Her cousin's fraud put a target on her back. A methodical biker made her his.
Carmen Reyes built Bloom from nothing. A flower cart at the farmers market became a real shop, serving every quinceañera, wedding, and funeral in Newark's North Ward. When loan sharks show up claiming she owes forty thousand dollars for a debt she never signed, Carmen refuses to break. She's fought too hard to lose everything now.
Then they destroy her display case and promise worse is coming.
She's never met anyone like Riff.
He perfected violence through repetition. She made him want to build instead of break.
James "Riff" Quinn joined Creeping Death MC because the brotherhood understood what he needed—patterns, precision, the same brutal motions executed until they were muscle memory. When his grandmother sends him to check on a scared florist with broken glass in her shop, something shifts. Carmen Reyes isn't a problem to solve.
She's the first pattern that feels like more than survival.
As the loan shark operation crumbles under Creeping Death's systematic assault, Riff discovers that protecting Carmen isn't enough. He wants to claim her—in front of his brothers, in front of the whole neighborhood. And Carmen's learning that the most dangerous man she's ever met might be the only one gentle enough to help her grow.
In Newark's industrial heart, where refinery flames paint the sky and violence is the only language predators understand, one woman will find her place in a world of leather and chrome—and one methodical man will finally find a rhythm worth keeping.