
Mummy, Please Marry Uncle Biker Daddy
He wasn't supposed to notice her.
She wasn't supposed to want him.
And her daughter definitely wasn't supposed to fall in love with him first.
"He's not just dangerous," she whispers to herself . "He's the kind of man who ruins your life slowly... and makes you thank him for it."
He rides loud.
He loves hard.
And once he wants something, he doesn't let go.
"You don't get to look at me like that," she tells him.
His smile is slow. Predatory. Certain.
"I already did," he says. "And now you're mine."
She's a single mother barely holding it together.
He's a biker king with blood on his hands and loyalty carved into his bones.
Their worlds should never touch.
But they collide anyway.
"You think I don't know what you're doing to me?" he growls.
Her back hits the wall. His body cages her in.
"You think I'd touch you if I didn't plan to keep you?"
This isn't a sweet romance.
It's raw. Possessive. Unforgiving.
The kind of love that marks you.
"Mummy," her daughter says softly, holding his hand.
"Can he stay forever?"
He shouldn't want them.
But the idea of leaving them hurts worse than any knife.
"I don't share," he tells her in the dark.
"Not my bike. Not my club. And definitely not my woman."
One kiss turns into hunger.
One night turns into obsession.
And one choice could burn everything down.
"If you climb on my bike," he warns, voice low and lethal,
"you don't get off unchanged."
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Chapter 4
Lily
Mommy thinks I'm asleep a lot.
I don't tell her when I'm not.
The house makes different sounds at night. I know which ones mean nothing and which ones mean I should listen. The fridge makes noise, the pipes squeak The floor creaks when Mommy walks slower than usual.
Last night, she walked slow.
I was on my side with Mr. Bear tucked under my chin when I heard her stop in the hallway. She didn't come in. She just stood there for a little while. I kept my eyes closed because when grown-ups think you're sleeping, they don't ask questions.
I heard her breathe. In and out. Like she was counting.
Then she went to her room.
I waited until the house went quiet again before I opened my eyes.
I don't like when Mommy is inside quiet. That kind of quiet feels different. It makes the air heavy. Like when it's about to rain but doesn't.
In the morning, Mommy woke me up like she always does. Soft voice. Gentle hands. Same routine. But her eyes looked tired, and that made my stomach feel funny.
I got dressed by myself and didn't ask for help. I wanted to be good today.
At school, I tried to tell Alex about my birthday, but the words felt weird in my mouth, so I told him about my crown instead. He said crowns were for princesses and kings. I said I was both.
When school was over, Mommy picked me up right away. Sometimes she's late, but not today. Her smile came fast when she saw me. Too fast.
We went home and made macaroni for dinner. I stirred while she watched the pot. She kept checking her phone and turning it face down on the counter.
I noticed.
After dinner, I colored at the table. Mommy washed dishes. The water ran loud, and I heard her sniff once, like she had a cold.
I colored a picture of our house. Just us. I didn't draw Daddy.
When it was bedtime, Mommy read two stories even though she usually only reads one. She tucked me in and kissed my forehead and stood up too quickly, like she didn't want to stay.
"Mommy," I said.
She stopped. "Yes, baby."
"Are you mad at Daddy?"
She sat back down on the edge of the bed. Her hands folded in her lap.
"No," she said.
I waited.
She sighed. "I'm not mad. I'm disappointed."
I didn't know exactly what that meant, but it sounded heavier than mad.
"Is he coming back to live here?" I asked.
She shook her head slowly. "No."
That felt strange. Sad, but also not. Like when you miss something but don't want it back the same way.
"Okay," I said.
She brushed my hair back from my face. "I love you."
"I know," I said. "I love you too."
After she turned off the light and closed the door, I stayed awake again.
I heard her phone buzz later. Once. Then again. I heard her walking. The floor creaked outside my door.
She didn't come in.
Instead, she went to the kitchen.
I slid out of bed and padded quietly to my door. I opened it just a little, enough to see the light under the hallway and hear better.
Mommy was talking on the phone.
Her voice was low. Not yelling. Not crying.
"I told you not to contact me," she said.
There was a pause. I imagined Daddy's voice on the other end even though I couldn't hear it.
"No," Mommy said. "You don't get to decide that anymore."
Another pause.
"I'm not being difficult," she said. "I'm being clear."
She went quiet for a moment, then said, "Stop."
I felt my chest squeeze.
"I'm hanging up now," she said.
The kitchen went quiet. Then I heard a sound I didn't recognize at first.
Mommy laughing.
Not happy laughing. The kind that breaks a little at the end.
I stepped back into my room and closed the door softly. I climbed back into bed and hugged Mr. Bear tight.
The next day, Daddy didn't come.
That part wasn't new.
What was new was the way Mommy kept checking the street through the window. Not nervous. More like she was waiting for something she didn't want.
In the afternoon, we went to the store. Mommy's hand stayed on the cart handle the whole time. She didn't let go, even when I asked to push.
At home, she sat at the table with papers spread out. Numbers. Writing. Her serious face.
I sat on the floor and played quietly. I didn't want to interrupt.
The doorbell rang.
Mommy's head snapped up.
She stood slowly and walked to the door. I followed, stopping a few steps back.
When she opened it, Daddy was there.
My heart jumped.
But Mommy didn't smile.
"What are you doing here?" she asked.
"I need to talk," Daddy said.
"Not now."
"Please."
Mommy looked tired. Not sleepy tired. Heavy tired.
"Go home," she said.
"I am home," Daddy said.
That made Mommy's mouth turn into a straight line.
"This stopped being your home when you left," she said.
I held my breath.
Daddy looked past Mommy and saw me.
"Hey, peanut," he said softly.
I didn't say anything.
Mommy stepped in front of me without touching me, like she was blocking the doorway with her whole body.
"You need to leave," she said again.
Daddy's face changed. He looked mad now.
"You're poisoning her against me," he said.
Mommy didn't raise her voice. "You're doing that all by yourself."
Daddy stared at her for a long moment. Then he turned and walked away.
Mommy closed the door and leaned her forehead against it.
I stood there, not knowing what to do.
Finally, she turned around and knelt in front of me.
"I'm sorry you saw that," she said.
"It's okay," I said, because it felt like the right thing to say.
She hugged me tight. Her arms wrapped all the way around me. I hugged her back.
Later, when she thought I was asleep again, she sat at the kitchen table with her phone in her hand and didn't move for a long time.
I knew something was changing.
Not all at once. Not loud.
But like when the ground shifts just enough that you know you'll have to learn how to stand a new way.
I closed my eyes and listened to the house.
It was still ours.
For now.
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7.1
I was the Architect who built the digital fortress for the most feared Don in New York.
To the world, I was Brendan Wiggins’s silent, elegant Queen.
But then my burner phone buzzed under the dinner table.
It was a photo from his mistress: a positive pregnancy test.
"Your husband is celebrating right now," the caption read. "You are just the furniture."
I looked across the table at Brendan. He smiled and held my hand, lying to my face without blinking.
He thought he owned me because he saved my life ten years ago.
He told her I was just "functional." That I was a barren asset he kept around to look respectable, while she carried his legacy.
He thought I would accept the disrespect because I had nowhere else to go.
He was wrong.
I didn't want to divorce him—you don't divorce a Don.
And I didn't want to kill him. That was too easy.
I wanted to erase him.
I liquidated fifty million dollars from the offshore accounts only I could access. I destroyed the servers I had built.
Then, I contacted a black-market chemist for a procedure called "Tabula Rasa."
It doesn't kill the body. It wipes the mind clean. A total hard reset of the soul.
On his birthday, while he was out celebrating his bastard son, I drank the vial.
When he finally came home to find the empty house and the melted wedding ring, he realized the truth.
He could burn the world down looking for me, but he would never find his wife.
Because the woman who loved him no longer existed.

9.4
I spent the night with a stranger...
Who got me pregnant...
And turned out to be my boss...
Whoops, sorry, did I say "boss"? I meant a MOB boss.
To be fair, I didn't know he was my boss when I slept with him.
I thought he was just the kind stranger offering me a place to stay.
But one night in Misha Orlov's hotel room got me way more than I bargained for.
It got me champagne that tasted like starlight.
Satin sheets as soft as a dream.
And a man with silver eyes who showed me how it felt to come undone.
And then, in the morning...
He was gone.
That's I needed to get my life together anyway.
After all, my ex-not-quite-husband (it's a long story) just emptied all our bank accounts and disappeared, taking my home and my money and my job with him.
So I'm starting from a blank slate.
I find myself a new apartment.
A new job.
And I put both Misha and my husband behind me.
At least, I thought I did.
Until Day 1 of orientation.
When I learn that Misha Orlov is my new boss.
That's bad enough.
What's worse is what came next.
A car crash.
A doctor's appointment.
And two pieces of unsettling news.
Congratulations, the doctor says. You're pregnant.
Congratulations, Misha says. You and I are getting married.

9.1
I drowned in freezing pool water, the mocking laughter of the elite Savage family echoing in my ears.
When I opened my eyes, I was an eight-year-old orphan again, right on the day those monsters came to adopt me.
Terrified of repeating my hellish past, I ran down the hallway and desperately grabbed the shirt of a random, dumpy IT guy, begging him to take me instead.
I thought I had chosen a weak, boring suburban dad to hide behind.
But I was completely wrong.
My new mom greeted me with a ceramic tactical knife hidden in her apron.
My clumsy dad sliced dinner ribs with the terrifying precision of a seasoned hitman.
My ten-year-old brother was a dead-eyed sociopath who immediately calculated my bone density.
They were a family of lethal underworld monsters, yet they frantically pretended to be a normal, pathetic household just for me.

7.3
While I was pregnant, my husband held a party downstairs for another woman's son.
Through a hidden mental link, I overheard my husband, Don Dante Rossi, tell his consigliere he was going to publicly reject me tomorrow. He planned to make his mistress, Serena, his new mate.
An act forbidden by ancient law while I carried his heir.
Later, Serena cornered me, her smile venomous. When Dante appeared, she shrieked, clawing her own arm and blaming me for the attack.
Dante didn't even look at me. He snarled a command that froze my body and stole my voice, ordering me from his sight as he cradled her.
He moved her and her son into our master suite. I was demoted to the guest room at the end of the hall.
Passing her open door, I saw him rocking her baby, humming the lullaby my own mother used to sing to me.
I heard him promise her, "Soon, my love. I'll sever the bond and give you the life you deserve."
The love I felt for him, the power I'd hidden for four years to protect his fragile ego, all turned to ice.
He thought I was a weak, powerless wife he could discard. He was about to find out that the woman he betrayed was Alessia De Luca, princess of the most powerful family on the continent.
And I was finally going home.

9.1
I woke up strapped to a freezing operating table, a gaping hole crudely sutured over my heart.
Joi Rocha, my supposed guardian, stood nearby holding a glowing vial that contained my freshly extracted Phoenix gene sequence.
"Don't blame me, sweetheart. Gayla's body is just too weak. She needs this sequence more than you do."
In my past life, I endured years of illegal biological harvests for this family. My fiancé Brennon watched with cold eyes as they ripped the gene from my chest, while the elite academy students filmed and mocked my bleeding, broken body. They stripped me of my status, drained every drop of my worth, and left me to die in a freezing tomb just so their precious fake daughter could thrive.
Until my dying breath, I didn't understand. I had given them my absolute loyalty, so why was I treated like disposable medical waste? Why did my life mean absolutely nothing to them?
But opening my eyes again, I realized I had returned to the exact day they stole my core.
This time, I didn't cry or beg. I stared dead into Joi's eyes and smiled.
I detonated the residual energy in my chest to incinerate Gayla's stolen sequence, faked my own flatline, and injected myself with a hidden dark matter drive to completely rewrite my DNA.
If they wanted to play God with my life, I was going to burn their entire world to ash.

8.8
For three years, I swallowed a bitter pill daily, suppressing my royal white wolf bloodline for a normal life as the Alpha's Luna. That morning, my husband Santino coldly announced a crucial announcement, then entered our grand hall with another woman, declaring, "Alessia, she will be living here from now on."
She was pregnant, he announced, carrying our late Beta's child-yet her neck was unmarked. My scoff met his furious Alpha dominance, threatening my title, forcing my bow as he settled her into the suite next to ours.
Her sickening scent soon permeated my private study. Later, I found him intimately grooming her in the kitchen-a sacred act for mates-while he snarled mental insults, branding my jealousy pathetic.
Watching his hands violate our vows, a slow, cruel smirk pulled at my lips. My three-year marriage was officially over. I had already paused my royal trust fund's capital, then severed our mind link with a chilling declaration: "Don't touch me with the hands that just touched her."