The General's Daughter: The Mission-Chapter 148: The Date
Outside, dusk had begun to swallow the island, the sky streaked in bruised purples and dying gold. The open air should have eased the tension.
But It didn’t.
The moment they cleared the mausoleum doors, Yannis moved forward again, slipping neatly to Lara’s other side with polished grace, as though the earlier hostility had never happened.
"May I invite you to dinner?" he asked, his tone warm, cultured, perfectly charming. "Someone recommended an excellent place nearby. They specialize in home-cooked local cuisine."
Lara’s face lit instantly — genuine, unguarded delight breaking through the heaviness of the day.
Yannis’ breath caught. A flicker crossed his blue eyes.
"Really?" Lara’s eyes sparkled in the fading light. "I haven’t had the chance to explore Laguna at all. I’ve basically been confined to the mansion."
She glanced at Ares as if expecting objection.
None came.
His silence felt heavier than refusal.
"Then I won’t stand on ceremony," she said, smiling.
Something sharp twisted in Ares’s chest.
Dinner. With Yannis Fenn.
He had hosted diplomats, kings, predators in human skin — and none of them had unsettled him like the idea of her sitting across a table from a psychiatrist, laughing at his quiet jokes, softening under that careful attention.
Yannis met his eyes over Lara’s shoulder and mouthed silently:
Part of her therapy.
The smugness was unmistakable.
Ares’s hands curled into fists at his sides, tendons standing out like drawn wire. He could feel the challenge in it — polite, civilized... and absolutely deliberate.
Yannis wasn’t just inviting her to dinner.
He was claiming ground.
And he knew it.
Ares held his gaze, something dark and ancient stirring behind his composure.
Gloating, he thought.
Yannis was provoking him. Testing how far he could push before something broke.
The worst part wasn’t the man’s arrogance.
It was the thin, dangerous thread of satisfaction in Lara’s smile — proof that Yannis had given her something Ares hadn’t.
Normalcy. Freedom. Choice.
Ares exhaled slowly through his nose, forcing the tension back under iron control.
But the feeling didn’t fade.
It settled deeper and it made him hotter.
Possessive in a way he had no right to be.
And every instinct he possessed warned him that if Yannis pushed much further...
Control might not be enough.
...
Dinner was a terrible idea.
Lara knew it the moment she stepped into the restaurant and felt the weight of two very different kinds of attention settle on her from opposite sides.
The place was warm and intimate — low amber lights, polished wood, the comforting aroma of garlic, vinegar, and something slow-simmered that reminded her painfully of the home she shared with her parents and the six brothers.
A soft murmur of conversation filled the air, punctuated by clinking glasses and quiet laughter.
It was normal and ordinary.
Dangerous in its own way.
Yannis pulled out her chair before she could reach for it, the gesture smooth and practiced, his hand hovering at the small of her back just long enough to guide but not quite touch.
"Careful," he said softly. "The floor slopes."
It didn’t.
But she sat anyway, acutely aware of the warmth radiating from him, of how easily he filled the space around her without crowding it.
Across the table, Ares lowered himself into his seat with controlled precision, as though restraining an urge to stand between them instead.
The table was round. No head. No hierarchy.
Ares had insisted on coming and wanted to bring Shay with him. But Shay did not come.
"Daddy, I want to show Grandpa the tricks that Midnight learned." She said in in her cute voice and Ares had no choice but to agree.
Even if Shay could not make it, he still wouldn’t let Yannis have the opportunity to spend a romantic dinner with Lara.
A server arrived, smiling nervously as if sensing something sharp beneath the surface politeness. Orders were placed. Water poured. Menus collected.
Silence settled in. Heavy and suffocating.
Lara reached for her glass just to have something to do. "It smells amazing in here."
Yannis’s expression softened immediately. "You’ll like it. The dishes are simple, but they’re done properly. No shortcuts."
His attention was steady, focused entirely on her, as if the rest of the room — including the man sitting directly opposite him — barely existed.
Ares leaned back slightly, arms folded, gaze unreadable.
"Simple doesn’t mean harmless," he said.
The words were neutral.
The tone wasn’t.
Yannis’s mouth curved faintly. "Of course not. Some of the most dangerous things look completely ordinary."
Their eyes met.
Steel met ice.
Lara felt it again — that invisible clash, silent but violent, like tectonic plates grinding beneath the surface.
She cleared her throat. "So... why invite me here?" she said, glancing at Yannis.
"For therapy," Yannis replied casually.
"Dinner counts as therapy now?"
"It can," he replied easily. "Exposure to normal environments. Positive sensory experiences. Social grounding."
"And food," he added, a hint of warmth slipping through, "is one of the oldest comforts we have."
Ares’s gaze sharpened. "She doesn’t need to be studied."
"I’m not studying her."
"You’re observing."
"That’s my profession," Yannis said, his voice flat. "And my responsibility."
The words landed harder than they should have.
Lara blinked. "I’m sitting right here."
Both men looked at her instantly.
The intensity of it stole the rest of her breath.
Yannis spoke first, voice gentler. "You are. Which is why you get to decide whether this dinner happens."
Ares didn’t contradict him.
But his jaw tightened, the muscle jumping once.
"Yes," he said quietly. "You do."
Something about the way he said it made her chest ache — not pressure, not control, but restraint. Like he was forcing himself to loosen a grip he didn’t want to release.
"I want to be here," she said, surprising herself with how true it felt. "Let’s eat."
Yannis’ expression flickered.
Ares looked away first.
"Then we’ll behave," Yannis said lightly.
Ares didn’t promise anything.
...
Food arrived, steaming and fragrant. Clay pots, grilled fish, braised meats, rice glistening under soft light.
For a few minutes, there was only eating.
Lara hadn’t realized how hungry she was until the first bite hit her tongue — rich, savory, grounding. A small sound of approval slipped out before she could stop it.
Yannis smiled, pleased in a quiet, private way.
Ares noticed.
"You should eat more," Yannis said. "You’ve lost weight."
Ares’s fork paused mid-air.
"I’m fine," Lara said quickly.
"Fine isn’t the same as well."
"And monitoring her intake is part of therapy?" Ares asked coolly.
Yannis didn’t even look at him. "Concern doesn’t require professional justification."
The implication hung there.
I care.
Do you?
Ares set his fork down with deliberate care. "Be careful, Doctor Fenn. You’re drifting out of your lane."
Yannis finally turned his head. "My lane is her recovery."
"Your lane," Ares said softly, "is not her life."
Lara’s appetite vanished.
"Stop," she said.
Both men fell silent.
She stared down at her plate, suddenly exhausted. "I didn’t come here to watch you compete."
"We’re not competing," Yannis said.
Ares didn’t say anything.







