Chloe Decker has never fit in. Her father is considered a coward by the local MC. She’s the coward’s daughter and public enemy number one. When the president’s son, Alfie, and his friends bully her, she knows something bad will happen.
Alfie is determined to bring Chloe down. She thinks she’s better than all of them, but he’s going to show the town, and the club, she’s nothing. Only, he’s the one being taught a lesson. Chloe’s not faking anything. Slowly, Alfie begins to see the real woman beneath the bullying.
He’s not going to ruin her. He’s going to show her what it means to belong to him.
But someone is determined to keep them apart. When his original plans are shown to the entire town, Alfie loses the respect of the only girl he’s ever cared about.
Chloe promises to never return, but when her mother is run over by a car, she has no choice. She has to face the demons of her past. It doesn’t mean she will fall for Alfie’s tricks again.
Alfie’s finally got her back in town, and this time, he’s not going to risk losing her. He’s not the dumb biker kid anymore; he’s a man, and this man doesn’t let the woman he loves get away.
“You winced at an alcohol wipe.”
“I said I don’t need stitches. I didn’t say anything about not behaving like a baby over it. Come on, I can handle it.”
She smiled and cleaned him up.
“So that kiss, huh? Would it be natural of me to think that was your first one?”
“Yes.”
“And I was the one to give it to you.”
“Why do you have to make everything sound so dirty?”
“It is what it is,” he said. “So I was? You know, your first?”
She rolled her eyes. “Yes, you were my first. I had to figure out a way of getting you to stop punching him. I didn’t want you getting in trouble for me.”
“Why not?”
“I just don’t want you to get in trouble. I’ve dealt with more of this, and I’m fine with it. There’s no reason you should be dragged down. I don’t think your dad would be happy about coming down here to deal with you.”
“He’d be happy to know I was doing it to defend you.” He reached out and pushed some hair out of the way.
“Well, thank you, all the same,” she said. “I do appreciate it.”
“You’re sure? I’m not feeling the appreciation here.”
“I stopped you from getting suspended or your dad coming here. You got a kiss out of it as well, and I fixed your face.”
“I wasn’t able to enjoy the kiss.”
“And everything else?”
“I thank you, but I think you should kiss me again.”
She giggled. “You do, and why?”
“I’m your savior. I’m your personal knight in shining armor or whatever bullshit that is called,” he said.
“You’re really going to use that as a reason to get another kiss?”
“I’d rather use no reason and just have you kiss me, but I don’t seem to be getting what I want.”
“You want me to just kiss you?”
“It’s what normal people in a relationship do.”
“We’re not in a relationship.”
“You’re hurting my feelings, Chloe.” He put a hand over her heart, and as she put away the first aid kit, he took her hand. He pressed his lips to her knuckles and smiled at her. “I’m wearing you down. I can see you want to kiss me. You do.”
“I do not.”
“Why don’t you try it and we’ll see.”
She laughed. “You think I don’t know where you’re going with this? I do. I can see right through you.”
“That’s scary.”
He cupped her face, and before she knew what was happening, his lips were on hers. The kiss seared right to her soul, and any laughter died as he actually kissed her. It was slow at first, exploratory, and changed within seconds as he ravished her mouth.
After only a few seconds, but felt like longer, he pulled back. “That was the first kiss I should have given you.”
****
“You want to take her on a date?” Lily asked.
She was walking around the supermarket, picking up some fresh produce.
Alfie had been on his way to the clubhouse when he saw her.
“Yeah. Me and her, doing something together.”
Lily put the peppers into her trolley and frowned. She opened her mouth and closed it. “Why are you asking me?”
“You’re her mother.”
“Yes, and you’re not going to be dating me. You’re going to be dating my daughter. You see the problem here?”
“I know, but Chloe and me, we’ve not had a good start.”
“Believe me I know, and I can’t say that I blame her.” Lily tilted her head to the side.
He didn’t know why he thought this would be a good idea. Getting her mother to like him would only allow Chloe to trust him more, right?
“We haven’t always been close.”
“I know you bullied my daughter, Alfie, and I’m not going to give you permission to date my daughter. I don’t trust you.”
“I’m proving to you that I care. That I’ve changed.”
“No one does that quick a turnaround. Believe me, I know about men and their behavior. You want to date my daughter, fine. You will come to dinner tonight. You and your father and I will see if you have the right personality for my girl.”
“Seriously? You’re going to do this right now? When I’m proving to you that I’m different. I help her at school. I’m stopping all the bullying.”
“That I imagine you helped to start in the first place. I’m not blind to everything going on, Alfie. I’ve given you the conditions for you to date her. Take them or leave them. I will never be the one to encourage my daughter to go on a date with her bully. Not now, not ever.”
Alfie watched her as she grabbed the shopping cart and moved on. This wasn’t exactly what he had planned.
Fuck!
Shit!
Cock!
Balls!
Chasing after Lily, he stood beside her. “You’re not going to budge on this?”
“Nope, I am not. Tell me, Alfie, will I be cooking for four or two?”
He gritted his teeth. “Four.”
“You better check with your father first in case he won’t make it.”
“He’ll make it.”