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Now reading: Chapter 275 - 276 from One Piece: Chosen by the Sea Strongest Swordsman, a Action novel by sagamaster789.

The first sign that the Op-Op Fruit had fully awakened was not visible.

It was a sensation.

Like the air inside a sphere of roughly eight ters in radius had simply changed its mind about what physical rules it was willing to follow.

El felt it the mont it happened—that involuntary, instinctive awareness that ca from living with a rule-type ability of his own for years. The Float-Float Fruit operated on a logic not entirely unlike this. He recognized the texture of it.

The snow within that invisible radius did not move.

It simply arranged itself differently, as though soone had casually rewritten the mo about where it was supposed to be.

El's coat, where the edge of the field grazed it, behaved strangely for exactly one second and then resud normal behavior when he pulled it back out of range.

The boy was breathing hard.

He had gone pale—or paler, against the grey light and the snow.

His hands were pressed flat against the frozen ground as if trying to find sothing stable in a world that had just beco comprehensively unstable.

"Don't move yet," El said.

The boy did not argue with this.

That, in El's observation, was significant.

Pride was one of the most consistent features of strong people. When sothing genuinely shocked them past the ability to perform nonchalance, the absence of an argunt where an argunt would normally go was a more reliable indicator than any visible reaction.

Law had stopped arguing.

Which ant the Op-Op Fruit had hit him considerably harder than he'd expected sothing described as a piece of food to hit him.

"Breathe normally," El said. "It passes."

"How would you know."

"I've watched it happen before."

This was not entirely true—El had not personally witnessed a first awakening of the Op-Op Fruit. But he had watched the Float-Float Fruit rewrite Shiki's relationship to gravity in front of him, and he had watched Carina process the Munch-Munch Fruit back in their earliest years, and the approximate shape of the experience appeared to be consistent.

Law took a breath.

Then another.

Slowly, the color ca back.

The invisible field around him stabilized, pulling inward until it was roughly the size of his body, then disappeared entirely—the fruit contracting back to baseline as it stopped broadcasting the simple fact of its existence and began, very quietly, to wait for instructions.

Law looked at his hands.

El looked at Law.

Not with his eyes.

With his Observation Haki—the kind that reached into the center of a person and reported back what it found there, regardless of what that person was showing on the outside.

What El found was:

Still grief. Still that wire of purpose running through it.

But also, now—

Sothing just beginning to wake up beneath all of it.

Not ambition. Not yet.

Sothing more foundational than ambition.

Curiosity. The particular kind that belongs to people who are, underneath everything else they've beco, interested in how things work.

There it was.

The beginning of Trafalgar D. Water Law.

"Who are you?"

The question ca flat and without embellishnt. Law's voice had returned to its natural register—steadier than before, slightly rough around the edges, and carrying the very specific cadence of soone who had grown up in circumstances that did not reward hesitation.

"El."

Law stared.

"That's not a family na."

"No."

A pause.

Law looked at Carina and Nami.

Then back at El.

Then at the sword at El's side.

"You're a pirate."

"Yes."

"You ca here for the Op-Op Fruit."

"Yes."

"But you told to eat it anyway."

"Yes."

Law's eyes narrowed.

He had the look of soone running calculations on a problem that kept producing the wrong kind of answer—not the answer he'd feared, but the one that was sohow harder to place.

"Why?"

El considered telling Law the tactical version.

The version where a trained Op-Op Fruit user capable of performing the Immortality Operation was more strategically valuable than a raw fruit. The version where this was a calculated investnt in a future asset.

Both of those things were true.

But looking at Law—at the dead man in the snow ten ters away, at the too-large coat, at the hands that had been pressing against frozen ground five minutes ago trying to find sothing stable—

El decided the tactical version was not the right answer for this particular conversation.

"Because you were already here," El said simply. "And the fruit reached you first. That matters."

Law looked at him for a long ti.

"That's not a logical reason."

"No," El agreed. "It's not."

Law did not appear to have a follow-up to this.

He looked back at the dead man.

El let the silence run.

He did not fill it. He did not offer condolences or explanations or the various softening phrases that people used when standing near fresh grief. He had learned early—from years of watching people from the inside out—that most of those phrases were not for the grieving person. They were for the person saying them.

Law did not need that.

He needed to be allowed to sit with it for a mont without anyone making him perform okay.

So El waited.

Carina, who understood this better than most people, stayed quiet beside him.

Nami put her hands in her pockets and looked at the sky.

Robin, who had been standing a few steps back throughout all of this, watched Law with an expression that was impossible to read—though El, who had his Haki and a few years of practice, could make a reasonable guess.

She was recognizing sothing.

She did not say what.

"He was a Marine," Law said. He was not looking at any of them. "He called himself Corazon. He was also Donquixote Rosinante. He was working against his own brother."

He paused.

"He died thirteen hours ago. Doflamingo killed him."

El did not react visibly to this.

Internally, he filed it.

The tiline matched close enough.

"I know," El said.

Law turned to look at him sharply.

"You knew?"

"I knew who he was. I didn't know the exact timing."

"And you didn't—"

"No," El said. "I didn't."

There was sothing in his tone that cut the sentence off cleanly—not cold, not dismissive, but final in the way that certain truths were final. He had not intervened. He was not apologizing for it. He was also not pretending it hadn't cost sothing.

Law stared at him.

The calculus behind those grey eyes was visible even without Haki—running through possibilities, looking for the place where El's behavior resolved into sothing coherent.

"You couldn't have gotten here in ti," Law said slowly. Not a question. Working it out.

"No."

"Even if you'd been trying?"

El looked at him.

"Even then," he said. "We were three days out."

Another silence.

Shorter than the last one.

Law looked back at Corazon.

Sothing in his expression shifted—not visibly, not the way emotions showed on most faces. But El caught it in his Haki:

A very small loosening. Grief did not diminish—it never did imdiately. But sothing at the edges of it changed character. The particular kind of tension that exists when a person is unconsciously braced for bla they feel they deserve—

Very slightly—

Let go.

"What do you want from ," Law said. His voice was steady. "You ca here for the fruit and you gave it to . So what do you actually want."

"Nothing right now," El said.

"That's not an answer."

"It's the honest one."

He stood up from the snow.

He was taller than Law had probably been expecting—the fact always registered slightly on people, the first ti they adjusted for scale.

"There's a grave to dig," El said. "After that—we can talk about the rest."

He turned and began walking back toward the ruined warehouse's corner, where the snow was thinner and the frozen earth beneath was marginally more workable.

After a mont—

Law stood up.

He did not say anything.

He followed.

It took the better part of an hour.

El used his Float-Float Fruit ability to break the frozen ground—lifting sections of compacted earth out of the permafrost in clean blocks, making room, and then lowering them back in afterward.

It was faster and significantly more practical than anyone with a shovel could have managed.

Law watched this from about three ters away.

He watched it with the focused attention of soone who was, for the first ti in several hours, thinking about sothing other than grief.

"Float-Float Fruit," he said, eventually.

"Yes."

"Shiki the Golden Lion had it."

"He did."

"Past tense."

"Yes."

A pause while El settled the last block of earth back into place and smoothed the surface with a wave of his hand.

"You beat Shiki."

"Years ago now."

Law filed this away with the sa flat efficiency he applied to everything.

Carina had found a piece of timber from the ruins and carved it into a rough marker while El worked. She set it at the head of the grave without ceremony—she had not known Corazon, and ceremony she hadn't earned felt dishonest. She simply placed it straight and stepped back.

Law looked at it.

He stood in front of the grave for a mont.

El did not watch this directly. He gave it the sa privacy he had given the rest of it—present, but not intrusive.

After a while, Law turned around.

"You said we could talk," Law said. "After."

"Yes."

"Then talk."

El looked at him—properly this ti, without the careful peripheral quality of soone managing a situation.

The boy looking back at him was exhausted and cold and running on sothing closer to structural determination than actual energy.

He had just buried the only person who had protected him—possibly the first person who had ever protected him—in frozen ground in the middle of nowhere.

He was twelve years old.

He had the Op-Op Fruit.

He had nothing else.

"Co aboard Pegasus," El said. "We'll talk sowhere warm."

Law looked at the ship anchored offshore.

"And if I say no?"

"Then I tell you what I need to tell you standing here, and you make whatever decision you make."

Another calculation behind those eyes.

"What do you need to tell that requires being sowhere warm?"

"Nothing," El said. "It just seems like a reasonable thing to offer soone who's been outside in this weather for thirteen hours."

Law stared at him.

The stare was long enough that Nami, standing to the side, began to quietly wonder if she should say sothing.

Then Law exhaled.

"Fine."

He did not say it like soone accepting generosity.

He said it like soone making a tactical concession while reserving the right to reverse it at any mont.

El nodded and turned toward the shore.

Behind him—

Trafalgar D. Water Law took one last look at the grave on Minion Island.

Then he walked away from it.

Not because he was leaving it behind.

But because the man buried there had spent his last act getting him to a point where walking forward was possible.

The least Law could do was walk.

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