Hard Sell: A Bad-Boy, Rock Star Romance

Home > Fiction > Hard Sell: A Bad-Boy, Rock Star Romance > Page 10
Hard Sell: A Bad-Boy, Rock Star Romance Page 10

by Savannah Skye


  “I’m doing my job just fine.” She poked him in the chest. His hard, muscular, sexy chest. “You’re the one who seems to scare away every girl I set you up with.”

  “I forgot that you’re holding my hotel key.” Star Jackson reappeared at Rory’s side, scaring Gina in the process. “I’m going to need that back.”

  “Yeah, yeah.” Rory dug the card out of his pocket and passed it to Star. “Have a good night.”

  Star held the key in her hand as she chuckled to herself. “You two just need to screw and get it over with.”

  Once again, Gina and Rory found themselves watching Star as she sashayed away with a walk fit for an actual star.

  “Look, I’m sorry. I don’t know what came over me. That got super weird and I…” Gina passed a quick glance over to Rory, his eyes dark and hungry, sending a bolt of heat straight to her core. “What are you looking at?” she demanded.

  “You,” he said simply and pushed his hands into the pockets of his black slacks. “Do you want to dance?”

  Chapter 13

  Rory waited patiently for an answer, but it was worth the wait if for no other reason than to watch her contemplate his question. It was like she was contorting her mind into a pretzel as she tried to find a way to say no.

  Only she didn’t say no.

  She said, “Fine.”

  “See. That was easy.”

  “Shut up.” She pressed one hand against his chest. “Just accept that we’re going to dance and don’t make it weird.”

  Rory led her toward the center of the ballroom floor where couples had gathered around to dance in slow circles. He wasn’t a great dancer, but he knew how to hold a woman, so he dropped a hand to her waist.

  Her dress was silky smooth against his rough palms, but as they turned in slow circles to the beat of some song he had never heard before, he fought the urge to slide his hand up underneath her dress.

  He wouldn’t. Not in public, but if he had anything to say about it later…

  First, to clear the air, though.

  Gina had been jealous. He never would’ve thought it, but once Hayden had said it, her crimson cheeks had confirmed the story. Now to get her to admit why so they could end this charade and get back to what they should be doing with every second of their free time.

  Fucking each other blind.

  The thought had his cock rising to attention again. He cleared his throat, breaking through the thick wall of silence in the very short distance between the two of them. “How was your night?”

  “My night was great,” she said with a flat smile, “until you scared my sweetie pie away.”

  Rory frowned. “Are we still going to keep playing this game?”

  “I don’t know what you’re talking about.” She shrugged. “I don’t play games. I play business-professional.”

  “Right.” He nodded and curled his fingers around hers. “And somehow I missed that you’ve been dating that douchebag for the past two months?”

  “Maybe you just weren’t paying attention.”

  He came to a stop, and by proxy she did too. Though he still held her by the waist and hand, things had changed in an instant. “Cut the shit, Gina.”

  “Can we not do this here?” she hissed.

  “Do what?”

  “This.” She gritted out and tried to move again, but he was like a stone, holding her in place.

  “I haven’t stopped thinking about you and I want to be with you again. You can pretend whatever you want, but I know you feel the same.”

  “It’s not going to happen.” She cocked her head sideways and glared at Star and Hayden laughing at the bar.

  Rory looked to the bar and then back to Gina. He lowered his hand from hers and dropped it to her chin to turn her back to face him. “Why are you being so stubborn?”

  “It’s just not an option.” She wiggled free from his grip and took a step backward. “Whatever that was, it can’t happen again.”

  “Fine.” He towered over her, demanding her attention as she gazed up at him. “But at least tell me why.”

  “Because,” she stammered, and then pinched the bridge of her nose. “We’re not a good fit, Rory. I don’t want to date a rock star. I can’t do it again. And, more importantly, the band has to be our number one p—”

  “Gina,” Cheri yelled as she grabbed Gina by the arm and pulled her backward. “We have an emergency.”

  “Can it wait?” Rory snapped as his sister impatiently.

  “It’s a girl thing.” Cheri shrugged and began to drag Gina away.

  Gina craned her head over her shoulder and glared at Rory with a shrug before turning back around and following Cheri out of the double doors of the ballroom.

  Rory cursed under his breath. He tapped his feet, standing alone in the center of the room.

  He needed a drink—or two, or ten—so he made a beeline for the long bar on the opposite end of the ballroom. His fingers tapped against the wood top of the bar as he waited for the bartender to approach. In his head, he was writing a new song for the band, though he’d need to disguise who the song was actually about if he ever brought up the idea to the band. Because it, like everything else lately, was all about Gina.

  A shadow passed over his shoulder and when he turned around, he found Dev dropping onto the stool beside him.

  “Jesus, Rory,” he said. “You look like hell.”

  “The same could be said for you.” He circled his finger at his best friend, whose face was covered in a thin veneer of sweat. “It’s not even hot in here.”

  “Right.” He raised his eyebrows knowingly. “But it’s hot in other places.”

  Rory ordered a whiskey neat while Dev climbed out of his suit jacket and draped it over the back of his stool. “I’m going to down this drink in record time.”

  “Something’s up,” Dev said, not asking a question but making a statement. He dropped his hand onto Rory’s shoulder. “And you’re going to tell me what it is.”

  “Nothing is up.” Rory shrugged as the bartender slid him the glass of liquor. “Why would you think that?”

  “For one…” Dev pointed down the length of the bar at Star, who was now hanging off the edge of Hayden’s lap, laughing and twirling her hair in circles. “How did you let that newbie steal your date?”

  “It’s a long story,” Rory grumbled before taking a short sip of the whiskey. He grimaced. “That’s some cheap shit. I should’ve specified a brand.”

  “Rory, we’re musicians. We’re very talented at making long stories short. So spill.”

  Dev had a point, so Rory took a deep breath and prepared himself for the fallout.

  “I fucked Gina.”

  Dev did a double take and then tipped his head in a clipped nod.

  “Okay. See? Case in point. That’s a two word story that tells the whole tale.” Dev reached past Rory and stole his drink from him to take a short sip and then held it in one hand as he continued. “So you crossed that line and now what? You’re feeling like you want something more? She’s wanting more?”

  “Me. Her too, maybe? But she doesn’t want to want to.” Rory shrugged. He was torn between relief that he didn’t need to explain the entire story and shame because he was obviously easier to read than a children’s picture book. “I’m going to bypass the whole issue where you don’t even seem shocked by my admission and skip straight to the point. What the hell am I supposed to do?”

  Dev grabbed on to the collar of his shirt and shook it furiously, exhaled sharply before taking another long drink and then slamming it down on the counter. He jumped to his feet and swung his jacket over his shoulder. “Let’s talk about this outside.”

  “Why?”

  “Because I need to cool the hell down.”

  The two boys pushed through the double glass doors of the hotel lobby and exited into the cool night air. There was a steady stream of stragglers late to the party and revelers leaving early for various reasons.

  Dev speared
a hand through his hair, enjoying the breeze as he parked his back against the exterior of the hotel right off the side of the city sidewalk.

  Rory leaned against the wall beside him and both men stared out into the busy street where a line of yellow taxis were stuck in traffic.

  “Back to your…issues.” Dev elbowed Rory in the side and bowed his head. “It’s not even an issue, at least not in my eyes.”

  “See, you’re just saying that to make me feel better.”

  “Not at all. If you want Gina, then you need to go for her, you know?”

  Rory cocked his head to the other man. “It’s a little more complicated than that.” He exhaled sharply. “I mean, yeah, we had sex and it was great but I don’t know, it’s like I’m having actual real human feelings for her.”

  “I know.” Dev chuckled, threw an arm around Rory’s neck and pulled him close. “Everyone knows.”

  “Bullshit,” Rory scowled and pushed his friend away.

  “Yeah, no. The way you guys needle each other all the time and then stand across the room mooning at each other like ten minutes later? It’s so obvious. If you find yourself feeling a certain type of way about someone, Gina included, then you need to listen to those voices in your head.”

  “I don’t know, man…”

  “Okay, I’m obviously going to have to give you one of those really long, heartfelt speeches, aren’t I?” Dev broke away from the wall to stand in front of his friend. With one hand leveled on one shoulder, he began. “Love, and life for that matter, is about risks. Everything you do in this life is going to be a gamble, and you can win or you can lose, but you automatically lose by default if you never try.”

  Rory rolled his eyes and scrubbed at his jaw. He wasn’t the most open person in the world or most vulnerable. He was a man. Men didn’t talk about feelings.

  His brain instantly reeled back to a time when he was five and had tripped over a toy and fell down the stairs. He’d wailed so loud, his father had come running. Even now, the memory made his stomach turn.

  If he’d thought the fall had hurt, the ass whooping he took for crying about it and leaving the toy out in the first place had made it pale in comparison. He could still hear the snap of his collar bone reverberating in his head more than twenty years later.

  “I’ll give you something to cry about.”

  He swallowed back to oil slick of nausea that rose with the memory and focused on the now, ignoring the throb in his collar bone.

  “I’m not great at the whole sharing feelings thing, bro. I think I’m better off suffering in silence and waiting to see if she comes around or another opportunity arises.”

  Dev shook his head dubiously. “You gotta do you, man, but I will leave you with this one nugget of advice. If Bug hadn’t been willing to convince me to take a risk, then I’d still be a no-good womanizer sleeping with a different girl every night, all the while still feeling fucking lonely inside.” He took a step back and shrugged. “And now look at me. What do you see?”

  “Sweat,” Rory deadpanned.

  “Other than that,” Dev said with a short laugh. “I’ll tell you what you see. You see a guy who’s the happiest he’s ever been. So go for it. Take that risk. Maybe it goes nowhere. But just maybe it goes somewhere special. And don’t worry about us. Don’t worry about the band. We’ve always been fine and we will continue to be fine so long as the five of us remain close and good with each other.”

  “But Ava—”

  “Fuck Ava, dude.” Dev reached forward and tapped against the left side of Rory’s chest, somewhere around where his heart should have been. “Our music is climbing the charts and Sub-Zero is popular because we have great stage chemistry and write kickass songs, not because women want to fuck us. I’m sure that helps to some degree, but despite what the label says, they don’t know us like we do. And I’m telling you they can go to hell if they’d rather you be unhappy.”

  Rory looked up to Dev with a smile and a gentle shake of his head. He couldn’t believe what he was hearing, but realized it was exactly what he needed.

  “You’re my best friend, you know that, right?”

  “Abso-fucking-lutely.” Dev stepped forward to throw his arm around Rory’s head and pulled him into a quick guy-hug. “Now, I’m sorry for sweating all over you, but get your ass back inside and go get that damn girl.”

  Once he was back inside, Rory searched the crowded ballroom. The party was winding down and he hadn’t seen Gina since he went back inside to find her. He still had no idea what he was going to do when he found her, but leaving without saying…something, wasn’t an option.

  A second later, he spotted her exiting through the double doors of the ballroom.

  He gave chase and began to prowl through the thinning crowd, brushing right up against Star and Hayden on his way out.

  He craned his head both directions, looking for her. He spotted her stepping into the elevator and quickened his pace.

  So what if he shot himself in the foot? Dev was right. His gut had gotten him this far in life. Great band, great friends, fairytale lifestyle. It was time to roll the dice and see where this thing with Gina could take him.

  Chapter 14

  By the time she looked up, it was already too late.

  If she had been given proper notice, she could have slammed her finger against the close elevator button, the button that nobody ever really used except in emergencies.

  Because this was definitely an emergency.

  She made a valiant effort, but she wasn’t quick enough.

  The doors began to draw closed, but Rory was able to slip into the elevator before it closed, the doors bustling back open as he stood in front of her, panting.

  She thought of running out of the elevator feigning the need to vomit, but she imagined that’d only lead Rory to believe she was pregnant or something equally ridiculous. It had only been two days since they hooked up, but it felt like a lifetime.

  It felt like another lifetime there in the elevator as he simply stood before her, his chest heaving and his gorgeous eyes boring into her soul. And when the elevator doors closed behind him, she felt as if she was suffocating.

  “I have something to say to you,” he said, his voice low and husky. “And you’re going to listen.”

  “You should have stayed with your date, Rory,” she whispered thickly, sure he could hear the pounding of her heart.

  His shoulders rose and fell and he gave her the slightest shake of his head. “After our little display downstairs, I’m sure that wasn’t an option any longer. And even if it was, I wouldn’t go.”

  “Well,” she forced from her dry throat, “I’ll have another date for you by tomorrow evening.”

  “Stop,” he commanded her and took a step forward. She had no choice but to retreat back one step until she was parked against the wooden beam of the elevator. “Just stop doing that.”

  “It’s my job.” She swallowed nervously and stole a glance at the digital screen indicating that they were going way too slow. “And though you might not have anything to worry about, I very much prefer keeping my job.”

  “This isn’t about your job.”

  “You’re wrong.” She glanced away from him, determined to look anywhere she could—at the digital screen with ascending red numbers, at the floor, at her own shoes—anywhere that wasn’t him.

  She had been trying so damn hard to keep her emotions in check all night. It had all began when she was watching him perform, and then it only worsened when she was forced to watch him with the woman she had set him up with. Her job was interfering with what she actually wanted, but she was used to that. She didn’t get where she was in life by following her heart. That much was certain.

  “What do you want from me, Rory?”

  “I want to take you home.”

  “Yeah,” she forced a nervous chuckle, “the elevator is doing a fine job at doing that.”

  “You know what I mean.”

  “I don’t k
now if I do.”

  The elevator dinged and the doors slid open. She went to step past him, but he threw his arm out, blocking her. Ever the clever girl, she simply ducked underneath his arm and hightailed it out of the elevator.

  When she heard the door ding behind her followed by the familiar sound of the hydraulic doors sealing shut, she prayed with bated breath that Rory had taken the hint and was on his way back down to the party in the ballroom.

  She rounded the corner at the end of the hall, sweeping toward her room in a frenzy. It was just up ahead. A few more steps and then—

  Fwap.

  She dropped to the floor like she’d walked into an invisible wall, her long flowing dress caught under the heel of her shoe. Instead of picking herself up right away, she rolled onto her back and scooted herself against the wall. Grumbling under her breath, she reached for the shoe that had betrayed her and ripped it off. Figuring it was no good to hobble back to her room with only one shoe, she took off the other too.

  “Are you always this clumsy when trying to make an escape?” Rory questioned calmly as he stepped forward to offer her a hand up.

  She resisted at first, letting out a heavy sigh. “I thought you had a one-way ticket back to the party downstairs.”

  “You thought wrong.” He reached for her hand, the feel of his flesh sending a sizzle through her, and pulled her back to her feet. “I’m not going anywhere.”

  “They have a word for that.” She turned on her feet and marched toward her room. “They call people like that stalkers, but what do I know?”

  “I don’t know much of anything right now,” he said from behind her, and she could hear his footsteps so she knew he was following her, intent to keep his promise that he wasn’t going anywhere. “I just know that I want to be around you, Gina.”

  She retrieved her card key from her bra but couldn’t bring herself to swipe herself into her room. She pivoted and leaned back against the door. “Are you intent on making my life hell?”

  “I’m intent on getting the truth from you.”

 

‹ Prev