Chapter Six
Nitro
I pulled into the driveway just as Whisper, Lyssa, and Cheri were climbing into their vehicles.
The Prospect at the compound gate had radioed me about the old ladies arriving, but a fight at the strip club had kept me longer than expected.
I killed the engine and watched the three women pull away, exchanging looks through open windows, their voices carrying on the afternoon air.
The front porch steps creaked under my boots, the sound too loud in the sudden quiet. I paused at the threshold, listening for movement inside. Nothing.
I went in without knocking.
The living room held the residue of the visit -- a throw pillow knocked slightly askew on the couch, a coffee mug left on the end table, the faint trace of perfume that wasn’t Willa’s hanging in the air.
The kitchen counter held a plate with the remains of cookies, and a thermos.
None of it had been there when I’d left.
But it was Willa who caught my attention -- Willa standing with her back half-turned to the door, one hand pressed flat against her lower belly, her dark hair falling forward to hide part of her face.
I’d been watching her, learning the way she held herself -- shoulders straight, chin up, body carefully contained -- but this was different.
This was the exact moment it happened: her shoulders dropped, the line she’d been holding in her spine gave out, and she went still in the way people go still when they’ve run out of the energy it takes to hold themselves together.
She didn’t make a sound. Her free hand came up and pressed against her mouth. Her gaze was fixed on something I couldn’t see.
I stood in the kitchen doorway, arms loose at my sides, and watched her.
The urge to cross the room, to put my hands on her shoulders, to do anything to stop whatever was happening -- burned under my skin, immediate and demanding.
But I’d learned, a long time ago and the hard way, that some things couldn’t be fixed with force.
Some broken pieces needed time to rearrange themselves.
Some wounds needed to bleed before they could close.
I unclenched my jaw, let out a slow breath through my nose, and stayed exactly where I was.
“Four months,” she said, her voice coming out unsteady, stripped of the composure she’d been using like armor since she’d shown up at my gate.
“I was pregnant for four months before I came back. Four months of trying to figure out what to do. Four months of --” She broke off, her hand still pressed to her stomach. “I was terrified.”
Not nervous, not uncertain -- terrified. The word landed between us. A truth she’d been holding back since the moment she’d walked through the gate. Four months pregnant. No plan. No one. Every door already closed before she’d turned up at the edge of Reckless Kings territory.
“Coming back wasn’t a decision,” she continued, her voice climbing slightly.
“It was the last option I had left.” Her voice broke on the last word.
“I tried everything else first. Every other door. Every other --” She broke off again, her breath catching.
“And then you stood up in Church and told twenty men I was yours without once asking if that’s what I wanted. ”
I listened to every word without interrupting, without reaching for the next logical step or the next item on the list of things I could fix.
I stayed where I was and let her finish -- let the words come out, let her release the control she’d been holding since she’d arrived.
Her eyes were bright now, her free hand shaking slightly at her side, but her voice didn’t break again.
It just got quieter -- each word dropping between us like something solid, each sentence landing with a truth that had been held too long.
“I’ve been on my own since I was seventeen,” she said.
“I’ve learned how to make it work. How to keep moving when there’s nowhere to go.
How to be what I need because there’s no one else.
” She looked at me then, her gaze meeting mine for the first time since I’d walked through the door.
“And then there were two heartbeats instead of one, and I realized I couldn’t do it anymore.
I may have been able to handle one on my own, but two?
I couldn’t be enough for both of them. I couldn’t --” Her voice caught again.
“I couldn’t protect them the way they needed.
And that’s why I came back. Not because I wanted to. Because I had to.”
It wasn’t the speech I’d expected. Not the explanation, not the measured assessment of options, not the kind of negotiation I’d been braced for since she’d walked through the gate.
It was more raw than that -- honest in a way that made something in my chest tighten.
She’d come back not because she’d wanted to, not because she’d chosen to, but because she’d run out of road and out of options.
The silence stretched between us -- not comfortable, not easy, but necessary. A space for words to land. A moment for truth to settle.
I crossed the room without speaking, my boots quiet on the hardwood floor, the old boards barely creaking under my weight.
I stopped three feet from her, close enough that I could smell the scent of her hair.
Then I reached for her -- not grabbing, not demanding, just opening my arms in a way that gave her the choice of whether to step into them.
She did. Which landed harder than anything she’d said.
She moved into the space I’d created with the care of someone who’d learned the hard way that touching came with cost. But when her body met mine -- chest to chest, her forehead against my collarbone, her hands braced lightly on my sides -- I felt when she let go.
Not all at once. Not completely. But enough she shifted into me, enough that her breath came out in a rush that wasn’t quite a sob but wasn’t far from it.
I pulled her in -- one arm around her waist, the other hand at the back of her head, careful not to grab, not to hold too tight.
She was smaller than I remembered -- not just in height but in the way she felt against me, like she’d been carrying herself with such care that she’d forgotten how to take up the full space of her body.
I held her there, steady and unhurried, while she pressed her face against my chest.
The kiss I pressed to the top of her head was quiet -- not a claim, not a demand, nothing like the declarations I’d been making since I stood up in front of the club. It was grounding. An anchor. A promise that had nothing to do with what I wanted and everything to do with what she needed.
“It’s going to be fine,” I said, my voice low and certain. “You’re not alone anymore.”
She made a small sound against my chest. I felt her hands shift on my sides, her fingers curling slightly into the fabric of my shirt.
“I have you,” I continued. “You and the babies both. That isn’t temporary. Isn’t a favor. Isn’t conditional on anything.” I paused, letting the words land. “It’s just the truth.”
She didn’t fully believe it yet, but something in her face shifted when she finally tilted it up toward mine -- a loosening around her eyes, a small and fragile thing -- and I recognized it for what it was: the first real thread of trust between us, thin but holding.
I didn’t push for more. Didn’t crowd her. Didn’t try to get her to say the words I knew she wasn’t ready for. I kept my arms around her and stayed exactly where I was, patient and certain, and let the quiet do the rest.
“It’s not fair,” Willa said finally. “I didn’t ask for this. For any of it.”
“No,” I agreed. “You didn’t.”
“But it’s happening anyway.”
“It is.”
She pulled back slightly. Her eyes were dry now, her expression careful in a way that made something in my chest tighten.
“I still don’t know if I’m staying,” she said.
“Not permanently. I can’t --” She broke off, frustration clear in the line of her jaw.
“I can’t promise something I’m not sure of yet. ”
“I know,” I said. “I’m not asking you to.”
Her head tilted a little, suspicion clear in the angle. “Then what are you asking?”
“Nothing,” I said. “Not yet.”
“That’s not how this works,” she said. “People always want something.”
“They do,” I agreed. “But wanting and asking aren’t the same thing.”
The conversation stalled there. Willa looked at me for a long moment, her gaze moving over my face like she was trying to read the words I hadn’t spoken. Whatever she found there made her shoulders drop another fraction of an inch, her body finding a new angle against mine.
“Thank you,” she said finally. “For letting them come. For not being here when they did.” She paused. “For giving me space to figure it out.”
“I didn’t give you anything,” I said. “You took what you needed. That’s different.”
She almost smiled -- a quick, involuntary movement at the corner of her mouth. “Is it?”
“Yeah.” I brushed a strand of hair back from her face, careful not to touch her skin. “One’s about control. The other’s about respect.”
She studied me for a long moment before huffing out a quiet breath. “You really don’t doubt yourself, do you?” The words sounded more curious than critical, like she’d already realized arguing with me wouldn’t get her very far.
“I don’t doubt what I want,” I said evenly. “And right now, that’s making sure you’re taken care of.”
Her mouth twitched faintly, not quite a smile. “You make everything sound simple.”
“Doesn’t mean it is.” I leaned back slightly, giving her room even though every instinct pushed me closer.
“But you haven’t eaten properly in days, and stress isn’t doing you or the babies any favors.
” I tipped my chin toward the kitchen. “So first, I feed you. Then we sit down and figure out the hard part.”
“The hard part,” she repeated softly.
“What comes next.”
She went quiet again, weighing me the same way she weighed every decision since walking into the clubhouse. Finally, she nodded once. “Okay. Food first.”
It wasn’t trust. Not yet. But it wasn’t rejection either. For now, I’d take that as a win.
I kept one arm around her waist as we moved toward the kitchen -- not holding, not restricting, just present in a way that made it clear I wasn’t going anywhere.
She didn’t step away. Didn’t pull back. Just walked beside me with the attention of someone navigating unfamiliar ground, one hand still resting protectively on her belly.
I gave her a moment to collect herself. The road ahead wasn’t going to be easy.
There would be more moments like this one -- more tears, more anger, more of the distance she kept between herself and anything she wasn’t sure of.
But for the first time since she’d walked through the gate -- maybe for the first time since the night we’d spent together -- I could see the outline of what we might become.
Not there yet. Not even close. But possible, in a way it hadn’t been before.
“They’re good,” she said quietly. “The women. They made it feel like…” She trailed off, unable to find the word.
“Like you belong,” I finished for her.
She looked up at me then, surprise clear in her expression. “Yes,” she said. “How did you know?”
“Because that’s what they do,” I said simply. “It’s who they are.”
She huffed softly. “And who are you?”
It was the question I’d been waiting for since she’d walked through the gate -- not the assessment, not the calculation of what I could give her, but the direct, uncompromising demand for the truth. I met her gaze steadily, not flinching, not looking away.
“Yours,” I said. “If you want me to be.”
The words hung between us -- not a claim, not a demand, but an offer. A choice. A road she could take or leave, with no consequence either way.
She looked at me for one long moment, her gaze moving over my face like she was trying to read the words I hadn’t spoken.