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The General's Daughter: The Mission-Chapter 104: On Horseback, Chasing The Past
Ares and her godbrothers looked like they had been carved out of sunlight and steel.
Ruggedly tall. Broad-shouldered. Effortlessly commanding.
They didn’t just sit on horses — they belonged there. The easy roll of their shoulders, the way they handled leather reins like extensions of their own hands — it was the confidence of men who had grown up with dust in their lungs and wind in their blood.
Lucas, the youngest, still carried that reckless spark in his eyes. A man who hated losing more than he feared falling.
The moment he took the reins, something flashed across his face.
Challenge.
He swung onto his dark brown steed in one smooth motion — and before anyone could stop him, he kicked off.
The horse lunged forward.
"Lucas—!" Logan’s voice tore through the air, but it was already too late.
Hooves thundered.
Liam swore under his breath and mounted quickly, jaw tight, chasing after his two younger brothers like a man used to cleaning up their chaos.
Dust rose in violent spirals behind them.
Then—
Almost as if the same thought struck all three at once.
Lucas slowed. Logan pulled back. Liam exhaled sharply and brought his horse around.
They turned.
And there she was.
Lara, still astride Chestnut. Ares beside her, calm as the quiet before a storm.
The brothers guided their horses back, sheepish grins replacing wild adrenaline.
"Sis, sorry," Logan said, rubbing the back of his neck, unusually embarrassed. "We got carried away. Forgot about you."
Lara arched a brow.
"No worries." A small smile curved at her lips. "Wanna race?"
Lucas and Liam exchanged a look. Silent agreement. They’d keep pace with her. Let her enjoy it. No pushing.
But Logan’s eyes flickered. He had other plans.
Ares remained slightly off to the side, watching — always watching.
Scarlet, meanwhile, was half-listening to the coach perched higher up, checking saddle straps and offering instructions she clearly wasn’t absorbing. Her attention drifted elsewhere. To Ares.
To Lara.
To the space between them.
Lara adjusted her grip and nudged Chestnut forward.
The thoroughbred’s muscles shifted under her palms — powerful, restless, alive. The energy surged up her arms like electricity. 𝙛𝒓𝒆𝙚𝒘𝒆𝓫𝙣𝓸𝙫𝓮𝒍.𝒄𝒐𝓶
It had been too long since she’d ridden.
Her body remembered — but not gently.
Every jolt rattled through her spine. Her thighs burned. Her shoulders tightened. Sweat gathered beneath the collar of her shirt, fabric clinging to her back.
She refused to show it.
"Follow me!" Ares called as he passed her in a blur of black leather and controlled dominance. "I’ll show you something interesting."
Interesting.
With Ares, that word never meant simple.
By late morning, they rode beyond the mansion gates.
The estate shrank behind them, swallowed by distance and dust. The sun blazed overhead, pouring molten gold across the rolling grasslands. The wind rushed past, carrying the scent of earth and heat.
Green stretched endlessly ahead — wild, untamed, almost daring.
Ares waited several meters in front, seated tall on his black stallion.
Midnight.
The horse lived up to its name — sleek, dark, and coiled with quiet power. It didn’t fidget. It didn’t strain. Just like its master.
It obeyed.
Lara guided Chestnut beside Logan, narrowing her eyes.
"You’re going to run the horse into the ground."
Logan hummed lazily in response, the sound low and unconcerned. He let his horse slow to a casual walk.
For three seconds.
Then—
He gave the signal.
The animal shot forward again.
Lara cursed under her breath.
And the game began.
For the next twenty relentless minutes, Logan turned the open field into his playground.
Whenever she caught up — he bolted.
Whenever she steadied her rhythm — he broke it.
The chase burned through her muscles. Friction bit into her skin where saddle met thigh. Her hands tightened on the reins until her knuckles paled.
Her breathing grew heavier.
But she refused to fall behind.
She didn’t understand him.
It felt deliberate. Personal. Like he was provoking her. Testing her.
Punishing her.
But Logan wasn’t punishing her at all.
This was how he rode with his brothers — fast, wild, teasing the edge of danger just to see who could keep up.
To him, this was fun.
To Lara, it was war provocation.
And somewhere ahead, Ares slowed Midnight, watching the dust storm forming behind them.
Watching her. Not intervening. Not helping. Just observing.
As if he wanted to see exactly how far she would go before she broke.
What steadied her mood were the two shadows riding beside her.
Liam on her left — solid, controlled, watchful.
Lucas on her right — competitive, but careful now, as if he’d silently decided she wasn’t to be challenged anymore.
And Ares.
He rode slightly ahead, Midnight’s black coat gleaming beneath the sun, the stallion’s movements fluid and restrained. He didn’t crowd her. He didn’t guide her.
He simply remained close enough that she would feel it if he left.
They crested a small knoll and the world shifted.
Lara’s fingers tightened instinctively.
Chestnut reared slightly as she pulled back on the reins, breath stolen from her lungs.
In the distance, near the shimmering edge of Calma Lake, two broken silhouettes cut against the sky.
Ruins. But not just any ruins.
Two towers.
Her heart slammed once — hard.
They used to flank a massive iron gate. They used to guard something sacred.
Without thinking, she dug her heels in.
Chestnut surged forward.
The burst of speed startled the men behind her.
Wind tore at her hair. Dust exploded beneath pounding hooves. She rode like someone chasing a ghost — or returning to a battlefield she had once commanded.
For a second, even Logan forgot to play.
She didn’t look like a woman riding for curiosity. She looked like a general reclaiming ground, a general leading his men into battle.
By the time they caught up, she had already stopped before the remains of what were once sleek, towering structures.
Now— broken into half their former height. Eaten by time. Jagged at the top like fractured teeth.
Lara dismounted slowly.
The air near the lake felt cooler. Still.
She approached the nearer tower.
Argus.
Her boots crunched softly over gravel and fallen stone. Her hand trembled as she pressed her palm against its weathered base.
Cold. Damp with moss.
Darkened by decades of abandonment.
Argus and Panoptes—







