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Chapter 1 - The Man Who Returned What the Sea Took

The sea in Elaris did not remember names.

It remembered weight.

It remembered what sank quickly and what fought.

Kael Virek stood at the edge of the harbor as the early morning tide rolled in, carrying the smell of salt and rusted anchors. The sky was still undecided between night and day — a soft bruise of blue and fading violet.

He liked this hour.

Before the city woke up and started pretending it mattered.

A small silver compass hung around his neck, resting cold against his chest. It wasn't valuable. It barely worked. The needle trembled more than it pointed. He had found it years ago in the pocket of a sunken coat.

No one came looking for it.

So he kept it.

He had a habit of keeping what nobody claimed.

Behind him, gulls screamed over discarded fish crates. The harbor workers were already shouting at each other in familiar irritation. Life, as always, continued without asking if he was ready.

His phone buzzed.

He didn't look at the screen before answering.

"You're the diver?" The voice was sharp. Male. Controlled panic.

"That depends," Kael replied lightly. "Did you drop something expensive or something emotional?"

A pause.

"…My wedding ring."

Kael exhaled slowly. "Location?"

"South pier. Slipped off during a call. It's—" The man swallowed audibly. "It's important."

They always said that.

Important.

As if objects carried the full weight of regret.

"Give me twenty minutes," Kael said.

He ended the call and adjusted the oxygen tank resting against the dock railing. The metal was cold under his palm.

His right hand trembled.

Just once. Quick.

He clenched it into a fist until the tremor stopped.

Three days ago, in a sterile white room that smelled faintly of disinfectant and resignation, a neurologist had spoken gently to him.

"Your scans show early-stage motor deterioration."

Kael had smiled as if discussing weather.

"Define early."

"It progresses differently for everyone."

"That's not an answer."

The doctor hadn't flinched. "You need to reduce physical strain. Diving, especially in cold water, will accelerate it."

Accelerate.

Such a polite word.

Kael had left before the doctor could explain what acceleration would feel like.

Now, standing above the same water that had always steadied him, he stared at his hand again.

"Behave," he murmured to it.

It didn't answer.

He carried the tank toward the lower dock. The wood groaned beneath his boots, the sound echoing against the hulls of moored boats.

The man waiting there wore an expensive coat and the expression of someone who had never lost anything before.

"You found it?" he asked before Kael had even stepped down.

"Not yet."

Kael secured the tank straps across his shoulders. The weight settled comfortably. Familiar. Predictable.

Unlike the inside of his own body.

He slipped into the water.

Cold swallowed him whole.

The world narrowed.

Sound disappeared first. Then the chaos of expectation. Underwater, no one needed him to explain who he was or why he existed. There were no forms to fill out, no birth records missing, no childhood files stamped incomplete.

Just pressure.

He moved slowly, scanning the sandy bed beneath the pier. Light fractured through the surface above, bending into silver ribbons.

There.

A faint glint near a barnacle-covered beam.

He reached toward it.

The tremor came harder this time.

A sharp flicker behind his eyes. A sudden betrayal in his fingers.

Not here.

He forced his hand steady. Gripped the beam. Waited.

For three seconds, his body did not feel like his own.

Then it passed.

He closed his fingers around the ring.

It was warm from trapped light.

When he surfaced, the harbor felt louder than before. As if the world resented his return.

The man rushed forward.

"Please tell me—"

Kael placed the ring into his palm.

Relief cracked the man's composure instantly. His shoulders sagged. His breath left him in a broken laugh.

"My wife would've killed me."

Kael smirked faintly. "That would've made my job harder."

The man didn't laugh at that.

He stared at the ring like it was oxygen.

Kael watched him.

Watched the way something so small could anchor someone's entire world.

He had never worn a ring.

Never been promised anything.

The payment notification buzzed on his phone.

Transaction complete.

The man thanked him too many times.

Kael walked away before gratitude could become conversation.

Back at the railing, he leaned against cold metal and let his hand hang loose at his side.

It trembled again.

Longer this time.

He stared at it with something close to curiosity.

"So that's how it begins," he whispered.

Not with drama.

Not with collapse.

Just small betrayals.

Across the harbor, white fabric billowed from the balconies of the Solenne estate. Preparations. Decorations. Staff moving with quiet urgency.

A wedding.

Kael squinted toward it.

He wondered what it felt like to have people preparing for your future as if it were guaranteed.

As if staying were assumed.

He touched the silver compass at his neck.

The needle inside it vibrated faintly, never fully settling.

He had always liked that about it.

It refused certainty.

On the upper balcony of the Solenne estate, Mira Solenne stood still while a tailor adjusted the fall of silk along her shoulders.

"Lift your chin," her mother instructed.

Mira obeyed.

From below, the harbor shimmered in muted morning light. She watched a diver emerge from the water — tank gleaming, jacket darkened by sea.

There was something about the way he walked away.

Not hurried.

Not proud.

Just… detached.

Like someone who expected nothing to hold.

Her fiancé's voice carried from inside the estate, discussing alliances, appearances, guest lists.

Her future sounded like negotiation.

"Smile," her mother said sharply.

Mira smiled.

It felt like someone else's expression.

Her gaze returned briefly to the harbor.

The diver was gone.

But the water remained.

That night, Kael sat on the floor of his small apartment above the mechanic's shop. The room smelled faintly of oil and sea salt that never fully washed away.

His right hand trembled steadily now.

Not violently.

Just enough.

He flexed his fingers.

They didn't obey immediately.

For the first time since the diagnosis, something close to fear brushed against him.

Not fear of dying.

Fear of needing someone.

He lay back against the cool wall and stared at the ceiling.

The sea roared faintly beyond the city.

He closed his eyes.

Sometimes the ocean does not drown you all at once.Sometimes it loosens your grip, finger by finger.

And somewhere across the city, Mira lay awake in a room full of silk and expectation, wondering why the idea of marrying security felt heavier than deep water.

Neither of them knew it yet.

But the tide had already begun to move.

And this time, it would not return everything it took.

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