Tok.
Tok.
Tok.
The sound broke the stillness of the room with deliberate restraint.
Noel turned toward the door, half expecting it to open without waiting for an answer. That was how it used to be. Orders entered first, explanations later.
Instead, a voice ca from the other side.
"May I co in?"
It was deep, steady. Familiar.
Noel stilled.
That had never happened before.
He looked at the door for a mont longer than necessary, absorbing the difference. Permission requested. Not assud.
"You may," he replied.
The handle turned slowly. The door opened without haste.
Albrecht Thorne stepped inside.
Ti had marked him, though not in ways that diminished him. He was broader than most n his age, shoulders squared, posture straight despite the weight of years and command. His hair, now carried strands of gray at the temples. His presence remained imposing, not because he raised his voice or filled space aggressively, but because he carried himself like soone accustod to being obeyed.
A warrior first. A patriarch second.
He closed the door behind him.
For a few seconds, neither spoke.
Months had passed since they had last stood in the sa room. There had been no letters between them. No ssages carried through interdiaries. Noel had walked away from the family na without asking for permission or leaving a promise to return.
Albrecht did not look angry.
He looked... careful.
"You look well," Albrecht said at last, his tone formal but not distant.
Noel held his gaze.
"I’m managing."
A brief silence followed.
"How have you been?" Albrecht asked, voice steady.
Noel did not soften the answer.
"Alive."
The word lingered between them longer than either comnted on.
Albrecht gave a faint nod, as if acknowledging that the answer carried more than its surface.
"I see," he said quietly.
Albrecht remained where he stood for a mont longer before taking a few steps into the room.
"What have you been doing these past months?" he asked, tone controlled but less formal now. "Word travels, but not clearly."
Noel leaned lightly against the edge of the desk.
"Moving," he replied. "eting people. Securing alliances. Preparing for what’s coming."
Albrecht studied him carefully.
"You’ve changed," he said. "You carry yourself differently."
Noel did not respond to that directly.
"There’s a lot to prepare," he added instead.
A pause followed, the kind that invited more but didn’t demand it.
Then Noel spoke again.
"I’m going to be a father."
The words were simple.
They landed heavily.
Albrecht’s posture stiffened almost imperceptibly. Not in anger. In surprise.
"I did not know," he said.
For the first ti since entering the room, sothing unguarded crossed his face.
Sothing closer to disbelief.
"You’re certain?" he asked, quieter now.
"Yes."
A breath passed between them.
"Then... congratulations," Albrecht said.
Noel inclined his head slightly.
"Thank you."
Silence returned, but it felt different this ti.
Albrecht’s gaze shifted briefly toward the window, toward the estate grounds beyond. The weight of the statent settled slowly.
A grandfather.
The thought lingered behind his steady expression, processing itself without outward display.
Noel watched him, uncertain whether to fill the space or let it stand.
Neither did.
The room remained uncomfortable.
The silence did not break imdiately.
It thickened, carrying with it ti neither of them had addressed properly.
Noel’s gaze drifted briefly to the bookshelf along the far wall, but he wasn’t seeing titles or bindings. He was rembering corridors filled with whispers. Orders spoken behind closed doors. The night steel t flesh for the first ti under this family’s crest.
The silence stretched, and Noel let it.
He had replayed those mories enough tis that they no longer burned. They settled instead, like cold tal resting beneath the skin.
The assassins had not been sent by Albrecht directly. That much had beco clear long ago. The wives had orchestrated it—fear, ambition, internal politics. He understood the structure now. Understood how power moved within noble houses.
But understanding did not erase consequence.
Albrecht had not given the order.
He had also not crushed it imdiately.
That had been the fracture.
When Noel first opened his eyes in this world—confused, disoriented, inheriting the body of a tragic extra whose fate was written in blood—he had expected chaos. He had not expected blades in the dark from his own household. He had not expected to kill before he even understood where he stood.
He had killed because survival required it.
Because no one stepped in fast enough.
Intent was not the issue.
Neglect was.
That was what lingered.
He could have remained angry. He could have held onto it like a weapon. For a ti, he had. But anger was heavy, and he had long since chosen sothing else.
Distance.
He had walked away not because he wanted revenge, but because he refused to build a future inside walls that had once tried to bury him.
The past did not need to be reopened.
The past did not need to be reopened.
Noel lifted his gaze from the floor and t his father’s eyes again.
"I didn’t co back to revisit old wounds," he said evenly. "I ca because there’s sothing larger at stake."
Albrecht straightened slightly, the subtle shift in posture signaling a transition. Personal tension receded. Strategy stepped forward.
"Explain," he said.
"Do you rember the major assault on the crystal?" Noel asked.
Albrecht’s gaze sharpened imdiately.
"Of course."
"That attack wasn’t isolated," Noel continued. "It was orchestrated."
He didn’t rush.
"You also rember the disease that spread through the northern territories. And the incident at the Holy Capital."
A brief pause.
"All of it," Noel said, "was the sa group."
The air in the room seed to tighten.
Albrecht did not react emotionally. He analyzed.
"Connected operations," he said quietly.
"Yes."
"And? What do you want Noel Thorne?"
"Let talk first. Now we can finish it," Noel replied. "There’s one central figure left. A man nad Roberto. If we remove him, the structure collapses."
Silence followed.
"How long?" Albrecht asked.
"Five months. That’s our preparation window."
Albrecht turned slightly, pacing once across the room, mind already moving through logistics.
"Capabilities?"
"Light magic," Noel answered. "High-level. Beyond conventional standards."
Albrecht nodded once.
"Then we prepare for radiant-based offense and defensive counterasures. Troops will begin resistance drills. Formations will adapt to avoid clustered vulnerability. Equipnt adjustnts will start imdiately."
No hesitation.
"I will align House Thorne with you," Albrecht said plainly. "If this man stands behind the crystal assault and the destabilization efforts, then he is a threat to our territory."
It wasn’t spoken as a father helping a son.
It was a house protecting its domain.
Noel inclined his head.
"That’s all I needed."
Albrecht’s eyes held his a mont longer.
"We will be ready."
Noel gave a small nod.
"Thank you."
The operational clarity dissolved once the strategy was set.
For a few monts, neither of them moved. The structure had been agreed upon. Preparations would begin. Orders would be issued. Troops trained. tal reforged. What remained in the room was no longer military.
It was personal.
Albrecht stood near the window now, hands clasped loosely behind his back, gaze resting on the estate grounds beyond the glass. The gardens were orderly. Servants moved along distant paths. Life continued, structured and precise.
Inside the room, the silence thickened.
There was nothing left to discuss about Roberto. Nothing left about tilines or formations. The future had been outlined.
And yet neither of them left.
Albrecht spoke without turning.
"Was I a bad father?"
The question ca without hesitation, without anger, without defensiveness. It wasn’t dramatic. It wasn’t frad as a plea.
It was direct.
Noel did not look away.
He didn’t soften his expression either.
"You were."
The answer landed cleanly between them.
Albrecht’s shoulders did not flinch. He had expected that much.
A pause followed, long enough to carry years inside it.
Noel continued, voice steady.
"I don’t know if you still are."
That was the part that lingered.
Albrecht closed his eyes briefly, not in sha, but in acknowledgnt. The weight of what had been could not be undone by regret or later clarity. A household could be rebuilt. Troops retrained. Territory restored.
A childhood could not.
"I see," he said quietly.
He finally turned back toward his son. Not as Lord Thorne. Not as a strategist.
As a man who had failed sowhere he should not have.
"I will not ask for forgiveness," Albrecht added. "That is not mine to request."
Noel held his gaze.
"That’s good," he replied. "Because it isn’t mine to give either."
Another silence settled.
This one was not sharp.
It was unresolved.
And honest.
Neither of them moved to bridge it.
The alliance between House Thorne and Noel was secured.
The distance between father and son remained.
For now, that was enough.
The wind outside brushed lightly against the window.
Inside the room, nothing else was said.
Outside, the estate remained calm, unaware that sothing far heavier than strategy had just shifted within its walls.
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