SSS Talent: From Trash to Tyrant-Chapter 339: A Necessary Conversation [I]

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Chapter 339: Chapter 339: A Necessary Conversation [I]

Trafalgar straightened where he sat, the shift subtle but unmistakable. His shoulders squared, his breathing steadied, and whatever tension had lingered in his posture settled into something far more reserved.

He looked at her directly.

"Will you answer everything I ask you?" he said. The words were calm, but there was no hesitation behind them. No testing tone. Just a line drawn clearly in the air between them.

Rhosyn met his gaze without flinching. There was no deflection in her eyes, no attempt to soften the moment with humor or distance. She nodded once.

"Yes," she said. "I’ll tell you everything I can." After a brief pause, she added, almost thoughtfully, "It’s the moment, I suppose."

That made his brow lift slightly.

"Suppose?" he repeated, the single word carrying quiet confusion rather than accusation. 𝕗𝗿𝕖𝐞𝐰𝗲𝕓𝐧𝕠𝕧𝗲𝐥.𝚌𝐨𝚖

Rhosyn exhaled, her expression shifting—not into uncertainty, but into something heavier. "As I said before," she replied, "I would have preferred more time. For you. For this." Her gaze drifted for a heartbeat, then returned to him. "But the world doesn’t wait. And not all timing is mine to decide."

She leaned back just enough to signal the end of avoidance, if there had ever been any. "So ask," she said plainly. "Whatever you want. I’ll be honest with you."

Silence stretched between them, but it didn’t weigh on him. He let it exist. Questions lined up in his mind with practiced order—about the title she kept using, about why she had intervened back then, about what she expected of him now. Any of them could have come first.

He dismissed them all.

Not because they weren’t important, but because they weren’t fundamental.

There was one truth beneath everything else. One point that didn’t allow detours or half-answers. Until he had it, every other explanation would be noise.

Painful or not, convenient or not, this was the starting line.

He took a single breath, steady and deliberate, then raised his eyes to meet hers.

No hesitation. No frustration. No plea.

"Why am I in this world?"

Rhosyn didn’t answer right away.

The shift was subtle, but unmistakable. The faint warmth she carried moments ago drained from her expression, replaced by a composure that felt restrained, as if she were choosing how much of herself to allow into the room. Her gaze steadied on him, deeper now, carrying the quiet gravity of someone who had held this truth for far too long.

"That question," she said at last, her voice lower, slower, "is not simple." She tilted her head slightly, eyes never leaving his. "Not because it lacks an answer—but because the answer doesn’t belong to a single explanation." A short pause followed, almost thoughtful. "I didn’t expect you to begin there. Most people don’t."

Trafalgar caught the implication immediately.

He leaned forward just enough to make it clear he wasn’t letting the moment pass.

"You already know," he said. His tone wasn’t sharp, but it carried certainty. "You know I don’t belong to this world."

Her reaction was telling in what it lacked. No flicker of surprise crossed her face. No tension crept into her posture. She simply held his gaze, as if this confirmation had been inevitable from the moment they sat down.

That silence spoke louder than any denial.

"You’ve known from the beginning," Trafalgar continued, eyes fixed on hers. "And the fact that this doesn’t unsettle you at all tells me it never surprised you." His voice dropped slightly, not threatening, but pressing. "So I’ll ask you properly."

He didn’t raise his voice. He didn’t rush the words.

"Did you always know?"

Rhosyn nodded once.

"Yes," she said. "I knew."

She didn’t soften it. She didn’t try to ease the weight of it with gentler phrasing. Her voice remained calm, grounded, as if this truth had long since settled into her.

"But you misunderstand one thing," she continued, eyes steady on his. "You did not die in your original world."

That, more than anything else, cut through him.

"This wasn’t reincarnation," Rhosyn said. "There was no end, no severing of your existence." She brought one hand up, palm open, as if laying something invisible between them. "What happened to you was displacement. Your consciousness—your soul, if you prefer—was moved. Shifted from one complete reality into another."

She let the words sit before going on.

"There are many worlds," she said quietly. "Entire, self-contained realities running alongside one another." Her gaze sharpened slightly. "This world was never a game. Not in any sense that matters."

She tilted her head, considering him. "What you knew as the ’second version’ only showed fragments. Pieces filtered through a system never meant to convey the whole. Lore stripped down to mechanics. Characters reduced to titles." A faint exhale left her. "You were never meant to understand it fully from there."

Then her tone shifted, just enough to signal the turn.

"The Trafalgar du Morgain of this world died," she said. "By his own hand."

The words landed with a quiet finality.

"When that happened, his body remained," Rhosyn went on. "Compatible. Empty." Her eyes didn’t leave Trafalgar’s face. "The Primordial Bloodline does not waste vessels like that. It operates beyond the limits most forces obey."

She shook her head once, slow and deliberate. "Your soul wasn’t torn away from your world. It wasn’t forced into this one." Her voice lowered. "It was moved. Redirected into a place where it could continue."

For the first time, something close to emphasis entered her tone.

"You didn’t replace him," she said. "You didn’t steal anything."

She paused.

"You simply arrived where someone else could no longer remain."

Rhosyn didn’t interrupt him when he spoke again.

"The Primordial Bloodline," Trafalgar said, the words settling heavily. "You mentioned it." His gaze sharpened, no accusation in it, but something colder, more demanding. "If it’s as powerful as you say... if it acts beyond limits... then why let a Primordial reach that point?" His jaw tightened slightly. "Why let it get that far at all? Everything that followed could have been avoided."

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