Lex grabbed the laptop and shoved it into a backpack he found in the corner. The sirens grew louder, multiplying like a swarm. Two minutes, maybe less.
He rifled through drawers. Cash. Fake IDs. A pistol with two magazines. His hands closed around the weapon. Cold. Heavy. Familiar.
Muscle memory kicked in. He checked the chamber, loaded a magazine, and tucked the gun into his waistband. Three years of playing weak had not erased his training.
The sirens stopped outside.
Lex killed the lights and moved to the window. Three police cars blocked the street. Officers poured out, hands on their weapons.
“Lex Andrews!” A voice boomed through a megaphone. “We know you are in there. Come out with your hands up.”
He glanced at his phone. The safe house address glowed on the screen. Twelve miles away. He would never make it on the bike.
A fire escape clung to the back of the building. Lex slung the backpack over his shoulder and climbed through the window. Metal groaned under his weight. Below, an alley stretched into darkness.
“Movement on the east side!” An officer shouted.
Flashlight beams swept toward him.
Lex descended two floors and dropped. He hit the ground hard, his ribs exploding with fresh pain. No time. He ran.
Footsteps thundered behind him. “Stop! Police!”
The alley opened onto a loading dock. Delivery trucks sat idle in the darkness. Lex vaulted over a chain link fence and kept running. His lungs burned. His vision blurred.
A bullet cracked against the brick beside his head.
They were shooting. At him. For allegedly attacking someone.
This was not protocol. This was execution.
Lex zigzagged between buildings, using every trick his father had taught him. Stay low. Stay unpredictable. Never run straight.
He emerged onto a main street. Late-night traffic crawled past. He spotted a taxi and flagged it down, forcing his breathing to slow.
The cab stopped. Lex climbed in.
“Where to?” The driver asked without looking up from his phone.
Lex read the address. “Industrial district. Riverside.”
The driver finally looked at him in the rearview mirror. His eyes widened at Lex’s bloodied shirt and bruised face. “You okay, man?”
“Rough night. I will pay double if you drive fast and do not ask questions.”
The driver hesitated, then nodded. “Cash upfront.”
Lex pulled out five hundred dollars. “Half now. Half when we arrive.”
They drove.
Twenty minutes later, the taxi stopped outside a derelict warehouse. Rusted metal. Broken windows. It looked abandoned.
“You sure this is the place?” The driver asked nervously.
“Positive.” Lex handed him the rest of the money. “You never saw me.”
“Never saw who?”
Lex stepped out and the taxi sped away.
The warehouse loomed before him like a sleeping giant. He approached the side entrance and knocked three times. Paused. Twice more.
The door opened.
The woman in black from the Sterling mansion stood there, her scar catching the dim light. “You are late.”
“I was busy getting shot at by cops.”
“I know. We monitored the police scanner. Inside. Now.”
The warehouse interior was transformed. Computers lined the walls. Monitors displayed security feeds from across the city. Six people worked at various stations, all wearing tactical gear.
This was not a safe house. This was a command centre.
In the middle of it all stood a man Lex had not seen in three years.
Marcus Kane looked older. Grey streaked his dark hair. New scars crossed his face. But his eyes held the same fierce intelligence that had built an empire once before.
“Dad.” The word came out strangled.
Marcus crossed the space in three strides and pulled Lex into an embrace. “I am sorry, son. For everything. For letting you suffer. For watching you endure hell while I built this.”
Lex pulled back. “Why? Why fake your death? Why abandon me?”
“Because they were coming for both of us.” Marcus gestured to a monitor showing old newspaper headlines. “Andrews Industries Collapses.” “CEO Marcus Kane Dies in Fire.” “Sole Heir Left Penniless.”
“The Zhangs sabotaged our factories. Bribed our investors. Poisoned our reputation. But they wanted more than our company, Lex. They wanted me dead. The fire was supposed to kill us both.”
“Then how did you survive?”
“I had a warning. An informant in their organisation. I faked my death and went underground. But I could not take you with me. If you disappeared, they would know I was alive. So I let them think they won.”
“You let them torture me for three years!” Lex’s voice cracked. “You let the Sterlings beat me. Humiliate me. You let Sophia…”
“I know what Sophia did. And I know it destroyed you.” Marcus’s jaw clenched. “But you had to see the truth. You had to understand who our enemies really are. If I had told you three years ago, you would not have believed me.”
“So you sacrificed me.”
“I turned you into a weapon.” Marcus pointed to the monitors. “For three years, you lived in the enemy’s house. You heard their conversations. Learned their routines. Discovered their secrets. Now we use that knowledge to burn their world down.”
Lex wanted to argue, to rage, to hit something. But part of him knew his father was right. The scared, naive boy who married Sophia Sterling was gone. In his place stood someone harder. Colder.
Dangerous.
“What do you want from me?” Lex asked.
“I want you to help me destroy them. All of them. The Zhangs. The Sterlings. Every family that profits from crushing people like us.”
“And Sophia?”
Marcus’s expression darkened. “Sophia made her choice three years ago. She is not your wife, Lex. She never was. She is an enemy agent who was planted in your life to monitor you.”
“I do not believe that. She could not fake three years of…”
“Look at this.” The woman in black, whose name Lex still did not know, pulled up video footage on the main monitor.
It showed Sophia. Tonight. At the Sterling mansion. After Lex escaped.
She stood in Gerald’s study, her face calm and composed. No tears. No fear.
“He is gone?” Gerald asked.
“Yes. I called the police as instructed. They will find him by morning.”
“Good. Andrew will be pleased. The last loose end is finally being tied up.”
“What about the files? If Lex knows about his father”
“Then we kill them both.” Andrew Zhang stepped into frame, his expression cold. “I am tired of playing games with the Kane family. Marcus Kane should have died three years ago. His son should have died tonight. But since they insist on surviving, we will finish this permanently.”
Sophia nodded. “What do you need from me?”
“Keep up the act. Play the grieving, betrayed wife. When we find Lex, you will be the bait that draws him out.”
“And then?”
Andrew smiled. “Then I kill him myself.”
The video ended.
Lex stood frozen, his world collapsing around him. Sophia knew everything. Had always known. Their marriage, their moments together, every word she had ever spoken to him was a lie.
“Now do you understand?” Marcus asked quietly. “This is not about business, son. This is survival. And the only way we survive is if we strike first.”
Lex’s hands clenched into fists. The pain in his ribs faded. The exhaustion disappeared. All that remained was cold, crystalline fury.
“Tell me the plan,” he said.
Marcus smiled. It was not a pleasant smile. “First, we expose Gerald Sterling’s corruption. Riverside goes public tomorrow. The permits scandal breaks. Sterling Industries crashes.”
“And then?”
“Then we go after Andrew Zhang. We have evidence linking the Zhang Corporation to international arms trafficking. When that goes public, the government seizes everything.”
“That still leaves Sophia.”
“Yes.” Marcus studied his son’s face. “What do you want to do about her?”
Lex thought about the woman who had shared his bed for three years. The woman who had watched him suffer and said nothing. The woman who had just sold him out to his would-be killers.
“She said she wanted an annulment,” Lex said quietly. “Let us give her one. But first, we make her watch everything she helped build turn to ash.”
“That is my boy.”
The woman in black spoke up. “We have a problem. The police are expanding their search. They are calling you armed and dangerous. Shoot on sight orders.”
“Then we do not give them a chance to shoot.” Lex turned to his father. “What resources do we have?”
“Money. Weapons. Intel. And six of the best operatives I have trained in the last three years. Whatever you need, it is yours.”
“Good. Because tomorrow night, I am crashing Sophia’s dinner with Andrew Zhang.”
Marcus raised an eyebrow. “That is suicide.”
“No.” Lex’s smile matched his father’s. “That is a declaration of war.“
Latest Chapter
Chapter Fifty: Verification
The bookstore felt different when Michael opened it the next morning. Every shadow held potential threats. Every customer could be under surveillance. Every sound made him reach instinctively for his weapon.Sarah noticed. “You’re on edge.”“Meeting strangers who claim they can protect our daughter. Of course, I’m on edge.”Emma was at school. Normal Tuesday. Normal schedule. Except that three of Dr. Foster’s operatives were supposedly watching her already. Michael had spotted none of them during drop-off. Either they were excellent at concealment or they didn’t exist.He would know soon enough.At eleven-thirty, Sarah flipped the sign to “Closed for Private Event.” They moved chairs into a semicircle. Created a meeting space that felt less like an ambush. Michael positioned himself where he could see both entrances. Old habits from his previous life.Noon arrived. Nothing happened.Twelve-oh-five. Still nothing.“Maybe they’re not coming,” Sarah said.Then the door opened. Dr Foster
Chapter Forty-Nine: The Meeting
Michael went alone. Left before dawn while Sarah and Emma slept. Left a note saying he had an early supplier meeting. Another lie to protect them. Another secret to carry.The warehouse district was exactly what he expected. Empty buildings. Broken windows. The kind of place where bad things happened and nobody noticed.He found the address. An old factory. Abandoned for years. The door was unlocked. An invitation. Or a trap.Michael entered carefully. Hand near his concealed weapon. Eyes scanning for threats. Every instinct screams danger.Inside, the factory was dark. Empty machinery cast strange shadows. Water dripped somewhere. The air smelled like rust and decay.“Hello, Michael.” A voice from the darkness. Female. Calm. Familiar somehow.A woman stepped into view. Late twenties. Athletic build. Dark hair pulled back. She wore tactical clothing. Moved like someone trained for violence.“Who are you?” Michael demanded.“My name is Dr Rachel Foster. I work for an organisation that
Chapter Forty-Eight: The First Sign
Two years passed. Emma turned ten. Life continued its peaceful rhythm. The bookstore thrived. Sarah opened a second location. Michael coached Emma’s soccer team. Normal family life. Beautiful in its simplicity.Then the first sign appeared.It was during a soccer game. Regional tournament. Emma’s team was losing two to one. Five minutes left. Emma had the ball near midfield.Michael watched from the sideline. Saw her accelerate. Saw her move past defenders. Faster than she should be. Faster than any ten-year-old should be.She took the shot from thirty yards out. The ball flew. Perfect arc. Perfect speed. Hit the top corner of the goal. Impossible shot for a child her age.The crowd cheered. Her teammates celebrated. The referee allowed the goal. Nobody questioned it.Except Michael. He saw what others missed. The speed was wrong. The power was wrong. The precision was inhuman.The enhancements were activated. Just like Dr Chen warned. Just like Marcus planned.After the game, Emma wa
Chapter Forty-Six: Vancouver
Michael arrived in Vancouver alone. He told Sarah he was meeting a book distributor. Told Emma he would be home in two days. Told Maya to watch over them both while he was gone.The lies felt necessary. Protective. He was hunting someone dangerous. Someone who had fooled him once already. He would not risk his family being anywhere near this confrontation.Dr Sarah Winters lived in a quiet neighbourhood near the university. Expensive homes. Well-maintained yards. The kind of place where professors and doctors retired comfortably.Michael watched her house from a rental car parked two blocks away. Studying patterns. Looking for security. Planning his approach.On the second day, he saw her. A woman in her late forties. Grey hair pulled back. Casual clothes. She walked to her mailbox. Collected letters. Went back inside.She looked ordinary. Harmless. Like any other retired professional enjoying a quiet life.But Michael knew better. Knew that monsters often wore normal faces. That dang
Chapter Forty-Five: The Hunter
Michael started at the beginning. At the clinic where the impostor performed the procedure. Someone owned that building. Someone is permitted to use it. Someone knew something.He drove there at dawn. The clinic still sat empty. Abandoned. No signs of recent activity.But Maya had taught him how to look deeper. How to find traces others missed. He examined the power meter. It had been active three weeks ago. The day of Emma’s procedure. Then went dormant again.Someone had turned the power on. Used the building. Turned it off. Covered their tracks.Michael checked the property records on his phone. The clinic was owned by a shell company. Pacific Medical Holdings LLC. Registered in Delaware. No public owners listed.But shell companies had to file paperwork. Had to have registered agents. Had to leave trails.He called a contact from his old life. Someone who owed him a favour. A corporate investigator named David Park.“Lex Andrews. I thought you were dead.”“I am. This is Michael Th
Chapter Forty-Four: The First Warning
Three weeks passed. Normal, peaceful weeks. Emma started a new art class. Sarah expanded the bookstore with a children’s section. Michael finally stopped checking locks obsessively.Life was good. Simple. Safe.Then the first letter arrived.Plain envelope. No return address. Michael’s name is written in typewritten letters. Not handwritten. Not personal. Clinical.He opened it at the kitchen table while Sarah made coffee. Inside was a single printed page.“Dear Michael,You made a mistake trusting Dr Chen. She is not who she claimed to be. The files you gave her are being used right now. Five people have already paid her for silence. Three more are being extorted. She is building wealth on Marcus’s legacy.You gave her the weapon. You armed the enemy. You have put your family at risk.This is your only warning. Stop her before she exposes you. Before she reveals that you had those files. Before she makes you a target for everyone Marcus ever blackmailed.Because that is her plan. Tak
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