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Chapter 13 - Chapter Thirteen

The Lower Levels

​The subterranean garage was a cavern of echoes. Every drip of water from the overhead pipes sounded like a gunshot.

​Andrew didn't head for his fleet of custom-armored sedans. He knew Victor's team would have remote-kill switches for every engine registered to Scott Enterprises. Instead, he moved toward the far corner, where the dusty, unglamorous vehicles of the building's overnight maintenance crew were parked.

​"There," Andrew pointed to a battered, silver mid-sized SUV. It was nondescript, invisible, and perfect.

​"You said steal it," Julie whispered, her eyes darting toward the elevator bank. The digital floor indicator was moving. The "containment team" was already descending.

​Andrew didn't use a coat hanger or a slim-jim. He pulled a small, black handheld device from his tactical bag—a signal relay. He held it near the driver-side door. Within three seconds, the locks clicked open.

​"Get in. Low in the seat."

​Julie scrambled into the passenger side, pulling the dark windbreaker tight around her. The interior smelled of stale coffee and sawdust. It was a jarring contrast to the scent of expensive leather and ozone she had lived in for the past weeks.

​Andrew jammed a screwdriver into the ignition housing with a brutal efficiency that surprised her. With a sharp twist, the engine sputtered, groaned, and then roared into a steady idle.

​"How do you know how to do that?" she asked, her heart hammering against her ribs.

​"I didn't spend my entire life in a boardroom, Julie," he replied, his eyes fixed on the rearview mirror.

​The elevator doors at the far end of the garage hissed open.

​Three men in tactical gear stepped out. They didn't shout. They didn't hesitate. They fanned out, their suppressed submachine guns raised in a low-ready position.

​"Hold on," Andrew said.

​He didn't turn on the headlights. He shifted into reverse, floored the accelerator, and slammed the SUV backward. The tires screeched, smoking against the concrete.

​The shooters opened fire. The thud-thud-thud of rounds hitting the rear tailgate was muffled, but terrifying. Glass shattered, raining down on the dashboard.

​Andrew swung the wheel hard. The SUV swung in a violent arc, its tail-end clipping a concrete pillar with a bone-jarring crunch. He shifted into drive and hammered the gas.

​The SUV surged forward, aiming directly for the exit ramp. One of the gunmen lunged into their path, leveling his weapon.

​Andrew didn't flinch. He didn't swerve.

​At the last possible microsecond, the gunman dove out of the way. The SUV hit the incline of the ramp, catching a brief moment of air before slamming back down onto the pavement of the rainy New York street.

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