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Shadow Unit Scandal: The Commander's Omega-Chapter 160: Vows for Natalie
The name rang cleanly in the hall, and the holo-slate near the dais answered with a soft, confirming chime as the imperial archive accepted the spoken line and locked it into the public record. The letters flashed once, NATALIE DIANA FRASNER, then collapsed into a seal stamp that only the closest witnesses could see. A clerk at the side console didn’t even look up, fingers moving as the palace grid breathed quietly through the etherlines in the walls.
Gabriel’s gaze went to Natalie immediately.
Natalie, dressed in a formal cloak that had clearly been designed by someone who had never met an infant with opinions, blinked slowly at the dais as if deciding whether the Emperor and the Empress were worth her attention today. Her ash-blonde hair stuck up in a soft, determined halo that no amount of court preparation had managed to tame. One small fist was tucked into the fabric at Rafael’s chest like she was anchoring herself in place.
And then she noticed Gabriel.
Her eyes sharpened, focus clicking in like a mechanism, and she made a small sound that was half question, half demand.
Gabriel’s mouth twitched, warmth slipping through his composure like sunlight through a crack in stone.
"She remembers me," he said quietly.
Damian remained motionless beside him, but his eyes shifted with a faint recalculation because, of course, the baby remembered the Empress, and it was important.
"She remembers your jewelry," Damian corrected, dryly.
Gabriel didn’t even glance at him. "It’s not jewelry. It’s authority."
Natalie chose that moment to reach with startling speed for the chain detail at Gabriel’s collar as soon as Gabriel stepped close enough for her to try, fingers splaying and grabbing like she was born to seize power.
Rafael caught her wrist gently and firmly, without scolding her.
"No," he murmured, soft as breath. "Ask." 𝓯𝙧𝙚𝒆𝙬𝙚𝒃𝙣𝙤𝒗𝓮𝓵.𝙘𝙤𝙢
Natalie stared at him, solemn, as if considering the concept of permission.
Then she turned her gaze back to Gabriel, made a small, insistent sound, and opened her hand again.
Gabriel’s expression shifted, faint amusement and fondness threading together into something that made the nobles standing nearby very careful about where they directed their eyes.
"That," Gabriel said, "was absolutely a request."
Damian’s mouth curved faintly. "She’s seven months old."
"And yet," Gabriel replied, calm and unbothered, "she has opinions."
Natalie squeaked, offended at the discussion happening around her without her consent.
Gregoris watched it all with a stillness that wasn’t calm so much as a controlled threat. His posture remained constant, but his attention shifted to hands, distance, and angles. A father’s vigilance layered over a commander’s instinct, both sharpened by the fact that this room was full of people who smiled like knives.
Gabriel reached out anyway and touched two fingers to Natalie’s cheek.
Natalie immediately leaned into the touch like she’d decided it was acceptable.
Rafael’s shoulders eased by a fraction you could only notice if you were looking for it.
"Thank you," Rafael said again, quieter this time, the gratitude real even as his spine stayed straight. "For agreeing to this. For witnessing it."
Damian’s gaze lingered on Rafael for a beat, measuring and assessing before faintly approving in that unsettling way Damian’s approval always felt like he’d just chosen a weapon.
"You wrote your conditions like a treaty," Damian said.
Rafael didn’t flinch. "She deserves one."
Gabriel’s tone sharpened, warm but dangerous. "And she’ll get it."
Natalie, apparently satisfied with the attention, yawned widely and then tried to bite the edge of Rafael’s collar out of pure curiosity.
Rafael adjusted her cloak, murmuring something soothing.
Gregoris’ hand hovered at her back without touching, as if his body was still learning how to let anyone else hold her without interpreting it as a threat.
Damian’s eyes flicked to that movement.
Then he stepped forward, close enough that the nobles closest to the dais instinctively held their breath.
He lightly pressed his hand against the back of her cloak, an acknowledgement that respected the ink and the rules, the type of restraint that existed only because Gabriel was watching and Rafael had made it impossible to pretend boundaries were optional.
"Under the imperial seal," Damian said, voice carrying cleanly through the hall, "Natalie Diana Frasner is recognized."
A pause, deliberate.
"And under our witness, her protections stand as written."
The holo-slate chimed again, a quiet confirmation that sent the declaration into the archive and into every record that mattered.
Rafael exhaled slowly, controlled.
Gregoris’ gaze didn’t soften, but something in the line of his shoulders eased, almost imperceptibly, as if a lock had clicked into place inside him.
Gabriel’s eyes stayed on Natalie.
"And her godfathers," Gabriel said, with the mildness of someone describing the weather, "will behave."
Damian’s mouth twitched.
"Yes," he said evenly. "We will."
Natalie, having no interest in imperial vows, made another tiny sound, then turned her face toward Gabriel again, her hand opening and closing as if demanding to be closer.
Gabriel didn’t hesitate. He stepped forward and held out his arms.
Gregoris watched him for half a heartbeat, the storm measuring candle, then nodded once.
Permission.
Rafael shifted Natalie carefully into Gabriel’s hands.
The moment the transfer happened, the room went quieter than it had any right to, as if the palace itself had paused to watch.
Natalie settled against Gabriel’s chest with startling trust, fingers tangling in fabric.
Gabriel’s expression softened openly, and he didn’t care who saw it.
"There," he murmured. "Safe."
Natalie blinked up at him, solemn as a judge, and then patted his cheek with an open palm.
Gabriel stilled for a beat like he’d been struck.
Then he smiled small, genuine, and dangerous.
Damian looked like he was reconsidering the entire concept of public ceremony.
And somewhere behind them, a few nobles realized with cold clarity that the point was not the title, the name, or the archive chime.
The fact that Natalie Diana Frasner could reach for the Empress without fear, and the Empress would catch her as if it was the most natural thing in the world.
Rafael’s voice, when he spoke again, was still soft.
But it landed like law.
"She is presented," he said. "And she is not for your consumption."
Gregoris’ eyes swept the room, cold and absolute.
"She is ours," he said simply. "And she is protected."
The etherlines in the walls hummed faintly, the palace grid breathed like a living thing, and the Empire - as a system, a machine, or a court full of sharp mouths - accepted the truth as it was carved into it in real time.







