His Daughter’s Call Led Him To A Biker Clubhouse Full Of Secrets-xurixuri

Mason Vance had built his life around the idea that danger could be predicted. In boardrooms, he predicted market threats. In deserts, years earlier, he predicted ambushes. In private security, he predicted what powerful people feared most.

But nothing in his training prepared him for the moment his daughter’s phone rang during a board meeting, and the voice on the line was not Ivy’s. It was Clara’s.

His wife did not know she had called him. She did not know the phone in her pocket had opened a door into a nightmare. Mason heard shouting, chaos, and then Ivy’s voice cutting through everything.

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“Mom, please help me! Make them stop!”

Then he heard Clara laugh.

Those few seconds would divide Mason’s life into before and after. Before, he had believed betrayal was something that arrived with warning signs. After, he understood betrayal could wear red lipstick and a cream trench coat.

He left the boardroom without explaining himself. Men worth billions called after him. A quarterly vote sat unfinished on the table. Mason did not turn around, because the only voice he could hear was Ivy’s.

By the time he reached the hospital, the emergency room smelled of bleach, rainwater, and fear. The nurse handed him a clear plastic bag under sick white lights, and inside were his daughter’s clothes.

Or what was left of them.

Her jeans were torn from hip to knee. Her white sweater had been cut open by paramedics. One sleeve was missing. Tangled in the fabric was a single pale-blue ribbon from her hair.

Mason knew that ribbon. Ivy wore it when she wanted to feel brave. She had worn it to interviews, family dinners, and charity events where strangers looked at her last name before they looked at her face.

He held that bag like it weighed a thousand pounds. Behind two swinging doors, Ivy lay with machines breathing for her while doctors spoke in careful sentences no father ever wants to hear.

They were not sure she would wake up.

Mason had been called many things in his life. Founder. Billionaire. Contractor. Soldier. Threat. But in that hallway, none of those titles mattered. Under those fluorescent lights, he was only a father.

A father holding proof that his daughter had fought for her life.

Officer Blake arrived with a notepad in his hand and gum in his mouth. He looked too young to be that tired, and too relaxed to be standing in front of a man whose child was in a coma.

“How is the investigation going?” Mason asked. “Who did this?”

Blake shifted his weight. His pen never touched the page.

He said they had gone out to the site. An old clubhouse off Route 9. Locals called it the Viper’s Den. The words landed with a weight Mason could feel in his teeth.

“And?” Mason asked.

Blake shrugged and said it looked like a party had gotten out of hand.

A party.

The waiting room froze around that word. A woman holding a paper cup stopped halfway to her mouth. A man near the exit studied the floor. The receptionist hovered over her keyboard, suddenly still.

Nobody moved.

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