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After My Fiancé Killed Her, My Mom Returned Alive Novel Cover

After My Fiancé Killed Her, My Mom Returned Alive

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.
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Chapter 3

The pen felt like a lead weight in my hand, its tip hovering over the signature line labeled *Witness Affirmation*. Outside, the Seattle drizzle had paused, leaving a suffocating, static silence in the apartment. The only sound was the hum of the refrigerator and Dalton’s breathing—steady, impatient, the rhythm of a man checking his watch while a building burned.

I didn’t sign. Instead, I flipped the page back to the hydraulic pressure graph. My eyes, trained to spot micro-fractures in steel and discrepancies in load-bearing calculations, locked onto the jagged red line at 21:04.

"The PSI spiked to five thousand before the fuel ignition," I said, my voice sounding strange to my own ears—hollow, yet vibrating with a frequency that could shatter glass. I tapped the paper. "That’s not a passive fuel line rupture, Dalton. That’s active engagement. She clamped down on the B-pillar while the battery was still live."

Dalton stiffened. The mask of the grieving son-in-law slipped, revealing the cold, calcified arrogance of Captain Ellis beneath. He snatched the folder, his knuckles whitening.

"You’re reading it wrong, Claire. You’re looking for blame because you can’t handle the grief. It’s a coping mechanism. A pathetic one."

"I’m looking at physics," I countered, standing up. My legs felt weak, but my spine was steel. "You’re asking me to certify that a rookie followed protocol when the data proves she executed a hot extraction without suppression. That’s not a mistake. That’s manslaughter."

He threw the folder onto the coffee table. The papers fanned out, sliding over the glossy surface like debris. "She’s twenty-two, Claire! She panicked. Do you want to destroy a young woman’s life because of a split-second error? Your mother is dead. Nothing brings her back. Why take Bailee down with her?"

"Because she killed her!" The scream tore from my throat, raw and jagged. "And you let her. You stood there, Dalton. I saw you. You were looking at Bailee, not the car."

Silence stretched between us, taut as a wire. Dalton’s eyes narrowed, shifting from irritation to something darker—pity mixed with disdain. He took a step toward me, reaching out, but I flinched back.

"You’ve always been like this," he sneered, his voice dropping to a low, venomous register. "So obsessed with your little rules and regulations. You think you’re saving the world with your clipboard, but you’re just cold. Ice cold. No wonder your mother always looked at me like I was her savior. She knew you couldn’t provide the warmth she needed."

The cruelty of it took my breath away, sharp as a rib fracture. But clarity followed the pain. I looked at him—really looked at him—and saw the rot beneath the uniform. The late nights, the whispered phone calls, the way he’d brushed off Bailee’s previous safety violations as "rookie jitters." It wasn't just incompetence. It was corruption. He was prioritizing his mistress over the charred remains of the woman who had raised me.

I looked down at my left hand. The diamond solitaire, once a promise of a future, now looked like a shackle. I gripped it, twisting it over the knuckle. It resisted, scraping skin, but I yanked it free.

"Get out," I said, tossing the ring onto the pile of falsified reports. It hit the paper with a dull thud.

Dalton laughed—a short, barking sound. "You’re making a mistake. You’re emotional. Hysterical."

"I said get out!"

He picked up the ring, pocketing it with a shrug. "Fine. Have it your way. But remember this, Claire: I’m a decorated Fire Captain. You’re just a grief-stricken girl with a history of anxiety. Who do you think the department will believe?"

The door slammed behind him, the sound echoing like a gunshot. I stood alone in the center of the room, my chest heaving, the phantom smell of gasoline rising in my throat.

***

The next morning, the sun broke through the clouds, a cruel irony that made the world look bright and washed clean. I sat on the floor, surrounded by photos of my mother, when my phone buzzed with a news alert.

*LIVE: Captain Ellis Speaks on Tragic Accident.*

My stomach turned over. I grabbed the remote and flicked on the TV.

There he was, standing on the steps of Harborview Medical Center. He was in his dress blues, medals gleaming in the morning light. Bailee stood next to him, wearing a black dress that was tastefully modest yet perfectly tailored to cling to her frame. She dabbed at dry eyes with a tissue, looking for all the world like a fragile angel.

"We lost a beloved member of our community," Dalton said into the microphone, his voice thick with practiced emotion. "A mother. A teacher. But in the face of death, we are reminded of the preciousness of life."

I watched, frozen, as he turned to Bailee. The cameras zoomed in. He took her hand—the same hand that had held the Jaws of Life, the same hand that had sparked the fire.

"Officer Wilson showed immense bravery in the face of horror," Dalton continued, gazing into her eyes. "She risked everything to try and save a life. And in this darkness, I have found a light I cannot ignore."

He dropped to one knee.

The breath left my body. A collective gasp went up from the reporters on screen. Dalton pulled a ring box from his pocket—not my ring, but a new one, larger, gaudier.

"Bailee Wilson," he said, loud enough for the microphones to catch every syllable. "Life is too short to wait. Will you marry me?"

Bailee covered her mouth, feigning shock, and nodded vigorously. The crowd erupted in applause. The banner at the bottom of the screen read: *TRAGEDY TURNS TO ROMANCE: HERO FIREFIGHTER PROPOSES.*

I stared at the screen, my fingernails digging into my palms until the skin broke. There was no tears left. The grief that had been drowning me began to harden, crystallizing into something sharp and cold. He thought he had buried me along with the truth. He thought he could rewrite the narrative with a smile and a diamond.

I reached for my laptop and opened a new file. I wasn't just a grief-stricken girl. I was a Safety Compliance Officer. And I knew exactly where the bodies were buried.

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