Chapter : 9

"Well?" Her voice sliced through the quiet room, crisp and devoid of any warmth. It held the ingrained authority of her noble upbringing, layered with the sharp impatience of youth. "Are you going to stand there gawking like a fool all day, Lloyd?" She paused, her eyes narrowing slightly. "Or did you actually interrupt my cultivation for a reason?"

The familiar wave of nineteen-year-old Lloyd’s anxiety washed over him – the urge to shrink back, stammer an apology, mumble an excuse about needing a book or checking the time, and make a hasty retreat to the comforting neutrality of the hallway sofa. He felt the heat rise in his neck, the sudden dryness in his mouth. Old habits died hard, especially when reinforced by years of awkwardness and a distinct lack of positive interaction.

But the eighty-year-old pragmatist, the scientist who’d faced down academic ridicule, the man who’d lived long enough to know that avoidance solved nothing, pushed back. No. Different approach this time. Change the script. He needed to establish a new dynamic, or he’d be stuck in the same rut that likely contributed to his early grave last time. This wasn't just about romance; it was about survival, alliance, and not spending the rest of his potentially short second life sleeping on upholstery.

He consciously relaxed his shoulders, forcing down the nervous tension. He met her icy stare head-on, holding it steady. And then, dredging up a confidence he hadn't possessed at nineteen but had cultivated over decades on another world, he let a slow, easy smile spread across his face. It felt strange, like wearing someone else’s expression, yet also liberating.

He tilted his head, mirroring her earlier gesture, but deliberately infusing it with playful curiosity rather than suspicion. "Actually," he began, his voice smooth, consciously pitched lower, warmer than his usual hesitant tones. The sound seemed alien coming from his own throat, but he pressed on. "I wasn't just gawking like a fool."

He let the smile widen slightly, allowing a hint of mischief into his eyes. "I was admiring the view."

Rosa blinked. Just a flicker of surprise in those guarded eyes, quickly suppressed, but it was there. Her carefully constructed wall of indifference had been momentarily breached by the unexpected maneuver. She recovered quickly, suspicion flooding back into her expression like a tide reclaiming the shore.

"The… view?" she repeated, her voice flat, skeptical. She deliberately looked away from him, scanning the opulent room with exaggerated slowness. "The view of what, exactly? The ridiculously overpriced vase my aunt sent? The drapes that clash horribly with the carpet? Or perhaps," she finished, her gaze snapping back to him, sharp and challenging, "the wardrobe you seem so fascinated with?"

Lloyd chuckled softly, a genuine sound this time, surprising them both. The tension in his shoulders eased slightly. Her defensiveness was predictable, almost comforting in its familiarity. It was the change in his own reaction that felt significant.

He took a deliberate step further into the room, closing the distance between them slightly. Not encroaching on her personal space, not yet, but moving out of the liminal doorway zone. Establishing presence.

"No," he said, his smile softening, becoming less playful and more sincere. He kept his gaze locked with hers, refusing to be intimidated by her frosty glare. "The view of you, Rosa."

He paused, letting the simple statement hang in the air for a pregnant beat, watching her reaction. Her eyes widened almost imperceptibly. Was that a faint blush creeping up her neck, or just a trick of the light? Hard to tell. She pressed her lips together, annoyance warring with… something else? Confusion?

He decided to press his advantage, however slight it might be. "You're incredibly beautiful when you're concentrating, you know," he continued, his voice maintaining its calm, warm tone. He leaned casually against the bedpost nearest him, adopting an air of relaxed confidence he definitely didn't feel bubbling beneath the surface. "All focused and powerful." He tilted his head again, a slight smirk playing on his lips. "Although, I have to admit," he added, his tone dropping to a near conspiratorial whisper, "you're even more striking when you're scowling at me like I've just tracked mud all over your pristine existence."

He held his breath, bracing for the explosion. The indignant retort. The demand that he leave immediately and perhaps consider setting himself on fire in the hallway. He had thrown down a gauntlet, disrupting the established order of awkward silence and mutual avoidance. Now, he waited to see if she would pick it up, or simply freeze him out completely. This was new territory, uncharted and potentially perilous. But infinitely more interesting than the sofa.

Chapter : 10

The air in the room crackled, the previously tentative shift in atmosphere vanishing like smoke in a gale swept through an open window. The delicate balance Lloyd had attempted to introduce, the slight disruption to their cold, established routine, had shattered against the wall of Rosa’s immediate and potent displeasure. Her eyes, which had perhaps flickered with a microsecond of unguarded surprise, now blazed with a chilling fury. It wasn't hot rage, not the explosive anger of lesser tempers; it was the frigid, focused indignation of someone whose control had been unexpectedly challenged. The faint hint of a blush, likely imagined by Lloyd in a moment of wishful thinking, was utterly eradicated, replaced by a pale rigidity. Her features, already defined by a certain aristocratic sharpness, hardened into an icy mask of command.

"Get. Out."

Each word was a perfectly formed icicle, clipped and sharp, delivered with the precise force of a physical blow aimed directly at his unwelcome presence. It wasn't merely a request fueled by irritation; it resonated with the ingrained authority of a Viscount's daughter, the assumed privilege of nobility, and the sharp, defensive reaction of someone deeply uncomfortable with vulnerability or unplanned intimacy. This was the Rosa he remembered from the fragmented, awkward memories of his first life – the young woman who wielded distance and disdain like both a shield against perceived threats and a sword to keep the world at bay.

Lloyd’s smile, the one he’d carefully constructed from eighty years of worldly experience and plastered onto his nineteen-year-old face, didn’t waver, though the muscles around his mouth tightened infinitesimally. A tiny betrayal of the effort it took. He held his ground, maintaining the deliberately casual lean against the sturdy mahogany bedpost. His posture was meant to convey a lack of intimidation, a refusal to be cowed, a stark contrast to the cringing retreat his former self would have executed. Nineteen-year-old Lloyd would have been halfway down the corridor by now, tripping over his own feet in his haste to escape the palpable disapproval, mumbling apologies for breathing the same air. Eighty-year-old Lloyd, however, had faced down corporate sharks, navigated academic minefields, endured the stark realities of military life on Earth, and developed a resilience far exceeding mere teenage indignation, even magically enhanced indignation.

"I don't think so," he replied, his voice remarkably calm, maintaining an even, almost conversational tone that directly contradicted the glacial hostility radiating from her. "We're married, Rosa." He let the word hang in the air for a beat, a simple statement of fact that felt loaded with unspoken complexities. "This is technically my room too, even if current sleeping arrangements are..." he paused, searching for a diplomatic term, "...unconventional." He gestured vaguely towards the plush, yet undeniably lonely-looking, sofa nestled against the far wall, a silent acknowledgment of the status quo he was now determined to dismantle.

Rosa's eyes narrowed further, becoming dangerous slits of obsidian fury. The air temperature seemed to drop several degrees. "I warned you," she hissed, her voice dropping to a low, menacing whisper that was somehow more terrifying than her earlier shout. It vibrated with suppressed power, a predator’s warning before the strike. "Don't push me, Lloyd. You have no idea what you're dealing with."

He simply looked back at her, the smile still playing faintly on his lips, his eyes holding hers steadily. He refused to break contact, refused to show the fear that nineteen-year-old Lloyd would have felt consuming him. Deep within her gaze, behind the icy anger, he saw it – the flicker, the gathering storm of focused energy. Raw Spirit Power coalescing, preparing to be unleashed. He knew what was coming. He braced himself internally, not physically – there was no physical defense against this – but mentally. He dredged up reserves of fortitude honed over decades of disparate challenges on Earth: the focused intensity needed to debug lines of faulty code under crushing deadlines; the stubborn persistence required to argue grant proposals with committees seemingly designed to say 'no'; the sheer grit developed during grueling military drills under unforgiving instructors; the quiet endurance learned during long, tense watches in simulated combat zones. These experiences, seemingly irrelevant in this world of magic and nobility, had forged a core of resilience within him, a bedrock beneath the surface of the awkward nineteen-year-old body he inhabited.

Suddenly, it hit him.

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