Chapter 377: Chapter 377: Seventeen [II]
Trafalgar reached for the ribbon resting on the dresser and gathered his black hair with practiced ease, pulling it back into a low ponytail. The motion was familiar, almost automatic, sothing he had done countless tis before without ever questioning it.
He continued dressing, adjusting the final pieces with quiet care. The colors he chose were dark—deep tones that absorbed light rather than reflected it. They simply fit. The sa way a well-balanced sword fit the hand that had trained with it long enough to know its weight without looking.
He had always gravitated toward these colors. Even before titles, before systems, before bloodlines and expectations had nas. It wasn’t a phase, and it wasn’t defiance. It was consistency.
For a long ti, he hadn’t understood why that mattered.
Now he did.
There was no conflict left in the thought. No need to redefine himself or correct an earlier version. This was who he had been, who he was now, and who he would remain. The world could shift, roles could change, wars could begin—but none of that required him to beco soone else.
He straightened, the fabric settling into place, and t his own reflection without hesitation.
He would move forward as Trafalgar.
"Seventeen..."
The word left Trafalgar’s lips in a low murmur, barely louder than breath. It wasn’t spoken with weight or ceremony, just acknowledgnt, like reading a number written on a page and moving on.
A year and three months.
That was all the ti he had lived in this world.
By any reasonable asure, it wasn’t much. Hardly enough to justify familiarity, let alone belonging. And yet, as the thought settled, he found no sense of shortage in it. No feeling that sothing essential had been missed or rushed. What mattered had already happened. What needed to take root, had.
He drew a quiet breath, his mind beginning to turn inward—
Then the mont broke.
A sharp sound cut through the silence.
Knock. Knock. Knock.
Trafalgar’s focus lifted imdiately. He didn’t need to turn toward the door, nor did he need a second to place the rhythm. Sword Insight had etched too many details into his mory—weight, spacing, cadence. The steps on the other side were familiar.
Caelum.
There was no surprise in the recognition, and no change in his expression. The interruption felt expected, almost natural, as if the mont had simply reached its allotted end.
"Co in," Trafalgar said calmly.
The door opened, and Caelum stepped inside.
As he crossed the threshold, the disguise he wore dissolved without spectacle, peeling away as naturally as a shadow retreating from light. What remained was his usual appearance: hair combed neatly back, unmoving and precise, and calm yellow eyes that held neither urgency nor hesitation. His presence settled into the room the way cold air did in Morgain.
Trafalgar watched him without comnt.
Sothing was different.
Caelum’s posture was unchanged, his expression as composed as ever, yet his hands were not folded behind his back as they always were. Instead, they were held in front of him, occupied. The sight drew Trafalgar’s attention imdiately, the way a missing note in a familiar pattern did.
Caelum never carried anything. Not when delivering ssages. Not when observing. Not even when standing idle. His hands were usually empty, hidden, as if prepared to return to stillness at a mont’s notice.
This ti, they weren’t.
Trafalgar’s gaze shifted to what Caelum was holding, curiosity surfacing despite himself.
The object rested between Caelum’s hands with careful restraint, presented neither forward nor concealed. It was enough to be seen, close enough to acknowledge, yet positioned as if its aning mattered more than the act of giving itself. Trafalgar studied it in silence for a heartbeat, then another, taking in its outline, its weight, the way Caelum’s fingers adjusted minutely to keep it steady.
"What are you carrying, Caelum?" he asked.
The question was simple. Direct. It carried no suspicion, only interest.
Caelum’s eyes moved to the object for a brief mont before returning to Trafalgar. His expression did not change, but sothing subtle passed through his gaze, like a shift in pressure beneath still water.
"It is for you, young master," he said evenly. "A gift."
The word landed oddly in the quiet room.
Trafalgar blinked once.
A gift.
For a mont, he did nothing. His mind searched for the appropriate response and found none waiting. Caelum was many things: precise, loyal, efficient to a fault. He was a presence that existed alongside orders and outcos, not occasions. Gifts belonged to different kinds of relationships. Different rhythms.
He looked at Caelum again, as if confirming that the man standing before him was the sa one who had guided him through strategy briefings and silent corridors without ever overstepping, without ever indulging in gestures that carried no function.
Caelum did not avert his gaze. He did not explain further. He simply waited.
The stillness stretched, thin but unbroken.
Trafalgar felt a faint, unexpected displacent settle in his chest, similar to the sensation of misjudging a step by a fraction of an inch. Nothing dangerous. Just enough to register. Caelum was not soone who acted without intent, and this intent did not align with duty alone.
"You’re serious," Trafalgar said quietly.
"Yes," Caelum replied.
The answer ca without emphasis, as steady as the rest of him.
Trafalgar’s thoughts moved quickly then, not scattered, but recalibrating. Caelum had chosen this mont. This day. The timing was too precise to be coincidence. He understood, suddenly, that this was not an attempt at sentint, nor an obligation fulfilled out of tradition. It was acknowledgnt, delivered in the only way Caelum ever delivered anything: directly, without adornnt.
That understanding unsettled him more than the gift itself.
Caelum had never given him anything before. Advice, yes. Protection, certainly. Information, always when required. But this was different. This had no imdiate utility attached to it, no order it fulfilled.
Trafalgar’s eyes returned to the object once more, then lifted back to Caelum.
"A gift...?" he said.
The word sounded unfamiliar when spoken aloud, as if it belonged to a language he understood but rarely used.
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