Read light novels, web novels, Chinese novels, Korean novels, Japanese novels and books online for FREE.
Font Size
18px
Now reading: Chapter 162: The Patriarch 2 from The General's Daughter: The Mission, a Romance novel by AzaleaBelrose.

The old man was watching Lara. Not just watching, but observing and assessing.

He seed to read her thoughts and understood her dilemma.

"Girl, you may call Grandpa Randell."

He leaned back into the chair, fingers lightly tapping against the armrest as his gaze lingered on Lara. Not rudely. Not obviously. But thoroughly.

That curtsy earlier...

It wasn’t sothing learned from books or films.

It was habit. A conditioning.

The kind carved into a person through years—no, decades—of repetition.

His eyes darkened slightly.

And those eyes of hers...

There was restraint there. Discipline. A quiet strength wrapped beneath softness.

Not a social climber. Not a gold digger and definitely not ordinary.

And yet... she stands here as a governess?

A faint scoff echoed in his mind.

Ridiculous.

His gaze flicked briefly to Ares.

His grandson stood tall, composed as ever—but the old man knew better. He had raised n like him. Built empires around instincts sharper than blades.

And right now—

Ares was too attentive.

Too aware of the girl’s every movent. Too quick earlier. Too... involved.

So that’s how it is.

A slow, knowing smile tugged at the corner of his lips.

Then his gaze shifted to Asher.

That one was worse.

Far less guarded.

The amusent, the curiosity, the blatant interest—it was practically written across his face.

The old man exhaled quietly.

Both of them interested in her?

Now that... that was troubleso.

But not entirely unwelco.

Because the child—

His eyes softened as they landed on Shay, who was still proudly demonstrating clumsy sword stances to no one in particular—

The child had already chosen.

"Mommy!" She said it without hesitation, without doubt.

Children were rarely wrong about these things.

They saw truths adults buried.

His fingers stilled.

The girl is already rooted.

Which ant—

She wasn’t temporary.

And he did not believe in letting valuable pieces drift away.

Not in the family. Not in legacy. Not in matters of the heart.

He leaned forward slightly.

"Ares."

His voice cut cleanly through the room—not loud, but commanding enough that even the air seed to still.

Ares turned imdiately. "Yes, Grandpa."

Good.

Still obedient where it mattered.

"Walk to the study." He said.

Asher groaned from the sofa, dragging a hand through his hair. "What about , Grandpa?"

The old man turned his head slightly, a slow smirk forming on his lips—sharp, knowing.

"You want to discuss business with us?" he asked mildly. "Then co."

Asher froze.

Then imdiately took a step back, raising both hands in surrender. "—On second thought, I suddenly rembered I have... absolutely no interest in business."

The old man chuckled under his breath.

Predictable.

He had always known exactly how to deal with this one.

Ares said nothing more. He simply stepped forward, guiding his grandfather toward the study beside his bedroom. The ground floor had long been prepared for him—no stairs, no inconvenience. Everything within reach.

Power, even in old age, was never ant to be inconvenienced.

The door shut behind them with a soft click.

Silence followed.

Ares moved first, pulling out a chair and assisting the old man into it with quiet efficiency.

"Please sit, Grandpa."

The old man waved him off lazily once settled, but his eyes never left Ares—not for a second.

Then he gestured faintly toward the direction of the living room.

"That woman," he said.

A pause.

"Keep her."

The words were simple. Blunt. Absolute.

They landed like stone.

The room went still.

Ares didn’t react—at least, not outwardly. His expression remained composed, unreadable as ever.

But sothing in his gaze sharpened.

Barely noticeable.

"Grandpa," Ares replied evenly, "she is just Shay’s governess. Besides, she lost her mory."

The old man snorted.

"I have lived for eighty years," the old man said dryly. "Do not insult with sothing so obvious."

His eyes locked onto Ares—no softness, no humor now.

Only authority.

"That girl is already acting as the child’s mother. The child has accepted her." A slight pause. "Even you—"

His gaze flicked briefly toward the door. Toward the mory of Ares catching Lara earlier. Holding her without hesitation.

"—have accepted her more than you realize."

A faint, dangerous pause.

Then—

"Make it official."

This ti, the words carried weight and finality.

"Give Shay a real mother."

Ares’ fingers curled slightly at his side.

For the first ti—

He hesitated.

"This is inappropriate, Grandpa," he said, quieter than intended.

The old man didn’t even blink.

"Ares," he continued, voice calr now but firr in a different way, "a child needs stability. Not temporary figures that co and go."

His tone shifted—less commanding, more... certain.

"I have been watching Shay."

A pause.

"She has improved."

His eyes narrowed slightly, thoughtful.

"Her health. Her behavior. Even the way she speaks."

A faint exhale.

"You said she just completed her chemotherapy. Yet today—she did not look like a sick child, like before."

His gaze darkened with quiet realization.

"She looked... alive."

Another pause.

"And her interactions are quite natural. No fear, not withdrawn."

His fingers tapped once against the armrest.

"That woman... and that boy around her—they are doing sothing right."

Ares didn’t interrupt.

He Couldn’t.

Because he had seen it too.

Every change. Every small improvent. Every mont Shay laughed a little easier.

The old man leaned back slightly.

"Shay carried herself like a child who had already lost everything," he said quietly. "But now..."

His eyes lifted.

"She is different."

A beat.

"And you know that."

Ares’ jaw tightened.

"Even Asher sees it."

Silence stretched again.

Then—

"The woman is a treasure."

The words ca slower this ti. Deliberate.

"People like that do not give their loyalty lightly."

His gaze hardened.

"But once they do..."

A pause.

"They stay."

A long, quiet breath filled the room.

Then, almost casually—

"Unless you are foolish enough to let her go."

The warning settled deep and sharp.

The old man shifted, easing back into his chair as if the matter were already decided.

"And if you do—"

His lips curved faintly.

"I’ll have Asher marry her."

Ares’ head snapped up.

"Anyway," the old man added lightly, "he looks interested enough. It makes no difference to whether it’s you or him."

"Grandpa."

Ares’ voice rose—just a fraction.

Controlled but unmistakably edged.

For the first ti—

There was resistance.

The old man simply stood.

His movent was slow and unhurried.

Conversation over.

"I’m tired," he said. "I’ll retire to my room."

And just like that he walked out.

Leaving the weight of his words behind.

Ares didn’t move. Didn’t even breathe properly.

He stood there for a long ti.

Still. Rigid.

Because for the first ti in a long while—

Sothing felt... unsettled.

And the quiet certainty he once had—

Was no longer as solid as before.

You are reading The General's Daughter: The Mission Chapter 162: The Patriarch 2 on WuxiaFull. Use Previous, Chapter List, or Next to continue.
Share this chapter
Bookmark saves this novel to your account. Reading History keeps recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading

You May Also Like

I'm the Culinary God cover
Trending now

I'm the Culinary God

Greedy kitten ·Fantasy

LinXu,whoisabouttograduatefromuniversity,suddenlygetsboundtotheCookingGodsystemandhasbecometheownerofarestaurant.Totastehishandmadenoodles,customer...

Supreme Vision Master cover
Trending now

Supreme Vision Master

Mo Yan ·Fantasy

Cultivationdestroyed,eyespoisonedblindandrobbedofherstatusinthehousehold? LuoQingtongnarrowshereyesandsneers,“Bringiton!Letmeteachyoualesson!” A24t...

User Comments

0 comments from readers

Post Comment
By posting a comment, you agree to all relevant terms.
There are currently no comments. Join the community and start the discussion.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.