
My Son Called the Woman Who Killed My Mother "Mom
Chapter 4
The gas pump clicked, a hollow, mocking sound in the damp night air. I stared at the small digital screen, the red letters burning into my retinas: *DECLINED*.
I tried again. *DECLINED*.
Everett hadn’t just taken my home and my son; he had erased me. He had frozen the joint accounts, cut the credit cards, and left me with a quarter tank of gas and the clothes on my back. I stood under the harsh fluorescent lights of the service station, the rain plastering my hair to my skull, shivering not from the cold, but from the terrifying clarity of my own obsolescence.
I got back into the car, my hands numb as I gripped the steering wheel. On the passenger seat, buckled in like a grotesque parody of a passenger, sat the brass urn.
"I'm sorry, Mom," I whispered, my voice raspy from hours of screaming. "I'm so sorry."
The windshield wipers slapped back and forth, a metronome counting down the seconds of a life that no longer belonged to me. I didn't have a destination, but the road seemed to pull me northward, away from the city lights that felt like judging eyes. I drove until the pavement narrowed and the trees closed in, turning into skeletal fingers reaching for the weeping sky.
Deception Pass. The name tasted like iron in my mouth. How fitting.
I parked on the gravel shoulder near the bridge. The structure loomed ahead, a steel ribcage suspended over the churning, violent currents of the sound below. The wind howled here, a feral thing that shook the car frame.
I looked at the urn one last time. If I took her with me, she would be lost to the ocean forever. If I left her, Everett might find her. But Everett didn't care about ash; he only cared about erasing evidence. She was safer here, in the silence of this car, than she had ever been in that house of lies.
"Goodbye," I choked out, touching the cold metal lid.
I stepped out into the storm. The wind hit me like a physical blow, tearing at my coat, urging me toward the edge. I walked to the center of the bridge, my heels clicking a hollow rhythm on the wet concrete. Below, the water was a swirling abyss of black and grey, the currents colliding with a violence that mirrored the ruin inside my chest.
I gripped the cold steel railing. My wedding ring was gone—Everett had demanded it back before throwing me out—but the phantom weight of it still strangled my finger.
*"I hate you. I want Mama Miriam."*
Remy’s voice echoed in the wind, louder than the crashing waves. My son. My sweet, manipulated boy. He was gone. The mother he knew was dead, replaced by a monster painted by Miriam’s lies. If I stayed, I would only be a ghost haunting their perfect new life, a stain they would scrub away again and again.
I climbed onto the lower rung of the railing. The metal was slippery with rain. I swung one leg over, then the other, balancing precariously on the narrow ledge. The drop was dizzying, a magnetic pull dragging at my soul.
I closed my eyes. The roar of the ocean filled my ears, drowning out the memory of the porcelain shattering, of my mother gasping, of Everett’s cold, dead eyes.
"Mom," I breathed into the gale. "Catch me."
I leaned forward, surrendering to gravity.
Tires screeched. A sound so shrill it pierced the storm.
"Eleanora!"
The scream was raw, masculine, and terrified. Before my brain could process the voice, a hand clamped around my wrist with the force of a vice.
The jolt nearly dislocated my shoulder. I gasped, my feet slipping off the wet steel, dangling over the abyss. I looked up, rain blinding me, into a face I hadn’t seen in fifteen years.
Dominick Ford.
He was soaked, his black hair plastered to his forehead, his jaw locked in a grimace of pure exertion. His tuxedo jacket was ruined, the expensive fabric straining as he held my entire weight with one arm.
"Don't you dare!" he roared, his eyes blazing with a ferocity that terrified me. "Look at me, El! Don't you let go!"
"Let me go," I sobbed, kicking at the empty air. "There's nothing left!"
"I am not losing you again!" He gritted his teeth, veins bulging in his neck as he hauled me upward. With a guttural cry of effort, he dragged me over the railing.
I collapsed onto the wet pavement, gasping for air, the rough concrete scraping my cheek. Dominick didn't let go. He fell to his knees beside me, pulling me into his chest, his arms wrapping around me so tightly I could feel the frantic hammering of his heart against my own.
"I've got you," he whispered into my hair, his voice trembling. "I've got you."
A second car door slammed. Rapid, light footsteps approached, and then a soft, warm weight settled over my shivering shoulders.
"Oh my god, El," a female voice cracked. Alessia.
I looked up through the rain. She was wrapping a foil shock blanket around me, her face pale and streaked with tears. She looked older than I remembered, but her eyes—warm, fierce, and terrified—were the same.
"How...?" I croaked, my throat raw.
"We've been tracking your phone," Alessia said, tucking the blanket tighter around my neck. "You stopped answering my texts months ago. Then the account went dark. Dominick had a feeling... a bad feeling."
Dominick pulled back slightly, his large hands framing my face, forcing me to look at him. The rain dripped from his lashes, but his gaze was steady, an anchor in the storm.
"We saw the accounts freeze today," Dominick said, his voice low and dangerous, a sharp contrast to the gentle way his thumb brushed a wet strand of hair from my cheek. "We saw the deed transfer. We knew he was trying to bury you."
He looked toward my car, where the urn sat alone on the seat, then back to me. The despair in my chest didn't vanish, but for the first time in months, something else flickered there. Not hope. Not yet. But safety.
"You're not alone, Eleanora," Dominick vowed, the promise dark and absolute. "And we are going to make them pay for every single tear."
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