Chapter 338: Chapter 338: Rhosyn
Trafalgar was the one who broke the silence. Answering the question that hung over before.
"I’ve been thinking," he said, voice steady. "About everything around . About this world. About what’s been happening to ." His gaze didn’t leave her. "About you too. In part."
The words settled between them.
"That’s why I’m here," he continued. "In Salca. The ssage said there was sothing here."
Nothing followed.
The Veiled Woman remained seated by the window, still as she had been since the mont he sensed her presence. The silence that ca after his confession wasn’t heavy, but it was deliberate, stretched thin like a held breath.
Trafalgar exhaled slowly.
Maledicta loosened in his grip, then dissolved into mana, the blade vanishing without sound or trace as it returned to his inventory. He turned away from the window and walked back toward the bed, each step unhurried. When he reached it, he sat down, posture straight, hands resting on his knees as if grounding himself.
He waited.
The Veiled Woman still said nothing.
Trafalgar remained seated, hands still on his knees, shoulders relaxed but unmoving. The silence stretched longer than before, and this ti he didn’t let it pass unanswered.
"Then why now?" he asked, voice low, carrying no anger, only weariness sharpened by expectation. "Why did you decide to appear now?" His gaze stayed fixed on her. "Have I done what you asked of ? Am I finally... apt?" A brief pause followed, his breath steady. "After a year—are you going to give
the answers I’ve been waiting for?"
There was no accusation in his tone. No bitterness. Just the weight of ti and the quiet insistence of soone who had reached the end of running in circles.
She didn’t answer him with words, nor with any abrupt gesture. The silence simply shifted as her hands rose, slow and deliberate, and Trafalgar felt the room tighten around that motion alone. His gaze stayed locked on her, dark-blue eyes unblinking, following every small movent as if afraid that looking away for even a mont might break whatever fragile balance had ford between them.
Her fingers reached the veil.
She lifted it little by little, not in haste, as though each fraction revealed had its own weight. First her chin ca into view, pale and smooth, then a small mouth set in a calm, unreadable line. A delicate nose followed, almost porcelain in its shape, too refined to feel accidental. When the veil rose further, her eyes were revealed at last—completely black, devoid of any visible color, like depth without reflection. They should have felt empty. Instead, they were strangely captivating, pulling his attention inward rather than pushing it away, like staring into a quiet void that looked back.
The veil slipped higher, and her hair fell free. Black, as dark as his own, straight and long, framing her face naturally, parted on either side as if it had always settled that way. Nestled within it was a single black rose, pinned carefully in place.
Sothing shifted inside him.
Trafalgar hadn’t expected this. Not the face. Not the reality of her. He had imagined answers, voices, explanations—but never her features, never the weight of seeing her fully, stripped of the distance the veil had imposed. For a brief mont, the questions he carried faltered, displaced by sothing raw and unprepared.
Then she spoke.
"Good evening, Cursed Heir."
Her voice was nothing like before. Without the veil, it was softer, almost gentle, carrying a quiet sweetness that contrasted sharply with the words themselves. It was clear now—the veil hadn’t just hidden her face. It had hidden her voice, her presence, altering how she existed in front of him.
And for the first ti, Trafalgar wasn’t just listening to a mystery.
He was looking directly at it.
Trafalgar pulled himself out of the stillness that had taken hold of him, grounding his breath before he spoke. His gaze didn’t waver from her uncovered face.
"Don’t call
that," he said, voice steady but firm. "Cursed Heir." He shook his head slightly. "I don’t even know what it ans. Unless you intend to explain it to —properly—then I won’t accept it."
For the first ti since revealing herself, her expression shifted. Not surprise, but sothing closer to consideration.
"I’m sorry," she said softly. "And yes... I would have liked for you to grow more before this." Her eyes lingered on him, unreadable. "But the world doesn’t wait for anyone. We’ll get to that later."
She paused, then tilted her head just a little.
"Before that," she continued, "if we’re going to have a long conversation—and it will be long, and heavy—I’d rather you call
by my na." A faint, almost amused curve touched her lips. "Veiled Woman isn’t a good one."
Trafalgar blinked, caught off guard by that.
"...How do you know I called you that?" he asked.
Her smile deepened just enough to be noticeable. "You say it sotis," she replied. "Under your breath."
That landed harder than he expected.
He straightened unconsciously, a sense of exposure crawling up his spine. "Does that an you were watching ?"
"Yes," she answered without hesitation. "To make sure you were all right." She lifted one shoulder slightly. "Not always. Not closely. And never directly." Her gaze dimd for a mont. "Before, I couldn’t. The Void Creatures would have noticed. But now..." She t his eyes again. "I finally got rid of them. They can’t detect
anymore. It’s taken ti."
Then, at last, she said it.
"My na is Rhosyn."
Trafalgar let the na settle for a mont before repeating it quietly, almost to himself.
"Rhosyn..."
He lifted his gaze back to her, studying the way it fit her now that she stood there without the veil. "It ans rose," he said after a pause. His eyes flicked briefly to the black flower woven into her hair. "Is that why you wear one?"
She seed genuinely caught off guard by that. Just a little. Enough for it to show.
"That’s the first thing you ask ?" Rhosyn said, a faint note of surprise threading through her voice. Then she nodded. "Yes. It’s my na." Her fingers brushed the rose lightly. "The one my mother gave ."
Trafalgar inclined his head in acknowledgnt, the tension in his shoulders easing in a way he hadn’t noticed until it was gone.
"I’m glad," he said simply. "To finally have a na for you." He hesitated, then added, almost dryly, "I was going to say a face—but this is the first ti I’ve actually seen it."
Rhosyn didn’t respond right away, but the silence between them no longer felt heavy. It felt open.
There were still no answers. No explanations waiting neatly to be given. But sothing had shifted all the sa. The distance that had once defined their encounters was gone, and with it, the masks.
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