
Vows Written in Blood
Vows Written in Blood Chapter 1
Chapter 1
"Move the root ball two degrees to the left, Carlos. It needs to align perfectly with the primary irrigation trench, or the soil erosion will drown it by October."
Clara Vance stood at the edge of the sprawling Bel Air estate, her designer boots caked in a thin layer of damp earth. She pointed a manicured finger toward the massive, fifty-year-old Japanese maple dangling from the crane.
"Two degrees? Boss, you sure?" Carlos called down from the cab of the excavator, wiping sweat from his brow. "It looks dead center from up here!"
"I'm positive," Clara shouted back, raising her voice over the roar of the diesel engine. "The blueprints don't lie, and neither does the grading. If we don't seat it correctly, Mr. Henderson is going to complain about the aesthetics of his koi pond, and I am not refunding a fifty-thousand-dollar tree. Two degrees, Carlos! Drop it slow!"
"You got it, Mrs. Vance!"
Clara stepped back, her eyes narrowing as she methodically assessed the landscape. As the heiress to the Vance shipping empire, she didn't have to work. She could have spent her days lunching at country clubs and hosting charity galas, just as her husband, Julian, frequently suggested. But landscape architecture was her sanctuary. It was a world of order, precision, and tangible growth—a stark contrast to the hollow, glittering society she had been born into.
Her phone vibrated in the pocket of her tailored blazer.
Clara pulled it out, expecting a text from Julian. He was downtown pitching a massive commercial real estate merger to the Sterling family today. Instead, the screen flashed an unknown local number.
She swiped to answer, pressing the phone to her ear as the crane whined in the background. "Clara Vance speaking."
"Mrs. Clara Vance?" a deep, gravelly voice asked. The connection was staticky, layered with the rhythmic thrum of heavy rain and wailing sirens.
"Yes, this is she. Who is calling?"
"Ma'am, this is Officer Davies with the California Highway Patrol. Are you related to a Robert Vance?"
Clara’s posture stiffened. The methodical, business-oriented part of her brain instantly cataloged the tone of the officer's voice. It wasn't a courtesy call. "Robert is my father. Is something wrong? He's supposed to be driving up the Pacific Coast Highway right now. He's taking my six-year-old son, Leo, to the Monterey Aquarium for the weekend."
There was a heavy, agonizing pause on the other end of the line. Clara’s breath hitched.
"Officer Davies? I asked you a question."
"Mrs. Vance, I need you to listen to me very carefully," the officer said, his voice stripped of all professional detachment, leaving only a grim urgency. "There's been an accident on Highway 1, just south of the Bixby Bridge. A black SUV registered to your father went through the guardrail."
The world around Clara seemed to plunge underwater. The roar of the crane faded into a dull, distant hum. "Went through the guardrail? What do you mean, went through? Are they okay? Where are they?"
"Emergency services are on the scene now, ma'am. We have a search and rescue team repelling down the ravine. It's… it's a sheer drop. The vehicle is partially submerged in the surf."
"No," Clara whispered, her fingers gripping the phone so tightly her knuckles turned white. "No, that's impossible. My father is an incredibly careful driver. He has a new car. It has sensors."
"Mrs. Vance, we need you to come to the Monterey County General Hospital immediately. Do you have someone who can drive you? A husband? A family member?"
"My son," Clara choked out, the word tearing at her throat. "My little boy is in that car! Tell me you have him! Tell me he's okay!"
"Ma'am, please. Do not drive yourself. Get someone to bring you—"
"Tell me where my son is!" she screamed, the sound startling Carlos, who abruptly halted the crane.
"We are doing everything we can, Mrs. Vance," Officer Davies replied softly. "Please. Just get to the hospital."
The line went dead.
Clara stood frozen for a fraction of a second before her survival instincts kicked in. Her hands shook violently as she pulled up her contacts and hit Julian’s name.
*Ring. Ring. Ring. Straight to voicemail.*
"Hi, you've reached Julian Vance. I'm likely closing a deal right now, but leave a message and I'll get back to you."
"Julian!" Clara cried into the receiver, already sprinting toward her Range Rover parked at the edge of the site. "Julian, pick up the phone! It's my dad and Leo. There's been an accident on the coast. The police just called. They went off the road. Julian, please, I need you! Call me back!"
She ended the call, threw her car into drive, and peeled out of the estate, tires tearing through the manicured grass. Her heart hammered against her ribs like a trapped bird.
She hit redial.
*Ring. Ring. Voicemail.*
"Julian, please!" she begged, tears spilling over her eyelashes, blurring the road ahead. "Where are you? You said the pitch was at ten! It's noon! Why is your phone off? Julian, I can't do this alone. They're pulling the car out of the ocean. Please, God, pick up the phone!"
She drove recklessly, weaving through traffic on the 405, her foot pinned to the floorboard. She hit redial a third time. A fourth. A fifth.
*Voicemail. Voicemail. Voicemail.*
"Dammit, Julian, answer me!" she shrieked, slamming her palm against the steering wheel. "Your son is in a wreck! Pick up!"
For thirty agonizing minutes, the only sound in the car was Clara's frantic breathing and the automated voice of Julian’s voicemail. She left six messages, each one more hysterical and broken than the last. She needed him. She needed her husband’s calm, charming demeanor. She needed him to tell her it was a mistake, that Leo and her father were fine.
Suddenly, her phone chimed. A text message.
Clara snatched it off the passenger seat, nearly swerving into the next lane. It was from Julian.
*Stop blowing up my phone. I told you my battery is dying and I'm in the middle of the Sterling merger pitch. This is the biggest deal of my career. Whatever you're overreacting about, handle it yourself. I'll call you tonight.*
Clara stared at the glowing words, a cold, sickening shock washing over her. *Handle it yourself.*
"Handle it myself?" she whispered, a hysterical sob escaping her lips. "Julian… Leo is in the ocean."
She threw the phone onto the floorboard. A profound, terrifying isolation wrapped around her. The man who had vowed to protect her, the man who kissed Leo’s forehead every morning, was ignoring her for a real estate pitch.
The skies darkened as she sped north along the winding coastal highway, heavy rain beginning to slash against her windshield. The fog was thick, rolling off the Pacific like a shroud.
Up ahead, through the gloom, she saw the flashing red and blue lights.
Dozens of police cruisers, ambulances, and fire trucks choked the narrow coastal road. Flares hissed on the wet asphalt, casting an eerie crimson glow over the jagged cliffs.
Clara slammed on her brakes, abandoning her vehicle in the middle of the road. She burst out into the freezing rain, ignoring the officers shouting at her.
"Hey! Lady, you can't be here! This is a restricted perimeter!" a deputy yelled, stepping into her path.
"I'm Clara Vance!" she screamed, shoving past him with a strength she didn't know she possessed. "That's my father's car! Where is my son? Where is Leo?!"
"Mrs. Vance! Stop!"
But Clara had already reached the edge of the guardrail. The metal barrier was twisted and violently sheared off, pointing down into the yawning, rain-slicked ravine.
Down below, amidst the crashing, violent surf and the jagged black rocks, a heavy-duty tow cable groaned under immense weight.
"No, no, no, no," Clara chanted, falling to her knees in the mud.
Slowly, agonizingly, the crane hoisted the crushed, mangled remains of a black SUV out of the churning water. The roof was completely caved in. The windows were shattered. It didn't even look like a car anymore; it looked like a crushed tin can.
"Leo," Clara breathed, the rain mixing with the hot tears streaming down her face.
As the wrecked vehicle swung over the rocks, the twisted rear door groaned and swung open. Debris spilled out, tumbling down the cliffside into the foam.
Among the debris, a small, bright object caught Clara’s eye. It bounced off a rock and landed in a shallow pool of water near the shoreline.
It was a bright yellow plush submarine. Leo’s favorite toy. The one he couldn't sleep without.
Clara’s vision tunneled. The roaring of the ocean, the shouting of the police, the flashing lights—it all vanished, leaving only the sight of that yellow toy soaking up the dark, muddy water. A visceral, blood-curdling scream tore from her throat, echoing off the unforgiving cliffs.
Vows Written in Blood of Contents
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