The coffee shop smelled like burnt espresso and broken dreams.
I sat in the corner booth, nursing my third cup of coffee and second-guessing every life choice that had led me to this moment. The classified ad response sat open on my laptop screen, taunting me with its simplicity: "Available Sunday. When and where?"
What kind of person responded to a desperate woman's plea for a fake boyfriend with such casual confidence? Either someone who did this professionally—which was disturbing—or someone who genuinely didn't care about the potential chaos they were walking into. Both possibilities should have sent me running.
The bell above the door chimed, and I looked up to see a man scanning the nearly empty café. Tall, dark hair, wearing a leather jacket that had seen better days but somehow made him look more dangerous rather than shabby. His eyes swept the room with the methodical precision of someone accustomed to assessing threats.
When his gaze landed on me, something electric shot down my spine.
"Maya?" His voice was gravelly, like he'd spent years smoking cigarettes in dive bars, though he looked too healthy for that vice.
I nodded, suddenly aware of how I must look—rumpled clothes from last night's wine-fueled breakdown, hair hastily thrown into a messy bun, dark circles under my eyes that no amount of concealer could hide.
"Silas Kane." He slid into the booth across from me without waiting for an invitation. Up close, his eyes were an unusual shade of amber, almost golden in the café's harsh fluorescent lighting. "Let's talk terms."
Direct. No small talk, no awkward introductions. I appreciated that, even as something about his intensity made my pulse quicken.
"Five hundred for four hours," I said, trying to match his businesslike tone. "You play the devoted boyfriend, charm my family, and make my ex-boyfriend jealous enough to choke on his own smugness."
A ghost of a smile played at the corners of his mouth. "Sounds simple enough. But I have a condition."
Of course he did. "What kind of condition?"
"Black Friday. There's a private gathering I need to attend, and I require a date." His fingers drummed once against the table, a barely perceptible nervous tell. "Nothing dangerous, just... complicated family politics."
The irony wasn't lost on me. "So you need a fake girlfriend for your fake boyfriend services?"
"Something like that." His eyes held mine steadily. "Do we have a deal?"
I should have asked more questions. Should have demanded details about this mysterious gathering, should have wondered why someone who looked like he could handle himself needed backup for family drama. But the thought of facing Chad and Sophia alone made my stomach clench with familiar dread.
"Deal." I extended my hand across the table.
The moment our skin touched, the world tilted.
A jolt of electricity shot up my arm, so intense it made my teeth ache. The café lights seemed to flicker, or maybe that was just my vision going haywire. Silas's grip tightened involuntarily, his amber eyes flashing to something almost molten gold before returning to normal.
We both jerked our hands back as if we'd been burned.
"Static electricity," I mumbled, though the tingling sensation spreading through my entire body suggested otherwise. "Dry air."
Silas flexed his fingers, studying them with an expression I couldn't read. "Right. Static."
But his voice had gone rough around the edges, and when he looked at me again, there was something predatory in his gaze that made my breath catch. Not threatening, exactly, but... intense. Like he was seeing me for the first time and didn't entirely like what that meant.
"We should go," he said abruptly, standing. "Traffic to Beacon Hill will be murder if we wait much longer."
I blinked. "Go? Now? The dinner isn't until—"
"Two o'clock. It's already noon, and you mentioned it was your family estate. Those places are never easy to find." He was already moving toward the door, leaving me to scramble after him with my laptop bag.
Outside, he led me to a black motorcycle that looked like it could outrun most sports cars. The sight of it made my stomach drop.
"I don't do motorcycles," I said firmly. "I have a car—"
"That piece of junk won't make it up the hill roads." He tossed me a helmet. "Trust me."
There was something in his tone that brooked no argument, and despite every rational instinct screaming at me to call this whole thing off, I found myself strapping on the helmet.
The ride should have been terrifying. Silas took corners at speeds that made my heart hammer against my ribs, leaning into turns with a fluid grace that spoke of years of experience. But instead of fear, I felt... exhilarated. The wind whipped past us, carrying away the stale anxiety that had been choking me for weeks.
Halfway up the winding road to my family's estate, Silas suddenly slowed and pulled over.
"What's wrong?" I asked, pulling off my helmet.
He was already off the bike, his head tilted like he was listening to something I couldn't hear. His nostrils flared slightly, and those amber eyes swept the tree line with laser focus.
"Deer," he said after a moment. "About fifty yards ahead, right side of the road. Three of them."
I strained to listen, to see anything in the dense woods. "I don't see—"
A doe stepped delicately onto the asphalt exactly where he'd indicated, followed by two smaller shapes. They stood there for a moment, ears twitching, before bounding back into the forest.
I stared at Silas. "How did you...?"
"Good hearing." He swung his leg back over the bike, but not before I caught the way his hands trembled slightly as he gripped the handlebars. "We should keep moving."
The rest of the ride passed in a blur of questions I didn't dare ask. Good hearing didn't explain how he'd pinpointed their exact location, or how he'd known there were three of them. And it certainly didn't explain the way my skin still buzzed from that handshake, or why every instinct I had was screaming that Silas Kane was far more dangerous than any fake boyfriend had a right to be.
As the Morrison estate came into view—all sprawling lawns and old money pretension—I realized I was about to walk into my family home with a complete stranger who could apparently sense wildlife from impossible distances and whose touch had felt like lightning.
What the hell had I gotten myself into?
The first snowflake hit the windshield like a warning.
I watched through the passenger window as what had started as a light dusting quickly transformed into something more ominous. The flakes were fat and heavy now, accumulating on the road faster than the wipers could clear them.
"We should have taken my car," I muttered, pulling my coat tighter around myself in the confined space of Silas's pickup truck. After the motorcycle had refused to start—conveniently, right as the weather turned—he'd produced this ancient Ford from somewhere, claiming it was more reliable in bad weather.
Silas's hands gripped the steering wheel with practiced ease, but I noticed the way his nostrils flared slightly, the way his breathing had changed since we'd been trapped in this small space together. Every few minutes, I caught him glancing at me with an intensity that made my skin prickle.
"Storm's moving faster than the weather service predicted," he said, his voice rougher than it had been at the coffee shop. "We might need to wait it out."
As if summoned by his words, the wind picked up, howling around the truck and reducing visibility to mere feet. The road ahead disappeared into a wall of white, and Silas had no choice but to pull over at the next exit—a lonely gas station that looked like it hadn't been updated since the 1980s.
The silence in the cab was deafening once he cut the engine. Snow pelted the windows, creating a cocoon of white around us. I could hear Silas breathing, could smell something wild and earthy about him that seemed to intensify in the closed space. Pine and leather and something else I couldn't identify—something that made my pulse quicken despite myself.
"How long do you think—" I started, then stopped as I caught him staring at me again. Not just looking. Staring. Like he was trying to solve some complex equation and I was the missing variable.
"You smell different," he said suddenly, then seemed to catch himself. His jaw clenched, and he looked away sharply. "Sorry. That was... inappropriate."
Heat flooded my cheeks. "Different how?"
But he was already getting out of the truck, mumbling something about checking the gas gauge. I watched him through the swirling snow, noting the fluid way he moved, the way he seemed completely unbothered by the bitter wind that would have had me shivering in seconds.
The gas station's neon sign flickered intermittently, casting eerie red shadows across the snow. I decided I needed coffee—or at least distance from whatever strange tension was building in that truck—and followed Silas inside.
The bell above the door gave a rusty chime as we entered. The place reeked of stale cigarettes and burnt coffee, but at least it was warm. An elderly clerk looked up from his magazine, nodding at us with the weary politeness of someone accustomed to stranded travelers.
I was reaching for a coffee cup when I heard the voices behind me.
"Well, well. What do we have here?"
I turned to see three men who looked like they'd walked straight out of a biker movie—leather jackets, visible tattoos, and the kind of sneers that promised trouble. The largest one, a guy with arms like tree trunks and breath that reeked of beer, was looking me up and down with obvious interest.
"Pretty little thing, aren't you?" he continued, stepping closer. "Storm's got everyone trapped. Might as well make the best of it."
My stomach clenched with familiar fear. I glanced around for Silas, but he was in the back of the store, apparently examining beef jerky with intense concentration.
"I'm just getting coffee," I said, trying to keep my voice steady. "My boyfriend's right over there."
The man followed my gaze and laughed. "That pretty boy? He doesn't look like much protection to me."
His friends chuckled, moving to flank me. The clerk had conveniently disappeared into the back room. My heart hammered against my ribs as the leader reached out to touch my arm.
"Come on, sweetheart. Just a little conversation while we wait out the storm."
That's when I heard it.
A sound I'd never heard before—low, rumbling, and absolutely terrifying. It seemed to come from somewhere deep and primal, vibrating through the air like a physical force. The fluorescent lights flickered, and every hair on my arms stood on end.
The three men froze.
I turned to see Silas standing at the end of the aisle, and for a moment, I didn't recognize him. His amber eyes had gone molten gold, and his entire posture had changed. He looked... bigger somehow. Dangerous in a way that made my breath catch.
The growl came again, and this time I was certain it was coming from him.
The largest biker took a step back, his face going pale. "Jesus Christ," he whispered.
One of his friends actually whimpered. The third man—the one who'd been eyeing the exit—suddenly bolted for the door, leaving his companions behind. The sound of his motorcycle roaring to life cut through the storm.
The leader's bravado crumbled completely. "We... we were just leaving," he stammered, backing toward the door. A dark stain spread across the front of his jeans, and the smell of urine filled the air.
Silas took a single step forward, and both remaining men practically fell over each other in their haste to escape. The door slammed behind them, leaving us alone with the flickering neon and the sound of the storm.
I stared at Silas, my heart still racing. He was breathing hard, his hands clenched into fists at his sides. Those golden eyes slowly faded back to amber, but the dangerous edge remained.
"What the hell was that?" I whispered.
He looked at me for a long moment, something like regret flickering across his features. "We should go. Storm's clearing."
He was right. Through the windows, I could see the snow had lightened to scattered flakes. But as we walked back to the truck, questions burned in my throat. That sound he'd made—no human throat could produce something like that. And the way those men had reacted, like they'd sensed something that went beyond normal intimidation.
The drive to my parents' house passed in tense silence. By the time we pulled into the circular driveway, the sun was breaking through the clouds, making the snow-covered lawn sparkle like something from a fairy tale.
But even the picturesque scene couldn't distract me from what I'd witnessed. Or from the way every dog in the neighborhood started barking the moment Silas stepped out of the truck.
Mrs. Henderson's golden retriever, usually the friendliest dog on the block, took one look at Silas and bolted behind the house with its tail between its legs. The Johnsons' German shepherd—a dog I'd never seen back down from anything—whined and pressed itself against their front door, desperate to get inside.
One by one, every dog within a three-block radius fell silent.
Silas noticed my stare and shrugged, but I caught the way his jaw tightened. "Animals are... sensitive sometimes."
As we walked toward my childhood home, snow crunching beneath our feet, I realized that whatever I'd hired Silas Kane to do, I'd gotten far more than I'd bargained for. The man beside me wasn't just dangerous—he was something else entirely.
And in less than an hour, I was going to introduce him to my family as my boyfriend.