wouldn't mind an exchange of information. You have access to things the Academy does not. Secrets of the Second Hokage's forbidden techniques, perhaps?"
Orochimaru chuckled, a dry, rattling sound. "A trade, then. Very well. Come to the Third Training Ground at midnight. I'll show you something that the 'Will of Fire' would find... repulsive."
As Orochimaru vanished into the shadows, Aizen continued his walk. He didn't need Orochimaru as a teacher, but as a catalyst.
Orochimaru is a man who thinks he is the scientist, Aizen thought. He doesn't realize that I have already placed him in a cage. He will find the secrets I need, and when he is no longer useful, I will let the 'snakes' eat themselves.
