This book promo is through RABT Book Tours and PR.
Doc Teaser Tuesday promotes the latest read from a regular here at Sarandipity’s (and Frugal Freelancer). Y’all welcome back author Harley Wylde, share with a friend, and follow Sarandipity’s.

Your message has been sent
Book Details

(Dixie Reapers MC)
Motorcycle Club Romance, Age Gap, Suspense
Date Published: October 24, 2025
When a fierce heroine collides with a hardened outlaw, secrets ignite and sparks fly.
Nova — I was never a part of my uncle Batsā outlaw MC world. He kept me far from the Dixie Reapers, convinced distance meant safety. But when my parents died in a crash I know wasnāt an accident, I walk straight into the world Iāve been shielded from, where every secret carries blood, betrayal, and danger. Each step puts a bigger target on my back, but I canāt stop. Not when the conspiracy reached higher than I ever imagined. And then thereās Doc. Heās a risk I canāt afford, no matter how much I want him.
Doc — I patched into the Dixie Reapers for a fresh start, not to guard the 19 year old niece of a fallen brother. As a veteran and the clubās medic, I know how to fight, save lives, and bury temptation. But Novaās stubborn, reckless, and too tempting to resist. I fell fast, and hard. Once Iāve set eyes on her, Iām not letting go. Protecting her tests me more than any battlefield ever has, but losing her isnāt an option.
Enemies circle like vultures — dirty cops, corrupt judges, men willing to kill to silence us. Together we uncover a deadly web of human trafficking and murder. But in the outlaw world, justice comes at a cost. Nova is mine, and Iāll burn the world down before I let anyone take her.
If you like possessive alpha males, gritty MC romance, heart-pounding suspense, and age gap romances, youāre going to love Doc and Novaās story!
WARNING: This book contains mature themes, government corruption, human trafficking, violence, and adult content. Reader discretion advised.
EXCERPT
Nova
My little Honda looked pathetic among the gleaming motorcycles, like a child whoād accidentally wandered into an adult party. I gripped the steering wheel, knuckles white, as I scanned the Dixie Reapers clubhouse. Uncle Bats had always warned me to stay away from this place, from his world. But Uncle Bats was dead, and I needed answers that only his brothers might have.
The folder and notebook on my passenger seat contained everything I had left of my mother — her research notes, newspaper clippings, and a lifetime of suspicions that had probably gotten her killed. I picked them up, clutching them to my chest like armor.
āYou can do this, Nova,ā I whispered to myself. āFor Mom and Dad.ā
I took three deep breaths, counting each one the way my therapist had taught me after the accident. Except it wasnāt an accident. I knew it wasnāt, no matter what the police report said.
Outside, the late afternoon sun cast long shadows across the parking lot. Men in leather cuts moved between motorcycles, their laughter and conversations a low rumble that stopped abruptly when they noticed my car. I felt their gazes on me, assessing, suspicious.
Uncle Bats had kept me secret from them, and while I knew of the Dixie Reapers, Iād never been allowed to meet them. Now I was about to shatter that barrier. The thought sent a tremor through my hands, but I shoved the fear down deep where it couldnāt reach my face.
I stepped out of the car, my sensible flats crunching on the gravel. Five feet tall in my best shoes, Iād never felt smaller than I did walking toward that building. The folder and notebook clutched to my chest were my only shield against their stares.
āHey, darlinā, you lost?ā called one man, his tone somewhere between amused and suspicious. Tattoos covered his arms and disappeared beneath the leather vest emblazoned with the Dixie Reapers patch.
I kept walking, eyes forward, spine straight the way my mother had taught me. āLook them in the eye, Nova,ā sheād say. āDonāt let them think youāre afraid, even when you are.ā
The surrounding conversations died one by one, replaced by silence and the weight of two dozen stares. I could feel them taking in my brown hair, my hazel eyes, my five-foot-nothing frame that had never intimidated anyone. I probably looked like a strong wind could blow me over, but they didnāt know about the steel underneath. They didnāt know I was Mary-Janeās daughter.
The clubhouse door loomed ahead, guarded by a mountain of a man with a graying beard and hands the size of dinner plates. His cut identified him as a full member, not just a hang-around. He stepped directly into my path, forcing me to stop or walk straight into his chest.
āClubhouse is members only, sweetheart,ā he said, voice like gravel. āWhatever youāre selling, we aināt buying.ā
Tiling my chin up, I met his gaze. āIām not selling anything. I need to speak with whoeverās in charge.ā
He chuckled, but there was no humor in it. āThat so? And what business would a little thing like you have with the Dixie Reapers?ā
The men behind me had moved closer, forming a loose semicircle. I could feel them at my back, curiosity and suspicion rolling off them in waves.
āMy name is Nova Treemont. Iām Batsā niece.ā
The effect was immediate. The doormanās expression shifted from dismissive to shocked in an instant. A murmur rippled through the men behind me.
āBullshit,ā someone whispered.
āBats never had family,ā said another.
āHe had a sister,ā another voice said.
The doormanās eyes narrowed, searching my face. āBats never mentioned no niece.ā
āHe wouldnāt have.ā I met his gaze. āHe kept me out of⦠all this. For protection.ā I gestured at the clubhouse with my free hand. āBut heās gone now, and I need help. The kind only the Dixie Reapers can provide.ā
The doorman studied me for what felt like an eternity, his gaze moving from my face to the items I clutched and back again. I could almost see the gears turning behind his eyes, weighing the possibility I was telling the truth against the risk of letting a stranger into their sanctuary.
āWait here.ā He turned to enter the clubhouse.
I stood rooted to the spot, aware of the bikers still watching me. I could feel the curiosity and hostility aimed my way. I kept my breathing even, pretending I couldnāt feel their stares boring into my back.
The doorman returned a minute later, holding the door open. āCome on,ā he said gruffly.
I stepped past him into a world my uncle had spent his life shielding me from. The air was thick with cigarette smoke that clung to the furniture and walls. The smell of beer and whiskey undercut everything, along with something else — something distinctly male and dangerous.
Pool balls clacked on a table where a game paused mid-shot as players turned to stare. Behind a long bar, bottles gleamed under dim lights. Motorcycle memorabilia covered the walls — license plates, photos.
It should have felt alien, this place my blood relation had called home. Instead, deep inside me, something whispered recognition. As if some part of me had been waiting to find this place my whole life.
The doorman nudged me forward with a hand that could have wrapped around my entire upper arm. āThis way.ā He guided me deeper into the clubhouse. āTheyāre waiting.ā
I followed, clutching my motherās research to my chest, aware that I was crossing a threshold I could never uncross. Behind me, I heard someone say softly, āMary-Janeās kid? Jesus Christ.ā
Theyād known my mother then. At least some of them had known, and theyād stayed away all these years. Just as Bats had intended.
The thought steadied me as I walked toward whatever waited ahead. I wasnāt just Nova Treemont anymore. I was Mary-Janeās daughter, Batsā niece. And I had questions that needed answering, no matter how dangerous the answers might be.
The back room was darker than the main area. Five men sat around a table, their faces half in shadow, their cuts marking them as the officers of the Dixie Reapers. I stood before them, a girl in jeans and a cardigan, feeling like I was facing a firing squad. But Iād come too far to falter now.
The doorman whoād escorted me in gave a brief nod to the man at the head of the table before stepping back, positioning himself in front of the closed door. Message received: I wasnāt leaving until they decided I could.
āSo,ā said the man at the head of the table. His neatly trimmed gray beard and dark eyes seemed sharp beneath heavy brows. The patches on his cut read, āPresident — Savior.ā āYou claim to be Batsā niece.ā
It wasnāt a question, but I answered anyway. āI am Batsā niece. My mother was Mary-Jane Treemont, his younger sister.ā
A muscle in the Presidentās jaw twitched. āBats was a brother to us for a long ass time. Never once mentioned a niece.ā
āHe was protecting me. Keeping his family separate from⦠this life.ā
One of the other men — younger, with a Vice President patch — snorted. āConvenient story, sweetheart. Got any proof?ā
I unzipped my bag and pulled out a small photo album, sliding it across the table. āPage three. Thatās my mother and uncle at her college graduation.ā
I watched as the President flipped to the page, his expression unchanging as he studied the photo of a much younger Bats with his arm around my mother.
āCould be anyone.ā The VPās tone lacked conviction.
āCheck the next page,ā I said. āThatās from my parentsā wedding. My mother, my father, and uncle.ā
The President studied the photo longer this time before passing the album to the man next to him. It made its way around the table, each man taking a moment to examine the proof of a side of Bats theyād never known.
āSo youāre his niece.ā The President slid the album back across the table. āWhat do you want from us?ā
I took a deep breath and placed my folder on the table. āMy parents died several weeks ago in what was ruled a car accident. Their car went off the road. Police said my father lost control.ā
āAnd you donāt believe that.ā The VP watched me with narrowed eyes.
āNo,ā I said firmly. āI donāt. My mother was an investigative journalist. She was working on a story.ā I opened the folder, spreading out newspaper clippings and photocopied notes across the scarred wood. āShe was investigating connections between Magnolia County officials and organized crime. Money laundering, illegal gambling, possibly human trafficking.ā
The men exchanged glances, their expressions giving nothing away. Iād honestly expected some sort of reaction, especially since this was happening in their territory. My uncle had always been clear that while he may be an outlaw, some things werenāt tolerated.
āThree days before she died, she called me,ā I continued. āShe said sheād found something big. Something that would blow the whole thing wide open. She wouldnāt tell me details over the phone, said sheād show me everything when they came to visit that weekend.ā My voice cracked slightly. āThey never made it.ā
I pulled out a copy of the police report, pointing to highlighted sections. āThe accident report says the car was traveling at high speed, that my father lost control. But my father never drove fast. He was cautious, meticulous. And the witness statements are vague. No one actually saw the car go off the road.ā
āAccidents happen.ā An older member with a gray ponytail watched me intently. āDoesnāt mean someone killed your parents.ā
I met his gaze directly. āAfter the funeral, our house was broken into. Nothing valuable was taken, but my motherās home office was ransacked. Her computer was gone. All her files.ā
That got their attention. The men straightened, exchanging glances that spoke volumes.
āI managed to salvage these.ā I gestured to the documents on the table. āShe kept backups in a safety deposit box. But itās not everything. There are references to evidence she had that I canāt find.ā
The President leaned forward, resting his forearms on the table. āAnd what exactly do you expect us to do about this, Ms. Treemont?ā
āIāve tried the legal route,ā I said. āIāve been to the police, the FBI, even a private investigator. No one will touch it. The case is closed.ā I swallowed hard. āMy uncle āBats — once told my mother that if she ever needed help, real help, she should come to his brothers. That you take care of your own.ā
āBats said that?ā The VPās eyebrows raised.
āHe did,ā I confirmed. āAnd with him gone, youāre all I have left.ā
The Presidentās eyes were unreadable as he studied my face. āYou understand what youāre asking? If what youāre saying is true, youāre talking about going up against powerful people. The kind that can make a car accident happen.ā
āI know.ā My voice came out steadier than I felt. āBut they killed my parents. Theyāve been watching me too. Cars following me home. Strange calls. Last week someone broke into my apartment.ā I pulled up my sleeve, revealing a jagged raw wound on my forearm. āI surprised him. He had a knife.ā
That drew a low curse from one of the men who hadnāt spoken yet.
āBefore she died, my mother dug into something dangerous — something big enough to get her killed. These bastards still tried to bury it, but I swore Iād drag the truth into the light and make them pay.ā My gaze cut across the table, meeting each manās eyes in turn. āJustice for my parents is the only thing that matters.ā
The silence that followed was heavy, broken only by the distant sounds of the main room beyond the door.
Finally, the President gathered up my motherās papers, tapping them into a neat stack. āWait outside.ā
The doorman stepped forward, opening the door for me. I hesitated, reluctant to leave my motherās research behind.
āWeāll return these,ā the President said, seeing my hesitation. āGo on now.ā
I had no choice but to comply. The doorman escorted me back to the main room, indicating a worn leather couch against the wall. āSit tight.ā
I perched on the edge of the couch, feeling the weight of curious stares from the men scattered around the room. No one approached me, but I could hear the whispers.
ā⦠Batsā nieceā¦ā
ā⦠Mary-Janeās kidā¦ā
ā⦠looks just like her motherā¦ā
That last comment made me look up sharply, trying to identify who had spoken. An older member nodded at me from the bar, raising his beer bottle slightly. āKnew your mama when she was younger than you. Bats always said she was the smart one in the family. Said she could sniff out a lie from a mile away.ā
A lump formed in my throat. Iād never heard anyone talk about my mother like that, like theyād known her personally. āDid you know her well?ā
The man shrugged. āWell enough. Your uncle always spoke highly of her investigative skills. Said she couldāve been FBI if she hadnāt been so damn stubborn about working outside the system.ā
That sounded like my mother. And it sounded like something Uncle Bats would say.
I sat straighter, hope kindling in my chest for the first time since Iād arrived. Maybe they would help me after all. Maybe Iād finally get the answers Iād been seeking for several weeks.
I just had to convince them I was worth the risk.
I traced the edge of my motherās notebook with my fingertip, counting the seconds that stretched into minutes. The leather couch beneath me had seen better days, cracked and worn by years of men larger than me shifting their weight. Around the room, bikers pretended not to watch me while doing exactly that. I wondered if Uncle Bats had sat here, on this very couch, planning runs or celebrating victories Iād never know about.
My gaze drifted to a wall of photos near the bar — men in Dixie Reapers cuts, arms slung around each otherās shoulders, grins splitting their bearded faces. I rose slowly, drawn to search for my uncleās face among them. A few members tensed as I moved, but none stopped me.
There he was. Younger, with fewer lines around his eyes, his arm thrown around another member, looking more relaxed than Iād ever seen him during his rare visits to our home. Heād always been on edge around us, as if expecting trouble to follow him through our door.
Now I understood why.
āHe was a good man,ā said a voice behind me.
I turned to find the older member whoād spoken to me earlier, the one whoād known my mother.
āOne of our best,ā he continued. āLoyal to the bone.ā
āBut not loyal enough to tell you about his family,ā I said softly.
The old bikerās mouth quirked in a half-smile. āThat was his loyalty to you, girl. Keeping you separate. Safe.ā He nodded toward the back room. āNot many of us manage that trick.ā
Before I could respond, the door to the back room opened. The President emerged, followed by the others. The room fell silent as they approached.
āMs. Treemont,ā the President said, his voice carrying across the now-quiet clubhouse. āWeāve discussed your situation.ā
I returned to the couch, perching on its edge, hands folded in my lap to hide their trembling. āAnd?ā
āBats was our brother.ā The President spoke in a measured voice, choosing each word with care. āThat carries weight. But what youāre asking involves the club in what appears to be a personal vendetta against powerful people, based on circumstantial evidence.ā
My heart sank. āItās not just –ā
He held up a hand, cutting me off. āI didnāt say we wouldnāt help. I said youāre asking a lot.ā
Hope flickered back to life in my chest.
āWeāll hear you out,ā he continued. āReview what youāve brought us. But I canāt promise involvement beyond that. Understand?ā
I nodded quickly. āYes. Thank you.ā
āDonāt thank me yet.ā His expression remained stern. āThis isnāt a democracy. I make decisions based on whatās best for the club, not for outsiders — even ones with Batsā blood.ā
Teaser Tuesday – October 21st
10. Books 1987
12. Book Junkiez
17. The Pen Muse
20. Gale Stanley
About the Author
Harley Wylde is an accomplished author known for her captivating MC Romances. With an unwavering commitment to sensual storytelling, Wylde immerses her readers in an exciting world of fierce men and irresistible women. Her works exude passion, danger, and gritty realism, while still managing to end on a satisfying note each time.
When not crafting her tales, Wylde spends her time brainstorming new plotlines, indulging in a hot cup of Starbucks, or delving into a good book. She has a particular affinity for supernatural horror literature and movies. Visit Wylde’s website to learn more about her works and upcoming events, and don’t forget to sign up for her newsletter to receive exclusive discounts and other exciting perks.
Author on Facebook, Instagram, & TikTok: @harleywylde
Publisher on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, and TikTok: @changelingpress
Save 15% off any order at ChangelingPress.com with code RABT15
Pre-Order Today: https://books2read.com/DocDRMC
