
After My Fiancé Killed Her, My Mom Returned Alive
After My Fiancé Killed Her, My Mom Returned Alive Chapter 1
The red ink on the safety audit looked too much like blood under the flickering fluorescent lights of my office. Outside, Seattle was drowning. The rain wasn’t just falling; it was hammering against the glass, a relentless, rhythmic assault that usually helped me focus. Tonight, it made my skin crawl.
My phone buzzed against the mahogany desk, vibrating with an urgent, staccato rhythm.
*Priority One Collision. Intersection of 4th and Pike. Structural compromise reported.*
My stomach tightened. I had flagged that intersection three times in the last month. Faded lane markers, poor drainage, blind spots. The city had filed my reports under "Pending Review." Now, someone was paying the price for that bureaucracy.
I grabbed my heavy-duty raincoat and the hard hat stenciled with *C. Campbell - Safety Compliance*.
By the time I arrived, the scene was a kaleidoscope of fracturing light. Blue and red strobes cut through the deluge, reflecting off the slick black asphalt. The smell hit me before I even cleared the perimeter tape—acrid burning rubber, the metallic tang of radiator fluid, and the heavy, sweet scent of gasoline.
I flashed my badge at the uniform guarding the line. "OSHA. I’m clearing the hazard zone."
He nodded, lifting the tape. I stepped through, my boots splashing in puddles that shimmered with oil rainbows.
My eyes locked onto the wreckage. A silver SUV had wrapped itself around a utility pole, the front end crumpled like a discarded soda can. My breath hitched. It was a late-model Highlander. The exact make, model, and color my mother drove.
*Coincidence,* I told myself, forcing the rising bile back down. *Statistics. It’s a popular car.*
But my heart hammered against my ribs like a trapped bird. I scanned for the Incident Commander.
Dalton Ellis stood near the engine block, shouting orders that were swallowed by the wind. My fiancé. Usually, Dalton was the picture of composed arrogance, his uniform pressed, his jaw set in heroic determination. Tonight, he looked unraveled. His helmet was askew, his eyes darting nervously.
"Stabilize the frame!" I shouted, rushing forward as I saw the vehicle shift on the wet pavement. "You haven't set the chocks!"
Dalton spun around, his face glistening with rain and sweat. "Claire? Get back behind the line!"
"You're violating protocol, Dalton!" I pointed at the leaking fuel tank. "That’s a Class B hazard. You need foam before you cut!"
He ignored me, turning to the crew. "Wilson! Get the spreaders. Now!"
My gaze snapped to the firefighter fumbling with the heavy hydraulic case. Bailee Wilson. The rookie intern. Her gear looked too big for her, and even in the chaos, I noticed a stray lock of blonde hair carefully arranged outside her helmet. She wasn’t moving with the urgency of a rescue; she was moving with the desperation of someone trying to prove she belonged.
I grabbed Dalton’s arm, feeling the tense muscle beneath the wet turnout gear. "She’s not certified for a hot extraction, Dalton. Look at the fuel leak! You need Marcus on the tool."
"I give the orders here, Campbell!" Dalton shoved my hand away, his voice cracking. "Wilson, get in there! Open the driver's side!"
I looked past him, through the shattered driver’s side window. Smoke curled inside the cabin, obscuring the face, but I saw the hair. Gray. Short. Styled exactly like my mother's.
The world narrowed to a tunnel.
"Dalton, wait!" I screamed, lunging forward.
Bailee stepped up, the heavy Jaws of Life trembling in her grip. She didn’t check the connection. She didn’t ground herself. She just jammed the metal tips into the crumpled door frame, right next to the sparking battery cable.
"No!" The word tore from my throat.
Metal shrieked against metal. A spark, bright and terrible, leaped from the tool to the pooling gasoline.
The air didn't just heat up; it solidified. A wall of force slammed into me, lifting me off my feet and throwing me backward onto the wet asphalt.
The sound came a split second later—a thunderclap that rattled my teeth and silenced the rain.
I lay on the ground, ears ringing, staring up at the sky where the rain was now mixed with black smoke. I couldn't breathe. I rolled onto my side, coughing, trying to push myself up. The SUV was an inferno. The orange flames roared, consuming the silver paint, consuming the gray hair, consuming everything.
"Mom..." The word was a whisper, lost in the roar of the fire.
Hands grabbed my shoulders, hauling me up. I was shaking, my vision blurring. Dalton’s face filled my view. He was pale, his pupils blown wide with terror. But as he looked at me, the terror shifted into something else. Something calculated.
He shook me hard, his fingers digging into my arms through the raincoat.
"Claire! Claire, listen to me!"
I stared at the burning car, numb. "Who... who was inside?"
Dalton pulled me close, his voice dropping to a harsh, urgent whisper against my ear. "I'm so sorry. We checked the plates before the blast. It’s her, Claire. It’s Mrs. Campbell."
The ground vanished beneath me. The rain felt like ice. I looked at the fire, at the pyre that was once a car, and the scream died in my chest, suffocated by a grief so absolute it stopped my heart. I collapsed into the arms of the man who had just given the order to kill her.
After My Fiancé Killed Her, My Mom Returned Alive of Contents
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