She moved. She took one step.
It was smooth and grounded.
Her arm lifted, the tal blade in her hand aligning with invisible points only she could see.
Another step. and then a sharp turn.
The white followed her like a whisper—trailing, flowing, cutting through the air with her.
Her movents were clean, and controlled, not deadly.
It didn’t look like practice. It looked like a performance.
No...
It was like a ritual.
Each motion precise. Each strike deliberate. No wasted energy. No unnecessary flourish.
And yet...
There was beauty in it.
A quiet, srizing elegance—like watching a dance carved from instinct and discipline.
Shay’s eyes widened, her earlier impatience dissolving into awe.
Even the air seed to still.
Because beneath that grace, was sothing else. Sothing sharper.
This wasn’t imitation. It wasn’t play. Wasn’t sothing learned for show.
This was instinct refined into art.
Because, unlike the little girl who dread of being a warrior—
Lara didn’t pretend.
She was one.
...
Asher didn’t realize his hand had started trembling until the fra tilted for the third ti.
He was supposed to be recording.
Instead, he was watching. Closely watching.
Lara moved like she didn’t belong to gravity. The blade traced silver arcs through the air, fluid and precise, every step flowing into the next as if the wind itself obeyed her rhythm. Sunlight caught the edge of the sword, scattering flashes of light across her figure—brief, blinding, impossible to ignore.
Asher forgot to breathe.
The cara dipped. Drifted. Caught nothing but grass for a second before jerking back up.
He didn’t even notice.
Because Lara spun—
—and in that single turn, sothing in his chest tightened.
It was too beautiful.
Not just her face. Not just her movents.
But the quiet power beneath it. The kind that didn’t need to shout to be overwhelming.
Then, just as suddenly, the dance softened.
The blade lowered.
Lara crouched slightly, her voice gentle as she guided Shay’s small hands into position. Sandro shuffled behind them, mimicking the stance with serious concentration, his brows drawn tight as if he were preparing for battle instead of practice.
"No, like this," Lara murmured, adjusting Shay’s grip. "Relax your wrist. The sword isn’t sothing you fight. You let it move with you."
Shay nodded earnestly, tongue peeking out in focus.
Sandro copied a second later—slower, clumsier—but determined.
And just like that, the sharp elegance of the dance lted into sothing warm.
Sothing... dostic.
Asher’s lips curved without him realizing.
The cara steadied.
He zood in slightly—Lara frad between the two children, sunlight soft on her face, her expression patient... almost tender.
A strange thought slipped into his mind.
If this were real...
If Shay were truly Lara’s daughter.
If he—
Asher let out a quiet, helpless giggle.
"Man... what a life that would be..."
Then, the air shifted.
The screen darkened—not literally, but enough that his smile froze.
A shadow entered the fra.
Cold. Sharp. Domineering.
Asher didn’t need to turn. He already knew who it was.
Still, he did, slowly.
Ares stood beside him, his face expressionless.
There was no warmth, just his usual cold and aloof deanor.
Just those eyes—fixed, unreadable, and sohow heavier than the blade Lara held monts ago.
Asher felt it instantly—
—as if soone had dumped a bucket of ice water straight over his head.
"Bro, you’re here too." Asher forced a grin, lifting the cara slightly as if nothing was wrong. "Perfect timing. Would’ve been a pity to miss such a lovely scene."
Ares didn’t look at the screen.
"What are you grinning about?" he said flatly, "like so hopeless romantic fool?"
Asher snorted, recovering just enough of his usual bravado.
"Co on, bro. With Shay having a mother like that?" He tilted his head toward Lara, eyes gleaming. "Who wouldn’t turn into a hopeless romantic?"
A beat.
Then, deliberately—
"If she’s Shay’s mom... doesn’t that make her perfect wife material?"
The surrounding air seed to freeze.
Asher felt the back of his neck tingling.
"What did you say?"
The words were quiet, but Asher felt like knives were suspended in the air, the blade all pointed at him.
His grin faltered.
Not completely—but enough.
"Why are you looking at like that?" he said, taking a careful step back. "Relax. I’m just saying—Shay calls her ’Mommy,’ right? So naturally, I can call her—"
"Stop!" The single word cut clean through the air.
Ares finally turned his head.
And this ti, there was no mistaking it.
That look, it was not just irritation. It was more than anger.
It was sothing sharper. Possessiveness.
"Shay is my daughter," Ares said, his voice low, carrying a weight that pressed against Asher’s chest. "Or did you forget that when you walked away?"
The teasing drained from Asher’s face.
"I was young back then," he shot back, jaw tightening. "Stupid. Fine. But that doesn’t change the fact that I’m her biological father."
Ares stepped closer. Not fast. Not aggressive.
But near enough. Enough that the space between them felt like it was closing in.
"Then act like one," Ares said quietly. "Not like this."
The tension snapped tight—
"Mommy!"
Shay’s voice rang out, bright and oblivious, slicing cleanly through the mont.
Both n stilled.
Across the lawn, Shay struggled with her stance, her small face scrunched in confusion.
"Why does it look so easy when you do it?"
Lara straightened slightly, brushing a loose strand of hair behind her ear. Her expression softened instantly.
"Because Mommy has practiced for a long ti."
Shay tilted her head, eyes wide.
"Then who taught you?"
For a fraction of a second, Lara paused.
Sothing distant flickered in her gaze.
"I t soone," she said at last. "An old man. He lived alone... long white hair, beard down to here—" she gestured lightly to her chest, a faint smile touching her lips.
Shay squinted suspiciously.
"Mommy... are you making that up? He sounds like a hermit."
Sandro frowned beside her.
"But aren’t hermits supposed to live in the mountains?"
Lara’s smile didn’t change.
But her eyes did.
He did.
A figure surfaced in her mory—silent, unforgiving, standing against a backdrop of endless peaks and cold wind.
Master Jethru.
The man who taught her how to hold a sword—
—and how to survive.
"Maybe he did," she said lightly.
Then she clapped her hands once, the sound crisp.
"Alright. Enough questions. Back to practice."
Shay groaned.
Sandro straightened.
And just like that, the mont moved again—
—but sothing unseen had already shifted.
Behind the cara, Asher didn’t dare speak.
Beside him, Ares’ gaze remained fixed on Lara.
Dark.
Unreadable.
And far too intense to an nothing.
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