
Into the Sunset
Author
Iandra Taylor
Reads
638K
Chapters
33
Chapter 1
SADIE
There was a text on my phone from an unknown number.
Unknown
Check on your husband.
It was odd, but so many things over the years had been odd.
It was three in the afternoon. For most of our marriage, Adam had worked second shift, but heād switched to first shift about two years ago. That meant he should be at work. I didnāt know if it meant thereād been an accident or if it was something else.
I took a bathroom break and hid in a stall to call his workplace.
āSorry, Mrs. Henderson, but he isnāt here. Heās not even scheduled today.ā
Yet he left the house this morning and told me he would be working late.
Strike one.
Iād often thought Adam was cheating on me, but Iād never had the evidence to prove it.
When I first suspected he was unfaithful, I had a small child and no way to support us both if I left. But Garrett hadnāt been a child for a while. He was seventeen now, almost eighteen, and could make his own choices in life.
Worried, I clocked out and went home to see if Adam was there.
His truck wasnāt in its parking spot.
As I pulled into my spot next to his, Garrett walked out of the apartment building to head to his part-time job.
āGarrett, have you talked to your father? Is he all right?ā I asked.
He looked at me with hatred in his eyes as he stalked to his car. āWhy do you always fucking ask me? If either of us had something to say to your pathetic ass, we would tell you.ā
He pulled open the car door before turning to me once more. āJust leave me the fuck alone. And while youāre at it, leave Dad alone too. He has something better with her. I donāt see why he hasnāt left your fat ass yet.ā
Then he got into his car and pulled away.
I always tried to make sure my son could never say that I was unfair or that I abused him. No matter what he threw my way, I always treated him with all the love I had. He was the light of my life, even when he was doing everything he could to not be.
When he was little, Garrett was the kindest child Iād ever known. But over time, his father had molded him into someone I no longer recognized. He was always a daddyās boy. And it was getting harder and harder to listen to the vile words that came out of his mouth.
If Iād left back then, I know I would have had to fight to get custody of him. I would have had to find not only a way to pay for our everyday life but a lawyer too. On top of that, I wouldnāt have had any support. I would have been utterly alone, with only my child for comfort.
Over the years, Iād learned to hide my feelings, to not show how much the men in my life hurt me. I saw how happy it made them to treat me like I didnāt matter, and I wouldnāt give them the satisfaction of knowing that their words cut me inside.
Late at night, while Garrett was in his room and Adam was at work, I would go into the guest room and turn on the loud fan. Only then would I let my emotions out.
That little room had become my safe havenāthe place I cried myself to sleep as I wondered where Iād gone wrong with all this. What had I done to deserve the shit life I had?
I slept in that room. I took all the pain and hopelessness I felt and turned it into something beautiful in that room. I became the woman I am today in that room.
Hunched over a second-hand laptop, Iād found hope in words. In the worlds I created. In the characters I brought to life. In the stories that flowed from my fingers and onto the page.
I was still standing, staring at where my sonās car had been parked when my phone pinged with another text from the same unknown number.
It was an address.
I had a general idea of where it was, and I knew I wouldnāt have a problem getting there.
I got into my car and put the address into my GPS. After a deep breath, I pulled onto the street, but my mind remained in the secluded comfort of the guest room.
As time passed, I only left the room to cook, clean, and go to work. After years of listening to their complaints and abuse, it was easier to escapeāto hide from them.
I often thought about why I didnāt just leave. Didnāt just pack up my meager belongings and run away from it all.
Before now, I wouldnāt have been able to make it on my own. Adam had ruined my credit. He controlled our finances, and until recently, I had no way of supporting myself.
Not even my parents would have taken me in. They would have turned me away and told me I needed to go crawling back to my husband, begging for forgiveness.
They raised me to be the perfect Southern ladyāto not argue with my husband and to follow the teachings of the church. The man is the head of the house, and therefore, he can do no wrong.
Divorce was an unpardonable sin according to this town of religious fanatics. It didnāt matter if your husband was unfaithful or if he beat you. You were the one who was breaking Godās law if you left him.
And that stigma would follow a divorced woman around to her dying day.
It wasnāt like my parents didnāt know what was going on. Whenever I would complain about him, my mother would tell me I needed to pray for God to give me the grace to be more understanding.
Eventually, I stopped complaining about how Adam treated me. I actually started to believe the bullshit she spouted. I couldnāt let Adam take all the blame. Part of this was my fault for not standing up for myself, for not just being better.
Now, however, it was a different story. I was in a different place.
Years of hiding in the guest bedroom meant I had years of published books under my belt. Iād hidden every penny I made from my writing and covered my tracks as if I were some undercover spy in a foreign land.
I wouldnāt be helpless again. Right now, I just needed something to push me over the edgeāsomething to make me finally leave the bastard.
Something like an address from an anonymous texter.
It only took five minutes to get there. I didnāt venture to this side of town often; I wasnāt one to go out much at all. I had too much on my plate with my full-time job, housework, and writing books.
I pulled up in front of what used to be the old motel. The town of Centerville was small, and for years, the old motel had been the only place for visitors to stay.
Six years ago, when it had finally closed, a motorcycle club bought it. According to town gossip, it was turned into a clubhouse.
I sat in the parking lot of what looked like the old lobby and stared at the building. A lot had changed. From my car, I could tell that the lobby and a few of the first-floor rooms had been turned into a bar.
There was now a second building peeking out from behind it. More rooms? Though I knew it no longer functioned as a motel. Maybe some of the men lived there.
The sign across the front read āSinnerās Pride.ā I snorted a small laugh.
Some days, it felt like this town had more churches than people.
For years, the religious fanatics had protested the building of any bars or liquor stores in town. When the club had first bought the motel and submitted the permits to turn it into a bar, those churches had raised a huge stink.
But this time, the club won. And based on the number of cars in the parking lot at three-thirty in the afternoon, they were doing quite well for themselves.
This was the first time Iād actually looked at the building since they moved into town. It was not at all what Iād pictured.
The building was clean, and the grounds were free of litter. Although Iād never been to an MCās clubhouse or bar before, Iād read some books about them. By books, I meant romances. And I knew they werenāt something I could take as gospel about biker life.
I could see Adamās truck parked at the other side of the lot. So, the anonymous text was right. He was here.
I closed my eyes and prepared myself for what I might find when I went inside. Did I want to find something? Did I want to see my husband in a way that Iād never seen him before?
I couldnāt really think of an answer.
At one point, years ago, weād had a great relationship. When we first started dating, everything was good. Happy. Even the first few years of our marriage were good.
Everything changed once Garrett came along. It was like I was living with a stranger. Gone was the Adam Iād fallen in love with. Now, almost eighteen years later, I still didnāt have a clue what had happened.
Maybe now would be the time to ask him just that. Or maybe not. All I knew for sure was that as soon as I walked through that door, my life would change forever.
I got out of the car and slowly walked to the entrance. The door didnāt make a sound as I walked inside. No one paid any attention to me either.
I looked around, squinting until my eyes adjusted to the darknessāand I found what I was looking for.
I was right. Nothing would ever be the same.










































