The Bad Boys of Summer Anthology(220)
“Oh shit.”
“Yeah, so I’m warning you. It’s coming. What are you going to do?”
I take a moment to breathe, trying to calm my jittery nerves. “All he gave me was that P.O. box. It could be miles from where he actually is, or he could have someone else picking up the mail and sending it on to him. I don’t know, but if I tell her, I’ll be breaking his trust yet again. He specifically asked me not to tell anyone but you and the attorneys.”
“Look, I know you’re trying to work through this shit, and I admire you for the efforts you’ve been making. I need to get some papers to him anyway. Let me write him and ask if he wants to talk to her? I’ll call her and tell her I’ll do that and at least it’ll buy us some time.”
Relief washes through me. In spite of how badly I treated Dave, he’s handled this shit so much better than I ever thought he would.
“Thanks, man, I appreciate that. Really.”
“It’s fine. She actually sounded really good in the message. I’m hoping she’s doing better.”
“Yeah, me too.”
“All right, I’ll talk to you later this week about the copyrights on those new songs you gave me.”
“Great. Thanks again, Dave.”
After we hang up, I lie back down on my bed, staring up at the dingy ceiling. I should really pay for my dad to get this place painted. So far I have trouble getting him to let me even pay for groceries, but he’s started to give on a few things.
After Walsh left, I immersed myself in what needed to be done to handle the band’s business, and when that wrapped up, I sat in my condo in Portland and realized I was lost. My friends were gone, my band was gone, the love of my life was gone. I was alone. And then I remembered my dad’s words. “I never want you to be alone like me.” So I called the number I had for him, the number Mel had known I would need at some point, and I told him I was coming to Denver. He was there at the airport waiting for me, and as he took my bag out of my hand, he said, “Rough few weeks, huh?”
“Yeah, you could say that.”
“Okay, let’s get you home. I’ve got beer in the fridge and the Broncos are playing tonight.”
“Okay.”
That was ten weeks ago, and I’m still here, near downtown Denver in the little brick bungalow he’s owned since my mom took me and moved to Portland. He’s a quiet guy—big surprise—but easy to be with. He works all day while I write songs and read, and I work with a holistic practitioner Dave found for me. She does energy work and other stuff, and we’ve been slowly talking about how I got to where I am and why. My need for control, my issues with my dad, why I screwed over the best friend I’ve ever had. It’s some hard shit to face, but she’s gentle with me, and some days I feel like maybe there’s hope for my future.
In the evenings, my dad comes home, tells me some stupid story about his crew at work, and then we pop a few brews and watch a game or he listens to whatever songs I’m working on. He actually has a good ear, and I found out he even used to play some guitar himself.
We don’t talk much about the past. I have those discussions with the energy therapist. I know one thing for sure though, Joseph Senior might not know how to be a dad, but he does know how to be a friend. At this point in my life, that’s enough. It’s comfortable, and I don’t feel so alone anymore.
After Dave’s call, I allow myself to think about Mel. I worked really hard at first, putting her out of my mind. Sometimes at night I’d wake up in the dark and reach for her before remembering she was gone and it would all come flooding back. It felt like something poisonous was destroying me from the inside out. It hurt that bad.
But more and more lately, I’ll find myself thinking of her during the small moments of the day. As I look at a tree outside or strum a certain chord in a song. When I taste a food I know she likes or hear a joke I think she’d laugh at. It’s less intense but more pervasive. Almost as if she’s become an actual part of me that I’ll never lose yet still always miss somehow.
My energy therapist says it’s because I’m getting more balanced and all the crap that’s blocked me for so long is dissolving. She says that it’ll be tough but worth it in the end because my feelings will be pure, not driven by negative things in my past. All I know is, the more I think about Mel, the more I want to think about her and the more I want to be with her.
Now, at five thirty a.m. on a Thursday, I’m lying in bed and wondering where she is and what she’s doing. I’ve talked to Colin a few times and he says she’s been staying with Tammy. I’m glad. I couldn’t take knowing that I destroyed their relationship too. Whatever problems they might have, Tammy and Mel love each other a lot. They need each other right now. Unfortunately, what they don’t need is me. But then no one from my life during the last twenty-eight years needs me anymore. I’m not sure my dad needs me either, but at least he doesn’t mind me. That’s something I guess.
It starts off with an email. I’m writing a song one evening as I sit alone in my dad’s apartment. He’s gone out with some guys from work. They invited me along, but I’ve had this song banging around in my head all day and I need to get it down. When it’s finally done, I sit and look at it. It’s about her. But then, they all are.
So often I think about sending the songs to her. Trying to tell her what I feel. I’m not sure why this time I act on it, but before I can stop myself, I give in to the need to tell her. I touch the email icon on the iPad and open up a new window.
To: picsbymel
From: RockStar1
I once told you that every love song I’d ever written was about you. Now I can truthfully say that every song I write is about you. The love songs, the sad songs, the happy songs, the beautiful songs, it doesn’t matter, they’re about you. Today I wrote this. I hope you like it.
The Girl From Shangri-La
I knew her once, the girl from Shangri-La
She taught me what it meant to fall and fall
It was but a minute in her life
But it was all the minutes in mine
She taught me what it meant to fall and fall
That beautiful girl from Shangri-La.
Love, Joss.
I hit send before I can second-guess myself, and then I begin the wait.
Chapter Thirty-Eight
Mel
Tammy is determined to find Walsh. She hasn’t told me what she intends to do once she knows where he is, but I’m really worried it won’t be good for her. I talk to her therapist about it and she agrees that Tammy needs to tread carefully. Her recovery is going well, and being rejected by Walsh right now might be more than she can handle. But we’re seeing that as she gets well, the old Tammy is reemerging, and she’s a force to be reckoned with. Not many people are able to tell her what to do.
My life has been in a holding pattern for over three months now while I’ve taken care of Tammy. I haven’t checked my school email account in all that time, so I have no idea what happened with the remainder of my case, whether Seattle College decided to let me retake the class or not. I guess it doesn’t matter anymore. So many things don’t seem to matter anymore. I spend my days taking care of Tammy, making sure my parents know how she is, coordinating with her doctors, and supervising what needs to be done at her house. It’s all I can really deal with right now.
Luckily, I too received a severance package from the band. Plenty of money to keep me going for the next year, open my own business, whatever I want. It would have made me feel like a hooker if I hadn’t also delivered the tour photos to Dave. It wasn’t the story of a rock band on tour, however. When we returned from California, during the many times Tammy either slept or was in therapy, I looked through the hundreds of photos I’d shot. I was shocked to see that it told the story of endings—the end of friendships, the end of loves, and the end of a band.
When I started the Lush project, I thought I’d be faced with photos of rock stars behaving badly. What I ended up with was photos of rock stars suffering pain. Things like Mike and Joss arguing, Tammy watching Joss with guilt and pain in her eyes, Walsh holding Tammy protectively, and Colin alone, apart from everything and everyone around him. The things that clearly showed the path we were all on but couldn’t see when we were in the midst of it. I don’t think anyone else will ever see what I created for Dave, but at least I’ve seen it, and at least he knows what happened. I feel like he deserved that much, given he lost his most lucrative client overnight.
I’m cleaning up some of the final files from the band project late one night when the flag on my inbox flashes. I click on the icon and open up the screen. There, as if not a day has passed, is an email from RockStar1. Joss.
My hands start to tremble, and I gasp. I feel the tears well up as a sense of panic explodes inside my heart. I lean back in my chair, hands over my mouth as I try to regain some control. It takes me nearly five minutes before I can extend a shaky hand to click on the message. I never even consider not opening it. The primal, visceral reaction I always have to him extends through the miles, the technology, the pain. I cannot turn away from Joss Jamison, no matter what he’s done.