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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.
Six Months Later.The sound of the engine wasn’t a roar anymore; it was a deep, contented purr.I leaned over the handlebars of the newly rebuilt Sovereign, tightening the final bolt on the intake manifold. The bike didn't have the volatile, dirty Phase-Drive anymore, nor the freezing closed-loop stealth core. It was just a machine again heavy iron, clean fuel, and a soul.I wiped a streak of grease from my forehead with the back of my hand and took a step back to admire the work.The garage doors were wide open, letting in the late afternoon sun. But the light didn't filter through the toxic yellow smog of Coldwater. The light was golden, clear, and smelled like pine needles and fresh water.The Origin-Code detonation hadn't just destroyed the Nullity; it had cracked the earth’s corrupted hard drive and installed a patch of pure, chaotic life. The Radiation-Sea was gone. In its place was a sprawling, untamed wilderness of bioluminescent flora towering trees with leaves that glowed fa
The silence that followed the end of the world was surprisingly peaceful.There were no sirens. No synthesized Board announcements echoing from the street-level speakers. The deafening, mechanical roar of the Nullity Armada had been replaced by the gentle, unfamiliar sound of wind blowing through the shattered glass of the Citadel’s penthouse.I lay on my back, staring up at the stars. They were so bright they almost hurt to look at. For twenty-four years, the sky above Coldwater had been a toxic ceiling of smog and neon light pollution. Now, it was a canvas of infinite, glittering possibilities.A shadow leaned over me, blocking out the constellation of Orion.Dax. His breathing was heavy, and a thin line of blood trickled from his hairline, tracing the edge of the scar on his jaw. But his amber eyes were shining with a light I hadn't seen since the porch in the simulation. It was the look of a man who had finally put down a weight he had carried
The freight elevator ascending to the roof of the Citadel was a metal box of rattling nerves and deafening silence.Every few seconds, the elevator shaft shuddered violently as another blind anti-matter beam hammered against the Phase-Shield miles above us. Dust fell from the ceiling grating, dusting our shoulders in a fine layer of grey ash.Dax stood beside me, his phased combat knife held loosely in his right hand, his SMG slung across his back. He didn't look at the floor numbers ticking upward on the digital display. He looked at me."Ghost," he said, his voice barely audible over the mechanical hum of the lift. "When the shield drops, the entire Armada is going to get a lock on this building. It won't be a blind bombardment anymore. It will be a localized deletion strike.""I know," I said, adjusting the heavy data-deck strapped to my forearm. The Origin-Code pulsing in my veins felt like liquid adrenaline, sharp and electric. "The mass driv
We didn't ride back to the Citadel in glory. We limped back in the back of a scavenged Board transport truck.With three of our stealth bikes completely bricked by the localized flash-freeze and Dax’s Interceptor coughing black smoke, riding wasn't an option. We sat in the cavernous cargo bay of the truck, the silence heavy and exhausted.In the center of the metal floor sat the canvas saddlebag. Inside, the Void-Drive hummed, casting a faint, rhythmic sapphire and purple pulse against the walls. It felt like transporting a captured, angry star.When the truck finally rolled into the subterranean loading dock of the Citadel, Tank and my father were waiting.Tank leaned heavily on a makeshift crutch welded from a plasma-rifle barrel, his amputated foot wrapped in thick, synthetic bio-gel bandages. My father ran past him, pulling down the tailgate of the truck."You made it," my father breathed, his eyes instantly locking onto the pulsing c
The horizon wasn't a line; it was a collapsing ceiling.Above the desolate ash of the Radiation-Sea, the Nullity Armada was descending. Massive, geometric drop-ships black monoliths that absorbed the starlight were detaching from the main fleet, dropping toward the wasteland like falling tombstones.Behind us, the six Null-Stalkers were gaining ground, their multi-jointed limbs eating up the distance with terrifying, silent speed.And beneath me, the Sovereign was dying."Engine core at negative one hundred and forty degrees!" I yelled over the comms, my teeth chattering uncontrollably. Frost was crawling up the matte-black gas tank, spreading across the digital dash in jagged, fractal patterns. The closed-loop cooling system my father had installed was working too well. Without venting the heat, the localized thermodynamics were flash-freezing the engine block."Push through it, Ghost!" Dax roared back, his Interceptor holding the point position in our diamond formation. "We're fifte
The roar of Dax’s Interceptor was a physical blow to the silent wasteland.It wasn't just noise; it was a declaration of war. As he dumped the clutch and tore the closed-loop stealth limiters from his engine, the bike erupted in a blinding trail of blue Phase-fire. He didn't ride away from the crater; he rode parallel to the ridge, deliberately silhouetting himself against the desolate ash, a screaming beacon of human defiance.All six Null-Stalkers snapped their featureless, jagged heads toward him.They didn't howl. They didn't growl. They simply moved. They launched themselves up the side of the glass crater with terrifying, impossible speed, their multi-jointed limbs propelling them like spiders made of obsidian. As they ran, the void-whips lashing from their backs struck the ground, casually deleting boulders and vitrified sand, leaving perfectly smooth, smoking trenches in their wake.Go, Reaper signaled, his hand a sharp, flat blade cutting toward the crashed ship.I didn't wat
The morning sun crept over the horizon, painting the jagged peaks of the Devil's Backbone in hues of bruised purple and gold. The air was finally still, the violent thrum of the helicopter and the scream of engines replaced by the distant, rhythmic clinking of federal agents tagging evidence. I s
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 landing was a bone-jarring collision of rubber and steel. The Norton slammed onto the metal deck of the freighter, the suspension bottoming out with a scream that vibrated through my teeth. I fought the handlebars as the bike skidded across the rain-slicked surface, finally sliding to a halt
The scent of Coldwater had changed. It no longer smelled like the heavy, stagnant tension of a city under Silas Thorne's thumb; it smelled like ozone, wet pavement, and the sharp, metallic tang of an impending storm. As the pack crossed the city limits, the familiar red-brick landscape of the ind







