The Kiss That Saved Roman Vale Revealed A Deadly Garage Secret-paupau

Five seconds should not be enough time to change the shape of a life.

Ava Hart learned that in the lower level of a private parking garage under downtown Chicago, with rainwater drying on the concrete and the smell of gasoline hanging close to the floor.

The anonymous message had come three nights earlier at 1:13 a.m.

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No sender.

No signature.

Just an address, a time, and six words that looked insane until the clock got close enough to make them feel like a hand around her throat.

Don’t let him reach the car.

She had read it at her kitchen table while her father slept in the next room, the television still muttering through the wall because he hated the silence after his stroke.

Ava had moved to Chicago eighteen months earlier because of him.

Before that, she had been at the Boston Beacon, chasing city hall money, redevelopment contracts, and men who smiled in photographs while burying favors in footnotes.

Chicago was supposed to be temporary.

A year, maybe two.

Long enough to help her father through rehab, keep the rent paid, and prove to herself that she had not traded ambition for duty.

Then Roman Vale crossed her desk.

At first, he was a name behind other names.

A restaurant investor here.

A shipping partner there.

A clean real estate holding company attached to a second company that led to a third company with a mailbox, a lawyer, and no actual employees.

For four months, Ava built a file one night at a time.

She cross-checked incorporation records, cataloged wire-transfer screenshots, saved warehouse lease copies, and printed only what she had to because paper could be stolen but a newsroom server could be subpoenaed.

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