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Still (Grip Book 2)(8)

By:Kennedy Ryan


"There aren't many Broadway roles that require nudity." I shrug and  widen my eyes innocently. "Maybe my time in New York could open up a  whole new avenue for Kai."

The cogs are turning so hard in my brother's head, I think I smell smoke.

"I love that idea, Bris." He leans over to hook his arm around my neck  and pull me closer. "And I think it's great that you're putting your  relationship with Marlon first."

"You do?"

"Yeah, and I know it's your choice. He's not that guy who would drag you across the country by your hair."

"I had to force him to tell me he wanted me to go with him." I smile at  the memory. "He's so concerned with me being happy and doing what I  love."

"Unlike me who would just say Kai, pack your shit, you're coming with me  to New York?" Rhyson laughs, but his voice rings with truth.

"Your words," I say with a grin. "Not mine."

He almost destroyed their relationship trying to control Kai. Our  parents set that pattern managing his career as a piano prodigy, using  love as control, and it's taken him twenty years to break out of it.

"I've gotten a lot better, too," Rhyson asserts. "Just ask Kai."

"Ask me what?"

Kai stands in the kitchen doorway, Aria perched on her hip. Her petite  frame is perfectly lit by the sun shining through the windows, and for a  moment, my brother looks dazzled by the dark hair hanging almost to her  waist and the tilted eyes that are even more beautiful because they are  kind. My niece is such a perfectly adorable blend of Rhys and Kai, I  can't resist going over and snatching her up immediately.         

     



 

While I'm cooing to Aria, Rhyson is thoroughly kissing his wife, pulling her much shorter frame up and into his.

For a long damn time.

"Ahem." I clear my throat meaningfully. "You think you two could wrap this up before Aria graduates?"

Kai turns dreamy, love-dazed eyes my way, a bashful smile on her pretty  face. You'd never know this unassuming girl in her simple jeans and  T-shirt is about to blow the music industry wide open. Her sweetness  cloaks a driving ambition that is backed up by immense talent. She's  going to be the biggest thing since . . . well, Grip, and it's my job to  make sure that happens. No one deserves it more than Kai; she's lost so  much over the course of her life, and it's good to see her happy,  especially with my brother.

"Sorry." A faint blush colors her cheekbones. "Rhys, what were you saying Bristol should ask me when I came in?"

He winks at me conspiratorially over her shoulder.

"We were just wondering how you feel about Broadway."





5





Bristol





"This could be the one, Bris."

I glance from the clean modern lines of the beautifully decorated  Tribeca apartment to Charisma Simmons, my friend since high school. Her  mother, Bridget, one of New York's most elite realtors, has shown me  several properties this week, and none of them made me feel like this  one does. There's something special here. Even though Grip and I will  only be leasing it for the semester, it has its own permanence, like it  has only ever been someone's home. There's a warmth that wraps around  me; it feels personal. It could be that this one comes fully furnished  while the others were cold, stark, empty boxes-albeit expensive empty  boxes. You have to mortgage your soul to live in New York. I shouldn't  be surprised; I grew up here, and LA isn't much better. We had an  apartment on the Upper East Side, where I lived during the school year,  close to the private school I attended. When I wasn't there, I was at  our estate a few hours outside the city. My parents and Rhyson were  rarely at either since they were usually on the road, and those places  never felt like home-but this, this was someone's home. I can feel it.

"It is beautiful." My gaze drifts over the sprawling space, the exposed  rafters, the red brick wall fitted with wide windows overlooking the  city, and the slatted staircase leading to the upper floor. "Your mom  said the owner wants to meet us, right? How close are they?"

"Oh! Let me check."

Charisma, or Charm as we chopped her down to growing up, pulls her phone  from the latest Birkin bag. She looks every inch the New Yorker, shaded  in black and gray, swathed in leather, accessorized and name-branded  from head to toe. The knife-sharp points of her precisely bobbed hair  slice into her skinny shoulders. The Gucci eyeglasses framed by her  perfectly arched brows say more about how smart she likes to look than  they do about her nearsightedness. I know her secret. In the cutthroat  publishing industry, a woman as delicate and lovely as Charm does  whatever necessary to be taken seriously by the intelligentsia,  including wearing glasses she doesn't actually need.

My wardrobe has adapted to New York, some, too. There's always an edge I  don and doff depending on the coast. Today I've paired my black  tulle-ruffled mini skirt with a tight black leather jacket and ankle  boots. If we're spending the fall here, I need to shore up my  sweater-weather game.

"My mom's fifteen minutes out. She got stuck uptown," Charm says,  slipping her phone back into her bag and flashing the impish grin that  landed us in the principal's office more than once. "But that gives us a  few minutes to catch up before she arrives. How is it that you've been  here all week and we haven't even had dinner?"

"Your author released a book." I run a finger over the mantle topping  the glass-encased fireplace, noting its dustless-ness. "And it was a  huge week for several of my clients. Me being here instead of LA,  managing the time difference, trying to see properties . . ."

I shrug carelessly, used to our dynamic by now. Charm and I have kept in  touch some, but we have demanding careers we've been completely  dedicated to since graduating. It's paid off. Both of us hold pole  position in our respective industries, but there's been little time for  long-distance friendships, and missing each other has become a habit  over the years. The two girls who grew up together and knew each other's  secrets are now women who have a lot to learn about who the other has  become.

"Well we have a few minutes now." Charm pats the cushion of the slate-colored suede sectional. "Come talk to mama."         

     



 

I sit beside her and smile involuntarily. My affection for Charm has  stubbornly hung around since we searched for ways to make our modest  school uniforms sexier.

"Tell me about this man of yours, the one you're dropping everything to  follow." Charm purses her lips and wiggles her brows with salacious  speculation. "I must admit, I was surprised to see you with a black  guy."

Charm's eyes stretch and she gasps, covering her mouth with one perfectly manicured hand.

"Oh, God. Did that sound bad? You know I'm a progressive."

"Of course you are, Charm." I pat her hand while holding on to my humor and patience. "Grade A liberal."

"I just meant . . . well, you never dated black guys in college."

My shrug is easy, my laugh less so. This feels weird.

"I never really thought about it. It didn't matter-it doesn't matter."

"No, it doesn't." She puckers her perfectly plucked brows. "I sound like  those people assuring you that they really do have black friends."

I don't answer, just lift both brows. Sometimes when you're quiet, people hear themselves.

"I really do have lots of black friends." Her tinkling laugh pokes fun at herself.

"I'm sure you do." I grin and decide to let her off the hook for now.

"I've seen pictures, of course. He's . . . wow." Charm licks her lips,  anticipation all over her face. This is more her speed-talking about how  hot a man is rather than the sticky issues of race.

"You have to tell me everything," she says, practically flushing. "Don't hold back. Remember the Dick Diaries?"

How could I forget our regular debriefs after sexual encounters and misadventures?

"I'm not talking about this with you, Charm," I say with neutral determination. "It's not appropriate."

"Oh, Bris, come on." Charm levels a knowing look at me because in a past  life, she did know all my dirt. "Remember we had a threesome with that  guy from Penn? The one with the bumpy dick? I know how you sound when  you come. I'm pretty sure telling me if your boyfriend is well hung  doesn't cross any lines we didn't cross a long time ago."

I groan because I try to forget that night with Crooked Dick.

"Please don't mention that when Grip gets here."

I haven't seen him in two weeks, and he's coming straight from the  airport. He did a few shows in Europe and recorded with some Danish  producer Rhyson has been raving about. Needless to say, after not seeing  him for thirteen days, under Charm's watchful eyes, I'll have to  restrain myself from dry-humping him.

"Also," I tell Charm, "I faked that orgasm, so don't presume you know how I sound when I come."