بيت / Romance / Biker's Forbidden Desire / Chapter 3: Ghosts Don't Knock

مشاركة

Chapter 3: Ghosts Don't Knock

مؤلف: Sarah John
last update تاريخ النشر: 2026-02-04 15:02:26

EMILIA POV

The ride to Desert Ridge took six hours, and every mile felt like traveling backward through time.

I'd forgotten what it felt like to be pressed against Axel's back, my arms wrapped around his waist, feeling every breath he took. The motorcycle thrummed between my thighs, powerful and dangerous, just like the man controlling it.

We stopped twice for gas and food, barely speaking except for necessity. But I caught him watching me when he thought I wasn't looking, his green eyes unreadable behind dark sunglasses.

"You still eat like a bird," Axel observed at our second stop, nodding toward my half, finished sandwich.

"You still eat like you're feeding an army," I shot back, watching him demolish a burger and fries.

The corner of his mouth quirked up. "Some things don't change."

But everything had changed. The easy familiarity we'd once shared was gone, replaced by tension thick. Every accidental touch sent sparks through me, but Axel remained frustratingly controlled.

As we got closer to Desert Ridge, the landscape became more familiar. Desert stretched endlessly on both sides of the highway, broken by rock formations and scrub brush. Mountains rose in the distance, purple, blue against the cloudless sky.

Home. The word hit me with unexpected force. I'd spent years telling myself I didn't miss this place, but seeing it again stirred something deep in my chest.

"Still beautiful," I murmured, forgetting Axel could hear me over the engine noise.

His hand briefly covered mine where it rested on his thigh. "Yeah. It is."

I wasn't sure he was talking about the landscape.

We rolled into Desert Ridge as the sun was setting, painting the sky in shades of orange and pink. The town looked smaller than I remembered, more run, down. Boarded, up businesses lined Main Street, and the few people walking the sidewalks looked tired and worn.

But the Iron Serpents clubhouse looked exactly the same.

Axel pulled into the parking lot, and I climbed off the bike on unsteady legs. Hours on a motorcycle had left me stiff and sore, but that wasn't why my hands were shaking.

The clubhouse squatted like a concrete fortress, all black walls and barred windows. Motorcycles lined the front, gleaming in the fading light. Music and laughter drifted from inside, along with the smell of cigarettes and beer.

"Marco's waiting," Axel said, removing his helmet.

I pulled off my own helmet, finger, combing my windblown hair. "How do I look?"

Axel studied my face for a long moment. "Like Vincent Romano's daughter."

I wasn't sure if that was a compliment or not.

The front door opened, and Marco stepped out. My brother looked older with new lines around his eyes and gray threading through his dark hair. The weight of leadership sat heavy on his shoulders.

"Em." Marco's face softened as he approached. "Christ, look at you."

He pulled me into a crushing hug, and for the first time since getting the call, I let myself cry. Marco smelled like home, and I clung to him like a lifeline.

"I'm so sorry," I sobbed into his shoulder. "I should have been here. I should have called more, visited more."

"Hey." Marco pulled back, gripping my shoulders. "None of that matters. You're here now, and that's what matters."

I wiped my eyes, aware that half the clubhouse was probably watching through the windows. "How are you holding up?"

"One day at a time," Marco said honestly. "Come on. Let's get you inside. Mama C's been cooking all day."

The clubhouse interior hit me like a punch to the gut. Everything was exactly as I'd left it: the scarred wooden bar, the pool tables, the Iron Serpents banners hanging from the rafters. Even the smell was the same: cigarettes and beer.

But it was quieter than usual. Conversations stopped as I walked in, and I felt the weight of a dozen pairs of eyes.

"Everyone, you remember Em," Marco announced to the room. "Vincent's daughter."

A chorus of greetings rose from the assembled bikers, most of whom I recognized despite the years. They looked at me with a mixture of curiosity and respect. I was Marco's sister, Vincent's daughter, MC royalty whether I wanted to be or not.

"Emmy!" Carmen emerged from behind the bar, all soft curves and maternal warmth. Mama C had been the clubhouse's unofficial mother figure for as long as I could remember, and seeing her face crumple with grief made my eyes fill again.

"Mama C." I hugged her tightly, breathing in her familiar scent of vanilla and cigarettes. "I'm so sorry."

"Your papa, he was so proud of you," Carmen said, stroking my hair. "Always bragging about his smart daughter in the big city."

The guilt hit me. "I should have called him more."

"He understood, mija," Carmen said gently. "He knew you needed to find your own way."

"But I never got to" I started.

"He knew you loved him," Carmen interrupted firmly. "That's what mattered."

Marco appeared at my elbow. "Are you hungry? Carmen made your favorite."

My stomach growled in response. I hadn't eaten a real meal since yesterday, and the stress was catching up with me.

Carmen bustled me to a corner table and returned with a plate piled high with enchiladas, rice, and beans. Comfort food that tasted exactly like childhood.

"Eat," Carmen ordered. "You're too skinny."

I was halfway through my plate when the front door opened again. A young man walked in, tall and lean with sandy hair and an easy smile. He was handsome in a clean, cut way, wearing jeans and a Iron Serpents t, shirt that showed off muscled arms.

"That's Jax," Marco said, following my gaze. "New prospect. He is  eager to prove himself."

As if he'd heard his name, Jax looked over and caught sight of me. His smile widened as he approached our table.

"You must be Em," Jax said, extending his hand. "I'm Jax Martinez. Your brother's told me a lot about you."

"All good things, I hope," I said, shaking his hand.

"Definitely." Jax's grip lingered a moment longer than necessary. "I'm real sorry about your dad. He was a good man."

"Thank you." I appreciated that he didn't offer empty platitudes about Vincent being "in a better place" or other meaningless comfort.

"Maybe later you'd like to take a ride?" Jax suggested. "I could show you what's changed around town while you were gone."

Marco's face darkened slightly. "Jax"

"I'd like that," I said, surprising myself.

Jax was safe. Normal, by MC standards. The kind of man I should be attracted to, not the dangerous ghost from my past who was currently glowering at us from across the room.

"Great." Jax grinned. "How about tomorrow afternoon?"

"It's a date," I agreed.

The words had barely left my mouth when a beer bottle exploded against the wall behind Jax's head.

Everyone in the clubhouse went silent. Jax spun around, and I followed his gaze to see Axel standing by the bar, his face a mask of controlled rage.

"Is there a problem, Ghost?" Marco asked quietly, using Axel's road name.

"No problem," Axel said, his voice deadly calm. "Just clumsy."

But his eyes were locked on Jax with unmistakable threat.

Jax, to his credit, didn't back down. "Are you sure about that?"

Axel moved away from the bar. "Real sure."

The tension in the room ratcheted up several notches. Other club members began shifting, hands moving toward weapons.

"Enough," Marco said sharply. "Both of you stand down."

Axel looked at Marco for a long moment, then at me. Something hot and possessive flared in his eyes before he turned and walked out the back door.

"What the hell was that about?" Jax muttered.

I stood up abruptly. "I need some air."

I followed the path Axel had taken, through the back door and into the small courtyard behind the clubhouse. He was standing in the shadows, smoking a cigarette with sharp, angry movements.

"What is wrong with you?" I demanded.

Axel took a long drag of his cigarette. "Nothing."

"You just threw a bottle at an innocent man's head."

"Missed on purpose," Axel said calmly.

"That's not the point." I moved closer, anger overriding my common sense. "You can't just"

"Can't just what?" Axel flicked his cigarette away and turned to face me fully. "Watch you flirt with some pretty boy prospect?"

"I wasn't flirting," I protested, even though I had been.

Axel stepped closer, backing me against the brick wall. "You said it was a date."

"So what if it was?" I lifted my chin defiantly. "It's been six years, Axel. Six years since you walked away without a word. I'm not sixteen anymore, and I'm not yours."

Something dark and dangerous flashed in Axel's eyes. "You sure about that, princess?"

His hands braced against the wall on either side of my head, caging me in. The scent of leather and cigarettes and something uniquely him surrounded me, making my head spin.

"Yes," I whispered, but it sounded like a lie even to my own ears.

"Prove it," Axel said softly.

His face was inches from mine, his body radiating heat and barely contained violence. One of his hands moved to cup my cheek, thumb tracing my lower lip with devastating gentleness.

"Axel," I breathed.

"Tell me you don't feel anything," he murmured. "Tell me six years erased what was between us."

استمر في قراءة هذا الكتاب مجانا
امسح الكود لتنزيل التطبيق

أحدث فصل

  • Biker's Forbidden Desire   Chapter 227: The Permanent Past

    EMILIA POV The sun had completed its descent behind the jagged peaks, leaving the entire valley wrapped in a deep, cool purple twilight that smelled of sage and wet earth. The children were still lingering near the edge of the lawn, their movements slowing as the exhaustion of the summer day finally caught up to their small frames. The peace inside the courtyard felt absolute, a perfect, unbroken seal that nothing could penetrate. And then, with a synchronized, jarring vibration that cut through the silence like a blade, three distinct cell phones buzzed simultaneously on the porch. Axel’s phone chimed from his breast pocket. Marcus’s phone let out a low, metallic ring from the adobe wall. My own device vibrated violently against my hip. The timing of the notification was entirely surgical—all at the exact same second, all tracking from the exact same encrypted, unknown international registry that we hadn't seen since our years in Europe. Axel pulled his phone out first, the soft

  • Biker's Forbidden Desire   Chapter 226: The Golden Hour

    EMILIA POV The summer evening hung over the valley with a rare, absolute stillness that made the desert feel infinite. The sky was bleeding into a deep, magnificent amber that turned the entire property, the orchard, and the distant mountains into a sharp silhouette against the golden hour. Every single piece of our circle was gathered in the backyard for the sunset. Axel and I stood near the porch steps, our shoulders touching, while Marcus and Catherine were seated on the low adobe wall near the garden bed, and Isabella remained anchored in her rocking chair beneath the trees, her wool blanket neatly covering her lap against the incoming cool air. Marco and our little Isabella were leading the twins through the final patch of grass near the fence line, their young voices ringing out clearly through the quiet, amber air. The children were completely lost in their own world, oblivious to the adults watching them. Dmitri was charging after a stray yellow butterfly with a loud, energ

  • Biker's Forbidden Desire   Chapter 225: The Sanctuary of Summer

    EMILIA POV The second summer after the twin heartbeats first filled the nursery arrived with an intense, golden heat that turned the entire valley into a beautiful, sun-drenched sanctuary of peace. The orchard was heavy with fruit, and the mountain winds kept the air sweet and clean. Late one Sunday afternoon, the light was bleeding a brilliant, warm amber across the lawn as all the children played together in the backyard, their voices echoing off the adobe walls. Dmitri was charging through the thick grass with a loud, joyful energy, chasing his sister Katarina, who was navigating the flowerbeds with a quick, clever agility that kept her one step ahead of his lunges. Marco, now taller and carrying himself with his father's steady posture, was leading them through a series of elaborate lawn games he had invented, while our little Isabella was sitting on a checkered blanket nearby, her serious dark eyes completely focused as she organized her wooden dolls in a neat line. They were e

  • Biker's Forbidden Desire   Chapter 224: The Silver Year

    AXEL POV The first birthday of the twins arrived exactly one year after that frantic morning in the Albuquerque delivery suite. We turned the entire central courtyard into a massive celebration, inviting our core foundation directors and the local staff who had become our extended family over the long journey out of the dark. The day was brilliant, the high desert sky a flawless sheet of blue that made the adobe walls glow like gold. Marco was tracking perfectly through his elementary school classes, running around the lawn with his friends from the valley, while our little Isabella was proving to be a terrifically sharp toddler, her dark eyes tracking every single movement in the courtyard with an intensity she inherited directly from her mother. Isabella, the elder, remained anchored in her wicker chair beneath the shade of the large cottonwood trees, her posture frail but her presence completely central to the geography of the room. Marcus and Catherine brought the twins out int

  • Biker's Forbidden Desire   Chapter 223: The Tapestry of Generations

    EMILIA POV Six months after the twin heartbeats first filled the wooden cribs by the window, Catherine had completely found her internal, maternal rhythm. She was still visibly exhausted—there is no version of raising twins that allows for a full night of uninterrupted rest—but the dense, suffocating cloud of her early postpartum depression had entirely cleared from her eyes. She carried herself through the courtyard with a quiet, vibrant confidence, completely present in every single moment of her new life. I would walk over to their cottage in the sunny afternoons and find her sitting comfortably on the living room rug, expertly nursing Katarina while her intelligent, observant eyes kept track of Dmitri as he rolled across the blanket toward the toy chest. Or I would see her pushing the heavy double stroller down the long dirt driveway between the orchard rows, taking long, peaceful walks through the valley with Marcus walking steady at her side, his large hand resting against the

  • Biker's Forbidden Desire   Chapter 222: The Perimeters of Peace

    AXEL POV Three months after the twin heartbeats first filled the nursery inside the guest cottage, the daily routine on the property had settled into an entirely new, exhausting rhythm. Marcus had adapted to fatherhood with a calculated, operational precision that was both completely surprising to the foundation directors and entirely inevitable given his nature. The man who had once been our most lethal asset, the man who handled logistics for high-risk extractions, was now entirely locked into the daily tracking of feeding schedules, sleep intervals, and diaper allocations. I would stand by the nursery door in the quiet evenings after my own office hours, watching him sit in the wooden rocking chair with Dmitri balanced carefully on his knees. He would use his low, gravelly voice to patiently teach the boy how to hold his chin up against the weight of his head, murmuring to him in a low, rhythmic song that sounded like an old security mantra. Then he would transfer his attention t

فصول أخرى
استكشاف وقراءة روايات جيدة مجانية
الوصول المجاني إلى عدد كبير من الروايات الجيدة على تطبيق GoodNovel. تنزيل الكتب التي تحبها وقراءتها كلما وأينما أردت
اقرأ الكتب مجانا في التطبيق
امسح الكود للقراءة على التطبيق
DMCA.com Protection Status