Home > Wood

Wood
Author: A.E. Via

Chapter One


Wood

 

Wood sat uncomfortably in the weak aluminum chair in front of the house director’s desk, trying not to bear all his weight down on it. He was sure the flimsy thing had a one-hundred-and-fifty-pound weight capacity restriction, and from the groans it was making, he figured he was testing it to its limits. Wood braced his elbows on his knees, reaching for yet another document he had to sign before he could leave the halfway house for good.

Wood skimmed over the bullet points: Yes, I will report to my parole officer. No, I will not do illegal drugs. No, I won’t engage in any criminal activity. Yes, I will remain in an AA program. No, I will not try to contact my victims. Signed. Agreed. Now can I please just get the hell out of here already. As if the director heard his thoughts, he gave Wood a tight smile.

“One more form and I swear that’s it.” He chuckled loudly which quickly morphed into a hacking cough. The stocky man had supposedly quit his two-pack-a-day habit, but it smelled as if Mr. Mannis had just stubbed one out before Wood walked in.

From what he understood, Mr. Mannis was kicked out of the military for serving his own needs and not those of his country. He’d messed up so much until he’d ended up with a gig like this. Babysitting a bunch of grown men who’d also messed up once too many. Wood had learned early that life was ironic as hell.

“You got a place lined up, don’tcha?”

“Yeah,” Wood mumbled.

Mr. Mannis had to finish his cough before he was able to accept the final form. He skimmed over Wood’s answers, then glanced at him over the rim of his reading glasses. “I see your new place is in Norfolk.”

Wood didn’t answer, noting those words weren’t posed as a question. He knew the expression Mr. Mannis wore. Norfolk could be a rough city, and he was advised to avoid certain places and types of people since it was also where Wood had got into trouble. He didn’t roll his eyes in irritation, but he’d already been through this with his parole officer. Instead he listened quietly while he stared down at his two trash bags totaling his entire life’s possessions.

“And employment?”

Wood rubbed his hand over his beard before dropping his arm back to his thigh. He stared at the colorful ink wrapped around his forearm, his art, his designs. “Yeah, I’m going to stay on with the temp agency. It’s kept me with steady work so…”

Mr. Mannis nodded and continued to stare at him for a long moment as if he had some kind of telepathic ability. “You know, I’ve watched you around the house over the past several months, and you seem to stay to yourself. Quiet. Didn’t make any friends… or enemies. You avoided the bullshit that goes on.” He glanced down at the folder. “I read your record, Mr. Wood. And I gotta tell ya, the man that’s lived under this roof the last six months doesn’t seem like the same man that did the things listed here.”

“But he did,” Wood gritted out.

The director cocked his head to the side, and Wood held his glare with his own. “You still drink?”

“No.”

And more fucking staring. “The man on this paper sounds violent, angry, and quick to—”

“The man on that paper did what he had to do to survive prison, all right. And I think you’ve been doing this job long enough to know that.”

“I have,” Mr. Mannis snarled, leaning forward. “And I also know a man doesn’t do the kind of time you did and come out fine. And come out as composed as you’re putting on.”

Wood got on his feet. “I never said I was fine, because you never asked how I was doing. But it doesn’t matter what you think you know. You don’t know me. And I’ve done the required sessions already. So, if you’ll excuse me. I don’t wanna keep my ride waiting.”

Mr. Mannis rocked back in his creaky chair. “I hope I never see you again, Mr. Wood.”

“Just Wood. And I can make sure that happens for you.” Wood left the stifling office with his bags slung over his shoulders.

The brisk February air felt good against his heated face as he stepped out the doors of his residence for the last five and half months. No more check-ins, bunk partners, curfews, and a shit ton of other rules he no longer had to adhere to. He hurried down the steps to the end of the long driveway, finally feeling like a free man. He’d gone from being told what to do every day for seventeen years in prison only to be released to Mr. Mannis’s mansion of rules and regulations. He looked back at the large Victorian-style home, then toward the long street that led out of the city toward the interstate. He almost stumbled at the realization of what that long stretch of road meant. He was on his own now, and shit was about to get serious. There was no one to tell him what to do and when to do it. And he admitted that fact scared the life out of him. But his good friend Bishop Stockley had done it, and he heard he was getting by all right since his release.

He dropped his bags at his feet on the curb and stood leaning against the basketball hoop Mr. Mannis allowed the guys to play on for one hour a day. He was excited to see his old cellmate again. He grinned a little at their hard-won relationship. It definitely hadn’t been love at first sight. Wood remembered when Bishop first got to McDowell Correctional Facility. He was a transfer from another prison and only three years into his sentence. But he looked as if he was fresh-in the way he trudged into the cell with tears in his eyes as if he’d never seen a damn six-by-eight before.

Those first few days as his cellmate, Bishop didn’t eat, he didn’t exercise, and he didn’t sleep. And when he did he had horrible nightmares, and Wood had wanted to beat the crap out of him for causing him so much disruption. And he’d come damn close until Bishop began to cry out a name in his dreams… Trent. He’d found out that Bishop had been serving his time all right until he was forced to leave his best friend behind, his brother, who he’d sworn he’d never abandon, and he was terrified for him. Wood believed it probably would’ve broken Bishop if he hadn’t stepped in and helped him through it.

It was just something about the way he’d described this Trent that made Wood curious.

“Mmmm, Wood. Are you leaving so soon? Say it ain’t so.” A soft, silken voice slithered across the back of his neck and down his spine.

Wood closed his eyes and took a deep breath, knowing exactly who that voice belonged to. His cock couldn’t help but take interest at the slightest innuendo of sex these days, but throwing in a hot sex addict like Rayne to tempt him was just plain cruel. Wood dropped his head back as slender fingers wove intoxicatingly through the length on top of his head, applying the perfect amount of pressure to his scalp. Damn the guy knew how to touch a man in all the right places. Another arm wove around his waist as a hand eased up his torso, grazing his left nipple. Wood groaned as his cock pulsed eagerly at the mere thought of some action.

“Yeah. Don’t leave me, Wood. Not before I get to hear you moan my name.”

Warning sirens began to blare in Wood’s head as he took a couple of steps forward and turned to face his—now ex—housemate. “Rayne.” Wood was damn near panting as he braced himself against the goalpost. “Stop it.”

“Why?” he asked, inching forward always so bold in his approach.

Hot Books
» House of Earth and Blood (Crescent City #1)
» A Kingdom of Flesh and Fire
» From Blood and Ash (Blood And Ash #1)
» A Million Kisses in Your Lifetime
» Deviant King (Royal Elite #1)
» Den of Vipers
» House of Sky and Breath (Crescent City #2)
» The Queen of Nothing (The Folk of the Air #
» Sweet Temptation
» The Sweetest Oblivion (Made #1)
» Chasing Cassandra (The Ravenels #6)
» Wreck & Ruin
» Steel Princess (Royal Elite #2)
» Twisted Hate (Twisted #3)
» The Play (Briar U Book 3)