The interior of Pegasus was warm.
Not artificially warm—not the stuffy, recycled heat of an enclosed ship with no ventilation. It was the particular warmth of a vessel that had been maintained carefully for years by people who lived on it and had strong opinions about comfort.
The ss table was large enough for ten.
At present it had two people sitting at it, a pot of sothing hot between them, and the specific atmosphere of a negotiation that neither party had formally acknowledged was a negotiation.
Law had not removed his coat.
This was not because he was cold.
It was because keeping the coat on was a statent, and Law, even at twelve years old, already understood that statents could be made with posture as easily as with words.
El sat across from him with both hands around a cup of tea and the relaxed attention of a man who had nowhere else to be.
"You said you ca for the fruit," Law began.
"Yes."
"And that you knew about Corazon."
"I knew who he was. Not the specifics of what happened."
"But you knew the fruit was there."
"Yes."
Law set his own cup down.
He had drunk most of it—not because he'd been offered it graciously and felt obligated, but because he was cold and hadn't eaten in a day and a half, and there was no version of being twelve years old in which the body's needs could be fully overridden by the mind's pride.
"Why did you want it?"
El looked at him.
"Specifically?"
"Specifically."
El set his cup down too.
"There is an operation that can be perford with the Op-Op Fruit—a specific, once-in-a-lifeti technique that the user can perform at the cost of their own life. It's called the Immortality Operation. The person it's perford on gains eternal life."
Law's expression did not change.
But his eyes did—a very slight sharpening, the kind that happened involuntarily when sothing connected to existing knowledge in a way the person hadn't expected.
"I've read about it," Law said carefully. "In a dical text Corazon found for . It was described as theoretical."
"It isn't."
"You know this for certain?"
"Yes."
A pause.
"And you want soone to perform it on you."
"On the people I travel with. All of them."
Law absorbed this.
The calculation was visible—not the conclusion of it, but the fact that he was running it. His eyes moved slightly in the way that indicated processing rather than listening.
"The technique kills the user," Law said finally. "So you need an Op-Op Fruit user who is willing to die for you."
"I need an Op-Op Fruit user skilled enough to perform it, and yes—willing."
"And you couldn't find one."
"I had another approach. It beca available. It no longer requires a willing sacrifice."
Law stared at him.
"Then why do you need the fruit at all?"
"I don't need the raw fruit," El said. "I need a surgeon who has mastered it thoroughly enough to perform an operation of that complexity."
The sentence landed.
El watched it land.
Law looked at him for a long mont with the specific expression of soone who had just understood sothing and was deciding whether or not they were angry about it.
"You gave the fruit," Law said slowly, "because you decided a trained surgeon was more useful than the raw ability."
"Yes."
"That's why you told to eat it. Not sentint."
"It was both," El said. "But if you need it to be only one for it to make sense to you—then yes. Strategy."
Another silence.
Longer.
El did not fill it.
"I'm not going to beco your surgeon," Law said. His voice was even. Not hostile—asured. The voice of soone drawing a line in the correct place. "I'm not going to perform your Immortality Operation on command just because you handed a fruit."
"I'm not asking you to."
"Then what are you asking?"
El leaned back slightly.
"Nothing right now. I'm offering you a choice."
"Which is?"
"Option one: you stay aboard Pegasus as long as you want. You get access to a dical library that's better than anything you'll find in the New World independently. You get ti to learn the Op-Op Fruit in conditions that won't get you killed. When you're older and have decided what you want—you leave or you stay, based on that decision."
"Option two?"
"I give you a three-day head start and an Eternal Pose to wherever you're trying to go."
Law looked at the table.
He was quiet for long enough that it beca clear he was not stalling. He was actually thinking.
Which was, El reflected, more than most adults managed in that situation.
"You said you know who Doflamingo is."
"Yes."
"Then tell why he wanted the Op-Op Fruit so badly. Corazon said it was—that it mattered. That getting it away from Doflamingo mattered more than—"
He stopped.
He didn't finish the sentence.
He didn't need to.
El understood what the end of that sentence was.
"Alright," El said. "I'll tell you."
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