FANtasy: A Hot Interracial BWWM Western Rockstar Erotic Story (Her Rocker Book 2)
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Copyright 2015, Ja’lah Jones
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. This book contains material protected under International and Federal Copyright Laws and Treaties. Any unauthorized reprint or use of this material is prohibited. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system without express written permission from the author
Other books by Ja’lah Jones
Her Rocker Series
Stage Fright
Her Cowboy Series
Hot Texas Night
Ridden at the Ranch
Going Down South
Addicted Series
Getting the Job Done
Judged
I didn’t know what was happening inside of me. I knew that he was bad news, just another guy doing community service because he’d made one too many bad choices in life, but despite all that, I wanted him.
My body betrayed my better senses and craved him.
And I couldn’t quite shake the feeling that I’d seen him somewhere before.
Corbin
“I understand all of that,” Corbin said, unable to keep the annoyance out of his voice, “What I don’t understand is why you want me to wear this ridiculous wig and make-up.”
The little man standing in front of him looked highly put upon, and Corbin couldn’t really blame him. Being Public Outcry’s publicity guy couldn’t be that great of a job, no matter what it paid. Especially since certain members of the band insisted on getting caught drinking and driving on a somewhat consistent basis.
And if Corbin hadn’t gotten to the scene of the latest accident and pretended it had been him driving when the foreign sports car had hit the light pole instead of the highly intoxicated drummer, Jay, then they would have had to cancel the upcoming summer tour, due to Jay having his misbegotten ass stuck inside of some rehab or jail cell.
So instead Corbin had taken a taxi to the scene of the crash and pretended like he’d been driving during the accident. Sadly, he had been drinking at home before he’d gotten the call or he could have played it off as just an accident, a moment where he’d lost control of the car after glancing down at his phone, but he had no such luck. Even though he’d been drinking lightly he was still over the legal limit that would have allowed him to drive, even if he wasn’t as pants-shittingly drunk as Jay.
“I mean, I don’t see why I can’t just go in and do my time without the costume.”
“Because, Corbin,” the little man sighed, “If you’re spotted working at the food bank and you make one mistake the paparazzi is going to get it on film and it’s going to be all over every single entertainment show on cable and the internet, not to mention all of the gossip mags. And while you may not care about that, it’s kind of my fucking job to care, and I don’t need you making my job any harder than your asshole bandmates already do.”
Corbin nodded, he had to admit that they didn’t make it easy for the older balding man. “Alright, whatever, but this wig looks like a mullet. Can’t I at least get something that isn’t going to make me look like Miley Cyrus’s dad?”
“No, you’ll fit right in this backwards ass town, and it matches your flannel shirt nicely.”
Corbin looked down at the faded flannel and sighed, all it took was a mullet to turn a nice flannel shirt from fashionable into something worn by a racist dickbag in a jacked up Ford. After this was over he was going to have to reevaluate his wardrobe choices, he shouldn’t be able to rock a mullet so seamlessly.
Julia
Julia took a sip of her peppermint tea as she flipped the page on her clip board. It was going to be a very busy day. She had three new ‘volunteers’ starting, on top of a huge shipment of rice that would have to be portioned out, and she was, as always, short staffed.
You would think having a steady flow of kids who’d gotten caught with pot being forced to help out would ease the burden of being perpetually understaffed but it didn’t. If anything it made it even worse because she spent half of her time training people to do shit they didn’t care about and the other half correcting their mistakes, which they also didn’t care about.
But for whatever reason the law had decided that her food bank was appropriate punishment for petty criminals.
It galled Julia that these people thought of it like that. The college girl who had been caught shoplifting one too many times, the small time suburban drug dealer who had tried to sell a dime bag to the wrong person, and the asshole who thought it was ok to drive after consuming their bodyweight in tequila.
That’s who she had coming into work this morning. To be punished.
It was anything but punishment to Julia, it was the closing of a circle, the fulfillment of being able to give back to a community that had supported her when she and her mother hadn’t been able to support themselves. Sure, it didn’t pay much, but she didn’t need much. It kept a roof over her head and food on the table, and she didn’t need much more than that.
Well, most of the time. She looked down at her phone and switched the playlist to Public Outcry, the one she listened to every morning. Her friends had already bought tickets to their concert this summer but Julia wasn’t going to be able to go, the tickets and a hotel room were going to be just too expensive.
She’d skipped college so she could work and she had no desire to wrack up tons of student loan debt anyway, but sometimes it still stung that she missed out on some of the things her friends were getting to experience. Like see her favorite band in concert.
Julia sighed and stood up from behind her desk. Who was she kidding, even if she’d gone to college, she still probably wouldn’t be able to afford to go. People like her always lived on the razor’s edge of poverty. But she didn’t mind, she was doing what she loved.
Corbin
Corbin walked up to the old rickety looking building and wondered if he were in the right place.
The sign said, ‘Community Cares Food Bank’ but he was sure the building was actually abandoned.
As he’d ridden through town in the little rented Kia sedan he looked on in wonder as his surroundings became more and more dilapidated.
The band had been playing the next town over when the incident had happened Corbin could only guess that Jay had accidentally wondered off the beaten path to get to this little Podunk community. He couldn’t imagine someone would come here on purpose.
He pulled the little Kia in the parking lot and turned off the engine before pulling down the visor and looking at himself in the mirror one last time. He looked ridiculous. Even after letting his beard grow in, wearing the glasses he’d been given and the stupid mullet wig, he couldn’t believe anyone would be fooled by something so stupid looking. He was going to end up on the entertainment shows anyway, except instead of looking like an incompetent rock star with no respect for the law he was going to look like an incompetent rock star with no respect for the law wearing a fucking mullet wig.
He lets out a sigh and opens the door to the car. There’s no way out of it, he’s got to go in.
The appearance of the building doesn’t improve much once he gets inside. There’s a little waiting area and a sign in slash receptionist desk that’s poorly lit with flickering florescent lights.
There’s a woman who looks to be in her fifties sitting behind the receptionist desk.
“Yes, I’m here to do some community service hours.” He says politely as possible, the woman doesn’t even look up fr
om the ancient computer screen, she just keeps on chewing her gum.
“Through those doors, down the hall through the big double doors and into the warehouse. Call out foor Julia, she’s who you’ll be reporting to.
He nodded, aware that she probably didn’t see him and didn’t care whether he understood her directions or not. There was probably a riveting game of Farmville on the other side of her computer screen that demanded her full attention.
He made his way down the corridor she’d mislabeled a hallways. It was more of something out of a horror movei than anything else. Hopefully he wasn’t reporting to leatherface to be slaughtered for his good deed of getting Jay out of trouble.
Corbin made it through the doors at the end of the hallway without incident and was surprised to find a large room filled with stainless steel metal shelving full of food neatly organized. Some shelves were full to overflowing and some were completely bare.
He wondered if he was just expected to bellow out the supervisor’s name when he saw her walk around the corner.
It felt like he’d been punched in the gut. She looked like a Julia, if there were a painting of the perfect girl that would embody the name Julia, she would be it.
He was used to being surrounded by beautiful women constantly so that wasn’t the only thing that was affecting him. It was the way she moved, the way she brushed her hair behind her ear as she checked something off the paper on her clipboard. It was the way her eyes crinkled at the corners as she looked at the numbers. It was the curve of her check of her breasts, of her waist and hip. It was everything about her.
Then she looked up at him and he felt the breath he’d been holding release. Her eyes cut through him right to the center of who he was. And a look of disgust crossed her face.
“Oh, you must be here for community service, follow me and we’ll fill out your paperwork.” And without another word she turned around and walked away, expecting him to follow.
Julia
He was the second asshole to arrive. She already had the teenage shoplifter repackaging the rice.
She didn’t expect much from the people they sent her but he looked like a cartoon character for a stereotypical rednick. If Disney had made a movie about Joe Dirt he was the model they would have used to base the character on.
She made it to her little corner that doubled as an office and looked for the paper work she’d just had on her desk ready for him to sign.
She was always losing something or misplacing it. That was just the way it was when there was no room to properly sort things. A filing cabinet would be lovely, but it, of course, was the last thing on the budget when they had to worry about people who needed to eat.
“I swear I just had your paperwork a minute ago. Give me just a second while I find it.”
She shuffled though applications she had set to the side for approval, making sure she didn’t loose those in the shuffle.
She’d had to finagle the numbers a bit but she was able to get fourteen more families approved to receive weekly food packages from the bank, now all she had to do was find food to give them. She sighed, that was ok though, she would do what she had to.
“A fan of Public Outcry?”
She looked up at him and saw him eying the little calendar she had tacked to the wall. She had made it herself in word so of course she’d decided to add a picture to it to try to cheer up her corner a bit.
“Hmm,” she muttered non commitally, “She wasn’t in the business of chit chatting with the people the court sent her.”
“You know I have some connections, I might be able to hook you up with some tickets or something.”
She put a stern expression on her face and eyed him from his out of date haircut down to the old ratty and stained jeans he was wearing, though they did seem to fit his body a little too well, and let her disdain for him show.
“I appreciate that but I’ll pass,” she said, her lack of interest in him dripping from every word.
She’d dealt with men like him before, and no good would come from even being slightly friendly to him. He’d take it as a sign that she was interested, and she was most definetly not. All she was interested in was doing her job and getting him to work as fast as possible.
Besides, what was the odds that Billy Ray here would have any connections to Public Outcry? None.
Corbin
If looks could have killed Julia would be standing over his dead body right then.
It had been a really long time since a woman had dismissed him quite so thoroughly. He’d forgotten how horrible it felt inside.
He understood it though, so he tried not to take it too personally. She probably had a lot of people, losers, coming through who had been assigned community service for whatever minor infraction they’d committed. He wouldn’t have been the first to have tried to hit on her. He might not have even been the first to have invited her to a Public Outcry concert after seeing her little calendar.
He smirked. She probably thought he would lying about having connections.
If she only knew.
He’d been worried that someone would guess who he was when he’d walked in, but here he was working for a fan and she didn’t even know it was him.
He guessed nobody paid much attention to you when you were supposed to be a dirtbag criminal doing community service.
“You’ll be unloading trucks today,” she said, keeping her eyes well away from him, which was a shame. Her eyes were a beautiful golden honey color he’d never seen before. “If you’ll follow me I’ll show you our loading docks and where to put the stuff that comes over the truck until it can be received in.”
She turned to go and he couldn’t help but watch the shape of her ass under the black pants as she walked ahead of him.
He felt himself harden as the cheeks of her ass jiggled and he had to force himself to look away. But damn did the girl have a figure to die for. He’d love to see that ass bent over in front of him, slapping against his stomach as he…
“So try not to fall between here and the truck, it doesn’t look that far down but trust me, that concrete hurts.”
He schooled his face, hoping she didn’t see the sheer lust on his face as she spoke to him but he was in littlel danger of that considering that she barely even looked at him.
Julia
This week was shaping up to be a doozy. Julia wiped the sweat off her brow and hoisted a box of macaroni noodles on to a rolling cart.
She had three people out sick with a stomach bug that was going around and two of them were the guys who were in charge of stocking and sorting.
So, of course, that meant she had to fill in.
“Hey, not working in the office today?”
She looked up to see the DWI redneck walking towards her. God she was glad to see him, even if he was eyeing her like she was something sweet to eat.
“Aren’t you late?” she asked him.
“Nope, I’m actually a little bit early.”
She believed him, he’d been working harder that week than most of the people who were there for community service ever did. She could almost see the change coming over him when he’d met some of their elderly clients who depended on their handouts to survive. She thought that was his favorite day, the one where he’d helped people put their supplies in boxes and carry them out to their car. If she wasn’t mistaken, she would almost swear that she’d seen him get a little teary eyed when he’d helped a single mother with two twin toddlers and a baby pack up her baby formula and pureed sweet potato.
And to her surprise the guy was actually growing on her. Mullet and all. She had to admit he’d helped out in anyway that she asked him to without complaint and she could always count on him to do the job without complaint. It was rare. Most of the people she got were so full of themselves they though they were too good to do the job. Not this guy, he did it and he did it with a smile on his face.
And she had to admit he was kind of cute even with the bad haircut and the
ratty clothes.
“I guess you are on time” she picked her shirt away from her chest, it was clammy with sweat. “I can’t believe it’s this hot so early in the morning.”
“Tell me about it, my car doesn’t have any A/C and it was like driving here in an oven.”
She noticed that his shirt was damp with sweat and also clinging to his body. A very nice body at that. She cleared her throat.
“Well, you’re in luck. You get to work with me picking up heavy boxes in an unair-conditioned warehouse and then moving them into another unair-conditioned room.”
“Great, that was just what I was hoping we’d be doing today!” he said with false brightness.
Julia laughed and went back to work, assuming correctly that he’d join in.