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Wildfire and Ice
Wildfire and Ice
Author: Silver Bird

Chapter One: Wrong Overpass

Author: Silver Bird
last update Petsa ng paglalathala: 2026-05-05 17:23:49

The motorcycle was supposed to go off the bridge.

Seventy miles per hour, hit the ramp, launch over the guardrail, land clean in the foam pit forty feet below. Simple. The kind of stunt Sienna Calloway had done a hundred times. Her heartbeat was steady inside her helmet, palms dry, vision already narrowing to that single laser point fixed on the ramp ahead. This was the part she lived for. Not the credit that flashed on screen for four seconds before the audience forgot her name. This. The suspended breath at the edge of impossible. The only moment the low constant hum of dread that followed her everywhere finally, mercifully, stopped.

She accelerated. The speedometer climbed. Fifty. Sixty. Seventy.

Then she saw the car.

A black Mercedes, pulling directly into her path with the absolute confidence of something that had never once had to yield. She had two seconds and no room to stop. So she did what her body knew. She veered. Hard. The bike screamed beneath her, caught on an asphalt seam, and gravity made its decision. Sky became ground. Ground became sky. She hit the pavement hard enough to empty her lungs completely and rolled, her body doing the thing it was trained to do, distributing impact, absorbing force, staying loose. She came to rest against a concrete barrier and lay still while the world rearranged itself around her.

Breathing. Right. That was first.

She raised her right hand. Thumb up. Not dead yet.

Then she looked at the car. Still idling. Headlights burning through the grey November fog with the breathtaking indifference of something that considered itself exempt from consequence. Rage cut through her shock like a blade finding something clean to work against. She pulled herself upright, held her screaming left arm against her body, and walked toward it.

The window rolled down.

He was beautiful the way a loaded gun is beautiful. Not warm. Not inviting. Undeniable. Sharp features carved for precision over comfort, dark eyes beneath darker brows, a jaw set by years of decisions he had never once second-guessed. He watched her the way you watch something mildly interesting at a safe distance. Not alarmed. Not concerned. Merely observing.

"You're trespassing," he said. His voice was quiet in the particular way of something that did not need volume to land with the weight of something final.

"I'm bleeding," Sienna said. "I have permits. City approval. And you just drove into an active film set during a live stunt run."

"You have permits for the other overpass," he said. "Half a mile north. You're on my property."

The bottom dropped out of her stomach. She looked, really looked, at the surroundings. The warehouse facades. The particular configuration of the road through the industrial district. The orange hazard marker on a support column, sitting on the far side of a chain-link fence.

She was on the wrong side of the fence.

He was already out of the car. Taller than he had looked through the window, moving with the unhurried certainty of a man who had never needed to be anywhere before he was ready. He looked down at her with the measured assessment of someone accustomed to making decisions about people, and accustomed to those decisions being final.

"My name is Dante Moretti."

She knew that name. Everyone in Chicago knew that name, the way you know a storm is coming before you can see it. It existed in a specific register of conversation, spoken half an octave lower than everything around it, always accompanied by a glance over the shoulder. The kind of name that never had a face attached, because the people who knew his face well enough to describe it did not tend to describe it to strangers.

Her blood went cold.

"You trespassed with a full crew and equipment," he continued, reciting items from a list. "Disrupted ongoing operations. Nearly destroyed four hundred thousand dollars worth of equipment in that warehouse." He paused. "My equipment."

She looked at the men positioned around the perimeter. Still. Watching. Waiting for a signal she desperately did not want him to give. Twenty-two people were standing forty feet behind her. People she had hired. People who had shown up at four in the morning because she told them to.

"I apologize," she said. "It was a location error. Entirely my fault. We will remove everything immediately and cover any disruption costs."

She turned to walk back to her crew.

"The veer," he said.

She stopped.

"At that speed, with that distance, the motorcycle should have gone down differently. You controlled the slide. Managed every point of impact." The clinical boredom in his voice had given way to something sharper, something deliberate. "That was not an accident. That was training."

She turned back slowly. "It's what I do."

"You're badly injured. Dislocated shoulder. Road rash down your entire left side." He studied her with quiet, unsettling precision. "And your first instinct when you stood up was to walk toward me. You didn't know who I was and you chose aggression over retreat." He tilted his head slightly. "That's rare."

"It's a personality flaw."

The ghost of something crossed his face, too controlled to be called an expression, too present to be called nothing. "Or a skill." He reached into the car and produced a card. Plain white. One number. "I want you to work for me."

She stared at him. "I'm a stunt woman."

"You have two options," he said, as though she hadn't spoken. "You work off what you've cost me. Or you and your entire crew spend the next several months explaining to various authorities why you were conducting an unauthorized production on property belonging to someone with very significant legal resources." He held out the card. "Two hours. Call that number and we discuss terms. Or don't, and find out what happens next."

She took the card. He got back in the car without another word. The Mercedes pulled into the fog and disappeared as though it had never existed at all.

Sienna stood alone on the wrong overpass, shoulder throbbing, card pressed between her fingers, staring at the place where the car had been. Then it hit her.

She had never told him her name.

He already knew it.

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