James: [?]
James: [...]
I don't know what happened on his end, anyway, after only a few moments, he quickly reacted: [Akai just sped off during the chase?]
And quickly reassures Jodie: [Don't worry, he's not driving right now.]
[He's jumping off a building.]
It's good that he's not racing in the city.
Even if Akai Shūichi's car didn't hit any ordinary citizen's car, but just shifted lanes and caused other cars to panic, swerve and brake sharply, which indirectly caused an accident, it's still a scandal.
There are no traffic accidents on the bridge is still tentative, Jodie is more worried about Akai Shūichi in the city also continued to chase racing and then a few hours of racing games, in New York caused dozens of traffic accidents, and now see the words of James, only to breathe a sigh of relief, slightly put down the heart.
And urgently mentioned: [...Jumping off a building?]
Jumping off a building?
James sent over a video.
The video was shot by cell phone, the first few seconds in the panic shaking, roughly sweeping the streets, the panic on the streets of the screaming crowd swept once, but basically can not see the expression of each person, only from the general movement of a part of the people in the surrender of the hand raised, dumbfounded to look up.
There was another part of the crowd that was constantly bobbing its head in one direction, and in that direction there was also a crowd, but the crowd was spreading out spontaneously like the Red Sea, and none of them were looking up, but were looking back in the direction of the parting of the crowd as they parted.
The screams and cries for God are all over the place, blended together in a symphony of panic.
The cell phone camera takes two seconds to sweep through the chaos and freeze on a car on the street.
It's a black car, eye-catching, but eye-catching in that the roof has collapsed in half.
It looked like something had fallen from a height and landed right on the car, making a mark.
...If the 'falling object' was a person, it would only look like a serious hit, but it wasn't.
Because there doesn't seem to be any blood.
Because the roof had collapsed a bit, one of the side doors was chain-reactively crooked, and couldn't be opened, so the driver climbed into the back seat and got out through the rear door, so the seats were down.
The cell phone camera was fixed on the eye-catching car for a few moments, and then suddenly the screaming in the background voice came to a peak, and the phone shook again, panning upward to focus on the figure above the building.
It was Akai Shūichi.
The phone wasn't actually pointed at Akai Shūichi's face, and it wasn't very clear because of the shaking, but Jodie recognized it.
She almost blacked out, and had to confirm her vaguely alarmed assumption that the 'falling object' was the 'Master'.
And really blacked out, silently praying: don't jump, don't jump, at least not in front of so many people and cell phones below!
...But James has already dramatized it.
Jodie, desperate to know that her bad feeling would be validated, could only watch.
She watched as Akai Shūichi looked down from his position on the 5th or 6th floor, and then slightly up, towards the crowd that had just witnessed the Moses Parting of the Sea phenomenon, as if he was looking at this 'Master' who was moving away.
As he watched, he took a few steps backward and disappeared through the window.
The cell phone's camera was still focused on the window, and for one second, three seconds, five seconds, Akai Shūichi didn't appear.
As the background noise continued to play, and the shouts of alarm subsided, the crowd that remained, almost all of them watching, looked up anxiously at the spot where Akai Shūichi had just appeared, but never appeared, and it was as if he'd given up the chase.
Jodie breathed a sigh of relief.
Halfway through, it came to an abrupt end.
There are scattered, fragmentary gasps, and the cell phone camera, still pointed upward, takes a few seconds to react, shaking and turning.
Beyond the crowd, a figure leaps down in two or three bounds, nimbly reaching the first floor by using some protrusions on the outside of the building, and then sprinting with such speed that it is blocked by the crowd and disappears from the cell phone's range in almost the blink of an eye.
It's Akai Shūichi.
He jumped, but instead of doing it in full view of the crowd, he took a sideways step and found a place where no one would be watching.
If he didn't jump, he couldn't catch up with the fleeing criminals.
Whether you go down the stairs or the elevator, you'll be right in front of the crowd, you'll be in the center of the action, and if you stop a few times, the 'master' will be gone.
Jodie understood, but that didn't stop her from being silent, "..."
The video ended.
In the meantime, James had sent several messages to the effect that he had contacted the authorities and would calm the situation urgently, and that the video had been taken from the cell phone of a young man at the scene of the crime, who was about to upload it to social media.
And the unfortunate news is that there's already news of a car race on the Brooklyn Bridge on social media.
There are two sides to this unfortunate news.
The good news: the owner was photographed.
After waving with a smile and getting a response from Akai Shūichi's car chase, he calmly shook his head and shrugged his shoulders and held his forehead for a few seconds, looking like he was a bit helpless.
As the car was traveling at breakneck speeds, his somewhat long white hair was blowing in the wind, almost glistening in the sun, and before he slowly sat back down in his car, Ichijō Mirai smiled at the person filming him, pointed a gun in his hand at his head, and made a shooting motion.
It looks like he's just kidding around.
But anyone who knows how dangerous this guy is will get a chill down their spine, realizing that this gesture is a careless threat to the person who's shooting him straight in the face.
The bad news: the 'Master' is already a star criminal.
By the time James found the video, it already had a lot of hits, retweets, and comments, and was still skyrocketing, almost as if it had caught fire quickly.
'Opening the window of a car while it's moving, poking out half of your body and waving to the rear' is of course a traffic violation, and barely rounded up is indeed a criminal.
Jodie had to: "..."
She took a few deep breaths, reassuring herself that it was okay to be famous, at least this gentleman was famous for breaking the traffic rules, not for being a 'criminal's criminal', so the impact wasn't that great.
For now.
As long as it was handled correctly, and the basic tone of freedom was exercised by blocking the topic in question, the impact would soon be minimized to nothing.
With that in mind, Jodie was just about to contact the relevant people when her cell phone received a message: [He has no sense of pain.]
It was a message from Akai Shūichi.
[He's letting me chase him.]