Chapter Three #2
“Reckless Kings,” I supplied, nodding toward the embroidered patch. “And you’re right. He won’t back down.” I let it sink in before continuing. “But neither will I.”
Callie stared at me, searching for weakness or deception. Finding neither, her shoulders slumped slightly, not in defeat but in something like bewilderment.
“Why?” she asked. “Why take this on? I’m nobody to you.”
It was a legitimate question. One Beast and Ranger had communicated without words at the gate. One I’d asked myself when I first spotted her crumpled form on the roadside.
“When I was nineteen, I was heading nowhere fast. Bad decisions, worse company. The Kings found me several years later.” I rarely talked about those days, but she deserved some explanation.
“They could have left me to figure shit out on my own. Instead, they brought me in. Gave me purpose. Family.” I met her gaze steadily.
“Sometimes people deserve a second chance.”
“And if he finds me here?”
“Then he finds more than he bargained for.” Simple truth. The Kings didn’t just talk about protection -- we delivered it, with whatever force necessary.
She studied me for a long moment, something shifting in her expression. Not quite trust, but consideration. Weighing options, outcomes. The calculation of someone used to having only bad choices.
“I know exactly what I’ve done,” I said, answering the question she’d asked earlier. “The question is whether you do.”
Confusion flickered across her face. “What do you mean?”
“By accepting my claim -- by wearing my cut -- you’ve stepped into our world.
It offers protection, yes, but it carries its own rules and its own dangers.
” I wanted no misunderstandings between us.
“The Kings aren’t saints. We live outside the law in ways most civilians would find uncomfortable.
You deserve to know what you’re choosing to stand beside. ”
A flash of something -- not quite amusement, but close -- crossed her face. “I think I left ‘comfortable’ behind a long time ago.”
The statement carried significance beyond its simplicity. A glimpse into whatever hell she’d escaped, whatever life had forged this woman who could flee through the night with a head wound, who could sit calmly discussing violence while wearing a biker’s cut.
“Fair enough,” I conceded.
She ran her fingers along the leather edge of my cut, tracing the worn material. “How long?” she asked. “This arrangement.”
“Until you’re safe,” I repeated my words from the gate. “Or until you choose to leave. Your call, when the time comes.”
Regardless of what being mine truly meant, if she wanted to walk, I wouldn’t force her to stay. She’d already survived hell and deserved her freedom. Even knowing it would cost me the chance to claim another woman while I remained part of the club, I wouldn’t cage her again.
Her gaze drifted to the window, darkness pressing against the glass. Beyond the walls stretched the compound, and past it waited whoever had hunted her. This moment of safety felt real yet fragile, balanced on boundaries ready to fracture and protection still waiting to prove itself.
“And if I never feel safe again?” she asked, the question hanging between us.
“Then my claim stands,” I said simply. “For as long as you need it.”
The importance of my promise settled between us like a physical thing. Neither of us looked away.
We sat in silence a bit longer before I showed Callie to the bedroom, offering her the space while I took the couch.
Simple hospitality, though nothing about this situation felt simple.
She perched on the edge of the mattress, fingers gripping the quilt beneath her, knuckles pale with tension.
Her face stayed carefully blank, but the signs gave her away -- the faint tremor in her shoulders, the measured breaths.
She held something enormous in check, pressure built over time, waiting for a crack.
I lingered in the doorway, neither stepping fully inside nor retreating.
The bedroom felt sparse but comfortable: a queen bed covered with a handmade quilt, carved oak nightstands, a dresser pressed against the far wall.
One lamp cast amber light across the wood-paneled walls, warming the space despite the heaviness hanging in the air.
Window shutters sat closed and latched, the door solid oak with a deadbolt.
My space, built for security as much as comfort.
“You’ll be safe here,” I said. “I’ll be right outside if you need anything.”
She nodded but didn’t move. Just sat there, rigid, knuckles growing whiter by the second. The tremor in her shoulders intensified slightly.
I should have left then. Given her space, privacy.
But years of reading people -- Prospects, enemies, brothers in crisis -- had honed my instincts.
What I saw in Callie wasn’t someone who needed solitude.
It was someone on the edge of collapse, holding themselves together through sheer force of will.
“Callie?” I kept my voice quiet, neutral.
Her breathing hitched slightly, the first crack in the dam. She didn’t look up, just stared at her hands gripping the quilt. The silence stretched between us, heavy with things unsaid, emotions barely contained.
I moved into the room, steps deliberate and slow, telegraphing each movement. Not approaching directly but circling to where she could see me without feeling cornered. When I knelt before her, it was at a distance -- close enough to offer presence, far enough to respect boundaries.
The first tear fell silently, tracking down her cheek to drip onto her clenched hands. Then another. And another. Her shoulders began to shake, body fighting to contain the sobs that built within her chest. She bit her lip hard, drawing blood in her effort to remain silent.
“It’s okay,” I said softly. “No one can hear you here.”
The permission broke something loose. A sound escaped her, raw and wounded, quickly muffled as she pressed a hand to her mouth. But the floodgates had opened. Her body shook with the force of silent sobs, tears streaming freely now.
I remained where I was, not reaching for her, not offering empty platitudes.
Just present, a silent witness to her pain.
My gaze stayed steady on hers when she could meet it.
The quilt bunched in her fists as wave after wave hit her, emotions she’d likely suppressed for survival now demanding their due.
“I haven’t been safe in so long.” The words fell between us, simple but devastating in their truth.
I nodded once, understanding without pity. “You are now.”
Her gaze locked with mine, searching for the lie, the hidden agenda.
Finding none, something shifted in her expression -- the wariness giving way to a fragile, tentative hope.
Her breathing hitched again, but differently this time.
Less panicked, more like someone surfacing after being underwater too long.
“How can you be sure?” she asked.
“Because I claimed you,” I said simply. “And because the Kings protect what’s theirs.” There was no bravado in the statement, just certainty born from years of living by that code.
Something in my tone -- or perhaps just exhaustion -- finally reached her.
I watched as her shoulders slowly dropped from their defensive hunch.
Her fingers unclenched from the quilt, leaving deep wrinkles in the fabric where she’d gripped it.
The change was subtle at first, then increasingly visible -- her breathing deepened, her posture softened, the tension in her jaw eased.
It was like watching ice thaw, a gradual surrender to warmth after too long in the cold.
Her eyes, still bright with tears, held mine for a long moment. Then her gaze dropped, not in submission but in relief -- the relief of someone who could finally set down a burden they’d carried too far, too long.
“Thank you,” she whispered.
I nodded, accepting both her gratitude and the trust it represented. “Rest now.” I rose slowly to avoid startling her. “Tomorrow’s soon enough to figure out next steps.”
She didn’t respond verbally, but her body was already answering -- eyelids growing heavy, shoulders slumping with the bone-deep exhaustion that follows emotional release.
The antibiotics Dr. Latimer had given her were likely contributing, fighting the infection while pulling her toward needed sleep.
I stepped back, giving her space to stretch out on the bed if she chose. Instead, she simply curled onto her side atop the quilt, still wearing my leather cut like armor. Her eyes closed, then fluttered open briefly, searching for me in the amber-lit room.
“I’ll be right outside,” I reassured her, moving toward the door.
Her eyes closed again, this time staying shut.
Her breathing slowed, deepened. The vulnerability of it struck me -- this woman who had run through the night, fought off attackers, survived whatever hell had marked her with zip ties and bruises, now trusting enough to sleep in my presence.
The burden of that trust settled on my shoulders, heavier than any Prospect challenge or club obligation I’d ever carried.
I reached for the extra blanket folded at the foot of the bed and gently laid it over her. She didn’t stir, already sliding into the deep sleep of complete exhaustion. My cut rose and fell with her breathing, the Kings’ emblem a promise of protection that would remain when she woke.
At the door, I paused for one last look.
In sleep, the wariness had fallen from her face, revealing someone younger than she’d appeared before.
Not innocence -- I suspected that had been stolen long ago -- but a glimpse of who she might have been before whatever hell she’d escaped.
Who she might become again, given time and safety.
I left the door partially open as I stepped out, ensuring I’d hear if she called out. The couch in the main room would serve well enough for the night. I’d slept in far worse places during my years with the Kings.
As I settled in, the reality of what I’d set in motion today finally hit me fully.
I’d claimed a woman I’d known less than an hour, brought unknown danger to the club’s doorstep, committed to protection without knowing what -- or who -- I was protecting her from.
By all logic, it was reckless, impulsive, potentially disastrous.
And yet, hearing her steady breathing from the bedroom, seeing the peace that had finally settled on her face as she slept, I couldn’t find it in me to regret the choice.
Whatever came next -- whatever storm followed her to our gates -- we would face it.
The Kings protected their own. And for better or worse, Callie was now one of ours.
Mine.