2 — Lamborghini
“Nope,” the old man said. “Met her twenty miles back. She was doing a hundred and twenty, I was doing a hundred and thirty. Seemed a shame to drive alone.”
The old man nodded slowly. “Best reason to drive.” 2 lamborghini
The driver of the Aventador stepped out. He was in his late sixties, dressed in worn jeans and a faded flannel shirt. Silver hair, crinkled eyes. He looked less like a supercar owner and more like a retired rancher. “Nope,” the old man said
Leo pulled in fifty yards behind them. The engines idled with a guttural, wet purr that vibrated in his chest. Seemed a shame to drive alone
The desert highway unspooled like a black ribbon under the Nevada sun. Heat shimmered off the asphalt, warping the distant mountains into liquid mirages. In the middle of this emptiness, two dots appeared in the rearview mirror—low, wide, and moving with the unnatural speed of fighter jets on afterburner.
Then the woman pointed at Leo’s beat-up sedan. “What’s your story?”