“Calla?” a powerful masculine voice says in my ear, alarming me.
“Manny?” I place my hand over my heart, surprised to see Cain’s best friend from school. “You frightened the hell out of me.”
His deep chuckle rumbles around the music.
“Sorry about that.”
I freeze when he comes into view.
“Girl. It’s been way too damn long since the last time I saw you. And fuck me straight to hell, you’re a sight for sore eyes.”
Even though it’s dark and he can’t see me, I roll my eyes.
“How have you been?” he asks.
“Great, until I came here expecting to get Cain to sign for a divorce and find myself being held hostage,” I scoff.
“About that..,” he begins, scratching the back of his head. “Look, Calla. I know you have no clue what the hell is going on, and I’m one of the very few people here who knows the truth as to why you took off.”
I go to interrupt him and he holds up a hand.
“Just listen,” he says.
“Shit’s been bad for years. I mean, real bad. Cain had it in his mind when he came back after you left him that he was going to set things straight within this club. Do right by you and find a way to get you back. You may not believe me when I tell you this, and frankly I don’t blame you, but I’m not bullshitting you when I tell you that what he did fucking destroyed him. He took off when he couldn’t find you. He disappeared for over a year, and to this day, whenever anyone asks him where he was, he tells them it’s none of their damn business. No one, not even his dad, knew where he went.”
Manny takes a long drink of his beer. Eyes trained straight ahead as he goes on.
“He hasn’t been the same since. He came back bitter and filled with hate for everyone around him. He dug right into learning everything about this place. Told his dad off more times than I can remember. And then a few years ago, those fucking Savages declared war on the club. Shit went to hell and Jeb ended up getting himself killed. Cain fucking lost it when that happened. He turned into a fucking crazy man. No one could reason with him.”
A dull ache forms in my chest. I feel for Cain and the fact he was blindsided by all of this, but my heart can’t get past the fact that he didn’t love me enough to stay true to his vows or the promises he made me. He disappeared for a very long time... we could have left together and tried to work things out. So many things could be different right now if he hadn’t given up on us so easily. I turn back to Manny.
“Do you know where Cain disappeared to?”
He chugs back some more of his beer.
“Yup.”
“Are you going to tell me?”
“Nope.”
I cross my arms over my chest.
“It doesn’t really matter. What’s done is done. I couldn’t care less.”
“Keep telling yourself that. Maybe when you’re ninety, you’ll believe it.”
He laughs at his own joke. I don’t find any of this funny at all. I want answers, and Manny most likely has them.
“Who are these Savages, and what does this all have to do with me?” I ask abruptly.
“They’re the fucking enemy,” he says without hesitation. “Why they’re the enemy is a story for Cain to tell you, not me. I will say this, though. The Savages have the worst reputation of all of the MCs. They think they can rule every other club out there. Those assholes will kill men, women, even members of their own club. Hell, they’ve gone as far as killing police officers.”