LOGINThe morning air at the Iron Wolves compound didn't smell like freedom; it smelled like stale beer, wet pavement, and the looming threat of a fight.
I hadn't slept. Not that I expected to, given that I was tucked away in a spare room in Dax’s private wing, listening to the muffled sounds of a biker clubhouse settling into a restless silence. My conditions had been simple: I touch every engine I race, I choose my own parts, and no one absolutely no one calls me "sweetheart."
Dax had agreed with a look that suggested he found my defiance more entertaining than annoying. That look was still burned into my brain when I stepped into the main garage at 6:00 AM.
The Iron Wolves’ garage was a massive, corrugated metal cathedral dedicated to the gods of speed. Rows of Harleys, Indians, and a few custom builds stood in various states of undress. It was a mechanic’s dream, but as I walked in, the dream felt more like a firing squad.
Six men were already there. They stopped talking the moment the heels of my boots hit the concrete.
"You’re lost, aren't you?" a massive guy with a beard down to his chest Tank, the enforcer grunted. He was holding a torque wrench like a club. "Kitchen’s back in the main house, honey."
The "honey" hit me like a slap. I didn't flinch. I walked straight past him to the center bay where a dismantled Road Glide sat on a lift. I took a long, slow look at the engine.
"The timing is off by at least two degrees," I said, my voice projecting through the cavernous space. "The primary chain is dragging, and whoever worked on this fuel injector clearly learned their trade from a YouTube tutorial and a prayer."
The garage went silent. Tank’s face turned a shade of purple that matched his club tattoos. "Listen here, Chen. Just because the VP has a soft spot for your old man’s ghost doesn't mean you get to walk in here and "
"I don't care about soft spots," I interrupted, finally looking him in the eye. "I care about the fact that if you take this bike on a run, the engine is going to seize at seventy miles per hour and send you sliding under a semi-truck. But hey, it’s your funeral. I’m just here to make sure the bikes that actually matter the ones for the Championship don't fail because of incompetence."
"Incompetence?" A younger guy, Reaper, stepped forward, his eyes narrowed. "We’ve been maintaining these bikes since before you could ride a bicycle."
"Then you’ve been doing it wrong for a long time," I snapped.
I walked over to a tool chest, grabbed a 10mm socket, and moved back to the Road Glide. Before Tank could stop me, I made three precise adjustments. I hit the starter. The engine roared to life, but this time, the idle was smooth, a perfect, rhythmic thrum that vibrated through the floorboards.
The bikers exchanged looks. The hostility was still there, but a thin layer of begrudging respect had started to coat it.
"She’s got a mouth on her," a voice drawled from the doorway.
Dax was leaning against the frame, a mug of black coffee in his hand. He looked like he’d been standing there for a while. He didn't look at his men; he looked at me. The sunlight from the open bay door caught the gold flecks in his dark eyes, and for a second, I forgot how to breathe.
"She’s also right," Dax said, stepping into the room. "The Road Glide has been running rough for a week. Tank, Reaper get the supplies for the North corridor run. Mia is the lead mechanic for the Championship bikes. Her word in this garage is mine. Any problems with that?"
Tank let out a huff of air, shoved his wrench into a drawer, and stomped out, followed by the others. Reaper lingered for a second, giving me a measuring look, before following.
Once they were gone, the garage felt too quiet. Too small.
"You enjoy that?" Dax asked, walking over to the lift. He set his coffee down on a workbench.
"Enjoying being hated? It's a Tuesday, Dax. I’m used to it." I wiped my hands on a grease rag, keeping my eyes on the bike. "Why didn't you tell them why I’m really here? That I’m Ghost Rider?"
"Because in this world, respect is earned through sweat, not reputation," Dax said. He moved closer, stepping into my personal space. The scent of him cedar and high-octane fuel wrapped around me. "And because if they knew you were the one who’s been taking their money at the tracks for three months, they’d do more than just call you names."
He reached out, his fingers brushing a smudge of grease off my cheek. His touch was light, but it felt like a brand. I should have pulled away. I should have snapped at him. Instead, I stood frozen, my heart racing faster than any engine I’d ever tuned.
"Don't," I whispered, though I didn't move.
"Don't what, Mia?" His voice was a low vibration. "Don't protect you? Don't notice that you're the only person in this town who isn't afraid to look me in the eye?"
"Don't pretend this is anything other than a business deal," I said, finally finding my voice and stepping back. "I’m here to win a race and clear my father’s name. I’m not here to be your project, or your conquest."
Dax’s expression shifted, the playful spark vanishing, replaced by something much darker and more intense. "You think this is a game to me? My father is a traitor. My brother is dead. And the people responsible are currently planning to put a bullet in your head the second you hit the track. This isn't a conquest, Mia. It’s a war."
He picked up his coffee and turned to leave.
"Start on the Ducati," he called over his shoulder. "We’re taking it to the private track at midnight. If you're going to race for the Wolves, I need to see if you're as fast as the legends say."
I watched him walk away, my grip tightening on the grease rag. I had six weeks to survive this clubhouse, six weeks to keep my heart under lock and key, and six weeks to prove that Ghost Rider didn't need an MC to win.
But as I looked at the massive Iron Wolves logo painted on the garage wall, I realized for the first time that the biggest danger might not be the Ravagers.
It might be the man who just walked out the door.
Would you like me to move to the midnight practice session at the private track, or should we focus on a moment where Mia finds a clue about the traitor while working in the garage?
The first thing that changed was the storm.Cael felt it before anyone else, which made sense, since the storm had been his, sustained for hours through the sheer expenditure of a capability he had been exercising since before he fully understood it. He felt the resonance reach the atmospheric layer above the island and he felt something there shift, not the manufactured counter-pressure he had been maintaining but something larger and older, as though the weather had been waiting for permission to return to its own patterns and had now received it.He let go.The manufactured storm dissolved. The actual sky of Iceland moved in to replace it, grey and vast and genuinely itself, with the clean, particular cold of a sub-Arctic atmosphere that had not been interfered with and had no opinion about human conflicts.For the first time in hours, the air outside the facility was simply air.Inside the turbine room, the resonance continued.Mia was aware of the others around her the way she wa
The turbine room was the beating heart of the island.Not metaphorically. The geothermal plant that had been powering this facility since before the Death Dealers occupied it ran its primary exchange through this room, the heat of the earth's interior translated into electricity by a system of turbines that filled the space with a deep, subsonic vibration that Mia felt in the soles of her boots before she crossed the threshold. The room was enormous, vaulted, its ceiling lost in the steam that rose from the turbine housings in slow, white columns. The floor was wet-dark iron grating. The walls were buried under decades of pipe work and valve assemblies, all of it analogue, all of it operating on the honest physics of pressure and heat and the conversion of one form of energy into another.At the centre of the room, where the original engineers had left a clearance space for maintenance access, the resonance chamber had been constructed.It was not large. That was the first thing Mia n
She found him in a monitoring station two corridors north of the turbine room, alone, which meant he had arranged to be alone, which meant he had known she would need to find him without an audience.The station was a small room, functional, its walls covered in the physical monitoring instruments that the geothermal plant had originally been fitted with, analogue gauges and pressure readers in their dozens, each one quietly registering the activity of the earth beneath the island with the patient fidelity of instruments that had been doing this job for decades and had no opinion about the extraordinary things happening above them.Dax was sitting on the edge of a work counter, the dead-weight gauntlet on his left arm resting across his knee, his Phase-Knife in his right hand. Not threatening. Just held. The way he held it when he was thinking rather than when he was preparing to use it.He looked up when she came in.She closed the door."She asked you to stand in the machine," he sa
Li Mei Chen was alone in the turbine room when Mia came back to it.The technicians had dispersed. Dax and the others were somewhere in the facility, and the quality of the silence said that Li Mei had arranged this deliberately, that she had read the situation with sufficient accuracy to know that this conversation needed to happen without the architecture of opposing groups around it.Mia descended from the upper railing to the turbine room floor through a side stair, and walked across the space to where her aunt stood beside the amplifier with her hands at her sides and her dark eyes moving between the machine and her approaching niece with an expression that was the most unguarded thing Mia had seen from her.Up close, the resemblance to her father was stronger and more specific. The line of the nose. The angle at which Li Mei held her head when she was listening. Mia had spent nineteen years watching Chen Wei hold his head that way, and seeing it in a stranger's face was a partic
Dorian Walsh was in a room on the facility's second level that had been arranged with the comfortable practicality of a man who had been occupying it long enough to have opinions about furniture placement. There was a workbench along one wall covered in physical books and printed technical documents, a map of the North Atlantic tacked above it with annotations in handwriting that was either architectural notation or the personal shorthand of someone who thought in diagrams. A kettle. An actual kettle, electric, running off the geothermal power system, and beside it two cups and a small collection of tea that suggested a man who had made certain decisions about the minimum requirements for civilised existence regardless of circumstances.He was reading when they brought Mia to him. He set the book down with the easy lack of ceremony of someone who had been interrupted regularly and had decided this was simply a feature of his current situation rather than an imposition."Ghost Rider,"
There are moments that arrive with the quality of inevitability, not the false inevitability of a plan proceeding as expected, but the real kind, the kind that settles into the bones with the weight of something that was always going to happen and has simply now arrived at its appointed hour.Mia stood at the railing above the turbine room and looked at the woman who had built the Death Dealers into an instrument of cosmic alignment and understood, with a clarity that bypassed the analytical machinery of her mind and arrived directly in the body, that this was one of those moments.She said nothing. She was her father's daughter in this regard, and her father had always said that the person who speaks first in a critical negotiation has already paid a small and unnecessary cost.Li Mei Chen waited approximately five seconds, during which she read Mia's silence with an attention that was recognisably familial. Then she smiled, very slightly, in the manner of someone who has just confirm
The revelation hung in the clinical air of the silo like a poisonous gas. My father, the man who had played the role of the humble, broken-down mechanic for two decades, stood before the multi-million dollar interceptor with the calm, terrifying poise of a man who had finally seen his greatest inve
The starting line evaporated in a haze of white smoke and the high-pitched shriek of Elena's turbine. I felt the Norton's front wheel fight the ground as the new Engine engaged, the variable-compression valves adjusting in a heartbeat to handle the sudden, massive torque. The power was unlike any
The black envelope felt heavier than its weight in paper, a physical anchor in a world that had just begun to breathe. The sapphire light of the Norton pulsed in a rapid, agitated rhythm, reacting to the dark energy bleeding from the wax seal.“The Mother is coming.”Dax stared at the weeping hawk,
The black envelope felt heavier than its weight in paper, a physical anchor in a world that had just begun to breathe. The sapphire light of the Norton pulsed in a rapid, agitated rhythm, reacting to the dark energy bleeding from the wax seal.“The Mother is coming.”Dax stared at the weeping hawk,







