The garage was a cage of steel, its concrete floors stained black by decades of oil and grease and god-knows what else.
The ceiling was forty feet high with heavy steel beams and dangling chains. Huge industrial fans spun overhead, doing little to cut the heat.
I stood in the entryway, feeling incredibly small. To my left, a man with massive shoulders was hunched over a motorcycle, his back to me. He was wearing a grease-stained leather apron, and his movements were extremely fast as he tightened bolts on the bike.
"Hello?" I called out.
The sound of the grinder stopped instantly. The silence that followed was heavy, almost predatory.
From the shadows at the back of the garage, three men emerged. They didn't walk like mechanics; they moved with a prowling grace that made the hair on my arms stand up. They didn't say a word. They just watched me, their eyes dark and not blinking.
"I'm here about the sign," I said, my voice echoing in the huge space.
"The reception job."
One of the men, a younger guy with a scar across his eyebrow, tilted his head. He took a long, excessive sniff of the air, his nostrils flaring. He looked at the others and smiled, a sharp, toothy smirk that felt more like a threat than a greeting.
"You're lost, sweetheart," he said, his voice low.
"The country club is ten miles east."
"I'm not lost," I snapped, the old Thorne fire coming to life.
"I’m looking for the manager. Is there one, or do you all just stand around sniffing the air like dogs?"
A low growl, not a human sound, came from the back of the shop. The three men immediately stepped aside, clearing a path.
He stepped out from behind a lifted Ford F-350.
He was the most intimidating man I had ever seen. He wasn't just tall; he was wide, built of solid muscle. He wore a black tank top and heavy work pants, his skin covered in a thin layer of soot and oil.
But it was his eyes that stopped my breath. They weren't brown or hazel. They were amber, like honey if held up to a flame.
"I'm Cane," he said.
"I own this place."
"I'm Eloise Miller," I said, trying to keep my knees from knocking.
"I'm here for the job."
Cane walked toward me, his movements slow and deliberate. He stopped just inches away, invading my space so completely I could feel the heat from his skin. He smelled like something wild, something that reminded me of the forest at night.
"You?" he said, his eyes scanning me from head to toe.
"You look like you’ve never broken a fingernail in your life. Why would a girl like you want to sit in a grease pit like this?"
"Because I need the money," I said, looking him dead in the eye.
"And because I’m tougher than I look."
Cane leaned down, his face very close to mine. For a second, his amber eyes seemed to glow, the pupils narrowing. He took a slow, deep breath, his chest expanding. I felt like a rabbit standing in front of a wolf.
"We had an assistant," Cane said, his voice dropping to a whisper.
"A guy named Pete. Pete thought he could skim from the till. Pete thought he could go places in this shop he wasn't invited to."
"What happened to Pete?" I asked, my heart pounding so loud, it felt like everyone could hear it.
"Pete... moved on," one of the men in the back said, followed by a chorus of dark chuckles.
Cane ignored them, his focus entirely on me.
"This isn't a normal office, Miller. We work long hours. We deal with rough people. And most importantly, we don't like questions. You see something, you hear something...you keep your mouth shut, and you keep the books straight. Think you can handle that?"
"I can keep my mouth shut better than anyone you've ever met," I said, which was true.
Growing up in the Thorne household was a daily masterclass in keeping secrets. I watched my father sign off on "hurricane relief" funds that I knew were actually being routed to bribe a zoning commissioner for a new high-rise project. I once sat through a three-course dinner smiling at a CEO, knowing my father had a folder in his desk that would destroy the man’s marriage by sunrise. Most importantly, I mastered the art of the "Thorne stare," a cold, blank expression used to hide the fact that my heart was racing with terror.
Cane studied me for a long moment. The garage seemed to grow still, as if everyone was waiting for his command. I felt a strange pull toward him, a sudden recognition that this man was the center of the world here.
"He's the Alpha," my brain whispered, though I didn't know why I used that word.
"The pay is twelve an hour," Cane finally said, straightening up.
"Cash. No benefits. No whining. You start at 6:00 AM tomorrow. If you’re a minute late, don’t bother coming back."
He turned his back on me, heading back toward the truck.
"Wait," I called out.
"That's it? You're not going to check my references?"
Cane stopped and looked back over his shoulder, a slight predatory smile on his lips.
"I don't care who you used to be, Miller. I can smell the truth on people. And right now, you smell like someone who has nowhere else to go."
He whistled, a sharp, piercing sound. The other men immediately went back to work.
"See you at six," Cane growled.
As I walked back to my Toyota, my hands were shaking so hard I could barely unlock the door. I looked back at the garage. In the shadows of the upper loft, I could see two more pairs of eyes watching me, amber and glowing.
I had no idea what I had just signed up for. But for the first time in three weeks, I wasn't a ghost. I was a Miller. And I had a job.