Chapter 7 #2
A motorcycle engine growled in the distance, the sound swelling then fading as it passed several blocks away.
Not Razor's bike—I'd learned to recognize his distinctive rumble, slightly deeper than most, with a rhythm as familiar to me now as Dante's breathing.
My fingers tightened around my phone, knuckles whitening with pressure.
Where was he? What "club business" kept him away when he knew how frightened I was?
The phone vibrated suddenly in my grip, making me jump. Razor's message appeared on the screen: "Safe. Stay inside." Three words that offered minimal reassurance but confirmed he was alive, at least. I typed back quickly: "Are you safe? Heard motorcycles nearby, not sure if friendly."
While waiting for his response, I stood and resumed my security check.
Front door: deadbolt engaged, chain in place.
Living room windows: locked, blinds drawn.
Kitchen door to backyard: secured with both the standard lock and the wooden bar Razor had installed across the sliding track.
Each confirmation provided a small measure of relief, a momentary easing of the knot between my shoulder blades.
My phone buzzed again. "Safe at clubhouse. Stay inside. Brothers patrolling are friendly. Love you."
I pressed the phone briefly to my chest, those last two words still new enough to cause a flutter beneath my ribs. One week married, and already this man had become essential to me in ways Tyler never had been. Essential and dangerous—because loving someone meant having something to lose.
I moved to the living room window, parting the blinds just enough to peer out at the empty street.
The scene reminded me painfully of nights at Tyler's condo, watching for his car to pull up, dreading the squeal of tires that signaled he'd been drinking.
The same vigilance, but for opposite reasons.
Then, I'd watched for danger arriving. Now, I watched for protection returning.
Moonlight silvered the asphalt, casting long shadows from parked cars and trees. Nothing moved except the occasional drift of leaves in the gentle night breeze. The normalcy of the scene should have been reassuring, but instead it felt like a facade, a calm surface concealing dangers beneath.
I returned to the security monitor, settling back into what had become my command post. The screen showed all was quiet, but my instincts—the same ones that had kept Dante and me alive through years with Tyler—hummed with warning.
Someone had been watching us earlier. I was certain of it.
And certainty like that didn't fade just because evidence remained elusive.
Movement on the monitor caught my eye—a figure approaching on a motorcycle, moving slowly down our street. My throat tightened, heart hammering against my ribs as I enlarged the front yard camera view. The bike slowed further, then turned into our driveway with deliberate care.
I reached for my phone, thumb hovering over Razor's name, when recognition dawned. The rider's posture, the distinctive cut visible even in the grainy footage, the careful way he surveyed the street before cutting his engine—this was Fury, one of Razor's brothers. The protection Razor had promised.
Relief washed through me, leaving my legs weak enough that I had to grip the table edge for support.
Fury dismounted, removing his helmet before taking up a position that gave him clear views of both the street and the side yard.
His hand rested near his hip, where I knew a weapon would be concealed.
His vigilant posture mirrored my own internal state—alert, expectant, prepared for threats.
I watched him through the monitor for several minutes as he made a careful circuit of the property, checking gates and sightlines with military precision.
His presence offered tangible comfort, evidence that Razor's promises weren't empty words.
But it also confirmed my fears—the threat was real enough that the club was taking shifts to guard us.
Settling back into my chair, I resumed my vigil alongside Fury's external one.
Razor was still absent, still handling whatever mysterious "club business" had called him away.
The tension between relief at having protection and concern for what Razor might be risking on our behalf created a new kind of anxiety in my chest.
Was he building support among his brothers?
Challenging Mustang's leadership? Making enemies to keep us safe?
The possibilities spun through my mind, each more worrying than the last. In just one week, I'd gone from fearing for my life with Tyler to fearing for Razor's life because of me.
The bitter irony wasn't lost on me—I'd escaped one danger only to become the source of another.
Outside, Fury maintained his patrol, a shadowy guardian circling our property.
Inside, I maintained mine, eyes moving between security feeds, phone clutched in my hand like a talisman.
Both of us sentinels, waiting for either threat or salvation to arrive in the form of headlights turning into our driveway.
Razor
I pushed through the heavy metal door to the repair shop, the familiar smells of motor oil, grease, and metal shavings hitting me like a physical force.
The fluorescent lights buzzed overhead, casting harsh shadows across the concrete floor where tools lay scattered in organized chaos.
Fury hunched over the dismantled engine of a Softail, his broad shoulders flexing beneath his cut as he tightened a bolt with focused precision.
This back room had always been a sanctuary of sorts—a place where club business gave way to the simple, honest work of mechanics.
Today, I was bringing the complications back in, turning even this space into contested territory.
The door clanged shut behind me, and Fury looked up, his expression shifting from concentration to curiosity. Grease streaked his forearms like war paint, the contrast stark against the skull tattoo that wrapped around his wrist.
"Razor," he acknowledged, straightening up and reaching for a rag to wipe his hands. "Thought you'd be home with the family."
"Need to talk first," I said, moving deeper into the shop, my eyes automatically scanning for surveillance. Old habits. Necessary ones when you're planning what some might call treason. "Got a minute?"
Fury nodded, tossing the rag aside and crossing his arms. "About yesterday's Church? Heard it got heated with Mustang."
"Word travels," I muttered, leaning against the workbench. Metal tools pressed into my palms, cold and solid. Reliable, unlike the shifting alliances of men. "Yeah, it's about that. About Ophelia."
Fury's posture changed subtly at the mention of her name—shoulders squaring, jaw tightening.
I'd seen the same reaction the first time I'd introduced her to the club, a protective instinct that had surprised me given how little he knew her.
Later, I'd learned his sister had escaped an abusive relationship years back.
Some wounds never fully heal, just form scars that pulse in recognition when similar pain passes by.
"Your old lady spotted someone watching the house," he said, not a question but a statement. His eyes, always watchful, had narrowed to dangerous slits. "Socket filled me in. Said Mustang brushed it off."
"Like it was nothing," I confirmed, a fresh wave of anger heating my blood at the memory. "Called it 'a woman's paranoia.' But Ophelia's survivor instincts are sharper than half our prospects'."
Fury's hand tightened on the wrench he'd picked up, knuckles whitening around the metal. "She's club blood now. I'm there," he stated flatly, with the simple certainty that made him one of our most reliable brothers. "Just tell me when."
"Already set up a rotation with Socket and Loch. Could use you in the mix," I said, watching his face for hesitation. There was none. "But this goes deeper than just protection duty. It's about Mustang. About where he's leading the club."
Fury's expression remained unchanged, but recognition flickered briefly in his eyes. Or confirmation of suspicions he'd already harbored. He set the wrench down deliberately, the metal clanking against the workbench.
"Been waiting for someone to bring that up," he said quietly, glancing toward the closed door. "What's your thinking?"
I chose my next words carefully, aware of the line I was crossing. "The club needs to evolve. Needs leadership that recognizes family protection isn't a distraction from club business—it is club business. Mustang's stuck fighting yesterday's wars while new threats are circling."
"Like your old lady's ex," Fury supplied.
"Exactly. Tyler's connected—judges, cops, money. Not the kind of enemy Mustang knows how to fight. He's looking for rival clubs with colors and patches. Meanwhile, men in suits and badges could be closing in on my family."
Fury nodded slowly, processing. "Been noticing things ain't right for a while," he admitted, voice dropping even lower. "Martinelli deal last month—Mustang ignored intel about police checkpoints. Could've gotten brothers arrested or worse. And the territory dispute with the Heathens..."
"Two prospects in the hospital because he wouldn't adapt the strategy," I finished.
"Yeah." Fury wiped his hands again on the already filthy rag, a nervous gesture I'd rarely seen from him. "So, what are you thinking? Calling for a vote?"
The question hung in the air between us, the club's formal process for challenging leadership. It wasn't done lightly—hadn't happened in over a decade. Men had ended up buried for less direct challenges to Mustang's authority.
"Not yet," I said, keeping my voice steady. "Building support first. Taking the temperature of the club. Ace is with me."
Fury's eyebrows rose slightly—having the VP onboard changed the calculus significantly. "Smart. Who else?"