Biker's Claim: A Bad Boy Romance (Demons MC) (Contains bonus book Cocked!)

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Biker's Claim: A Bad Boy Romance (Demons MC) (Contains bonus book Cocked!) Page 1

by Hamel, B. B.




  Biker’s Claim

  A Bad Boy Romance (Demons MC)

  B. B. Hamel

  Contents

  Copyright

  Mailing List

  Prologue: Janine

  1. Janine

  2. Clutch

  3. Janine

  4. Clutch

  5. Janine

  6. Clutch

  7. Janine

  8. Clutch

  9. Janine

  10. Clutch

  11. Janine

  12. Clutch

  13. Janine

  14. Clutch

  15. Janine

  16. Clutch

  17. Janine

  18. Clutch

  19. Janine

  20. Clutch

  21. Janine

  22. Clutch

  23. Janine

  24. Clutch

  25. Janine

  26. Clutch

  27. Janine

  28. Clutch

  29. Janine

  30. Clutch

  31. Janine

  32. Clutch

  Epilogue: Janine

  Thank You!

  Preview

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  Cocked: A Stepbrother Romance

  Copyright © 2016 by B. B. Hamel

  All rights reserved.

  No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without written permission from the author, except for the use of brief quotations in a book review.

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  Keep reading for the full text of Cocked: A Stepbrother Romance included at the end.

  Note: Biker’s Claim ends around 50%

  Prologue: Janine

  War was tearing the whole city apart.

  That was my life back then.

  I wasn’t owned, not exactly. But I owed the man who took me in as a kid and raised me as his own everything. I couldn’t betray him, even when every fiber in my body wanted to.

  My father wanted me to stay far, far away from him.

  He said Clutch wasn’t the type of man for me.

  I completely disagreed.

  And in the night when I could hear Clutch’s bike tearing up the sky, roaring down the road toward me, I knew exactly what I wanted.

  He was tall, ripped, and dangerous. The tattoos that snaked up his body only hinted at the strength inside him.

  An enforcer, a man with a dark past. He wasn’t right for me, but he made everything feel so good.

  My father was right, at least partially. Clutch was cocky, an asshole, and loved to tease me. His skin brushed up against my neck as he whispered in my ear.

  Ditch the fucking panties, girl, he whispered. I want to feel your soaking skin begging for more.

  Anybody could have seen us, and my father was not the type of man to be crossed, not at all.

  But Clutch wasn’t the type to walk away from what he wanted.

  Torn apart, ripped to shreds. Stuck between the club I owed my life to and the man I wanted to give my body to.

  I could see Clutch’s delicious grin in the dark.

  What are you waiting for? Spread those legs. Give me what I want.

  Chills ran down my spine, and that was exactly what I did.

  1

  Janine

  I owed my life to Larkin Yates.

  Not in one of those metaphorical ways, either. Some people said they owed their life to someone when that person just did something nice for them.

  No, not in this case. Larkin Yates saved my life in a very real way. Without him, I’d be dead, sure as anything in this world.

  I was just a little girl when I first met him. Larkin was one of my daddy’s friends, one of the tough men who smiled tender at me while they road their loud bikes around the city. Larkin and my daddy, they went way back. They knew each other as kids and were as close as could be.

  Which was why it took Larkin so long to put a bullet in Daddy’s head.

  I still remembered that night and always would. I was ten years old. Ever since I could remember, Daddy was a violent man, a drinker. He had a temper and was famous for it. Daddy got in fights all over town, but nobody thought twice about that. If you were a biker, you were practically expected to drink too much and to get in a fight or two.

  But Daddy took it all too far; he always did. He started hitting my mom when I was around six or seven. I could still vaguely remember the sounds they’d make, the yelling and the screaming, and eventually the crying as Daddy went too far and beat mom down to a pulp.

  It went on like that for a few years, getting worse and worse. At the height of it all, before Larkin saved me, I’d wake up wondering how long I had before Daddy got drunk enough to smack me around.

  Usually, that was before noon.

  I’d never forget the night Larkin came and changed everything. Daddy was getting drunk as usual, but he had some work to do in the backyard, something to do with the shed. I couldn’t remember exactly what, but it kept him busy. Kept his hands off Mom and me.

  But it also pissed him off. He was working himself into a rage back there, unable to fix whatever needed patching, drinking more and more whisky, getting louder, harder, scarier.

  Until around four in the afternoon, when he came inside. Mom said one thing, probably asked if he was hungry or something like that, and he started beating on her.

  He didn’t stop beating on her. She screamed and tried to get away, but Daddy wouldn’t stop. I’d seen him mad, seen him hit and smack, but never like this.

  Daddy was out of his mind.

  I hid in my bedroom, and eventually Mom stopped making noise.

  That was when he came for me with this look in his eyes and blood on his hands. He slipped the belt from his jeans and just looked at me, blood dropping onto the carpet. I couldn’t breathe.

  I had no clue when Larkin decided to come over. But Larkin, he must have heard me screaming as Daddy beat me with his belt over and over, leaving deep welts along my back, bloody scars I carried to this day.

  I didn’t know what he thought when he found Mom’s body beaten to death in the kitchen. I didn’t know how fast he got upstairs.

  But I remembered the door getting kicked open.

  “Frank,” Larkin said, “what did you do?”

  Larkin held a gun leveled at Daddy’s head. I could barely understand what was happening.

  “Mind yourself, Larkin,” he snapped.

  “Drop the belt, Frank. Come with me.”

  “Fuck you.” He hit me again.

  “Don’t hit the girl again,” Larkin said, cold as he could be.

  Daddy just laughed and laughed. “Stop me.” He hit me again and again.

  And Larkin put a bullet into his skull.

  One second Daddy was hitting me, and the next there was a loud roar in the room and Daddy collapsed onto the floor, red spilling from his face.

  Larkin swooped me up in his arms.

  “It’s okay,” he said. “It’s okay, Janine. I got you.”

  He carried me outside, put me on the back of his bike, and took me far away.

  I never went home after that. There was talk of finding me a foster home, but Larkin decided to raise me himself. I never understood why a single man running one of the most violent motorcycle gangs in the country wanted a little daughter for his own, but Larkin took me in and kept me safe.

  He gave me a life, gave me a home. In return, I gave him and
the Demons Motorcycle Club my full and unwavering loyalty.

  I grew up in the club. I was Larkin’s little girl, though most guys knew the real story. As far as they were concerned though, I was off-limits. I wasn’t just another club whore, although sometimes I tried to pretend like I was.

  Because maybe it was safer that way, if I was just another normal girl.

  Living with the Demons MC taught me one important lesson, though: Nothing was safe, not ever, and you better learn to take care of yourself.

  2

  Clutch

  You didn’t become a top enforcer for the biggest motorcycle club in the whole Austin, Texas area without cracking a few fucking skulls.

  To put it fucking mildly.

  I came from nothing. My momma named me Jonathan but I earned the name Clutch. Even as a little boy, I loved all things with a motor, especially bikes. I got my nickname when some asshole neighbor kid said that I worked on motorcycles so much I was becoming a clutch.

  I kicked that kid’s ass and then I took the name as my own.

  My dad ran off when I was a baby, leaving me and my momma alone to survive. She had her own problems, mostly booze and pills, but she tried. She worked two jobs and whored on the side to earn her drug money. She kept the whoring a secret for a while, but as I got older, I figured things out.

  I was left to figure things out for myself. I got a part-time job when I could and got real good at stealing from the rich kids at school. I saved up everything I had and bought parts at the local junkyard to work on my bikes.

  When I found the Demons, it was like coming home.

  I was eighteen. I just left home, rode my bike out to Austin with nothing but a duffle bag full of clothes and some money in my pocket. I found them on that first day and never left again.

  It wasn’t easy joining the Demons. I had to hang around the bar they used as their clubhouse for over a year before someone invited me to pledge. The man who sponsored me, his name was Leopold. Big guy, old-timer, member of the council. He took me under his wing, taught me everything he knew. I pledged and eventually was the only pledge of the guys I started out with to make it into the Demons.

  Leopold lived long enough to see me wear the Demon patch. He died a few days later of a heart attack.

  Like I said, Leopold was a big man.

  From there, I worked my way into the club, did what I could to earn their respect. I moved up through the ranks because I wasn’t afraid of violence. I did what the club needed done, cracked skulls and killed other violent men. The club was my life and my family. The club was everything to me.

  Later on, I found out that my momma died, killed by one of her sex clients. The guy stabbed her to death because he couldn’t afford to pay her after he used her up.

  That was five years ago, five years after I joined the club. Now, ten years since I was a little eighteen-year-old kid, I knew more than I could ever have guessed, done some things I never imagined I’d do.

  I had no dad, no mom. My only family was the club, and that was all I needed.

  * * *

  I still remembered the first time I saw her.

  I was a pledge back then, brand new to the place. I was sitting at the bar getting drunk with Leopold and two other guys I couldn’t remember anymore when she walked in that door.

  Long legs, long blond hair. Beautiful, absolutely fucking beautiful, and every guy in the place turned and looked.

  “Ah,” Leopold said. “There she is, the little biker princess.”

  I looked at him. “Who is she?”

  Leopold grinned. “You don’t know?”

  “Tell me, Leo.”

  “That’s Janine. She’s Larkin’s adopted daughter.”

  “Shit,” I said, looking at her again. “She’s gorgeous.”

  Leopold laughed. “Look away, kid. She’s out of your league. That girl is royalty. Ain’t no pledge in the world ever going to touch her body.”

  “She’s free to do what she wants, right?”

  Leopold just laughed and shook his head. “You don’t know how the club works yet, do you, kid?”

  I didn’t, not at that point, but over the years I’d figure it out. And although I never forgot that first time I saw Janine, I also never forgot what Leopold said about her.

  She was the biker princess. She was fucking royalty.

  We knew each other. Janine knew everyone in the club. She was three years younger than me, which meant we had more in common than some. We were friendly, as friendly as you could be with her at least. Larkin had the habit of beating the fuck out of any member that pushed the line with Janine.

  I respected Larkin too much to make a pass. And truth be told, for those ten years we were orbiting around each other, I was too busy finding my own damn place in the club to really see her too clearly.

  It wasn’t until I was twenty-eight and she was twenty-five that she came back into focus.

  She came back to me, sharp and alive. I had forgotten what it was like to really want someone until that night. But of course, that night wasn’t the beginning, though it did begin a lot of things for us.

  No, it really started a week before that. One week before my whole fucking life got a hell of a lot more complicated.

  * * *

  “Clutch.”

  I looked up and grunted. Janine grinned at me across the table, cocking her head to one side. She had this way of saying my name, like she was being sarcastic or some shit.

  “What do you want?” I asked her.

  She laughed. “You in a bad mood tonight?”

  “Just don’t have time to mess around,” I said, knocking back my whisky.

  Truth was, I had all the time in the world, but I’d learned a long time ago not to mess with Janine, even if she did want to flirt with you. Larkin had given me many of his famous bone-chilling looks, even if it was Janine’s own damn fault that she ended up in my lap.

  I never asked for that shit, and I sure as hell didn’t understand the girl.

  “Just wanted to say hi, is all,” she said. “Haven’t seen you around much.”

  “War got us all busy,” I said.

  “Yeah. War does that.” She tossed her blond hair, smiling at me. Of everyone in the club, I’d say that she liked me the best. Maybe I just thought that because she flirted with me the most, and because I was willing to walk the line between harmless and getting my ass beat.

  Never wanted to cross that line, though. Never wanted to betray Larkin’s trust like that.

  Even if Janine was one of the sexiest fucking women I’d ever laid my eyes on. Full lips like you wouldn’t believe, long, thick blond hair, and a body that made grown men cry. I’d be a liar if I said I never imagined what it would be like to sink my thick cock between her legs, fuck her like I was sure she loved getting fucked.

  But I was a good soldier, and I kept my dick where it belonged.

  “So where you been?” she asked me.

  “Dallas,” I said. “Been scouting out the Snake Spit and all that.”

  She nodded. I assumed she knew all about the Snake Spit and the war; probably hard not to know about it if you spent any time in the clubhouse.

  “Heard about it,” she said. “They’ve been pressing down from Dallas, trying to snatch turf.”

  “Yeah,” I said. “And your daddy wants to push back.”

  “You men,” she said, smiling, “always doing the hard thing.”

  “What else is there to do?” I asked, grinning. “The easy thing ain’t no fun.”

  She laughed and stood up. “You’re right, you know.” She turned and walked off, and I couldn’t help but stare at her ass.

  As she left, I realized that I hadn’t spoken to her in at least a month. She’d been around, but we just hadn’t been talking much. I’d been busy with the war, worried about the Mezcals, the Mexican MC gang in Texas, joining up with the Snakes. Then there was all that shit with Ford and Caralee and the Rebels MC going down. For a while there, shit was cr
azy, all blood and excitement.

  And as the Demons MC enforcer, I had plenty of that blood on my hands.

  But ever since I’d gotten back from Dallas, things had been quieter. The Snakes and the Mezcals were planning something, we were sure of that, but the Demons had their own plans.

  I glanced at Janine as she walked across the bar. I wondered briefly what her life was like, what she’d been doing during all this madness.

  But I quickly let that thought go.

  Better not to think about her; better not to get involved.

  My only priority was the damn club.

  3

  Janine

  Larkin thought I didn’t know what was going down with the club, but I wasn’t blind.

  I’d spent my whole life around the club. My daddy was a founding member, and my adopted dad was the president. I lived and breathed the Demons MC.

  So when they were at war, it was pretty easy to notice. The boys were all amped up and there was a level of anxiety happening in the clubhouse. Then all that shit with Ford and Caralee happened, and that was a nice distraction for a bit. It was nice to see two people who clearly loved each other finally come together.

  You didn’t see it that much, not in a violent place like the Demons MC clubhouse.

  I glanced across the room and caught Clutch looking at me. He quickly looked away, and I smiled to myself. I had talked to him earlier that night for the first time in a while, and he’d seemed like he couldn’t wait for me to get away from him.

  I did not understand that man. One second he was smiling and laughing, letting me sit in his lap, and the next he was acting like he barely knew me.

  Which suited me just fine. We’d been like that for ten years, one second talking up a storm and the next pretending like we were practically strangers. Ten years and I felt like I both knew him and didn’t know him at all.

 

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