LOGINPrologue continued
Nala's hands shook so violently she could barely hold the pen he shoved at her. Tears blurred the words across the pages until the legal jargon became meaningless black smears against white paper, but none of it really mattered anyway. This wasn’t law, this wasn’t procedure. This was coercion dressed up in paperwork. This was survival.
Nala stared blindly at the signature line while grief rose inside her so fast it became almost impossible to breathe around. She didn’t want this. God, she didn’t want this.
She loved Cole with a depth that still startled her sometimes, loved him despite the club and the violence and the danger and all the things she had spent years trying not to look at too closely. She loved the rough scrape of his voice first thing in the morning, and the absentminded way he kissed her forehead while passing through the kitchen, and the softness he only ever showed when nobody else was looking.
She loved him enough that this felt like dying.
And maybe, in some ways, it was.
A fairy tale, she thought suddenly, hysterically. That’s all this ever was. A stupid fucking fairy tale about loving a dangerous man and believing that love somehow made me safe.
Her throat tightened painfully. I’m sorry.
She didn’t even know who she was apologizing to anymore. Herself, Cole, the tiny fragile heartbeat inside her body. Maybe all three.
Then, before she could think hard enough to stop herself, Nala signed the papers, and just like that, three years of marriage were erased in a few trembling signatures beside a prison parking lot. No conversation. No goodbye. No choice.
The second the pen left the page, Wheels ripped the documents from her hands. He flipped through the pages quickly, checking each signature with clinical efficiency before finally nodding once.
“Good,” he said flatly, then his eyes lifted back to hers. “If you’re a smart bitch, you’ll be across state lines before sunset.”
Nala looked at him for a long second, hatred and heartbreak tangling together so tightly inside her chest she could barely separate one emotion from the next.
“You tell him,” she whispered hoarsely. “You tell Cole what you did.”
Something flickered across Wheels’ face then, something unreadable and brief, before disappearing entirely. “Get the fuck outta here.”
Nala turned and walked away because every instinct she possessed told her not to run. Running triggered pursuit; running made predators chase.
So she forced herself to walk steadily across the prison parking lot even though her legs barely felt attached to her body anymore. The cold Colorado wind cut across her face, carrying the sharp scent of autumn and asphalt and distant exhaust fumes, while tears streamed silently down her cheeks beneath the pale morning sky.
Nobody looked at her, nobody noticed her. A woman falling apart beside a correctional facility was probably the least remarkable thing in the world.
By the time she reached her car, her hands were trembling so badly she fumbled the keys twice before finally managing to unlock the door. Nala climbed inside quickly and locked the door immediately behind her, and the second the locks clicked into place, something inside her finally shattered completely.
A sob tore out of her chest with enough force to hurt, and she folded forward against the steering wheel, shaking violently as panic and grief crashed through her in relentless waves, each one worse than the last. Her marriage was gone. Her future was gone. The life she thought she knew was gone. Whatever fragile illusion of safety she’d been clinging to had just been ripped away from her so brutally that she felt split open by it.
And beneath all of it, louder than heartbreak, louder than fear, louder even than grief itself, one instinct screamed through her entire body with primal, desperate clarity:
Protect the baby. Protect the baby. Protect the baby.
Nala dragged in a trembling breath and slowly lifted her head, looked at herself in the rearview mirror. Her mascara had smeared beneath her eyes, her throat was already beginning to bruise darkly beneath her skin, fingerprints blooming there like ink stains.
Shaking, she looked down at her stomach. Her fingers spread protectively across it, and for the first time since this nightmare at the prison had begun, her voice softened completely.
“We’re going be alright, little one,” she whispered. Another sob caught painfully in her throat as she closed her eyes, calling on every bit of strength that she could possibly summon. “Both of us.”
Cole let himself into his trailer as calmly as a man could after having his entire life torn open and rearranged in the space of a single night.He had slipped out the back of Satan’s Bar because he couldn’t face the thought of having to explain any of what had happened to his MC brothers. The engagement party had still been raging when he left, laughter and music spilling through the walls while Ice and Vixen celebrated the beginning of their forever, and the irony of that had almost made Cole laugh as he walked alone across the gravel lot toward his bike.Forever.Christ.He had believed in that once.The trailer was dark and cold when he entered, smelling faintly of smoke and coffee. He locked the door behind him and stood there for a long moment, keys still in hand, staring at the narrow kitchen, the worn couch, the boots lined by the door, the empty space that had never really stopped being empty no matter how many years he lived in it.Then he went straight to the bathroom and t
The motel room smelled faintly of old carpet, industrial lemon cleaner, and the kind of stale cigarette smoke that no amount of repainting ever fully erased from walls. Despite the rather yucky environment, Luna had fallen asleep within seven minutes of climbing beneath the stiff floral comforter, which made the place suddenly feel like the best hotel in the entire goddamn world.Nala stood beside the bed for a long time after that, watching her daughter sleep curled on her side with one hand tucked beneath her cheek and the other wrapped around the stuffed bear that Cole had won at the state fair more than a decade ago.The bear looked ridiculous now, worn nearly bald in spots, one button eye slightly looser than the other, the tiny fake leather jacket cracked along the seams from years of love and travel and being dragged through childhood. Nala had attempted once, when Luna was four, to replace it with something newer and softer and less heartbreaking, but Luna had cried for nearly
Nala froze, her hand on the office door. Slowly, she looked back over her shoulder at Cole, and when she answered, her voice finally broke completely.“No.”Cole wasn’t surprised, but it fucking hurt like hell anyway. “Did you ever talk to her about me?”Nala sighed. “She used to ask me why her dad didn’t want her.”The words hit Cole like a bullet straight through the chest, and for a second, he genuinely forgot how to breathe. He could suddenly see every single year of his daughter’s life laid bare in front of him with brutal clarity.Real days, real nights. A little girl asking questions Nala had no good answers for. A little girl watching other fathers at school events and birthday parties and grocery stores and soccer games and quietly realizing that she was missing something everybody else seemed to have naturally.And Nala carrying all of it alone.Jesus fucking Christ.Cole pressed the heel of his hand hard against his sternum like that could somehow stop the crushing pressure
Nala stared at Cole in stunned silence, the words still hanging between them like smoke.And I’ll hand you the matches, baby.Baby.God. It should not affect her the way that it did, not after everything that’s happened between them, after eleven years of fear and grief and loneliness and anger layered so thickly over old love that sometimes she honestly couldn’t tell where one emotion ended and the next began.But the second the word left his mouth, something inside her reacted instantly and treacherously, some deeply buried part of herself remembering exactly what it had once meant to belong to this man completely.Baby.She used to hear it murmured against her skin in the middle of the night while his arms tightened around her half-asleep. Used to hear it spoken with quiet amusement every single time she got herself worked into one of her little tempers about something. Used to hear it growled softly into her hair when he came deep inside her. And for one horrifying second standing
Nala looked down immediately, but not before tears slipped free, silent and furious against her cheeks. That was how she cried, he remembered suddenly with a force that made the years between them feel terrifyingly thin: never loudly, never dramatically, never asking anyone to notice, just tears escaping despite how much she clearly hated the loss of control. He remembered the way she turned her anger inward first because vulnerability offended her, the way she had once stood in his kitchen in nothing but one of his shirts and told him she was not a romantic person while leaning into his hands like she wanted to live there. Eleven years disappeared frighteningly fast standing this close to her, and the fact that love could survive that kind of distance felt less beautiful than cruel.Somewhere deep beneath the grief and rage and betrayal, another realization began taking shape inside him slowly, terrible in its clarity. Wheels hadn’t just destroyed his marriage, he hadn’t simply tak
Cole swallowed painfully, his gaze shifting briefly toward the narrow crack in the office door where warm yellow light spilled into the hallway, because somewhere beyond it slept the little girl he should have known from the moment she took her first breath.The little girl whose first words he had never heard, whose first steps he had never seen, whose birthdays had arrived and passed ten times without him even knowing what kind of cake she liked, or whether she was afraid of thunderstorms, or whether she woke cheerful in the mornings or needed time to become human.His daughter was twenty feet away from him, wrapped in his cut, exhausted and frightened because someone had tried to take her, and yet somehow the oldest wound in the room was still Nala standing across from him with eleven years of silence in her eyes.“Why didn’t you try to contact me after I got out of jail?” he asked, and though he tried to keep his voice steady, the question came out rough anyway, scraped raw by too
Shocked, stunned, teary at those words, Nala shook her head. “Don’t say things like that, Cole. Don’t make promises that you can’t keep.”“Promises?” he echoed, suddenly furious and not at all sure at what, or whom. “You want to talk about those, Nala?”She paused, and Cole already regretted his wo
“Anyway,” she continued quickly, chattering to distract herself. “I got downstairs to Luna through the dumbwaiter.”Cole blinked. “The what?”“The old service lift built into the walls, it goes between my bedroom and the kitchen. The realtor thought I liked the ‘historic charm.’” A humorless laugh
Cole barely paid attention at first, assuming another late arrival had finally found the engagement party, but something about the car made him look twice. It was a rental, and it had out-of-state plates, from New York. It was moving slowly, almost cautiously, like whoever drove it was forcing them
Denver, ColoradoSatan’s BarTwo Nights LaterSatan’s Bar was loud enough to vibrate through bone tonight, the kind of deep, relentless noise that settled into the walls and floorboards and skin alike, until it became less something a person heard and more something they simply existed inside. Musi







