LOGINHe wasn’t supposed to notice her. She wasn’t supposed to want him. And her daughter definitely wasn’t supposed to fall in love with him first. “He’s not just dangerous,” she whispers to herself . “He’s the kind of man who ruins your life slowly… and makes you thank him for it.” He rides loud. He loves hard. And once he wants something, he doesn’t let go. “You don’t get to look at me like that,” she tells him. His smile is slow. Predatory. Certain. “I already did,” he says. “And now you’re mine.” She’s a single mother barely holding it together. He’s a biker king with blood on his hands and loyalty carved into his bones. Their worlds should never touch. But they collide anyway. “You think I don’t know what you’re doing to me?” he growls. Her back hits the wall. His body cages her in. “You think I’d touch you if I didn’t plan to keep you?” This isn’t a sweet romance. It’s raw. Possessive. Unforgiving. The kind of love that marks you. “Mummy,” her daughter says softly, holding his hand. “Can he stay forever?” He shouldn’t want them. But the idea of leaving them hurts worse than any knife. “I don’t share,” he tells her in the dark. “Not my bike. Not my club. And definitely not my woman.” One kiss turns into hunger. One night turns into obsession. And one choice could burn everything down. “If you climb on my bike,” he warns, voice low and lethal, “you don’t get off unchanged.”
View MoreI didn’t know my marriage was officially dead until I saw the balloons.
Pink and gold. Cheap foil. Tied to the mailbox like they belonged there. They looked wrong against the house. Too bright. Too cheerful. Like someone had tried to decorate over a crack in the wall instead of fixing it. Lily was already unbuckling herself in the back seat, humming under her breath. Five years old and excited in a way that made my chest ache. She had on the dress she picked herself. Too much tulle. Glitter that would end up everywhere. She’d insisted on wearing the crown too. “Mommy,” she said, leaning forward between the seats. “Daddy said he’d be here early.” My hands tightened on the steering wheel. “He did?” I asked, keeping my voice even. She nodded. “He said he had a surprise.” Of course he did. I forced a smile and got out of the car, smoothing my shirt like that would smooth anything else. The house looked the same as it always had. Small. Modest. A little tired. I’d cleaned it top to bottom the night before, scrubbing until my fingers hurt, because cleaning was something I could control. The balloons were new. That should have been my first warning. Inside, the house smelled like cake and sugar and the faint chemical tang of the cleaner I’d used on the counters. Lily ran ahead, crown crooked, shoes abandoned by the door. “Daddy!” she yelled. I stepped inside and froze. Evan was standing in my kitchen like he still belonged there. And beside him, leaning casually against my counter like she’d earned the right, was a woman I had never seen before. She was younger than me. Not by much, but enough. Long dark hair, styled carefully. A tight smile. One manicured hand resting on Evan’s arm. The balloons weren’t for Lily. They were for her. “Mara,” Evan said, like my name still fit in his mouth. “Hey.” I stared at him, then at her, then back at him. Lily skidded to a stop beside me, her small hand slipping into mine. She looked up at me, confused, then at the woman. “Daddy,” she said slowly. “Who’s that?” Evan hesitated. Just long enough. “This is Vanessa,” he said. “She’s… a friend.” Vanessa smiled wider. Too wide. The kind of smile that wanted to be admired. “Hi,” she said brightly, bending slightly at the waist. “You must be Lily. I’ve heard so much about you.” I felt something cold settle in my stomach. I didn’t scream. I didn’t cry. I didn’t throw the cake sitting on the counter in his face, even though for half a second, I really wanted to. Instead, I leaned my free hand on the kitchen counter and breathed. In. Out. Because losing control in front of my daughter wasn’t an option. “You brought her here,” I said quietly. Evan frowned like I’d offended him. “It’s Lily’s birthday. I thought—” “You thought,” I repeated. “You thought bringing your girlfriend into my house was appropriate.” Vanessa’s smile slipped, just a little. “I didn’t realize this would be such a big deal,” she said. “Evan said you were… mature.” That did it. I straightened slowly and looked directly at her for the first time. Really looked. She was pretty. That wasn’t the problem. The problem was the way she stood there, unbothered, like she hadn’t just walked into someone else’s life and started rearranging furniture. “This is my home,” I said. “You don’t get to be here.” Evan stepped forward. “Mara, don’t do this. Not today.” “Not today?” I asked. “You cheat on me, leave, and then show up with her on our daughter’s birthday, and you think I’m the one doing something wrong?” Lily’s hand tightened in mine. “Mommy,” she whispered. “Why are you shaking?” I looked down at her and forced my voice to soften. “I’m okay, baby.” I wasn’t. Evan sighed like I was exhausting him. “Vanessa and I are together now. I wanted to be honest.” Vanessa nodded like this was all very reasonable. Honest would have been not sleeping with another woman while you still shared a bed with your wife. Honest would have been not bringing your mistress into the space where your child felt safe. “You need to leave,” I said. Evan’s jaw tightened. “I’m Lily’s father.” “And I’m her mother,” I replied. “And I’m telling you to leave. Both of you.” Vanessa glanced at Evan. “Maybe we should go.” For a second, I thought he might argue. He had that look. The one he used to get when things didn’t go his way. Then Lily spoke. “Daddy,” she said quietly. “Is she the reason you don’t sleep here anymore?” The room went very still. Evan didn’t answer fast enough. That was answer enough. Lily looked up at me, her eyes too serious for her face. “Can we still have cake?” My throat burned. “Yes,” I said. “We can still have cake.” I looked back at Evan. “Get out.” This time, he did. Vanessa followed, her heels clicking against the floor, her head held high. She didn’t look back. The door closed behind them, and the house felt louder without them in it. I sank into the chair at the kitchen table and pressed my fingers to my eyes. Lily climbed into my lap without being asked and wrapped her arms around my neck. “I don’t like her,” she said matter-of-factly. I huffed out something that might have been a laugh. “I don’t either.” She rested her head against my shoulder. “Daddy used to be nicer.” I closed my eyes. “So did a lot of things,” I said softly. Outside, the balloons bobbed in the breeze, bright and stupid and wrong. I watched them through the window and made myself a promise. This was the last thing Evan Collins would ever ruin for us. I just didn’t know yet how much harder he was going to make that promise to keep.Mara I told myself the reason my hands were shaking had nothing to do with him. It was the bills folded inside my purse. The daycare reminder. Evan’s name lighting up my phone twice that afternoon and me letting it ring both times. It was exhaustion layered over fear layered over the kind of loneliness that crept in when the apartment went quiet and stayed that way. That was all. It had nothing to do with the biker. So when I saw his bike outside The Iron Halo again, parked at the curb like it had always belonged there, my chest tightening was purely coincidence. Purely. I almost kept walking. I should have. Lily was asleep at a friend’s place down the block, sprawled across her couch with a cartoon still playing to an empty room. My friend had offered dinner and a sleepover, and I had said yes too quickly, relief making me careless. Careless enough to walk back toward the bar instead of away from it. The door swung open before I could c
Cole I noticed her because she didn’t flinch. Most people did. They saw the bike first.the tattoos then the leather. The weight of the thing I carried without meaning to. Men get scared. Women pretended not to look, then looked anyway. Fear had a smell to it. Curiosity did too. She had neither. She stood at the pump like she belonged there, one hand braced on the handle, the other resting loosely at her side. Not defensive. Not careless. Just… present. Like the world hadn’t trained her to shrink yet, even if it had tried. She looked tired. Not weak. That was the difference. I told myself to finish filling the tank and leave. I had no reason to be standing in a gas station ten minutes out of my way except that the road had gone quiet in my head and I didn’t like that feeling. Quiet made room for memories. Quiet made space for ghosts. She glanced at me then. Not startled. Just aware. Dark eyes. Sharp. The kind that had learned to read rooms fast and trust slowly.
Mara Lily was six, which meant she noticed everything and pretended she didn’t. She knew which days I counted pennies at the counter before paying. She knew when my smile was for her and when it was borrowed. She knew the difference between being late because of traffic and being late because you sat in the car and tried to breathe through something that felt too tight in your chest. That afternoon, she buckled herself in without being asked and asked if we could stop for snacks on the way home. “Just one thing,” she said. “I promise.” I said yes because she’d already had enough no’s in her short life. The gas station sat on the corner of a road I didn’t usually take. I pulled in because the fuel light was on and because changing routines felt dangerous lately. Predictability was safer. Familiar. But the pump closest to the entrance was open, and I took it without thinking. The air smelled like gasoline and hot pavement. Lily leaned forward in her seat, pressing
Lily Mommy thinks I’m asleep a lot. I don’t tell her when I’m not. The house makes different sounds at night. I know which ones mean nothing and which ones mean I should listen. The fridge makes noise, the pipes squeak The floor creaks when Mommy walks slower than usual. Last night, she walked slow. I was on my side with Mr. Bear tucked under my chin when I heard her stop in the hallway. She didn’t come in. She just stood there for a little while. I kept my eyes closed because when grown-ups think you’re sleeping, they don’t ask questions. I heard her breathe. In and out. Like she was counting. Then she went to her room. I waited until the house went quiet again before I opened my eyes. I don’t like when Mommy is inside quiet. That kind of quiet feels different. It makes the air heavy. Like when it’s about to rain but doesn’t. In the morning, Mommy woke me up like she always does. Soft voice. Gentle hands. Same routine. But her eyes looked tired, and th






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