I’ve always figured Tammy knows Your Air was written, if not about her, at least because of her—not that she gives a rat’s ass. It came to me several weeks after we slept together and just wouldn’t go away. So I took the chance, even though love ballads aren’t really our thing. The guys were ambivalent about it, but Dave, who knows gold when he smells it, said it was going to hit, and he was right.
Now, as I sing the lyrics that describe a relationship doomed from the moment the principals touched, Your Air takes on new meaning.
If I could only watch one view, it would be your face
If I could only touch one place, it would be your skin
If I could only feel one force, it would be your love
If I could only breathe one thing, it would be your air.
Instead of an ode to something dark and wrong and painful, maybe Your Air could be my anthem of hope, the possibility that someone might actually love me back.
I look at Mel, and I smile.
When we come offstage for the last time, the guys are amped. It was a great opening show, only a few lighting glitches, not anything anyone but the stage manager and I would ever notice. Walsh throws his sweaty ass all over Tammy when he reaches the wings, and she quite predictably shrieks and starts smacking at him. Mike is high-fiving the crew guys he typically parties with, and Colin grabs some groupie who managed to get backstage and lays some French on her. The poor girl is speechless for five minutes afterwards.
I know I’m grinning like an idiot, but there’s only one person I want to see, and she waits quietly for me as I stride toward her. She’s wearing that flimsy sundress and those cowboy boots that make me want to saddle up the nearest horse and ride off with her. Her red hair is glowing under all the colored lights, and her lips shine like a couple of jewels begging to be worshipped.
“So what did you think?” I ask when I reach her.
She grins back at me. “It was amazing,” she says, and my heart stills for a minute before it resumes beating much faster than the normal rate.
“I haven’t had that much fun at a performance in a long time, Mel. I think you’re my good-luck charm.”
She flushes. “It’s the camera. It makes people more aware of everything and gives them a reason to fake it ‘til they make it.”
I laugh. “Fake it ‘til they make it?”
“Yeah,” she responds as she packs her camera away. “They try to look perfect for the camera and eventually they feel perfect too.”
I shake my head. “You’re something else, Mel DiLorenzo. You know that?”
She just smiles.
“Hey, Joss!” Walsh calls.
“Yeah, man,” I say, tearing my gaze away from the stunning redhead at my side.
“You ready to party?”
I look at Mel questioningly. She nods her head vigorously.
“Yep. Let’s hit it, bro.”
And we all head back to the green room to get things underway.
Chapter Fourteen
Mel
According to what Tammy told me during our prep for tonight, the guys always start the post-performance parties in the green room. Where there were sodas and snacks beforehand, there is now dinner and booze. Lots of booze. Everyone grabs plates of food and beers, whiskey, tequila—whatever booze they might want—and sits around in the large room on sofas and armchairs. Joss is off taking a shower and changing. Meanwhile, Colin has broken out a bong, and I wonder how he gets away with that everywhere he goes as if it weren’t still illegal in most states.
I watch Walsh too, curious as to how he handles all of this since he’s in recovery, but he seems fine with it, and Tammy stays glued to his side. More and more people filter in. Crew, security staff, and as I look around, I realize groupies too. Here is the side of rock and roll I’ve always heard about but never seen. As the security staff comes in, they have women tagging along. Blondes, brunettes, redheads.
They all have one thing in common, they look slutty. Yeah, I know it’s not very sisterly of me to say so, but it’s the God’s honest truth. I’ve never seen so much T and A in one room before in my life. There is cleavage oozing, asses bouncing, and legs spreading every which way, and I wonder how the hell Tammy stands this.
I watch as two of them sidle up to Mike and he throws an arm around each, letting his hands drift down to their chests at the same time. Both girls squeal when he squeezes their tits. When I look five minutes later, he’s got one on the couch, making out with her, his hand up her shirt, while the other one straddles his lap and grinds on him as she sucks on his neck. I nearly throw up in my mouth a little.
I see that there are far more groupies than band members, and I realize the groupies also give their affections to the crew. Suddenly I understand why these guys give up months at home and spend their days lugging around all that equipment in order to be a roadie. It’s a job with some serious benefits.
I go to the buffet table and look skeptically at the food, debating whether I should have told someone to photograph this, when a freshly showered and dressed Joss comes and stands next to me. His hair is still damp and the bottom sticks to his neck in little pieces. He’s clean-shaven and smells like some sort of beachy cologne. He has on a button-up shirt, cut narrow and untucked over jeans. It’s open far enough at the neck that I get a glimpse of firm muscle and golden skin. It makes my stomach twist in a knot with wanting. A wanting I know is bad for me.
“You got everything you need, Mel?” he asks as he nurses a beer.
I’m suddenly uncomfortable with him and angry for reasons I can’t understand. I wonder how often he screws women like those filling this room. Does he take one back to his hotel after every performance? Does he ever learn their names or ask how old they are? Because I’m pretty sure some of these girls are underage, and that’s not a comforting thought.
“Yeah, I’m good,” I say woodenly.
He dips his head and watches me carefully. “You sure? Everything’s all right?”
“Yep.” I look straight ahead instead of at him. “It’s all good.”
My stomach twists as I see Colin start dancing with a blonde who has her hand on his crotch and just snorted a line of coke up her nose.
I’m an average girl. I party. I have dates. I’m not a virgin. And I’ve spent my share of nights worshipping porcelain. But there is something different about this, something so anonymous and without conscience or purpose.
I’ve had sex with boyfriends, and I’ve even had a one-night stand, but this is far beyond a one-night stand. I know Mike didn’t ask those girls their names. I know he won’t bother to find out how they’re getting home, and I know he doesn’t care what happens to them after tonight.
They aren’t people to him. They’re vessels to pour his sexual energy into so he can go on his merry way with a load off. And just as bad, they view him the same way. He’s not Mike the funny, irreverent, talented musician. He’s a celebrity—someone they can brag about fucking when they go out partying with their friends the next night—a status symbol, not unlike a Mercedes or a pair of Prada shoes.
I stand like a statue and watch it all. I’ve gotten myself into something a lot heavier than I realized. I suddenly feel woefully naïve and stupid. The same sort of naïve and stupid I was with my professor. How many times do I have to put myself in situations like this before I learn? How could I not have known what this was? How could I have really thought Joss Jamison was someone I could be friends with? Or even something more, if I’m totally honest with myself.
Maybe Tammy can have a relationship with Walsh because they grew up together. She was here every step of the way when he discovered all this, and because of her, he’s maybe never really participated in it. But Joss? Joss has been at the center of it all for years. The quintessential rock god. I remember the blonde from the day we left on tour, and it seems so much more revolting now than it did then. How many? How often?
“So have you gotten a chance to eat some dinner?” Joss asks through my fog of deteriorating thoughts.
I barely register him before I’m out the door, headed back to the hotel.
Chapter Fifteen
Joss
Between the time we walked off stage and the after-party, something went seriously haywire. The vibrant redhead who watched me perform, sending me heated looks and sparkling smiles, has been replaced by a pissed-off, closed-off woman who just walked out on me. I’m fucking clueless, and I don’t like it. I don’t do clueless. I know what to expect and when, especially on my own damn tour.
Hell, maybe DiLorenzo women are just that mercurial. Maybe they don’t really care about anyone for more than a few hours. But I know that’s not true. Tammy has loved Walsh for thirteen years. Hardly fickle.
I throw myself down in an armchair, debauchery continuing on all around me, and I wonder what the hell happened. I go back over our conversation as we walked to the green room. I remember the sexy little look she gave me when I told her I was going to shower and change. She wasn’t pissed at me. I know she wasn’t. I’m not a total idiot about women. Well, at least not all the time.
A buxom brunette approaches me. She’s sultry and wearing something that actually approaches clothing, unlike most of the women in here. She says some flirty thing to me, but I reply, “Not tonight, all right? Nothing personal.” She winces and retreats quickly.