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They say you can't outrun your past on two wheels, but I was about to prove them wrong until the man who destroyed my father's legacy pulled up beside me at 90 miles per hour.
The engine beneath me roared like a caged beast as I leaned into the turn, my knee nearly scraping asphalt. Wind screamed past my helmet, carrying the acrid smell of burning rubber and gasoline. This was freedom. This was power. This was the only place where Mia Chen, struggling mechanic and daddy's disappointing daughter, didn't exist.
Here, I was Ghost Rider.
The motorcycle beneath me, a custom Ducati I'd rebuilt from salvage, responded to my every touch like an extension of my body. I'd spent three years perfecting her, using every spare dollar I could scrape together from my day job at Murphy's Garage. Murphy paid me half what he paid his male mechanics, but I couldn't complain. Jobs were scarce when your last name was Chen and everyone in Coldwater knew your father died owing money to half the town.
The straightaway opened up before me, and I twisted the throttle. The speedometer climbed at eighty, ninety, one hundred. My competitor, a rider on a Yamaha R1 who went by "Razor," was half a bike length behind. I could feel his frustration radiating through the night air. He'd been winning these underground races for six months straight until Ghost Rider appeared three months ago.
He had no idea Ghost Rider was a woman. None of them did.
That was the point.
The final turn approached, a sharp chicane that separated the winners from the wrecks. I'd memorized every inch of this abandoned airstrip outside town, knew exactly where the asphalt cracked and where oil stains made the surface treacherous. I braked hard, downshifted, and dove into the turn.
That's when I felt something was wrong with my helmet strap.
The cheap clasp I'd been meaning to replace finally gave up. The helmet shifted on my head, the visor tilting. I couldn't see clearly. Panic shot through me, but I couldn't slow down now, not this close to the finish line. I'd lose everything, the five thousand dollar purse I desperately needed to make this month's payments on Dad's debts.
I crossed the finish line first, but the helmet was sliding backward. My hands flew up instinctively to catch it, and the bike wobbled. I managed to regain control and slow down, but it was too late.
The helmet tumbled from my grip.
Long black hair spilled down my back as I brought the Ducati to a stop. The crowd of spectators, rough men and women who bet on these illegal races fell silent. In the sudden quiet, I could hear my heart hammering against my ribs.
"Holy shit," someone breathed. "Ghost Rider's a chick?"
I turned slowly, meeting dozens of stares. Some shocked. Some angry. Some calculating in a way that made my skin crawl. I'd been so careful for months, and now everything was ruined in one moment of mechanical failure.
Then I heard the sound that made my blood run cold, the deep rumble of multiple motorcycles approaching. Heavy bikes. Harleys, from the sound of them. The crowd parted like the Red Sea as five riders rolled into the circle of light cast by the spectators' headlights.
The lead rider dismounted with predatory grace. Even in the dim light, I recognized him. Everyone in Coldwater knew Dax Steele. Six-foot-three of leather-clad muscle, dark hair pulled back in a knot, and eyes that could cut through steel. The Vice President of the Iron Wolves Motorcycle Club.
The club that destroyed my father.
"Well, well," Dax drawled, his voice carrying across the silent crowd. "Ghost Rider finally shows her face. Or should I say, Mia Chen shows hers?"
My stomach dropped. He knew who I was. Of course he did. In a town this small, everyone knew everyone's business.
"Problem, Steele?" I forced my voice steady, even as my hands trembled.
He walked toward me with the confidence of a man who owned the ground he walked on. "Just enjoying the show. You've got skills, I'll give you that. Your old man taught you well before he—"
"Don't." The word came out sharp as a blade. "Don't you dare talk about my father."
Something flickered in Dax's eyes. Surprise, maybe. Or respect. It vanished as quickly as it appeared.
The race organizer, a wiry man named Snake, pushed through the crowd. His face was flushed, angry. "We got a problem here, Ghost Rider. Turns out Razor had a tracker on your bike. Claims you knew the course ahead of time, that you sabotaged his engine at the starting line."
"That's bullshit," I snapped. "I won fair and square."
"Tracker don't lie, sweetheart." Snake crossed his arms. "Shows you riding this course three nights ago, practicing. That's against the rules. And Razor's bike? Somebody loosened his brake line just enough to make him cautious on the turns."
Ice flooded my veins. "I didn't touch his bike. I've never cheated in my life."
"Convenient that your helmet just happened to fall off after you won," Razor spat, pushing forward. His face was twisted with rage. "Probably planned it that way, figured showing you're a girl would get you sympathy points."
The crowd's mood shifted. I could feel it like a physical thing, the anger, the sense of betrayal. These people had bet money on Ghost Rider, had built the mysterious racer up into a legend. Finding out that legend was a woman was bad enough. Finding out she might be a cheater? That was unforgivable.
"You know the penalty for cheating," Snake said. His hand moved to his belt, where I knew he carried a knife. "You pay back everyone who bet on you. That's about fifty grand, give or take."
Fifty thousand dollars. I barely had fifty dollars in my bank account.
"I don't have that kind of money," I said quietly.
"Then we got a problem." Snake stepped closer. "Because one way or another, you're gonna pay."
The Iron Wolves moved almost imperceptibly, forming a loose circle around the scene. Dax hadn't moved, but his eyes tracked everything. I couldn't read his expression.
"I'll give you seventy-two hours," Snake continued. "You bring me fifty grand, or we take it out of your hide. And that pretty little garage you work at? Might have some unfortunate accidents."
My mind raced. Murphy's Garage was barely staying afloat as it was. If anything happened to it, Murphy and his family would be ruined. And I knew Snake wasn't bluffing. These people didn't make idle threats.
"I need more time," I tried.
"Seventy-two hours," Snake repeated. "Starting now."
The crowd began to disperse, muttering among themselves. Razor shot me a triumphant sneer before climbing back on his Yamaha. I stood there, alone except for my Ducati and the bitter taste of desperation.
Almost alone.
Dax Steele hadn't moved. He watched me with those unsettling dark eyes, his expression unreadable.
"Something you want, Steele?" I asked, too tired and scared to be properly cautious.
He tilted his head slightly. "Maybe I have a solution to your problem."
"I don't need anything from an Iron Wolf."
"Fifty thousand dollars says otherwise." He pulled out a cigarette, lit it. "Meet me tomorrow. Murphy's Garage. Noon. Come alone."
"Why would I."
"Because, Mia Chen," he interrupted, exhaling smoke, "you're out of options. And because despite what you think you know about me, about my club, about what happened to your father….you don't know the whole story."
He climbed back on his Harley, the engine roaring to life.
"Noon tomorrow," he called over the rumble. "Or start running. Though we both know you can't outrun this debt."
Then he was gone, his club following like a pack of wolves, leaving me alone in the darkness with a broken helmet and a debt I could never pay.
In another life, in another context, twenty meters was nothing. Twenty meters was the distance between one side of Murphy's Garage and the other. Twenty meters was how far she used to stand from the chain-link fence when she practiced her throwing arm as a teenager, alone in the backyard of the Coldwater house while her father sang something tuneless in the kitchen.Here, twenty meters was approximately forever.Mia moved low and fast, Dax half a step behind her and to the right. The red pulses from the spire washed over them in waves, each one pressing harder against her skull than the last. Her vision was fine. Her hearing was fine. But at the periphery of her thoughts, things were beginning to slip slightly, names misfiling themselves, sequences taking a moment longer to assemble. She had warned them about neurological interference. She had not mentioned that it felt quite so personal, as though the Archon's machine was not suppressing thought in general but was specifically, surgi
It was one thing to understand something in theory. It was another thing entirely to stand in front of it.The array was not beautiful in any conventional sense, but it had the brutal, terrible beauty of things built without conscience by something that understood only function. The central spire rose from a plinth of reinforced black iron, studded with component housings and power conduits the thickness of Mia's torso. Six satellite dishes fanned outward from its base like the petals of some industrial flower, each one angled with precise mathematical care to maximise signal spread across the smothered continent. Red energy pulsed from the spire in slow, rhythmic waves that bent the air around it in visible distortions, and with each pulse the hum in Mia's skull tightened another degree.She had grown up taking engines apart to understand them. She had rebuilt carburettors at fourteen, rewired ignition systems at sixteen, and by twenty she could diagnose a mechanical fault by sound a
Sixty stories of iron does not care how determined you are. It simply exists, patient and indifferent, waiting to find out whether your arms will give out before your will does.Mia climbed.Her shoulders burned somewhere around the fortieth rung. By the sixtieth, her hands had moved past pain into a strange, distant numbness that she recognised from long nights in the garage back in Coldwater, when she had worked through exhaustion into some quieter country beyond it. Her father had called it the second wind of the body. She called it stubbornness wearing comfortable shoes.Dax climbed directly below her. She was aware of him the way she was aware of gravity, which is to say constantly and without having chosen to be."Tell me something," she said quietly, not because she needed conversation but because the hum was getting worse. It pressed against her skull in slow, rhythmic pulses, and having a voice to focus on was better than having nothing."What do you want to know?""What does
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