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"BENEATH THE MASK" Chapter 15 — City Lights

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Chapter 15 — City Lights

The rooftop overlooked half of Prague.

Rain had finally stopped sometime after midnight, leaving the city glowing beneath silver reflections and distant gold lights stretching endlessly across the river.

Eliana sat on the edge of the abandoned hotel rooftop wrapped in Kael’s spare tactical jacket while Noah Reyes hacked surveillance feeds two floors below and Kane handled perimeter rotation.

For the first time in days—

No one was actively shooting at them.

Progress.

Kael stood near the rooftop ledge monitoring sniper coordinates through binoculars.

Still working.

Of course.

Eliana unscrewed the whiskey bottle beside her and took another slow sip.

Then called across the rooftop:

“You know, emotionally speaking, you are exhausting.”

Kael lowered the binoculars slightly.

“Why are you drinking my whiskey?”

“Trauma bonding.”

“That’s not how trauma works.”

“Depends how committed you are.”

Something dangerously close to amusement touched his eyes.

Eliana noticed immediately.

Unfortunately.

Kael crossed the rooftop slowly and stopped beside her near the ledge.

Wind moved softly through the dark strands of his hair.

Tonight the mask rested lower around his neck.

Not fully removed.

Enough.

Enough for her to see the line of his mouth clearly beneath the city lights.

Dangerous development.

Eliana handed him the whiskey bottle.

Their fingers brushed briefly.

Both froze.

Always this.

Kael took the bottle carefully.

Drank once.

Then sat beside her.

Not too close.

Not far enough either.

Prague glowed beneath them in impossible quiet beauty.

For several minutes neither spoke.

Surprisingly comfortable.

Eliana tilted her head slightly toward him.

“You’re quieter lately.”

Kael stared out across the city.

“You talk enough for both of us.”

“True. I’m carrying this relationship conversationally.”

A beat passed.

Then Kael asked quietly:

“Why poetry?”

Eliana blinked.

Interesting.

He remembered.

The realization warmed something dangerous beneath her ribs.

She leaned back on her hands slightly.

“My father liked words,” she said softly. “He thought truth sounded different when written honestly.”

Kael listened without interrupting.

Always listening.

“He used to read Neruda badly at breakfast,” Eliana continued. “Very dramatic. Very French-adjacent.”

“French-adjacent?”

“He wore scarves emotionally.”

That finally did it.

Kael laughed.

Tiny.

Low.

Barely there.

But real.

Eliana stared at him immediately.

Kael noticed.

“What.”

“You laugh.”

“Occasionally.”

“That felt medically historic.”

Another faint almost-smile touched his mouth.

God.

That was unfair.

Eliana looked away toward the city lights before her nervous system fully collapsed.

Below them, Prague moved peacefully through midnight traffic and glowing windows.

Normal life.

Something neither of them really belonged to anymore.

Kael’s voice lowered beside her.

“You miss him.”

Not a question.

Eliana’s chest tightened.

“Yes.”

Silence stretched gently afterward.

Then unexpectedly—

Kael spoke again.

“I don’t remember much before training.”

Eliana turned toward him slowly.

The wind shifted across the rooftop.

Kael stared out across the skyline while speaking.

Not looking at her.

Probably the only reason he could say any of it aloud.

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“I remember music,” he murmured. “And my mother’s hands.”

Something inside Eliana hurt quietly.

Kael swallowed once.

Then:

“The rest feels... fragmented.”

Like trauma had erased pieces.

Like survival required forgetting.

Eliana understood that feeling too well.

She looked at him carefully.

At the tired eyes.

The scars.

The impossible restraint holding him together.

Then softly asked:

“What do you want?”

Kael finally looked at her.

The question clearly caught him off guard.

Interesting.

As if no one had ever asked before.

A long silence followed.

Then quietly:

“I don’t know.”

The honesty nearly wrecked her.

Because Kael sounded genuinely lost.

Not weak.

Not broken.

Just...

human.

Eliana laughed softly under her breath.

“That might be the healthiest thing you’ve ever said.”

Something shifted in Kael’s expression then.

Tiny.

Warm.

And before she could stop herself—

Eliana laughed.

Really laughed this time.

Bright.

Uncontrolled.

The sound startled even her.

Kael stared.

Completely still.

Watching her.

Not the skyline.

Not the mission.

Her.

Too intensely.

Eliana’s laughter faded slowly beneath the weight of his attention.

“Why are you looking at me like that?” she asked softly.

Kael didn’t answer immediately.

The city lights reflected faintly in his steel-grey eyes.

Then quietly:

“You forget to lie when you laugh.”

Oh.

That.

The air between them shifted instantly.

Closer.

Softer.

Dangerous.

Eliana’s pulse stumbled hard.

Kael noticed.

Of course.

His hand rested beside hers on the rooftop ledge now.

Close.

Very close.

Neither touched.

Both aware of the distance.

And for one suspended impossible second—

It felt like they might.

Then Noah’s voice exploded through comms.

“Ghost, surveillance just flagged three hostile vehicles heading north.”

Reality shattered instantly.

Kael stood at once.

Weapon again.

Mission mode.

But before moving toward the rooftop access door—

He looked back once.

And Eliana realized something terrifying.

Kael wasn’t trying not to stare at her anymore.

He was simply no longer hiding it.

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