
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 6
Cole
I noticed her because she didn't flinch.
Most people did.
They saw the bike first.the tattoos then the leather. The weight of the thing I carried without meaning to. Men get scared. Women pretended not to look, then looked anyway. Fear had a smell to it. Curiosity did too.
She had neither.
She stood at the pump like she belonged there, one hand braced on the handle, the other resting loosely at her side. Not defensive. Not careless. Just... present. Like the world hadn't trained her to shrink yet, even if it had tried.
She looked tired.
Not weak.
That was the difference.
I told myself to finish filling the tank and leave. I had no reason to be standing in a gas station ten minutes out of my way except that the road had gone quiet in my head and I didn't like that feeling. Quiet made room for memories. Quiet made space for ghosts.
She glanced at me then. Not startled. Just aware.
Dark eyes. Sharp. The kind that had learned to read rooms fast and trust slowly. The kind that had been disappointed too many times to bother pretending otherwise.
She didn't smile.
Good.
I nodded once. She nodded back.
That should have been it.
But when I swung my leg over the bike, she dropped her keys.
They skittered across the concrete, metal clinking loud in the space between us.
I was already moving before she bent down.
I picked them up and held them out.
"Thanks," she said.
Her voice wasn't soft. It wasn't hard either. It was controlled, like everything else about her.
"No problem."
Our fingers brushed when she took them. Electricity. Quick. Unwelcome.
She pulled back first.
Smart.
"Bike yours," she said, nodding toward it.
"Yeah."
"Loud."
I smirked. "Only if you're listening."
That earned a corner-lift of her mouth. Not a smile. A warning.
I liked it more than I should have.
She turned back to her car, conversation clearly over. I respected that. I always respected lines when they were drawn clean.
I left.
I should've stayed gone.
But three nights later, I saw her again.
Same woman. Different place. Worse circumstances.
The Iron Halo was already busy when I stepped inside. Music heavy. Air thick with sweat and bad decisions. I owned the place, but I didn't linger in it much. I preferred the garage out back. Engines made more sense than people.
She was at the bar.
Hair tied back. Shoulders tight. Eyes scanning like she was counting exits instead of drinks.
Not here for fun.
That pissed me off more than it should have.
I watched from the wall, arms crossed, letting the room move around me while I stayed still. She ordered soda water. Lime. Paid cash. No flirting. No smiles.
A man slid closer. Too close.
She shifted. Subtle. Enough to create space without inviting conversation.
He ignored it.
I pushed off the wall before I thought better of it.
I didn't touch him. Didn't need to.
My presence did the job.
He backed away with a muttered curse.
She turned, eyes sharp again. Recognition flickered there. Not relief. Assessment.
"You," she said.
"Me," I replied.
"You following me."
"Didn't know you'd be here."
"That's not an answer."
Fair.
"I own the place."
Her brows lifted. Just slightly.
"That makes it worse."
I smiled at that. Couldn't help it.
She didn't.
"You shouldn't be here," I said.
"I don't remember asking."
I liked that too.
"Not permission," I replied. "Warning."
She studied me like she was deciding whether to be insulted or grateful.
"Why," she asked finally.
Because I see men like the one who tried to touch you every night.
Because I know what it looks like when a woman's here because she needs to be, not because she wants to be.
Because you look like someone who's already had enough taken from her.
"Because this place eats people alive," I said instead. "Especially the ones who think they're just passing through."
Her jaw tightened.
"I can handle myself."
"I believe you."
That surprised her. I saw it.
"That doesn't mean you should have to," I added.
She looked away first this time.
"I'm leaving," she said.
"Good."
She walked past me, shoulder brushing my chest on purpose or accident. I couldn't tell. My body reacted anyway. Muscle memory. Instinct.
Dangerous.
I let her go.
I didn't follow.
That night, I thought about her longer than I should have.
About the way she stood like she expected the ground to hold her up even when everything else didn't. About the absence clinging to her like a second skin.
I told myself she was none of my business.
Then I saw the kid.
Three days later. Daylight. Small park off the service road. I was riding through to clear my head when I spotted them.
Her on a bench. Sunglasses on. Coffee in hand.
The girl on the slide.
Six. Maybe seven. Too aware for her age. Laughing, but watching her mother between climbs like she was checking that the world hadn't shifted when she wasn't looking.
The girl ran back, chattering about something urgent and imaginary. The woman leaned forward, listening like it mattered.
That was when it hit me.
This wasn't just a tired woman.
This was a mother holding everything together with grit and routine and not a lot else.
The girl glanced at me then. Not afraid. Curious.
She waved.
I froze.
The woman followed her gaze and stiffened when she saw me.
Shit.
I lifted two fingers in a small acknowledgment. Neutral. Non-threatening.
She didn't wave back. She stood, gathering her things, her body already angling between me and the child without making it obvious.
Protective.
Good mother.
I didn't approach.
I didn't speak.
I mounted the bike and left.
But the image stuck. The way the girl leaned into her. The way the woman's hand never stopped moving, grounding, steady.
That night, I made a decision I hadn't planned on.
I went back to The Iron Halo.
She was there again.
Alone.
Lonely in a room full of noise.
Our eyes met across the floor. Something unspoken passed between us. Not invitation. Not refusal.
Recognition.
I didn't move toward her.
I waited.
And when she walked to me instead, chin lifted like she was daring herself to make a mistake, I knew one thing with absolute certainty.
Whatever this was about to become, it wasn't going to be clean.
And I wasn't going to be able to pretend I didn't see her anymore.
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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."