WebNovels

Chapter 18 - Chapter Eighteen

​​The Ghost in the Machine

​The gas station on the edge of the marshes was a relic of the 1970s, illuminated by a flickering neon sign that buzzed like a dying insect.

​Julie walked into the light, looking like a drowned specter. The clerk, an older man with skin like parchment, didn't even look up from his tabloid.

​"Payphone's broken," he grunted.

​"I need to make one call," Julie said, her voice raspy. She placed a hundred-dollar bill—soaked but unmistakable—on the counter.

​The clerk looked at the money, then at her. He slid a battered cordless phone across the laminate.

​She dialed Ethan's private number from memory.

​"Hello?" Ethan's voice was sharp, laced with the tension of a man who had been looking over his shoulder for twenty-four hours.

​"Ethan. It's me."

​There was a sharp intake of breath. "Julie? Where are you? The news—they're saying Andrew's dead. They're saying you're a fugitive."

​"I have the ledger, Ethan. The real one. The Origin blueprints."

​"Listen to me very carefully," Ethan whispered. "Don't go to the police. Don't go to your apartment. Victor has a 'recovery team' at every precinct in the city. He's purged the SEC files Andrew sent. He's rewriting the story as we speak."

​"Where do I go?"

​"There's a safe house in Red Hook. An old shipyard office. I'm heading there now. I've been working with a contact in the Attorney General's office—someone Victor hasn't bought yet. If we can get the ledger to her, the narrative flips."

​"Ethan," she hesitated. "Andrew... he stayed behind. He brought the vault down on them."

​Silence stretched over the line.

​"Andrew Scott didn't do anything by accident, Julie," Ethan said finally. "If he stayed, he had a reason. But right now, you are the only witness left. If you die, Origin stays buried. Get to Red Hook. Now."

​She hung up and handed the phone back.

​As she stepped back out into the rain, a black sedan pulled into the lot. No lights. No plates.

​Julie didn't wait. She ducked behind a row of rusted oil drums and slipped into the shadows of the woods behind the station.

​She wasn't just a liability anymore. She was the evidence.

​Across the river, deep beneath the rubble of the Manhattan vault, a hand moved.

​Slowly, fingers caked in white dust and blood curled into a fist. A single red light on a backup generator flickered to life, illuminating a pocket of space between two falle​Would youn steel beams.

​Andrew Scott opened his eyes.

​His lungs were filled with fire, and his left arm was pinned beneath a ton of reinforced concrete. But as he looked at the wreckage of the men who had tried to kill him, a cold, jagged smile touched his lips.

​He was still in the gravity of the city. And he wasn't done pulling it down.

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