Ets was right about one thing. I’d never cared before. But I cared about Briar. She’d told me she loved me.
“Staring at the picture isn’t going to change anything,” Flip said, hand on my shoulder.
He might get it. “I miss her.”
“Right-o, mate. Got that one. Question is, can you do what you need to do to make everyone happy?”
“Is that what you do?”
Flip chuckled. “Hell to the no. If that were the case, I’d be at home, rubbing Cynthia’s belly, talking to my bub.”
“So you’re saying it’s not possible?”
Flip rubbed his chin, considering.
“I think you have obligations. Same as I do. Those come first right now. Stardom and families don’t mix great.”
“You miss Cynthia?”
“Course, mate. Wish she was here now.”
“But?” I asked.
“Life’s a bitch. I get to see her in sixty-one days.”
“When’s the bub due?”
Flip raised his eyebrows. “Twenty days.”
“Gonna miss the birth, then.”
He shook his head. “Not by my choice. Harry set all the dates before we found out. But I’m not happy with the situ any more than you are. Just making the most of this moment.”
“And enough money to live off of?” I asked, pocketing my phone.
“Too right, Hayden. We’ve got that now.” He leveled me a look. “Most people are going to expect us to go right back into the studio to record another album. You’d need to be writing for that to happen.”
“I haven’t written a song this whole tour. Not feeling it. My mum dropped some shit on me. I didn’t handle that well. I didn’t handle leaving Briar well either.”
“We all know about that,” Flip said, his voice dry. “So now you have to figure out what’s more important—the past you can’t change, or the woman you clearly care about. What you want looking forward.”
28
Briar
The pictures of Hayden with another woman shouldn’t have hurt so much. But they did. His arm was curled around her waist, her lips on his jawline. I sat in Rosie’s room, holding her hand long after she fell asleep. Then, only then, the tears rolled down my raw cheeks. When she woke, she asked the night nurse to bring me water.
“Me dying isn’t worth these tears, Briar Anne.”
“You’re worth a lot more than tears, and you know it.” I managed to smile.
“Oh, I’m going to miss you, lovely girl,” she said, her voice cracking. The oxygen machine hissed as it blasted another breath into her failing lungs.
“I’ll miss you more, Rosie.”
“You think your life’s all over. Being young is so stark. He’s a fool, but at least he isn’t also an ass like Kenneth.”
I finished the water and sighed, closing my tired eyes.
“Wash up and go home. Get some sleep, Briar.”
“I’m not sleeping well.”
“Then go home and lie down on something comfortable. I’ll be here tomorrow.”
“What if you aren’t?” I asked, my voice breaking.
“Then it’s finally my time,” she said. “And I’ll say a huge thank-you to the angels for giving me as many years with you as I got.”
The next morning, and four days into living with constant paparazzi attention, I was too frazzled to even consider walking outside. Even in full makeup, dressed for a job interview or cocktail party, the comments on my body and fashion were brutal. There were so many ways I wasn’t good enough to date an international rock star, though clearly that was no longer happening, thanks to Hayden’s latest photos with the girl after his concert. She was young, blond, gorgeous. Everything I wasn’t, and if I hadn’t already been aware of that, the comments under the photos and each news story pointed out my lack.
The worst were comments about things I couldn’t—and wouldn’t—change. My boobs were too small, my hips too wide. My eyes weren’t symmetrical, my hair was a boring, plain brown. My jeans were pedestrian and made my butt look flat.
I’d finally turned off my Wi-Fi connection, the only way to break the cycle of scrolling through the comments and then feeling horrified by the cruelty people dished out.
Why anyone would want celebrity status was beyond me.
After the one day I went out to eat with Lia, Asher, and the kids, I’d spent the rest of my time holed up with Rosie at hospice, leaving only long enough to sleep and feed Princess. Yesterday, the doctor confirmed the tumors had spread into Rosie’s lungs. She was down to hours.
Lia tried to talk me into moving in with her again, but I couldn’t. And not just because of Rosie’s failing health. Lia and Asher were so damn happy—each time they touched or even shared a look in my presence was like salt being rubbed in my bleeding heart. Not that I could tell Lia that. Instead, I used their impending move back to the Seattle area to my advantage.
“I’ll see just as much of you if you’re here.”
“Not for the next couple of weeks, Bri, and the story’s hot now. By then, the media will have moved on to something else. You know how it goes.”
I did. And now that I’d been on the other side, I knew for certain I’d never work in the industry again.
I’d never felt so adrift. I’d always known where I was going and how to get there, because financial security was so important to me. All those years ago, after my dad died, there’d been days when my stomach was so empty, I was sure my belly would cave in.
Lia and I never talked about that month—ever—and now that I was older, I was sure that time was scarier and harder for her than it was for me. One night, she’d made me a sandwich and then went to the window to stare out while I ate it. Now I realized why she hadn’t sat with me, looked at me while I ate. It had been the last of the food we’d had in the house, the last we’d get until our mom finally picked us up three days later. I’d never felt hunger the way I’d felt it then.
Now, money in my bank account meant I never had to worry about where my next meal came from. While I’d saved enough to live on for the next few months—thanks to my hoarding skills and my current rent-free living arrangement—I’d have to figure something out. Soon. I swallowed the stitch of panic that built in my throat.
“You holding up okay?” Lia asked. Lost in my thoughts, I’d nearly forgotten she was still on the phone. I shifted so I could stare at the ceiling.
“I don’t know. Visiting Rosie’s keeping me going.”
Lia remained quiet, which probably meant she had something to tell me but wasn’t sure how I’d react. Princess jumped into my lap and I ran my hand over her sleek flank. She turned twice and settled against my belly, her favorite spot.
The cat and I had come to an understanding, for which I was grateful. After I’d explained her mommy wasn’t coming back, Princess accepted me . . . in a temporary surrogate role. Last night, she curled onto the bed, her warm body a lifeline during the dark hours when I couldn’t sleep. Wide awake in bed, I relived my short affair with Hayden, wondering how I’d managed to so quickly fall in love with a man who’d told me he wasn’t looking for love.
“Hayden called Asher today.”
“Okay.”
“He wants to talk to you.”
“Asher?” I asked.
“C’mon, Bri, don’t do that.”
I smoothed Princess’s soft fur, letting my fingers burrow in close enough to feel the heat from her skin. She turned those big eyes toward me, as though sensing my falling mood.
“I don’t want to talk to Hayden.”
“I see where you’re coming from.”
I sighed. “But?”
“No but, Bri. He hurt you. The way he handled the situation was pretty terrible. And then there are the pictures of him with that girl.”
“But.” Dammit. The tears stung as they hit my nose. “I still love him.”
“I know.” I pictured Lia pulling on her hair—a nervous habit she’d done for years
. “He told Asher he’s sorry he hurt you. That he never meant to. And he didn’t sleep with the girl.”
“Well”—I sniffled—“he did hurt me. Because he left and because of the blonde. Whether he had sex with her or not.”
“Before you jump down my throat, I know what I’m asking. I also know that one day you’ll regret not getting the closure.”
I huffed. “I hate when I can’t argue with your logic.”
“It’s the curse of being the younger sister. I’m always going to be wiser.”
“I’m not sure four and a half years matter that much,” I said, my tone dry.
“They matter enough to make me smarter than you. Just think, if I hadn’t listened to Asher when he came here to explain his reasons for staying away during his divorce proceedings, I might still be depressed and wearing the same pajamas.”
“You do like to wallow.”
“Everyone deserves a good wallow, Bri. You’ve just never been patient enough with yourself to grieve.”
Princess’s big, wide eyes remained trained on me. She licked her thin kitty lips. “This hurts. So bad. And . . . and . . . Rosie’s almost gone. I can’t stop and let the rest hit me.” The lump in my chest expanded. “I can’t talk to him. No way.”
The silence dragged out. I pulled the phone away to make sure we were still connected. She started talking again just as I put the phone to my ear. “You can’t hide from your feelings, Briar. They’ll come out, eventually. And it’s worse if you try to suppress them. I wish I was there with you.”
“No you don’t. I’m depressed and bitchy.”
“If it makes you feel any better, Hayden’s desperate.”
“I think he just wants to apologize. For the continued press maybe.”
Lia hummed. “He texted Bill. He’s called Asher twice. That’s too much effort for just an apology.”
I scratched Princess under her chin, wincing when her claws dug into my bruised hip. “The girl then. That was bad form. Even for a rock star.”
“They aren’t rock stars for their good behavior, Bri.”
I digested that. “Doesn’t matter. He was wrong.”
“True.”
“Then why do you want me to talk to him?”
Lia sighed. “For you. I want you to tell him he’s an asshole. He shouldn’t have left the way he did. He knows you’re dealing with Rosie’s death. And he sure as shit shouldn’t have messed around with the girl.”
“I hate her.” I sniffled, wiping my nose on one of the crumpled tissues I kept in my pocket. “I’d hate him, too, if I could.”
“I’ll do enough hating for both of us.”
I tore apart the tissue, ripping it into smaller and smaller bits, thinking.
“You said he was sorry he hurt me?”
“He told Asher that multiple times. Why?”
“I don’t know,” I said slowly. I wasn’t going to spill Hayden’s secrets, not even to my sister. Stupid though it was, I needed to protect him. “What, exactly, did he say?”
“Um, Asher said his words were, I’d never hurt her on purpose. But he had to know leaving you would be hard on you emotionally.”
“But that’s not what he meant,” I murmured. Why hadn’t I connected the bruises to what I knew about Hayden and his mother earlier?
Lia sucked in a breath. “What else could he mean?”
“I woke up the morning he left with some bruises. On my hips. From his hands.”
“What?” Lia’s voice was low, dangerous. I’d only heard her like this once before, when a classmate intentionally hurt Abbi’s feelings. “He bruised you?”
“No. God, no. He was crawling back in his shell. Like I do. You know. I didn’t want him to, so I pushed for intimacy, and things got . . . rough. In a good way. It helped him back from the edge, but between the text he sent me that morning and what he said to Asher . . . I think that’s what he meant.”
Princess blinked at me with her large, sapphire eyes before licking her lips again. Yeah, it was a pretty reasonable guess.
“You sure?”
“About it being unintentional? Yes.”
Lia exhaled hard into the phone. “Good. Because if he did mean to hurt you, I’d have to fly to Asia to destroy him.”
“Lia!”
“How do you feel?” Lia asked.
“The bruises? You know how easily I bruise. Touch me wrong and poof! If I’m right though . . . ” I sighed. “I’m going to have to talk to him.”
“You owe him nothing. Especially now that he took pictures with another woman. Telling him he’s an asshole is one thing. Forgiving him is another. And you shouldn’t feel obligated to do so. Asher agrees with me.”
“I think there’s more to it that I’m just beginning to understand. And that’s going to eat at me.”
Lia grunted, her annoyance wafting through the phone like an invisible vapor. “I want you to be happy, Bri. And safe.”
I thanked her then clicked off my phone. Princess still watched me.
“Should I give Hayden my new number?”
Mrroowww.
“That’s all you have to say?”
She lifted her paw and began to lick it.
“Talking to you isn’t helping.”
29
Hayden
Flip and I clinked beers. Jake and Ets were across the room, chatting up some of the fans.
“To Mumbai,” I murmured.
“Best show in a while,” Flip said. “Good to be out of Asia, I think.”
I sat my half-empty beer on the table. “Felt good. The show. Leaving for Europe tomorrow will be excellent.”
Flip tugged on his soul patch. “Any ideas what you want to do after this tour?”
Everything inside me stilled, even my heart. Next second it pounded, harder and louder than normal.
No way he could know what I’d been thinking.
“Not sure. Probably grab some holidays. You?”
“You’re in love with her—the Yank.”
I picked up my beer. Not seeing Briar this week made me antsy. I was an addict in full-blown withdrawal.
“It was like that for me, with Cynthia.”
“She good?” I asked.
She’d miscarried last year so had been extra careful about this pregnancy, spending most of it on bed rest.
Flip’s face split in a wide grin. “Talked to her before I came backstage. She’s great. The baby’s moving heaps, keeping her up a lot of the night. Wish I was there to feel him tussle about.”
Lack of sleep wasn’t something to be excited about—I’d give anything to put together five straight hours right now—but I was happy for Cynthia and Flip.
“Good news then, mate.”
“So do you love your Yank?” he asked.
“It’s all jumbled. I mean, I met her whilst my mum was dying. All the feelings, they were intense. But . . . ” I said slowly, “when I think about Briar, separate from my mum, it’s all positive. It’s like my mum’s death soured it all somehow.”
“That’ll color any scenario.”
“So it’s a right bloody mess.”
“You’re going to have to talk to her. Tell her you’re not happy here without her. Soon.”
I shot him an angry look. “I’ve been trying. She changed her number.”
Flip smirked as he lifted his beer to his mouth. “Women were always too easy for you. Especially when you were giving off that I-don’t-give-a-shit vibe. I like seeing you all tied up over a girl. She’s gorgeous, by the way.”
“Yeah. She is. But she’s also sensitive. And funny. And she’s a better runner than me.”
Flip laughed. “Definitely love.” He slapped me on the back. “Thanks for asking about my plans. Me, I want to get home for some family time. Just thought you should know.”
“Right-o. Appreciate that, Flip.”
He sauntered off, waving to a gaggle of lovesick girls before heading out to the tour bus. A couple of months ago, I’d thought Fli
p was an idiot, leaving the company of pretty girls to go play video games or read, whatever a man did when his lover wasn’t with him. But I got it now. I wanted nothing more than to do the same.
I stood, planning to call Asher again. The timing worked. Good thing about being up so late here in Mumbai meant it was afternoon in Seattle.
“Come here, Crewe. Meet Indira.”
Fucking Ets. I wasn’t interested in making small talk with a girl ten years younger than me. I scowled, causing his smirk to slide into a full-blown grin. Yeah, he was angry with me for my comment about Mila. I should have kept my mouth shut.
“She’s your biggest fan,” he needled.
“Good to meet you, Indira,” I said, holding out my hand to shake hers. She stood, giggling. If she was twenty, I’d be shocked. “Hope you enjoyed the show.”
“I did. Very much.” She batted long lashes at me. I stepped back, wary. I refused to have my picture taken with another sheila. No way. Last time I called Asher, he’d reamed me for ten minutes about the photos with that blonde before he even let me state my business.
“Right-o. I have some calls to make. Enjoy your evening.”
Ets glared. Extricating himself from another girl who was latched on to his arm, he followed me from the room.
“What the hell’s your problem?” he growled.
“Right now? You. I didn’t want to meet that girl, and I sure as hell don’t want to invite her back to my bed on the bus.”
“Since meeting that Yank you’re a complete bore.”
I bit my tongue. Fighting with Ets wouldn’t help. I shoved my hands into my pockets and rolled back on my heels. “Anything else?”
“Just that meeting that woman was the worst thing that ever happened to you.”
“You’re wrong, Ets. Briar got me through one of the hardest experiences of my life. What if it was your mum? Wouldn’t you be thankful for someone holding you up?”
Before he could answer, I turned on my heel and left the room. Clearing the rest of the roadies and the last few girls trying to get past security, I dialed Asher’s number.
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