Chapter Two #2
With deliberate movements, I slipped the leather vest from my shoulders.
Cool night air brushed my arms, and the loss of the familiar weight left me momentarily disoriented.
Without the cut, I stood before Beast and Ranger as Lyle Harker again -- the name I’d left behind decades ago, the person who’d ceased to exist when I became Samson.
The Prospects watched in silence, understanding the significance of what they witnessed. Ranger’s eyebrows rose slightly, the only indication of surprise from the veteran rider. Beast’s expression remained unreadable, though something flickered in his eyes -- not disapproval, exactly, but caution.
I draped the cut over Callie’s shoulders, the leather engulfing her smaller frame. The gesture carried a universal meaning -- claiming, protection, responsibility, and a bond far deeper than convenience or circumstance.
“She’s mine,” I said, my voice low but strong enough to carry across the space between us. “I claim her. Permanently.”
The words settled into the night, heavy with consequence. Claiming went beyond shielding her from danger. It meant vouching for her choices and owning the fallout if trouble followed. It tied her to my life in a way no quick fix or temporary solution ever could.
Beast studied us both. Years of friendship existed between us, built on trust and mutual respect. I’d never asked for special treatment, never pushed against club rules. Until now.
“You sure about this?” he asked finally, his voice pitched for my ears alone. Not questioning my right to make the claim but ensuring I understood its weight.
“Yes,” I answered without hesitation. The die was cast the moment I stopped on the dark road.
Ranger’s face creased in what might have been concern or resignation. “Hope she’s worth it, brother.”
The words weren’t meant as criticism -- just acknowledgment of the path I’d chosen. I nodded once in response, neither defending nor explaining. Some decisions didn’t need justification.
Beast held my gaze for another long moment before turning to the Prospects. “Let them through.”
The older Prospect gave me a brief nod before stepping back, respect clear in the gesture.
“Get her to Dr. Latimer,” Beast said, his voice returning to its usual authoritative tone. “Full report after. And, Samson…” He paused, his expression hardening slightly. “Whatever she’s running from becomes club business now. You understand?”
I nodded, the implications clear. By claiming Callie, I’d brought her troubles under the Kings’ protection. If someone was hunting her, they were now hunting one of ours. The club would respond accordingly, bringing full force and every available resource.
“Understood,” I said.
“I’ll have your bike brought inside,” Beast said.
Then he stepped aside, clearing the path into the compound.
As we moved past him, he placed a heavy hand briefly on my shoulder -- not quite approval, not quite warning.
Something in between. The weight of years of brotherhood compressed into a single gesture.
Ranger’s expression had softened almost imperceptibly as we passed, his eyes lingering on Callie’s injuries. The old man had seen enough violence in his time to recognize its patterns, to understand what she’d endured to reach this point.
The gate closed behind us with a metallic finality, sealing us inside the compound -- and keeping out whatever pursued her. For now, at least.
* * *
Callie’s gaze found mine, fever-bright but suddenly more focused than when I’d first found her.
The weight of my leather cut seemed to pull her from the fog of exhaustion and pain, awareness dawning as her fingers touched the worn leather draped across her shoulders.
Recognition flickered in her expression as she processed what had just happened, what I’d declared to Beast and the others.
Her throat worked as she swallowed, cracked lips parting with effort.
“What does that mean?” she asked, voice barely audible, rough from dehydration and fear. Her fingers curled around the edge of the leather, knuckles white with tension.
The question carried layers -- what did claiming mean in our world, in her situation, between us. Around us, the night seemed to hold its breath, the club members watching this exchange with careful neutrality. What passed between us now would define what came next.
I met her gaze directly, keeping my voice low but firm. “It means you’re under my protection. No one touches what’s mine.” The possessive term hung between us, weighted with implications I couldn’t fully explain in this moment. “Not out there, not in here.”
Her gaze darted to Beast and Ranger, then back to me, calculating even through fever and exhaustion.
She’d managed to survive whatever hell she’d been in, which meant she’d probably observed her captor to find a weak spot or the best time to escape.
It told me she was probably good at reading situations.
Now she was trying to read this one -- trying to determine if she’d traded one danger for another.
“Your…” She paused, searching for words. “Your property?”
A fair question, given what she’d likely heard about motorcycle clubs. The outside world’s understanding of our life came from sensationalized news and television shows. Some of it true, much of it distorted.
“My responsibility,” I clarified, shifting her weight in my arms to better support her. “My obligation. In return for protection, loyalty.” I kept the explanation simple, basics she could grasp in her current state. The nuances could wait.
Callie’s eyes narrowed slightly, a flash of something defiant flickered. “And if I don’t want to be… claimed?”
Behind us, I sensed rather than saw Beast and Ranger exchange glances. Her question tested more than my decision. It contested club protocol and the system maintaining order in our world. The challenge was fair and deserved an honest answer.
“Then I get you somewhere safe, somewhere else,” I said. “But not tonight. Tonight, this is your best option.” I nodded toward the darkness beyond the gate, where shadows moved among trees. “Better than whatever’s waiting out there.”
She followed my gaze, eyes lingering on the tree line. Something in her expression shifted -- hardened -- as she stared into the darkness. Whatever she saw, or remembered, made the decision for her.
When she looked back at me, defiance hardened into resolve. “How permanent is ‘permanently’?”
The question hit deeper than she realized. In the club world, claiming meant commitment without shortcuts. She didn’t need the lesson yet, not with fever raging and strength bleeding out of her by the second.
“As permanent as it needs to be,” I answered, lying a bit. “Until you’re safe.”
She studied my face, looking for deception or ulterior motive. Even half-conscious and feverish, her survival instincts remained sharp. I kept my expression open, meeting her scrutiny with steady calm.
After what felt like minutes but was likely only seconds, she gave a small, decisive nod. Agreement, acceptance -- at least for now. The tension in her fingers eased slightly where they clutched the leather of my cut.
“Okay,” she whispered, the single word carrying the weight of a much longer decision.
I turned toward Beast, who had watched our exchange. He gave a slight nod. “Dr. Latimer’s waiting.” His voice sounded neutral but carried a note of finality. The decision was made. Whatever consequences came would be addressed later.
I adjusted my hold on Callie, mindful of her injuries as I carried her forward. Her head rested against my shoulder as the fight drained from her.
Callie’s breathing came shallow against my neck, her fever heat persistent where her skin touched mine.
My cut draped over her like a shield, the leather catching the compound’s security lights as we moved deeper into Kings territory.
The weight of the symbol -- what it meant for her to wear it -- settled fully on my shoulders, heavier than the leather had ever been.
The Prospects secured the chain and resumed their posts, weapons visible, a silent reminder that protection demanded constant vigilance.
Beast fell into step beside us, his presence both reassurance and subtle reminder of authority.
“Dr. Latimer’s set up in the medical cabin,” he said, gesturing toward a small structure near the edge of the compound.
“Lyssa’s with him. They’ll get her stabilized.
You’re lucky he was already here on a call. ”
I nodded, grateful for the efficiency. Beast might question my decision, but he wouldn’t withhold help now the claiming was done. The Kings took care of their own, and for better or worse, Callie now fell under the club’s protection.
Ranger remained by the gate, his face turned toward the darkness beyond. Watching. Waiting. The man’s instincts were legendary -- if something followed us here, he’d be the first to sense it.
“Thank you,” Callie murmured against my neck, the words so quiet I almost missed them.
I glanced down at her face, pale beneath dirt and dried blood, eyes closed again as exhaustion claimed her. The words weren’t for Beast or the others -- just for me. “Rest now,” I told her as we approached the medical cabin’s lights. “You’re safe.”
This time, the words felt less like a lie. Whatever came next -- whatever she ran from, whatever claiming her might mean for us both -- could wait until morning. Tonight, she had walls around her, people ready to defend them, and the protection that came with wearing a patched member’s cut.
For tonight, it would have to be enough.