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Wicked Serenade: a Lost in Oblivion Collection

Page 143

by Quinn, Cari


  “Oh yeah? Is it sexy?”

  She rolled her eyes. “Is that all you care about?”

  He chewed on his bottom lip and paused. And because she got even more exasperated, he nodded. “Mostly.”

  “Normally it just goes in the crazy box, but man, this was way too cool. Especially with the song we picked for the cover.” She snapped out a ripped out T-shirt. The fan had even torn out the sides like he preferred.

  “Jesus. You’d think she...she?”

  Jazz nodded. “Yeah, it was a woman.”

  Simon wiggled out of his shirt and tossed it on a guitar trunk.

  “Geeze, Simon.”

  He took the shirt from her and arched one eyebrow then the other until they danced. “Nothing you haven’t seen before, Pix.”

  “I see your chest almost as much as my husband’s.”

  “Clothing is restrictive,” he said with a shrug.

  He tossed the shirt over his head. “This, however, is not. Awesome.” He looked up and Margo stood in the sidelines, her dark eyes heavy-lidded as they skimmed down his body.

  Jesus fuck.

  Thankful that the shirt was a little long in the front, he tugged it over his buckle to hide his instant reaction to Margo. “Like the show, Violin Girl?”

  Instead of the embarrassment he was going for, he saw only interest in her eyes. “Creative use of Michael Hutchence’s face,” she said.

  He grinned and turned around. “Even better from the back.”

  Jazz ticked her nails down the sliced back. “I need to do that to some of my shirts. It’s hot under these lights and the tadpole definitely kicks up my temperature gauge.”

  “Not sure you can call it a tadpole when you’re carrying around the equivalent of a soccer ball.”

  Jazz socked him in the arm. “Rude.”

  Simon reached over and patted her little Buddha belly. “Adorable.”

  She slapped his hand.

  He laughed. A much better state of affairs than the mood he’d been in during his warm-up.

  “On in five.”

  Simon ushered Jazz into the backstage area and let Margo go ahead of him as well.

  “Last minute change to the setlist.”

  Simon groaned. “If I have to try and remember lyrics again, I’m gonna kill ya, Nicky.”

  “Nah, just rearranging.”

  “Thank fuck.”

  Simon scanned the page. “Starting with ‘Sugar Kiss’. That’s different. Why?”

  “Kim got us on iHeart Radio’s live broadcast.”

  Simon’s eyebrows shot up.

  Nick blew out a nervous breath. “Yeah. My sentiments exactly.”

  “That’s a little more than the live feed we were doing from our website.”

  “Yeah. We’re moving up ‘Jet City Woman’ too since it was the Twitter winner. Blast the social media shit out of the sky tonight.”

  “Buzz, buzz, buzz.”

  “You got it.” Nick shook out his hands. “I’m gonna go throw up. I’ll be back in a minute.”

  Simon shook his head. Nicky was not kidding. He probably was going to go heave out whatever they’d had for lunch.

  He scooted backstage to the dressing area and grabbed the Crystal Skull bottle on the dressing room table and a small stack of Dixie cups.

  When he got back out there, he snagged a bottle of pineapple juice from the stash Lila had waiting for them between songs.

  “Okay everyone, band huddle.”

  “One minute, Simon. You don’t have time for speeches,” Lila said.

  Simon set out seven cups on Deacon’s bass trunk.

  “If you splash booze on my bass, I’m going to kick your ass.”

  “Chill out, Demon.” Simon splashed a little more than a shot in six of the cups then pineapple juice in the seventh.

  “What if I wanted pineapple juice?” Deacon asked.

  “Too bad.”

  Deacon sighed and picked up his cup.

  Simon nodded to the last cup. “You too, Violin Girl.”

  “I’m not part of the band.”

  “You are tonight.”

  She set her bow down on the trunk and picked up her cup.

  “Everyone in. You too, Lila.” Simon lifted his cup and they all tapped paper together. “To the next phase.”

  “The next phase,” everyone repeated.

  Lila tossed her shot back without a hiss or a wince. Her sac was a helluva lot more impressive than Gray and Deacon, who both made faces.

  “Cups.” Lila held hers up and everyone tucked theirs into hers and grabbed their instruments.

  He poured another for himself and grinned when Margo held her cup up for another. “Need a little liquid courage tonight?”

  “I like vodka.”

  “Ever a surprise, Violin Girl.” He splashed two fingers in her cup and they both tossed it back.

  “Give me that.” Lila took the skull-shaped bottle from him. “Go. Get on stage.”

  “Ready for one more night with us crazies?”

  Margo nodded. “More than.”

  “Then let’s do this.”

  * * *

  Margo drew her bow across her strings as Simon curled his entire body around the microphone and his stand.

  The man never stayed still. He slithered against the chrome like it was a lover. She remembered how those hips had moved, the innate fluidity of his inner rhythm. And she wished for a little more of the vodka.

  Maybe that would take the edge off.

  Because watching Simon all damn day had left her skin too tight for her body. The heavy air under the lights seemed oppressive. Screams rending the air seemed shrill and over the top.

  Or maybe it was just her.

  As “The Becoming” hit its peak, she came out to the spotlight with Simon as she’d done the night before. The first time she’d been in a trance. Simply existing in his sphere and following his cues.

  Tonight she played up the push and pull game they’d played the first time. This time she slid behind him until they were shoulder-to-shoulder, her hips following his as the song got darker and sexier.

  Deacon’s bass was her central line into the song. He was the constant, Simon was the wild card. The song ramped up, Nick’s guitars came to the forefront and then Gray’s blew them both out of the water.

  She tried to melt back into the darkness. This song was going out into the internet ether with their rabid fans soaking up each chord. But Simon didn’t allow that.

  He dragged her in front of him, and his hips never stopped the slow seduction against her. His arm banded across her midriff and they moved as one. The crowd below lost their collective minds.

  Maybe she had as well.

  She had no choice but to stay in the moment. Was entirely sure she couldn’t do anything else anyway. She felt the stiff length of him bumping against her and tried to resist his voice in her ear.

  They created a darkly sensual dance between them, and her violin answered his words as if the conversation was on a different plane.

  He swung her out as the song ended and then dragged her in tight until she had no choice but to let her violin dangle against her thigh.

  As if in a distant time and place, the crowd screamed in reaction.

  He palmed the back of her neck and dipped her. His nose and the barest hint of lips trailed up her neck before he put her back to rights and the heavy bass of “Jet City Woman” filled the room.

  She escaped his touch, the madness that had bespelled them, and managed to play her part in the layers of the epic cover song. Simon prowled the stage and pulled the crowd in like a lover.

  As easily as he’d dragged her under, he left women mesmerized in his wake. His old-style microphone became an extension of him. His lips caressed the guard, and his moans translated to screams from the crowd.

  And as the song ended, he dropped to his knees and mimicked the pain of the narrator. It was his gift. Their songs were catalogued in a different part of performance fo
r Simon. No less powerful, no less entrancing in their own right, but when he sang someone else’s song, he became a chameleon.

  When he popped to his feet, the crowd swelled forward and women reached for him and men hollered out their battle cries. Women wanted to fuck him and men wanted to be him.

  It was a heady experience to behold.

  Simon clipped his microphone into the stand and swiped his hair back. “Good goddamn! This is why we do everything in L.A., man. This crowd. Fuck yeah!”

  He put his hand up to his mouth. “Whoops. Sorry, iHeart. I got a little carried away. That six second rule always saves our asses, huh?”

  Margo shook her head and tucked her violin under her arm.

  “Thanks so much for peeking in on our release party.” He held his arm out to his right. “Nicky boy and Grayson, come take a bow.”

  The two of them stepped into the spotlights and waved.

  “Demon, get your Gigantor ass out of the shadows. Give my ridiculously tall friend a hand, huh?”

  Deacon draped his arm around Simon’s neck.

  “Think we should give them one more?” he asked Deacon.

  Deacon leaned into the mic. “Not sure they can handle it.”

  “What do you guys think?” The crowd blasted him with screams and Simon fake stumbled away from Deacon. “Holy shit. Maybe they can.” He stood on the drum riser. “Jazzercise, what do you think?”

  “I think you should sing ‘Monster’.”

  Simon looked over his shoulder. “Whadya think?”

  The crowd screamed and he pointed at Margo. “Violin Girl, start us off.”

  Startled, Margo lifted her bow and started off the song as they’d rehearsed.

  Sometime toward the middle of the song, she noticed that the camera crew had lessened. It didn’t seem to matter that the cameras were off Simon. He poured everything into the show just the same.

  A heavy sheen of sweat coated her arms by the end of the night. Her back ached from the heels, and her heart still raced in time with the last song.

  When the house lights went down, it felt like they’d only just begun even as her body said otherwise.

  A single violet-tinged light shot out of the night and the murmuring crowd settled as Simon held his hand up. “Thank you so much for making tonight amazing. We’ll be out to schmooze and booze with you momentarily, but we’ve got one more song tonight.” He slid his hand under the shirt that was molded to him with sweat. “This might give you a clue.”

  Then the light went out and she cradled her violin against her chin for the opening chords of “Never Tear Us Apart”.

  Simon sang the first verse in the complete dark. His voice morphed into a fair mimic of Michael Hutchence with his own spin.

  The lights slowly lifted until they were all awash in a purple glow with a roving disco ball splash as Simon’s fluid performance entranced.

  Though a jazzy saxophone had been part of the original version, they’d modified her strings to suit the melody. She came forward and her lights went pink with a heartbeat pulse around her.

  The slow song built until there was nothing but guitars and drums pounding out around Simon as he got the crowd to sing with him. The iconic INXS song bled into the raunchy, gritty guitars of Guns n’ Roses.

  Simon stripped off his shirt and raced to the edge of the stage, then dropped to his knees. He rolled onto his back and screamed out the lyrics with a raw edge that made Margo wince.

  He wouldn’t be able to talk later.

  But the crowd lapped it up. They moved as one and sang back at him for every line. Los Angeles anthem that it was, everyone knew the song.

  By the time it was over, the party had started.

  And same as last night, Simon jumped into the crowd and led the charge to the bar. He slapped the countertop and a line of shot glasses flamed to life.

  Gray and Nick played the hell out of the guitar solos, each of them dueling over the riff-heavy song as the crowd went wild.

  Simon blew out his shot and tossed back two of them before running back to the stage to finish the song. The fans and radio people, the famous and pseudo-famous all joined in for the last chorus.

  Margo got pulled forward with the band as the song closed out. Deacon scooped her up and dropped her next to Simon as they waved and bowed.

  Somehow her arm ended up around Simon’s back. He was slick with sweat and vibrating with excitement. He looked down at her, but the smile she was expecting was missing.

  His eyes burned with a flame similar to the shot glasses making the rounds at the bar. She shivered and pulled away as the band dispersed.

  Jazz jumped and hugged everyone, including her. There was nothing but the high of the show, the crowd, and a night of success.

  Why did she want to escape?

  True, it wasn’t her success, but she’d enjoyed the way that the band had allowed her into the inner circle. The interaction of the fans was a high she couldn’t deny.

  She should allow herself to be pulled in, but she only wanted escape. Her heart rate was hummingbird-fast as she climbed the hidden stairs to the quiet corner she’d found after rehearsal.

  The stairs to the catwalk over the bar. Now that the show was over, the lights had been brought down and shadows and strobe lights bounced around the room in a heady pulse that echoed the excitement of the night.

  People were talking over one another and Oblivion songs were piped in with a current radio hit in between each song. She curled her fingers around the textured paint that splattered the iron bars and rivets.

  No one knew she was up there. She wasn’t altogether sure that anyone cared. Her purpose had been fulfilled for this part of their promotional tour.

  She wasn’t sure how to feel about that.

  She’d gotten exactly what she wanted. The exposure had garnered interest and her email was peppered with new offers that her agent was getting for her and studio work. Her untimely dismissal from the Boston Philharmonic might be just what she needed for a different career.

  She had Oblivion to thank for that. “The Becoming” had ruined her for the staid and true songs that had molded her childhood, but in the end, that song had given her so much more.

  “Hiding?”

  Margo shivered at his voice. “Watching.”

  “Is that what you like to do?”

  She closed her eyes against the throb of reaction that flared to life again. Escape had been too much to ask for. Not when Simon was in the picture.

  “Sometimes.”

  He came up behind her, curling his fingers around the bar on either side of her hands. “Is it the people below that you like or the dancers in the cages?” He tucked his chin over her shoulder and steered her gaze to the far side of the room.

  Under the throbbing bass of the song, she noticed two women bookending the second bar with a little extra entertainment. All the lights and the crowd’s focus centered on the two dark-haired women with thigh high boots and leather bikinis who gyrated with the songs.

  “A little obvious, don’t you think?”

  “We are in L.A.,” he said with a purr.

  “The home of excess?”

  “That might be Vegas.”

  “That’s greed.”

  “And the looks on their faces below don’t include greed?”

  “I’d say the greed would be the executives under Donovan Lewis. Here, the commodity is lust and excess.”

  Simon laughed. “Is that why you’re up here? Too good for those emotions, Violin Girl?”

  No.

  No, she definitely wasn’t.

  She’d been living with the lust part for weeks now. It was inconvenient and messy and she hoped to hell that she could leave it behind with the experience, but she was beginning to wonder.

  “I saw the need in your eyes tonight.” He slid one arm around her and tucked her back against his hips. “Felt it in the way we moved together on the stage.”

  She let out a shaky breath. “A moment o
f madness.”

  “Is that all we’ll ever be?”

  I don’t know.

  He moved his hips in time to the syrupy tempo of the song piping out into the crowd. Conversation and milling bodies, laughter and shouts, light and shadow—all of it fed into the insanity that made her move against him.

  He hissed out a breath and his arm tightened across her hips until they moved as one. “Is this what you want?” His hand slid lower as he skimmed his fingers along the hem of her skirt.

  She let out a shuddering breath.

  “Under the cover of shadows, with the crowd right there.” He tucked his fingers into the band of her thigh-high and scraped short nails over the skin until he reached the line of her panties. “Are you wet?”

  She nodded.

  “Are you wet because of me?”

  The moan that tripped out of her chest couldn’t be hers. It wasn’t her. It was her when she was with him.

  A new kind of Margo.

  He nosed his way along the line of her neck, behind her ear. “Tell me you want this.” He pushed the front of her panties to the side and sneaked under the elastic. His grumbling voice thickened when he pushed the pads of his fingers under the swollen flesh that hid her clit. “I need to hear it, Margo.”

  Her knuckles went white with her grip on the iron support bar. “Yes. God, yes.”

  He flicked his tongue over the lobe of her ear and drew it into his mouth as he sunk two fingers into her. “All those people under us. All they need to do is look up and they’d see me finger-fucking you.”

  She let out a breath and undulated against his hardness from behind and his invading fingers from the front. “Let them.”

  His laugh was low and harsh in her ear. “My naughty Violin Girl likes that idea.”

  “Harder.”

  He drew his other arm around her and gripped her breast through the silk camisole. He tucked his chin onto her shoulder and tugged at the strapless bra she wore until the tip of her nipple peeked over the top.

  “Watch,” he said.

  “Watch what?”

  “The people.”

  She tried to turn her attention to the people below, but her gaze kept straying to her breast. He plucked at the distended flesh, gently at first then twisted tighter as she fed him with moans and groans in approval.

 

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