Rockers After Dark: 6 Book Bundle of Sexy Musicians

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Rockers After Dark: 6 Book Bundle of Sexy Musicians Page 21

by Chase, Deanna


  He follows me into the house and drops the umbrella in the stand near the door but doesn’t take his coat off or move farther into the house.

  I pull the coffee beans from the fridge and raise an eyebrow. “Are you going to join me?”

  “I want to.” He shoves his hands in his jacket pockets.

  “Cadan?”

  “You’re sure? I don’t want you to feel like you have to let me stay. I know I was over the line accepting your mom’s invitation to Christmas. But you know how she is, and I really wanted to spend some time with you. If it’s not okay, please tell me and I’ll be on my way.”

  Biting my lip, I drop the beans on the counter. Then I stride over to him and gently begin to undo the buttons on his jacket. He gazes down at me, his blue eyes full of questions. I focus on my fingers as I work the last button.

  “Hold still,” I say and move behind him, slipping the jacket from his shoulders. Once it’s hanging on the coatrack, I take him by the hand and lead him into the kitchen. He sits in the same chair I did earlier that morning while Seth made me breakfast.

  Seth. He was supposed to be here tonight. My body goes tense with desire at just the thought of him. And I’m a little sad I won’t be spending Christmas with him. The night would’ve no doubt been fun and full of mischief. There wouldn’t be all this crazy emotion combined with awkwardness. Still, I’m not unhappy Cadan is here. It’s just not exactly what I wanted for the holiday.

  I move to stand on the other side of the counter and take Cadan’s hands in mine. Holding his gaze, I say, “It’s Christmas. A time to spend with those you love. I wouldn’t let you leave if you tried.”

  He stares at me for a long moment and then swallows. “You still love me?”

  “Yes,” I say, emotion trying to strangle me. As much as I wish I didn’t, I know I always will. “You’re a part of me. That isn’t going to change.” I let go of his hands and retreat back to the coffeemaker. “Can we not talk about this anymore?”

  “Yeah, sure.” His tone is smooth and confident, but when I turn to glance at him, he’s staring at his phone, frowning.

  “What is it?”

  He pulls his gaze from the screen and scowls. “Your mom. She sent me eight texts, begging us to come back tomorrow.”

  I stalk back over to him and grab his phone. It’s a long stream of messages telling him we’re being immature and that we can’t ruin her Christmas like this. That I’m being selfish as usual and she doesn’t understand why I can’t get along with Randy.

  My vision turns red, and before I know what I’m doing, I hit Call and press the phone to my ear, waiting for her to pick up. She will.

  “Cadan,” Mom says, breathless as if she’d run to get the phone. “Tell me you’re coming over tomorrow. If not, I’ll never hear the end of it.”

  “So that’s why you’re harassing him, then? Randy’s upset and taking it out on you?”

  Mom gasps. “Lucy. Why are you using Cadan’s phone? Something happen to yours?”

  “No, Mom. God, who cares about my phone?” I pull the device away from my ear and shake my head, trying for some sort of calm.

  “I was just asking. Don’t be difficult.” Her voice fills the kitchen she’s speaking so loud.

  I clutch the phone to my ear once more. “I’m being difficult?”

  “Yes. You’re the one who stalked out for no reason. And now I have to deal with the fallout. Again. Why do you always do this? Your father—”

  “Do not call Randy my father ever again!” I yell into the phone. “My father would never hit on my friends and make them so uncomfortable they never wanted to come over to my house. My father would never walk into my room without knocking and then laugh when he caught me half-naked, changing clothes. My father would never proposition me on my graduation day and offer me a new car to keep my silence.”

  “Lucile Marie Moore. What did you just say? How dare you spew those lies? Randy never… He wouldn’t… I can’t believe any daughter of mine would ever behave this way.”

  I grit my teeth, knowing this is how she’d react. I’d tried to talk to her about this once, but she’d shut me down before I could spell it out for her. I’m certain she knows it’s true, but she’s too cowardly to face it. “My father was my rock, the one person I could count on always. Your husband was never that person.” A sob rips from my throat, and my voice cracks as I push out the next words. “My father is the only parent I’ve ever been able to count on. Don’t call me or bother Cadan again. Not until you can accept that I’m telling you the truth.”

  My heart pounds against my chest while the tears stream down my cheeks. The phone slips from my hand, but I don’t even hear it hit the floor. I’m too overcome by my outburst. The words had been pent up inside for the last three years as I’d tried to ignore what had happened. I just can’t do it anymore.

  I stumble forward, tripping over one of the barstools. Pain shoots through my knee, and instead of getting up, I sit on the floor and hug my knees to my chest.

  “Lucy, Holy Christ,” Cadan says and sits next to me, wrapping an arm around my shoulders. He kisses my temple and gently guides my head to rest on his chest.

  Sobs wrack my body as I lean against him, crying for the broken relationship with my mother, for the hole left in my chest after Dad passed, and because Cadan is here, but I’m acutely aware that he’s not the one I want holding me right now.

  “Shh,” he says and runs a hand over my hair. “It’s okay, baby. Everything is going to be okay now.”

  His words light a fire in me. I suck in a breath and pull away from him. “Really? Why? Because you’re here?”

  He frowns, looking more troubled than ever. “No, not just because I’m here. Because we can work on everything now. And once we get back into the studio, all this will be behind you and we can focus on what’s important.”

  I clamber to my feet. “On what’s important?” I say, outraged. “And what’s that? Your career? Not my family issues? Which you helped to escalate, by the way.”

  He stands and stares down at me. “What’s that mean? I didn’t do anything except drive you home.”

  “Ha!” I stomp out of the kitchen and head for the living room. “You’ve been using Mom to get to me, pushing her buttons. My relationship with her has been more strained than ever because all she can do is tell me how stupid I am for leaving you.”

  His eyes narrow, all sympathy gone. “I had nothing to do with that. All I wanted was your number to get in touch with you. You’re the one who cut me off.”

  “And you’re the one who fucked everyone within a fifty-mile radius!”

  He strides toward me, anger streaming off him in waves. Clearly trying to calm himself, he stops a few feet from me and takes a deep breath. “I told you already, that’s over. I made a mistake. If this thing between us is going to work, you’re going to have to let it go.”

  “Are you kidding me right now?” I can’t believe him. Selfish Cadan is back in full force. He’s learned nothing. Yes, I’d brought it up, but I’m not over what he did to me. If we’re going to move forward, he has to acknowledge I have a few things to work through. “You’re turning this on me? Really?”

  He steps back and clutches the back of his head with his hand. “No. Fuck.” He turns and moves toward the kitchen but stops and faces me once more. “I never meant to hurt you, Luce.”

  A sound of someone clearing his throat comes from the hallway and I jump, startled.

  “Sorry,” Seth says. He’s dressed up more than usual in dark jeans and a black button-down shirt. He must have come straight from his parents’ house. “I didn’t mean to intrude. My knock went unanswered and when I heard yelling I got worried.”

  “Everything’s fine,” Cadan says in a clipped tone. Then he narrows his eyes at Seth. “Why are you here?”

  Seth ignores him and
walks to my side. “Are you all right?”

  I nod, unable to form words for a moment. Then I grab him and push him back toward the entry hall. Once out of Cadan’s view, I wrap my arms around him and bury my head into his chest.

  “What happened?” His tone is low, and I can tell it’s meant to be gentle, but it’s laced with an edge.

  I shake my head. “Terrible day.”

  He holds me until Cadan walks in and says, “Lucy? Can we talk?”

  I extract myself from Seth’s arms and turn around, sending him a flat stare. “I need a minute.”

  He hesitates, eyeing Seth.

  “Cadan,” I warn.

  He raises his hands in defeat and backs up. “Yeah. Fine. I’ll wait in the living room.”

  When he’s gone, I turn to Seth and frown at the judgment I see in his expression. “It’s not what you think.”

  “Oh? What do I think?”

  “I…” Dammit, I don’t know. “Can we go outside for a minute?”

  His jaw tightens as he glances down the hall. When his gaze meets mine again, he nods once.

  I stifle a sigh of relief and follow him out the door.

  Chapter Twenty-seven

  Seth

  Lucy’s tearstained face once again triggers a primal instinct to stride back inside her house and tear Kinx limb from limb. What the hell had he done to her? And why am I the one being escorted outside?

  She walks until she gets to my truck and then stands in front of me, staring at the ground.

  “What’s going on?” I ask, ignoring the rain already soaking through my shirt. Lucy doesn’t seem to notice the weather.

  She kicks a rock across the driveway. “You should have waited for my call.”

  I wait for her to lift her head, to look me in the eye, and when she doesn’t, I use two fingers to lift her chin. There’s pain in her deep blue eyes. Lots of it. “When I didn’t hear from you, I got worried.” I gestured to the night. “Anything could’ve happened on those windy roads.” The familiar heartache clutches at me, but I swallow it down. Lucy is not Elsa.

  “You didn’t get my text?” A lone tear rolls down her cheek and she wipes it away angrily.

  I want to wrap her in my arms again, to protect her from whatever’s happening, but she crosses her arms over her chest while she waits for me to answer. “No.” I pull my phone out and scroll through the messages. Shaking my head, I hand her the phone to check for herself.

  “Nothing.”

  Her frown deepens. “I sent a text letting you know I needed to cancel and that I’d call you later.”

  I raise my eyebrows and jerk my head toward the house. “Because of him?”

  “Yes and no,” she says, her voice low.

  “What does that mean? Are you saying if he wasn’t here you still would’ve canceled?” My insides clench with dread. This last week has been nothing short of perfect. Our time together, the fact that I’m painting again. That I can even talk about Elsa. It’s because of her. And if I lose her to that jackass so soon, I don’t think I’ll recover.

  “No, probably not.” She steps closer, and for a moment I think she’s going to wrap her arms around me again, but she only places one hand on my chest as she stares up at me. “I had a fight with my mom and walked out. Cadan drove me home. I couldn’t just kick him out on Christmas. His car is in Santa Rosa.”

  I wrap my hand around hers and pull her a little closer. Cupping her cheek with my palm, I wipe away the tears mixing with the rain.

  “It’s almost impossible for him to find a way back now,” she adds.

  “No doubt. But I’m more concerned about you and these tears.”

  “Oh.” Her brow crinkles and she closes her eyes as she tries to blink back a fresh onslaught. “Mom and I had another fight on the phone and then Cadan and I got into it after I hung up on her.”

  “I see,” I say, but I don’t. Not really. I don’t understand what it must be like to be her and to have such tenuous relationships.

  “I’m sorry,” she says.

  “For what?”

  “For having to deal with this crap. For walking in and finding him here.” She steps back, her voice stronger now. “I think I need to take a break from whatever this is while I deal with Cadan and figure out what I’m going to do about my contract.”

  My heart clenches so tight actual pain ripples through my chest. “This is how it’s always going to be, isn’t it?”

  “What do you mean how it’s always going to be?” Her eyes meet mine, and I can tell by the resignation I find there that she knows exactly what I’m talking about. But she wants me to put it into words. To make the break for her so she doesn’t have to.

  But I refuse to let go so easily. I should. It’s the best thing for me. If I stay in this relationship, my heart is going to be shredded. But I can’t. Not yet. I reach out once more and brush her matted hair from her face. “Nothing. Call me when you need a friend.”

  She frowns and her lower lip trembles as her eyes well up again. “I could use a friend right now.”

  My resolve melts and I pull her close. This time instead of hugging her, I lean down and brush a soft kiss over her lips. It’s all I can do to not stuff her in my truck and take her home. Forcing myself to let her go, I take a step back. “I’m your friend, Lucy. Truly. No matter what you decide to do about Kinx.” The words send a bolt of jealousy through me. That ass has this gorgeous, sweet, sexy woman and yet all he can manage to do is hurt her. She deserves better. I’m acutely aware I want to be the one to give it to her. I shake myself.

  Stop it, Keenan. She’s not yours.

  “If there’s anything I can do or if you need to talk, I’m around.” I grin, trying to shake the mood. “Or if you just need someone to take your mind off of everything, I can think of a few ways…”

  That gets a smile out of her. “Yeah, I’m intimately aware of your distraction techniques.”

  We both chuckle. Silence stretches between us for a few moments. I should get in my truck and drive away. She needs to deal with her ex one way or another. Hanging around isn’t helping. Too bad all my instincts are screaming for me to stay.

  “I better go in,” she says.

  “That’s my cue.” Reluctantly I climb into my truck and stuff the key into the ignition. The engine roars to life, and before I can talk myself out of it, I back out of her driveway, swearing at myself for getting emotionally involved with the most unavailable single girl I know.

  She’s still standing in the rain watching me leave when I crank the wheel and head back toward town. Emptiness creeps into my gut and spreads. I can’t help but feel that by leaving her with him that I’ve lost her before I ever really had her.

  I tighten my grip on the wheel and lay into the gas, needing to get as far away from the pair of them as possible. Otherwise, I’ll turn around and go back. And I’m not that guy. For the first time, I start to really understand what Jax has been going through since the big breakup. I touch the Call button on my media center and hit Jax’s name.

  “Merry Christmas!” she says by way of greeting.

  “Hey,” I say.

  “What’s up?” Her bubbly tone shifts to one of concern.

  Feeling foolish for calling, I press harder on the pedal and take a corner a little too fast. The truck fishtails. “Oh shit!”

  “Seth!”

  I get the truck under control and slow to the speed limit. “Sorry. Took a corner too fast.”

  “Pull over right this minute.”

  “Jax.” I sigh. “I’m on Bluetooth.”

  “Still. It’s awful out. You shouldn’t be talking while driving.”

  Ignoring her admonishment, I ask, “Are you busy with family?”

  “No. We’ve already done dinner, and I’m holed up in my apartment pretending I don’t ha
ve to get up at the ass crack of dawn to open presents no one wants.”

  I snort. Jax’s mom still thinks her kids are eight. They get pajamas and board games just as they had every year since she was five. “What time is the wakeup call?”

  “Seven-fucking-thirty. You’re so lucky your family does Christmas Eve and skips the morning torture ritual.”

  “Yeah.” We used to do Christmas morning. That is until I’d just stopped going the year E died. That Christmas I’d stayed in bed and pretended the day didn’t exist. For some reason, after that, Mom stopped making a big deal about holidays. She said as long as we were together on a regular basis that’s all she cared about. The cold chill of loss hit me again. “Do you mind company?”

  “Not if the company is you.”

  “I’ll be there in twenty minutes.”

  Jax is waiting for me in her doorway when I pull up in front of her house. “What’s going on?” she asks when I reach her side.

  Still soaked from standing in the rain with Lucy, I shiver.

  “Jesus,” she whispers. “Come on. Get inside.”

  She pushes me into the bathroom and hands me a dry towel. “I don’t have any clothes that will fit you. Just strip and I’ll throw yours in Mom’s dryer. You can wrap yourself in a blanket or whatever while they dry.”

  Too cold and wet to care, I do as I’m told and wrap the bath sheet around my hips. I emerge with my wet clothes and hand them to her.

  She runs them downstairs to the dryer she shares with her parents, and when she returns, she rakes her gaze down my body. “Damn. No wonder Lucy keeps going back for more.”

  “Not tonight,” I say almost to myself.

  “Well sure. Isn’t she at her mom’s?”

  “No.” I run a hand through my damp hair. “She’s home… with Cadan.”

  Jax straightens. “What? No. She can’t be. I thought he finally left.” Her eyes narrow. “Are you sure?”

  I nod and sit on her couch, wrapping a blanket around me. “Yep. Positive. I just came from there.”

 

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