by Nicole Fox
“What the fuck's so funny? Huh?”
“You, man, that's what,” Tyke said, still chuckling as he took a drink of his beer. “You all bent outta shape about having to knock some bitch up? Like it's a fucking miracle of goddamn nature or some shit? Shit, man, I've done it twice that I know of, and both times by fucking accident.”
“What're you saying, man?”
“What I'm saying is,” Tyke replied as he leaned forward on his elbows, “you just gotta find yourself one of them . . . what're they called? Sure-gates.”
“Sure-gate? A surrogate, you mean?”
“Yeah, man. Find some chick who actually wants a kid, offer to pay for it, send it to Harvard, do whatever, then, pow,” he slammed his fist into his hand, “you bang one out, man. Presto. You got yourself a fucking kid, and you got yourself the trust. Just fucking man-up and quit being such a touchy-feely pussy about this shit.”
Tyke was right. He just needed to man-up on this. He could run a bar, he could nail a board, and he could beat the ever-living shit out of a man if he had to. Why didn't he just do this? Danny hung his head. “You're right. I just gotta find some woman who'd be willing to do it.”
Tyke's cell rang. He reached down and dug in his pocket, pulled it out to check the ID. “Shit,” he muttered as he climbed out of the booth. “That's Thorne, man. I better get moving.”
Danny went to stand, and the two hugged and clapped each other viciously on the back.
“Find you a girl,” Tyke said, “and just knock her up. Easy-peasy, man.”
“Right,” Danny agreed as Tyke headed back out to his bike. “Easy-fucking-peasy.”
Chapter Two
Sara
Surrogate. That was a job that sounded easy enough to Sara. Lay back, get pregnant, have baby, get paid to take care of the baby. Not really a surrogate, though. More like a paid mother. To her slightly-tipsy mind, it actually didn't sound half bad.
The Fallen Knights biker in the booth next to hers got up for another beer as she wondered her thoughts aloud. His boots stomped across the floor right in front of her booth.
“Geez,” she said aloud, forgetting how empty the bar was, “I wonder how much you'd have to pay a woman to have your baby?”
The boots scraped on the floor as they came to a dead stop.
She had a sinking feeling, and it wasn't the alcohol. She didn't know how she knew it, maybe it was some deep instinct, but she felt like she was being watched. Sara glanced up from her beer.
Yep, she was being watched. The Fallen Knights biker, the handsome, sexy one who had come in a second ago, was staring at her. He worked his jaw, clenching and unclenching his teeth like an animal, his pale blue eyes bored into hers for just a moment. As their gazes lingered, he broke off their connection to turn and go back to the bar.
What was that about? Was it because he thought she might have overheard them talking? Oh no, part of her brain screamed at her, he needed to shut her up. He didn't want it to get out that he had to get a woman pregnant to get his inheritance. She never should have come to the Old Crow, never should have come here instead of Baby Dolls.
She was going to get raped here, or killed, or both. She grabbed her beer and went to finish it down, her mind working overtime. Not that she'd mind, at this point. What else did she have to live for, anyways? At least it would be a handsome man ending her life.
“Jethro,” the biker called, “two more beers, buddy.”
He was such a drunk low-life. He was ordering two beers for himself! She paused and took a deep breath, then finished the rest of hers, to steady her nerves to leave.
The resounding thump of each boot heel preceded him as he came back over to the booths.
She fumbled for her purse.
He set the beers on the table and pushed one in front of her. “Going somewhere?” he asked, his voice as unyielding as his muscle-bounds arms probably were.
She glanced up at him. “N-n-no.”
“Good. Have one on the house.”
“I don't need you to buy me a drink.”
“I'm not. I'm part-owner of this place. I'm giving it to you.”
Part-owner? Him? She glanced from the beer to his face, to those cold, sexy eyes, and back again. “I think I should really - ”
“Look,” he said as he slid into the booth, across from her. “Jethro told me you were looking for a job cocktailing. Right?”
She nodded, her spirits rising a little. Maybe, since he was part owner, he could hire her. This could be a good thing.
“Well, you don't exactly look like the cocktail waitress type.”
Well, that wasn't a promising start to the interview. Her spirits sunk again. She didn't feel like the type, either, and shook her head.
“You're . . . the respectable type.” He said it like he'd never seen it in person before.
“I guess I am,” she agreed. And, she was, even if she happened to be sitting here in this dive of a biker bar, getting drunk on cheap liquid courage before she went to apply at a strip club.
She'd wanted to go to college, but that hadn't happened because of her parents. Instead, she'd been flailing, trying to find a way out of this town, a way to get as far as possible from the memories of both here and the next town over.
He took a big gulp of his beer and wiped his mouth with the back of his scarred, callused hand. He set the beer down and bored his eyes into hers again, forcing all of her attention on him. He folded his hands on the table. His veined, rippling muscles danced beneath the tattoos that sleeved both forearms.
“I have a proposition,” he said.
Maybe it was a job? Nervous, she felt her heart quickening. She could certainly imagine herself working under his management. “What kind of proposition?” she asked in a wavering voice, and took another drink.
His eyes held hers like a snake-charmer mesmerizes a cobra. “I'll pay you five-hundred-thousand dollars to have my baby.”
Thank God he'd waited till she'd finished swallowing! That was more money than she could imagine, especially right now. But, it wasn't enough to completely guarantee a life for her, or for a baby.
“I'll pay your living expenses while you're pregnant,” he continued, “and support him after he's born. My father left me more than enough money. Normally, I wouldn't give two shits about it, but I need it for my mom. Okay? This isn't even for me, and you'd still be making a killing on it.”
All of her money problems would be taken care of. She could stop dodging Martin, the embodiment of filth that masqueraded as her landlord. Her mouth was suddenly dry, but she swallowed anyways.
His eyes were steely, his voice made of granite. “My word is my bond. You'll be taken care of if you do this for me.”
There was something about the determination in him, a weird sense of a rogue's integrity. He was unlike any man she'd ever met before. And here he was, a man who lived or died by his honor, staking that honor when he made this promise. Sara knew she shouldn't believe him, but she did. She believed him with ever fiber of her being.
But, still, that was probably just the liquor and beer believing for her. “When's my appointment with the doctor, then?” she asked, a heavy note of sarcasm dripping into her voice.
“Doctor?” he asked, genuine surprise in his voice. “No doctors. We'd just do it the old-fashioned way.”
“The old-fashioned way?”
“You really are prim and proper, aren't you?” he asked.
“What's that supposed to mean?”
“I mean,” he said with an oddly sexy curl of his lip, “we fuck.”
“Listen,” she said. “I don't know you, and you don't know me.”
“Perfect,” he said. “I want to keep this about making a baby.”
“Not about raising one, then?”
He shook his head. “The only thing I care about are my brothers, the Fallen Knights. You and I, we have a baby. I get paid, you get paid. Simple as that.”
Sara laughed a little, nervous about the
conversation, and about how the man across the table from her was making her feel. She wanted to agree, if only because she might get to see what he had beneath that biker vest and tight black shirt if she did.
“I don't even know your name,” she said, “and you don't even know mine.”
“Danny Reynolds.”
“Sara Taylor.”
“See? That simple. We're practically fucking already.”
Laughing uneasily, she shook her head. “I don't really think practically fucking is enough to build a life around, or enough to make a decision. I'm the one who has to carry a baby for nine months, after all.”
“How about this?” he asked. “How about we meet again tomorrow? When there's no beer involved?”
“No shots, either,” Sara said, taking another drink of beer.
He nodded in agreement. “There's a park on the square, downtown near the courthouse. How about noon?”
Sara thought briefly about her busy schedule of sitting around being unemployed, before agreeing to the meet.
“Good. Noon, then,” he said and vacated the booth with his beer. He nodded a goodbye to Jethro, and was headed for the door before Sara had a chance to reconsider.
Even though she was nervous about their meeting tomorrow, she watched as his perfect, tight-jeans-covered ass disappeared through the front door. Her eyes lingered, waiting to see if he'd come back in.
“What in the hell have I gotten myself into?” Sara wondered aloud before finishing her beer.
Chapter Three
Sara
The roar of the bike punched through the gentle quiet of Main Street as Danny pulled up at the park. Sara smirked a little to herself as she checked the time on her phone. Even though she'd only known Danny for the space of one conversation, she could say one thing about him: he was punctual. It was exactly noon.
She'd been up half the night, worried out of her mind that this was all a sham, and that the sexy biker had been pulling her leg. The other half, she'd been fretting about this not being a sham, and how she would handle the fallout of her decisions. Now, she sat there on the park bench, weighing all her choices.
One thing she knew, though: it wasn't an option to just leave her life the way it was. What kind of existence was moving from low-rent apartment to low-rent apartment, having no one other than her friend Penny to rely on, and working awful temp jobs where old businessmen just leered at her body while she got them coffee? No reliable man in her life. No husband. No children. Did she want that till she died? If so, what was the point?
Sara chewed on her lip as she watched him approach, as she traced her eyes down and around his strong, goateed jaw, over his slicked-back, wavy hair, and across his broad chest and massive arms. He looked even better out here, in the warm light of day, than he had in the dingy, poorly lit Old Crow.
She could feel herself getting excited as she thought about what it would be like if she signed this deal, if she climbed into bed with him. The feel of his flesh pressed against hers.
She bet he'd fuck her like a real man, too. Not like any of those prissy, unstable flings she'd had.
“You still in?” Danny asked as he, wearing his MC vest and tight jeans just like the day before, came stomping through the neatly trimmed grass and planted himself right next to her. He had a big manilla envelope in one hand, and he slapped it down on the bench next to him.
Sara shivered a little at his proximity, at the smell of exhaust and musky manliness that seemed to roll off him. “I don't know. I mean, how do I know it'll be worth my time?”
He stretched out an arm and put it across the back of the bench like he owned the place, and her. “Believe me,” he said as he glanced down at her, “it'll be worth your time. I brought the paperwork from Pops' estate, if you want to look at it. That way, you know I'm not just making crazy promises.”
She glanced over at the envelope, then back to him. “I probably should look over it.”
He picked up the papers and handed them over to her. “Be my guest.”
She opened the bundle up and looked inside. She immediately saw a bunch of legal documents. She pulled them out and set the empty envelope across her lap, then started to read. Sure enough, it looked like he was telling the truth. There were lots of different assets, and lots of zeroes on their financial assessment.
Geez. Was he really worth this much money?
She mulled over the decision, didn't say anything for a bit. She worried away at her lower lip. Now, with him so close, it seemed so real. She could tell just from the way he handled himself that the “old-fashioned way” would be fun. But, something inside her recognized the danger. I mean, a guy like this, he'd probably been with tons of girls. But, in the end, why her? She put the papers back in the envelope and handed it to him.
“Come on,” Danny said, clearly just jabbing at her a little. “I've got shit to do. You in? Or out?”
“Why me?” she asked.
“Why not you?” he asked. “You're good looking, you seem smart. Even better, you're not some trashy whore. I'd be fine with you raising my kid.”
“Funny,” she said. “You want a woman you can pay to have your child, but you want one that's not a whore. The irony is strong with this one.”
“Yeah,” he said, looking around again. “I know.”
“Are you clean?”
“Do I look like a fucking moron?” he asked sharply, as his head snapped around and his eyes found hers.
“I'm still withholding judgment on that one,” she replied, smiling.
In return, he seemed to just barely allow himself a little smile. “Yes,” he said, accentuating the word. “I'm clean. Any other questions?”
With the way they were sitting on the park bench, his lips were just inches from hers. She could just lean forward and . . .
Her eyes flickered from his eyes, down to his full, delicious mouth. “Do we have to kiss?” she asked.
His eyes followed suit, but his glance down lasted longer than hers. “Why not? I've always figured work should be a little fun.”
She smiled, bit her lip again. “Okay,” she said with a nod. “I'm in. But only because I need the money.”
“Sure it's not because of my winning personality?” he asked, smirking.
She didn't respond.
“Didn't think so. I'll pick you up tomorrow night, alright?”
“Tomorrow,” she agreed, before giving him her address.
Finished with their meeting, he got up from the park bench and went to his bike. She kept her eyes on him the whole time, taking in the way he moved, the way he seemed to stalk across the grass like a predator. One part of her already regretted her decision, but another was conjuring butterflies to flutter in her stomach. It had been so long since she'd just been allowed to have fun, to cut loose.
Maybe, with this she could let things go for a little while, even while she solved her problems and gave her life some new direction.
Besides, it'd be good to get laid. Even a prim and proper priss like herself needed a good fucking every once in a while. And, as she watched the rugged, handsome biker pull out to roar away on his bike, she knew Danny was the man to do it.
Chapter Four
Danny
“Hey old man,” Danny said to the tombstone planted just at the top of the slight incline at the back of the cemetery. The name “Logan Reynolds” was chiseled across the front, with the epitaph “Loving Father and Fallen Knight to the end” just below it. On the ground, a spot next to the plot lay empty, just waiting for when Cathey Reynolds gave up the ghost. Hopefully, that'd be later, rather than sooner.
He drove up here after leaving Sara at the park. He didn't tell his mom he came up here, sometimes. He didn't want her asking about what he talked about.
He hadn't brought his pops flowers or anything. Instead, he'd brought a little pint of bourbon that he clutched in one hand. It had been his favorite brand when he was alive. “Brought you some Knob,” he said, holding it up so h
is pops could see the label. “Wasn't sure what else you'd want, since you didn't ever like flowers or any of that shit.”
The old man didn't reply. Not that Danny thought he would have. He leaned down and set the bottle up against the base of the big chunk of marble.
“Got the letter about your estate, you old goat fucker,” he said as he turned away and looked out down the rise to the opening of the cemetery. They'd interred him up here, near the back, so he'd always be able to look down at the highway that led to the Fallen Knights clubhouse. This way, he could keep an eye on the boys as they rode by.