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"BENEATH THE MASK" Chapter 30 — Almost Normal

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Chapter 30 — Almost Normal

The lakeside cabin looked painfully ordinary.

That was what made it dangerous.

No underground tunnels.

No bloodstained safehouses.

No tactical command centers buried beneath cities.

Just a quiet wooden cabin hidden deep within northern forests beside a dark frozen lake untouched by roads or surveillance routes.

Temporary shelter.

Two weeks maximum before BLACK VEIL tracking systems inevitably caught up again.

But for now—

Silence.

Peace.

Something dangerously close to normal.

Eliana stood near the kitchen window early the first morning watching pale winter sunlight spill across frozen water while coffee brewed softly behind her.

No gunfire.

No alarms.

No death.

The quiet itself felt surreal.

Kael moved somewhere behind her carrying firewood inside from the snow-covered porch.

Heavy boots against old floorboards.

Steady breathing.

Alive.

Still here.

Eliana hadn’t realized how constantly she expected him to disappear until now.

The cabin smelled like cedar smoke and coffee grounds while weak jazz hummed quietly from the old radio Kael repaired the night before.

Of course he repaired it.

Ghost apparently possessed deeply domestic survival instincts nobody warned her about.

“You’re staring again,” Kael said quietly behind her.

Eliana looked over her shoulder immediately.

And paused.

God.

Morning light softened him unfairly.

Dark hair slightly messy from sleep.

Black thermal shirt rolled at the sleeves.

No mask.

No tactical armor.

Just Kael carrying chopped firewood through warm sunlight like some absurd alternate version of life neither of them were supposed to have.

Beautiful.

Dangerously beautiful.

“I’m observing,” she corrected softly.

Kael set the firewood down beside the stone fireplace.

“That’s a polite word for it.”

Interesting.

Humor.

Tiny.

But real.

Eliana smiled despite herself.

And horrifyingly—

Kael relaxed visibly after seeing it.

Like her smiling had become something his nervous system physically depended on now.

That realization terrified her quietly.

The days settled into strange fragile routine afterward.

Cooking together.

Repairing old cabin wiring.

Sleeping through full nights without emergency evacuations.

Existing beside each other quietly.

Domestic softness wrapped around both of them slowly enough to feel almost unreal.

Kael remained cautious with happiness.

Eliana noticed that immediately.

Every peaceful moment seemed to confuse him slightly.

Like his body expected violence eventually and didn’t fully understand how to survive gentleness instead.

On the third night she found him awake alone in the kitchen at 2 a.m.

Again.

Some habits never fully disappeared.

Kael sat at the table cleaning weapons beneath weak overhead light while untouched tea cooled beside him.

“You know,” Eliana murmured sleepily from the doorway, “normal people buy therapy dogs.”

Kael glanced up slowly.

“I don’t think any animal deserves that level of psychological burden.”

Eliana laughed softly.

The sound startled him slightly.

Not because it was loud.

Because it was relaxed.

Real.

God.

They were becoming comfortable around each other now.

That felt infinitely more dangerous than attraction ever did.

Eliana crossed the kitchen quietly and stole the tea from beside his elbow.

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Kael watched her with tired eyes.

“You made tea and forgot to drink it.”

“I was thinking.”

“Concerning.”

Kael’s mouth twitched faintly again.

There.

That almost-smile.

Eliana sat beside him slowly while snow drifted quietly outside the dark cabin windows.

“What were you thinking about?”

Kael went still briefly.

Then honestly:

“This.”

One word.

Heavy enough to ache.

Eliana looked toward him carefully.

Kael stared down at the half-disassembled pistol resting across the table.

“The cabin,” he clarified quietly. “The quiet.”

A pause.

“You.”

Her pulse stumbled hard.

Kael continued speaking slowly.

Like admitting these thoughts still felt unfamiliar.

“I keep waiting for something to go wrong.”

God.

The exhaustion in his voice.

Not tactical exhaustion.

Emotional.

Like happiness itself made him anxious now.

Eliana reached toward him without thinking.

Again.

Always.

Her fingers brushed lightly across the back of his scarred hand resting beside the weapon components.

Kael froze instantly.

Always this.

Always reacting to tenderness like it physically mattered too much.

“You’re allowed to have good things,” she whispered softly.

Kael looked at her then.

Really looked.

And Eliana nearly stopped breathing.

Because there was something devastating about seeing Ghost exhausted by hope instead of violence.

“You say things like that very confidently,” he murmured.

“You disagree?”

A long silence followed.

Then quietly:

“I don’t know.”

The honesty hurt.

Because suddenly she realized Kael genuinely couldn’t imagine a future where peace lasted long enough to trust.

ORPHEUS stole even that from him.

The ability to believe in safety.

Eliana’s chest tightened painfully.

Without thinking further, she leaned sideways until her head rested lightly against his shoulder.

Tiny movement.

Catastrophic effect.

Kael went perfectly still.

The pistol remained forgotten on the kitchen table.

Snow fell softly outside.

Jazz hummed low through old radio static.

And for several seconds Ghost looked completely unable to process simple affection.

Then finally—

Very carefully—

He relaxed beneath the contact.

Not fully.

Never fully.

But enough.

Progress.

Tiny devastating progress.

Eliana closed her eyes briefly.

“You know what the worst part is?”

Kael’s voice stayed quiet.

“What.”

“This almost feels real.”

Silence.

Then slowly—

Kael turned his head slightly toward hers.

And Eliana realized with terrifying certainty that he felt exactly the same way.

Three days later they cooked dinner together badly.

Objectively disastrously.

Kael overcooked pasta.

Eliana nearly set a towel on fire.

Neither possessed useful domestic skills apparently.

The tiny cabin kitchen filled with smoke while snowstorms raged softly outside and Kael stared at the burned saucepan like it personally betrayed him.

“This feels operationally incorrect,” he muttered.

Eliana laughed hard enough to nearly drop the wooden spoon.

“There it is.”

Kael looked over.

“What.”

“A personality.”

His eyes narrowed slightly.

“You’re very rude for someone surviving exclusively because I keep rescuing you.”

“Counterargument,” Eliana replied immediately. “You’re emotionally attached now. My survival odds increased dramatically.”

Kael stared at her for one long second.

Then—

Finally—

He smiled.

Not the tiny almost-smiles.

Not restrained amusement.

A real smile.

Small.

Soft.

Open.

And God.

Eliana’s chest physically hurt from the sight.

Because suddenly Ghost looked younger.

Human.

Like someone who might’ve lived an entirely different life if the world had been kinder to him.

Kael noticed her staring immediately afterward.

The smile faded slightly beneath self-consciousness.

“What.”

Eliana shook her head slowly.

“Nothing.”

Lie.

Everything.

Because she realized in that exact moment something terrifying:

She would destroy entire governments to protect that smile now.

The realization settled quietly between her ribs while snow fell endlessly outside the cabin.

False hope.

Temporary peace.

Two damaged people pretending for a little while that the world might let them keep this.

And somewhere deep down—

Both of them already knew it wouldn’t last.

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