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Now reading: Chapter 145: The Guardians 2 from The General's Daughter: The Mission, a Romance novel by AzaleaBelrose.

Yannis Fenn kept a deliberate distance, the way a bodyguard does when he’s been told to stand down but not stand off. Ahead of him, Lara stood with General Leonard Norse and his three sons, each positioned behind one of the emperors’ coffins as if the dead still commanded ceremony.

The air in the crypt was cool, heavy with stone dust and old power.

But the coffins weren’t what held their attention.

It was the wall behind them.

Carved into the ancient stone were reliefs of the generals who had shielded each emperor in life — guardians immortalized in chiseled muscle, armor, and unblinking stone eyes. Torchlight crawled across their faces, sharpening cheekbones, deepening shadows, making them look less like sculptures and more like n waiting to step forward.

And every single one carried the sa na.

Norse.

"Dad," Liam said quietly, his voice echoing just enough to feel disrespectful in a place like this. Analytical as always, his gaze moved from coffin to carving, mapping tilines in his head.

"These are in chronological order. Which ans... these generals existed before Amiel Norse. Before the official family record."

Leonard Norse answered with a low, distracted hum. He wasn’t really listening.

He had stepped closer to one relief, drawn to it the way iron answers a magnet.

The general’s face was unmistakable. A Norse face. Deep-set eyes carved with ruthless precision. A high, proud bridge of a nose. Brows arched with a severity that bordered on judgnt. It wasn’t just resemblance — it was inheritance frozen in stone.

Beneath the figure, ti-worn letters had been cut deep enough to defy centuries:

Ephraim Norse, Firstborn of Asael

Leonard’s gaze lifted.

Above them, painted across the vaulted ceiling, a war unfolded in sweeping strokes of faded pignt — ships shattered against jagged eastern shores, foreign banners trampled into surf and blood, a single armored figure standing at the tide line like a wall the world itself had failed to break.

Ephraim — Defender of the Eastern Coast — captured at the height of his most radiant victory against foreign invaders.

The ceiling mural did not flatter him. It immortalized him.

Armor split and blackened by fire. A cloak whipped to tatters by sea wind. One knee planted in the surf as if the ocean itself had tried to drag him down and failed.

Around him lay the wreckage of an invasion — shattered hulls grinding against the rocks, broken shields bobbing in crimson foam, foreign banners sinking like dying birds beneath the tide.

And Ephraim stood at the center of it all.

Not untouched. Not pristine. Victorious the hard way.

A sword hung in his hand, its edge dark, its tip buried in the sand as though even steel needed rest after what it had done.

His other arm braced a shield split nearly in half, the Norse crest still visible beneath scorch marks and gouges.

His face wasn’t painted in triumph. It was painted in resolve. The expression of a man who had decided that nothing would pass him, not army, not storm, not fate itself.

Behind him, the coastline burned.

Before him, the sea retreated.

Leonard felt his chest seize, breath going shallow, heat flooding his veins so suddenly it bordered on pain.

Pride, yes — but not the polite, ceremonial kind worn at parades or etched onto dals. This was older. Wilder. The kind of pride that cos from recognizing your own blood in sothing unstoppable.

He could see the family in that face. The sa eyes staring back from mirrors, portraits, old photographs. Not resemblance — continuation.

The legacy of their na had not begun with the rebirth of Azuverda as a republic. Not with charters, constitutions, or elections. Those were recent events.

Ephraim had stood here when the land was still called an empire. And he’d protected its borders and its flags.

A Norse had been there — always there. Not as politicians, not as nobles, but as the wall people hid behind when the world ca crashing in.

A chill threaded through Leonard’s pride, sharpening it into sothing almost reverent.

Norse wasn’t just a family na passed down through paperwork and bloodlines.

It was a title earned again and again in monts when survival hung by a thread.

Empires rose. Empires fell. Governnts reinvented themselves and called it progress.

But the na remained.

Not polished by history but forged by it.

Norse was not lineage.

It was proof that so forces don’t fade with ti — they embed themselves into the bones of a kingdom, into its wars, its victories, its scars.

History moved on. The Norses didn’t. They endured.

And standing beneath that painted by the ceiling, Leonard understood sothing that felt less like discovery and more like rembering:

If the world ever burned again...

A Norse would be there when the flas reached the shore.

...

By the ti General Norse stepped out of the mausoleum, the daylight hit him like a verdict.

The stone doors groaned shut behind him, sealing away the cold, the incense, the dead emperors — and whatever had happened to him in there.

He paused on the steps, jaw tight, shoulders squared as if he were bracing against incoming fire instead of afternoon sun.

His eyes were red.

The kind of red that cos from holding sothing back too long and almost losing the fight.

He cleared his throat once, hard, already shifting into command mode. "We’ll need to double the periter," he said to no one in particular. "A scanner sweeps every hour. No blind zones—"

"Dad," Logan cut in, leaning against a pillar with that infuriating half-smirk he wore like armor. "Don’t tell you cried."

Silence snapped between them.

Leonard turned slowly, fixing his son with a look that had stopped seasoned officers mid-sentence. Then he reached out and flicked Logan’s forehead — not gentle, not brutal, just enough to sting.

"You brat," he muttered. "Is that how you think of your father?"

Logan winced, rubbing the spot, grin faltering but not dying. "Hey, I’m kidding, okay? Relax."

Leonard huffed, but the heat behind it had already cooled into sothing heavier. He looked away first, eyes drifting back toward the door as if he could still see through them — through stone, through centuries, through ghosts.

Liam and Lucas said nothing.

They stood a little apart, quieter than usual, the kind of quiet that didn’t co from boredom but from being shaken in a way you didn’t want to admit out loud.

They had been inside that mausoleum before. Three tis, maybe more.

Official visits. Ceremonies. Obligatory monts of respect.

Each ti their attention had stayed where protocol demanded — on the coffins, on the emperors, on the grandeur of power laid to rest.

But this ti...

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