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Part 2: The Breath Within the Dark

articleUseronJune 2, 2026

The two crematorium workers froze, their hands hovering over the heavy iron lever that would have tipped Clara’s casket into the white-hot inferno. The roar of the furnace suddenly felt deafening, a hungry beast denied its meal.

“Daniel, this is psychological delusion,” Dr. Crane stammered, stepping forward. His fingers were trembling so violently he had to shove them into the pockets of his white lab coat. “Post-mortem spasms. It is a documented medical phenomenon. The buildup of gases in a pregnant corpse can cause… muscular contractions. It’s a trick of the light and biology. Nothing more.”

“A trick?” I whispered, my eyes never leaving Clara’s stomach.

Under the harsh fluorescent lights of the chapel, the fabric of her white maternity dress rippled again. This wasn’t a random spasm. It was rhythmic. Deliberate.

Like a hand pushing from the inside, trying to find a way out.

“Shut the coffin!” Helena Vale roared, dropping her facade of the grieving, dignified matriarch. Her voice hit a pitch that made the glass light fixtures vibrate. “Daniel, you are desecrating my daughter’s body! Marcus, remove him from this room immediately!”

Marcus moved with the predatory grace of a man who had never been told no in his entire life. He grabbed my shoulder, his grip like a steel vice, digging into my cheap, rented suit. “You heard my mother, grease monkey. The show is over. You’re going to walk out of here, or I’m going to ensure you spend the rest of your life in a psychiatric ward. We own the judges in this county. Don’t tempt me.”

I didn’t flinch. I didn’t look at him. I simply reached into my jacket pocket one more time. I didn’t pull out another piece of paper.

I pulled out a heavy, black tactical flashlight—a tool from my garage. And before Marcus could drag me away, I slammed the heavy metallic base of the flashlight directly onto his kneecap.

Crack.

Marcus screamed, collapsing to the tiled floor, clutching his leg as curses poured from his mouth. Helena gasped, backing away into the shadows of the chapel, her face twisted in absolute fury.

“Security!” she shrieked. “Call the police!”

“Call them,” I said, my voice dead and cold. “Let’s have the police, the media, and the state coroner look at this ‘post-mortem spasm’ together.”

I stepped back to the edge of the open casket. I ignored the agonizing groans of my brother-in-law on the floor. I ignored Dr. Crane, who looked ready to faint. I leaned over Clara.

Her skin was ice-cold to the touch, painted with the grotesque, thick makeup the funeral home used to hide the pallor of death. But when I pressed my ear directly against her chest, I didn’t hear a heartbeat. Dr. Crane wasn’t entirely lying about that. Her heart was silent.

But then, I felt it. A faint, hot puff of air against my cheek.

She wasn’t breathing through her nose. Her lips were parted just a fraction of a millimeter. And from deep within her throat came a sound so low, so desperate, it broke my heart into a million pieces.

“…D-Dan…”

It was a sigh. A ghost of a whisper.

“She’s alive,” I breathed, tears finally stinging my eyes. “She’s alive! Get an ambulance! Now!”

“No one is calling an ambulance,” a voice said from the doorway.

I whipped my head around. Two men in dark, unmarked security uniforms had entered, locking the heavy oak doors of the crematorium behind them. They didn’t look like standard guards. They carried tactical holsters under their jackets. They were the Vale family’s private security—hired muscle loyal only to Helena’s payroll.

Helena stood beside them, her dry eyes suddenly burning with a calculating, venomous intelligence. The weeping mother was completely gone. In her place stood the billionaire CEO of Vale Pharmaceuticals.

“You should have taken the money I offered you when you married her, Daniel,” Helena said, her voice dropping to a chillingly calm register. “I offered you five million dollars to walk away and leave her alone. You insisted on ‘true love.’ And look where your romance has brought you. To a furnace.”

“What did you do to her?” I demanded, stepping in front of the casket, shielding Clara with my own body. “She’s your daughter! This is your grandchild!”

Helena looked at Clara’s shifting stomach, and for a split second, a flash of genuine horror—not grief, but fear—crossed her aristocratic features.

“You don’t understand what she carries, Daniel,” Helena whispered. “Dr. Crane, prepare the sedative for the boy. We are finishing this today. The ashes must be scattered before the sun sets, or none of us survive what is coming.”

The Secret in the Blood
My mind raced. I was outnumbered, outgunned, and trapped in a soundproofed crematorium room. Marcus was still hobbling on one foot, cursing, while the two guards began drawing their batons, moving toward me with synchronized, lethal intent.

But they didn’t know who I really was. They thought I was just a mechanic. They thought I spent my days changing oil and fixing brakes.

They didn’t know that before I opened my garage, I had spent four years in the Marine Corps as a combat engineer, trained to look at structures, systems, and environments, and figure out exactly how to break them.

I looked at the cremation control panel on the wall to my left. A heavy digital interface with emergency shut-off valves for the natural gas lines feeding the furnace.

“Dr. Crane,” I said, keeping my eyes on the approaching guards. “The Vale family is powerful, but they can’t protect you from a mass murder charge. If they burn her, and you signed the certificate, you go down for premeditated murder.”

Dr. Crane’s eyes darted wildly. “I… I had no choice, Daniel! The bloodwork… her bloodwork wasn’t human anymore! We had to stop it!”

“Shut up, you fool!” Helena barked.

Her bloodwork wasn’t human?

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