"You see those spike strips?" Rico's blood dripped steady onto cracked leather. "We're dead, Javier."
Metal teeth gleamed under streetlights ahead. Police barricade stretched across the intersection. Squad cars closed from behind, engines roaring like hungry wolves.
Speedometer hit eighty. Too fast to stop, nowhere left to run.
—-----
Three weeks earlier, this was supposed to be clean.
Marcus spread blueprints across my kitchen table. Security schematics, guard schedules, maintenance codes. Months of intel reduced to paper and digital files.
"Blackwood travels first Tuesday every month," Marcus said, finger tracing penthouse layouts. "London merger meetings. Gone for ten days minimum."
Rico studied the floor plans with prison-trained eyes. "Service elevator here. Camera blind spot for forty seconds during guard rotation."
"Building security uses Meridian Systems," I added, reviewing the schedules. "Same company that handles half of Manhattan. Marcus already has their backdoor access."
We spent weeks learning that building's rhythm. Marcus hacked Meridian's servers, mapping every sensor and camera angle. Rico posed as maintenance worker, timing elevators and testing keycard readers.
I memorized escape routes through Lower Manhattan's maze. Police response times averaged four minutes from Midtown precincts. Traffic patterns during night hours. Construction zones that could provide cover.
Details that separate successful thieves from Rikers inmates.
The night of the job felt perfect. November air carried winter's bite. Blackwood was supposed to be shaking hands with London executives, closing deals worth billions.
Service garage entry at 11:43 PM. Marcus's cloned keycard opened every electronic lock like magic. Rico carried the gear while I monitored police scanners for any unusual chatter.
"Building's empty," Marcus whispered through our earpieces. "Security feeds are looped. We're invisible."
Service elevator rose silent to the penthouse level. Rico's lockpicks opened Blackwood's private vault in under seven minutes. The man hoarded more than cash - rare wines, first-edition books, historical artifacts worth millions.
Then I saw Vicente's collection.
Championship belt hung behind climate-controlled glass like some museum display. Brown leather gloves rested on red velvet, worn smooth by greatness. Fight photographs covered an entire wall - Vicente in his prime, muscles coiled like steel cables, eyes burning with champion fire.
The sight hit me harder than any sucker punch.
Thirteen years old in Brownsville Recreation Center. Miguel Santos wrapping my knuckles with white athletic tape, trying to save another group home kid from the streets.
"You got speed," Miguel said, adjusting my stance. "But speed without discipline is just wild swinging."
Former Golden Gloves champion teaching fundamentals to throwaway teenagers. Pro career ended when a detached retina stole his future. Now he volunteered after construction shifts, seeing potential in angry kids that social workers had written off.
"Boxing teaches control," Miguel demonstrated proper footwork. "Control of distance, timing, yourself. Everything else follows."
Lasted exactly two weeks before quitting. The discipline felt suffocating after years of institutional rules. Street life offered immediate payoffs - stolen wallets, boosted electronics, quick scores without anyone dictating how to stand or breathe.
"This is harder than stealing," I complained after a brutal sparring session left my ribs aching.
"That's exactly the point," Miguel replied quiet. "Easy roads don't build character."
Walked away from that gym and never looked back. Chose shortcuts over dedication, crime over sweat. Miguel called the group home three times offering second chances I was too proud to accept.
Now, staring at Vicente's championship belt through reinforced glass, I wondered what different choices might have built. What kind of man proper guidance could have shaped instead of criminal ambition driving every decision.
"Load it all," I told Rico, voice rougher than intended.
We filled military-grade duffel bags with four hundred million in cash while I carefully removed Vicente's artifacts from their displays. The gloves felt warm against my palms, like they still carried echoes of old fights and forgotten dreams.
Championship photos showed Vicente's rise from Brownsville poverty to Madison Square Garden glory. Same neighborhood that raised me, same streets that tested him. But he chose discipline where I chose shortcuts.
"Time to move," Marcus announced from his laptop station. "Blackwood's private jet just touched down at Teterboro. He's not supposed to be back for six days."
Perfect heist execution. No alarms triggered, no security protocols breached, no digital evidence left behind. We should have been celebrating another flawless score while counting retirement money.
But Blackwood stood in his living room when we reached the main floor.
Silk bathrobe, crystal wine glass, completely calm like he'd been expecting us. Should have been terrified finding three armed men in his home. Instead, he looked mildly annoyed.
"You're early," Blackwood said, sipping wine. "I wasn't expecting this until next week."
Marcus raised his pistol instinctively. "Get on the ground! Now!"
"Unnecessary theatrics," Blackwood replied, setting down his glass. "Take what you came for. I won't interfere."
Rico started cursing in rapid Spanish, waving his gun like some amateur street thug. Blackwood remained calm, even offered us drinks while we finished loading the bags.
The old man never resisted. Never threatened to call police. Never tried to be a hero.
Marcus shot him anyway.
One bullet to the chest, point-blank range. Blackwood collapsed backward onto Persian rugs worth more than most people's houses. Blood spread dark against expensive fabric.
"What the fuck, Marcus!" Rico screamed. "He was cooperating!"
"He saw our faces," Marcus said, but his hands shook as he holstered the smoking gun.
The gunshot triggered backup security protocols Marcus hadn't discovered. Silent alarms bypassed the main system, sending emergency alerts directly to NYPD dispatch and private security firms.
"Building's compromised!" Marcus grabbed his laptop as red emergency lights began flashing. "Silent alarm just went active!"
We reached the service garage as first patrol cars screamed into the building's underground entrance. Spotlights swept concrete while we threw bags into the stolen BMW.
Security cameras had recorded everything despite Marcus's electronic warfare. Our faces, our methods, our escape vehicle. Digital evidence uploading to police databases faster than we could drive.
"Move! Move! Move!" Rico shouted as sirens echoed through the parking structure.
Chase began in Midtown Manhattan. Empty streets became hunting grounds while police coordination improved with each radio transmission. Scanner chatter filled our car with vehicle descriptions and last known coordinates.
Helicopter searchlights joined ground units. Roadblocks materialized at bridge entrances. The net tightened around us like a closing fist.
Now spike strips waited ahead.
"Everybody hold on!" I screamed, yanking the wheel hard left.
BMW launched into a sideways skid across rain-slick asphalt. Hit the spike strips at a sharp angle, all four tires exploding simultaneously. Physics took control as we flipped once, twice, three times before crashing upside down in a construction zone.
Safety glass exploded inward like diamond rain. Steel twisted around us with sounds like dying animals. Gasoline smell flooded the air as punctured fuel tanks began bleeding across broken pavement.
Marcus hung unconscious from his seatbelt, blood trickling from a severe head wound. Rico was pinned under twisted metal framework, breathing shallow and labored.
I tasted copper and felt warm liquid on my forehead. Everything hurt but I could still move my arms and legs. The boxing collection had scattered during the crash - Vicente's championship belt wrapped around a piece of construction rebar, fight photographs torn and scattered like autumn leaves.
Those championship gloves lay just beyond my reach, somehow still perfect despite the destruction surrounding them.
Electrical sparks danced from damaged wiring, casting crazy shadows across wet asphalt. The fuel leak spread wider, forming dark pools that reflected streetlight like black mirrors.
Fire ignited the gasoline trail with a soft whoosh sound.
Flames raced toward our overturned vehicle while police sirens grew louder in the distance. We had maybe thirty seconds before the main fuel tank exploded and turned us into charcoal.
Regret flooded through me like ice water as I remembered every wasted opportunity. Miguel's patient instruction that I rejected. Group home counselors who tried steering me toward legitimate futures. College recruiters who saw potential I was too angry to pursue.
Every person who'd offered salvation from myself.
My right hand stretched toward Vicente's gloves, fingers almost touching worn leather that represented everything I'd never become. Champion's dedication, fighter's honor, the discipline I'd been too proud to learn from men who cared enough to try teaching it.
"If there's truly a God," I whispered through blood-crusted lips, "please give me one more chance to make things right."
The flames reached our car's twisted frame as my fingertips finally brushed Vicente's championship gloves.