Carolina crosses her arms, annoyed. The truth is, I haven’t seen much of either of them. Carolina’s career has taken a bit of a stumble, and she is nursing a broken heart—caused by the same guy who messed with her career. Sara, too, had a tumultuous relationship with a scumbag who beat her to a pulp only a few months ago. Both women threw themselves into their work at an alarming pace.
I know people deal with heartbreak differently—I probably would do the same—but I’d be lying if I said I don’t begrudge them for hardly being around anymore. It takes a miracle for me to see them these days. I’m sure it is their guilt of not being around as much that has them pushing Mandy and this concert on me. As if I have no other friends. I mean, I don’t, but that’s beside the point.
“Look,” Carolina says. “I know you like Industrial November. I also know Sara and I have been a bit absent—”
“A bit?” I scoff, but I smile because I can’t be too mad at them.
Carolina raises an eyebrow at me. “Fine. A lot absent. We just want to make sure you don’t fall into your tendency to only work.”
“Tell me,” I say to both Carolina and Sara, “why, exactly, aren’t either of you going with Mandy?” I raise my eyebrow right back at Carolina, even if my brows aren’t as spectacularly thick and sculpted as hers.
Sara hangs her head, her blond tresses falling over her face like a curtain she hides behind to avoid any and all conflict, and Carolina has to answer for the both of them. “We’re working.”
I bite my lip, trying to suppress laughter. They can’t get out of work, but expect me to?
“Look, I know we’re total hypocrites, but we are slaves to our schedules. We can’t take off on such short notice. You, on the other hand, are your own boss. You can do anything you want, even close if you have to,” Carolina says.
I shake my head. “I can’t close.”
“Can’t Joe handle it on his own?” Sara asks, looking up at me once again.
I glance over at Joe. He’s been my bar manager for a year, and I have yet to leave him alone on a weekend night. I don’t doubt he’d be able to handle it, but I’m not sure I’d have any fun worried about the million things that could go wrong. I’ve built my business from the ground up. It’s successful because of all the hard work I put into it.
Mandy, for her part, is looking at me like I’m holding her new puppy. Talk about peer pressure. I roll my eyes.
“You’re the Industrial November super fan, Carolina. I know their music from it popping up on some of my playlists, and I like them well enough, but I couldn’t name a song if you had a gun to my head.”
“I know. Trust me,” Carolina huffs. “It’s killing me that I won’t get to meet them.”
Rolling my eyes again, I look over at Mandy. “Let me talk to Joe. If he’s okay with it, and we can get at least one backup waitress to come in, then yeah. I’ll go with you.”
I take my place back behind the bar—my favorite spot to be. I worked hard to give this place—my baby—an edge that felt like me without being kitschy. La Oficina is a modern bar with a moody feel, including exposed brick walls, tall, black-framed windows, dim lighting, and black and white photographs of my favorite Spanish rock bands. The likes of Café Tacvba, Maldita Vecindad, Molotov, and Panteón Rococó adorn my walls. Industrial November isn’t amongst their ranks in my heart, even though they are the world’s most listened-to band.
I don’t admit to my friends that if the tickets were to Café Tacvba, I’d jump at the opportunity and close the bar faster than Mandy could say Hot Potato.
“What was that all about?” Joe asks, breaking my thoughts.
“Mandy wants me to go to the Industrial November concert with her tomorrow.”
“No way! You get to go? I’m so jealous. I’m not too ashamed to admit that I actually wept when I couldn’t get tickets. They sold out within an hour.”
“I’m not sure I’m going. It’s our busiest night,” I say to him because he clearly hasn’t considered the ramifications for him if I were to take off.
“Hey, if you don’t go, please say I can have your ticket.”
“What part of ‘it’s our busiest night’ are you not getting?”
“Sorry, boss,” he says. “But you really should go. I don’t think I can work for a woman who, when given a chance to see the best band on the planet, declines. I’d have to question your judgment.”
If Joe weren’t married, or Mandy weren’t quite as forward as she is, it wouldn’t be inappropriate for them to go together. But given the realities, it’s me or no one.
“Are you sure you can handle it, Joe? Like, really handle it?”
“You haven’t given me a chance to prove myself yet. This might be the perfect opportunity.”
“Okay. If you can get Tracy to come in tomorrow night, and you swear you’ll text me the minute you need me for anything at all, I’ll go.”
I don’t much care for our backup waitress Tracy, but she’s gotten us out of some trouble in the past.
“You won’t regret it, boss,” he says. “Oh, and before I forget, David Price called again today. He really wants to buy the place?” Joe asks, with a slight look of concern straining his face.
“Joe, I’d never sell the bar.”
“Next time he calls, want me to tell him to go to hell?”
I laugh. “No. He’s still a colleague. Be professional. He’ll get the hint one day.”
When I get back to the table with the girls, I only smile at Mandy before she jumps up and hugs me. She doesn’t even give me the chance to tell her I’m going.
“It’ll be amazing, you’ll see,” Mandy squeals. “Drinks are on me. All night tomorrow night.”
“Nope. Not drinking,” I say. “I’ll be driving.” I grin at her.
“You don’t mean . . .” Mandy trails off and covers her mouth from the gasp she let out. Seriously, what a drama queen.
When I nod, Mandy jumps again and hugs me tight one last time. “I get to ride Bonnie? No freaking way. It’s going to be the best night ever.”
When I sit with them, Mandy announces she has to go home and get ready for the next day. I watch her leave the bar with a pep in her step, her calves accentuated by the red pumps she’s wearing.
When I look back at her, Carolina tilts her head to the side and crosses her arms. When her right eyebrow floats up, and her perfect lips form into a scowl, I know I’m in for it. “What did I do now?” I ask, annoyed. This is what she wanted. Isn’t it? For me to take her assistant to the damned concert?
“Mandy’s straight,” Carolina deadpans.
“I know.”
Sara interjects before any further questioning. “It looks like you two are going to be arguing for a while. I’m going to hit the hay. Caro, I’ll get you next time?” Sara says and leaves me alone with Carolina.
“Please don’t put the moves on her,” Carolina says when we’re alone.
“I wasn’t going to—”
“It’s your MO. Whenever you have the mood for a woman, you wow her with Bonnie, then take her to bed, and it always ends with the poor woman’s heart broken.”
I do my best to look offended. “My god, you’re paranoid. I don’t only take lovers for a ride. I thought it would be fun for Mandy. That’s all.”
“You promise?” Carolina asks.
“What’s it to you, anyway?”
“I care about Mandy. You’re both important to me. I’d hate to have to pick sides here.”
The thing is, Amanda “Mandy” Gomez is very attractive. She is short, barely five-foot-three, and her frame is slender in a muscular sort of way that’s always been catnip to me on a woman. She always makes me smile because she basically lives in high heels, trying to be just a little bit taller, and it’s adorable. Her cool-toned, light-brown skin brightens with her broad toothy smiles that can cheer anyone up. But I’d never go there. She’s a big part of Carolina’s life, and I respect those bonds.
“Look, Mandy’s hot and
all,” I finally admit. “I’m not blind, and I’m only human, but you know I don’t date. I wouldn’t jeopardize any friendship for a fuck. It’s not that important.” I don’t say out loud what Carolina already knows. I don’t do relationships. Period.
“I’m going to trust you here—”
“Have I ever given you a reason not to?” I ask my friend.
Carolina eyes me warily and takes too long to respond.
“And if you remember, it was you and Sara who pushed me to take her to the stupid concert,” I add.
“Okay, I’m going to let go of the fact that you just called my favorite band ‘stupid.’ But you’re right. You can’t win tonight, can you? I’m sorry. I’ve been in a mood.”
My eyes soften when I take a moment to study Carolina’s tired features. Her eyes are sunken, and she looks a little worse for wear. “I know. Hey, how are you doing—really doing?” I ask her, worried about my stubborn friend trying to pick up all the pieces of her life by herself when she doesn’t need to do it alone. She has friends, damn it.
But I also get her. I’m just as fiercely independent as she is, if not more.
“Not ready to talk about it,” she says. “Besides, I have to get going. Early morning tomorrow. Close out our tab?”
“You got it.”
Joe walks over to me at the register. “Tracy said she’d come in.”
“Good, cuz I already told Mandy yes.”
“You won’t regret it, boss. Nothing will go wrong tomorrow night.”
Famous last words, I think.
When it’s nearly closing time, I walk over to the last straggler, who’s been checking me out all night but has been too afraid to talk to me. He is tall, handsome, and well-built—a little burly—just how I like my men.
“Can I get you another drink?” I ask him.
“Nah, but maybe close out my tab?”
Once I hand him his credit card, I place my elbows on the bar counter, letting my cleavage swell over my tank top. “So, Nick. You gonna ask me out or what?”
Nick blinks quickly. “How’d you know my name?”
I point to his hand. “Your credit card.”
“Oh.”
“You’ve been checking me out all night.” I lick my lips slowly as I stare him dead in the eye—my favorite flirting move. My luscious lips are my favorite part of my body, and whenever I lick them, it makes men crumble, if I do say so myself. “We’re closing now, so you could say you’ve missed your chance.”
“Oh. Have I really?” Nick chuckles nervously, scratching his jaw.
“Yeah, sorry. But if you’d like to fuck, my place is close by.”
Nick does a doubletake. “What?” His mouth falls open.
“Hey, I’m sorry if I misunderstood. I just thought you—”
“No. You didn’t misunderstand . . .” he hastens to add.
“So,” I say. “You’re interested in going to bed with me tonight?”
Nick nods. “Very.”
I lean in closer until I can feel the heat of his breath. “Okay. I have rules.”
“Okay,” he says, looking at me—a mischievous smile curving his mouth. “What are they?”
“One night and one night only. No repeats and absolutely no sleeping over. Are those acceptable terms?”
“Fuck yeah,” Nick says and slams down the rest of his drink.
“Oh, and you have to be sober,” I add.
Nick smiles. “I only had two drinks. I’m completely sober.”
Joe smirks at me and shakes his head as he leaves the bar. Undoubtedly, he heard the exchange, but he’s used to me taking customers to my place and doesn’t bat an eye—anymore.
I lock up La Oficina, and Nick trails me home.
Hiding in the Smoke
Two: Sofia
There couldn’t be a worse place to be than at the front row of an Industrial November concert. Hell would be cooler. I made the mistake of not looking into the band’s live shows before showing up at the concert.
The arena is packed to the brim with screaming fans, and apparently, the lead singer, Brenner Reindhart, has a thing for pyrotechnics. Much like the Pink Floyd laser show, Industrial November also attacks their audience with a light show, only they use real fire. I will be surprised if those of us at the front leave with our eyebrows and eyelashes intact.
Fire erupts from below, from the sides, and even outward over the audience’s heads—at a safe distance, but still close enough for the scorching heatwave to graze our skin. Midway through the concert, their microphone stands light on fire. At one point in the show, when they play “Metal Red Day”—their most popular single and the song I am most familiar with—the singer places a thick helmet over his head that sprouts a massive mohawk made of fire. I have to admit it now—I’m impressed.
This is the concert that turns me into a fan. Experiencing their music live is an entirely different experience than hearing it over my headset. Though the same is true for probably any rock band, there is a spectacular visual element to Industrial November that elevates their show to a form of performance art.
They don’t rely on the visuals, though. The music is just as powerful as their studio albums produced with sound engineers. I can see how it would be easy to slack on the musicality when fans are clearly here for the spectacle, but they do both, and they do it well.
I do feel a bit out of place. Everyone all around me knows the lyrics to every single song. If only they sang in their native language—German—I’d probably be in better company. But as is my luck tonight, every single song is performed in English.
All four members of the band are exceedingly handsome—tall, muscular specimens. Brenner is the tallest, though perhaps the least attractive of the four men on stage. His face isn’t classically handsome, but more a type of beastly sort of ugly-handsome with a strong jaw and slightly wide nose. His straight, black hair falls to his forehead with every head-bang, and he pulls it back with one hand, slicking it into place with his sweat. He is drenched with sweat after the first three songs and exudes the type of virile sexiness that I’ve always been attracted to in men. He moves on stage like a brute, with powerful thighs, firm steps, and one of the broadest sets of shoulders I’ve ever seen.
Midway through the concert, when Brenner takes off his shirt, revealing chiseled abs below a barrel chest, I am done for. To put it plainly, the heat emanating from the concert isn’t only coming from the fire.
As the audience’s energy winds down after an impressive four-hours, and the band turns to their slower songs, Mandy rests her head on my shoulder. She’s tired from all the jumping, screaming, and singing of the night. As she leans on me, Mandy sways to a rock ballad she informs me is called “Bed of Eyelashes.”
That’s the moment when Brenner sweeps me away. His deep voice carries a power in the hard metal songs, but I never expected he would be able to carry that over and actually sing. His voice in the rock ballad borders on operatic. It flows like authentic Mexican hot chocolate, silky smooth and hot with a hint of spicy. I know then that I’ll go home and listen to all their albums, hoping I’ll find more ballads there.
Then it happens. I can’t believe it when he does, but midway through the ballad, Brenner Reindhart, the one and only, lead singer of Industrial November, locks eyes with me. I’m not singing along like everyone around me, and he shakes his head lightly as he smirks between lines of the chorus. He locks his gaze on me for the entirety of the ballad after that, effectively serenading me.
I look around and behind me, wondering if I’m imagining it, and he’s actually looking at someone near me, but when my gaze lands back on him, he shakes his head and points, nodding, almost as if to say, Yes, you, stupid.
“Holly, hell,” Mandy says when the song is over. “Did you see the way he was looking at you?”
“I didn’t just imagine that?” I ask her.
Mandy grins, turning me by the shoulders to face her. “No. You didn’t.”
I’
ve been to my fair share of rock concerts, and not once have I seen anything close to what Industrial November does when the show is over. They exit the stage, and the crowd stomps their feet until they return for the encore. All four men come back out, line up in a straight line, grab hands, and take a bow. The concert is heavy metal, performance art, and theater all rolled into one. It’s pure art.
“Ready to go backstage?” Mandy asks.
When we get backstage, Mandy and I are escorted to a room packed with other fans and groupies. I find a spot on a couch and take a seat to check my phone, which I now realize I haven’t done all night. I frown. I got so lost in the music, in the magic of the singer. Brenner Reindhart actually made me forget about La Oficina for four hours.
Three missed text messages from Joe await me.
Joe: Tracy was a no-show. We are short-staffed.
Joe: Never mind. Don’t worry. I was able to get Ileana to come in. Enjoy the concert.
Joe: Did you not get change for the register?
I rub my temples. Joe’s never had any issues like this before. He is probably nervous and, I’m sure, figuring things out on his own. Not that it eases my nerves any.
The door opens, and all the women in the room, including Mandy, jump to their feet, if they aren’t already standing, as the bass player walks in, followed by the guitarist. Two security guards flank them.
“Hello, ladies,” the guitarist says with a wide smile. He has the look of a golden, blond god as he opens his arms wide for two women to fall under his wings and fawn over him.
“That’s Karl,” Mandy says. “And that one over there, the brooding, muscular one with the beard, the bass player, his name is Fritz. We should go over and say hi.”
“Why don’t you go ahead? Get their autographs or take a selfie or whatever you want. I have to deal with Joe.”
“Everything okay?” Mandy asks.
“Yeah. Go on. Enjoy what time you can with them. When I’m done with Joe, I’ll join you.”
Mandy shrugs, and I can almost see her skipping toward the two band members—surely her high heels are the only thing stopping her. I still can’t believe she wore those shoes on Bonnie. I had to hand it to her, the woman was committed to her high heels.
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