LOGINRiverdale hadn't changed much in ten years. Same cracked sidewalks. Same faded storefronts. Same feeling of being trapped in amber while the rest of the world moved on.
Valentina parked outside Mack's Bar & Grill, the neon sign buzzing and flickering just like it had when she was eighteen. The place looked seedier than she remembered, but beggars couldn't be choosers. And right now, she was definitely a beggar. The bar smelled of stale beer and fried food. A few early drinkers hunched over their glasses, not bothering to look up when she entered. Valentina approached the bar where a heavy-set woman with faded blonde hair wiped down glasses. "Help you?" The woman looked up, recognition flickering in her eyes. "Well, I'll be damned. Valentine Porter. Or is it still Valentine Ross?" "It's Valentina now," she corrected, her married name sticking in her throat. "And it's Ross again. Hi, Patty." Patty whistled low. "Never thought I'd see you back in this dump. Heard you married some rich fella out west." "Things change." Valentina forced a smile. "I heard you rent rooms upstairs. I need one." Patty's eyebrows shot up. "Trouble in paradise, huh?" "Something like that." Twenty minutes and two hundred dollars later, Valentina had a key to a tiny room above the bar. The space was barely big enough for a double bed and dresser. The bathroom down the hall had to be shared with two other tenants. She sat on the bed, the springs creaking under her weight. So this was rock bottom. At least it was clean. After a shower that never quite got hot enough, Valentina changed into fresh clothes and headed back downstairs. The bar had filled slightly, and she kept her head down, not wanting to be recognized again. "You need a job." Valentina looked up to find Patty watching her. "What?" "You're broke, ain't you? Why else would Valentina Porter be staying above my bar?" "Ross," she corrected again. "And yes, I could use work." Patty nodded toward the diner across the street. "Blue Plate's hiring waitresses. Pay's shit, but the tips are decent if you can handle the grabby truckers." "Thanks." An hour later, Valentina walked out of the Blue Plate Diner with a job starting tomorrow. The owner, Hank, had barely looked at her application before handing her an apron. Desperation had its advantages. By evening, Valentina had bought some essentials from the dollar store and settled into her room. She sat by the window, watching motorcycles pull up to Mack's below. The Riot Kings. Duke's motorcycle club. Her stomach knotted. Would she see him tonight? Was he even still in Riverdale? Maybe he'd left like she had. A familiar rumble made her heart stop. She'd know that engine anywhere. The custom Harley with the modified pipes that growled rather than roared. Duke. She pressed back from the window, heart pounding as he pulled up. He climbed off his bike with that same fluid grace, removed his helmet, and ran a hand through his dark hair. He was broader now, harder-looking. The boy she'd known had become fully a man, intimidating in his leather cut with the Riot Kings emblem on the back. A vice president patch stood out on his chest. Second in command. As if sensing her eyes on him, Duke looked up toward her window. Valentina ducked back, breath caught in her throat. Too late. She'd seen the recognition flash across his face. Sleep didn't come easily that night. Every time the bar door slammed downstairs, Valentina tensed, wondering if heavy footsteps would climb toward her room. But Duke never came. Morning brought clouds and drizzling rain. She dressed in jeans and a t-shirt, tying her hair back with a band. The uniform at the Blue Plate was casual, thank god. The diner hummed with breakfast crowd chatter. Hank showed her the ropes quickly, then threw her to the wolves. By noon, Valentina's feet ached, and coffee stains dotted her apron. "Table six needs a refill," called Sandy, an older waitress with kind eyes and a cigarette-roughened voice. Valentina grabbed the coffee pot and turned—then froze. Duke sat alone in booth six, a half-empty mug in front of him. His dark eyes locked on hers, expression unreadable. For one wild moment, she considered running out the back door. But where would she go? This town was too small to hide in. So she walked over, coffee pot steady despite her trembling insides. "Refill?" Her voice came out huskier than intended. Duke didn't respond immediately. His eyes traced her face, her body, noting all the changes ten years had wrought. The scar on her forearm from a cooking accident. The tiny lines around her eyes. The absence of softness. "You look like hell, Valentine." His voice was deeper than she remembered, rougher. "It's Valentina now," she said automatically. "And thanks for the compliment." A ghost of a smile touched his lips. "What are you doing back here?" She poured coffee into his mug without answering. "Your fancy husband know you're slinging coffee in this shithole?" The question hit like a slap. "No," she said finally. "And I'd like to keep it that way." Duke leaned back, assessing her with those penetrating eyes. "Trouble in paradise?" "Why does everyone keep asking me that?" "Because Valentina Ross wouldn't be caught dead back in Riverdale unless something went very wrong with her perfect life." His tone wasn't mocking, just matter-of-fact. Before she could respond, the bell above the door jangled. Three men in Riot Kings cuts walked in, stopping short when they spotted Duke with her. "Well, look what the cat dragged back," said the tallest one—Axel, she remembered. His beard was fuller now, streaked with gray. "Valentine Ross," said another, Denny, his smile not reaching his eyes. "Heard you were a Porter these days." "It's Valentina," she said tightly. "Can I get you guys anything?" "Just coffee," Duke answered for all of them, his eyes never leaving her face. "We won't be staying long." The men slid into the booth, their presence filling the small space. Valentina felt dizzy suddenly, memories flooding back. These men had been like brothers once. Now they were strangers. She brought their coffees, feeling Duke's eyes burning into her back as she walked away. The weight of his gaze stirred something she'd thought long dead. When they finally left, Duke paused at the counter where she was refilling salt shakers. "Whatever you're running from," he said quietly, "it followed you here." Her head snapped up. "What?" His eyes darkened. "This isn't over, Valentine." "It's Valentina," she whispered. Duke's mouth curved in a cold smile. "Not to me. Never to me." He walked out, leaving her heart racing against her ribs like it was trying to break free—just like it had ten years ago, every time he looked at her that way. Home wasn't safe after all. It never had been. Not with Duke in it.# Bonus Chapter 26: All of UsThe Morrison house could no longer hold all of Christmas comfortably, but they tried anyway, every year, because tradition mattered more than square footage.Valentina stood in the kitchen at six in the morning, the only one awake, coffee brewing while she surveyed the counters already crowded with prep for the day ahead. Twenty-three people were expected by noon. Twenty-three people who all needed feeding, all needed space, all needed to feel like this overflowing house was exactly where they belonged.Duke appeared behind her, sleep-rumpled, wrapping his arms around her waist. "You're up early.""Someone has to start the turkey before the chaos arrives.""I could have helped.""You'd have burned something and then insisted you didn't burn it." Valentina leaned back into him. "This is my domain. You handle the outdoor heaters and make sure the garage is presentable for whoever inevitably ends up out there.""Fair division of labor." He kissed her temple.
# Bonus Chapter 25: Steady HandsJJ proposed to Cora in the garage.Not romantically planned—not candles or an overlook or any of the grand gestures his father and sister had favored. He proposed on a Tuesday evening with grease still under his fingernails, mid-conversation about a custom build, because the moment simply arrived and he didn't see the point in waiting for a more photogenic one."Marry me," he said, setting down his wrench.Cora looked up from the frame she was sanding—she'd taken to the garage work naturally over their four years together, had her own set of tools now, kept at the shop alongside Duke's and JJ's. "Right now? Covered in metal dust?""Right now. Covered in metal dust." JJ reached into his back pocket, pulled out a ring he'd been carrying for three weeks, waiting for a moment that felt right instead of staged. "I don't need flowers to know I want forever with you."Cora set down her sanding block. Looked at the ring, then at him. "This is the least romanti
# Bonus Chapter 24: Full CircleMia Park was seven years old and had been begging to ride on a motorcycle since she was old enough to understand what they were."Everyone else gets to," she complained to her mother on a Saturday morning, watching through the kitchen window as Duke prepared his bike in the driveway for a routine ride to the garage. "Uncle JJ had his own bike at sixteen. Grandpa Duke rides every single day. I'm the only one who doesn't get to.""You're seven," Emma said, not looking up from the dishes. "Seven-year-olds don't ride motorcycles.""Grandpa Duke could hold me. Like a baby carrier but bigger.""That's not how motorcycles work, sweetheart."Mia huffed with the specific frustration of a child who believed adults were arbitrarily withholding joy. She'd inherited her grandfather's stubbornness in full measure, which everyone found simultaneously endearing and exhausting.Daniel appeared from the garage—Duke's garage, where he'd been helping with some project desp
# Bonus Chapter 23: SistersMelanie Ross had never expected to find her happy ending at a motorcycle club barbecue.But there she was, eight years after the affair that nearly destroyed her relationship with Valentina, standing in a backyard full of leather-clad bikers and their families, about to marry Tommy—a man twenty years her senior who'd somehow become the steadiest thing in her chaotic life.Valentina found her in the makeshift bridal suite—Sarah's old apartment, vacated since Sarah had moved into a house with her now-husband Dan, currently borrowed for the occasion because it had good light and a large mirror."You look beautiful," Valentina said, taking in her sister's dress—simple, ivory, nothing like the elaborate gown from her first wedding to a man who'd turned out to be exactly wrong."I look terrified," Melanie said, though she was smiling."Good terrified or bad terrified?""The good kind. The kind where you can't believe your life turned into this." Melanie turned fr
# Bonus Chapter 22: What's BuriedDuke hadn't visited his father's grave in eleven years.It wasn't deliberate avoidance, exactly. More that the grave existed in a category of things he simply didn't go near—the barn property, the old Reynolds land, the entire chapter of his life that had nearly destroyed him twice. After the truth came out about Connor, after the body was properly identified and reburied in the town cemetery instead of behind a barn, Duke had paid for the headstone and never gone back to look at it.Grace was the one who brought it up. Seventeen at the time, deep in a school project about family history that required actual research instead of the usual creative interpretation she preferred."I need to know about your dad," she told him over dinner. "For the project. Just basic stuff—when he died, where he's buried."The table went quiet. JJ, twenty-one and visiting for the weekend, looked up sharply. Emma's fork paused halfway to her mouth."Why do you need that?" D
# Bonus Chapter 21: ClosureThe trial had taken eighteen months.Eighteen months of postponements, motions, evidence hearings—the slow grinding machinery of the justice system handling a case with explosives, attempted murder, kidnapping, and arson all stacked together. Eighteen months in which Valentina had testified twice, sat through hours of Marcus's lawyer trying to paint him as a man undone by love rather than a predator who'd nearly killed her.She'd taken a leave from the bookstore the weeks she testified. Duke had gone with her every single day, sitting in the gallery, his presence a steady weight she could feel even when she wasn't looking at him.The sentencing hearing fell on an ordinary Tuesday in November. Gray sky, cold wind, the kind of day that made the courthouse steps feel especially institutional and bleak."You don't have to come," Duke had said that morning, watching her get dressed in the dim bedroom light. "The lawyer said the verdict's basically a formality at







