Claimed by the Biker Giant: A Betrayal, a Garage, a Biker's Claim


Claimed by the Biker Giant follows Maxine, a mechanic's apprentice, after her family chooses her sister over her on Christmas Day, and the novel is currently reading on Dreame and Jobnib. If you've ever had the people who were supposed to protect you decide, out loud, that your bed and your bedroom were negotiable, the opening chapter will feel uncomfortably familiar before a single biker shows up on the page.
The Night Her Family Chooses Her Sister
The story opens with Maxine walking in on the conversation that ends her old life. Her sister got pregnant by Maxine's own boyfriend, on Christmas Day, in Maxine's bed, and the family's response is to plan an engagement party and hand Maxine's room to the coming baby. Her parents don't apologize. They just ask her to be quiet about it and clear out.
That scene works because nothing in it is exaggerated. The father's line that Maxine "will have to live with it" carries more weight than any biker brawl could, because it's the moment the power in her own household flips against her completely. She has done everything right — top grades, a specialized apprenticeship, loyalty to a family that keeps proving it doesn't extend the same loyalty back — and none of it buys her a place to stand.
Setting Up a Room in the Valley Lords' Garage
The shift starts small. Maxine's boss at the shop hears what happened and quietly brings it to "the prez" of the Valley Lords, and soon Tank, a patched member of the club, is helping her move her things into a space above the garage. He builds her a desk corner for her laptop. He asks what side of the bed she wants. None of it is dramatic, and that's the point: after a family that treated her presence as a problem to be solved, a stranger arranging furniture around her preferences reads as its own kind of statement.
This is where the power dynamic of the book turns over. Maxine spent the opening chapters being managed by people who had authority over her and no interest in her wellbeing. In Tank's garage, she's the one being asked what she wants, even though he's the one who's objectively more powerful — bigger, patched, connected to a club her family would call dangerous. The novel earns its central tension by making his size and reputation something Maxine has to reconcile, not something she's simply handed as a reward.
Tank, Defined by Everything Her Family Wasn't
Tank never gets his own interior monologue in the sample chapters, so what we know about him comes from contrast. Maxine's ex rushed to marry her sister rather than face an uncomfortable conversation. Her father cared more about appearances than his daughter's safety. Tank, by comparison, is described as a man who fears his own strength around a woman — a giant worried about causing harm rather than one looking to use it. Every domestic gesture, from the desk to the sleeping arrangement, functions as a rebuttal to the men who came before him in Maxine's life.
Why Readers Keep Showing Up Past Chapter 300
The novel has grown into a long-running serial, now well past 300 chapters, with a recurring cast that expands into a "Jones Gang" conflict and, according to longtime readers, eventually a next-generation storyline involving characters like Cloe and Storm. Reader comments on Jobnib describe getting pulled in early and staying invested for hundreds of chapters, checking back regularly for new updates. Some of that same reader base has flagged rougher patches in pacing and timeline consistency in the later stretches, alongside requests for tighter editing around club terminology.
What holds, across both the praise and the criticism, is that people keep asking what happens next to Maxine and Tank specifically, not just to the club as a whole. That's a reasonable indicator of where the story's actual pull comes from: the domestic, protective relationship at its center, not the surrounding action.
Who This Novel Is For
This is a fit for readers who want a size-difference, dark romance built on small gestures rather than instant declarations, and who don't mind following a serial as it grows in real time rather than reading something with a fixed ending already in place. Readers looking for a tightly plotted, fully resolved arc may want to go in knowing this one is still being written, chapter by chapter, with the story currently active past 300 installments.
Where to Read
Claimed by the Biker Giant is available to read for free on Jobnib, which hosts the novel as an ongoing, mature-rated serial with the full chapter list unlocked as you read. It's also hosted on Dreame under author VJParker, where the first chapter is available as a free preview before further chapters continue in-app.

