Current location: Novel nest Ghost Doesn’t Fall in Love Chapter 1

"Ghost Doesn’t Fall in Love" Chapter 1

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Ghost survived black sites, torture, overseas wars, and six years of becoming something less human and more useful.

Founder of BLACK VEIL.

Mercenary captain.

A ghost story in tactical gear.

The kind of man people called when they needed a building cleared, a body retrieved, or a problem buried so deep it stopped having a name.

He was silent, brutal, untouchable.

Even his own men feared him.

As for someone like that—

Nyra Quinn, underground mechanic and illegal street racer, had one very professional opinion:

"He looks like he buries people in wet cement for stress relief."

Then one day,

Ghost watched her steal a motorcycle outside a bank and chase down a robber through downtown LA traffic like she's starring in her own action movie.

He's in the middle of a sniper assignment when it happened.

One second he's calculating wind direction.

The next?

Nyra tackled the guy off a bike, draged him into an alley, and started beating him with her helmet...

He forgot his target existed for six seconds.

For the first time in eight years.

...

Later,

Nyra worked under the hood of BLACK VEIL's armored SUV while six armed mercenaries stood around like emotionally constipated furniture.

She didn't look up.

> "Does your boss come with a user manual, or is the mask supposed to explain the whole personality disorder?"

The garage went silent.

Because no one talked about Ghost.

Not like that.

Not in front of him.

Ghost stood beside the vehicle, skull mask turned toward her.

After a long pause, he said,

> "Nyra."

She rolled out from under the engine with a wrench in her hand.

> "What?"

His grey eyes lowered to the grease on her cheek.

Then to her mouth.

Then back to her eyes.

> "Come here."

Nyra narrowed her eyes.

> "If this is a murder thing, I'm charging extra."

Ghost's voice dropped lower.

Rougher.

> "I lost focus on a job today."

Nyra blinked.

> "Congratulations on having a human experience?"

His men stopped breathing.

Ghost didn't move.

> "Because of you."

Nyra stared at him.

The wrench slipped slightly in her hand.

Across the garage, Kane muttered,

> "We're all completely fucked."

① Emotionally repressed masked mercenary captain × sunshine chaos mechanic

② He kills people for touching him.She touches his mask and asks if he's hiding scars or feelings under there.

③ Slow burn / touch-starved antihero / found family mercenaries / black humor / "she makes the monster hesitate."

--

--

The armored SUV rolled into Nyra's garage sounding like it was dying.

Metal screamed somewhere beneath the chassis. The left suspension dragged hard enough to spit sparks across concrete. One headlight flickered twice before giving up completely.

Nyra stood beneath the raised garage door with crossed arms while the vehicle limped to a stop in the middle of her workspace.

Jesus Christ.

What had these people done, drive through a war zone?

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Actually—

looking at the blood—

probably.

The engine cut.

Silence slammed into the garage.

Not normal silence.

The kind that came loaded.

Six armed men climbed out one by one, dressed head-to-toe in black tactical gear. Efficient movements. Controlled scanning. Hands never far from weapons.

Not gang members.

Not cartel muscle.

Military.

Real military.

Or worse.

Nyra's eyes tracked automatically:

expensive rifles

combat boots

body armor

blood patterns

movement discipline

Professional killers.

Cool. Love that for her.

Ghost exited last.

Tall enough to eclipse the garage lights behind him. Broad shoulders wrapped in tactical black. Skull-pattern mask. Blood drying along one glove.

The entire room subtly bent around him.

Even his own people adjusted unconsciously when he moved.

Authority without effort.

Nyra hated how noticeable that was.

"You know," she said casually, "most people call before bringing their private war into my garage."

Nobody answered.

The underground garage waited beneath an abandoned textile warehouse.

Illegal races upstairs.

Weapons deals downstairs.

Money mattered more than questions down here.

Music still played somewhere near the back office. Bass rattled the walls. Nobody moved to shut it off. Nobody moved at all.

Every single person in the garage avoided direct eye contact with Ghost.

Not because of the skull-pattern mask.

Not because of the blood covering his gloves.

Because danger had a certain shape to it.

And Ghost looked like the kind that walked away alive while everyone else stopped breathing.

He moved through the center of the garage without speaking, tactical boots echoing against concrete. His team spread naturally around him, armed and tense.

One mechanic near the tool bench physically backed away.

A mercenary behind Ghost muttered quietly,

"…Jesus. She's dead."

Ghost stopped.

The girl was standing right in front of him.

Dark curls.

Oil stains on her tank top.

A knife holster strapped to one thigh.

Most people reacted to him one of three ways.

Fear.

Submission.

Or stupidity disguised as bravery.

This wasn't any of those.

Meanwhile, she was also sizing him up - Skull mask. Black tactical gear. Blood on his gloves. Shoulders broad enough to make the SUV behind him look smaller than it had any right to.

Nyra tilted her head.

"…Damn," she said. "You're either military or deeply committed to being intimidating."

A silence dropped so hard it practically dented the concrete.

One of the mercenaries stepped forward, hand already moving toward his sidearm.

"Watch your mouth."

Nyra looked at the weapon.

Then at the man.

Then back to the masked giant in front.

"…Cute," she said lightly. "You brought emotional support."

Someone near the motorcycles made a strangled sound, like a laugh had tried to escape and been murdered halfway out.

The masked man lifted one gloved hand.

The mercenary stopped moving.

Nyra blinked.

Oh.

So that was how this worked.

The scary one didn't need to raise his voice. He didn't even need to speak. One small movement from him, and the room rearranged itself around his silence.

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Nyra hated how interesting that was.

The man's grey eyes stayed fixed on her through the mask, like she had done something tactically incorrect by existing.

"Oh," she said softly. "So you're the scary one."

"You plan to kill someone," she asked casually, "or can I save your number first?"

Ghost's second-hand, Kane looked horrified, his expression caught somewhere between disbelief and preparing to watch a public execution.

Kane had seen Ghost walk through gunfire without flinching.

Seen him torture men for information.

Seen him stitch his own wounds shut in silence.

None of that had ever scared Kane.

But the mechanic flirting with him?

Yeah. They were all fucked.

Nyra finally began to read the room. "What?" she asked.

Nobody answered.

Nyra pointed her wrench toward the armored SUV.

"Rear axle's shot. Transmission fluid's leaking all over my floor. Left suspension sounds like somebody tried to exorcise it with a grenade."

Her eyes shifted to the operative bleeding against the wall.

"And that one's going to pass out in about twenty minutes if somebody doesn't stitch his side."

The wounded man straightened slightly, offended on principle despite the blood soaking through his black tactical shirt.

"I'm fine," Reed said. His voice was too smooth for a man actively leaking.

Pale skin. Long ash-blond hair pulled back at his nape. Green-grey eyes that looked expensive and vaguely unwell.

"You're like Victorian tuberculosis with a knife wound."

Lucas, dark curls and silver rings catching the shop lights, made a delighted sound under his breath.

Kane dragged a hand down his face. "Reed."

Reed's mouth curved faintly, like being injured was an inconvenience beneath his dignity.

The masked man finally spoke.

"You a mechanic or a medic?"

His voice was low, rough, and controlled, the kind of voice that didn't need volume because people leaned in despite themselves.

Nyra grinned before she could stop herself.

"Ooh. He talks."

Someone at the back of the garage whispered, "She's insane."

Something shifted behind those grey eyes. Interest, maybe. Or irritation wearing interest's clothes.

The masked man stepped closer.

Nyra had to tip her chin back to keep eye contact, which annoyed her on a spiritual level. Up close, he was worse. Taller than he had any right to be. Six-five, maybe. Built like violence had gone to the gym, found religion, then lost it again.

Most people would have stepped back.

Nyra stayed where she was.

That wasn't bravery. Not exactly.

She had grown up around men who used size as punctuation. Men who broke bottles, doors, promises. Men who mistook fear for respect because nobody had ever taught them the difference.

The trick was not to flinch too early.

Or, if flinching became unavoidable, make sure you had a wrench in your hand.

The masked man stared down at her.

Nyra glanced over the blood on his gear, the way his shoulders didn't quite relax, the way his attention kept flicking to exits even while he watched her.

"You look exhausted," she said, like she was commenting on the weather instead of talking to the most dangerous man in the room. "Go get some sleep or something while I fix this."

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