Fall in Love

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Fall in Love Page 74

by Anthology


  He turned her into the tiled wall and she climbed higher on him. She didn’t even want to check to see if he was hard. She didn’t want that temptation. Because right now she was hot enough to do something stupid.

  Harper squirmed against him, the emptiness inside her dying for that piece of him that would end the ache that felt heavier every hour. Just like her mouth, she knew he’d fill her up until she was ready to scream.

  Until she did scream.

  She tore her mouth away from his and scraped her teeth down his neck. “Oh, God, we gotta stop.”

  “Where’s Simon’s stash when you need it? I want inside you so fucking bad I can’t think,” he said with a strangled groan.

  She bumped her bikini bottoms along the ridge of his erection with a matching groan. “I have to get back to work. If I just had eight condoms and four hours, I’d kill you.”

  “Jesus.”

  She cupped his face and slowed the kiss. “God, it’s going to be so good.”

  “No performance anxiety. Nope. None.” Before she could slip away from him, he dragged her closer again and kissed her breathless. “I have a fan thing after the show tonight, so I probably won’t be able to get away.”

  Disappointment sat heavy in her chest. “That’s okay. I’ll be cooking for that shindig.”

  “We’re heading to Dallas tomorrow. I don’t know it quite as well as Austin and Galveston, but maybe we can slip away for a while?”

  She couldn’t stop a smile when she tipped her head back to get a good look at him. “Is that right?”

  “That’s right.”

  “Deal.”

  “Good.”

  CHAPTER ELEVEN

  August 20, 1:00 AM - Texas or Bust

  “Load up, people. We have to be in Dallas by noon.”

  “Are you kidding me?” Simon turned around with a bright red plastic cup in his hand and a girl on his arm. “The party just started.”

  Gordo stepped off the bus, his ever constant iPad in hand. “I sent itineraries to you this morning.”

  Deacon unearthed his phone. Sure enough there was an email and a text outlining their schedule for the day. And as usual, there were so many alerts that he’d missed an important one. “Gordo, you gotta lighten up on the notices. We get so many a day that we stop looking at our phones.”

  “Or it drains our damn battery,” Nick said with enough acid in his voice that Deacon winced.

  He’d taken to carrying his charger and a backup battery pod with him. Between the social media blasts they did and the crappy signal they had in the remote parks, their phones were about as useful as a paperweight.

  He sighed and downed the last of his own cup of beer. Well, that was why he couldn’t find Harper. The food trucks packed up with the equipment to make sure they were in place before everyone else.

  “It’s the only way I can keep you informed. Since you love to ditch me.”

  Nick smirked and tucked his hands into his jeans. “We wouldn’t do that, Gordo. That’s just mean.”

  Jazz socked Nick in the stomach. “Don’t be an ass.”

  “What?”

  She plucked a drumstick from her hip pocket and twirled it idly. “Looks like we’ll be getting a good night’s rest for once.”

  “If you’re not tired, you can climb into the bunk with me.” Nick waggled his eyebrows.

  She shoved him back a step, but couldn’t quite stop a smile. “Pig.”

  “Do we get to bring company on the bus?” Simon asked.

  Nick snorted. “Like you’ve ever asked before tonight.”

  The girl on Simon’s arm linked her fingers in Nicky’s belt loop as well as Simon’s. “I’m not ready to stop partying.”

  Simon’s sleepy eyes sharpened, and the trio loaded onto the bus.

  Fucking awesome. It was going to be a damn long drive.

  By the time Deacon climbed inside, Simon and Nick were sitting on the couches with the music on, and the girl was straddling their lead singer.

  She shifted toward Deacon and trailed her fingers down his belly to his loose cargos. “The more the merrier.”

  “Nah.” Nick hauled her off Simon’s lap and deposited her on his own. “Deak has eyes for only one girl these days. Maybe if he finally gets the good chef on all fours he can finally relax.”

  Deacon hauled Nick off the couch by the collar, pulling him up until his feet dangled. “You do what you want with the women of your choice, but don’t fucking disrespect Harper like that.”

  Nick gripped Deacon’s forearm. “Jesus, I was only kidding. Get off!”

  Deacon dropped him to his feet and stumbled back. “I’m sorry.”

  Christ, what the hell was wrong with him? Getting stirred up by a woman was one thing, but this? He swiped Simon’s flask and belted back a fiery mouthful. He hissed as the vodka tore down his throat and burned like gasoline fumes in his lungs. “Fucking shit, Simon. How do you drink this?”

  Simon grinned. “Take another belt, and maybe you’ll calm down.”

  “Maybe I’ll drop into a coma.” But he took another slug. The haze would be welcome, but he’d have to drink a helluva lot more than was in the palm-sized silver flask.

  He leaned over to the small fridge under the couch and pulled out one of his craft beers. When he washed away the vodka with the smooth stout, he evened out.

  His back felt like an army of fire ants were feasting on him, and his adrenaline was still kicking from the show with no outlet. “She’s making me crazy.”

  “Just fuck her, would you? For all of our sakes.”

  Deacon finished off the beer. He knew Nick was right. But he wasn’t entirely sure that fucking her would end the tight skin. When he went to sleep, she was the last thing he thought of. In the morning—well, like this morning. He’d like that to be every morning.

  Seven fucking days.

  Seven days shouldn’t do this much damage. It had to be the sex. He’d cut himself off for the last few months. The club dates around California and Washington after the single broke had been one mindless fuck after another.

  Not every night, but more than once, he’d let their newfound fame lure him into a bed that didn’t mean anything other than the physical release.

  He understood that. It wasn’t healthy, but at least it made sense.

  With Harper, he didn’t feel any of that. The urgency matched the sense of rightness. And it scared the hell out of him. Everything was changing so fast, and all he could think about was hanging onto something.

  Was it wrong to want it to be her?

  He reached for the six pack under the seat and stalked back to the bunk area.

  He woke a few hours later thanks to an insistent bladder. His head was still a bit fuzzy. After a trip to the bathroom, he wandered into the front of the bus and dropped onto the couch to watch the landscape go by. Joe had the radio on low; the classic rock anthems were replaced with the perfect lyrics that always crawled inside him.

  Not because he had a mother that gave him good advice. Because he sure as shit hadn’t had that. But the lyrics to “Simple Man” had always lined up with his own theories.

  As shitty as days could be, there were good ones to be found. Being patient was his stock in trade. He’d waited out the band, he’d waited out the growing pains of replacing Snake with Jazz and the added bonus of Gray.

  He’d just have to find the patience to figure out Harper. Rushing her wouldn’t do anything to help his cause, but the sense of urgency wouldn’t fade.

  Making her his, holding on to her as if she was going to fade out like the last strains of a song wasn’t a smart move. Instead he had to trust that if she was truly that important, then things would fall together.

  Fate wasn’t something he sat around and waited for. But in this case, he was pretty sure he had to sit on his need to fix and work a problem around to his way of thinking.

  And that sucked.

  Jazz padded out and dropped to the sofa next to him, Nick followin
g a few minutes later. The rest of the bus was silent for a few snores.

  After a bit, Jazz sighed and levered herself off the couch. “I know I’m just the drummer, but I’ve got all this stuff knocking around in my head. And we’re on this damn bus for hours…”

  Deacon sat up straighter. “Okay. Show us.” When she went to the small compartment under the instruments, he glanced at Nick. He just shrugged.

  “Can I?”

  Deacon returned his attention to Jazz. Her fingers were wrapped around the neck of his acoustic. “Sure.”

  She settled on the couch, and his oversized guitar made her look like a little girl. But she quickly tuned the Takamine like it was her own.

  “You play guitar too?”

  “Yeah. The guitar was actually my second instrument after the piano. I can pretty much play anything.” She stretched her fingers. “I got bored easily, so I just kept learning instruments.”

  Deacon could feel Nick tensing behind him. Compromise and lyric writing were hard things to share in Nick’s world. And this woman who’d changed so much of the band was going to insert herself into another of his spaces.

  He just hoped that Nick would keep an open mind.

  She strummed, the piece a simple three chords, soft as a spring breeze off the water. Her bell-like voice tripped over the words at first. She cleared her throat. “Let me try again.”

  The road twists, and the world turns

  The night swallows the day, and we begin again

  But part of me stands still

  Here in the dark, I hear your breath

  In the light of day, your breath is gone

  And part of me stands still

  Nick stood and Jazz stalled. But instead of walking off, he unhooked his own guitar from the opposite closet and sat across from her. “Again,” he said simply.

  So she repeated the song and the chords, and Nick built off the acoustic tones and layered them until her voice blended with the notes.

  Deacon grabbed Simon’s Gibson and sat next to Jazz. He wasn’t the guitar player that Gray and Nick were, but he knew his way around a composition.

  He adjusted the rhythm and the tempo, and Nick followed suit easily. They were in tune whenever he did small changes to a song. Like they linked up at a basic level.

  The three of them played with the words, scribbled down a basic cord progression so they wouldn’t forget and hashed out eighty percent of a song by the time they came into the Dallas venue.

  When Jazz looked up, she smiled. Deacon followed her gaze to find Gray in the doorway. The naked longing on his face shimmered hot and bright before slipping under his usual mask.

  The question was, did he want Jazz or to write with them?

  Maybe it was a little bit of both.

  Joe’s voice boomed over the bus’s inner speakers. “Lady and asshats, we are pulling into Dallas’s premier attraction.”

  Jazz scrambled up to look out the window. The eye-searing blue sky was cloudless. The pavilion looked like any other. Half concrete jungle, half forest in the middle of nowhere. This time, all the accent colors were stone gray, white, and Crayola blue.

  The arches were a little rusty and the cement gave off rays of heat like coils in a stove. This part of Texas, he didn’t miss.

  “It will be a cool one hundred and two today, so make sure you have water and SPF nine hundred. I’m talking to you, Nick, my boy.”

  Nick shifted toward the window and scrunched down in his seat, his chin resting on the cushion as they rolled to the back of the venue. Jazz hopped forward as they parked and did her usual spiel with Joe about the venue and the highlights of the day’s scavenger hunt.

  “We’re changing it up today. We’re sending our very delicious, very clever boys out to hide tickets in a few of Dallas’s hot spots. Well, in this freakish weather everything is a hot spot. More details to come as we pick hunting grounds. Happy scavenging!” She flicked through settings and set the video to upload.

  The doors to the bus opened, and Gordo in his typical khakis and Oblivion blue polo shirt with their logo on the right breast climbed on. His soft-soled shoes were immaculate and his blond hair had been shellacked into its usual dome. He carried a messenger bag. “Hey, people. I have your scavenger hunt items. Great job with the video, Jazz.”

  “How the hell did you see it already?”

  “The video hit your Cloud account. Our phones and iPads are linked, remember?”

  “How could we forget,” Simon grumbled.

  “I sent you itineraries for today. Simon, you have three interviews in the city, so why don’t you go shower and change. Maybe we can do something for the scavenger hunt at the radio channels.” Gordo started typing with his stylus on the iPad.

  “There’s a pretty impressive golf course around here, isn’t there?” Deacon asked.

  Gordo tapped on his tablet. “Yes, about fifteen minutes away from here.”

  Deacon remembered there were a lot of small parks on the edges of Dallas. “I’ll see if I can borrow one of the trucks and take a ride out.”

  “Make sure you’re back for soundcheck at—”

  “Yeah, yeah. Five as usual.” Deacon checked his watch. That gave him four hours with Harper.

  He’d make them count.

  CHAPTER TWELVE

  August 20, 12:00 PM – Storms

  “Hello there, Chef Pruitt. Hiding from me?”

  She scrunched up her shoulders and turned on the balls of her feet. “Of course not.” She popped up and grinned up at him. Before she could curb the instinct to touch him, she laid her palm on his forearm.

  He pulled her around the table and curled an arm around her waist. He bent down to her, nuzzling into the space where her shoulder and neck met. He coasted around the curve of her ear with his nose, then his lips.

  She went very still. Just because her bones were turning to taffy didn’t mean she had to show it. Because seriously, who did that to an ear in public. It was just rude.

  In the best way ever.

  She closed her eyes against the endless tingles from his lips and the light peach fuzz his scruff had become. “Come out with me. Play hooky. Play scavenger hunt with me in Dallas.” She shut her eyes when his lips coasted down the nape of her neck and his hand slid around her waist and under the apron to lightly scratch over her belly. “Come with me.” He nipped at the skin between her shoulder and neck then swirled his tongue around the spot. “Come with me, please.”

  “That’s not fair in the least.”

  “Who said I had to play fair?” His fingertips dug into her belly and then down into the waistband of her pants. Not all the way, just the tiniest fraction of an inch. “I want time with you today. I missed you last night.”

  She rolled her hips because she couldn’t stop herself. God, she was still so wound up from the shower the day before. She hadn’t had a moment alone to even take the edge off. She needed to be able to think, and Deacon’s hands on her caused a whole lot of not thinking to happen.

  His fingertips traced the top of her panties. “I can’t tell you how much I want to get my mouth on you.” Dragging her back to his impressive erection was just cruel. Who knew he had such a cruel streak? “All of you. I intend to know exactly how you taste.”

  “Crap,” she said under her breath. She reached under and took his hand and dragged him out to the doorway. “Meg, I…”

  The head chef was scribbling on a clipboard and didn’t look up. “Get out of here, newbie. I don’t want to see you until tonight.”

  “But I have…”

  Meg looked up. “If you go out with,” her eyes traveled up to Deacon, “McMuscles here, then you better come back with a big old relaxed grin on your face, capiche?”

  “Uh.” Harper wasn’t quite sure what to say to that one.

  “I’ll make sure she comes back in a great mood,” Deacon answered for her.

  She frowned up at him. “Excuse you?”

  Deacon slid an arm around her wai
st and propelled her out the door. “Playing hooky with permission isn’t quite as fun, but I’ll be sure to make sure we get into extra trouble to make up for it.”

  “Where are we going?”

  “I need to place one of the scavenger hunt pieces out in Dallas. I was thinking at one of the parks near a golf course. I saw signs when we were driving in.”

  “You do realize it’s over one hundred degrees out there?”

  “I used to live in Texas. I can handle it. Can you?”

  “I can handle anything you do, buddy.”

  “Where’s the car?”

  “There.” She pointed to the next row. “We haven’t unhitched it yet.”

  “You don’t like making things easy on us, now do you?”

  “Where’s the fun in that?” Shamelessly, she watched his biceps and shoulders flex as he detached the rusty hitch.

  “Ready?” he asked.

  She refocused on his face, blushing when his eyebrow rose. “What?”

  “Enjoying yourself?”

  She bit her lower lip. “Yeah, kinda. I mean I know I shouldn’t objectify you or anything. I’m sure plenty of women do that, but dang, Deacon…you have freaking rocking body. It’s a little daunting, actually.”

  Surprise and that stupid dimple flashed. Seriously, how was she supposed to concentrate when he was so adorable? She was twenty-two years old, not twelve. She could control herself.

  “I like when you objectify me. Just means you’re thinking about getting me naked. And getting me naked means I can get you naked. And that is all win.”

  She rolled her eyes and threw the keys at him. “Objectify while you drive.”

  “I should be keeping my eyes on the road.”

  “Yeah well, I don’t have to. So I guess that’s a win-win for me, now isn’t it?” she said and slid into the passenger seat. He flashed her a grin and took a right toward the highway.

  She’d never actually seen him do something so normal as drive. The road setting was getting to be all they knew. Stage and backstage, trucks and food carts, and of course, tattoos.

 

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