Book Read Free

CLAIMED BY THE BAD BOY: A Dark Bad Boy Romance (Bloody Saints MC)

Page 29

by Zoey Parker


  It was the second time she’d reached out and grabbed me. Her fingers sent electricity through my body. I didn’t want her to let me go. I realized I had urges to do more than just protect her. I could no longer deny how she made me feel. There were so many reasons why I hadn’t just let her go yet.

  The main reason was that as soon as I saw her, I felt protective over her. She had been so vulnerable, despite giving everyone hell. Her reluctance to talk about whatever was really going on with her just added to that sense of how vulnerable she was and how much she needed someone’s help.

  I placed my hand over hers and gave her a gentle, caring squeeze. I started to get up because I knew it wasn’t going to be long before we heard the stomping feet coming down the stairs. She let go but stayed where she was as I stepped away from the wooden benches.

  “Uncle Blade!” the kids screamed as they came off the staircase. Soon, a bunch of children were surrounding me, all trying to hug me and reaching for me to pick them up.

  “Uncle Blade?” Maggie asked skeptically.

  I knelt down so I could let each one of those precious children hug me. I looked back at Maggie and saw her standing up with one eyebrow raised and her hands on her hips.

  “Yep, Uncle Blade is what they call him,” Connor said, coming down behind the kids. He’d ditched his hoodie and gloves, sporting his usual dress shirt and bowtie.

  He walked over and shook Maggie’s hand. “Sorry about earlier. I was just trying to get you two inside. Man, it’s cold out there isn’t it? Blade and his MC, the Marauders, donate a bunch of toys for the kids every year. They love him, of course. He’s just a big teddy bear when it comes to them.” I could hear the dorky smile on his face.

  “They’re not even intimidated by him,” Maggie observed. I could hear her mind getting blown. It was great to know there wasn’t anything I could do that wouldn’t surprise or confuse her. She had so many misconceptions in that head of hers.

  “No, they can sense he’s good people,” Connor told her. “Despite his tattoos and the scars on his arms, despite his rough demeanor and his intimidating size, they know. They can see right through all of that. If anything, I think it makes them feel safer because they know no one is going to mess with them while he’s here.”

  “That’s right,” I chimed in as I stood back up. “All right, who is ready for Christmas presents?” I asked the horde of children surrounding me.

  “Me,” they all answered in unison, raising their hands and jumping.

  “Then do Uncle Blade a huge favor and go sit along the wall. We’re going to do this one at a time.” I pointed at the wall next to the door to the closet where we’d stashed all the presents.

  “Christmas now?” Maggie asked me.

  “Yeah, why not? I’m here now.”

  “They wouldn’t want to do it without him,” Connor said as he opened the closet again and pulled out a chair for me.

  I sat down, and Connor went into the closet to hand the toys to me as the kids approached, but there was only one problem. Maggie was standing in front of me, between the kids and me.

  “What do you guys think? Do you think Miss Maggie deserves a Christmas present?” I asked the kids, leaning to the side so they could see me around her.

  “Yeah!” they all shouted.

  “No, no,” she said, shaking her head and holding out her hand. “You know how I feel about Christmas.

  “Everybody loves Christmas,” one of the little girls said.

  “You better listen to Isabella, Maggie. She knows a thing or two. She gets straight As in school,” I said, winking at Isabella sitting along the wall.

  She giggled and kicked her feet.

  “You really do know these kids, don’t you?” Maggie asked me, amazed.

  “Yeah, duh. Now, come on up and get your present. We got enough for everyone and then some.” I leaned back and called to Connor. “I need a girl’s gift. Something for Maggie.”

  When I handed her a doll, the kids behind her cracked up. They thought it was the funniest thing that I was giving a children’s toy to an adult. After she took the toy, I jerked my head to tell her to get out of the way and let the kids come up to get theirs.

  It only took a few minutes to hand out most of the toys we’d picked up at the toy store, placing a toy in each child’s hand. Connor ran them upstairs after another round of hugs. A few of them even hugged Maggie, hopefully melting the ice that had built up around her heart a little bit.

  “I’ll be back down in a minute,” Connor said, following the kids upstairs.

  I put the chair back in the storage closet and sat down with Maggie along the wall again.

  “So, you guys do this every year? Does he know how you get the toys?” she asked, and I realized she still thought we’d just walked out with them.

  I chuckled. “The MC pays for the toys ahead of time, and the owner of the store just keeps a tab. If we pay too much, which we usually do, he uses the money to write off more toys for donations through other charities.”

  “Wow, that’s not at all what I expected,” she said.

  “I hope that’s a good wow. I hope you’re not disappointed that I’m not some big bad biker thug.” I leaned over and nudged her with my shoulder.

  She laughed, blushing a little. “That’s kind of what I was expecting from you, you know. I mean, the way you handled me at the auction. The way you handled everyone else. You just kind of command the room. I figured you were the muscle all the time.”

  “Just when I need to be,” I admitted. “You have to give back to the kids, man. Everyone deserves a chance to have a merry Christmas, right?”

  She looked down at the doll I’d handed her, and a thoughtful look fell over her face. Her brow furrowed, and she frowned a little as she stared at the toy.

  “What’s wrong?” I asked.

  “I just kind of stopped believing in the magic of it all, you know?” She looked up at me with tears in her eyes.

  “Hey, it’s okay. It’s never too late to believe in magic.” I reached over and wiped the tear away from her cheek.

  She grabbed my hand and held it on her face. A different look came into her eyes then, and she started to lean towards me.

  Our lips almost touched. I could almost feel her soft, precious lips against mine.

  “No, I’m sorry,” she said. “I need some fresh air.” She was suddenly flustered. She looked for a place to set her doll and finally just handed it to me.

  “Is everything okay?” I asked.

  “No, I’m fine. I just need some air. That’s all. I’m not going anywhere. I’ll be back in a minute. Hold onto her for me. I’m coming back for her,” she said, pointing at the doll in its box as she got up and started to walk towards the front door.

  I watched her hurry away from me, but I didn’t get up to follow her. She needed her space, and she needed me to be patient with her. There was a lot going on that she hadn’t told me, and she wasn’t going to be able to start moving forward until she let go of it.

  “Where’s your friend going?” Connor asked as he came back down.

  I laughed. “Just outside. She needs a cigarette or something,” I told him dismissively.

  “She seems a bit overwhelmed by it all,” he said.

  “Yeah. She’s had a rough night. I think it’s been rougher than she’s even told me.”

  “You two go way back or what?” Connor asked.

  “Or what. I just happened to show up at the right time. She needed to get out of a bad situation, and I was there to help, so I did.”

  “You’re a good man, Blade. She looks like a good kid,” he said.

  “Yeah, but I wonder just how bad things were before I came along,” I mused.

  “Well, you better go find out, I guess. Thanks again for the toys, man. You guys do a great job every year helping these kids out.” He shook my hand while we talked.

  “No problem, Connor. If you ever need anything, you know you can give us a call. These
kids need anything, you can call me any time,” I reminded him, looking him in the eye.

  “Of course, definitely. They’ll be talking about this for a while.” He stepped back and laughed a little. “Is she keeping the doll?”

  “Yeah, I think so. She told me to hold onto it for her so she could get it back when she came back in.”

  “I hope things work out for her. You’d better take that out there for her. It doesn’t seem to be warming up this morning. She’s probably going to be ready to go by the time you get back outside.” He started walking me to the front door.

  He opened the door, and let me through.

  “We’ll see you soon, Connor,” I told him as I left the building.

  Maggie was standing at the bottom of the steps in the early morning glow. She stood with her arms wrapped around herself, shivering in the freezing breeze that was cutting through the downtown streets.

  I walked down the steps to join her. “Let’s get you somewhere warmer,” I said behind her, startling her a little bit.

  She turned around and nodded, so I put an arm across her back and walked with her around the corner to where my car was parked in the alley. I held the door for her and handed her the doll once she was in. She looked up at me with a joyful kind of surprise in her eyes, like she hadn’t expected me to hold onto it for her.

  I winked and walked around to get in.

  “Now, tell me, what was that?” Maggie asked once the car was on and the heat started to thaw her out.

  “That place is an orphanage, a children’s home. We take them presents every year and just sort of look out for them,” I explained.

  “You’re kidding me,” she said.

  “No, you just saw it happen. Open your mind, Maggie. I know things are pretty grim right now, but that doesn’t make all of us monsters. I’m not here to take advantage of anyone. Now, let’s get out of here. Where to?” I asked as we pulled out of the alleyway.

  “The bus station,” she said again. “And can I get a little cash to help me get a ticket?”

  “About that. We need to talk about where you’re going before I take you to the bus station or pay for a bus ticket.”

  Chapter 10

  Maggie

  “Why does it matter where I’ll go?” I asked him. We were back on the question of where I would go if I got him to drop me off at the bus station.

  “Because I don’t think you have anywhere to go, Maggie. I think you’re just running at this point,” he said in a calm voice.

  “Earlier you were telling me you thought I was trying to set you up. Now you’re saying I must be on the run from something. Which is it, Blade?” I asked angrily, but I wasn’t mad at him. If I was mad at anyone, I was mad at myself for being back in the same situation I always found myself in.

  “I’m sorry I misjudged you,” he said. “It was just hard to get a read on you before. You were being so guarded.”

  “Well, I still haven’t told you shit,” I snapped.

  “I know you haven’t, but I’ve gathered a lot from being around you,” he countered.

  “Oh, have you?”

  “Hey, calm down, Maggie. I’m not your enemy here. I just want to help you, okay? I would hope you would know that by now.” He reached over and put a hand on my shoulder.

  He didn’t grab me like he did back at the diner when he had decided it was time to leave. This time his touch was gentle, and I almost melted into it. I wanted to melt into him. I wanted to give myself to him. I needed someone strong and protective like him, someone who cared about other people the way he did.

  But I didn’t want to get in the way. I didn’t want to fall for another good guy just to find out he was an asshole down the road.

  “Look, I don’t have anywhere else to be, and neither do you. Go ahead and tell me what’s going on,” he insisted.

  I took a shaky breath. Tears were already welling up in my eyes. His kindness and generosity were so overwhelming, I didn’t think I could handle it. I didn’t know what to say, what to tell him, or where to even start.

  Then, as if he could read my mind, he said, “Start with why you were in the alley last night.”

  “Okay,” I said, hesitating, taking my time to start.

  “It’s okay, Maggie. You’re safe here with me,” he said, coaxing me.

  I smiled and laughed through the tears that were starting to trickle down my face. “My ex hit me, and I fled his house last night. It was kind of late, so I just grabbed a jacket and ran.”

  “You were living with him?”

  “Yeah, we had a place together. Well, it was his place really, the same place he had when we started seeing each other years ago. Now, I don’t regret leaving him, but I regret how I did it. I should have grabbed some money or my phone at least so I could have had a better place to stay than the street,” I continued.

  “And that’s where the guys at the auction found you?” he asked.

  “Yep. I was under a blanket in the alley. There was another guy there, a man who called himself Major Ralph. He offered me a blanket,” I told him.

  “And he’s probably the one who gave you up. He’s been known to turn people over to the auctioneers. He usually keeps an eye out for new people crashing out on the pavement with him.”

  “You’re shitting me. You think Major Ralph turned me in? Does he get paid to do that?” I asked.

  “I don’t know for sure, but I’d assume so,” Blade told me.

  “You really don’t have much to do with the auction itself, do you?” I asked him. I had noticed he didn’t seem to have a very positive opinion of the whole thing.

  “I don’t really have much use for it, but they pay me well to make sure people stay in line,” he replied.

  “Well, you know the rest, really. I got under that blanket and fell asleep, and when I woke up, I was at the auction. That’s where you came in,” I told him.

  “I’m sorry, but you know, I’m really glad I ran into you there,” he said.

  “I don’t get you, Blade. Why are you so interested in trying to help out a stranger?” I finally asked.

  “It’s what I do. I can’t help it. You needed my help, and I just couldn’t resist coming in to take care of you. And you’re still not in a great place, so I’m going to stick around until you get back on your feet,” he explained to me.

  “You don’t have to do that. No one is asking you to do that,” I protested.

  “That’s fine, but all that being said, I really think you need to stay put for a little while until you get your bearings. You don’t need to go running off right now. You need to be where you’ve got some support and where you can get your feet under you again. Once you’re able to stand on your own, if you want to go running off somewhere, that’s when you do it.”

  I laughed. “But once I have my feet under me and I’m on my own for a change, I’m not going to want to run off.”

  “That may be true, but still, I think you should hang around and accept help when it’s offered instead of running away and falling right back into the same trap.” He took his hand back and had both hands on the wheel.

  I stared at him for a moment, watching the intent look on his face while he drove through the downtown streets. I had noticed that we didn’t seem to be going anywhere in particular, just driving around. I wanted to reach over and trace the lines of the tribal tattoos on his arm and the scars from what must have been old fights. I didn’t understand why he was trying to help, but I was glad he was there.

  “What exactly are you offering me, Blade?” I asked him finally. We’d been dancing around this all night, I realized. There was no point in not just cutting straight to the point.

  “I’ve got a room back at Marauders’ HQ where you can stay,” he said.

  I laughed and nodded. I knew it. “Are there any strings attached to this offer?” I asked.

  “What do you mean?” he asked, taking his eyes off the road to look at me.

  “I mean, what do I h
ave to do to stay there? Do I have to sleep with you, sleep with the whole club, what? It’s too good to be true, so what’s the catch?” I asked.

  “There’s no catch, Maggie,” he assured me. “Now, if you want to sleep with me, that’s great, but I’m not going to ask you to,” he added, laughing.

 

‹ Prev