
Echoes of a Shattered Vow
Chapter 2
Chapter 2
The morning sun did nothing to warm the sterile, echoing lobby of the First National Bank. The floors were polished granite, the walls lined with imposing steel doors, and the air smelled faintly of ozone and old money.
I hovered just behind Julian's left shoulder, the chill of my spectral existence matching the icy demeanor radiating from my husband. He stood tall and unmoving, dressed in a sharp charcoal suit, staring blankly at the heavy vault door at the end of the hall.
Clara paced nervously beside him, her high heels clicking a frantic, erratic rhythm against the stone floor. She wore a designer trench coat, her blonde hair pulled back tightly, but the dark circles under her eyes betrayed a sleepless night.
"Julian, this is absurd," Clara said, stopping to grab his arm. Her voice was shrill, echoing slightly in the vast, empty lobby. "We should be picking out floral arrangements. We should be calling the caterers. We shouldn't be chasing down the last pathetic lies of a dead woman."
Julian didn't look at her. He kept his eyes locked on the vault. "I don't leave loose ends, Clara. You know that."
"She tortured you!" Clara snapped, her grip tightening on his sleeve. "She broke your heart, she stole your money, and she nearly ruined your company. Why are you letting her ghost back in? Why give her this power over you?"
"She has no power over me," Julian said, his voice terrifyingly calm. He finally turned his head to look at her, his gray eyes devoid of warmth. "If there is evidence of the offshore accounts in that box, I will reclaim every single cent she stole. I will erase her completely. That isn't giving her power. That is finishing the job."
Clara swallowed hard, her throat working anxiously. "And what if it isn't money? What if it's just more of her manipulations? A letter blaming you? A final insult? Julian, please. Let me take the key. Let me burn whatever is in there. Protect your peace."
I watched Clara’s desperate performance with a mixture of disgust and dark amusement. She wasn't worried about Julian’s peace. She was worried about her own survival. She had been the one to let Victor Sterling into Thorne Industries. She was the mole. And she was terrified I had left proof.
"I don't need protection," Julian said flatly, pulling his arm out of her grasp. "I need the truth."
A heavy silence descended as the bank manager, a balding man named Mr. Higgins, scurried out from a side office. He looked incredibly intimidated by Julian's mere presence.
"Mr. Thorne, sir. Everything is ready," Higgins stammered, holding a biometric tablet. "If you'll just press your thumb here, and provide the key..."
Julian pressed his thumb to the glowing green screen. A soft chime echoed. He handed over the brass key.
"Excellent. Right this way, please."
Higgins led them past the massive steel gates and into the private viewing rooms deep within the vault’s belly. The room was small, windowless, and illuminated by harsh fluorescent lights. In the center sat a simple metal table.
"I will retrieve box 814 and leave you to your privacy," Higgins said, bowing slightly before rushing out.
Clara began pacing again the moment the door clicked shut. "This is a mistake. I feel it in my bones, Julian. She was toxic. Whatever is in that box is toxic."
"Sit down, Clara," Julian commanded. It wasn't a request.
Clara froze, her mouth snapping shut. She slowly lowered herself into one of the metal chairs, her hands trembling as she folded them in her lap.
A moment later, Higgins returned, carrying a long, heavy steel lockbox. He placed it carefully on the center of the table. "I will be right outside if you require anything, Mr. Thorne."
Higgins left. Julian stepped up to the table. He stared down at the dull gray metal of box 814. For a fleeting second, his hands hovered over the lid, and I saw a tremor in his fingers. The ruthless billionaire facade cracked, just a millimeter. I knew what he was feeling. He was remembering the woman he thought he married. He was remembering the late nights, the whispered promises, the way we used to laugh before the poison and the lies destroyed us.
*I'm sorry, Julian,* I whispered, reaching out to place my ghostly hands over his. *I'm so sorry.*
Julian inhaled sharply, his jaw locking into place. He flipped the latches and threw the lid open.
Clara leaned forward, her eyes wide with panicked anticipation.
Inside the box, there was no stack of offshore bank documents. There were no bearer bonds. There were no printed ledgers of stolen money.
Resting on a bed of black velvet were only two items.
The first was a small, clear medical vial with a secure rubber stopper. It was completely empty, save for a microscopic residue of a pale blue liquid coating the glass.
The second was a standard silver USB flash drive. But the silver casing was heavily smeared with a dark, rusted brown substance.
Dried blood.
Clara recoiled instantly, kicking her chair back so hard it screeched against the floor. "Ew! What is that? Is that blood? Julian, don't touch it, it's biohazardous!"
Julian didn't move. He stared at the vial and the blood-stained drive, his brow furrowing in deep, profound confusion. "A medical vial?" he murmured, his voice barely above a whisper.
"It's a sick joke," Clara insisted, her voice rising in pitch. "She was insane, Julian. She put her own blood on a computer drive to traumatize you from beyond the grave. Throw it away!"
Julian ignored her. Slowly, delicately, he reached into the box. He picked up the vial first, holding it up to the harsh fluorescent light. He studied the pale blue residue. "This... this looks like the compound Dr. Aris showed me. When I was in the hospital."
"Julian, stop it," Clara begged, stepping forward to grab his wrist. "You're overthinking it. It's trash."
Julian yanked his arm away, his gray eyes flashing with sudden, explosive anger. "Do not touch me, Clara. And do not tell me what to do."
Clara shrank back, genuinely frightened by the raw aggression in his voice.
Julian set the vial down and picked up the flash drive. He stared at the dried blood coating the metal. It was my blood. I remembered the night I had copied the files. Victor’s men had beaten me severely to ensure I understood the stakes of our arrangement. I had dragged myself to a secure terminal, bleeding from a deep gash on my temple, my fingers slipping on the keys as I locked the drive.
Julian unzipped his sleek leather briefcase and pulled out his private laptop. He set it down next to the lockbox and flipped the screen open. The Apple logo illuminated his stark, intense features.
"Julian, please," Clara tried one last time, her voice cracking. "For me. If you love me, you will close that laptop and walk out of here with me right now."
Julian paused. He looked at Clara, really looked at her. "If there is nothing but madness on this drive, Clara, then we walk away, and we never speak of her again. But I am not leaving a single shadow behind me."
He turned back to the laptop. With a sharp, decisive click, he plugged the blood-smeared flash drive into the USB port.
A prompt appeared on the screen. He clicked it. A single folder opened, containing one audio-video file titled: *For Julian.*
Clara let out a shaky breath, her nails digging into the palms of her hands.
Julian clicked play.
The screen went black for a second before snapping into grainy, low-light focus.
The video showed me.
Julian violently flinched, his hand gripping the edge of the metal table so hard his knuckles turned translucent.
On the screen, I looked terrifying. My face was bruised, a horrific cut bleeding freely down the side of my cheek, dripping onto my collarbone. My hair was matted with sweat and dirt. I was staring directly into the camera lens, my eyes hollow, haunted, but burning with a fierce, pragmatic resolve.
Clara let out a small gasp.
"If you're hearing this, Julian," my recorded voice echoed through the small concrete room, trembling but resolute. "The poison is gone from your blood. And I am gone from your life."
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