by Lyrica Creed
“She did? I wanna see.” A hand appeared between the seats, interrupting my thoughts, and Colt dropped the phone into Jeter’s palm.
When we were parked in the drive in front of the Powers’ house, the boys immediately exited the back. Intending to pause Colt long enough to thank him for the evening out, I reached, and my hand landed on his arm.
Misunderstanding my chaste intentions, he leaned toward me, and my eyes fluttered closed when his lips settled on mine. The kiss wasn’t hot and hungry, but it wasn’t tender and sweet either. It was easily the best I’d ever had, excluding one. Yet, the passion was practiced—not a spontaneous combustion like when I’d kissed Gage. His tongue stroked mine one last time, and I thought he was easing out of the kiss. Instead of retreating, his tongue curled enough to caress the backside of my lips hitting a sweet spot that had me groaning and digging my fingers into his arm.
I was practically panting when we parted. His eyes ran over my face, and I clung to his gaze, shaken and confused about what I was feeling.
“Thought this wasn’t a date.” I managed to toss out the wry words and to lift my brows when reminding him of his words before we’d set off to the restaurant.
He returned my grin with one of his famous ones. “It wasn’t… Until you stole a goodnight kiss.”
“I stole?”
“I was getting out of the car like a gentleman.” He reminded, and I realized my hand was still on his arm when he lifted it, touching his forefinger to my lips.
“Lipstick?” I inquired and searched for any signs on his lips. The shade was one of the ‘all day stay’ varieties, but I wouldn’t doubt such a thorough kiss might have done some smearing.
“No. Pretty,” he replied, and his smile lifted again. “I wonder if Gage is going to bust a song out?”
Thinking of Gage had my body subconsciously pulling back. “That was random.”
“Not really.” His fingers slid down my cheek as his hand fell away.
And then I remembered. If Gage didn’t produce a song by their studio session, he could be on his way to being out of the band or the band as a whole could be cut from the label. There was enough hanging in the balance already without whatever friction would be caused if Colt and I had a fling.
Leave it to Colt to muse aloud the possible repercussions of a kiss we were still in the middle of.
‘…if you want your band to stay together, you need to get her out of here… And if you’ve already fucked her, then get ready for the fallout!’
I laughed. A sarcastic tinkle of sound that bounced around the interior and off the glass.
He frowned, almost glared. “What?”
“You make it so easy.”
“What easy?”
“Just when I feel like I’m about to do something stupid with you, you open your mouth, and I remember why I don’t.”
His mouth opened but it was a silent gape, and then I saw the dawning on his shadowy features. “No… No! Do something stupid!” His eyes were alight, glimmering in what little light spilled from the windows of his home and the landscaping. “Let’s do something stupid!”
The playfulness on his fine face was hard to resist. I must have smiled, because he curved one in reaction to reading my face and exclaimed, “See? See!” He invaded my space again, tilting his head to mine. “We could have fun, Scarla. We could have so much fun.”
His lips covered mine on the last word, and I surrendered for the time.
I don’t want to want him but I want him.
Like Gage, yet so different. I didn’t want to want to want the boy who’d been my brother. But I could no longer resist my impulses when it came to him.
Wait, why was Gage in my head?
And Colt. He could anger me with words one second and have me clinging to him during a kiss the next?
Oh, momma. I understand your addiction to musicians…
Heaven help me. I have no hope of escaping that gene… Double whammy… Whammy bar… Pun… Obviously delirious…
We kissed in all the delicious ways we had a moment ago. This time, my fingers curled into my seat because I refused to let them travel his skin or comb through his hair.
When I noticed the brightness of the interior, I had no idea how long the car lights had been behind us. A vehicle had rolled through the gate and was idling behind us, but now it passed by, taking a spot up ahead on the drive.
“Must be here for the kid…” He stole another kiss, and lingered a breath from my lips. “Wear your tiniest bikini—or nothing at all—and meet me in the little pool…” He swiped his tongue over my lips, and I conjured up the smaller pool on the lower level—out of sight of the house. “In an hour…” Another languorous kiss. “…if you want to get stupid with me.”
I giggled at the way he said the last part—yes, giggled like a twelve year old—and he laughed too as he brushed his lips to mine.
The rap on the window behind him made me jump out of my skin. The shadow blocking out any glow of lighting on that side felt ominous, and I wondered if I still had that old container of pepper spray in my purse.
“You two going to finish this shit up any time soon?”
Gage!
Chapter 28
Fuck. A fist formed. He was going to hit him. Drag him from the car and punch the pretty face that kept women creaming their panties. His fingers curled into the door handle, and he jerked, but found it locked.
There was enough light shining through the windshield to make out Scarlette’s wide-eyed stare, mussed hair, and kiss-swollen lips. He’d called it all right. His bandmate had busted a nut getting her here to the privacy of his house the moment opportunity arose.
His fist made contact with the glass again, right as the door swung open. Instead of stepping out of the way, he rounded the obstacle in one quick motion.
“You son of a bitch! I told you to keep off my sister!” His growl was mad-dog feral when he got a look at the other guy’s equally well-kissed mouth. Scarlette had done that—had kissed those lips so thoroughly, they were as puffy as hers were.
His fist was twisted in the front of Colt’s dress shirt when headlights lit the gate from the street side.
Colt surged out of the car and stood at eye level. “Make up your fucking mind. She’s your sister. She’s not your sister. Which is it, asshole?”
“Doesn’t fucking matter. Either way, she’s off limits to you!”
The front door of the house burst open and a lanky boy ascended the pathway to the drive. The kid waved toward them, hollering out a “Thanks, Mr. Powers!” before closing himself inside a nondescript SUV. Red taillights flashed, and the vehicle began to circle about, back toward the gate.
Spotlighted in the headlights, Scarlette, having crawled to the driver’s side, hopped from the Range Rover and rested a restraining hand on Gage’s chest.
The contact tingled through his tee shirt. He looked down, and realizing he still had ahold of Colt, released the other guy’s shirt. As the car neared, they were all bathed in halogen headlights for a few seconds before the hum of the gate joined the crickets chirping and soon after, they were alone in the driveway again.
Scarlette’s touch was still a white-hot brand until she let her hand fall to her side.
“Can we talk?” He wanted to reach out, run his fingers down her hair, but he made a fist to stay the compulsion. “Please?” He implored, willing her eyes to hold his.
At last, she met his gaze head on and then glanced at Colt.
Colt nodded his acknowledgment to them both and strolled toward his house.
“I’m sorry.” The moment he was alone with her, the anger bled away, becoming remorse, and he begged into the blues of her eyes. “I know I said it in the voicemail, and on the phone, but I wanted to say it—to you.”
Her eyes dropped, and she nodded. Scarlette had never been timid all of those years ago. Wary, yes. Distrustful, often. But not fragile. She was all of those things in this moment, and he hated himself for mak
ing her feel that way.
“I didn’t want you to go. But I know why you did.” He knew he was still repeating things he’d already said to her phone. What he wanted to do was beg her forgiveness for being a corpse in the shower, and for being stupid enough to risk anything happening again with her in the house.
She stayed quiet, her gaze touching over his face in acceptance of the apology and then skittering away to the landscaping lights and shadows in the yard.
“You said you found Ivy?”
Her eyes swung back. “In a way.” She told him about the sex tape with Bradley Walker. “Apparently, she’s fine. But I want to see her before I leave. Find out why she never answered my messages and is never on Facebook, or Instagram, or anywhere.”
He nodded and hated that she looked miserable and confused. Shifting from one foot to the other, he hesitated and then admitted, “There was a text on my phone from the PI from a couple of days ago—to call him. It got buried under the rest of the texts. I saw it right after I talked to you on the phone tonight. I’m guessing he’d found her too, then. I’m sorry. Another screw up on my part.”
Was she wondering if his being high all the time affected overlooked texts? Her eyes had narrowed, but then regardless of what she’d been thinking, her generous nature conceded, “You do get a shit load of messages. It’s bound to happen.”
“I’m still sorry. I let you down.” He knew he was talking about much more than the missed text.
If she picked up on his deeper meaning, she ignored it. “Colt said you kind of know him―Bradley.”
“I don’t have his contact info or anything. But I think I can get it.”
“Thanks.”
His contemplation was drawn to her grateful slight smile—to the lips Colt had experienced a thorough taste of, and he hadn’t experienced nearly enough.
He wanted to kiss the taste of any other man away, but he took a safe step back, away from the close proximity of the rise and fall of her chest.
“I’ll make some calls first thing tomorrow. When do you have to go back?”
“Soon. Pretty soon now that I know Ivy’s fine.”
He knew she wanted to disappear for the twentieth anniversary week. So while ‘soon’ didn’t surprise him, it still pricked when she seemed anxious to leave L.A.
“Want to come over tomorrow and swim?”
Her lips curved, but he recognized it as the automatic polite face she sometimes used. And then she finished off with her catch phrase for something she had no intention of doing. “Sure. Sounds good.”
“Please. It helps me compose. And we both know I need to pull a song out of my ass.”
This drew a real smile from her. Were the afternoons of floating in the pool while he played guitar sweet memories for her too? He could only wish.
“Okay. I’ll be by.” She dipped her chin in a nod—a surefire ‘you can count on me’ signal. Her fingers dipped into the front pockets of her jeans and she swayed a bit in that sexy way she had.
He took two more steps back and glanced at the Escalade to stay grounded. Please come home. Get in the car with me and just come home.
“Promise me something? Before you and him get any farther into this thing, have a look in his studio.”
“What thing? You mean me and Colt? There’s not a thing.”
“Seeya tomorrow, Scar.”
“What’s in his studio?”
Your father. Everywhere. He forced his feet to keep moving. If he stopped long enough to answer, he would either drag her to the car or fall down on his knees begging her to come with him.
Chapter 29
It made no sense.
Gage had consistently gone from discouraging anything to do with Colt to throwing me at him. Only that wasn’t right either. In leaving me last night, he hadn’t pushed me to Colt. It seemed more as if he was giving me enough information to make my own decision.
Although I still saw glimpses of him, for the most part, gone was the big brother who had threatened hormonal boys when I’d been a teen. Gage, ‘the new big brother,’ treated me as if he trusted my judgment.
Maybe brother was the wrong word. Maybe that was the logic behind this change. Maybe Gage was no longer treating me in a brotherly way. Maybe the protectiveness came from some other feeling—the same strange and deep feeling I was beginning to feel.
Squinting against the sun, I made my way around the top-level pool, getting splashed one or twice by Seth’s butterfly stroke.
“Hey,” I called out after one of his flip turns. “Your daddy awake?”
“He’s in the kitchen.” The teen stopped and gestured to the French doors before disappearing beneath the water surface in a dolphin-like dive.
I was almost to the windowed entry when one door yawned open, and Colt gestured me inside.
“Morning.” We were simultaneous in our greetings.
Pushing a ‘World’s Best Dad’ coffee mug into my hands, he eyed me and teased. “My midnight swim was lonely.”
I shrugged and offered an apologetic smile as I filled the cup and added sugar. “I was tired.”
He nodded, accepting the answer as easily as he’d made the proposition the night before.
“I like your house.” My eyes swept from the cozy kitchen we stood in to a great room on the other side of a colorfully tiled bar. In no way did it look like a rich bachelor’s pad in the way that Gage’s did. I wondered if Caroline was responsible for the sheer curtains, fun knick-knacks, and eclectic furnishings. “Think I could get a tour?”
We did a walk through, and I found all the rooms to have the same inviting, lived in feeling as the front two. Seth’s room was a typical teenaged boy mess. Lastly, somehow we finished the tour standing at the foot of Colt’s unmade bed.
“My housekeeper only comes by once a week,” he explained.
“And men can’t be bothered to make beds.”
I took a nervous sip of coffee when he didn’t move out of this room as quickly as he had the others.
“It’s a wasted effort. Not sure why anyone makes beds.” He quirked his rock star smirk.
He looked at me funny when I only nodded and smiled before backing toward the hallway. And then I realized. Possibly, despite his son being in the pool outside, he’d thought I had been hinting toward this particular room when I’d asked for a house tour.
Ironic, when all the while, I hadn’t seen the one room I’d had in mind.
“So where’s your gear? You don’t have a studio like Gage?” He seemed to flinch, and I wondered if I was being too nosey. Musicians and their studios, and all that. Gage, after all, kept his locked. “You don’t have to show me. I just asked because I didn’t see a guitar anywhere except Seth’s room.”
Liar. Gage had my mind going ninety to nothing with his unexplained remark the night before.
What’s in his studio?
“No, it’s cool. It’s just not here in the house.”
He led me outdoors, down a stone path and to a room dug into the hillside.
“Underground is great soundproofing,” he joked, as he entered the code on the keypad.
He flipped the light on, and I found myself in a room so similar in structure to the other rooms in his home, I would never have known it was practically underground.
Strolling the perimeter, I eyed the many posters hanging of bands over the decades—including his own band, Fire Flight.
“Wow. Just wow. Did you ever imagine you’d be a poster on your own wall?”
Posters even covered the ceiling. I paused before Jimi Hendrix and then moved on.
That’s when I saw it.
One entire corner dedicated only to Tyler Conterra. There were easily a dozen posters. My focus froze on the many sets of eyes identical to my own, some staring directly at me and some gazing with a haunted look at something beyond the eye of the camera lens.
My palms grew clammy.
Behind me, Colt was speaking, but his words didn’t register.
&nbs
p; A tall corner display case angled between the two walls, and I felt the coffee mug begin to tremor in my hand. The guitar inside the glass was identical to the one in two of the posters next to it, and this wasn’t the first time I’d seen it in pictures.
The seventh string was the least of its unique features. Sleek and shiny, it was the indigo color of a midnight sky. Jagged lightning bolts, specks of stars, and a skull were part of the custom paint job. But I knew what completed the custom design was out of sight on the back.
Feeling lightheaded, I lifted the coffee mug to my lips. When I gulped the tepid liquid, I gagged.
“…every album of your father’s and every word on them before I was fourteen. His music is what inspired me―what made me ask for my first guitar.” With his usual lack of intuition, Colt was jabbering on despite the turmoil of emotion, spinning Tasmanian devil-like through me.
Interrupting him midsentence, I blurted, “Can I hold it?”
“Sure! Yeah.” He hastened to what looked like an amp and popped off the front revealing a safe. Kneeling, he spun the code in, swung it open, and dug around until he held up a key.
What had made me ask that? It was as if my vocal cords had been possessed. I couldn’t hold it!
I wanted to reach out, stop him from opening the display case. But I didn’t. After gingerly lifting the instrument from its stand, he stroked over the fretboard with his thumb as he deposited it into my arms.
I was holding it!
The weight felt significant. Monumental. I edged away from the table where I’d set my half-empty cup. The mass was no different from any other guitar I’d held, and yet I could feel the weight straining at my arms. Tingles began in my palms and rolled upward into my elbows and then on up to my shoulders and exploded at the base of my windpipe. I wheezed with the effort it took to breathe.
Using the tips of my fingernails, I strummed, and then as worshipfully as Colt had done, I ran my thumb up the neck. Next, I dropped to the nearest seat—a drum stool—and rested it flat in my lap so I could drink in the sight of it. I brushed my fingertips over the skull and up a streak of lightning.