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Shadow Unit Scandal: The Commander's Omega-Chapter 217: In Between
Frederik.
At ten, he had become everything Rafael had once feared and then, to his continuing private irritation, adored.
He was leaner now, taller than he had any right to be, his face beginning to sharpen into that quiet severity that made the resemblance to Gregoris less an impression and more a public hazard. Same ash-blond hair. Same silver eyes. Same awful stillness before movement. Tonight he wore formal clothes of noble children, with silver detailing restrained enough for palace use and severe enough to make him look less like a child attending a party and more like a very young official whose authority people would regret underestimating.
And beside him, half a step closer than formality required, stood Cecil.
Cecil, eleven and already carrying that unnerving imperial stillness far too naturally for someone his age, looked so much like Damian that it could stop thought for a second if one were unprepared. The same dark hair. The same bone structure was already refining itself into something severe and beautiful. But his eyes were silver, the cold bright silver Damian himself had once possessed before the trial of ether remade him and left gold where silver had been.
Tonight those silver eyes were watchful.
His formalwear was black with silver embroidery. He looked composed, but not soft. Young, yes. Easy prey, absolutely not. There was something too measured in the way he held himself, something slightly too contained beneath the polish, as if he had already understood that visibility in a room like this was never neutral. 𝗳𝚛𝗲𝕖𝚠𝚎𝚋𝗻𝗼𝕧𝗲𝐥.𝚌𝚘𝐦
Frederik had positioned himself at Cecil’s right in a way so subtle most adults would have missed it entirely.
Rafael did not.
Neither, he suspected, did Gabriel.
Aylin followed his line of sight with the eager precision of a child detecting gossip before it had properly formed. "That’s Frederik."
"Yes," Rafael said.
"And Cecil."
"Yes."
Aylin leaned in a little, lowering her voice for no reason except that children instinctively understood when something ought to feel important. "Frederik looks like he wants to bite someone."
Gabriel, from his chair, did not even bother to hide the flicker of amusement in his eyes.
Rafael exhaled through his nose. "He is being civilized."
"That usually means someone deserved it first," Gabriel said.
Rafael gave him a look. "You are not helping."
"No," Gabriel said. "I’m observing."
"That is your least reassuring habit."
Aylin, still perched securely on Rafael’s hip, watched the side terrace with the fascination of a child who had correctly identified that the adults around her were pretending something was not interesting when in fact it very much was.
At first glance, the small circle around Cecil looked harmless enough. A few younger nobles. One older boy in formal black with house silver at the collar, handsome in the polished, forgettable way of children who had been overpraised for decent posture and a family title. He approached with the confidence of someone who had learned the mechanics of charm long before he learned where not to use it.
Rafael did not know his name.
That alone would have made him unimportant.
Unfortunately, the boy was trying to become memorable.
He bowed to Cecil correctly, but not deeply enough. When he straightened, his smile lingered just a fraction too long, and the angle of his body suggested a confidence it had not earned. He was speaking to a prince, yes, but more dangerously, he was speaking to a young omega prince and clearly believed that fact changed the balance of power in his favor.
Aylin leaned closer. "Who is that?"
"Someone making a mistake," Rafael said.
Gabriel smiled faintly.
Across the ballroom, Cecil did not move.
He stood with his hands lightly clasped behind his back, expression composed, silver eyes cool and steady in the same way Damian’s once had been. There was no visible discomfort in him, nothing that might have encouraged a wiser person to proceed carefully. But the boy speaking to him was not wise. He was young enough to mistake beauty for softness and omega for vulnerability, and so he kept talking.
Gabriel’s fingers went still around his glass.
Rafael noticed immediately. "Ah."
Aylin looked up. "What?"
"He thinks Cecil is soft," Rafael said.
Her face scrunched at once with the deep offense of a child confronted by public stupidity. "That’s dumb."
"Yes," Rafael said. "Very."
Frederik had not moved yet.
He stood at Cecil’s right, just half a step closer than pure formality required, his pale head slightly inclined as though he were merely present, merely attending the same function, merely existing in polite noble proximity.
Rafael knew better.
So, Rafael suspected, did Gabriel.
The older boy said something else to Cecil and smiled again, this time with the slick confidence that suggested he believed he was successfully applying pressure. Perhaps he expected a blush. A stumble. A softer answer from a younger omega prince who would rather preserve social ease than embarrass a guest.
Instead, Cecil looked at him with all the quiet stillness of a prince who had been born into a family that weaponized composure better than most courts weaponized armies.
Then Frederik moved.
He stepped into the line of the interaction with such exact precision that the arrangement of bodies changed before anyone had time to call it an interruption. A shoulder angled. A half-step was placed. Suddenly the noble boy no longer had easy physical access to Cecil’s right side. Suddenly there was a second pair of silver eyes in the conversation, cold and still and far less decorative than the child wearing them ought to have been.
Aylin went very still in Rafael’s arms.
"Oh," she whispered.
Frederik said something.
Only one sentence, likely.
The noble boy’s expression changed almost at once, at first confusion, then a flicker of affronted surprise, then the fast correction of someone who had just realized he had not been indulging a soft prince in a harmless flirtation. He had been mishandling an imperial child under the direct scrutiny of another noble boy who looked alarmingly prepared to make the evening unpleasant for him in ways too subtle to protest.
Cecil turned his head and looked at Frederik and smiled pleased.







