Chapter 445: Raising the perfect daughter
Morning light filtered through Celena's bedroom curtains, casting patterns across walls covered in mathematical equations and artwork that would have impressed gallery curators. Blake sat in the rocking chair Reggie had moved into the room, watching his daughter sleep. Rose lay beside Celena on the narrow bed, both of them finally at peace after the tension of the previous night.
Their first mission had been... successful. Technically.
The Hendricks family was safe, relocated before the raid began. The surveillance targets had received timely warnings to relocate their operations. And Salvador's forces had found exactly what they expected to find—empty buildings and cold trails.
Blake and Rose had filed reports documenting their thorough searches and expressing disappointment at the lack of results. Their new supervisors had been frustrated but not suspicious. First missions often yielded little, they were told. The resistance was experienced at evasion.
If only they knew.
Celena stirred, her eyes opening to find Blake watching her. For a moment, confusion crossed her features—the disorientation of a child who had grown used to waking alone. Then memory returned, and she smiled.
"You came back," she said simply.
"We promised we would," Blake replied, moving to sit on the edge of the bed. "How did you sleep?"
"I had dreams," Celena said, sitting up carefully to avoid disturbing Rose. "About Uncle Randal. He was in a dark place, looking for something shiny."
Blake and Rose exchanged a glance. Celena's dreams had always been vivid, but since their return, they seemed to carry weight beyond normal childhood imagination.
"What kind of shiny thing?" Rose asked, fully awake now.
Celena scrunched her face in concentration. "Like a star, but not in the sky. In a box. And there were scary people guarding it."
Blake felt a chill that had nothing to do with the morning air. "Did Uncle Randal find it?"
"Not yet," Celena said with the certainty that only came with dreams or prophecy. "But he's close. And the scary people know he's coming."
The conversation was interrupted by the sound of voices from downstairs—Nana and Reggie discussing something in low, urgent tones. Blake rose, kissing Celena's forehead.
"Get dressed, little one. We'll make breakfast together."
Celena's face lit up. "Really? Can I make pancakes?"
"If you promise not to use vampire strength on the mixing bowl," Rose said with a smile. "We don't have many left."
As Celena bounded toward her dresser, chattering about pancake recipes and asking if they could have chocolate chips, Blake marveled at how quickly they'd fallen back into the rhythms of family life. Five years might have passed, but some bonds transcended time.
Downstairs, they found Reggie pacing the kitchen while Nana prepared coffee with the kind of deliberate calm that suggested barely controlled worry.
"What's wrong?" Rose asked, settling Celena at the table with her mathematics books.
Reggie handed Blake a folded paper. "Message from Randal. Came through the network about an hour ago."
Blake unfolded the paper, reading quickly. The handwriting was Randal's, but shakier than he remembered:
*Found the trail. Salvador's artifact is real. Ancient. Dangerous beyond measure. Going dark for final approach. If something happens to me, tell Blake the old promises still hold. Tell Celena her Uncle Randal loves her. R.*
"When was this sent?" Blake asked.
"Three days ago," Reggie replied. "Took time to reach us through the relay network."
Rose read over Blake's shoulder, her expression growing more concerned with each word. "He sounds like he's saying goodbye."
"That's what worries me," Reggie said. "Randal's been reckless since you disappeared, but this... this feels final."
Celena looked up from her homework. "Is Uncle Randal in trouble?"
The adults hesitated. How much truth could a seven-year-old handle, even one as advanced as Celena?
"He's working on something important," Blake said carefully. "But yes, it might be dangerous."
Celena nodded seriously. "That's what my dream said. The scary people have lots of teeth."
An uncomfortable silence fell over the kitchen. Nana moved to the stove, beginning the ritual of breakfast preparation with movements that spoke of decades of practice. Rose helped Celena with her mathematics while Blake and Reggie discussed logistics in voices too low for enhanced hearing to catch.
"We need to find him," Blake said finally, speaking at normal volume again.
"I know," Reggie replied. "But Salvador's got you on assignment tonight. And Rose has surveillance duty for the next three days."
"Then we go after our shifts," Rose said, not looking up from Celena's calculations. "Separately if necessary."
"No." Blake's voice carried final authority. "We don't split up again. Not after what we've been through."
Celena dropped her pencil, looking between her parents with the uncomfortable perception that seemed to be her birthright. "Are you fighting?"
"No, sweetheart," Rose said quickly. "We're just... discussing options."
"It sounds like fighting," Celena observed. "Nana says when adults 'discuss options' in angry voices, they're really fighting but trying to be polite about it."
Nana chuckled from the stove. "The child knows her lessons."
Blake sighed, moving to kneel beside Celena's chair. "You're right. Mommy and I are worried about Uncle Randal, and we don't agree on the best way to help him."
"So ask him what he wants," Celena said with the simple logic of childhood.
"We can't reach him right now," Rose explained. "He's in a place where the phones don't work."
Celena considered this, her expression serious. "In my dreams, he was alone. Really alone. And sad." She looked up at Blake. "He misses you, Daddy. He thinks it's his fault you went away."
Blake felt like he'd been punched. "It's not his fault. None of it was his fault."
"I know that," Celena said. "But Uncle Randal doesn't."
The pancake breakfast that followed was both joyous and bittersweet. Celena insisted on making the batter herself, her enhanced strength carefully controlled as she whisked ingredients together. She chattered about her lessons with Nana, her training sessions with Reggie, her hopes that they could all go to the park like they used to.
"The playground's different now," she added casually. "Only vampire children can use it during night hours. Human children get the daytime."
Blake paused, his fork halfway to his mouth. "How do you know that?"
"My friend Sophia told me. She's human. Her family got moved to the South District after her daddy refused to register for blood donation." Celena's expression grew troubled. "She said her daddy got taken away. Now it's just her and her mommy."
Rose and Blake exchanged a look across the table. This was the reality of Salvador's world—families torn apart, children segregated by species, fear governing every interaction.
"Do you miss playing with Sophia?" Rose asked gently.
Celena nodded. "But Nana says it's not safe for her to come here anymore. And I can't go there because of the district restrictions."
Blake set down his fork, appetite gone. His daughter was growing up in a world where friendship was limited by bureaucratic cruelty, where children understood concepts like "blood donation registration" and "district restrictions."
It had to end.
After breakfast, they settled into something approaching normal family time. Rose helped Celena with her artwork while Blake and Reggie discussed resistance operations in the next room. The day felt suspended, peaceful despite the undercurrents of tension.
But all too soon, evening approached, bringing with it another night of walking the tightrope between their cover identities and their true loyalties.
"I don't want you to go," Celena said as Rose helped her prepare for bed.
"I know, sweetheart. But—"
"You just got back," Celena continued, her voice small. "What if you don't come back again?"
Rose knelt beside the bed, taking her daughter's hands. "Look at me, Celena. Really look at me."
Celena met her mother's eyes—amber meeting amber in perfect symmetry.
"I will always come back to you," Rose said with absolute conviction. "Always. No matter what happens, no matter how far I have to travel or how many monsters I have to fight, I will find my way back to you."
"Promise?"
"I promise."
Blake appeared in the doorway, having overheard the conversation. "We both promise," he said, joining them beside the bed. "You're the most important thing in our world, Celena. Everything else—every mission, every assignment, every danger—is secondary to getting home to you."
Celena seemed to accept this, settling back into her pillow. But as her parents prepared to leave, she called out one more time.
"Daddy? When you find Uncle Randal, tell him I love him too. And that Nana made his favorite cookies. He should come home and eat them before they get stale."
Blake smiled despite the weight in his chest. "I'll tell him."
As they prepared for another night of dangerous deception, Blake caught sight of their family portrait—a photo taken just days before their disappearance into the spirit world. Celena as a toddler, Rose radiant with happiness, himself looking confident in their ability to handle whatever challenges arose.
They'd all looked so young then. So certain that love and determination were enough to overcome any obstacle.
Maybe they still were.
But the obstacles had certainly gotten more complicated.
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