Chapter 184: Yannis and Lara
Chapter 184: Yannis and Lara
Yannis led Lara down the southern path of the mansion grounds, where the world seemed to quiet into something almost intimate.
Above them, ancient Narra trees arched overhead, their branches weaving into a living canopy. Sunlight filtered through layers of green, breaking into soft, shifting patterns that danced across the stone path. The air beneath was cooler—touched with the scent of damp earth and leaves—like stepping into a hidden sanctuary untouched by the harshness beyond.
For a while, only the sound of their footsteps filled the silence.
Measured. In sync.
Too in sync.
"I assume you’ve seen the photo," Yannis said at last, his tone casual—but not quite. His hands remained tucked in his pockets, shoulders relaxed, yet his gaze flicked toward her with quiet precision. "Is that why you lost consciousness?"
Lara didn’t just pause.
She stopped.
The sudden stillness broke the rhythm between them, like a snapped thread.
Of all the things he could ask—he chose that.
Slowly, she turned to face him. Her expression was composed, but her eyes... her eyes were no longer calm.
"I don’t remember," she said. Then, after a beat, more firmly, "But I can infer."
A faint breeze stirred her hair, brushing strands across her face.
"They’re my family."
The words felt foreign—and yet disturbingly certain.
"So I’m not a Reyes..." Her gaze sharpened, cutting straight through him. "I’m a Fuegerro."
The name lingered between them, heavy with implication.
Yannis didn’t interrupt.
Didn’t confirm.
Didn’t deny.
Lara took a step closer.
"But my life as Larissa Reyes is real," she continued, her voice tightening—not with weakness, but with control barely held in place. "Every memory. Every scar. Every person I knew."
Her jaw clenched.
"So tell me—was I abandoned by the Fuegerros?"
The question wasn’t emotional.
It was surgical.
Yannis faltered. Just for a second.
But Lara saw it.
Behind his silence was something far more dangerous than a lie—uncertainty.
His godfather’s orders echoed in his mind. The secrecy. The deliberate distance. The carefully constructed life she had been forced to live.
Even he didn’t understand the full picture.
He only knew one thing—
She had been hidden.
"No... you weren’t."
The answer came out softer than intended. Almost swallowed by the wind.
Too soft it was almost inaudible.
Too careful.
Lara’s eyes narrowed instantly.
"You’re not sure," she said, her voice cutting clean and cold. Not loud—but precise enough to leave no room for denial.
Yannis said nothing.
Because he couldn’t.
And that silence was answer enough.
A flicker of something darker crossed Lara’s expression—not pain, not quite anger...
Something sharper.
Calculating.
"Do you know what my mission is?" she asked.
This time, there was no hesitation in her voice.
Only intent.
Yannis blinked, caught off guard. Then slowly shook his head.
"I don’t."
And that was the truth.
For a moment, neither of them spoke.
But Lara’s mind was already moving—fast, methodical, dangerous.
If she had been hidden...
If her identity had been erased...
If even Yannis didn’t know the full truth—
Then whatever she had been trained for... wasn’t ordinary.
Her gaze lowered slightly, thoughts aligning into something colder.
Her mission wasn’t protection.
It wasn’t survival.
It was something else.
Lara lifted her eyes again.
She stared at Yannis. Her gaze was sharp, focused, deadly..
"What is your relationship with the Fuegerros?" she asked.
This time, Yannis didn’t hesitate.
"He..." He exhaled once, steadying himself. "He is my godfather."
Silence fell again.
But now, it was no longer peaceful.
The canopy above them no longer felt like shelter—
It felt like a cage.
And Lara had just realized...
She might not be walking toward the truth.
She might be walking straight into the role she was never meant to escape.
"How much do you know about me?" Lara asked, her voice steady—but there was pressure beneath it, like a blade held just short of the skin. "When did we first know each other?"
Yannis didn’t answer immediately.
He held her gaze.
Not casually—never casually.
He studied her the way one studies a puzzle with missing pieces, measuring every shift in her expression, every flicker in her eyes. This wasn’t how this was supposed to go. He was the one meant to ask questions. He was the one meant to control the pace.
And yet—
Here she was.
Turning everything on him.
Interrogating him without raising her voice.
Yannis fell silent for a few beats too long.
The wind stirred the leaves above them, whispering through the canopy as if urging him to speak—or to stay quiet.
He inhaled slowly.
Deliberately.
"I don’t know much," he admitted at last. His voice was low, careful. "I only saw you... occasionally."
A pause.
"Mostly when you were seriously injured."
There it was.
Raw. Unpolished. True.
Lara didn’t react the way most would.
No flinch.
No visible discomfort.
Instead, a faint, almost amused curve touched her lips.
"So," she said lightly, as if discussing something trivial, "you’ve only seen me at my most vulnerable."
She stepped past him and resumed walking, her pace unhurried. Almost lazy. The kind of movement that disguised awareness—every step placed with quiet precision.
Yannis turned, watching her for a moment before following.
"No," he said.
The word came firmer this time.
"I saw you at your bravest."
Lara didn’t stop—but something in her stride shifted, just slightly.
Yannis continued, his voice gaining weight with memory.
"At your calmest. At your most decisive."
The path stretched ahead of them, dappled with fractured sunlight.
"You once saved someone," he said. "A man—badly injured. His thigh was torn open. The bleeding wouldn’t stop."
For a second, the surrounding air seemed to hold its breath.
"You hesitated only for a short time."
His eyes fixed on her back now.
"You had no proper tools. No preparation. And you’d never done it before."
His voice dropped.
"Your hands shook but only for a bit."
A beat.
"You cleaned the wound. Stopped the bleeding. Then you stitched it—clean, precise... like you’d done it a hundred times."
Lara slowed.
Not enough to call it stopping. Just enough to listen.
"You showed no fear," Yannis said quietly. "Not even once."
Another step. Then another.
"And do you know what I remember the most?"
She stopped.
This time, completely.
The light shifted across her face as she turned slightly, just enough for him to see the sharp edge of her gaze.
Yannis met it without retreat.
"You weren’t trying to save him because you cared," he said.
"You were calm... because, to you, it was simply the correct decision."
Silence pressed in around them.
Lara’s expression didn’t change. But something behind her eyes did.
A quiet realization.
Or perhaps ...
Recognition.
Of someone she used to be. Of someone she might still be.
And that— was far more dangerous than any answer Yannis could have given.
The memory did not come gently. It tore through her.
...
The scent hit first. Thick. Metallic. Suffocating.
Lara’s fingers twitched.
"Focus."
The voice cut through the noise like a blade.
Her father.
He stood behind her—not close enough to comfort, but near enough to control. His presence pressed against her spine, heavy, immovable.
In front of her—
A man lay sprawled across a metal table.
Barely alive.
His thigh was torn open.
It was not a clean wound.
Skin split wide, muscle exposed, blood pouring out in relentless waves that soaked the sheets beneath him and dripped steadily onto the floor.
The sound—of dripping blood, It echoed louder than her heartbeat.
"I—I can’t..." Lara’s voice broke, small for the first and last time.
Her hands hovered uselessly above the wound.
"You will."
Her father’s tone didn’t rise.
It didn’t need to.
It was absolute. Cold. Unyielding.
"If you hesitate, he dies."
A beat.
"And if he dies, you fail."
The words wrapped around her throat like invisible fingers.
Tightening.
Suffocating.
"Lara." The voice was gentler.
It was Yannis.
He stood at her side, already gloved, already prepared—but he did not step in.
He wouldn’t save her.
He would only guide her.
"Look at me," he said quietly.
She didn’t want to.
Didn’t want to see calm when everything inside her was chaos.
But she did.
And somehow—
That steadiness anchored her.
"Listen carefully," Yannis continued. "You don’t need to know everything. Just the next step."
Her breathing was uneven and sharp.
"There’s too much blood—" she whispered.
"I know."
His voice didn’t waver.
"First, stop the bleeding. Press here."
He guided her wrist—not holding it, just directing it—toward a specific point above the wound.
"Harder."
Lara swallowed then pressed.
The man groaned weakly beneath her hands.
Hot blood soaked into her fingers.
She almost pulled back.
"Don’t."
Yannis’ voice sharpened slightly.
"If you pull away, he bleeds out."
Her jaw clenched.
Her hands steadied.
"Good," he murmured. "Now maintain pressure."
Behind her, her father said nothing.
But his silence was worse than shouting.
It meant he was watching.
Judging. Waiting for failure.
"Next," Yannis said, "you need to see the wound clearly. Clean it."
"I’ve never—"
"You have now."
A beat.
"Do it."
Her fingers moved before her fear could catch up.
She wiped the wound with cloth and water.
The blood smeared at first—then cleared.
And what lay beneath made her stomach twist.
Torned muscle. Jagged and deep.
Too deep.
Her breathing hitched. She only dressed small wounds but this...
This wasn’t practice.
This wasn’t theory.
This was a man’s life unraveling beneath her hands.
"Stay with me," Yannis said softly.
Not commanding but grounding.
"You’re doing fine."
Fine.
The word felt absurd.
And yet she didn’t stop.
"Needle," he said.
Her fingers trembled as she picked it up.
It was too sharp. Too real.
"I can’t—"
"You can."
This time, it wasn’t her father.
It was Yannis.
His voice firm and certain.
"Start at the edge of the wound. Go through both sides. Slow and controlled."
Her first attempt was shaky.
Wrong angle.
The needle slipped.
The man cried out.
Lara froze.
"I said controlled," her father’s voice came from behind, colder now. "Pain is irrelevant. Precision is not."
Her chest tightened.
But Yannis spoke over him.
"Adjust your grip," he said calmly. "Like this."
He demonstrated in the air—never touching, never taking over.
"Forcing it will make it worse. Guide it."
Guide it.
Not force it.
But before she could move, the man on the table convulsed.
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