The call came through on a Tuesday afternoon while I was reviewing quarterly reports in my corner office on the twenty-fifth floor. Eleanor Vance, that’s me—though most people in Chicago’s logistics industry know me simply as “the woman who turned one used truck into an empire worth hundreds of millions.” I built Vance Logistics over thirty years, starting with nothing but debts that would have broken most people and a stubborn refusal to stay poor.
“Miss Ellie,” my head of security Luther said, his voice carrying that particular flatness that meant trouble, “I think you need to see something. I’m sending you a location pin.”
I looked at my phone screen as the pin dropped—a small park near Lake Forest, about forty minutes from downtown. “What am I looking at, Luther?”
“Just come,” he said. “I’ll drive you myself.”
Twenty minutes later, I was in the back of my Mercedes watching the city give way to the manicured lawns of Chicago’s wealthy suburbs. Luther drove in silence, which was unlike him. He usually filled quiet moments with updates about security protocols or minor issues that needed my attention. This silence felt heavy, deliberate, like he was giving me space to prepare for something he knew would hurt.
We pulled into a small neighborhood park—the kind with wooden benches and old oak trees, designed for nannies with strollers and elderly couples taking afternoon walks. It was nearly empty on this gray autumn afternoon, just leaves skittering across the pathway in the wind.
That’s when I saw him.
But the knowledge that our blood, the blood Preston Galloway had called inferior, was actually made of something far more valuable than his ever would be.
It was made of steel.