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The General's Daughter: The Mission-Chapter 62: The Variable
When dawn slid through the tangled emerald canopy of the Ourea jungle, it didn’t arrive gently. It cut through the dark like a blade, thin shafts of gold slicing into the second-floor room where Amante stood motionless.
The jungle outside hummed—thick, alive, unforgiving.
Inside, the air felt heavier.
He swept the room again.
No blood. No overturned furniture. No bullet holes.
Just a single pillow lying on the floor like it had been knocked loose in a hurry.
Too clean.
Amante’s jaw tightened. His boots thudded against the wooden planks as he paced once more, eyes sharp, mind racing. This wasn’t a chaotic grab. This wasn’t amateurs. Whoever had come through here moved like ghosts—silent, surgical, disciplined.
He stepped out into the early morning mist and walked toward the hut where the hostages had been kept the night before.
The deputy leader trailed beside him, face tight, hand hovering near his weapon. Around them, rebels whispered in low, nervous murmurs.
The jungle suddenly felt less like protection and more like exposure.
"Boss," one of the men called, voice strained. He extended his hand.
An army knife rested in his palm.
"We found this at the entrance of the hut."
Amante took it slowly.
The weight. The balance. The steel.
His thumb traced the engraving on the handle—a clean, precise insignia burned into the grip.
He knew that mark. Not common infantry. Not provincial militia.
Issued only to the military’s most ruthless unit—the kind trained to dismantle insurgencies in their sleep.
The army’s elite group: Wolverine.
A slow breath escaped him.
"Someone came to rescue them," he said.
The panic in his voice slipped out before he could cage it—but beneath it was something else.
Relief.
The deputy leader exhaled too, shoulders lowering a fraction.
So that was it.
Professionals had taken their leader.
Men who moved in silence. Men who erased footprints. Men who would make it quick.
Amante straightened, dignity stitching itself back into his posture.
Their ruthless commander hadn’t been outplayed by a mere woman. Hadn’t been humiliated by someone soft-handed and underestimated.
He had fallen to the elite.
There was honor in that.
Because history would have been merciless otherwise.
Imagine it—whispers spreading through the underworld, laughter curling through enemy camps. A rebel leader feared across provinces, brought down by a woman dismissed as fragile. No grand battle. No heroic last stand. Just a quiet, precise end at the hands of someone they never thought was strong enough.
That kind of story doesn’t die.
It would fester.
Amante closed his fist around the knife.
No.
If their leader had to fall, let it be to trained killers. To the state’s finest. To ghosts with government badges.
Not to someone they’d once believed was weak.
"Have the men already set out?" He asked, his eyes fixed on the spot where the wooden fence had a disturbance.
"Yes, our men are already in pursuit."
...
In another part of the jungle, where the canopy choked out most of the dawn, Lara’s eyelashes fluttered before her eyes opened.
She didn’t wake because she was rested.
She woke because the air changed.
The night’s rhythm—the steady electric hum of cicadas, the sharp clicks of tree frogs—thinned out like a dying signal.
In its place rose the harsh, unruly chorus of morning: birds with raspy throats, wings slicing through damp air, branches shaking with life. Daytime predators were clocking in.
Lara stayed still for a full five seconds.
Listening. Counting. Measuring.
The rebels would have found it by now.
The knife.
She pictured it where she had left it—angled just enough to look careless, just enough to look real. A deliberate mistake. A breadcrumb.
An army knife—
One of the greeting gifts from her godbrothers when she officially stepped into their world. Not jewelry but steel.
Gifted by the eldest godbrother, who was clueless as to what women cherished.
But surprisingly, she liked his gift more than the jewelry Logan and Lucas had given her.
Rare issue with elite marking. 𝒻𝘳ℯℯ𝑤ℯ𝒷𝘯ℴ𝓋ℯ𝘭.𝑐ℴ𝑚
It hurt to leave it behind—but that was the point. It would scream military extraction.
Instincts told her she needed to divert attention from herself and push the rebels to hunt in the opposite direction.
Misdirection bought time.
And time kept people alive.
"Sandro." Her voice was low but firm.
She shook the boy gently. His eyes snapped open instantly—no confusion, no sluggishness.
"Stay here. Watch over Shay. I need to scout. I’ll be back."
He didn’t ask questions. He just nodded and shifted closer to Shay, who lay on the cool earth. The thin malong beneath her had been folded three times, but hardly enough to soften stone and roots.
Even asleep, the girl looked fragile against the tunnel’s floor.
Lara pressed her palm against the hidden mechanism in the wall.
A muted click.
Then the concealed door eased open just wide enough for her to slip through.
Outside, she reset the second mechanism tucked behind thick curtains of vines, making sure the entrance vanished back into green anonymity.
No wasted movement.
She moved.
Within seconds, she was scaling the nearest towering tree, muscles burning in smooth, controlled pulls.
Bark scraped her palms.
Sap stuck to her skin.
She climbed higher—past the lower canopy, past the tangled mid-branches—until the jungle finally loosened its grip.
From above, the world widened.
The jagged peaks of Mount Ourea cut through morning mist like the spine of a sleeping giant. Below, carved into the unforgiving slope of Mount Roca, lay a small plateau of exposed rock—a scar against the green.
Her breath hitched. It wasn’t the same.
In her memory, there had been a sprawling tree at the center, its branches wide enough to shade a gathering. A waterfall had once spilled down one side, silver and alive, its mist catching sunlight like shattered glass.
Now the tree and the waterfall were gone.
Time had not been kind to this place.
A tightness gripped her chest—unexpected, unwelcome.
She blinked hard and swallowed it down. Sentiment was expensive. She couldn’t afford it.
From the pouch strapped to her thigh, she pulled out the satellite phone.
Two bars.
Her thumbs moved fast, crafting a longer message this time. Detailed terrain notes. Rebel movement predictions. Estimated pursuit window. Safe extraction vectors.
If they came, they needed precision.
She sent it.
Then she descended.
When she slipped back through the concealed entrance, she carried with her a handful of wild fruits and small jungle berries rested in her shirt fold.
Sandro looked up immediately.
She handed him two fruits without ceremony, then crouched to bundle Shay gently, adjusting the malong around her shoulders before lifting her into a steadier carry.
"Let’s leave," Lara said.
She pressed the release. The hidden door slid open once more.
The jungle outside was fully awake now.
"It is not safe here."
And this time, they disappeared deeper into it.







