I never told my billionaire in-laws I was a retired Special Forces Colonel. “What will high society think of those calloused hands?” my arrogant mother-in-law spat, convinced I was just a dirty mechanic after their fortune. I let them believe it. I just wanted a quiet life. But when a ruthless cartel stormed our wedding reception to execute his entire family,

Coffee

He blinked, clearly surprised. I was used to that look. Most wealthy men who drifted into my shop assumed I was the receptionist pretending to know about cars until a “real mechanic” showed up. But this man—Daniel Harrison, as I would soon learn—didn’t offer a patronizing smile. He leaned against my workbench, crossed his arms, and genuinely listened as I walked him through the repair process.

While I worked, we talked. I expected him to bury his face in his phone, but he asked questions. He was fascinated by the mechanics, asking about torque, gear ratios, and how I diagnosed the issue so quickly. Most people in his tax bracket treated service workers like invisible furniture, but Daniel looked right at me. He saw me.

Apparel

When I finally slammed the hood shut and wiped my brow, he insisted on paying double my standard hourly rate.

“Would you… maybe like to get coffee sometime?” he asked, lingering by the driver’s side door.

I almost laughed out loud. A man in an Italian suit asking out a girl covered in engine grease. But the sincerity in his amber eyes pinned me to the spot. There was no mockery, no arrogant swagger. Just a man asking a woman for a cup of coffee.

Dresses

“Sure,” I heard myself say.

That single coffee spiraled into three-hour dinners, long walks through the quiet streets of Milfield, and late-night phone calls. Daniel revealed he was the CEO of Harrison Tech, a massive, billion-dollar cybersecurity and tech firm built by his father. I told him about my love for fixing broken things and my quiet life.

What I deliberately omitted was why I craved that quiet. I never mentioned the nightmares, the medals hidden in a shoebox under my bed, or the ghosts I was running from.

Three months later, he proposed. There was no flash mob, no stadium screen. Just the two of us in my cramped apartment above the garage, the smell of rain hitting the asphalt outside.

“Sarah, I’ve never met anyone like you,” he said, dropping to one knee on my worn rug. “You’re real. You’re entirely genuine. You make me feel like Daniel, the man, not Daniel, the bank account. Will you marry me?”

I said yes, tears blurring my vision. But a cold, heavy knot of dread settled in my stomach. Daniel loved Sarah the mechanic. He had absolutely no idea who I was before I put on those coveralls.

And as the heavy oak doors of the Harrison family estate swung open to welcome me a week later, I realized my simple life was over. I was walking completely blind into a battlefield I hadn’t scouted.

Family

The moment I crossed the threshold of the Harrison mansion, the temperature seemed to drop twenty degrees.

Daniel’s mother, Catherine Harrison, was the terrifying archetype of a billionaire’s matriarch. Her hair was a stiff, platinum blonde helmet, her neck dripped with flawless diamonds, and her gaze swept over me like I was a particularly offensive piece of mud tracked onto her Persian rug.

“So, you’re… the mechanic,” Catherine drawled when Daniel introduced us in the cavernous foyer.

She didn’t say, Nice to meet you, or Welcome to the family. She just said “the mechanic,” enunciating the syllables as if identifying a parasitic infection.

Daniel’s sister, Amanda, was arguably worse. Twenty-five years old, armed with a trust fund, and having never worked a single day in her life, she made it her personal crusade to remind me of my place.

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