Chapter 22
TWENTY-TWO
LUCY
I sit tied to the chair in the middle of their main room.
The rope cuts into my wrists every time I shift even an inch.
My shoulders ache from the angle. My legs feel numb from lack of movement.
The music still thumps loud through the walls.
Men keep drinking and shouting over it. Their voices blur together into one ugly roar.
I keep my eyes closed most of the time now.
It helps me pretend I am somewhere else.
A loud crash suddenly echoes from outside. Glass breaks. Shouts rise up fast. The music cuts off mid-song. My eyes fly open. Men scramble to their feet. Chairs scrape across the floor. “What the fuck?” someone yells.
Gunshots pop in the distance. My heart leaps into my throat. Hope surges through me so strong it makes my hands shake against the ropes. It is them. It has to be. Tiny. The Iron Reapers. I pull at the bindings harder. The rope burns my skin but I do not stop.
Chaos erupts around me. Southside Kings members grab weapons and rush toward the doors.
Their movements look sloppy and panicked.
They shout orders at each other that contradict.
One guy trips over his own feet and curses loud.
Another fires a shot through the window before anyone even sees a target.
This place feels nothing like the clubhouse I know.
There is no plan. No one watching each other’s backs. Just fear and anger flying everywhere.
A window shatters nearby. Cold air rushes in. I hear familiar voices outside now. Deep shouts. Coordinated. “Reapers!” someone calls. Relief floods my chest so fast tears prick at my eyes. I blink them back. I need to stay alert. I need to be ready.
The door bursts open with a heavy kick. Gunfire cracks loud inside the room.
I duck my head as low as I can. Bullets hit the wall behind me.
Plaster dust falls on my hair. My breathing comes quick and shallow.
I am frightened. The fear claws at me but underneath it hope burns brighter. Tiny is here. He came for me.
I spot him then. He moves through the doorway like a force.
His shoulders fill the space. His eyes scan the room fast until they lock on me.
The look on his face shifts everything. Relief mixes with fury and something deeper that makes my chest tighten.
He starts toward me, gun up, firing controlled shots at anyone who steps in his path.
Brothers move with him. They cover each other.
They call out positions. Pres directs from the side.
“Clear left. Watch the stairs.” Their voices stay steady even in the middle of it all.
A Southside King lunges at Tiny with a knife.
Tiny sidesteps and drives an elbow into the man’s face.
The guy drops without a sound. Tiny does not even pause.
He keeps coming straight for me. My heart pounds so hard I feel it in my ears.
I want to call out to him but my voice sticks in my throat.
All I can do is watch him close the distance.
He reaches me in what feels like seconds but probably takes longer. His hands go to the ropes first. They work fast but careful. “Lucy,” he says. His voice sounds rough and full of everything he holds back. “I got you. I am right here.”
The rope falls away from my wrists. Blood rushes back into my hands with sharp pins.
I gasp at the feeling. Tiny pulls me up from the chair and into his arms. His body feels solid against mine.
Warm. Real. I bury my face in his chest. The smell of leather and gunpowder and him fills my nose.
Tears come then. I cannot stop them. They soak into his shirt.
My hands clutch at his cut like if I let go he might disappear.
“You came,” I whisper against him. My voice cracks. “I knew you would.”
He holds me tighter. One hand cradles the back of my head.
The other stays around my waist like he plans to never let go again.
“I am sorry I was not there. I should have been there to pick you up.” His words come out low and heavy.
I feel the guilt in them. It makes me shake my head against his chest.
“It is not your fault,” I say. I pull back just enough to look at his face. His eyes search mine. They look tired and wild at the same time. “You are here now. That is what matters.”
Around us the fight winds down. Iron Reapers secure the room.
They move with purpose. They check on each other.
One brother helps another with a graze on his arm.
Their voices stay controlled. “All clear.” “Two down over here.” No one laughs at the fallen men.
No one kicks them for fun. They simply do what needs doing and move on.
The difference hits me hard while Tiny still holds me.
In this clubhouse the Southside Kings acted like animals.
They grabbed and took and broke things because they could.
Here the Reapers act like a unit. They protect their own.
They came for me because I belong to one of them.
Because Tiny loves me. The safety I feel in Tiny’s arms right now feels like the exact opposite of every second I spent tied to that chair.
Tiny cups my face with both hands. His thumbs brush my cheeks where tears still fall. “Are you hurt?” he asks. His eyes move over me slow. Checking. “Did they touch you?”
I shake my head. My hands cover his. “I am frightened but okay. They tried. I fought. They did not get far.” My voice stays steady enough to say it. I want him to know I stayed strong. I want him to see I held on for him.
He nods. Relief washes over his face clear as day.
He pulls me close again and kisses the top of my head.
“Good. That is good. I was losing my mind out there thinking about you in here.” His arms tremble just a little around me.
I feel it. The big tough biker who never shows weakness lets me feel it now. It makes my own tears start fresh.
Pres walks over. He keeps his distance enough to give us space but his voice reaches us clear. “We got the place locked down. Few of them ran but we will handle that later. Tiny, get her out. Take the truck out back.”
Tiny does not argue. He keeps one arm around me and starts walking. I lean into his side. My legs feel shaky after all those hours tied down. He notices and slows his pace. “Easy,” he says soft. “I got you. Lean on me.”
We step outside into the early morning air.
The sky looks gray and pink at the edges.
The cold feels clean after the smoke and sweat inside.
Tiny guides me to a truck I recognize as one of the club’s.
He opens the passenger door and helps me in like I might break.
Once I sit he reaches across and buckles my seatbelt. His hands linger on mine.
“I kept thinking about you,” I tell him while he stands there in the open door. “Every minute. The way you hold me. The way you ask before you touch me. It kept me going.”
He leans in and rests his forehead against mine. His breath warms my skin. “I blamed myself the whole time. Should have been there. Should have kept you closer. I rode with that guilt eating at me until we found this place.”
I touch his cheek. The stubble feels rough under my fingers. “We both made it. That is what counts. I love you, Tiny. I love how safe you make me feel.”
He kisses me then. The kiss feels deep and desperate and full of everything we both held back during the long night.
His lips move against mine like he needs to convince himself I am real.
I kiss him back the same way. My hands slide into his hair.
For a moment the rest of the world fades.
There is only him and me and this truck and the morning air.
When we pull apart he rests his hand on my knee. “I am taking you home. To the clubhouse. Your mom and dad will want to see you but that can wait until you rest.”
I nod. Exhaustion crashes over me now that the adrenaline drops.
My body feels heavy. But my mind feels lighter than it has in hours.
Tiny closes the door and walks around to the driver side.
He starts the engine and reaches over to hold my hand the whole drive.
His thumb rubs slow circles on my skin. It grounds me.
We pull into the Iron Reapers clubhouse lot as the sun rises higher.
Brothers greet us with nods and quiet words.
No loud celebrating. Just relief. One of them brings out a blanket and hands it to Tiny.
He wraps it around my shoulders without asking.
The gesture feels so normal for them. Care without making a show of it.
Inside, the common area looks calm compared to the Southside place. A few old timers sit at the bar drinking coffee instead of liquor. They raise their mugs when they see me. “Glad you are back, girl,” one says. His voice sounds genuine.
Tiny leads me straight to his room. He shuts the door behind us and guides me to sit on the bed. He kneels in front of me and starts checking me over again. His fingers gentle on my wrists where the rope left marks. “These look sore,” he says. “I will get something for them.”
I stop him with a hand on his shoulder. “Later. Just stay with me right now.”
He sits beside me on the bed and pulls me into his lap. I curl against his chest. His heartbeat thuds steady under my ear. The sound soothes every frayed nerve I have left. “I was so scared,” I admit quiet. “But I knew you would find me. I told myself that over and over.”
“I rode the whole time with your face in my head,” he says.
His hand strokes my hair slow. “I kept seeing you smile at me. It pushed me through every dead end. When we hit that place and I saw you tied to that chair…” His voice catches.
He clears his throat. “I never felt fear like that before. Not for myself. For you.”
We sit like that for a long time. I tell him pieces of what happened. The van. The cloth over my mouth. The men grabbing at me. He listens without interrupting. His arms stay tight around me. When I finish he kisses my forehead. “You fought smart. You stayed you. I am proud of you, Lucy.”
The words sink in deep. They warm me from the inside.
I feel safe here in his room with the familiar smell of his sheets and the quiet sounds of the clubhouse waking up.
This place feels like home now. Not because of the walls but because of the people.
Because of him. The Iron Reapers came together for me.
They moved like family. They protected what mattered.
That difference from the Southside Kings feels huge in my chest. One club destroys. The other builds and guards.
Tiny eventually lays us down on the bed. He keeps his boots off but stays fully dressed like he might need to jump up any second. I do not mind. I tuck myself against him and let my eyes close. Sleep pulls at me but I fight it a little longer just to feel him here.
“Rest,” he whispers against my hair. “I am not going anywhere. You are safe.”
I believe him. My body finally relaxes. The fear that gripped me all night loosens its hold. Tiny’s hand keeps rubbing my back in slow circles. His breathing stays even. I match mine to his. In this moment I feel cherished. Protected. Loved in the way only he knows how to give.
Outside the room life at the clubhouse continues.
I hear low voices. Boots in the hall. Someone laughs once, quiet and relieved.
It sounds nothing like the harsh laughter from the night before.
This laughter carries warmth. Brotherhood.
I drift toward sleep with Tiny’s arms around me and the knowledge that I made it back to where I belong.
When I wake later the room sits dim. Tiny still holds me. His eyes open when I stir. “Hey,” he says soft. “You okay?”
I nod and press closer. “Better now. With you.”
He smiles a little. The expression looks tired but real.
We talk more. About my family. About what happens next.
He promises to take me to see my parents soon but only when I feel ready.
He tells me the club will handle the loose ends with the Southside Kings.
His voice stays steady when he says it. I trust him.
Hours pass like that. We stay wrapped up together.
He brings me water and food when my stomach finally growls.
He watches me eat like it matters to him that I take care of myself.
The care feels so different from anything those other men tried to force on me.
This care asks for nothing back. It simply gives.
By evening I feel stronger. The fear lingers at the edges but it no longer controls me.
Tiny stays right beside me through all of it.
His presence fills the room and my heart.
I look at him and see the man who rode through the night to find me.
The man who fights for me without hesitation. The man I love.
“I am ruined for anyone else,” I tell him quiet while we lay there again.
He Laughs low. The sound vibrates against me. “Good. Because I am not letting you go. Ever.”
We kiss again. Slower this time. Full of promise and relief and everything we almost lost. Outside the clubhouse the world keeps turning but in here I feel whole. Safe. Home.