Making Choices - Embroidery Cover - Ebook
Making Choices - Embroidery Cover - Ebook
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TYPE: Electronically Signed Ebook
SERIES: Duplicity Trilogy Book Two
TROPES:
✔️ Found Family
✔️ Starting Over
✔️ Coming of Age
✔️ Second Chance
✔️ BDSM
WHAT READERS ARE SAYING:
★★★★★ "If I could give this story more than five stars, I would in a heartbeat! This is the second installment or the third installment (if you decide to read the prequel “Craving Control” which I suggest so you get a better appreciation for this series, but since it is written in the villain’s POV, take precautions) of this series."—Amazon Review
Making Choices is book two in the Duplicity Trilogy. The first book, Tempting Fate, must be read first to understand the overarching storyline. Do not read this blurb if you haven’t read the preceding book, as it contains spoilers.
Reader discretion is advised, as this dark redemption traumance contains potentially triggering content. Please also be aware that this story is set in Australia and is written in UK English with liberal use of Aussie slang and vernacular.
SYNOPSIS
SYNOPSIS
After losing my innocence, my pregnancy, and my fiancé in the same horrible night, I can feel myself sinking into despair.
Alex’s voice echoes in my brain. He reminds that I’m poisoned. That he is inside me, and I’ll never be free of him, not even in death.
One man keeps my head above water through it all.My ex-fiancé’s best friend.
Slash is my strength and my safe harbour in a world that I no longer trust. Which is why I rebuff his declaration of love and his request that I choose him over Zeke.
I love them both.
Different but equal.
Choosing between them is impossible. Until Zeke is arrested for a murder that I committed and the only way to save him is to do the one thing I swore I wouldn’t…Choose Slash.
CONTENT WARNINGS
CONTENT WARNINGS
- Death of a main character
- Pregnancy after miscarriag
- Death of a newborn (not stillbirth)
- Death of a parent (off page, mentioned in passing)
- BDSM elements
- Drug use
- Profanity
- Violence
- Emotional manipulation
- Torture (on page, descriptive)
- Non-consensual sex (under coersion)
- Love triangle (readers may feel some events constitute cheating)
LOOK INSIDE CHAPTER ONE
LOOK INSIDE CHAPTER ONE
Prologue
CARTER
Aged: Nineteen
“He’s in here,” my best friend, Zeke, grumbles in a low voice. “Hasn’t moved since Angelis dropped him off once the fuckin’ cops let him go after the…”
When he trails off rather than say the word that’s liable to ignite my temper, I wrap a hand around the pillow next to me and slam it down over my head to block out his unwanted sympathy. This isn’t the first attempted intervention he’s pulled and it’s unlikely to be the last—not that whatever he has planned this time will work.
I’m a lost cause. Charged with affray after gate crashing the dual funeral. My face has been splashed over the front page of every newspaper. Even made the nightly bulletin the day it happened. I’ve embarrassed my brotherhood. Brought them to the attention of the Maddison Clan and dragged our club into the spotlight shone by the organised crime taskforce.
My life as I once pictured it is over.
Biding my time, drowning my sorrows in beer and weed, as I work up the courage to notch the barrel of my handgun under my chin, squeeze the trigger, and make this foregone future a reality.
Boom.
One well-placed shot is all it’ll take.
My rage will be defeated.
My guilt will be appeased.
The solution is simple.
Now, I just need them to leave me the fuck alone long enough for me to grow the balls needed to make the ten steps from my bed to the shower cubicle to enact my plan. It’s a shit act to pull. Leaving one of my brothers, or worse my mother or little Cherub, to find my body. Can’t be helped, though. I mightn’t want to sully the clubhouse, but my bedroom is the only place I can close my eyes without seeing her.
Jenna fucking Greatbatch.
Of course, this reprieve is only possible because she refused to come here. She deliberately snubbed my world. Rejected the chance to understand what drove me to join the brotherhood I’ve idolised since I was a small boy. Ignored my pleas for her to see my world for what it is.
Freedom.
In truth, the bottom rocker I proudly wear on the cut I discarded two weeks ago in lieu of a black suit was the main cause of our problems.
I wanted her and the club where I’m a prospect.
She wanted me for my dick and the clout bouncing on it brought her around campus.
We were toxic together yet deadly apart…
When the bedroom door slams, I allow myself to sigh with relief.
Zeke can be a pushy motherfucker.
Especially when he’s presented with a problem that no one else can solve.
If he hadn’t already been christened with his road name when he was eight, I would’ve definitely thrown Mr. Fix-it into the mix as an option. Not that it matters now. I’ve missed the lead up to our patching-in ceremony. After my life imploded, I checked out of any reality that didn’t involve smoking, drinking, and sucking on a joint—all activities I can safely partake from my bed—so I will no longer be joining my best friends when they patch into the Shamrocks in two days’ time.
The club is just one more thing Jenna took from me.
“Fuckin’ hell,” I grumble to myself as tentacles of misery wrap themselves around me again. “Fuck me in the eye with a rusty dildo.”
“Ew. Pass.” The softly spoken retort belongs to someone who most definitely shouldn’t be in my room. “Not even sure where I’d get a rusty dildo anyhow… aren’t they rubber?”
When the bed shakes as she climbs onto the mattress next to me, I toss the pillow on the floor, and roll onto my side to face her. “What the fuck’re you doin’ here?”
“Zeke snuck me in,” little Cherub tells me with a wide grin. She plonks her arse on top of the covers and crosses her legs. Her bright-blue eyes twinkle as she says, “He said you needed someone to talk sense into you…” Trailing off, Cherub wrinkles up her nose as she drops the punchline. “And since we all know I’m the only person remotely equipped for the job, I came straightaway.”
“Get. The. Fuck. Outta. Here.”
My president’s daughter tilts her head to one side and pouts. “Nope.”
“I don’t need a pep talk from an eleven-year-old.”
“Actually, I’m twelve now,” Cherub remarks. With a snort, I fling myself onto my other side so all she can see is my back. Her warm fingertips tap dance along my arm. “Aren’t you going to wish me a happy birthday? It was yesterday, but I figure you have a decent excuse for forgetting… unlike my dad.”
“Happy birthday, little Cherub,” I mutter. “Now fuck off.”
Rather than do as she’s told, Cherub flops down behind me. She sighs. It’s a heavy sound that mirrors my own lament at the unfairness of the world. Lilianna Mayberry might be a kid, but she’s felt the world’s wrath just as hard as I have. Only difference is that she’s still standing while I’ve taken to my bed like a Victorian debutante with a bad case of vapours.
“I hate to tell you, Carter, but I read that book you gave me and it was horrible. Like, some of it was okay, but mostly it made me feel shitty.” When I don’t answer, her slender, pianist fingers wind their way into my knotted hair and she starts to gently work the tangles out. “‘The death of a beloved is an amputation.’ Now that made sense… but the whole ‘no one ever told me that grief felt so like fear’ thing is dumb as hell. What I’m feeling is nothing like fear. I’m mad. I’m filled with this anger that I can’t seem to shake… like, I want to smash someone’s face to a pulp, even though I know it won’t fix anything. That’s nothing like fear… because, let me tell you, mister, when I’m afraid, I’m not seeking out things to destroy… I’m gonna hide from that shit.”
“Language, Cherub.”
“Oh, fuck off,” she counters, dragging her fingers through a tangle with more force than necessary. “My mum’s dead. My Dad’s lost his marbles. And one of my favourite people in the world won’t get out of bed… cursing is the least of my problems. Plus, you know I’m right, the whole grief feels like fear thing is bullshit.”
In the wake of Cherub’s passionate declaration, my own rage surges again. She’s right. My grief doesn’t feel like fear. Unlike C.S. Lewis in the wake of his greatest tragedy, I’m not restless. I’m not yawning. I’m not swallowing uselessly or left feeling mildly concussed. The only fluttering in my stomach is the kind that energises me before I inflict pain.
The sole reason I don’t give into the urge to wreak destruction is because I know it’s futile.
Beating someone half to death or peeling back their fingernails until they spill all their secrets won’t fix a thing.
Jenna will still be dead.
By her choice.
Our baby boy will still be gone.
Again… by her choice.
“My anger is eclipsed by the need to blame her,” Cherub confesses in a choked whisper. “Mum’s decision to drive that night pisses me off. Why that road? Her car. A tree. One random hailstorm. If she’d just stayed here with me like I begged…”
When she trails off, her fingers tense, then flex in my hair. I reach up to take hold of her wrist, pulling her hand straight and linking my fingers with hers. Cherub snuggles into my back with her arm looped over my neck, and we both pretend not to notice how her body shakes while she silently sobs.
Despite its noiselessness, Cherub’s pain is visceral.
It lives. It breathes. It claws at her while it taunts me with my vicious reality.
Scarlett Mayberry is dead, but she would still be here if she could be. She loved her kids, her husband, and the Shamrocks more than life itself.
My farce of a fiancée killed our baby so I couldn’t have him.
Fuck me, Jenna even went so far as to leave me a letter to drive that point home.
Our loss is not the same.
Our pain is incompatible.
Cherub is caught between anger and blame.
I’m trapped within a manufactured web of rage and guilt… and another emotion I’m too chicken to name.
“I hate that you’re hurting like this, Carter. You didn’t deserve Jenna’s cruelty, not after you tried so hard to love her the way she wanted. You’re a good man… and this whole situation is just wrong. What she did is wrong.”
As her heartfelt declaration pierces my psyche with shards of innocent mistruth and the kernel of knowledge that she’s planted takes root, I screw my eyes shut and try to keep breathing. The words bubble in my throat, and I swallow them down, over and over, so I don’t scream my true thoughts at Cherub.
In.
Out.
In.
Out.
Slowly.
Steadily.
To the beat of six simple words that repeat over and over in my head…
I. Am. Not. A. Good. Man.
Once, a year or so ago, before I found myself falling in love with Jenna and compromising my morals left, right, and centre to please her, I believed that I was good. Fair. I was authentic. Justified in my pursuit of a life outside the dictates of society. Capable of a bigger existence than the civilians who toe the government’s line like good little robots.
Until my heart, and then my dick, led me astray and turned me into everything that I loathe about our so-called civilisation.
I offered Jenna marriage because that’s what normal people do when they’re expecting a baby—even if they’ve only been together for four months and are barely more than kids themselves. She accepted, then tossed the ring back in my face every time I refused to act the way she wanted. I used my mathematical savantism to turn the pittance I make as a prospect into a deposit for a big house in the suburbs, and I even talked my dad into going guarantor for the loan. She declined to even look at the house. I increased my subject load at university and tried to balance my pre-medical studies with my duties to the Shamrocks. Jenna complained when I wasn’t spending time with her, then accused me of smothering her when I tried to stick by her side.
Everything I stood for was brushed aside so I could be the kind of man Jenna demanded I become if I wanted a place in our kid’s life. Determined to be a better dad than I was boyfriend, I abandoned every ounce of my good to keep her happy.
I still ended up broken.
“Did you get to hold him?” Cherub’s tone is tentative when she continues. “I heard Crystal crying… and I just—I just… thought…”
“Once. Zeke bribed a nurse so I could be alone with him.” When my arms pulse with the phantom memory of my newborn son’s scant weight, I push myself upright and stumble to my feet. Looking everywhere except at Cherub’s tear-stained face, I mumble, “Look, I appreciate you comin’ here and all, but—”
My attempt to eject her is halted as she scrambles off my bed and hurtles herself at me. Cheek pressed to my stomach with her arms looped around my back, Cherub’s hug is so tight that I swear she temporarily fixes my broken bits. The dark cloud that descended the moment I learnt my son had been murdered dissipates a little and I press a quick kiss to the top of her head.
Everyone in the club has tried to comfort me, yet Cherub is the only one who feels authentic in her actions. Her quiet weeping doesn’t make my skin crawl like my mum’s does because it’s not filled with mind-numbing sympathy, the howl of regret, or a silent plea for me to pretend that I’m handling my loss better than I am.
Cherub is offering me understanding.
Empathy without judgement.
It’s a synchronicity of emotion I didn’t think I’d ever find.
Proof our pain is the same.
We’re the ones left behind to cope. The ones abandoned without answers or hope. By virtue of another’s choice, our hearts have been sliced into ribbons. We’ve been flayed alive. Stripped of options. Pushed into living a future we never wanted. Forced to despise the actions of someone we once loved.
So far, Cherub’s the only one who hasn’t tried to console me over the loss of my fiancée. She’s the first person to see through the veneer of expectation that our culture layers over grief to the real core of my suffering. We’re not allowed to speak ill of the dead, even if the deceased deserves it.
And that’s the crux of my depression.
I’m not mourning the way they anticipated because I don’t miss Jenna. By the end of her life, I barely liked her. I forced myself to tolerate her because that was the honourable thing to do. If I could’ve removed our child from her selfish, frivolous, mendacious presence before he was born, I would’ve gleefully done so.
A child is not leverage.
A child is not a weapon.
A child is a blessing.
And she killed our child because she couldn’t get her own way.
I hate her.
The sound of her name.
The memory of her laugh.
The fury that stabs me with any mention of her malignant existence.
Yet, I know that if I went out to the front bar and announced any of that out loud, every single person would judge me for it. Even the hard men who kill without a second thought. They’d try to talk sense into me. They’d minimise what she did with excuses about the pressure she was under. They’d throw around diagnoses that she didn’t have in the hope of making me understand her motivation for murdering the little helpless human we’d created together, even after I pleaded with her to let me have him when she decided she didn’t want him after he was born.
Not one person out there would have the guts Cherub just displayed to tell it as it is.
Jenna punished me for not wanting her, then she killed herself to escape the consequences.
And the hole in my chest, the empty space that rages at me to feed it with violence, seethes with ineptitude because there’s nothing that I can do to change what happened.
Jenna made her ultimatum.
I called her bluff and lost.
He didn’t even have a name, yet my son paid the ultimate price for my failure to protect him.
As I finally allow myself to acknowledge the truth I’ve been trying to avoid for days, my arms drop around Cherub’s shoulders and I return her embrace. She shivers, sniffs, then hiccups. I squeeze her as tight as she’s squeezing me.
“I know I shouldn’t have said mean things about Jenna, even if they are true, but, please, don’t make me go,” Cherub whispers. “I can’t face them all right now. Their stupid clichés. Their even dumber promises. The crappy excuses… it’s all fake. Mum is dead and the moronic lies they tell me about heaven being some wonderful place isn’t making me feel any better… the only place I can truly feel her is here if they shut up long enough for me to find some peace. Not that the club will be mine for much longer anyway so I’ll lose that soon, but—”
When she abruptly stops speaking and tilts her head back to look up at me, I see my own outrage at the hollowness of our society’s grieving process reflected back at me. If I’m not allowed to talk ill of the dead, then Cherub is definitely unable to verbalise her anger at being treated like a dumb kid whenever she’s offered useless platitudes.
“You can stay,” I promise. She offers me a watery smile as her tears start to dry on her cheeks, then presses her forehead to my heart. “For as long as you need to hide out, this room is yours. I want you to find your peace.”
“How nice of you,” she quips in a semi-mocking tone. “Considering we both know my stay will be short since your patching-in ceremony is in less than an hour. Why do you think Zeke brought in the big guns? He was worried you ‘wouldn’t drag your arse outta bed for it.’”
Biting back a grin when she nails Zeke’s bossy tone perfectly, I grip her shoulders and hold her out from me. “That’s not for another two days.”
“Nope. It’s this afternoon.”
“Fuck me.”
“Again, pass,” Cherub states with a smirk. She knocks my arms away and swipes at her damp cheeks to clear away any residual tears. “Right. You need to get your butt in the shower because you smell like nicotine and dandruff. I’ll dig through this pit to find something clean for you to wear.”
Although her excitement is contagious, my hope dies when I remember that I haven’t undertaken my prospect duties for almost a month.
“Brutus won’t—”
“Yes, he will.” Hands on her hips, Cherub narrows her gaze at me as she says, “Do you really think the Shamrocks will deny you your top rocker over this?”
Inclining my head, I avert my eyes when I tell her, “Maybe not all of them, but Brutus could. You know he’s a hardarse when it comes to provin’ yourself worthy… I haven’t exactly put the club first lately.”
“Hardarse or not, Brutus isn’t in charge any longer.”
Before I can question Cherub about her cryptic comment any further, she shakes her head at me and hits me with a look I know well. She means business. If I don’t get moving, she’s liable to employ one of her more vicious methods of getting her point across. Being the only girl surrounded by eleven boys who range from the ages of nineteen like me, Zeke, and her oldest cousin, Benedict, to five years old like her youngest brother, Nathaniel, Cherub has had to get creative to keep us in line.
Right now, she’s favouring the classic nipple cripple.
“All right.” I hold my hands in the air. “I’m going.”
“Good… and I don’t want to see you until you smell like a human instead of an ashtray.”
“Fuckin’ bossy,” I mumble as I turn to close the door to my ensuite bathroom behind me.
Something solid hits the door with a thud. “I heard that.”
As the water is heating up, I catch a glimpse of myself in the mirror above the basin. To my surprise, I’m smiling. My gaze remains haunted by the loss I figure I’ll carry with me forever, yet the hunched shoulders and the downturned mouth that have greeted me every time I’ve ventured into the bathroom over the past couple weeks are gone. Even the handgun that sits on the toilet tank no longer calls to me.
Bloody Cherub and her magic.
Zeke swears she’s the only person capable of pulling him out of his rage when his control snaps. Her twin brother maintains she can read his mind. Cherub’s mum called her an empath. Personally, I’m beginning to believe she’s some kind of sorceress because only magic could’ve dragged me back to my feet considering how close I was to ending it all before she snuck into my room.
When my smile widens into a grin and the emptiness in my chest floods with gratitude, I allow the first rays of hope to light a thin pathway out of the darkness that’s been holding me captive since Jenna destroyed my life.
I’m going to survive this.
Maybe I’ll always wear a mask to disguise how broken I am, but I’ll live.
Thanks to one meddling Cherub and the truth she apologised for making me see.
The water is scalding hot when I step under it. It washes away the filth that coats me—inside and out. Relaxes me. Soothes me. I shampoo my shoulder blade length hair three times, then apply half a bottle of conditioner to assist with the knots. As it sinks in, I tilt my face under the water and blink through the strange weightlessness that’s invading my limbs as my mind and my body begins to shake off the numbness that’s been my only comfort since the funeral.
“You’ve got an hour before it starts,” Cherub yells as she bangs on the door. “I’ve laid out clean jeans and your least smelly t-shirt on your bed. Your cut is hanging on the back of the door.”
At the moment, she sounds so much like a younger version of her ever-efficient mother that I can’t stop myself from chuckling. The Shamrocks will miss Scarlett. Her loss is going to leave a hole that’ll be felt for generations. Thankfully, she raised a daughter who embodies everything that she stood for during her too-short life.
After the one-two punch of Zeke’s mother dying of cancer, then Scarlett’s fatal accident two months afterwards was compounded by Jenna’s suicide and the murder of my son weeks later, the Black Shamrocks have been beaten from pillar to post recently. Watching Cherub effortlessly slip into her mother’s shoes, I finally believe that we’re going to get through this as a collective. It’s going to hurt for a long time. Some days will feel like a backward step. Emotions will run high. Mistakes will be made.
But I’m going to be okay.
And so is my brotherhood.
“Thank you,” I shout back at her when she bangs a second time. “I’ve got it from here, Cherub.”
She doesn’t answer me. Not that she needs to. Her silence is enough.
Cherub has done what Zeke sent her to do, so she’ll be moving on to her next project now.
I rinse my hair and scrub at my face, then switch the water off. With a towel around my hair and another knotted around my waist, I drag the door open and step into my bedroom.
Cherub has been busy in my absence.
My dirty clothes are piled in the hamper. A scented candle I’ve never seen before has been lit. The overflowing ashtray has been cleaned out. The empty beer bottles have been removed. New sheets and a quilt cover sit folded on the bare mattress for me to remake my stripped bed. Next to them are the clothes Cherub mentioned, complete with my motorcycle boots lined up below them on the floor.
As I go to double check that my cut is where she said it is, the door opens.
Since I was expecting my mother to invade my space as soon as Cherub tells her that I’m out of bed and putting on actual clothes for the first time, I do a double take when the tall blonde responsible for my miraculous return to humanity steps inside. She knocks the door shut with her heel and approaches me with a hairdryer and a brush in one hand and a bunch of hair ties layered on her opposite wrist.
“Cherub,” I venture slowly. “Zeke’ll kill me if he finds out I was half-naked around you.”
“Screw Zeke.” Cherub rolls her eyes. “No matter how much he tries to make it true, he doesn’t actually own me. I love you both equally.”
“Still…” I trail off as I tighten the knot on my towel. “Maybe—”
“Seriously, just shut up.” With a quirk of her lips, she shrugs off my next round of objections before I can verbalise them. “I’ve invaded the cut—” Cherub lowers her voice to whisper the next word. “—sluts dressing room and lived to tell the tale. The hair dryer works and the brush is new. How do you want your hair?”
“Um, I don’t know… just a ponytail like usual?”
“Boring! I’m going to twist it into a bun on the top of your head so you don’t look back on the photos one day and realise you spent the majority of your teens looking like a bad imitation of David Beckham at his least hot.”
“What do you know about hot?”
Cherub rolls her eyes. “I’m twelve, not two… I know a hot man when I see one.”
Clearing my throat as I recognise that this conversation is taking a strange turn, I change the subject. “I’ll get dressed first.”
“Whatever.”
While she plugs in the hairdryer and organises herself, I grab the clothes she laid out and slip into the bathroom to pull them on. As I exit, Cherub beckons me over to her.
“Sit on the floor and lean back,” she instructs after plonking herself in my armchair.
I do as I’m told, leaning back between her spread legs. With efficient strokes and sweeps of the hot dryer, Cherub makes quick work of my damp hair. Her fingernails feel amazing against my scalp, the first human touch I’ve been able to accept without my skin crawling since I was told what Jenna had done.
Even so, every couple of seconds my gaze strays to the bedroom door. If Zeke caught us like this, he’d jump to the wrong kind of conclusion, and my face would resemble tomato pulp within a minute. He’s been over-protective of Cherub for as long as I can remember—something that everyone at the club has commented on more than once.
Their connection is strange yet comforting to witness.
Not at all creepy like Brutus recently alleged.
Just unusual in a world that likes to sully good things with bad intentions.
“Holy fuck,” I curse when Cherub drags the brush through my drying locks and my skin breaks out in goosebumps. “Who knew having your hair brushed felt so good?”
“It always feels better to have someone else brush your hair than it does when you do it yourself,” she tells me. There’s a wistful quality to her voice when she adds. “It’s such a small thing, but it’s what I miss the most now she’s gone… even though it used to annoy me before.” Her fingers are assured and quick as she scoops my hair to my crown and twists it into a knot. “Not being around to remind you of the small things is what worries me about leaving you.”
“What do you mean leaving?”
Cherub winds a sandy coloured hair tie around my hair to secure it in place. “Dad’s given Hades the president’s patch. He’s moving us to Inadale to start a new chapter… apparently, it’s too hard for him to be around the compound and our home without Mum.”
“You gotta be mistaken.” My arms shake as I push back to my feet. “Fuckin’ Brutus would never step down.”
“Oh, he hasn’t stepped down.” Cherub screws up her face. “He’s going to be president of the new chapter and vice president of this one.”
“That’s not…” The rest of my sentence dies on my tongue as my door is flung open and Zeke strides in. I whirl on him, disbelief in my voice as I demand, “Did you know?”
“I just found out.” His voice is choked as he looks down at Cherub. “Why didn’t you tell me, Lily?”
“What could you have done about it?”
“I don’t kn-know,” he stutters. Jamming one hand in his hair, he holds out the other to Cherub. “Come on, we’ll go talk to him.”
“The time for talkin’ is over,” Brutus announces from the doorway as he barges into my bedroom. He glares at Zeke, the muscle in his jaw working overtime. “Now you can quit fuckin’ with little Cherub’s head, and let her—them—go. They needa start a new life…away from here.”
“Away from the club?” Zeke growls and his right leg starts bouncing. “Scarlett hasn’t been gone a fuckin’ month and you think takin’ them away from their family will help? You’re fuckin—”
“I’m the only family they have left.”
“That’s fuckin’ bullshit and you know it,” I tell him. “They’re Shamrocks… that makes us their family too.”
“Neither of you are Shamrocks, yet, and if it was up to me that’s how it’d stay.” Brutus dismisses me and Zeke with a curl of his upper lip. He mimics Zeke’s posture and holds his hand out to his daughter. “Come on, little Cherub. It’s time to go.”
Cherub casts a glare at his outstretched arm. “We’re not staying for the ceremony, Dad?”
Brutus grunts. “No.”
With a sob that makes my heart lurch, Cherub stumbles to her feet and throws her arms around my waist. I barely have time to hug her back before Zeke pulls her away from me. He lifts her into the air. She wraps her arms around his neck and he folds her legs around his hips. Cherub presses her face into the side of his neck and whimpers with barely suppressed sobs.
“You’re gonna be all right,” he murmurs to her. “You’ve got Sander and Everett and the two boys, plus we’ll all visit. Hell, you’ll be bloody sick of the sight of us before long… that’s how often we’re gonna come see you all.”
“Promise?”
When he meets my eyes over Cherub’s shoulder, I see the same resolution darkening his gaze as he sees in mine. Brutus can take the Mayberry kids away from us, but he can’t keep us away from them.
Not without a fight.
They belong with the Shamrocks.
They are Shamrocks.
Exactly like Scarlett raised them to be.
After pressing a light kiss to the top of Cherub’s head, Zeke sets her back on her feet and stoops down so he can look her straight in the eye. “Promise.”
The ghost of a smile lifts her lips. It dies when Brutus claps a hand down on her shoulder and uses it to tow her out of my bedroom.
“He’s fuckin’ lost it,” I declare when we’re alone.
Zeke snorts. “Motherfucker never had it to lose. This is just another power play. He hasn’t spent ten minutes with those kids since Scarlett died… how does he expect to raise them on his own when he won’t even look at ‘em? Come on, I’ll talk to my dad. He’ll make him see sense.”
As we step out into the wide hallway that runs down the middle of the new, single man sleeping quarters, Benedict comes striding through the doorway from the main bar. His nostrils flare as his footsteps grind to a halt. On his face is the same devastation that’s ripping through my chest.
Cherub’s oldest cousin points at us, then at the doorway he just came through. “Did you—did you…” Benedict’s mouth moves silently as he tries to find the right words to express his outrage. “He just… took them. Away. Cryin’.”
“Fuck,” I grumble when Zeke takes off in the direction of his room.
The door slams.
Sounds of destruction break out, then I hear a rifle being racked.
“Go get Hades,” I order Benedict. “He needs to get through to Zeke before this shit ends with a bullet in Brutus’ head.”
Even as I approach Zeke’s door to try to stop him from chasing after Cherub’s father, I can already tell that things are going to get worse before they get better. Brutus is ripping his children away from everything they’ve ever known at a time when they need every ounce of comfort they can find. He’s turning this club on its head—demanding to be both a president and a vice president at the same time.
It’s unprecedented.
And selfish.
Starting a new chapter in the middle of the state when we’re still regaining control of the Fremantle port after our recent war with the Maddison Clan is beyond stupid. Brutus is weakening the club by directing our attention between two chapters when we barely have enough members to run the guns that we already supply through Western Australia.
But that’s not the only thing that has a Code Five alarm ringing in my head.
I caught his slip-up when he mentioned needing to let her go.
He’s deliberately separating Zeke from little Cherub.
It’s cruel.
Unnecessary.
My best friend would kill himself before he harmed a hair on that girl’s head.
The love he feels for Cherub is innocent. Platonic. It’s the same with me. The same with Benedict. We’d die for her, just because she’s her.
Our biker princess.
Destined to be a duchess who rules in her own right.
Cherub is the solitary light on the hard road we’ve chosen to ride.
Fuck me, she literally brought me back to life today, yet her own father looks to be taking a path that threatens to snuff out her innate glow.
I’ll be damned if I stand by and allow that to happen.
No matter the cost, I’ll always have her back.

Why you'll love these books...
Bella Faust’s stories are bold, dark, and unapologetically addictive. With gripping love triangles, forbidden passion, and jaw-dropping twists, these books deliver an emotional rollercoaster that will keep you hooked until the very last page. Perfect for readers who crave resilience, redemption, and romance that thrives in the shadows.