LOGINJenna Carter fled Redemption Creek ten years ago, leaving her high school sweetheart Colt Richardson waiting at the altar. Now she returns broke, bruised, and desperate, only to discover Colt has become president of the Devil's Reign MC—the club that destroyed her father's legacy. When her abusive ex Derek sells her to the ruthless Serpent MC for fifty thousand dollars, Jenna must choose between freedom and the dangerous man who still owns her heart. But Colt has his own plans, and they involve keeping Jenna in his bed and under his protection, whether she wants it or not.
View MoreI knew coming back to Redemption Creek was a mistake the second my battered Honda coughed its last breath on Main Street.
It's now Ten years of running, hiding, surviving. And now I was back where it all began, with seventeen dollars in my wallet and bruises I could not explain away anymore.
The engine ticked as it cooled. I pressed my forehead against the steering wheel, tasting blood where I had bitten my lip too hard. My ribs screamed with every breath—courtesy of Derek's boots three nights ago in that motel parking lot outside Tucson.
"You cannot run forever, Jenna," he had said, his voice cold as winter. "I will find you again."
But I had run. Again.
A rumble split the air. Deep. Mechanical. The kind that made your bones vibrate.
I lifted my head and saw them. Six motorcycles rolling down Main Street like they owned it. Leather. Chrome. The devil's head patch on their backs—red eyes, fangs bared.
Devil's Reign MC.
My blood turned to ice.
The lead bike pulled up beside my car. The rider kicked down the stand and swung off in one fluid motion. Tall. Broad-shouldered. Dark hair touching his collar. When he pulled off his helmet, the world tilted sideways.
Colt Richardson.
Those steel-gray eyes locked onto mine through the windshield, and for three heartbeats, neither of us moved. His jaw was harder now, shadowed with stubble. Scars traced his knuckles. The boy I had loved wore a man's face now—all sharp edges and controlled fury.
He crossed to my door and yanked it open. "Get out."
Not "Hello." Not "Jenna, is that you?"
Just a command.
I stumbled out on shaky legs. The other riders had stopped, engines idling, watching us like wolves circling prey.
"Colt—"
"Ten years." His voice was granite. "Ten years, Jenna. Not a word. Not a letter. Nothing."
"I can explain—"
"You ran." He stepped closer, and I backed against the car. "The night before our wedding. You ran."
The wedding. God, I had almost forgotten. White dress bought on layaway. His grandmother's ring. Promises I could not keep because my father—
"My father said he would kill you," I whispered. "He said if I married you, he would put a bullet in your head."
Colt's expression did not change. "Your father's been dead for five years."
The words hit like a slap. "What?"
"Heart attack. Died in his club's garage." He tilted his head, studying me like I was something broken. "You did not know."
I could not breathe. Could not think. My father—dead. The man who had controlled every second of my life. The man whose threats had chased me across state lines.
Gone.
"You are wearing Devil's Reign colors," I said, my voice cracking. "My father's enemies."
"Your father's club fell apart after he died. We absorbed what was left." Colt's smile was sharp. Dangerous. "I run Redemption Creek now, Jenna. Every street. Every back road. Every person who walks through here answers to me."
One of the other riders laughed. "Boss, this girl? The one who—"
"Shut up, Razor." Colt never took his eyes off me. "Why are you back?"
Because I had nowhere else to go. Because Derek would not stop hunting me. Because I was so tired of running I could barely stand.
But I said none of that.
"My car broke down."
"Try again."
"I needed—" My voice broke. "I needed somewhere safe."
"Safe?" He laughed, cold and bitter. "You think running back to the man whose heart you shattered makes you safe?"
"Please." I hated how small I sounded. "Just let me stay a few days. I will leave. I promise."
"Like you promised to show up at the church?" He leaned in close enough that I smelled leather and motor oil and something darker. "Like you promised you loved me?"
"I did love you." The words ripped out of me. "I still—"
His hand shot out and gripped my chin, forcing me to look at him. His thumb brushed my split lip, and I flinched.
The change in him was instant. His eyes went flat. Cold.
"Who hit you?"
"No one. I fell—"
"Jenna." My name was a warning. "Who. Hit. You."
"It does not matter."
"It matters to me." His grip tightened just enough to make his point. "You are in my town now. Under my protection. Whether you want it or not."
"I do not need your protection."
"That split lip and those bruises say something different." He released me and stepped back. "Razor, get her car towed to the garage. Jenna, you are coming with me."
"I am not going anywhere with you."
He smiled then, and it was the most frightening thing I had seen all week. "You can ride behind me, or I can throw you over my shoulder. Your choice."
The other riders were watching now, waiting.
I was so tired. So broken.
"Fine."
Colt handed me his helmet. "Hold on tight. I drive fast."
As I climbed onto the bike behind him, his words from ten years ago echoed in my memory: *"You are mine, Jenna. Always."*
I wrapped my arms around his waist, felt the heat of him, the solid muscle that had not been there when we were kids.
He was right about one thing.
I was back in Redem
ption Creek.
But I had a terrible feeling I would not be leaving.
Not without paying for every promise I had broken.
The framework document was published on a Friday.Not with fanfare. Not with a press release that announced itself loudly to the world. With the quiet deliberateness of something that had been built carefully and was being released into its proper context without performance.Dr. Solano's team had titled it: Community-Led Witness Protection: A Framework for Closing the Institutional Gap.Forty-seven pages. Built from six months of consultation work. From Mouse's security architecture principles. From Riley's community outreach methodology. From Briggs's understanding of the trust-building sequence that had to precede any formal intake. From Patricia Hale's mother's story rendered as anonymized case study. From everything the Devil's Reign MC had built and bled for distilled into transferable principle.Morrison sent me a copy at seven in the morning with one line.This is what the work was for.I read it at the kitchen table while Colt made coffee.All fo
He was in the garage.Of course he was.I stood in the doorway for a moment before he saw me. He was at the workbench doing something with his hands that was probably not strictly necessary but gave the hands something to do while the mind was elsewhere. He had that quality about him sometimes. The quality of someone who thought better when their hands were occupied.He looked up when he heard me.Read my face.He stood up."Favorable," I said.He crossed the garage in three steps and held me.I let myself be held completely. No thirty-second limit. No managed duration. Just the full weight of eight weeks of accumulated alertness releasing completely in the arms of the person who had stayed beside me through every version of this that had existed.He held me until I was ready to step back.When I did his face was the undefended version. The fully present one."Both convictions hold," I said."Both convictions hold," he repeated."T
The four weeks of waiting felt different from the eight months before the verdict.The eight months had been active. Building. The program rebuilding. The consultation work developing. The framework document growing toward something real. The waiting had been the background of a life that was full and moving.These four weeks had the particular quality of a held breath. Not paralyzed. Still working. Still present. But with something underneath everything that was paying attention to a door that was not yet fully closed.I noticed it most in the mornings.I would wake up and for a moment everything was ordinary and then the oversight finding would arrive in my awareness and the morning would have a different quality than it had the day before the complaint was filed.Not fear exactly. Alertness. The old threat-assessment instinct that I had been slowly recalibrating finding a legitimate target and settling onto it.Colt noticed on the fourth morning."You
The oversight board meeting was on a Wednesday at two in the afternoon.The federal building downtown. A conference room on the ninth floor that was arranged differently from Morrison's fourteenth-floor space. More formal. A long table with the board members on one side and space for respondents on the other. The kind of arrangement designed to feel official rather than collaborative.I sat across from two board members and a legal counsel.Morrison sat beside me. He had insisted on being present. Not to answer questions on my behalf. To be in the room.I had not argued.The board members were professional in the specific way of people who conducted these reviews regularly and had learned to hold their conclusions until the process was complete. The legal counsel was younger. Precise. Carrying a tablet with what I assumed was Mouse's timeline package and every document submitted to the review.They opened with a standard procedural introduction. The purpose o
My mother deteriorated rapidly.One day she was walking. Talking. Laughing. The next, she was in a wheelchair. Too weak to leave her motel room.I moved her to a hospice facility. Paid for everything. Made sure she was comfortable.Colt and Sophia visited with me. They did not have to. But they did
I did not visit my mother for three days.I was too angry. Too confused. Too overwhelmed.Instead, I worked. Threw myself into club business. Protected witnesses. Managed territory. Anything to avoid thinking about her.But Sophia noticed. "You are being weird. What is wrong?""Nothing. Just stress
The next evening, I drove to Castellano's estate alone.Well, not alone. Razor and Hammer followed at a distance. Morrison's team surrounded the property. And Colt monitored the wire transmission from a van two miles away.But I walked to that front door by myself. Wearing a wire. Carrying no weapo
Six months passed in relative peace.Sophia was thriving. School was going well. She made friends. She even started calling me "Mom" sometimes.Colt and I were stronger than ever. Therapy was working. We communicated better. Fought healthier. Trusted deeper.The club was stable. Profitable. Our all
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