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"BENEATH THE MASK" Chapter 27 — What They Made Him

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Chapter 27 — What They Made Him

The safehouse remained silent after the firefight.

Not peaceful silence.

The exhausted kind.

The kind that settles after too much blood, too little sleep, and emotional damage no one knows how to survive properly.

Rain hammered softly against reinforced windows aboveground while BLACK VEIL operatives moved quietly through the underground medical sector treating injuries and rebuilding operational routes.

Kael disappeared immediately after extraction.

Of course he did.

The mask incident had shaken him harder than gunfire ever could.

Eliana found him nearly an hour later alone inside one of the abandoned maintenance tunnels beneath the station.

Dim emergency lights painted the corridor pale gold.

Concrete walls dripped slowly with rainwater leaking from the city above.

And Kael sat motionless on an old supply crate cleaning blood from the broken remains of his mask.

The sight hurt instantly.

Because suddenly the mask no longer looked intimidating.

It looked fragile.

Like armor someone built desperately young and wore too long afterward.

Kael noticed her approaching immediately.

His body tensed on instinct.

Then relaxed again just slightly after recognizing her footsteps.

Interesting.

Even now.

Even after betrayal and emotional collapse—

Part of him still calmed around her automatically.

“Eliana.”

Quiet.

Tired.

No coldness this time.

That alone terrified her.

She stopped a few feet away.

Kael didn’t look up immediately.

Instead he continued wiping blood from cracked black composite plating with slow mechanical precision.

Like avoiding eye contact might help him rebuild emotional distance again.

Too late.

She had already seen him.

Really seen him.

“The mask is ruined,” she said softly.

Kael’s jaw shifted faintly.

“It was always temporary.”

The sentence felt heavier than it should’ve.

Eliana studied him carefully now.

No mask.

No emotional armor fully rebuilt yet.

Just Kael sitting alone beneath weak tunnel lights looking exhausted enough to collapse.

God.

He looked human.

Painfully human.

“You disappeared after the warehouse,” she said quietly.

Kael finally looked up then.

Steel-grey eyes shadowed by sleeplessness.

“I needed to think.”

Dangerous sentence.

Eliana stepped closer carefully.

“About me?”

A pause.

Then honestly:

“About everything.”

The tunnel fell silent again afterward except for distant thunder somewhere beyond the station walls.

Kael stared down briefly at the broken mask pieces resting across his hands.

Then quietly said:

“Your father investigated ORPHEUS.”

Eliana froze instantly.

The words hit like physical impact.

Kael continued before she could speak.

“Not just BLACK VEIL operations. The conditioning program itself.”

Her pulse accelerated sharply.

ORPHEUS.

The child weaponization program.

The thing that created Ghost.

Kael’s eyes lowered again toward the ruined mask.

“He got close.”

A pause.

“Too close.”

Eliana’s throat tightened painfully.

“My father knew about the children.”

Kael nodded once.

Minimal movement.

“Yes.”

Silence swallowed the tunnel completely.

Because suddenly pieces connected in horrifying ways.

Her father disappearing.

BLACK VEIL cover-ups.

Kael’s conditioning.

Everything intertwined long before either of them met.

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Eliana sat slowly beside him on the supply crate.

Close.

Not touching yet.

Kael went very still anyway.

Always this.

Always reacting to proximity like it mattered too much.

“What exactly was ORPHEUS?” she whispered.

Kael closed his eyes briefly.

And for the first time since knowing him—

Eliana saw genuine hesitation there.

Not tactical caution.

Fear.

Because this wasn’t mission information.

This was trauma.

Finally Kael spoke quietly.

“They selected children young. Mostly war orphans. Stateless minors. Disappearances nobody investigated.”

Eliana stopped breathing.

Kael’s voice remained flat.

Too flat.

Like emotional detachment was the only way to survive the memories.

“Psychological conditioning. combat training. sensory manipulation. sleep deprivation.”

His jaw tightened slightly.

“Punishment systems.”

God.

Eliana felt sick.

Kael continued staring at the broken mask pieces instead of her.

“They erased names first.”

The sentence shattered something deep inside her chest.

Names.

Identity.

Humanity.

Ghost.

Kael laughed softly beneath his breath afterward.

Empty sound.

“I barely remember mine sometimes.”

No.

God no.

Eliana looked at him fully now.

At the scars.

The exhaustion.

The years of violence carved into posture and reflex and silence.

And suddenly she understood something devastating:

Kael was never born Ghost.

He was built into one.

Engineered.

Conditioned.

Weaponized systematically until violence became instinct and tenderness became terrifying.

Not monster.

Victim.

The realization hurt almost unbearably.

“Eliana.”

She looked toward him instantly.

Kael finally met her eyes fully.

And there it was again—

That terrible vulnerable honesty he only showed when completely exhausted emotionally.

“Your father tried to expose General Orlov.”

The name landed heavily.

General Orlov.

Architect behind ORPHEUS.

The man responsible for the conditioning program.

Kael’s expression darkened faintly.

“He designed most of it personally.”

Cold spread through Eliana’s stomach.

“How do you know?”

A long silence followed.

Then quietly:

“Because he trained me.”

The tunnel suddenly felt too small.

Too quiet.

Eliana stared at him in horror.

Not horror toward him.

Toward what had been done to him.

Kael noticed immediately of course.

His body shifted subtly backward on instinct.

Retreat.

Preparing for rejection automatically.

Like trauma taught him to expect fear whenever someone learned too much.

“Eliana.”

Warning this time.

Weak warning.

But she barely heard him.

Because suddenly all she could picture was younger Kael—

A child stripped of identity and rebuilt into Ghost by men who called cruelty training.

Something inside her broke quietly.

“You were a kid,” she whispered.

Kael looked away immediately.

Like the sentence physically hurt him.

“No one stopped it,” he said softly.

God.

The loneliness buried inside those words.

Eliana’s eyes burned suddenly.

Because she realized something horrifying:

Kael genuinely believed what happened to him made him less human.

Less worthy.

Less salvageable.

The mask.

The emotional distance.

The constant restraint.

It was never about intimidation.

It was shame.

Eliana reached for him before thinking.

Again.

Always.

Her fingers touched lightly against the scar beneath his jaw.

Kael froze instantly.

Breathing uneven now.

“Eliana.”

This time his voice sounded wrecked.

She moved closer carefully.

Close enough to see the exhaustion behind his eyes.

Close enough to understand the real haunting thing about Kael Vanth wasn’t violence—

It was survival.

“You were never the villain,” she whispered.

Kael stared at her silently.

Like he didn’t understand the sentence.

Or maybe wanted desperately to.

Eliana’s hand remained against his cheek.

Warm skin beneath scarred fingertips.

And slowly—

Very slowly—

She watched something inside him fracture open.

Not weakness.

Relief.

Tiny.

Terrifying.

Like no one had ever looked at Ghost and seen the wounded boy underneath before.

Kael swallowed once.

Then finally whispered:

“You should hate me.”

Eliana’s chest tightened painfully.

Instead she leaned closer and rested her forehead gently against his.

The same grounding gesture he always used first.

Only this time—

She gave it back.

“No,” she whispered softly.

“I think they already hated you enough for everyone.”

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