The hallways of the estate were quiet, polished, and unnaturally clean—like even dust had been ordered to stand at attention.
Leon walked them in silence, boots tapping lightly against stone, guided by the same guard who seemed to have no hobbies outside of standing stiff and speaking in monosyllables.
But Leon wasn't paying much attention to the guard.
Not when he kept catching whispers trailing behind him.
Two maids passed by on cleaning duty. One of them shot him a glance, flushed, and leaned toward the other with a not-so-subtle whisper.
"He's so adorable..."
"That hair—did you see his eyes?"
Leon rolled his eyes internally and kept walking, expression as flat as his patience.
He wasn't unaware of how he looked.
He remembered the first time he'd seen his reflection in a still puddle—silver-white hair, pale skin, and eyes like a snowstorm had learned how to stare back. It had actually startled him. He'd looked like a cursed prince from a children's tale.
Definitely hit the genetic lottery on this one, he thought dryly. Still waiting for the strength stat to catch up, though. Anytime now.
He passed two more servants. More giggles. Someone actually murmured the word ethereal.
Leon suppressed a sigh.
Ethereal. Fantastic. Next, they'll be writing poems. I look like the type who coughs blood prettily right before dying. Wonderful. Just wonderful.
Still, he didn't slow down. The more they gawked, the faster he wanted to get to wherever Seraphine was waiting. Because if there was one thing he trusted less than nobles…
It was attention.
And he was getting far too much of it lately.
The guard opened the door to Seraphine's office. Leon stepped in, already familiar with the space: stone walls lined with maps, tall arched windows letting in pale morning light, and a large, polished desk that made everything else in the room look too small.
Commander Seraphine Vael sat behind it, already reviewing documents, quill in hand, armor half-donned like she lived on the edge of battle and bureaucracy.
She looked up, met his eyes, and gestured with a faint motion.
"Sit. Make yourself comfortable."
Leon moved to the seat across from her without comment. He didn't sprawl or slouch—he sat straight, alert, giving her the respect she clearly expected, not out of submission.
Out of strategy.
Seraphine set her quill down and studied him for a long moment. Then, without any preamble, she spoke:
"I want you to join the city garrison as a temporary soldier. Provisional. Not full rank."
Leon tilted his head. "Back to recruitment, huh?"
Her expression didn't waver. "You're talented. But you're still seven. I'm not sending you into missions tomorrow. Or next week. This is about training. Resources. A future."
He stayed quiet, letting her talk.
"You'd receive ten silver a week. Meals, housing… training." She tapped the desk once, like she was debating whether to say more. "And—education. Gear. The basics."
Leon raised an eyebrow. "Like a test run?"
"Exactly. You gain strength under our guidance. I get to see how serious you are."
Her tone remained composed, but there was a thread of interest under the discipline—a subtle curiosity.
She wanted to see what he became. What rank would his class be? What he'd awaken as in that dungeon.
She didn't say it aloud, but he caught it in her gaze. The spark behind the control.
"And," she added, "you saved lives. In Grayridge. That earns you some trust."
Leon considered that.
She wasn't wrong. She'd pulled him out of a hellhole, clothed him, fed him, and treated him well. She'd kept her word and her distance.
If anything, she was playing the long game.
Let him train. Let him settle. Let comfort do the convincing.
It was smart.
And dangerous.
Because he could see himself staying.
But still… he wasn't ready to belong to anyone yet.
Not even a city.
Not even someone like her.
He leaned back in his chair slightly and exhaled.
Let her think he was tempted.
That part was genuine.
But the decision?
Still his.
Leon didn't respond right away.
He stared at her—measured, thoughtful, the way someone twice his age might when weighing a deal that felt like it had more strings than promises. He tapped his fingers once on the armrest, slow and quiet.
Finally, he exhaled and leaned forward.
"Alright," he said. "I'll join."
Seraphine's brows lifted—not with surprise, but with calm satisfaction.
Leon lifted a finger. "But—uh—let's be clear. This doesn't make me your soldier. Not permanently. I'm agreeing to the trial, not an oath."
A pause. His tone didn't change, but there was steel under it.
"I'll train. I'll learn. I'll pull my weight. But if you think I'm going to become someone's loyal footsoldier just because I like the food... think again."
Seraphine studied him.
For a moment, neither of them spoke.
Then she gave a slow nod. "Understood."
She did understand.
This boy—this razor-sharp, silver-eyed child with a mouth full of sarcasm and the self-awareness of a man thrice his age—wasn't going to be caged. Not by kindness. Not by gold. Not even by gratitude.
But that didn't worry her.
Because Seraphine Vael knew how to play long games, and this wasn't about chains.
It was about bonds.
The kind that grew from trust.
And a few other things too.
Like, for example, the overwhelming desire to reach across her desk and squish his ridiculously perfect cheeks.
Her hand twitched toward the desk before she caught herself. God help her. Discipline, Seraphine. Discipline. Quills, armor, maps—not cheek-squishing.
She forced the thought down so fast she nearly coughed.
He's just a child. Just a child who looks like a doll carved out of snow and moonlight. Stop staring. You're a commander, not a doting aunt.
Still, her fingers curled once against the tabletop.
Seraphine had never made an offer without knowing the outcome. It wasn't how she operated. But Leon… he was a wildcard. A gamble.
One she was now delighted she'd taken.
And besides—
If she was going to train someone, personally train them, then it could be the strongest, strangest, most adorably sharp-mouthed disciple fate could throw her way.
A talented apprentice and a cute one?
That was dangerously close to a dream come true.
Leon, unaware of the exact flavor of doting war being waged behind her eyes, crossed his arms and muttered, "Just don't expect me to call you master or anything."
Seraphine cleared her throat and nodded thoughtfully.
"Of course."
Not yet, anyway, she thought.
In her mind, Seraphine was already imagining it.
Training sessions at dawn. Sword forms corrected by hand. Occasional cheek-pinching "punishments" for sarcastic remarks. A small, grumpy disciple who rolled his eyes every time she tried to hug him—but secretly didn't mind.
She kept her face unreadable, of course.
Years of command didn't allow for visible weakness.
But oh, if restraint had a skill tree, she'd have maxed it out.
Still seated with poise, she said, "The guard outside will escort you to your new room. It's within the mansion. Closer to the training grounds."
Leon blinked. "Inside?"
"Yes."
He tilted his head slightly. That was… unexpected. A mansion room? For him?
For a moment, paranoia pricked his instincts. It wasn't like he was used to luxury unless it came with strings.
Probably wants to keep an eye on me, he thought. Or make sure I don't run.
Still, he gave a casual nod. "Sure. As long as the bed doesn't try to stab me, I'll manage."
He paused, muttering under his breath as he slid off the chair, "Or explode. Or bite. Wouldn't be the weirdest thing."