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Rock Hard_A Motorcycle Club Romance_The Beasts MC

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by Zoey Parker




  This is a work of fiction. Any names, characters, places, and incidents are products of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously and are not to be construed as real. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, organizations, or persons--living or dead--is entirely coincidental.

  Rock Hard: A Motorcycle Club Romance (The Beasts MC) (Alpha Inked Bikers Book 2) copyright 2017 by Zoey Parker. All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission.

  ***

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  Contents

  Rock Hard: A Motorcycle Club Romance (The Beasts MC) (Alpha Inked Bikers Book 2)

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Books by Zoey Parker

  Blood Oath: A Motorcycle Club Romance (Satan’s Kin MC) (Alpha Inked Bikers Book 1)

  The Devil’s Chopper: A Motorcycle Club Romance (Inferno Hunters MC) (Owned by Outlaws Book 4)

  The Devil’s Blaze: A Motorcycle Club Romance (Fury Riders MC) (Owned by Outlaws Book 3)

  The Devil’s Scar: A Mafia Hitman Romance (Owned by Outlaws Book 2)

  The Devil’s Vow: A Motorcycle Club Romance (The Silent Havoc MC)

  Buying My Wife: A Bad Boy Hitman Romance (Moretti Mafia)

  Buying My Bride: A Bad Boy Motorcycle Club Romance (Wild Aces MC)

  Don’t Ruin My Baby: The Predators MC

  Don’t Take My Baby: Twisted Ghosts MC

  Don’t Hurt My Baby: A Bad Boy Hitman Romance

  Zoey Parker Mailing List

  Rock Hard: A Motorcycle Club Romance (The Beasts MC) (Alpha Inked Bikers Book 2)

  By Zoey Parker

  I’m rock hard and ready to break her.

  She’s in my bed for her own protection.

  But there’s nothing to protect her from me.

  Who cares that our marriage is fake?

  The night I have planned for my new bride is going to be very, very real.

  KELLAN

  I didn’t ask for this.

  She didn’t, either.

  But someone is determined to hurt and destroy my MC president’s daughter.

  And it’s fallen to me to keep her safe.

  Caught without options, I marry her and take her as my wife.

  Emma is gorgeous and smart – far too good for a violent biker like me.

  That doesn’t stop me from putting my hands all over her.

  I love the way she moans my name, the way she moves under the cover of darkness.

  I can’t stop wanting her, no matter how hard I try.

  But danger is never far behind.

  I know I should let Emma go.

  I’m not the right man for her.

  But my vows have become real.

  In my heart, Emma is mine.

  To have. To hold. To feel. To f**k.

  She’s a biker’s bride…

  ‘Til death do us part.

  EMMA

  When my father tells me to marry his second-in-command, I’m frozen in shock.

  I had always sworn I’d never get involved with a biker.

  I’d seen too much.

  The club tore families apart.

  I wouldn’t let that happen to me.

  But then my father tells me he’s dying.

  And a mysterious man tries to assault me in the middle of the night.

  Something is happening, something that scares me.

  I have no choice but to follow my father’s orders.

  That’s how I became the outlaw’s bride.

  Kellan is a beast and a b*stard.

  A killer, a sinner, a rogue.

  But he kisses me at the altar with so much passion that my heart comes to a standstill.

  I shouldn’t want him.

  He’s not the man I imagined as my husband.

  But as my dad’s enemies get closer, I can’t stop wanting our marriage to be real.

  Our lives are on the line.

  And I realize that, although Kellan might not be the man I ever predicted for myself…

  He’s the one I’m falling for.

  And he’s the one I’ll be with.

  As long as we both shall live.

  Chapter 1

  If it hadn’t been raining, Emma might have seen the man following her. The fact that it was eight o’clock, and long since dark, wasn’t counting in her favor either. With the tenacity of an Oregon native, and the arrogance of a college student, Emma navigated the long, fat body of her ’95 Buick into the assigned space at the college apartments, unaware of the SUV that pulled into a spot two rows over, and one row back.

  She, like any sensible woman who had access to a newspaper, tucked her keys between her fingers before checking her cell phone. Three unread messages were glaring up at her. The first was from the school, notifying her that the entire campus, including the apartments, would be closed starting Saturday, and that anything left behind would be property of the school.

  “Yeah,” Emma muttered to the message, “because you certainly don’t have enough of me as it is.”

  The second message was from Diana, or as Emma liked to call her, the good roommate. While most of it was emojis, Emma understood the dark-haired vixen was currently enjoying her first week back at home, and that Emma should stop being boring and hurry up and join her.

  Emma liked boring; her childhood had been exciting enough, boring was just the speed she wanted to go for the foreseeable future.

  I’ll be there soon, she messaged back. Try not to break any hearts before I get there.

  The third message was from Kristin, also known as the bad roommate. The wild-haired girl seemed to dislike bathing, communicating, or eating her own food. It didn’t seem to matter how many times Emma wrote her name on something, bits and pieces of it—and sometimes the entire thing—always seemed to vanish. While Emma would have liked to blame Diana, that girl believed in nothing but liquor, fresh fruit, and more liquor.

  Did I leave anything behind? it asked.

  Emma didn’t think so, but she didn’t much want to look. Kristin’s bathing issues meant her room had a certain…odor.

  I’ll look, she texted back. She might look, if anything else didn’t distract her.

  With a sigh she carefully tucked the phone inside her backpack. It rested between Anatomy of Canines and Internal Veterinary Medicine, Fourth Edition. Her phone would be safer from the rain than she was. Oh well.

  To be fair, Emma’s thoughts weren’t really on the rain; that was just a mild annoyance. They weren’t even on the last slice of lasagna waiting for her in the fridge, or the promise of the apartment being all hers for the next two days. Instead, they were focused on next semester, which was supposed to be her last semester, and how she was going to pay for it.

  Being frugal wasn’t going to help her. I’m already frugal, she thought as she took her first step out into the rain. The backpack hung heavily over one shoulder. The college diet of ramen noodles, store brand chips, and Vienna sau
sages had given her naturally waify figure a few needed pounds. Every paycheck from the Oswald Veterinary Clinic had been deposited and cataloged, and thank god for Dr. Oswald working with her insane schedule this year, but minimum wage wasn’t going to pay for her final weeks of college. Hell, it wasn’t even going to pay for her books.

  The fact of the matter was her savings had paid most of the way, and it was all gone. If she was very diligent, the money ferreted away in her savings account would be just enough to pay for her share of the rent and books she would need to finish her degree. Then, with a little luck, she’d be one step closer to having her own practice.

  One day a main street window was going to say Ketchum Veterinary Medicine, and it was going to be a really good day.

  “Emma! Hey, Emma! Hey!”

  The voice that broke through her dreams of a window decorated with paw prints was young, enthusiastic, and male. With a sigh Emma paused just inside the awning to her apartment building as a guy who was more leg than body came sauntering up. She could almost see him telling himself to play it cool. Marco, freshman science major and digital chess master, may be cool one day, but this was not it.

  “How ya doin?” Water droplets were collecting on the bony tops of his gaunt cheeks, exaggerating his pasty coloring. Emma, pale as she was, didn’t have much of a right to think of anyone as pasty, but at least she looked like she’d seen the sun since the day she was born.

  “I’m fine, Marco,” she answered, hauling her backpack higher up on her back. The rain was graduating into a storm and she wanted to get inside to the sanctity of pasta and Parmesan cheese. “How are you?”

  “Good, good, I’m…uh…I’m gonna be heading home tomorrow. I was wondering if you were busy tonight. Maybe, uh, well, maybe we could hang out. You know, just chill or something. I dunno.”

  If he was going for cool, he lost it sometime right after the second good. She tried to put on her politest smile, but Emma was pretty sure it looked more tired than nice. He wasn’t the first college guy to zero in on her. They took one look at her blonde hair and blue eyes and, for reasons beyond her understanding, got all sorts of ideas. “Sorry,” she offered. It was amazing how much that one word could deflate a person. “But I need to pack. I have to head out first thing in the morning. So, you know…”

  “Where are you going?” he asked, trying to lean causally against the outdoor railing. It might have worked if the water running off the awning roof wasn’t puddling on his shoulders.

  “Diana is letting me crash with her for the summer in Florence. Her family has a lake house there and, you know.”

  He crossed his arms over his chest. “That sounds cool. Real cool.”

  “Uh-huh.” She gave him a moment to realize he was being brushed off, but he didn’t seem to get it. “So yeah, I’m going to go do that packing thing and all that.”

  “Oh yeah. Right. I mean. Well, maybe I could help. I’m strong, you know.”

  Emma wondered what his scale of comparison was, looking over his slender arms and bird chest. It wasn’t that she was shallow; she’d have no problem dating a guy with Marco’s teen-boy build, so long as they had something in common. While Marco might also be enthusiastic about science, that was where it all ended. He wanted to be a proctologist.

  While there were plenty of eighteen-year-old guys who wanted to study butts for a living, only Marco was taking it to the next level.

  “No, thanks, I’ve got it.”

  “No, really, I could help!”

  “Marco—”

  He put a hand on her should and she jerked it free. Suddenly everything that was annoying her, frustrating her, terrifying her, came roaring up to the surface. She snapped. “Marco, my Aikido might be a little rusty but I’m willing to work it out if you don’t back off.”

  He gave her a look that was part anger, part embarrassment. “Fine, man, don’t gotta be a bitch about it.”

  “Yeah,” she said, brandishing her keys at him, “apparently I do.”

  He whirled away from her and stormed off into the cold wet night. His shoulders were slumped and the rain was dripping off his nose. He looked pathetic. A small part of her felt bad, but it wasn’t enough to invite him up to her place.

  When she turned back to her apartment the door to the SUV opened. She didn’t notice. She didn’t notice when a large masculine shape followed her steps up the first flight, and then the second flight of stairs. Irritation at the world had muted everything but the goal of an evening alone.

  “Emma Ketchum?”

  “Hmm?” She was half turned when she felt the kiss of a blade against her throat. It was cold and sharp. A single drop of water shimmered like a diamond as it danced down the blade and over a hand. It was a man’s hand, strong and thick fingered. Veins stood out beneath the kind of golden brown skin you either got by accident of birth, or accident of wealth. The first finger had seven crosses tattooed in black ink lined up down the digit.

  Crosses, she knew, meant kills.

  “You even think about screaming for help and I will slit your pretty throat, do you understand?”

  She nodded once. A lock of hair too dark to be her own fell over her shoulder. A second arm snaked around her belly. She felt her stomach turn to lead, sick and heavy.

  The arm flexed and she stumbled back against a body. Emma could hear her heartbeat pounding behind her eyes. This wasn’t a skinny, barely eighteen-year-old boy. She struggled as much as the knife would let her, but his grip was unrelenting. This was the form of someone who knew how to use their body like a weapon. She swallowed hard, which only made her feel the blade that much more.

  “Open the door.” His voice was thick with Latin roots. “Slowly.”

  Emma hesitated. More than anything she didn’t want him in her apartment, where he could do in private whatever it was he was thinking of doing right now. The lack of space between him and her door, however, was doing nothing but giving him every advantage. With hands that shook more than Emma would have liked she unlocked the door to her too empty apartment.

  He kept the blade to her neck and used his free hand to rip her bag off her shoulder and toss it into the hallway. The sound of wet canvas and heavy books plopping against the floor echoed.

  “Please,” she whispered softly, picturing the worst. “Please don’t do this. What do you want?”

  She felt the dull brush of his stubble against her cheek. Hadn’t she read somewhere that if a guy didn’t wear a mask when he attacked you, he was probably going to kill you? A whimper escaped her throat. She realized she was crying; she didn’t know when it had started.

  “Step forward.” His instructions where whispered against her ear. She could smell the mixture of alcohol and cigarettes on his breath. She felt bile burn in the back of her throat.

  Every terrifying picture of every morbid headline she’d ever read surged to the forefront of her mind, leaving her breathless and shivering. Would they find her in the morning? Would she even be alive? Would she be in one piece?

  “I don’t understand. Who are you?” she pleaded.

  “The fucking tooth fairy.”

  She took a single step into her apartment on legs that felt like Jell-O. Her mind was screaming Run, but her body wasn’t listening. She couldn’t even remember her Aikido training. Everything was just a blur of fear and uncertainty and self-doubt.

  “Keep stepping.”

  He shut the door behind them. The only light in her apartment came from the lamppost outside. The dull flicker, muted by the rain, did little to offer anything close to illumination. Somehow the dark helped her think. She couldn’t see him, not really. Just a vague outline of a large bodied male.

  He grabbed her hair and yanked her head back, exposing a long line of her neck. The blade scrapped and then cut. Her skin gave ever so slightly. Blood, hot and metallic, ribboned down her throat. She squirmed, but he held her tight.

  “Please stop.”

  “Tell your daddy he needs to watch his fucki
ng back.”

  Few things could have surprised her more. Her father? Emma hadn’t seen or spoken to her father since she was eighteen, nearly seven years ago. She had done her best to live apart from him, to keep her life separated from his, but it hadn’t mattered. The sharp press of the blade proved well enough that it hadn’t mattered at all.

  “I don’t even talk to my dad,” she managed to gasp out, hoping beyond hope that this would make the attacker go away. It didn’t. His body pressed harder to hers, enveloping her in the scent of cheap cigarettes. “I haven’t seen him in years.”

  “Eh. You better start, puta.” The hand on her side slithered upwards. At first she thought his shirt had thin sleeves, but her eyes adjusted to see that his arm was decorated with tattoos in dark ink. The largest was the Virgin Mary, with two buxom angles forming a protective ring over the praying lady. The wings danced as his hand paused just beneath her breast. He made some shift in his hips that had her stomach jumping into her throat.

 

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