by Cari Quinn
Hard to believe she thought a laundromat in one of the poorest sections of town wasn’t safe. Pfft.
Simon met Jackson Miller’s gaze. Intelligent and far too bright brown eyes locked on his. The guy looked too pleased with himself. And if Deacon didn’t get his smile under control, Simon was going to be tempted to yak all over again.
Simon held his hand out. “Simon Kagan.”
“Oh, I know who you are.” Miller pumped his hand, his grip firm and his palm dry. Again, that slick smile tipped up the corners of his mouth. Crinkles gathered at the corners of his eyes.
Not a completely fake smile. Close, but not all the way there.
Simon nodded toward his right. “Nick Crandall, Jazz…” What was her last name again? She was his Pink Pixie. Hell, he rarely ever used her real name.
Pretty in Pink bounced forward, jamming her ever-present drumsticks into her back pocket. “I’m Jazz Edwards. Our other guitarist, Gray Duffy, had to…he had to go to work.”
Simon glanced down at her, but she wouldn’t meet his gaze. What now? He sighed and transferred his attention to Deak. The big puppy’s green eyes held a light he’d never seen. Was this the real deal?
How many times had some exec promised them the world? Especially when the world came with deals that included the band shelling out an arm, two dicks and four legs to pay for it? Up front, before the contract.
Simon crossed his arms, jamming his fists under his biceps. The sticky grit from the smoke machine and his own sweat-saturated skin only added to his discomfort. “What soundtrack?”
“For Pacific Coast.”
Simon’s heart jumped and skidded into his throat. His temples throbbed with the quick rush of blood. “The action movie?” The summer blockbuster that was on the damn television every five minutes?
Simon frowned. Shouldn’t the score or soundtrack be done for that already?
Miller nodded. “If I didn’t know any better, I’d think you guys had sneaked on the sound stage. ‘The Becoming’ is tailor-made for the love story part of the movie.”
“Really?”
Simon heard the hope and the excitement in Deacon’s voice. Deak was the level-headed one—and he was freaking entranced. Simon had to admit, the guy looked a helluva lot more legit than anyone they’d ever spoken to before.
Jackson smiled. “Really. We’d like to discuss this with you, if you’re amenable.”
“Yeah, we—”
“We need to talk it over.” Simon said over Deacon.
Deacon shot him a look that could have melted bone. Simon felt the tingles at the back of his neck. The same ones he’d felt in Phil’s office when they’d made their first contractual gig deal. But he was so tired of being let down.
This was too important to let excitement screw them sideways.
Nick stared at his feet. He wasn’t grinning, but he also wasn’t scowling. Jazz, on the other hand, couldn’t wipe the smile from her face. In fact, with every bounce on her platform boots, she crowded in on Nick. Who didn’t seem to mind the invasion.
Nick of the don’t-crowd-me persuasion.
Shit.
So much for the pounding to warn him away from everyone’s favorite cotton candy confection. Jazz was beyond talented, but she may as well have a neon sign screaming danger, sharks ahead. Big, fucking hungry sharks that would leave nothing but chum in their wake.
Okay, he had to stop watching Shark Week on Netflix.
Simon returned his gaze to Deacon—an unusually keyed up Deacon who wouldn’t stop clenching and unclenching his massive fists. Seriously, the veins were going to burst out of his forearms.
No help there.
Simon sighed. Since when was he the voice of reason? That was Deak’s job, Nick’s job—hell, even Gray was probably more responsible than he was. The fact that he had to be the downer pissed him the fuck off.
“Got a number?” Simon asked. “A card?”
Miller nodded, his smile losing a bit of its luster.
“You understand that we have to check you out, right, buddy?” Simon added, hoping the question would jog something in Deak’s brain too. Hello, manage this?
“Sure, I get it.” Miller’s smile was back in a blink. “Can never be too careful. But this is a time sensitive deal, guys…and you too, Miss Edwards.”
“You were right to lump me in with the guys,” Jazz said with a shrug and a grin.
Miller’s eyes lit with interest as he got trapped in Jazz’s tractor beam smile. Simon knew all too well how easy it was to focus on her elfin face and huge blue eyes and forget where the lines were.
Placing Jazz and her short skirts and hot pants in the far corner of his brain was the only way to keep him from hitting on her that was for damn sure. Jazz was one of the few chicks he’d met who didn’t have lead-singer-syndrome. As in I want to bang one. Her being in the band herself probably helped, but she clearly had other preoccupations. If she moved any closer to Nick, she’d be burrowed under his damn skin.
“I think—”
“Is tomorrow good enough?” Simon again talked over Deacon.
This time Deacon only clenched those giant hands. There was no unclenching. Simon knew he was risking another beating—even the Peacemaker could be pushed too far—but this was important and they needed to discuss it. All of them.
Including Deacon’s new writing partner, who had a habit of disappearing at the most inopportune times. Where the fuck had Gray gone?
Miller buttoned his suit jacket and smoothed his palm over the trim lines. “I hope to hear from the band as a whole.” He turned to Deacon. Obviously the man knew his mark. “Walk me out?”
“Absolutely.” Deacon’s shoulders remained tight under his Rebel Rage shirt. The faded cotton strained with multiple washings and his friend’s increased muscle mass. The guy was spending as much time lifting weights as he was playing bass these days.
Deacon followed him out the side curtain and down the rickety stairs, his deep voice blending with the cacophony of people still mogging around the Rhino. Simon followed, but a handful of women pushed forward and blocked his path.
Fans?
They weren’t exactly unheard of, but they didn’t usually linger around the side of the stage. They found them at the bar and occasionally at the van once the bar closed up for the night.
Simon smiled automatically as a gorgeous woman snagged him by his belt loop and trailed her fingers through the light patch of hair that led to his zipper. He sucked in a breath at the slide of her nails below his waistband. “Hello there.”
Her steady blue eyes were a little disconcerting. All thoughts of chasing Deak disappeared under the implacable focus of a beautiful lady. Or not a lady, which was even better. “I was watching you on stage.”
“Handy,” he said around a cough as her nail nipped over the head of his very interested cock.
“I was just wondering if you’re as energetic without your clothes on.”
Any twinges of pain were still buried under the high from the show and the promise of a very willing female. He spared a look over his shoulder. Nick and Jazz were a little too intent on each other. He really didn’t want to have to beat on his best friend again so soon.
The woman’s clever fingers curled around his shaft. “You didn’t answer my question.”
Simon choked, his gaze now riveted to the woman in front of him. “Stamina’s my middle name, darlin’.”
She lifted onto her toes, flicking the tip of her tongue along the dent in his chin. “Good.”
Simon looked back once more, but Nick and Jazz were gone. Her fingers tightened on him and he groaned. “Let’s just see how many rounds it will take to tire you out.”
Her scarlet lips curved up into a triumphant smile. “Many.”
Putting suits filled with promises, band drama and a niggling worry into one of his favorite boxes at the back of his brain, he dragged the hot blonde closer. His fingers dug into the firm flesh of her ass and he skimmed his lips o
ver her cheek to her ear. She smelled of expensive sex and had real diamonds dangling from her earlobes. “Where to?”
She rubbed against his chest. “I’ve got a hotel for the night.”
He could work off the adrenaline still spiking through his veins and enjoy a real mattress for once. Halle-fucking-lujah. “Works for me.”
Simon whistled happily as he did a quick turn around one of his favorite people on the block, a Latina woman in her sixties, just outside the door of the Fluff and Fold. Parts of his body screamed from even that little exertion, but he just didn’t care. “How are you doing, Mrs. Gonzales?”
“You’re up early, scamp.”
Simon shrugged. “Haven’t been to bed yet.” Well, not to sleep anyway.
She tsked at him, but couldn’t stop a smile. Comfortable lines dug grooves into a still beautiful face. “Someday you’re going to have to become a responsible member of society.”
Impulsively, he caught her hand and turned her out in a quick cha-cha step then dropped a kiss on her cheek. “That day is probably not today.”
She laughed and waved him away. “What am I going to do with you?”
“Marry me and have a dozen babies.”
“You only say that because I can’t do that anymore. When are you going to settle down with a good girl?”
“I haven’t met a woman that can compete with you.”
“Scamp,” she said again, but laughed as he intended. Just the idea of setting down made his scalp itch. “Have a good day, querido.”
Simon continued his quick salsa step on the way into the laundromat. “You too.” The night before had been wild. That blonde was probably a good decade older than him and had double, possibly triple his stamina.
There had definitely been a revenge angle working somewhere in her behavior. Hell, she hadn’t even told him her name.
“Finally. Don’t you answer your phone?” Deacon pounced, his green eyes flashing with anger and more. Was that anxiety?
Simon halted mid-samba. “It’s dead. I didn’t exactly have my charger on me.” Nor had he been able to think about his phone or his own name by the time she’d been done with him again this morning. He dropped into one of the seventies reject orange seats beside Nick, wincing as his ribs protested the all night workout and the unforgiving chair.
And his dancing.
Nick leaned over and sniffed loudly. “You stink like sex.”
The corner of Simon’s mouth kicked up. “Classy sex. The sheets were at least six hundred count.” The mattress had been as exciting as the sex, to be honest. His back felt awesome for the first time in months, minus the fact that he was still moderately broken from the fight.
“Manwhore,” Jazz muttered.
Simon nodded with a smirk. “You know you want a ride.”
“I’d need a full body condom.”
He stretched out his legs, crossing them at the ankles. “This body is pure and disease-free.”
“Oh, yeah, it’s a temple.”
He chose to ignore her sarcasm and smiled sweetly. “Exactly.”
Jazz rolled her eyes, but her lips twitched toward a smile. Nick, however, got still and silent. Gray sat across from them with his fingers laced behind his head. An empty chair separated him from Jazz.
Huh. That was unusual. Gray nearly had Jazz on his lap whenever they were in the vicinity of each other.
“If you’re finished?” Deacon asked.
Simon skimmed his hand under his shirt and pressed a hand to his ribs. “Yes, Dad.”
“Fuck off, Simon. You’re the one that wanted us to talk before we discussed the deal with Jackson.”
“Is that what this is about? And we’re on a first name basis with him now, Deak?”
“I called him this morning and set up a meeting. If you’d stop smirking and joking long enough to think about what kind of opportunity this is, maybe you’d get serious for the first time in your life.”
Simon stood slowly and walked up to Deacon until he could feel the ridiculous heat that always seemed to emanate off of the big guy. “I was serious last night when I said we should all talk about this first. You wrote the song with Gray and it’s not a band song.”
“It is—”
“No, we didn’t discuss that,” Gray said quietly.
Deacon took a step back and turned to Gray. “You’re in the band, the song becomes part of the band.”
“Really? Because I was reminded again last night that this whole deal was very, very temporary.” Gray’s eerily even tone was as effective as a shout. The room went silent.
Simon tipped back on his heels. They all thought he was an idiot, but he’d seen this coming from the very beginning. “And I give you exhibit A why we need to talk.”
Deacon gave him a withering glance then sat beside Gray. “I thought we were all good with working together. Our magic becomes more obvious each night we’re on stage.”
“Tell that to your bandmate over there.” Gray nodded toward Nick.
Deacon’s gaze swung to Nick. “Is that true?”
Nick shoved his fists into his hoodie. “This was always going to be temporary. Snake will—”
Deacon stood, the room vibrating with his growl of frustration. “Snake is going to bounce out of rehab and have a pipe in his hand or a line up his nose within seventy-two hours and you know it.”
Nick leaped out of his chair so fast it skidded into a washer with a bang. “You can’t just kick a man out of the band when we can’t even contact him. Where’s your fucking loyalty?”
Deacon stepped forward until their chests touched. He had at least four inches on Nick and all six feet five of him was strung tighter than synthetic guitar strings. “My loyalty is to the people that show up and care about this band. Snake hasn’t been loyal to the band since his first stint in rehab over a year ago.”
“Some of us can’t be as perfect as you are, Deacon.”
“And some of us live in a place called reality. When are you going to get it? This,” Deacon waved around the room, “is the band. This is what a band is supposed to be like. We all click. We sound good—hell, we sound fucking amazing. There hasn’t ever been this kind of chemistry in the band. I’m not going to throw that away for Snake.” His voice gentled. “I’m sorry, I’m just not.”
Simon winced and stepped beside Nick, unsure what his best friend was going to do. Christ. He was just starting to be able to take deep breaths again. He really didn’t want to fight anymore.
If Nick and Deacon went at it, he was going to have to step in. Deacon would mop the floor with Nick. There was a reason he was the peacemaker of the group. Deacon didn’t allow himself the luxury of a short fuse because he was far too adept at fighting.
Scary adept.
Jazz tucked her feet up under her on the chair. “Can I just say something?”
“No,” came a chorus of voices.
She popped up, obviously undeterred, perching her cute little butt on the back of the chair and planting her obscenely sexy boots in the middle of the seat. “Why don’t we just go and see the studio and find out what they’re looking for? Why get all bent? It might be a ridiculous joke, or they might want to turn our songs into techno-crap.”
Simon jerked back a step. “Seriously, Pink Pixie, did you have to go with techno?”
She shrugged and dug out one of her drumsticks to twirl. “While I’m enjoying the whole measure-your-dicks diatribe, what I really want is to see if this is a real deal. Then we can worry about joint custody of the song.”
“I agree.”
The posturing and chest bumping suddenly stopped at Gray’s quiet words.
Gray leaned forward, his elbows propped on his thighs. “I want to hear what they have to say. Then Deacon and I can talk about the copyright of the song if need be.”
Simon rose onto his toes and dropped back onto the balls of his feet. “Deacon, did you research this guy?”
“Of course I did.”
“And he
’s legit?”
“I did a Google search on his name as well as checked in with the company he works for. Miller’s in acquisitions for talent both on the musical score end as well as finding new bands. He’s worked with Aerosmith and Jay Z, for God’s sake.”
Simon’s eyebrows shot up. “Jay Z?” His taste in music was as eclectic as his taste in women. Jesus fuck. “Well color me informed. Who’s driving?”
Gray snapped a set of keys around his finger and into his palm. “I’ll drive.”
“Can you fit us all?”
“I’ve got my work car. We’ll fit.”
“Shotgun,” Deacon shouted.
“Asshole,” Simon muttered.
“Long legs, shrimp.” Deacon said with a shrug.
“Think I could take a shower?”
“I think you can stink like sex for a little while longer,” Nick said with a grin. He thumped Simon on the back. “Maybe it will be a deterrent for all the ladies at the studio.”
Simon frowned. He hadn’t thought of that.
“Oh, now don’t pout, Pretty Boy. You can take a few hours off, can’t you?”
Simon shrugged. “Probably a good idea. At least on the first impression.”
Jazz rolled her eyes and skipped after Gray. He didn’t give her a backwards glance. Christ, they were going to have to come up with a name for the soap opera this shit was becoming.
As the Oblivion Turns?
Nope—pretentious.
Days of Oblivion?
No…wait. Lost in Oblivion. That had a certain ring to it.
Simon grinned and followed Nick into the backseat of the swanky Lincoln Town Car. He sunk into the plush seats, smoothing his hand over the supple leather that was softer than suede and silk combined.
Now he could get used to this. “Who the hell do you work for, Gray?”
Gray didn’t stared straight out the window. “I work for a private mobilization company that specializes in high risk transports.”
“So, you’re basically a cabbie?” Simon asked.
“Something like that.”
Simon nodded and threw his arm out along the back of the seat. Jazz elbowed him in the ribs and he winced through the black spots. “Can you get your sex stink off me?”