Incapable
Ainslie Paton
www.escapepublishing.com.au
Incapable
Ainslie Paton
Love can be a great healer, except when it hurts…
As voice actor royalty, Damon Donovan is trouble. He’s professionally intimidating. He’s confident. He’s charming, funny and genuinely talented. And he triggers the nurturing instincts newly separated Georgia Fairweather has sworn to ignore.
Damon Donovan is used to three types of women: those who fawn, those who mother and those who want to fix him. So a reticent, prickly engineer he can neither awe nor charm triggers his interest.
A recording engineer and a voice actor should be a match to sing about, but the thrilling rhythm they create is soon drowned out by static. Georgia doesn’t know who she is, and Damon doesn’t know who he’ll become.
Can a man facing his insecurities and a woman afraid of her own instincts harmonise, or are they destined to sound good in theory, but be out of sync in life and love?
About the Author
Ainslie Paton is a corporate storyteller working in marketing, public relations and advertising.
She’s written about everything from the African refugee crisis and Toxic Shock Syndrome, to high-speed data networks and hamburgers.
She writes cracking, hyper-real romances. Her other books include: Grease Monkey Jive, Getting Real, Detained, Floored and Hooked on a Feeling. The other two novels in the Love Triumphs series are Insecure and Inconsolable.
Ainslie blogs at: ainsliepaton.com.au
You can chat to her on Facebook or on Twitter @AinsliePaton
Acknowledgements
Beta readers rule.
For life and loss and bravery. For strength and insight and determination.
For Kathryn.
Contents
About the Author
Acknowledgements
1: Eyes Open
2: Sound of Alone
3: Lucky
4: Foresight
5: Flying Blind
6: Disturbed
7: Sorting Colours
8: Go Fish
9: Pure
10: The Force
11: In the Dark
12: Shadow Comfort
13: Hide and Seek
14: Lost and Found
15: Naked
16: Beneath
17: Technicolour
18: Freefall
19: Nothing
20: Rottweiler
21: Huge
22: Vulnerable
23: Voiceless
24: Kiss it Better
25: Ripped
26: Postmarked Sorry
27: Chokehold
28: Death Wish
29: Blown
30: Whispered
31: Seen
32: Unfixed
33: Annoyingly Alive
34: Secretarial
35: Surviving
36: Jupiter
37: And Beyond
Bestselling Titles by Escape Publishing…
1: Eyes Open
Taylor blasted her horn like she was announcing the grand opening of the gates of hell.
Damon set the alarm, shouldered his bag, pulled the front door closed and locked it. She started blasting again before he got across the pavement to her little car. He felt for the handle and swung the car door open as she pumped the horn the final two times.
“Geez, Tay, I’m not deaf.” He threw his bag on the floor and got in.
“No, but you’re slow. I said I’d be here at ten.”
“It’s quarter to.”
“Damn.”
He laughed. She was so always prompt. Taylor the reliable, the girl least likely to let you down, despite having the appearance of the girl most likely to mess you up. It amused them both she was trying to put one over him, which meant he had to tease her—as mercilessly as possible. It wasn’t going to be difficult.
“You put perfume on to go to the gym.”
“I did not.” She hit the blinker and pulled out from the kerb. The indignation in her voice could’ve starched his shirts.
“Cut grass. It’s going to make me sneeze.” He’d smelled it the second he sat down.
“Why would I put perfume on to go to the gym?”
“Waste of a good spritz.” He sniffed, then put his hand to his face to try to quell the itch. “Did you bath in the stuff?”
“Does it really smell like cut grass?”
He sneezed.
She thumped him, hard on the top of his thigh, and he should’ve seen it coming. “You did that for show.” He also should’ve gone for a hug before going for ritual humiliation. He’d missed her so much.
He sneezed again, let that second splutter stand for itself and felt the third one building at the back of his sinuses as she made a right-hand turn onto the main road.
“Damon.”
He sneezed then laughed. It wasn’t often his nasal passages rushed in to help him get a rise out of Taylor. “You’re such a girl.” She was the same tomboy who’d gotten him into trouble on the farm when they were kids.
She flicked the blinker on again and turned left. “I’m not letting you out of the car till you tell me if it really smells like a fricking front lawn after a push mower’s been over it. It was expensive, fuck it.”
“First I’d have to know why the hell you’re wearing perfume to the gym.”
She pummelled the steering wheel. “I kinda had plans before you called.”
He swivelled in his seat to face her, the need to tease put aside. “Why didn’t you say? I could’ve called Jamie.”
“They kinda scrambled like eggs.”
“Was there a new man involved in these plans?”
Blinker on again. “None of your business.”
He cleared his throat, moment of sympathetic understanding over. “Couch, or possibly Buffalo. Grown on the south side, mowed with a Victa at dawn.” Did people wax on about perfume like they did about wine? No idea, but he was going for this.
“Why didn’t you stay in LA?”
If Taylor was attempting to date again, this was big news and he wanted in on it. He went for very round vowel sounds, David Attenborough via Pierce Brosnan. “A light frost was present at the time of harvest, adding a touch of petrol to the fragrance. A bouquet designed to bring out the best in expulsions of mucus.”
“I hope you fall off the treadmill and die.”
He held back a laugh and they pulled into the gym car park. “A lingering aftertaste of stale air conditioning with a high note of body odour.”
“I hope the elliptical smacks you in the head and gives you brain damage.”
Taylor was a locked safe in matters of the heart and he didn’t have the combination, none of them did. He could feel another sneeze building and shook his head to hold it off. “Best enjoyed by those who like their perfume to stimulate barfing.”
Taylor shut the engine off. “Why do I do the things I do for you?”
He sneezed. “Ow.” He turned to face her. “Ou mad me bi my tun.”
She threw her arms around his neck. “You big baby.”
He hugged her skinny body close, dragging her half into his seat to do it. “Thath’s my livethihood you’re dithing there.” His nose twitched and he sneezed again. “Geeth, Tay.”
She pulled his hair and pushed her face into his neck and he tried not to breathe her too deep.
“You going to tell me what the eau de lawn is all about?” Her no was the rub of her cheek against his collarbone. “Do I need to beat the bastard up for you?” He stroked a hand down her back.
She pulled away. “Yes. Beat him to a pulp. That’ll make me feel
better.”
He nodded. “You point him out and his flesh is mine to bruise.”
She opened the door. “I still hope you come a cropper in there. Cut grass. It’s bloody Yves Saint Whosit and it cost more than a week’s rent.”
He got out his side and she’d already come around the car to meet him. “Why didn’t you ask me to get you something duty free?”
She snuggled into his side and he felt her shrug. “You’ve got enough to worry about without buying me perfume.”
“You only have to email what you want. Easy as.”
“Yeah, yeah.”
He stopped and she was forced to prop with him or let go his arm. “I’m serious. God, girl, the things you do for me. You filled the fridge with stuff, the freezer too.”
“Pasta, there’s nachos and that burnt fig, honeycomb and caramel ice-cream you like. I used the money you left me.”
“It’s not about the money. It’s embarrassing what I got paid for recording the game alone and you won’t let me buy you anything.”
She let go his arm. “I don’t want you or anyone buying me things. I can buy my own things, and if I can’t afford them, then I’ll wait till I can.” Her vowels weren’t round, but they were distinctly pissed.
It was going around. “That ticks me off, you know that.”
“Yeah, well, live with it, Vox.”
He growled, his Captain Vox signature growl—sardonic menace with a squeeze of humour. “Does the dickhead who stood you up come to the gym?”
“Why?”
“Cause you really have put me in the mood to take him down.”
She put the back of her hand to the back of his and he took her arm. “Big talker, Damo.”
He laughed and put a hand to her shoulder. “They don’t call me The Voice for nothing.” But the laugh was forced because Taylor’s insistence on doing everything the hard way made him grind his teeth.
She groaned. “You’re so full of yourself.”
“You’re so lawn at dawn.” He could feel her trying not to crack up.
They got through reception, flashing their membership tags, and stopped in the corridor separating the women’s and men’s change rooms. She gave him a shove towards the men’s. It only took a few minutes to find an empty locker, stow his bag, take his water bottle, earplugs and towel out, and meet her again.
When they got to the cardio floor, Taylor started laughing. “I might get my wish.”
“Which one?”
“You on the floor, treadmill stack. They’ve put new equipment in since last time we were here.”
He groaned. The new machines would have new programs and interfaces; feel dissimilar underfoot and in his hands. All his regular settings would be redundant. Taylor was still laughing when they stepped onto side by side machines.
He felt around the console, identified the main stop, start buttons and the one to increase and decrease speed. “Where’s the earphone jack?”
She leaned over and plugged him in and then they were both off, running for the next twenty minutes. It was the same on the elliptical and the rowing machine, getting the speeds and tensions set the way he wanted them to test his fitness was a nuisance. It’d be less frustrating if he’d had more sleep. Maybe. It was easier in the free weights room. Everything familiar again. By the time Taylor flicked him on the chest with her towel to say she’d had enough, he was light-headed and needed grease.
They went to the food court adjacent the gym and he scarfed a hamburger with the lot and a strong black coffee and Taylor told him about the gigs she’d been auditioning for and joked about her day job, but she wouldn’t tell him who the perfume was for.
“You still want to surprise the guys?” she said, on the way to the car.
He did. He’d been away too long this time and it didn’t feel like he was home till he reconnected.
“Can I shower and change at yours?”
Bummed, she still felt she had to ask. “Only if you don’t use the new perfume.”
There was silence except for the engine kicking over. “Was it really that bad?”
She’d lost the ginger sting, she was all wet sugar disappointment, and despite the fact it’d made him sneeze he’d do almost anything not to hear Taylor sound defeated over a stupid fragrance.
“Nah, it wasn’t that bad, Trill,” he used her pet name, knowing she’d still think he was lying. “I probably picked up a bug on the plane. Let me put it on you when you’re ready.”
And she did. When they were both showered and dressed to go again, he sprayed just the right amount of perfume on his fingertip and painted it at the crook of her elbow, behind her left ear and in what little cleavage she had. He didn’t stop to think touching her there might be inappropriate. They touched each other casually all over the place and had since forever, but never with intimacy in mind. But she took a sharper draw on her breath and it made him tense, pull his hand away too fast, as if her skin might burn him.
She caught his hand and brought it to her chest. “I missed you.”
He felt the steady rhythm of her breathing, her heart pumped under his wrist. “I always miss you.”
If she’d taken the job as his assistant, travelling with him, looking after his bookings, transport and accommodation, this would be easier, but she’d seen through it, too proud to accept his help. She’d used the excuse of needing to be available for auditions, and while it was a fair call, he hated the fact he was raking in the money and she was struggling in a retail job where the shifts were short and too infrequent.
He should’ve asked her to move in with him before now. For Taylor he’d sacrifice his privacy and he was hardly home for more than a few weeks at a time anyway. He’d ask her this time, but he needed to pick his moment.
She released his hand. “You don’t have to rehearse, you know.”
He kissed her forehead and though his nose itched, he didn’t sneeze. “Can’t wait to see everyone.” The guys bent the rules so much for him, it was the least he could do to front for a run-through before a show when he was in town.
They listened to the radio, a pop station on the way to Moon Blink, singing the chorus to some new hit that didn’t have many more words than, get it in, get it up, get it out, get it over, delivered in a tongue twisting syncopated rap beat. He had the singer’s intonation down the third time the line came around. It was a good warm up.
Moon Blink lived up to its namesake. It was cool and dark inside the club. He bumped into a table before Angus almost hugged him off his feet.
“Vox! When did you get home?”
Arms pinned, he could smell the beer on Angus, but on his clothes, not on his breath. He’d been cleaning up, which meant someone hadn’t shown up for their shift and Angus had to fill in again. Nothing glamorous about owning a bar. “Last night. Figured you wouldn’t mind if I crashed rehearsal.”
Angus steered him to the bar and there was coffee in front of him before he took a seat. Taylor slid in beside him.
“So Trill, you kept this one to yourself?”
Angus was irritated. Damon closed his eyes as the coffee hit the back of his throat, as the beginnings of jet lag made itself known. No sound came out of Taylor, she would’ve shrugged.
Angus gave Taylor her nickname after the amazing bell-like quality she had in her upper range, and it was his band, his bar, that employed her to sing three nights a week, but the best that could be said about his two closest friends now was they tolerated each other. It never used to be that way. Some days that was more annoying than others. Today it was exasperating. He’d need a nap before the show tonight or his own frustrations might come prowling out.
He pushed his cup forwards for a refill. “I thought it might be fun to surprise you.” Fronting up with no warning had been Taylor’s idea. Why he was helping her out he didn’t know. He felt her elbow insinuate itself between his ribs and refused to give her the pleasure of reacting, except she pushed harder and his cup hit the saucer off centre and h
e had to use both hands to stop it flipping over; still coffee sloshed everywhere. Technically a win for Taylor.
Angus mopped up and put a wet towel in his hands. “You’ll sing with us tonight?”
“Hell yeah.” Then he’d be home. His mates, a small audience, songs from musicians he admired to sing, no pressure to do anything but have fun.
Angus refilled his cup. “How long are you around this time?”
“A couple of months.”
“Months.” Angus and Taylor in duet. He laughed. It’d been years since he’d been around for months. “I’m booked on a couple of small jobs here, favours really. I need the break.” He’d been working solidly for the last three years with very little time off and way too many flyer miles accumulated. Underneath the niggle of jet lag was a more bone deep tiredness, it sat under his eyelids like emery board and in the back of his throat like a lump of sand. He had six months to rest and plan the next year’s work commitments.
Sleep would help, not needing to be anywhere further than a couple of local recording studios would make a difference, and being with friends instead of living like a road warrior in hotels and sound booths, buddying with people he’d likely never meet again, would make a huge improvement to his stress levels.
Angus clapped his hands. “The band is back together again.”
Taylor huffed. As well she might. If he sang with them more often it would change their set list and she’d have to share the stage.
“Tay, you okay with Damon on your stage?”
“Of course I am.”
Ah indignant, thy name is Taylor. Damon swivelled his stool so his knees grazed her thigh. “Trill?”
She cupped his jaw with both hands. “You’re an idiot.”
He snorted. She was all right about it. “I love you too.”
Angus clapped again then rubbed his hands together. “We need a new set list. Got any preferences?”
“No rap,” he said, on song with Taylor, and they all laughed.
They settled on some U2, Clapton, a little John Legend, Michael Buble, James Blunt, Bruno Mars, and covers from the bands One Republic, London Grammar, The Fray and The Stones. A list of artists entirely in his range. It left Taylor singing backup, but she refused to do much more than that and her favourite Pink ballads, Try and Sober. They’d do Give Me A Reason together.
Incapable (Love Triumphs Book 3) Page 1