The Weight of Innocence
img img The Weight of Innocence img Chapter 5 Hunted
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Chapter 6 Morrison Estate img
Chapter 7 The prosecutor's Daughter img
Chapter 8 Richard's Intuition img
Chapter 9 The Lawyer's Warning img
Chapter 10 Proximity img
Chapter 11 The Parole Hearing img
Chapter 12 Sarah's Suspicion img
Chapter 13 Flashback The Beginning img
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Chapter 5 Hunted

The motel was exactly what I expected. Peeling paint. A flickering neon sign. The kind of place that charged by the hour and never asked questions. Perfect.

I paid cash for three nights. The clerk barely glanced at me. He took the money, handed me a key on a plastic tag marked twelve, and went back to scrolling his phone.

Room twelve was on the ground floor, tucked around the corner from the office. The door stuck when I tried to open it. I had to shove my shoulder into it before it finally gave way.

Inside smelled like cigarettes and old damp. One bed with a sagging mattress waited in the middle of the room. A television sat on the dresser, a relic from a decade that had ended long before. The bathroom sink had rust spreading around the drain. The window blinds refused to close all the way.

Home sweet home.

I dropped my plastic bag on the bed and sat. The springs groaned under me. Every part of my body hurts. The hospital had sent me away with pain pills, but I had only taken one. I needed to stay alert. No fog. No mistakes.

My phone sat in my hand. The battery is still alive. Vincent's message still burned into my mind. I should get rid of it. Buy a cheap burner. Disappear completely.

But burners cost money. I did not have money. And I needed something to contact my parole officer before I ended up right back in prison.

I lay back on the bed and stared at the ceiling. Water stains shaped themselves into faces and hands and guns. Always guns.

My eyes grew heavy. I tried to remember the last time I truly slept. Not in the hospital, where machines beeped and nurses interrupted every hour. Not before that, in the warehouse. Not before that, my first night out of prison when I slept in a shelter and flinched at every sound. Five years inside had taught me to sleep lightly, if at all.

Maybe an hour would help. Just one hour.

I closed my eyes.

A mistake.

The memory hit fast. Not a dream. Not fully a flashback. Something in between, sharper than either.

Marcus's office. Late at night. Just the two of us.

"You do not understand what you are asking me to do," Marcus said. He paced the carpet, nervous. "Vincent is dangerous."

"That is why we need proof," I said. "Real evidence. Not suspicions."

"He will know it was me."

"He will not. We will be careful."

Marcus stopped pacing. His eyes were wide with fear. "Anastasia, if he finds out, he will kill us both."

"Then he does not find out."

But he did. Somehow, he knew.

The memory jumped. Marcus on the floor. Blood spreads across white carpet. Vincent standing over him with a gun.

"You should have minded your own business," Vincent said.

Then he looked at me.

I tried to run. My legs refused to move.

Vincent stepped toward me. Lifted the gun.

"Your turn."

The scene twisted. The warehouse replaced the office. Flames everywhere. Marcus's voice in my head.

"You did this. You got me killed."

"No," I tried to say, but the words died.

"You trusted the wrong person."

"I am sorry."

"Too late."

The flames climbed higher. Marcus's face appeared in the fire. Then Vincent's face. Then mine.

Hands closed around my throat. Squeezing. Tighter. No air. No escape.

I jolted awake with a gasp, clawing at my neck. No hands. No fire. Just a filthy motel ceiling and my heart beating hard enough to hurt.

Sweat soaked through my shirt. Two hours had passed. Two hours too long.

I went to the bathroom and splashed cold water on my face. My reflection in the cracked mirror looked like someone losing a fight she never asked for. Dark circles. Fresh bruises. A bandage sliding loose across my temple.

So this was rock bottom.

Then I heard it.

An engine. Idling. Close.

I froze. Listened. The sound stayed steady and low. Too close to be random.

I turned off the bathroom light and crept to the window. I lifted one broken blind and peeked out.

A black SUV. Twenty feet from my door. Engine running. Lights off. Not moving.

Watching.

Ice spread through my chest. The same SUV from the hospital. It had to be. They must have followed the cab. They might have watched me since the moment I left.

I let the blind fall back. My pulse was hammered. I backed away from the window and ran through my options.

The front door was out. They would see me instantly. The bathroom window was small, but maybe I could fit.

I grabbed my phone and plastic bag, climbed onto the toilet, and shoved at the small grimy window. It resisted. I pushed harder. It scraped an inch open. Then another. Just enough.

I shoved the bag through the opening. Then I pulled myself up. Pain shot through my ribs. My ankle warned me I was making everything worse. I ignored it and squeezed through.

The frame dug into my stomach. For a moment I was stuck halfway. I wiggled forward and dropped hard onto the ground outside.

The pain that shot up my ankle nearly made me scream.

I grabbed my bag and scanned the alley behind the building. Dumpsters. Trash. A chain link fence at the far end.

I limped toward the fence as fast as my injured ankle allowed. The moment I heard the car door slam behind me, I pushed harder.

They knew I had run.

I reached the fence. My hands slipped on the cold metal when I grabbed it. I could barely put weight on my leg. My arms did all the work. I hauled myself up. Someone shouted behind me. Another car door slammed.

I made it to the top and tossed my bag over. I climbed down and dropped to the other side. My ankle screamed again. No time to react.

The SUV roared around the corner of the building.

I forced my body into motion. The alley on this side was narrow and boxed in by buildings. Only one way out.

Run.

I stumbled forward. Every breath burned. Every step hurts. The end of the alley grew closer. A street glowed beyond it. People. Traffic. Safety.

The SUV slid into the alley behind me. Headlights swept across the walls.

I pushed harder.

I reached the opening. Ten feet left. Then five.

The SUV shot forward. I looked back and saw its front grille closing in. They were not trying to grab me. They were going to run me over.

I hurled myself sideways. My shoulder slammed into the wall as the SUV tore past, missing me by inches. It braked hard, blocking the exit.

I turned back toward the alley behind me. A figure stood there now, tall and broad, framed by the headlights. He stepped closer. A shaved head. A scar across his cheek. Eyes that did not care if I lived or died.

"Nowhere to run, Anastasia," he said. His voice was deep and rough. Not Vincent. Someone Vincent trusted.

I pressed back against the wall. No doors. No windows. No escape.

He reached into his jacket.

This was it. This was the end. A dirty alley behind a cheap motel and no one would ever know what happened.

Then another engine approached. Headlights blasted across the alley from behind the SUV. Blindingly bright.

The man with the scar turned, shielding his eyes.

A car shot into the alley at full speed. At the last moment it swerved and screeched to a stop between me and the men hunting me.

The passenger door flew open.

"Get in," a voice yelled.

Ethan.

I ran. I dove inside. Ethan hit the gas the instant I touched the seat.

We shot forward. The scarred man jumped aside. The gap between the SUV and the wall looked impossibly small, but Ethan aimed for it anyway. Metal shrieked as we scraped through. Sparks scattered across the pavement.

Then we were on the street. Ethan took a sharp turn. The tires wailed. Traffic swerved around us.

"They are still behind us," I said.

"I know."

He cut left into a parking garage and headed up the spiral ramp at full speed. Level after level flew past. The SUV entered behind us and kept coming.

"What are you doing?" I asked.

"Trust me."

Level six. The top. Open air. Nearly empty.

Ethan braked hard and slid into a spot. He killed the engine and ducked.

"Get down," he whispered.

I sank into the footwell, heart pounding.

The SUV rumbled up the ramp. It rolled slowly across the rooftop. Its headlights swept over our car. I held my breath and pressed myself even lower.

It stopped right in front of us.

The driver scanned the roof. Searching. Calculating.

Ethan did not move. Barely a breath escaped him.

A long moment passed. Then the rear window of the SUV slid down. A rifle appeared. Long barrel. Dark metal.

"Ethan," I whispered.

"I see it."

The rifle pointed across the rooftop. It moved slowly, aiming at shadows. If it found us, there would be no chance.

Then a siren rose somewhere below. Loud and close. Someone must have called the police about the chase.

The rifle slipped back inside the SUV. The window rose. The engine revved.

The SUV sped toward the exit ramp and disappeared.

Ethan and I stayed still until the siren grew louder and the danger felt distant.

He finally sat up and looked at me.

"Are you okay?"

Was I? I had just been hunted across a motel, an alley and half of the city. I had been saved by a man who owed me nothing and who should have walked away days ago.

"No," I said. "I am not okay."

"Yeah. Me neither."

We sat together in the quiet of the parking garage. Two strangers caught in something neither of us understood.

Somewhere out there, Vincent watched. Vincent waited.

And Vincent was planning his next move.

                         

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