The General's Daughter: The Mission-Chapter 92: What Happened Back Then - Flash Back

If audio player doesn't work, press Reset or reload the page.
Chapter 92: What Happened Back Then - Flash Back

Three hundred armed defectors.

Military men.

Not rebels from the streets. Not nameless extremists.

But men trained under the same flag the Norse family had bled for.

That must have been the cruelest cut of all.

To dedicate generations to protecting a nation... only to have that nation’s own soldiers storm a child’s birthday party and turn it into a massacre, injure a Norse wife, and abduct a Norse precious child.

No wonder the Norse family never spoke of it. It was taboo.

It wasn’t just a tragedy. It was betrayal.

Lara closed her eyes briefly, imagining it — the chaos, the screaming, the gunfire tearing through balloons and birthday banners.

Chloe Fuegerra, Madeline’s best friend.

She tried to picture her.

Elegant. Warm. Laughing as she adjusted party decorations. A mother celebrating her son’s second year of life — probably dressed in something soft and expensive, her joy effortless.

The report had been clinical about it.

Wife and son of 1st Lieutenant Artemio Fuegerra — deceased.

Just like that.

Reduced to a line in a government file.

Chloe had been Artemio’s first wife, Madeline’s closest confidante. They shared the same passion: fashion and design.

The kind of friendship forged before titles and medals, before politics and power.

They must have chosen that resort because it felt safe, private, exclusive, and secure.

No one would have expected three hundred armed men to descend on it like wolves.

Lara’s throat tightened.

Madeline had lost more than a daughter that day.

She had lost her best friend. A godson. Her sense of safety.

And perhaps something inside herself that never fully returned.

Was that why Madeline held onto her so tightly when she first arrived?

Was that why the room, now her room, remained untouched for years — preserved like a shrine, like hope?

Outside, a branch tapped softly against the window.

Lara opened her eyes and stared at the ceiling.

The Norse family’s legacy was painted in gold frames along the hallway — victories and honor of a bloodline.

But beneath that polished history lay something darker. 𝕗𝐫𝚎𝗲𝘄𝐞𝕓𝐧𝕠𝘃𝕖𝐥.𝐜𝚘𝚖

Betrayal, a lost child, and unanswered questions.

And somewhere inside that tangled past... her.

If the Norse daughter had vanished in that chaos...

If Chloe and her son had died in the crossfire...

If Madeline had been injured...

Then the threads connecting all of them were not coincidences.

They were a knot.

And knots only tighten when you pull at them.

Lara inhaled slowly.

This wasn’t just about a dead baby anymore.

It was about a massacre the government had buried beneath medals and discipline.

And the more she uncovered, the more she feared one thing—

The truth wasn’t revealed.

It was hidden.

On purpose.

...

Flashback

February 25, 2005, Azure Resort

The breeze carried the faint scent of wood and jasmine as the 7-seater SUV rolled to a stop before the gleaming reception façade of Azure Resort.

Madeline stepped out first.

She was dressed simply—an off-the-shoulder yellow summer dress that caught the afternoon light like spun gold. No excessive jewelry. No dramatic makeup. Just effortless elegance that came from breeding and quiet confidence.

In her arms was one-year-old Lara, dressed in the same shade of yellow, a tiny sunflower headband nestled against soft curls. The child blinked at the bright sky, clutching her mother’s neck as if the world were too big and too loud.

Two nannies followed closely behind. One carried a baby boy dressed in a sky-blue terno, his tiny fingers wrapped around the lace collar.

The other balanced an oversized birthday gift wrapped in blue foil, its ribbon trailing like a comet’s tail.

They moved toward the grand ballroom.

At the entrance stood Chloe, in a bold, dark red dress.

Her dress was not merely red—it was deliberate. Structured, sophisticated, impossible to ignore.

She welcomed guests with a smile so polished it could have been rehearsed in front of mirrors for years.

"Maddie," she called warmly, opening her arms. "You’re early."

They embraced, careful of the babies between them.

Chloe’s eyes flicked past Madeline’s shoulder, searching.

"Where are Liam and Logan?" she asked lightly, but the question carried weight.

"Logan has a mild fever," Madeline replied gently. "And you know your godson Liam..." She paused, lips curving faintly. "He said he’s too old for this."

Chloe blinked. "Too old? He’s only six."

"I know, right."

For a brief second, the two women exchanged a look only old friends could share—half amusement, half something unspoken.

"Go inside," Chloe urged. "Let the babies enjoy the play area. They’ll love it. I still need to greet the guests."

Madeline nodded and stepped into the ballroom.

The doors opened to a spectacle of yellow and white.

SpongeBob SquarePants ruled the kingdom that afternoon. Balloons crowded the ceiling so densely they concealed its height, creating a floating sea of gold and cream. Cartoon sea creatures smiled from every corner. A life-sized pineapple house stood near the dessert table.

On one side, a soft-matted play area cradled crawling babies in a safe, pastel barricade. On the other, a livelier zone awaited toddlers—mini slides, foam blocks, animated caretakers.

Chloe had planned everything with surgical precision.

After all, Hubert was her firstborn.

He deserved the best any mother could give.

Unlike Madeline and Leonard, who had married young and fast, Chloe and Artemio had taken their time—building their careers, then families. This celebration wasn’t just a birthday.

It was a declaration.

...

Madeline scanned the room.

Familiar faces from college floated past her—now wives draped in designer labels, husbands in tailored suits. Conversations sparkled with subtle competition.

Only she and Chloe stood alone.

Both husbands were absent. Both were away on "important mission." Both women understood what that truly meant.

They were not merely wives left behind in elegant dresses and polite conversations.

They were the silent infrastructure.

While their husbands negotiated with insurgents and battled unseen wars elsewhere, they held the lines at home.

They kept the schedules tight, the finances discreetly aligned, the children secure, the elders appeased. They absorbed rumors before they could spread, softened crises before they could erupt, and ensured that not a single crack showed on the surface of their carefully built worlds.

They were the calm that kept their homes from trembling.