Chapter 2 Two
Murphy's Garage sat on the wrong side of Coldwater, wedged between a pawn shop and a laundromat that had been closed since I was twelve. The building's red brick had faded to the color of dried blood, and the sign out front buzzed even when it wasn't lit. It wasn't much, but for the past three years, it had been my sanctuary.
Now it felt like a trap.
I'd arrived at eleven-thirty, too anxious to wait at home in the cramped studio apartment I could barely afford. The garage bay was open, and I'd thrown myself into work, trying to lose myself in the familiar comfort of engines and grease. Old man Patterson's Ford needed a transmission flush, and I'd thrown myself into it despite the morning chill, my hands already black with grime.
Work was the only thing that quieted my mind. The only thing that made sense in a world that had been chaos since Dad died.
My father, Chen Wei, had been the best motorcycle mechanic in three counties. He'd learned his trade in Taiwan before immigrating to the States, and he'd taught me everything he knew. How to listen to an engine's heartbeat. How to feel a problem through the handlebars. How to transform a broken machine into something beautiful and powerful.
What he hadn't taught me was how to deal with the Iron Wolves.
Three years ago, Dad had been contracted to customize bikes for the club. The president at the time, Dutch Steele, Dax's mother, had commissioned an entire fleet of custom choppers for the club's twentieth anniversary. Dad had poured everything into that job, his time, his money, his reputation. He'd taken out loans to buy the parts, hired extra help, worked sixteen-hour days.
Then Dutch claimed the work was substandard and refused to pay. Not just refused she'd spread word throughout the biker community that Chen Wei was unreliable, that his work was shoddy. The loans came due. Clients vanished. Dad's shop went under in three months.
He had a heart attack two weeks after losing everything. I found him in his garage, slumped over a partially assembled engine, his tools still in his hands.
I was nineteen years old, working my way through community college, when I became an orphan and inherited a mountain of debt.
The rumble of motorcycles pulled me from my memories. I didn't need to look up to know who it was. That particular deep, powerful sound belonged to only one club in Coldwater.
The Iron Wolves.
I wiped my hands on a rag and stepped out of the garage bay. Five bikes rolled into the parking lot, their chrome gleaming in the noon sun. Dax Steele rode at the front, her Harley customized with details that made my mechanic's eye clock the craftsmanship even as every instinct screamed at me to run.
She dismounted with that same predatory grace I'd witnessed last night. Today she wore a leather vest over a black t-shirt, her club patches prominently displayed. Vice President. The Iron Wolves logo, a snarling wolf's head surrounded by flames, dominated her back.
The other riders fanned out behind her. I recognized a few faces from around town. Tank, the club's enforcer, built like his namesake. Reaper, the road captain, covered in tattoos. And two others whose names I didn't know but whose expressions were equally hostile.
"Zed Chen," Dax said. It wasn't a greeting. It was a statement of fact.
"You're trespassing," I replied. "This is private property."
"Murphy knows we're here. Called him this morning." Dax pulled off her gloves. "He's a smart man. Knows when to make himself scarce."
Anger flared in my chest. "You threatened him?"
"I asked nicely. There's a difference." She stepped closer, and I held my ground. "We need to talk. About your debt. About last night."
"I don't need your help."
"Fifty thousand dollars says you do."
"I'll figure something out."
Dax's laugh was sharp and humorless. "Right. You'll just magic up fifty grand in what, sixty hours now? Face it, Zed. You're screwed. Snake doesn't forgive debts, and he doesn't forget. You know what he did to the last person who couldn't pay?"
I didn't answer. Everyone knew what Snake had done. The guy still walked with a limp.
"But here's the thing," Dax continued. "I can make your problem disappear. All of it. The fifty grand. Snake's threats. Everything."
"Why?" The question came out harder than I intended. "Why would you help me? Your club destroyed my father. Or did you forget that part?"
Something dangerous flashed in Dax's eyes. "I forget nothing about your father, Zed. Nothing." She pulled out a cigarette, then seemed to think better of it and put it away. "But what if I told you that everything you think you know about what happened three years ago is wrong?"
"I'd say you're a liar."
"Your father's work wasn't substandard. It was perfect. Better than perfect, it was art." Dax's voice dropped lower. "My mother didn't refuse to pay because the work was bad. She refused to pay because she was being blackmailed."
The world seemed to tilt slightly. "What?"
"Three years ago, a rival club, the Death Dealers out of Pittsburgh wanted our territory. They had dirt on Dutch, on the club. They gave her a choice bankrupt Chen Wei and drive him out of business, or they'd expose everything. Destroy the Iron Wolves entirely."
I shook my head, unwilling to believe it. "That's convenient. Blame it on some other club."
"I have proof," Dax said quietly. "Recordings. Documents. Text messages between my mother and the Death Dealers' president. I've been gathering evidence for two years."
"Why?" The question burst from me. "If you have proof, why haven't you done anything about it?"
"Because my mother is still club president, and she'd rather protect the club's reputation than admit what she did. Because the Death Dealers are still out there, still powerful, still dangerous." Dax's jaw tightened. "And because your father wasn't the only person Dutch hurt to keep the club safe."
The other Iron Wolves shifted uncomfortably. There was a story there, something painful, but Dax didn't elaborate.
"What does any of this have to do with my debt to Snake?" I asked.
"Snake works for the Death Dealers. Last night wasn't coincidence it was a setup. They sabotaged Razor's bike and planted that tracker on yours. They knew Ghost Rider was you, Zed. They've known for weeks." Dax's voice was flat and hard. "They want you in debt to them. They want leverage."
"Leverage for what?"
"For me." Her expression hardened. "The Death Dealers know I've been investigating. They know I'm close to having enough proof to take them down. They figure if they control you, they control me."
"That doesn't make sense. Why would you care what happens to me?"
Dax was quiet for a long moment. When she spoke, her voice carried a weight I hadn't heard before. "Because your father saved my brother's life once. Because Dutch's actions got a good man killed. Because I'm trying to fix the mistakes my family made, even if it costs me everything." She met my eyes. "And because you're a hell of a rider, and I need someone exactly like you."
"Need me for what?"
"There's an inter-club championship race in six weeks. Winner takes fifty thousand in prize money and territorial rights to three counties. Every major club will be there, including the Death Dealers." Dax pulled a folded paper from her vest pocket and held it out. "I want you to race for the Iron Wolves. You win, and the prize money clears your debt to Snake and then some. More importantly, it puts the Death Dealers in a position where they have to deal with me directly."
I stared at the paper without taking it. "You want me to join your club? The club that destroyed my father?"
"I want you to help me destroy the people who actually destroyed your father," Dax corrected. "There's a difference."
"And I'm supposed to just trust you? Just believe that everything you're saying is true?"
"No." Dax's expression didn't soften. "I'm asking you to come to my clubhouse tonight. Look at the evidence yourself. Talk to people who knew your father, who know what really happened. Then decide."
"And if I say no?"
"Then you've got about sixty hours to come up with fifty grand or disappear." Her voice was matter-of-fact, not threatening. Just honest. "Your choice, Zed."
She placed the folded paper on the hood of Patterson's Ford, then turned back to her bike.
"One more thing," I called out. She paused. "Why now? Why wait three years to tell me all this?"
Dax looked back over her shoulder, and for just a moment, I saw something raw and painful in her expression.
"Because three years ago, I was a different person. I believed in my mother, believed in the club's code. I thought what she did to your father was justified somehow, that the club came first." She swung her leg over her Harley. "Then I learned the truth about a lot of things. About Dutch. About the Death Dealers. About the cost of loyalty when it's given to the wrong people."
The engine roared to life. "Eight o'clock tonight, Zed. Iron Wolves clubhouse on Route Forty-Seven. Come alone, or bring an army. Either way, I'll be waiting."
Then they were gone, leaving me standing in an empty parking lot with grease-stained hands and a choice I never wanted to make.
I picked up the paper Dax had left behind. Unfolded it.
It was a photograph. My father, younger than I remembered him, standing beside a teenage boy in a hospital bed. The boy's leg was in a cast, but he was smiling. My father's hand rested on the boy's shoulder.
On the back, in handwriting I didn't recognize: "Chen Wei fixed my bike after my crash and refused payment. Said family takes care of family. I never forgot. Marcus Steele."
Marcus. Dax's younger brother. The one who'd died two years ago in a motorcycle accident that everyone said was suspicious.
My hands were shaking as I tucked the photograph into my pocket.
Maybe Dax Steele was telling the truth.
Or maybe this was just another lie in a town built on them.
Either way, I knew I'd be at that clubhouse tonight.
