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Break The Bed(5)

By:Joanna Blake


No matter how shaggable she was.

"Alright, hold on."

Marley walked into the hallway to the office. He was back in just a few minutes with a stack of papers. At the last second he pulled the top sheet off.

"What's that?"

"It's nothing. Just the cover letter."

"Give it here."

Marley sighed and ran his hands through his hair.

"Fine."

Nick grabbed it from his hands and stared down at it. The cheeky little bitch had signed the note. But not as herself.



Mr. Falcon,



Please approve the updated concert schedule within. These dates are approximate and will depend on venue availability.



Best,

Wendel Cass





Bloody hell.

He raked his hand through his hair. She had gumption he'd have to give her that.

"What the hell is that supposed to be- a joke?"

"I think we made a mistake when we sent the flowers."

"We made a mistake?"

"You said to send her the same as last time- well, last time we sent flowers was for Wendel's wake."

"Christ Marley, we need this girl to toe the bloody line! Not go all militant on us."

He sat down again and started reading.

His face cracked into a huge smile as he flipped through the proposed schedule. It wasn't a bad plan actually. Some of the smaller venues were part of rock history. It would be great for a limited tour- he kind of missed playing that sort of intimate venue and really getting off with the crowd. Some of these places were part of his old stomping ground. But if he played them exclusively, he knew what would happen.

People would say he was a has been.

"What do you want to do, Nick?"

"Call her and set up one of those promotional events. Pick the best one. Late night TV. Oh and tell her I’ll do some of the smaller venues. But not all.”

Marley let out a huge sigh of relief.

"Okay Nick."

"Get that skinny redhead. I like him."

"Right. Will do."

"And Marley. Tell her I said, knight to queen's bishop."

"What?"

"She'll understand."





Chapter 8





Sabrina





Sabrina had just pulled off the freeway when the phone rang. She knew it wasn't likely to be anyone from the office. Her heart skipped a beat. She glanced down at the flashing screen expecting to see her aunt's phone number.

Aunt Petra hardly ever called with good news.

A horn sounded behind her and she jerked her eyes back to the road. The light had turned green while she was staring at the name that appeared on her phone.

Nick Falcon.

A soft tone sounded a minute later, indicating she'd gotten a voicemail.

She forced herself to concentrate on the road. She always left work early on Thursdays. It was her weekly shift at the Gilda's Club headquarters. She did a lot of fundraising for the cancer resource center, as well as visiting patients who didn’t have family to support them.

She never looked forward to the shift, but she never missed it either.

It didn't feel like charity though.

It felt like penance.

She pulled into the lot and parked. She took a deep breath and checked her voicemail. The key was still in the ignition so Marley's voice filled the car via blue tooth. It always startled her when it did that.

"Hello Sabrina! It's Marley. Nick has agreed to do one promotional appearance. He wants it to be that red headed fellow- Conan something. He wants to do some of the new venues, but most of them are off the table. He still wants his stadium shows. Oh, and he said to tell you 'knight to queen's bishop.'"

She leaned her forehead against her hands where they rested on the steering wheel. He'd given in. Her tactics had worked.

She'd won.

She'd actually wrangled one of the most notoriously difficult personalities in the music industry and come out on top. Her mother would be so proud.

If only she could tell her.

That's something she used to do when she was younger. Pretend she could just call her mother. Dial a random number and just talk. Finally her father had caught her. He'd been furious. Confused and hurt.

But worse than that, he’d been worried,

It hadn't stopped her from compulsively calling people. She’d been desperately hoping to hear the voice of a kind woman. She secretly believed that if she called enough times, her real mother would answer.

This time, she knew her mother would be proud of her. The hard-working immigrant's compliments were always hard earned, but all the sweeter because of it. Yes, her mother would be proud of how she'd bested Nick Falcon.

Then again, his chess comment told her two things. First, that Nick was smarter than he looked. He obviously understood strategy and was familiar with the complex game of chess. Secondly, he was telling her that he wasn't done yet.

He wasn't going to just roll over and be a good boy. Or become like some of her other clients who didn’t require a lot of hand holding. The trouble was, she didn’t think it was his hand that he wanted held. He was going to continue to be difficult, no doubt about it. Not that she’d really expected anything else from him.

In fact, she might have even been disappointed if he made it too easy.

She smiled grimly. She'd expect nothing less than open warfare. Polite warfare, she hoped. But a battle all the same.

After all, a game of chess played well takes time.





Chapter 9





Nick





Nick paced back and forth on the deck with a bottle of water. He was desperately trying to get his head together and give his liver a respite, even if it was a short one. According to Marley, he had to hydrate to make up for all the brutal drinking he'd been doing lately.

Lately? Who are you kidding?

Hell, it felt like he'd been drinking this hard forever. But he had to clean up his act. Lose the bloat and the bloodshot eyes. He was going to be on bloody TV in two days. He had to look sharp.

And not like the drunken, bloated fool he’d been lately. Even too much champagne could make a bloke look puffy. He had taken a good hard look in the mirror when he woke up earlier that afternoon.

He did not like what he saw. And he definitely did not want to be that person on national television.

Not a lot of people knew it, but Nick hated doing live TV. Movies were much easier. There was a script involved. And he could do as many takes as it took till he got it right. Usually, it didn’t take too many.

Even filming live concert was easy for him. He loved it. He made sport of messing with the censors, slipping a fair number of F bombs in as he interacted with the crowd.

Fuck, standing in front of fifty-thousand people with only a pair of skin tight leather pants on was fine too. That was a bloody walk in the park. These broadcast bastards wanted him to actually talk!

He had to make sense on top of it. No cursing or blathering on about this or that. And they expected him to be charming for God’s sake!

Funny, even! Nick found himself hilarious most days, but in a ‘hell with it’ sort of cynical way. Not TV funny! He needed anecdotes or some shite.

Lord save him, this was a disaster.

Give him a screaming crowd of thousands, keep a steady stream of drinks in his hands, he could hold forth all night. But just sitting there and talking with all those invisible eyes on him? Now that made him fucking terrified.

Even worse, he had to do it sober.

At first his rock star persona had practically demanded that he misbehave. The ladies wanted a bad boy, and by God, that’s what he gave them. They expected him to party like, well, a rock star.

He’d loved it. He’d never given a toss for convention and now he had license to do whatever he bloody well pleased, and people would accept it.

Not just accept it, either. They ate is up. Called him unique and unconventional and eccentric.

Now things were different. If he was honest with himself, which he rarely was, getting smashed was just a habit to dull the loneliness and boredom. The bloom was most definitely off the rose.

Sometimes Nick thought that having things come too easily had made him permanently discontent. He'd always wanted more more more. More success, more money, more women, more booze.

But sometimes, he wanted less.

Most of it was crap after all wasn't it?

Still, he couldn't complain. He might be trapped in his opulent over the top lifestyle, but the average bloke would trade a body part to have his problems. Which model to sleep with, what fabulous destination to fly to, which house to spend the weekend in. Really, he should be so happy his feet hardly scraped the ground.

But lately it just wasn't the case. He felt… empty. Sparring with that hot little label exec had been the most excitement he'd had in years. The woman was a bloody brilliant adversary, and she knew it.

And now she'd tricked him into doing something he hated. Worse, it was something he feared. What if he looked foolish? Uncool? That would be it. His career would be over. Then he really would be touring second rate houses.

Exclusively.

Even worse, he'd be performing on weekdays. Only. It was fine to do a Thursday now and then, but the really big names mostly performed on Fridays and Saturdays.

He shuddered.

Without all the glittery facade, he really didn't have anything. If he lost his glimmer, he wouldn't be anyone… He’d be a has-been.

Marley walked in with Sandy, his personal trainer. She smiled a brilliantly at him. Sandy was a gorgeous, incredibly fit and tan California girl with golden highlights. He sighed in relief.

Something to get his mind off of all of this… thank God.

As with everything, Nick pushed himself to excess. Even though he partied hard, he’d never let his muscles go to fat. He knew that his physical condition was remarkable, especially considering what he put his body through partying all these years.