SSS Talent: From Trash to Tyrant-Chapter 341: A Necessary Conversation [III]

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Chapter 341: Chapter 341: A Necessary Conversation [III]

The room felt unfamiliar to Trafalgar, as if its shape had shifted while he was not paying attention. He stood there without moving, posture slightly off, shoulders tense in a way that suggested imbalance rather than anger. There was nothing explosive in him, nothing sharp enough to break the silence. What lingered instead was a hollow stillness, like sound swallowed by thick fog. His eyes drifted without purpose, settling on objects and slipping away again, unable to anchor themselves for long.

Rhosyn watched him quietly before speaking.

"Are you alright?" she asked.

Her voice carried neither urgency nor softness meant to soothe. It was a simple question, offered plainly, as though she were checking whether the ground beneath him still held.

Trafalgar blinked once, slowly, then turned his head toward her. It took a moment for his gaze to properly focus, as if his thoughts were lagging behind the movement. When he finally looked at her, there was a faint distance in his eyes, something unsteady that had nothing to do with fear.

"I don’t know," he said after a pause. His voice sounded lower than usual, rough around the edges. He searched for the right words, then let out a quiet breath. "I feel... empty. That’s the closest I can get." His brow furrowed slightly. "It’s not pain and it’s not panic either. I just can’t name it."

The admission hung between them, heavy in its lack of drama. It was not grief spilling over, nor denial clawing its way out. It was absence, plain and unsettling, like stepping into a familiar place and realizing something essential had been removed without leaving a mark.

Rhosyn did not interrupt him. When she spoke, her expression softened, though not into pity. There was restraint in the way she looked at him, a careful balance between understanding and resolve.

"It was difficult to hear," she said calmly. "And it was never going to be otherwise." Her gaze remained steady. "This is something you wanted to know. You asked for the truth."

She paused briefly, then continued, her tone unchanged.

"But you cannot let yourself fall apart here. Not now." Her eyes did not leave his. "The world is unstable. Everything is moving too fast, and it will not slow down for this." She did not raise her voice, nor did she press. "This is not a moment you can afford to collapse."

There was nothing harsh in her words. No judgment. Only timing stated as fact.

Trafalgar listened in silence. He did not argue. He did not nod either. The emptiness remained where it was, unmoved by reassurance or reason, settling into him like a quiet weight that had not yet decided how deep it would sink.

The truth had landed.

Trafalgar let out a slow breath and leaned back, then allowed himself to fall fully onto the bed. The mattress dipped under his weight with a dull softness, absorbing him without resistance. He did not bother adjusting his posture. He lay there staring at the ceiling, eyes fixed on a point that did not matter, as if focus alone might keep his thoughts from scattering further.

’So I never existed on Earth.’

The realization formed cleanly this time, stripped of shock. Not missing. Not dead. Removed so completely that the idea of absence no longer applied. There had been no space left behind, no outline where he used to be. A life erased so thoroughly that even the world itself had adjusted, seamless and indifferent.

His chest tightened, then loosened again.

Nothing followed.

No tears came, no sting behind his eyes, no familiar pressure that usually warned him when emotion was about to spill over. That bothered him more than the truth itself. The weight was there, unmistakable, sitting heavy in his mind, yet his body refused to respond to it. It was like standing before a vast drop and feeling nothing but a faint breeze.

’So that’s it,’ he thought. ’There’s nowhere to go back to.’

No family waiting. No parents to see again. No house, no room, no version of the world where he could stand and say he belonged there once. Whatever ties he had formed in that life were gone in a way that could not even be mourned properly, because mourning required something left behind.

Now there was only this.

This body. This name. This history remembered by others in this world.

’Trafalgar du Morgain,’ he thought. ’Only this one.’

A dull pressure began to build behind his eyes, slow and persistent, spreading across his temples. His thoughts felt crowded, overlapping, pushing against one another without direction. Too much information, too many conclusions arriving at once. He pressed his tongue against the roof of his mouth and exhaled again, steadying his breathing as the sensation sharpened into a headache.

’I’ve never let myself break,’ he realized.

Not since arriving in this world. Not once. Every time something threatened to pull him under, he had kept moving, kept acting, kept surviving. There had never been time to stop and sit with what he felt. Reflection had always come second, pushed aside by necessity, by danger, by the simple need to stay alive.

Maybe that was why this felt the way it did.

’Tomorrow,’ he decided. ’The hunting fields.’

The thought settled more easily than anything else had. Movement. Violence. Something physical and direct. A place where thinking was optional and action was enough. The idea of it cleared his mind slightly, like opening a window in a room that had grown too warm.

’I hope the monsters help,’ he added, dry humor threading through the thought.

His lips twitched, though the expression never fully formed.

After a moment, he spoke aloud, the words rough and unpolished.

"It’s shit."

Trafalgar remained where he was, stretched out on the bed, eyes fixed on the ceiling. He did not turn toward Rhosyn, nor did he pause to see whether she was ready to listen. The words came out as they formed, carried by a tired edge that stripped them of restraint.

"It’s ironic," he said quietly. "That’s what this is." A slow breath left him. "So much weight, so many consequences, all born from something that feels almost laughable when you look at it from the outside."

He swallowed, his gaze never leaving the ceiling.

"You moved my soul," he went on. "From one world to another. Out of a body that failed and into one that was empty." His brow tightened slightly. "So what does that make this? Life after death? A continuation? Or something else entirely?" His fingers curled once against the mattress. "Thinking about it too much makes my head hurt."

Silence followed, brief and controlled, before he continued.

"I thought I’d live a quiet life," he said. "Ordinary. Do what I wanted, fail at small things, succeed at others." His jaw tightened. "Nothing grand. Nothing written in advance." His eyes finally shifted, not to her, but inward. "That version of things doesn’t exist anymore."

He let the thought sit, then asked the question that had been circling since the beginning.

"You told me my destiny was written," Trafalgar said. "Is this what you meant?"

Rhosyn answered without delay.

"In part," she said. "From the moment your soul was moved into this body, your path became fixed." Her voice was steady, precise. "Not by your choices. Not by your wishes. By the origin of Trafalgar du Morgain."

She stepped closer, her presence grounding rather than pressing.

"In this world, every existence is distinct," Rhosyn continued. "We may share systems, classes, skills, bloodlines, but no two beings are identical. Each status reflects something singular." Her eyes rested on him. "Trafalgar was always an anomaly."

She paused briefly.

"You are special because of your mother," she said. "You are half-Primordial through her blood."

The words settled slowly.

Trafalgar closed his eyes for a moment, then opened them again, staring at the ceiling as something shifted into place. His thoughts drifted, not toward Earth this time, but toward faces he had tried for so long to keep at a distance. His father. His siblings. His aunt. The way he had hesitated over titles, sometimes using names, sometimes formal words, never fully certain what he was allowed to claim.

’I used to doubt it,’ he thought. ’Whether they were really mine.’

The doubt felt distant now.

He exhaled, the tension in his shoulders easing slightly.

"I guess I can stop thinking that way," Trafalgar said quietly. "About what to call them." His voice was steadier than before.

Something rooted itself where uncertainty had lived before, pulling him away from the remnants of another world and anchoring him firmly in this one. Identity no longer stretched backward across realities. It settled forward, shaped by blood, legacy, and the name he carried now.

Rhosyn observed him in silence as the shift settled. The room felt steadier now, not lighter, but more defined, as if something loose had finally found its place. After a moment, she spoke again, her tone measured.

"Do you want to stop?" she asked.