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Synopsis
“Nancy Bush always delivers edge-of-your seat suspense!” —Lisa Jackson, New York Times bestselling author The Biggest Mistake The branding iron glows in the moonlight as he presses the searing metal into his victim’s flesh. She must wear the devil’s sign, just like the others. He knows the curse that afflicts them—and he’ll make sure they carry it to their graves… Is Believing When investigative reporter Jay “Dance” Danziger is nearly killed in a bomb blast, journalist Jordanna Winters senses a career-making story. Together they can find out who’s responsible. But as their investigation uncovers a string of unsolved murders, each body branded in the same way, Jordanna realizes that Dance isn’t the only one in danger. You Could Ever Get Away… Small towns can hold big, dark secrets. Deep in Jordanna’s troubled past is the key to a killer’s terrifying mission—to purge the guilty one by one, burning their flesh to free their souls. And her turn is coming, as he prepares to make his mark once more…
Release date: July 1, 2015
Publisher: Zebra Books
Print pages: 349
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You Can't Escape
Nancy Bush
There were voices around him. They rose and fell sporadically. People coming and going, he realized at the same moment he understood he was in a hospital. Nurses, doctors, friends . . . ?
Where is Maxwell?
The explosion, he remembered suddenly, then realized at the same moment that he’d lost hearing for a while. His ears still rang a little, but at least the problem had apparently been temporary because he could make out words.
He was injured. Numb and dull-feeling. Painkillers, most likely. He’d gone to find . . . Maxwell . . . but his brother-in-law hadn’t been there.
The explosion was meant to kill Maxwell, he thought dully, sorting through the flotsam and jetsam left in his shaken brain. Maxwell, his confidant and informant. His friend. Except Max wasn’t there.
“Mr. Danziger?” A woman’s voice. One of the nursing staff?
And then another woman, loudly, “Can you hear me?”
Maxwell hadn’t been there because he’d known about the bomb, or whatever it was, and stayed away. It hadn’t been meant for Maxwell, he thought with a jolt. It had been meant for him.
And Maxwell had known and had purposely been gone.
“You’re sure he was waking up?” the first woman asked skeptically.
“Yes. His wife wants to see him.”
“Took her long enough to get here.”
Wife? Carmen? They’d been emotionally separated for years . . . divorced for months . . . though they’d kept the same residence, mainly so that people—people like Maxwell—wouldn’t know that their marriage had crumbled. Carmen’s idea, not his, but he’d been happy to play the charade—anything she wanted—because he just wanted out.
“Mr. Danziger?” the second nurse asked, a bit more urgently. “Your wife’s here to see you.”
“He’s not waking up,” the first said in a superior tone.
Jay Danziger felt himself start to fade away again. Good. He didn’t want to think too much. Where’s Max? his mind asked again, but this time he answered himself: Far away from the accident that was meant to kill you.
When he resurfaced again—opening his eyes before he was awake enough to remind himself he should keep them closed—he didn’t know how much time had passed. A while, for sure. Hazily, he realized a woman was seated beside him, holding his hand. Her palm was sweating.
“Mr. Danziger,” a man’s voice greeted him. With effort, he zeroed in on the voice, moving his eyes carefully, as there was a dull ache in his head, to take in a man in a white lab coat who stood at the foot of the bed, holding a manila file. “We wondered when you would return.”
The man’s name tag read DR. WILLIAM COCHRAN. Again, carefully, he swiveled his eyes from the doctor back to the woman seated beside his bed. She was somewhere in her late twenties, he thought, with dark brown hair in a loose bun and tendrils escaping to curl slightly at her temples. It was the same style Carmen wore hers in, most times. No wonder they thought she was his wife. He was pretty sure he’d never laid eyes on her until this moment.
She murmured, “So glad you’re okay, Jay. You had us all worried.”
He thought about saying something, calling her out as a fraud, but held his tongue. Worry was exactly the emotion filling her hazel eyes just now. She was petrified of something, most likely that he would blow her cover because she sure as hell wasn’t Carmen. He didn’t know her from Adam, and the fact that she was impersonating his ex-wife was disturbing, though not full-out alarming, which said something about his confused mental state, he supposed. He should have been thoroughly concerned, especially with the new and ugly realization that Max had meant for him to die. Or had he been warned away? Was that why he wasn’t there? No . . . it didn’t feel like it. Dance sensed he knew something in the deep recesses of his mind, some hidden nugget of truth that escaped him now yet made him question Maxwell’s motives. And if the bomb, or whatever had caused the explosion, hadn’t been meant for him . . . if it had just been some kind of terrible accident that had gone off and sliced up his leg—
Immediately, he glanced down to his left leg. It was wrapped from hip to below his knee. A thigh injury. He had no sensation of pain, though; the meds must be good.
“Max has been asking about you,” the woman holding his hand said, a current of urgency running beneath the words.
Maxwell Saldano. She knows about Max.
Jay “Dance” Danziger had trusted his instincts on numerous occasions and that trust had saved him from all kinds of trauma during the last ten years that he’d worked as an investigative journalist. He trusted them now, so he looked “Carmen” straight in the eye and croaked out, “Take me home.”
Her lips parted. Before she could answer, the doctor inserted, “We need to check some tests. Make sure you’re all right. Surgery went well. A lot of muscle damage that was repaired. As long as there’s nothing unexpected on your MRI, you could get out of here as early as tomorrow.”
“Today,” Dance muttered.
“Well . . . maybe . . .”
“I’m leaving today,” he said positively.
“I’ll check the tests.” The doctor left them, and as soon as Dance was alone with his hand holder, he slid her a silent look.
“Home might not be the safest place,” she said carefully.
She was warning him, in her way, that it wasn’t safe to speak freely. Though they were alone in the room, her gaze shifted toward the open doorway. Maybe there were listening ears just outside the door.
“Where should I go?” he forced out with an effort.
She glanced at him, then down at their still-clasped hands, and shot a quick, darting look back at his eyes before letting her gaze wander away. “I know a place . . .”
“Where?”
“Just somewhere I know.”
“What do I call you?”
She flicked another look toward the outer hallway. “What do you mean?” she asked cautiously.
The meds were fading a little, he thought. He could feel pain knocking at the door, eager to remind him that his leg was in bad shape and his head could hurt a lot more, too. “Well . . . not . . . Carmen . . .”
He sensed, then, too, that he was fading out himself. Blessed twilight was coming to take him into oblivion for a while longer. So softly he almost missed it, she said, “Jordanna.”
“Jordanna,” he repeated, unaware that his voice was inaudible as he succumbed to unconsciousness.
Jordanna Winters had always had a healthy disrespect for the police.
At age fourteen, she shot her father with a .22 rifle when he was attempting to have sex with her older sister and learned the hard way that the law enforcement types in Rock Springs, Oregon, were chauvinistic, repellant, and inclined to believe an upstanding citizen like Dr. Dayton Winters over his unstable middle daughter, who, let’s face it, was half-wild from growing up on a farm with a mother whose own mental state had always been in question. There was a rogue gene lying in wait in Gayle Treadwell Winters’s family that popped up randomly and had brought dubious behavior, suicides, horrific accidents, and even murder over the years to the unlucky Treadwells—or so the people of Rock Springs were wont to believe. Jordanna, they collectively decided after the shooting that grazed her father’s shoulder, was clearly an unhappy recipient of that gene, which was undoubtedly the reason for her erratic behavior. The good Dr. Winters was above reproach, so Jordanna’s behavior had to be from something else . . . something vile and difficult, maybe impossible, to control . . . the Treadwell Curse.
Bull. Shit. All of it.
From Jordanna’s point of view, dear old Dad was a lech, and a pedophile, and a whole host of other things that forced Jordanna to move away from home as soon as possible. She’d learned from an early age that she couldn’t count on anyone other than herself. Even her older sister, Emily, had insisted it was her own fault she had been in their father’s bed. Emily had assured her that she was sleepwalking again, and had just wandered into Dad’s bedroom. She’d insisted that she’d just been dreaming about their mother and had climbed into the bed, looking for her. When Jordanna had objected, Emily had then accused Jordanna of being just as screwed up as everyone thought she was. She was the one who needed help.
Jordanna had stubbornly kept to her story. She’d heard Emily scream out Dayton as if she were scared—but Jordanna’s insistence did no good. No one had believed her, and less than a year later Emily had lost her life in an automobile accident along the treacherous switchback roads above Rock Springs on a particularly cold and icy day. Her car slid over a steep ridge and tumbled down a cliff side. Heartbroken, Jordanna had stood as far away from her father and the rest of her family as possible at the funeral. She’d felt like a pariah, and why not? Everyone thought she bore the Treadwell Curse, though they wouldn’t say so to her face.
And then while a cold, January rain beat down on them, her younger sister, Kara, had moved up next to her and whispered in a strained voice, “It wasn’t an accident.”
“What do you mean?” Jordanna demanded.
“Somebody killed Emily,” Kara had responded.
“Our father?” Jordanna suggested. But Kara had merely shrugged and shaken her head. They had both gazed across the plot where the pallbearers were laying their sister to rest, and, feeling her father’s eyes on her, Jordanna had set her jaw and vowed to get to the truth someday . . . when she was stronger and the time was right.
She’d moved out of the house at seventeen and ended up rooming with a group of students who attended Portland State. She’d then worked her way through night classes at the university as well, majoring in journalism and communications. She’d also taken courses in criminal investigation and spent her days working at coffee shops and restaurants. Eventually, under a pseudonym, she began a blog that was a newsletter about victims of crimes, what happened to them afterward, and maybe what caused the crime in the first place, and had managed to turn her work into various newspapers. To date, she’d been published in both the Laurelton Register and the Lake Chinook Review, and it was her dream to hit the big leagues. She’d been working toward that end for ten years, spurred by the ill treatment she’d received in her own hometown, bent on proving herself free of the “crazy” Treadwell Curse. So far, she’d done a fairly decent job of it, ignoring or flouting rules along the way. Her only hiccup had been her own hero worship of another investigative reporter, Jay Danziger, a man she’d literally followed for his insight, acumen, and success in digging into the truth. Tracking him had led to the madness of her current situation: breezing into Laurelton General and passing herself off as his wife. It was the reason for her thumping heart and sweating palms when she’d stated in a low, fast voice to the receptionist, “Tell Officer McDermott that Carmen Danziger is here.”
“Ma’am?” the receptionist had asked blankly.
“Jay Danziger’s my husband.” She’d uttered the lie quick and sharp. No gatekeeper was going to stop her. “One of the bombing victims. I was called.” She was amped enough by her charade not to have to manufacture the trembling of her lower jaw.
“Uh . . . yes . . .” The receptionist looked around for help. Chaos surrounded them. Though the bombing had been over twenty-four hours earlier, Laurelton General had received the bulk of the casualties and was swarming with extra medical staff and, of course, the police. Jordanna had made an educated guess that Jay Danziger had been brought here. She’d known he had been at the explosion of the building in downtown Laurelton that had sent the community scrambling while wailing sirens and dust and debris filled the air. She’d known because she’d seen him there, had been across the street when the bomb had blown. The concussion of the blast had knocked her off her feet, but she’d managed to pick herself up. She’d fumbled for her phone, her ears still ringing, poised to call 9-1-1, but then realized she could already hear the wail of distant sirens. Instead, she’d staggered to her Toyota RAV4 and driven to her apartment.
After cleaning herself up, she’d stared into the bathroom mirror and asked herself what had happened. She hoped to God Jay Danziger was still alive. The shudders that racked her body at the thought had brought her to her knees. Those goddamn Saldanos! she’d thought, filled with fury. And that’s when she’d hatched her crazy plan. If Danziger was still alive, and she fervently hoped to hell he was, she was going to find him, interview him, and convince him of the Saldanos’ evil. She’d been casually following . . . okay, half stalking . . . the man around for weeks, catching him outside the gates of his home or tooling after him as he met with members of the Saldano family, the corporate crime family with tendrils in more businesses and government offices than a haystack had pieces of straw. Until Danziger had gotten swept up in the Saldano net of greed, Jordanna had admired the man. Dreamed about him a little, if the truth be known, as he was damned attractive. But his biggest appeal was his freewheeling investigative style and the results he produced. That was number one.
And he was married. Which was just as well, really, because she was not interested in a married man. She only wanted Danziger’s story, and by God, she was going to get it if it killed her. She looked enough like Carmen Danziger to bluff her way inside while everything was in a state of flux. Carmen mostly stayed out of the spotlight, but Jordanna knew she wore her long, brunette hair in a messy bun and that when she did go out, she favored tight dresses and the highest heels imaginable for a woman to still be able to walk. In the few hours since the bombing, Jordanna had purchased both at the nearest mall. She’d damn near broken an ankle hurrying into the hospital, but luckily, no one had noticed.
“Call him,” Jordanna had urged the receptionist, dabbing at the real tears that formed at the corners of her eyes. Fear. Or excitement. At least it was working for her.
“Do you have ID?”
Shit. “I . . .” She pretended confusion, gazing back through the glass double doors to the parking lot.
At that moment, Officer McDermott himself had stalked through the reception area. She’d seen him on the news earlier and she knew he was part of the investigation. Fully crying, she grabbed his arm. “Please tell me my husband’s alive.”
He gazed down at her impatiently. “Who is your husband, ma’am?”
“Jay . . . Jay Danziger? Is he here? Please . . .”
If Carmen Danziger had actually already been at the hospital, Jordanna would have probably been arrested. She’d been pretty sure she was safe, though, because she’d seen Carmen with a ton of luggage heading to the airport a few days earlier. Jordanna had hoped she was still far, far away and hadn’t returned yet. But Jordanna figured if she was caught in her masquerade, so be it. It was still worth a try. Recklessness had served her well in the past and she wasn’t going to play it safe and miss a golden opportunity.
“Mrs. Danziger.” McDermott had looked like he wanted to peel her off his arm.
“Is he here? Is he all right?”
“He’s still recovering from surgery.”
She’d pressed a hand to her mouth and shaken her head, letting emotion overcome her.
“I’m sorry, ma’am. We have a lot of injuries. Check with the hospital staff.”
Jordanna had nodded, releasing him. The bombing had taken place at the Saldanos’ main company headquarters, where, according to general speculation and Jay Danziger’s investigation prior to his being seduced by the family, the Saldanos received and shipped all manner of illegal drugs. Max Saldano and the entire family hotly denied this accusation. They were honest businesspeople involved in importing and exporting commodities from Mexico and Central and South America. They were not criminals.
More bullshit.
Danziger was a longtime friend of Max Saldano, the man who had introduced him to his sister, Carmen. Jay and Carmen had already been married by the time Jordanna had begun admiring Danziger’s journalistic style. It was only after the Saldanos came under suspicion of criminal activity, all the while being championed by Jay Danziger, that Jordanna had begun to think her idol had feet of clay. Money involved, Jordanna had told herself darkly. Lots of money. And Jay Danziger had rolled over for it, much like her father had when he’d married into the Markum family after Jordanna’s mother’s death.
As soon as those thoughts circled her mind again, Jordanna had shut them off, concentrating instead on discovering Danziger’s room, which she’d been unsure how to find until she overheard two nurses talking about him and had followed them to the fourth floor. Her tight green dress and heels had gotten her noticed, but the camouflage had helped connect her as Danziger’s wife. The nurses had believed her when she’d said Officer McDermott, and a doctor she’d seen mentioned on the news, had sent her to the fourth floor. It had been almost too easy, which had struck her as odd. That’s when she’d first thought that Danziger might be in danger. None of the Saldanos had been at their building when it exploded. It had been virtually empty of family members, though a number of employees had been hurt from the fallout. The initial theory was that a rival group had bombed the Saldanos to send a violent message, though the family patriarch, Victor Saldano, had scoffed at the suggestion.
In her disguise as Carmen, Jordanna had decided to alert Danziger to possible danger. She might not trust his motives any longer, but he’d damn near died because of his association with the Saldanos. That was clear. He’d been the one in the line of fire, not Maxwell, nor his father, nor any other Saldano, for that matter. So, she’d entered his room cautiously, but found him asleep. Uncertain for a moment, she’d decided to sit down and wait to see if he woke up. She’d sat tensely in the chair next to his bed, all the time feeling a ticking clock inside her head, like the countdown to a bomb, warning her that Carmen Saldano Danziger or someone who knew her was bound to show up any time.
But then Jay Danziger had awoken and she’d just started . . . improvising.
And so had he.
She looked at him now. At the handsome face with the two lines of worry etched between his brows even in sleep. She felt an emotional pull inside herself, one she desperately needed to control. Did he understand about the danger? Maybe he knew more about it than she did. He certainly hadn’t argued with her. In fact, he’d put himself in the care of a stranger without a qualm, no questions asked, and she’d committed herself to getting him out of here. With her mind on the old farmstead in Rock Springs where she’d grown up—a place she’d avoided for years—she’d told him she would get him somewhere safe.
She just hoped to hell she could deliver on that promise.
Jordanna stood by the northeast-facing window of Jay Danziger’s hospital room, staring through the blinds to the parking lot below. It was actually two separate lots; the one toward the north side was a level lower than the one on the east. The hospital sat on a hillside, and the main entrance and emergency room were on the top level, while most of the parking that surrounded the other three sides of the building step-staired its way down toward the rear of the building.
If I park back here, I can get away without being seen, she thought. There was no way she was getting Danziger through the main entrance without press and questions and all kinds of commotion. But one of the rear entrances might work for the stealth assignment she’d tasked herself with. Were there security cameras around? Possibly. She couldn’t see any from this angle, but it was amazing how much of today’s world was under surveillance. She would just have to assume cameras were watching, and that their progress to her car would be recorded. If anyone then chose to go so far as to try to find Danziger once he left the hospital, something she sensed could easily happen, the cameras would catch her on video.
She exhaled a long, soft breath. Some Saldano Industries employees had also been hurt, but none of them had suffered the injuries Danziger had. The bomb had been on the other side of the wall from the entrance where Danziger had been standing. Though others had been hit by flying shrapnel, no one else had been close to the explosion’s source. Jordanna subscribed to the “there are no coincidences” theory, and in her mind that meant the bomb had been meant for Jay Danziger.
She glanced again toward his unconscious body. He was breathing evenly now, but since she’d been standing vigil, he’d gasped a couple of times in his sleep. Whether this was from an injury or some uncomfortable memory or dream, she couldn’t tell. Either way, every time it happened it caused her breath to catch in her throat and her heart to race.
She paced to the other side of the room and cautiously peered around the door and into the hallway. A woman’s voice, one of the nurse’s, was complaining from the nurse’s station around the corner. Someone hadn’t done as she’d ordered her and it sounded as if there would be hell to pay. It reminded Jordanna of her aunt Evelyn, who found great joy in recounting every slight and misery she’d been subjected to, whether real or imagined, to anyone with one good ear. She was a grievance collector of the first order.
Needing to use the restroom, Jordanna turned down the hall, teetering a bit on one heel. She had half a mind to take off the shoes. They’d served their purpose and now she needed to walk. Before she could make that decision, however, she heard someone coming from behind and just managed to reach the corner before being seen. Her heart jolted when she looked back and spied two policemen, McDermott and another younger man, entering Jay Danziger’s room, and a cold frisson slid down her back as she considered what would have happened if she’d had to speak to them. She didn’t trust that McDermott would continue to think she was Carmen.
A bell went off at the nurse’s station up ahead to her left, jarring her nerves further, but Jordanna ducked into the bathroom on the right. Inside, she leaned against the wall beside the door, watching it start to close behind her.
What the hell are you doing?
The complaining nurse suddenly snapped, “You’ve got to be kidding!” Then footsteps marched toward her. Jordanna moved quickly away from the door and to the sink, sure her charade was about to be unmasked. She pretended to wash her hands, but no one entered the bathroom. Cocking her head, she tried to listen, but the door was firmly shut now and the bathroom walls apparently too insulated to hear through. In that moment she caught sight of her reflection in the mirror and forced herself to clear the lines of anxiety between her brows.
Gathering her courage, she carefully stepped back into the hallway and hurried back to the corner once again. To her right was the nurse’s section. If she went left, she would reach the branch of the hallway that led to Danziger’s room. Swallowing, she dared a quick look and saw that his door was open. The complaining nurse’s voice suddenly sounded from the direction of the nurse’s station. It was muffled at this distance, but she was plainly still upset.
“Can I help you?”
Jordanna just managed to keep from leaping out of her skin at the unexpected female voice. She turned to find a young aide behind her. She’d come from farther down the hall. To Jordanna’s right, another nurse was approaching the nurse’s station with a file in her hands.
“I’m just debating whether to see my husband again, or let him get some rest,” Jordanna told her, inclining her head toward the branching corridor.
“There’s a waiting area ahead.” The aide pointed past the turn to Danziger’s room and toward the opposite end of the hall from the nurse’s station. If she chose to go there, Jordanna would have to cross the corridor that led to Danziger’s room, and if the policemen were standing outside his door, it was more than possible one of them might see her. Would they think she was just some other visitor, or would they know how Carmen Danziger dressed?
“Thank you,” she said to the aide, who smiled and turned toward the nurse’s station. Jordanna stood still for a moment, then held her breath and decided to cross to the waiting area. She moved quickly, forcing herself not to turn her head. In her peripheral vision, she caught a glimpse of one of the officers still in the hallway, but she kept her pace even, only breathing a sigh of relief when she was safely down the hall and at the small waiting room, which was really an alcove with several brown faux-leather side chairs and a glass table with metal legs. A row of windows gazed down upon the very parking lot where Jordanna was thinking about leaving her car, and she leaned her chin on one hand and calculated the distance from Danziger’s room to the elevator, and then the elevator to the back door....
The woman’s voice was full of annoyance. “. . . asleep, and when he’s awake, you can question him.”
A man’s voice answered, implacable and cool. “We’ll wait.”
“I’ve paged Dr. Cochran,” the woman warned. “Until he arrives, I suggest you wait in the hall.”
“Ma’am, we’ve spoken with Dr. Cochran and he knows we’re here.”
“Even if that’s true, patient health is Laurelton General’s first responsibility,” she responded crisply, undaunted. “Please wait in the hall until Mr. Danziger awakens.”
Silence. Dance pictured a glare-off between the man and woman. Even in his dull state, he had a pretty good idea that the man was a police officer. There was just something authoritative in his tone. And they would be wanting to question him. They would want to know if he knew anything about the explosion. Dr. Cochran had basically released him, so they wouldn’t miss this opportunity while he was still at the hospital.
He toyed with the idea of letting the nurse duke it out with the officers; there were at least two of them or the man wouldn’t have been speaking in plurals.
But Dance didn’t see how that was going to help him. He sensed he was in trouble, either a target of the bombing or someone who’d merely gotten in the way. What that meant, he wasn’t sure. His head felt stuffed with cotton; it hurt to think. Either way, he wanted to get the hell away from the hospital, where he felt like a sitting duck. If this Jordanna person could spring him, he was going to go with her.
She could be in on it.
He opened his eyes.
Two people were in the room, and he sensed another standing just outside the door. The iron-jawed, middle-aged nurse with the glare was just as he’d expected. The fifty-ish man with clipped gray hair gazed calmly back at her and wore a policeman’s uniform. The third person was outside his line of sight.
It was the nurse who saw him first. Her eyes momentarily flicked his way, but returned to the police officer without letting him know Dance was awake. But then the officer in the hallway suddenly entered and his gaze collided with Dance’s.
“His eyes are open,” he said, effectively breaking the glare-off between the other two.
“Mr. Danziger,” the nurse said, bustling over to his bedside officiously. “How are you feeling? Can you talk? These policemen wish to speak with you, but you do not have to right now.”
“I can talk,” Dance rasped.
Her lips tightened. “I’ve paged Dr. Cochran, and—”
“No, I’ll talk,” he said again, clearing his throat. “I want to.”
She inhaled a breath, hesitated a moment, then said, “If you’re sure,” in a tone that said there was no way he could be.
“Mr. Danziger,” the policeman greeted him, ignoring the nurse and gazing at Dance through flinty eyes. “If you’re feeling up to it, we’d like your account of the accident.”
“Was it a bombing?” Dance asked him.
The older officer—McDermott, by his name tag—glanced at the nurse, who tried to ignore his pointed stare before bustling out of the room in a flurry of indignation.
Once she was gone, McDermott turned his attention back to Dance. “It appears to have been.”
The younger officer, whose name tag read BILLINGS, kept silent, clearly leaving the questions to his more experienced partner.
“We’ve been waiting to interview you,” McDermott explained. “You feel up to it?”
Dance kind of figured the interview was coming at him regardless, but he managed a careful nod.
“Do you mind telling us what you were doing at Saldano Industries?” the older officer asked.
“I was meeting Maxwell Saldano there.”
“A business meeting?”
“We were planning to play golf,” Dance said, sidestepping the question. “I was meeting Max at his office.”
“Maxwell Saldano is your
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