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The Room

The Room

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In July 2005, eleven days into a stay in Prague, the past finally caught up in the corner of a mid-range hotel bar near Old Town Square.



Episode 4: "The Room" recounts the high-stakes encounter between the narrator and David Chen—a man from his former life in Tampa who knew his real name. This wasn't a calculated pursuit by the federal government, but something arguably more dangerous: the random, motivated recognition of a ghost from a life that was supposed to be over.


The narrator deconstructs the anatomy of a three-second window—the razor-thin margin where an identity is either saved or shattered. He explores the "Decide First" principle, revealing why innocence nods while guilt runs, and how a well-placed, mundane question can be the most effective weapon in a room full of tension.


Moving beyond the immediate survival tactics of the hotel bar, the episode delves into the psychological cost of the encounter. Standing outside Room 412 at 12:31 in the morning, the narrator arrives at a realization that would define the next two decades of his life: relief makes you reckless. He details the formation of his most vital rule for living on the run: "Build a life so real that the cover barely needs to exist".


Finally, the episode sets the stage for a pivotal shift in Budapest. It introduces Anna, a translator who became the first person in seven months of running to make the narrator want to tell the truth. It is through her that he begins to confront the hardest lesson of all—the profound and painful difference between merely surviving and actually living.


Episode 1:

20 Years Gone

Episode 2: The Disappearing Act


Closing Credits & Production Notes



  • Written and Narrated by: Randy Levine


  • Executive Producer: A No Extradition Production


  • Signature Outro: "I'm Randy Levine. And this is 20 Years Gone."
  • Coming Up in Episode 3: The Warsaw Decisions The escape was only the beginning. Next time, we move to Warsaw—a city built on the energy of starting over. I will reveal the three critical decisions that shaped the next two decades of my life: the shift from spending money to making it, the creation of a durable identity, and the one decision I have never spoken about to anyone—until now
  • Listener Note: If you are just joining us, be sure to go back and listen to Episode 1: The Fire Escape, where the journey from a federal condo in Florida to the snowy streets of Poland began
  • Connect with the Story:

    • Subscribe: Don't miss the door to Episode 3
    • The One Rule: Remember, this isn't a performance—it's a memory . Every word has physical weight.
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