Wood (A True Lover's Story #2) - A.E. Via Page 0,108
asked.
“Why should I go get him and bring him back to the reason he left in the first fuckin place?” Mike clarified.
Wood didn’t want to confess this to anyone else but Trent, but he literally had no choice. “I love him, all right. But that’s my business to tell, not yours,” Wood said between clenched teeth.
“I don’t care about what you love,” Mike said, then motioned to Manny and two other big men blocking his back door. “Grab him.”
“Wait! Wait!” Wood backed up and threw his guard up in front of him. “He loves me too.”
Manny stopped his guys and scowled as only an angry makeshift uncle would, like he was waiting for Wood to elaborate.
“Just bring him back to me… I’ll take it from there. Trust me,” Wood begged, needing Trent home and not caring what ass he had to kiss to make that happen. “I can’t explain us, Mike. Trent and I just go together.”
“I don’t trust your big ass as far as I can throw you, Wood.” Mike flipped his wrist and the next second his blade was gone, and with an unspoken signal, his men backed down. “And you and my son go together about as well as toothpaste and orange juice.”
Wood made sure Manny and Mike could see his genuine, most deepest sincerity when he gritted out, “I don’t give a fuck what you think.” Wood’s eyes moved around his place at the gang that’d assembled to take him out or at least do him serious bodily harm. “I don’t care what any of y’all think. I don’t give a damn about you. You. You.” Wood pointed around the room. “You. I don’t even freaking know you, so I doubly don’t care what you think.”
Mike watched him a few seconds, his intense eyes focused only on him, reminding Wood of Bishop and how he used to scrutinize a man so hard it could feel as if his skin was being fileted. He wasn’t sure what Mike ended up seeing, but eventually he turned around and stormed down the hall. Wood followed him and watched as Mike turned a full circle in Trent’s bedroom.
“Where the hell are you, kid?” Mike mumbled to himself. He went to Trent’s dresser and fiddled with a few pieces of mail before he tossed them to the side. He walked over to Trent’s record player and slowly ran his finger along the face of the equalizer. “Spotless. Not a speck of dust in sight.”
“Because he takes care of that thing like it’s his child. He cleans it every day.”
Mike sighed, lifting one of the rare Miles Davis albums from a black crate. “I know exactly where he is.”
“Good. Go get him now. His back was hurting earlier, and I know it’s time—”
“You listen to me,” Mike hissed, pointing his finger in Wood’s face. He clenched his jaw at the gesture but otherwise stayed quiet. “I’m gonna bring Trent home, and you got twelve hours to fix your fuckup. When I check on my boy tomorrow, he better sound happier than Mr. Fucking Rogers.”
“Done,” Wood agreed easily. “Now go. And take your damn gang with you.”
Chapter Forty-Nine
Trent
Trent wiped his mouth, then took a long gulp of his sweet tea, just barely covering his belch before it escaped loudly. “Mama, that really hit the spot. I haven’t had cooking this delicious in ages. Bishop has a partner that brings me food a lot, but his stuff is more gourmet-style meets a kind soul.”
Mama smiled as she stirred a large pot sitting atop one of her three industrial stoves. “Sounds like goodness.”
“It is. But I’ve sure missed this.” Trent took his plate to the dishwasher in back and set it on the rack. It was as if nothing had changed. This had been his home away from home at one point. Where he’d come every day after his mom left him with her musician boyfriend to go work her late shift. It was a time in his life that Bishop hadn’t been much a part of because he never understood Trent’s fascination for rhythm and blues. But it was never about the music only. It was the love and sense of belonging this kind of music gave him, the family it introduced him to. Only Trent had been too young to understand then that blood didn’t make anyone family. “The club still looks and feel the same, Mama. I see all the upgrades are still done on your kitchen first.”