Epilogue Property #3

"No." I brought his hands to my lips, pressed a kiss to his knuckles.

"What I have left of Danny is in here." I touched my chest. "And in here.

" I touched the knife at my belt. "This bike was never meant to sit in a garage gathering dust. It was meant to be ridden.

To feel the open road, the wind, the freedom Danny was building toward before they took him.

" I held Tyler's gaze, letting him see everything—the grief, the love, the certainty.

"Ride it for him. Ride it for me. Ride it for yourself. "

Tyler looked at the bike for a long moment. Then he looked back at me, and the tears were falling now, silent tracks down his cheeks that he didn't try to hide.

"Okay." The word came out rough, thick with emotion. "Okay."

I pulled him into my arms and held him while he cried—for Danny, for me, for the years of pain that had led us here and the future we were building together. The Shovelhead waited beside us, patient and gleaming, ready to carry both our ghosts into the sun.

We rode out of the clubhouse and into the desert.

Tyler took the lead, the Shovelhead's engine roaring to life with a sound that was pure Danny—deep, throaty, alive with mechanical joy.

I fell in behind him, watching the cherry red paint catch the afternoon sun, watching the way Tyler's body moved with the bike like he'd been born to ride it.

The new leather of my jacket creaked against my shoulders as I leaned into the first curve, and something in my chest cracked open—grief and pride and love all tangled together, impossible to separate.

We hit the main road and opened up.

The desert exploded around us in shades of gold and rust, the landscape stretching to the horizon in every direction, empty and vast and impossibly free.

The wind tore at my hair, whipped tears from the corners of my eyes, filled my lungs with air that tasted like sage and hot asphalt and the particular electricity of speed.

Tyler's silhouette carved through the shimmer of heat rising off the pavement, the Shovelhead eating miles like it had been starving for them, and I pushed my own bike harder to keep pace.

He glanced back at me. Grinned. And then the bastard accelerated.

The race was on.

We chased each other through the curves, trading positions, engines screaming their joy at finally being unleashed.

A straightaway opened up and I pulled alongside him, close enough that I could have reached out and touched his arm, our bikes running parallel at speeds that would have terrified anyone else and felt like the only way to be alive.

The vibration traveled up through my boots and into my bones.

The world narrowed to this—the road, the sun, the man beside me, the thunder of two engines speaking a language older than words.

I signaled the turn. Tyler followed.

The smaller road climbed into the foothills, the pavement rougher here, cracked in places where the desert had tried to reclaim it.

We slowed but didn't stop, winding through terrain that shifted from flat scrubland to rocky outcroppings, the elevation rising with each switchback.

My heart was pounding—not from fear, not from exertion, but from something bigger.

Something that felt like freedom and grief and love all tangled together into a single, overwhelming sensation that pressed against my ribs and demanded release.

Danny should have been here. Danny should have been the one riding this bike, feeling the wind, watching the sun paint the desert in shades of fire.

But Danny was gone. And the man riding Danny's dream was the man who'd pulled me back from the edge of grief, who'd given me something to fight for beyond vengeance, who'd shown me that the future could hold more than just surviving until the next tragedy.

The reservoir appeared below us as we crested the final rise.

Water like hammered copper in the late light.

Mountains purple and hazy in the distance.

The whole world spread out beneath us like an offering, vast and silent and achingly beautiful.

We pulled into the gravel lot and killed our engines in near-unison, the sudden quiet rushing in to fill the space where thunder had been.

For a long moment, neither of us moved. We just sat there, engines ticking as they cooled, staring out at the view.

Tyler pulled off his helmet. His hair was wild from the ride, his cheeks flushed, his eyes bright with an exhilaration that matched the fierce, aching thing in my own chest. He was breathing hard, and when he turned to look at me, he was smiling.

Smiling like a man who'd just discovered what it meant to be free.

"This is where you brought me," he said softly. "That first day. After you taught me to ride."

"Yeah." I swung off my bike, crossed to stand beside him. "Seemed fitting."

He climbed off the Shovelhead—careful, reverent, treating the machine with the respect it deserved. His hand traced the fuel tank the same way mine had in the garage, fingers learning the curves, the shape, the dream Danny had never gotten to finish.

"I have one more thing." I reached into my saddlebag and pulled out the jacket.

It was leather—quality leather, the kind that would last decades if treated right.

Black, classic, cut to fit Tyler's shoulders rather than swimming on his frame like the one I'd given him before Reno.

The Phoenix patch was already sewn onto the back, positioned above the words I'd had stitched in bold white thread:

PROPERTY OF TANK

Tyler stared at it. His mouth opened. Closed. Opened again.

"I know how it looks." I held the jacket out, turning it so he could see the words.

"And I know what you went through with Cross.

The ownership. The control. The way he made you feel like a thing instead of a person.

" I met his eyes, held them, letting him see everything I was feeling.

"This isn't that. I don't want to possess you.

I don't want to control you. I want everyone who sees you to know that you're under my protection.

That if they hurt you, they answer to me.

That you're not alone anymore, and you never will be again. "

Tyler's hand reached out, touched the leather. His fingers traced the letters of my name.

"You know how this usually works," I continued, my voice rougher than I'd intended.

"You were there for Kai's ceremony. The club, the patch, Hawk presiding.

Everyone watching." I shook my head. "But that's not us.

That's not you. You've had enough of your life being public property.

" I pressed the jacket into his hands. "So this is ours.

Private. Just between you and me. Hawk already approved it—I asked him last week. "

"You asked permission to claim me?" Tyler's voice was strange—not upset, just... processing.

"I asked if the club would recognize you as mine.

Under my protection. Part of my family." I cupped his face in my hands, tilting it up so our eyes met.

"You're not my property, Tyler. You're my partner.

My equal. My—" The word caught in my throat, too big and too simple at the same time.

"My everything. The jacket is just a way of telling the world what you already know. "

Tyler was quiet for a long moment. The wind moved through his hair. The water glittered below us. Somewhere in the distance, a hawk circled on the thermals, patient and free.

Then he shrugged out of his old jacket, the borrowed one that had never fit right, and slipped his arms into the new leather.

It fit perfectly. Like it had been made for him. Like it had been waiting.

He turned, showing me his back—the Phoenix patch, the white letters, the declaration that anyone who saw him would understand. Then he turned back to face me, and he was smiling. That real smile, the one that cracked his face open and let the light pour through.

"Property of Tank." He said the words like he was tasting them, testing their weight on his tongue. "I can live with that."

I pulled him in and kissed him—deep and thorough, pouring everything into it that words couldn't capture. When we broke apart, his eyes were shining, and mine probably were too.

"Come on." I climbed back onto my bike, kicked the engine to life. "Let's take the long way home."

Tyler mounted the Shovelhead. The cherry red gleamed in the fading sun, and his new jacket—his jacket now, forever—creaked softly as he settled into the saddle. He looked like he belonged there. He looked like he'd always belonged there.

"Race you?" His grin was sharp, challenging, alive.

"You don't stand a chance." But I was smiling too, the wind already pulling at my hair, the road stretching out before us like a promise.

Tyler laughed—bright and real and free—and the Shovelhead roared to life beneath him.

We rode out together, side by side, into the golden afternoon. The desert opened up around us, vast and endless and full of possibility. Danny's bike sang beneath the man I loved, and I thought about ghosts, about grief, about the way life keeps going even when you think it can't.

You'd like him, Danny. You'd like who I am with him.

And I hope, wherever you are, that you're finally at peace.

The road unwound before us. The sun hung low on the horizon. And for the first time in longer than I could remember, the future felt like something to ride toward instead of something to survive.

We had each other. We had the club. We had two months of healing behind us and a lifetime stretching ahead.

That was enough.

That was everything.

THE END

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