“Yeah.”
***
Erin’s butt had barely hit the chair at lunch when she leaned forward, an inquisitive gleam in her eye. “So,” she said. “You and Danny.”
Defiance was in Case’s eyes as she nodded. “Yeah.” You got a problem with that?
“Are you okay?”
Case blinked. That was not the kind of question she’d expected. “You mean, like, am I out of my fucking mind?”
“No, I mean, like, are you okay?” Erin said. “Really okay? The kinder, gentler Case—is she all right with this?”
“You mean the one who was trying not to be such a stone-cold bitch.”
Erin smiled patiently. One of her more aggravating traits was that it was impossible to get a rise out of her when you were feeling combative, Case thought. Case waited, but it didn’t look like Erin was going to give up any time soon. The waiter passed their table on the way to somewhere else, denying her even that brief reprieve.
“I don’t know,” she finally admitted. “I mean, I’m not flogging myself for it or anything—he had a choice, too, you know? Has a choice.”
Erin nodded.
“And I think this has been brewing for a while.” She was certain of it, in fact. Danny had wanted to explain some of his reasons, and after some initial reluctance, she’d let him. A lot of it seemed to boil down to simply needing someone to share his thoughts with—so much so that she’d felt vaguely ashamed for not knowing her own reasons so well. Sure, there was chemistry, and she felt that she had other, deeper, reasons; but she hadn’t looked very hard for them. Introspection was not her strong suit. “So, you know. The situation sucks, but I haven’t been wallowing in self-loathing between fucking marathons.”
“Charming,” Erin said.
“So, yeah. I’m okay.”
Erin frowned, raising one eyebrow skeptically. “You don’t seem okay.”
“I’m fine.”
“Not worried about being Rebound Girl?”
There it was, dammit. Case winced. She liked Danny—a lot. A lot more than she had anyone in a long, long time, and even though their situation was far from ideal, it was the picture of health compared with the shit she typically got herself into when she liked somebody a lot. The whole thing felt precarious. Inviting Danny to stay with her this morning had taken effort on par with tearing out her own liver, but it was as close as she could come right now to telling him that this—that he—mattered to her, and she had still felt horribly exposed.
“You really care about him,” Erin said.
“What are you, Dr. Phil? Would you quit that? I mean, seriously?”
“All right,” Erin said. “I’ll lay off. But I’m here if you need to spill your guts.”
“Thanks.”
Neither of them said anything for a minute. Around them, the chatter of the restaurant continued unabated.
“So,” Erin said in a low voice, “how is it?”
Case laughed. “Unbelievable. My neighbors are so pissed. We’ll be lucky if we don’t put each other in the hospital.”
“Ha. I’ve sparred with you. He’ll be lucky if you don’t put him in the hospital—you’ve got nothing to worry about.”
“Maybe so.”
“And now, on to business.”
And, God, there was so much business. Case looked at the list of things they had to take care of to get ready for the tour with mounting dismay. They’d been invited on the tour, so the booking and road crew were taken care of, but that was about it. They needed to arrange for their own transportation, their own food, their own lodging. Crashyard’s record label would put Ragman’s name on a few things, but for the most part they had to do their own promotion, too. Erin had a whole plan for that, as usual, but it involved sending out a ton of promotional material, including copies of their CD, to various radio stations and record stores.
“We don’t have a CD,” Case pointed out.
“You’ve got seven weeks to come up with one. It would be ridiculous to go on a tour this size without a CD to sell. And speaking of selling stuff, we’re going to need to talk about merchandising.”
Case groaned, and Erin jumped back into the list. There was a never-ending tide of details that needed to be attended to, and each one had a price tag attached.
“How much is all this going to cost?” Case asked, after Erin had at least ticked off all the major items.
“Depending on how much the recording costs, if we assume you sell your cars and buy a van, and you sleep in the van so you don’t have to pay for rooms most of the time, and we assume cheap food—I’m guessing about eleven thousand dollars.”
There suddenly seemed to be no oxygen in the room.
“Congratulations, rock star.”
Chapter 24
“Sorry, sorry. Sorry, guys.” The song stumbled to a halt, and Danny looked down sheepishly. “I got a little preoccupied. Let’s hit it one more time. I’ll get it this time. Really.”
Case took her headphones off. “Give it a rest,” she said.
The recording engineer apparently had the same thought. “Hey, how about you guys take five?” he said, his voice small and distant through the headphone speakers.
“Or fifteen,” Case said. God, she hated the studio. Not this particular studio—it seemed decent enough, and the engineer was cool—but the general aura of all recording studios. Stuck in a sterile room, the sound coming out of obnoxious and uncomfortable headphones with a cable that always seemed to get in the way, and no vibe. The scrutiny was the worst, though. Trying to play rock and roll in a room like this was like getting a pelvic exam in front of an audience.
“I can get it,” Danny protested.
Case put her guitar down. “Enough.” Before she could see Danny’s sad eyes, she walked out.
Johnny and Bill—the engineer—were waiting in the control room when she came in, sitting in front of an enormous mixing console. Bill had a kind smile for her. “There’s always one song that just won’t come together,” he said. “But there’s always one you knock out in two takes, too. It’ll come around.”
She sat down in the nearest chair and massaged her temples.
Danny came out a moment later, looking like a dog who’d just been scolded for pissing in the corner.
“What the fuck, man?” Johnny asked. “You know this motherfucker backwards and forwards. We’ve probably played it in front of a couple thousand people by now.”
“I told you, I’ll get it.” Danny’s embarrassment was changing to irritation with uncharacteristic speed.
The bass thumped, loud through the control-room speakers. Whatever was going on out here, Quentin was still having a good time. Bill turned him down a little.
“Why don’t you get it then? Clock’s ticking!” Johnny pulled back the sleeve of his motorcycle jacket—his jacket, since Case had reclaimed hers a while back—and tapped an imaginary wristwatch.
“Good thing it’s my dime, then, isn’t it?”
“Oh, it’s your dime—that’s why we were all waiting on your late ass this morning?”
“Hey! Enough, all right?” Bill’s good-natured grin was gone, and now he looked like somebody’s pissed-off dad. “Just cool it.”
“I’ll cool it when—” Johnny started, but Case cut him off.
“Outside,” she said, pointing sharply with her thumb. “Now.”
He gave her a mean little squint. “Or?”
“Or we’ll have to pay for all the stuff I break with your head in here.”
He sneered, but he got up.
Although she talked a good game, Case was getting very worried. It wasn’t just the studio vibe—everything had a bad vibe lately. Somehow, more responsibility kept falling to her. Hell, if she’d become the band’s peacekeeper, things had gotten very bad indeed.
The glare off the pavement in the parking lot was intolerably bright. Case stayed back next to the building where there was a sliver of shade, and Johnny followed suit. He crossed his arms an
d waited.
“What is wrong with you?” Case asked, low anger in her voice.
“What’s wrong with me? I don’t want to fuck this up, that’s what’s wrong with me. And my idiot brother can’t seem to get his drumsticks out of his ass.”
“Lay off. He’s stressed out, and you know it.”
Johnny curled his lip. “Nice arrangement you’ve got there. He gets his excuses made for him, and you get your oil changed.”
“Don’t.” Her voice was calm, but the word came out crisply, the “t” sharp and explosive. She felt calm, too—the same calm she felt right before going onstage, right before a tournament fight—or right before some real violence went down. She wanted this tour as badly as anyone, but if Johnny said one more word like those last few, somebody was going to get hurt and fuck the consequences.
He must have read that in her face, because he dropped his gaze. His voice took on a whining tone. “Maybe we should try one of the new tunes.”
Case groaned. This again. “Let it drop, Johnny. Now is not the time.”
“They’re good fucking songs.”
“I don’t know about that, but I do know that we haven’t even learned them yet,” she said. “I’m not sure we’ll ever learn them.”
“What’s that supposed to mean?”
“I told you, I fucking hate metal. I’m not putting my name anywhere near a song with a name like ‘Black Goat with a Thousand Young.’”
“Johnny says—” He stopped abruptly, closing his mouth with a click. “They’re good songs,” he said.
Great. Now he’s talking about himself in the third person. One more thing to reinforce her growing sense that the band was unraveling. Danny had gotten flaky lately, showing up late for practice and recording, flubbing easy parts, and forgetting important pieces of equipment—like his goddamn snare drum on one occasion. His preoccupation in the studio was becoming standard. She could understand that, sure, but the timing was spectacularly bad. Johnny, for his part, alternated between being a massive dick and withdrawing into an anxious, inward-directed silence. He gave her the creeps, and while she didn’t like to think about that too much, it was getting worse instead of better. She thought he was neglecting his personal hygiene, too—that could be the only explanation for the very faint, rank odor that clung to him all the time these days.
That was not today’s problem, but it occurred to her that she’d have to talk to him about it before they all ended up in a cramped van together.
“Case says they’re not that good,” she said, garnering a look of pure hatred that was gone almost before it registered. Almost. “Anyway, we don’t know them.” There. That was as much conciliation as she could muster. It would have to count as an attempt to keep this conversation from going off the rails.
It seemed to be enough. “Yeah. Okay.”
Case breathed out, and that unearthly sense of calm left her. Seemed there wouldn’t be a fight after all. “Now, do you suppose we can go back in there and pretend to like each other long enough to finish this fucking CD?”
Johnny nodded. All at once, he looked oddly lost.
“Good,” Case said, and she opened the door. “Great.”
***
The weeks leading up to the tour were brutal for Quentin. He needed money, so he’d picked up a bunch of overtime on the construction site. When the recording sessions started, he worked out a deal with his boss to get off early so he could make the sessions. He didn’t want to give up the overtime, though, so part of the deal was that he’d come back after the sessions—often after midnight—and clean up the site and cut stock for the next day. He was down to about three hours of sleep a night, and his whole body hurt all the time. By the end of ten days of recording, he couldn’t exactly remember a time when his whole body hadn’t hurt.
That was cool, though—it would pass. The recording was done, and that’s what counted. He knew Johnny and Case had some problems with the way it had come out, but he was thrilled. He had never imagined it would sound so good when they got done. The pressed copies wouldn’t be ready for a couple of weeks yet, but he’d gotten a burned copy from the studio, and he had it cranked as he drove to the club for load-in.
One last show in Dallas, and then the tour. The tour. What a weird thought. Very cool, though. He hoped the turnout for the show was good—they were counting on the cash from the show to pay for the CDs and fund some of the trip.
He turned the CD up to deafening levels as he accelerated up the on-ramp to Central Expressway. It sounded great. He supposed he could see why Johnny wasn’t too happy about it—Johnny sounded pretty good, but his voice was missing some of the magic it had during the live show. They’d tried a dozen or so microphones in the studio, just about driving the engineer nuts, but none quite nailed it. Maybe it was the space, or Johnny’s nerves, but it wasn’t quite right. Close enough, though—Johnny still sounded pretty good. The rest of the band sounded incredible. Quentin had listened to his own bass coming out of the speakers in the studio and it had sounded so good he was ready to tackle the engineer to get him to divulge the secret of that sound. That hadn’t been necessary—Bill had been pretty forthcoming, and, incredibly, the “secret” turned out to be nothing more than a touch of equalization and compression. Just amazing. When Quentin got a few bucks, he was definitely going to have to get a decent compressor for his live rig.
Quentin was singing along with “Changing Gears” and wondering about how much a good compressor cost when he pulled up outside the club.
***
The club filled up, and by the time the third band of the night went on, Quentin realized he shouldn’t have worried about the turnout for the night. Ragman was getting a pretty good local following, and Erin had cranked her unstoppable promotional machine into high gear besides. At the current pace, the club would be turning people away at the door before he and the guys took the stage.
He saw Danny and Case sitting at a high table off to the side of the stage, and he thought about going over to say hi. The two of them obviously had something going on these days, but it seemed cool. That was about the only thing about either of them that was cool lately, though. Danny was a roaming ball of stress, and Case looked like she was half an inch from tearing Johnny’s head off most of the time. Quentin wished she’d just relax, but he wasn’t sure he could really blame her. Since the weirdness of the last few months, even Quentin didn’t like to be around Johnny any more than he had to. Still, it was too bad. He thought Case and Johnny would write some even more kickass tunes together if they just learned to get along.
Ah, well. He didn’t see Johnny anywhere, so the tension at Case and Danny’s table probably wouldn’t have attained its usual stratospheric heights yet. He bought a screwdriver and a couple of beers and ambled over.
“Drinks all around,” he said. He put them on the table and gestured at the room full of people. “Pretty cool, huh?”
“Yeah,” Danny said. He looked more like himself than he had in weeks. “I think it’s gonna be a good show.”
Even Case flashed him a smile. “Get that compressor yet?”
Quentin grinned back. “Nope. Saving up for the tour.”
“Me, too,” Case said. “I ought to get some new tubes for my amp, but they’re damn expensive. I’m praying the ones in there now last the whole tour. If they don’t, I’m fucked.”
Quentin was about to reply when Johnny showed up at the table—also with an armful of drinks. He had a big grin on his face, and he looked genuinely happy. It seemed like a long time since he’d been without the expression of frustrated anger that was carved into his face lately, and Quentin was glad to see it gone. Danny smiled, too, and patted him on the shoulder.
“Gonna be a good show tonight, I think,” Johnny said.
“I’ll drink to that,” Quentin said.
The four of them raised their glasses.
***
“Yeah!” Quentin yelled, though nobody heard it over the roar of the b
and, amplified to deafening levels. Whether it owed to finally being out of the studio or to the reinforcement of having recently played the same parts over and over again in the studio, the band was firing on all cylinders tonight. He especially loved the bass at a live show, the thunder of the cranked subwoofers vibrating his whole body on the low notes, the kick drum pounding his chest. There was nothing like it in the world.
Johnny was hot tonight, as if to make up for his lackluster performance in the studio, and his voice tore ragged, white-hot holes in the air. Enough people knew the songs that they were starting to sing along with the choruses, which Quentin thought was the coolest thing.
They started up one of the newer songs Johnny’d been pushing for, an unsettling tune called “Ashes and Bone.” It might have been a creepy tune, but the intro the band had worked up for it just plain rocked. They nailed it, and Quentin looked back at Danny and grinned. I might get to do this for a job, he thought, and his grin widened. Danny grinned back—and then Johnny dropped into the first verse of the song. The whole atmosphere of the room changed. The grin melted from Danny’s face, and from Quentin’s too.
“There’s footprints under my window
Cigarette ashes in a neat little pile
Cross made out of chicken bones
He’s been coming for a long, long time”
The crowd got quiet, doing that hypnotized thing they sometimes did when Johnny was on a roll. Usually, though, they did it during the slower, mellower songs. This was a more raucous number, but the crowd was swaying and weaving, making barely a noise.
The stage lights seemed too bright, the back of the room shrouded in darkness. Even the lights Quentin could see through the open door to the street looked dimmed. He knew that must be an illusion caused by the stage lights being so bright, but it was unnerving all the same—as if the real world outside this room were fading away.
It got worse when Johnny hit the chorus.
“He’s waiting for me out there
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