
After My Fiancé Killed Her, My Mom Returned Alive
Chapter 2
The world was white. Sterile, blinding white. It smelled of antiseptic and the lingering, phantom scent of burnt gasoline that seemed etched into the lining of my nostrils.
I tried to sit up, but my limbs felt like they were filled with concrete. Sedatives. Heavy ones. Through the fog, I saw a silhouette standing at the foot of the bed. Broad shoulders, perfect posture. Dalton.
"She’s waking up," a doctor said, his voice sounding as if it were coming from underwater.
"I'll handle her," Dalton said. His voice wasn't soft; it was the command tone he used at fire scenes. "She’s delusional with grief. She thinks she saw things that didn't happen. Keep the nurses out for now. She needs absolute quiet."
"Dalton?" My voice was a rusted hinge. I reached for the bedside table, my hand patting the empty surface. "Where’s my phone? I need to call... I need to call Mom."
Dalton moved instantly. He was at my side, his hand covering mine, pressing it back down onto the mattress. His grip was too tight.
"Claire, stop." He loomed over me, blocking the harsh light. "I have your phone. I turned it off."
"Give it to me."
"No." He smoothed the hair back from my forehead, his touch clinical. "The press is already swarming. Do you want to read the condolences? Do you want to see the photos of the wreck on Twitter? I’m protecting you."
"I need to hear her voice," I whispered, tears leaking from the corners of my eyes. "Maybe... maybe you were wrong. The car... lots of people have that car."
Dalton sighed, a sound of heavy, burdened patience. "It was her plates, Claire. I identified the... personal effects. Don't make this harder than it is."
He turned his back to me, walking toward the door. Through the crack, I saw him pull out his own phone. He spoke low, but the room was so quiet I caught the sharp edge of his tone. "Just keep your mouth shut, Bailee. I’m fixing it. Stay at the station."
He glanced back, saw me watching, and stepped into the hallway, closing the door with a final click.
Panic, cold and lucid, cut through the sedation. I needed to know. I pushed myself up, the room spinning violently. My legs wobbled as I slid off the bed. I stumbled to the door, cracking it open just as a nurse walked by with a cart.
"Please," I gasped, clutching the doorframe. "My phone... I lost my phone. Can I use yours? Just for a second?"
The nurse looked at my wild eyes, then at the empty hallway where Dalton had disappeared. She hesitated, then handed me a sleek smartphone. "Make it quick, honey."
My fingers trembled as I punched in the number. I knew it by heart. I held the device to my ear, my breath hitching in my throat.
*Ring. Ring. Ring.*
*"Hi! You've reached Mrs. Campbell. I’m probably out in the garden or grading papers. Leave a message!"*
Her voice was bright, alive. It shattered me.
"Mom?" I choked out. "Mom, please pick up. Please be there."
The beep sounded. Silence followed. Just static and the emptiness of a line that would never be answered again. The phone slipped from my hand, clattering onto the linoleum.
"Claire!" Dalton’s voice was a whip crack. He rounded the corner, snatching the phone from the floor and shoving it back at the startled nurse. He grabbed my upper arms, hauling me back into the room. "What the hell are you doing?"
"She didn't answer," I sobbed, my body going limp against his chest. "She didn't answer."
"Of course she didn't." He steered me back to the bed, his jaw tight. "She’s gone, Claire. Your denial is a symptom. You’re hysterical. You need to listen to me if you want to get through this."
***
Two days later, the rain had stopped, but the grey sky over Seattle remained. I sat on my living room couch, wrapped in a blanket that still smelled like the detergent my mother bought for me. The apartment was suffocatingly quiet.
The lock turned. Dalton walked in, shaking his umbrella. He didn't ask how I was. He walked straight to the coffee table and slapped a manila folder down on the glass.
"We need to get this over with," he said, loosening his tie. He looked exhausted, shadows bruising the skin under his eyes.
I stared at the folder. "What is it?"
"The Incident Report. Headquarters is pushing. They want to close the file before the funeral." He pulled a pen from his pocket. "I need you to sign the witness statement."
I opened the folder. The text swam before my eyes, but the technical jargon triggered a reflex in my brain. I was a Safety Compliance Officer. Reading these forms was as natural as breathing.
I scanned the summary. *Cause of Ignition: Unavoidable Mechanical Failure. Fuel line rupture due to impact trauma.*
My eyes narrowed. I read further down. *Rescue Protocol: Executed within standard parameters. Firefighter B. Wilson acted with commendation under volatile conditions.*
"Commendation?" The word tasted like ash. I looked up at Dalton. "She used the spreaders on a hot zone without foam suppression. She sparked the battery."
"You saw it wrong," Dalton said, his voice flat. "The report says the fuel line ruptured spontaneously. It was a tragic accident."
I pointed to the hydraulic pressure log attached to the back. "Dalton, look at this. The PSI spike at 21:04 coincides exactly with the explosion. That’s the tool engaging metal. That’s operator error. If I sign this, I’m perjuring myself."
Dalton slammed his hand onto the table, making the coffee mugs jump. "You want to ruin Bailee’s life? Is that it? She’s a kid, Claire. She made a call in the heat of the moment."
"She killed my mother," I said, my voice trembling but gaining volume. "She was incompetent, and you let her operate."
Dalton leaned in, invading my space. His eyes were cold, hard flint. "If you report this as negligence, there will be an investigation. The press will drag your mother’s name through the mud. They’ll say she was speeding. They’ll dissect her life. Is that what you want? To dishonor her memory with a scandal?"
He uncapped the pen and pressed it into my shaking hand.
"Protect her dignity, Claire. Sign the damn paper."
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