He doesn’t respond until I’ve opened the door to his hotel room, and what he does say will stay with me for the rest of the day. “Tonight, Kylie. Tonight you’re fucking mine.”
As if I need a reminder.
My face is still prickly when I let myself into my room five minutes later. Cautiously, I peek around the corner to where our queen-size beds are separated by only a nightstand, and I see that Heidi is alone. She’s sitting on her bed in a midriff-baring tee and boy shorts, plucking food off a tray loaded with the continental breakfast.
“You’re up early,” I say.
She takes a long sip of coffee and makes a face at the Styrofoam cup. “So are you. Did you screw Prince Albert to get him out of your system?” When I slide down on the edge of my bed to face her, she lets out a dramatic sigh. “You didn’t, did you?”
Heidi’s been my friend for the last four years. I met her on tour when she was dating the lead singer of the band that had opened for Your Toxic Sequel. We bonded instantly over our mutual love of music. Our similar backgrounds—my parents are both youth ministers, and her dad is a former televangelist—brought us even closer. She’s been there for me through the bullshit and the tears and our inability to commit because of the past, and she gets me.
When I glance up at her, I don’t even try to keep the misery from creeping its way onto my face. “He took the Prince Albert out a couple of years back, remember?”
I still have memories of the tiny piercing that was on the head of Wyatt’s cock, and they’re all vivid enough to flood my mouth with moisture.
She snorts and bites into her bagel. “Sorry, I don’t keep up with what Wyatt McCrae is doing with and to his junk.”
“Which is why we’re friends.” I scan through my phone, searching for the number Wyatt programmed earlier. “Sin is back in rehab,” I say quietly. She’s going to find out sooner or later, and it’s better if I tell her myself.
She sinks her small teeth into her lip. Heidi’s been around for a lot of Sinjin’s ups and downs, too. “What the fuck?” she finally says.
So, I tell her everything Wyatt told me last night, and when I’m done, she shakes her head to each side. “What’s going to happen to him?”
“I don’t know, but as soon as I speak to Lucas directly, I’ll sure as hell find out.” In the meantime, I need to handle his flight details before I can even think about confronting him. I fish my credit cards from the nightstand drawer.
Heidi cocks an eyebrow as I take off in the direction of the bathroom. “If you want to talk dirty, I can cut you a discount,” she calls after me.
I spin around to face her. “It’s impossible for me to take you seriously when you’ve got cream cheese on your upper lip,” I say.
She wipes it off with the back of her hand, smearing it even more.
“Making a call for Lucas before I talk to him about Sin. Be out in a little.” I start to close the bathroom door, but then I poke my head out. “I meant to ask you—how’d things go with Shiner Bock?”
Heidi looks confused for a moment, but then she figures out to whom I’m referring to and laughs. “Eh . . . I guess he was okay.” She lifts her hand, wobbling it from side to side. “Finn and I are having drinks tonight. You should come.”
Meaning he has a friend Heidi wants to play matchmaker for. I roll my eyes. “So-so isn’t exactly grounds for drinks and round two, babe, but I’ll think about it,” I say as I close the restroom door and dial the number Wyatt gave me.
Arranging the flight for Lucas takes longer than I initially assumed. By the time I’m done and I’ve emailed the details to Sienna, assuring her that Lucas will be okay with the extravagant cost, Heidi is passed out in bed, making soft noises that she swears up and down isn’t snoring.
I curl up in my bed and grab my iPod and earbuds from under my pillow. Out of habit, I let the sounds of Chevelle and HIM rock me to sleep.
Chapter Four
“So, how do you and Heidi know each other?” Finn asks me after he takes a swig of his drink-of-choice for the evening, Bud Light.
We’ve been out barhopping for at least an hour, and this is the first thing he’s actually said to me all night. All he’s talked about is the gym, and although Heidi claims he’s from Florida, I expect him to bring up tanning and laundry at any moment.
“You two work together?” he continues before I can answer his first question.
Across the table, Heidi’s cornflower blue eyes widen slightly. She gives a slight jerk of her head that Shiner Bock and his friend, James, don’t seem to notice.
I down a sip of my drink before asking him, “Hmm?”
Shiner Bock curls his arm around Heidi’s bare shoulders and shifts a lock of her wavy brown hair through his fingers. “Customer service rep, right?”
So, that’s what Heidi’s calling phone sex now. Smoothing my own hair back, I shake my head, and Heidi’s nervous smile—the one that, paired with her bright red lipstick and the lighting in the bar, makes her look like a hot version of The Joker—stretches across her face. “No, I’m my older brother’s personal assistant.”
Heidi instantly relaxes and bobs her head up and down in agreement. If she felt the need to lie about what she does for a living—and she’s damn proud about her voice-banging gig—then things must have gone much better with Shiner Bock than she let on this morning.
“You like it?” he asks.
I squint down at my drink. “Best job in the world.” Besides the fact that I’m almost always with the band. That’s one of the reasons Wyatt and I have never been able to move forward properly. I know what goes on behind the scenes. There’s always been too much temptation, and after Brenna, too much doubt on my end about what’s happening when I’m not around. And then, there’s the fact that I’ve had to watch Sin’s fast, tumultuous downfall over the last few years.
Yes, I love my job, and I love Your Toxic Sequel, but sometimes it’s too much, even for me.
A hand brushes up against my thigh. I flinch and turn my head a fraction to James, who’s smiling back at me. He’s good-looking enough. He has a dark tan, like Shiner Bock, with auburn hair and sea green eyes. Unlike Shiner Bock, he’s taller, standing at least a half a foot over my five-four stature. And he’s got a bad case of the feels. This is the fourth time in the last hour when James’s fingers have made contact with my body, which includes two “accidental” boob pokes and one bold-as-hell ass grope.
“You okay, Kyla?” he asks.
“I’m good.” I ignore the fact that he doesn’t know a little detail like my name.
His hand inches down toward my knee, causing me to let out a little breath of relief. “I was just asking what your brother does.”
“He’s in a band,” Heidi and I say at practically the same time. After running my tongue down over the center of my upper lip, I continue, “My brother is in a band, and I travel around with them.” Lifting my beer to my mouth, I drink a quarter of the contents in one gulp.
James’s eyes narrow skeptically. “Anyone worth listening to? Or one of those small town things?”
The derision in his voice snaps my head up. Setting my drink down on the table a little too hard, I give him a withering glare.
“Actually, I’ve found that some of my favorite bands are the ones who are small town things.” Douche bag. I’m already on edge because Wyatt hasn’t texted me, and Lucas brushed me off earlier this afternoon when I called to ask him about Sinjin, so I inhale and exhale a couple of times before I speak. “But, yeah, I think Lucas’s band is worth listening to. My brother fronts Your Toxic Sequel.”
Beneath the muted lights hanging overhead, James flushes—three different shades of red, in fact. When he moves his hand away from my knee, I scoot my chair as far away from him as the limited amount of space will allow. Across the table, Heidi glances down at her napkin, and Shiner Bock chokes on his drink and then pounds on his chest a few times.
“You’re kidding, right?” James asks.
As I move my head from side to side, he gives Heidi and his friend a look before turning his eyes back to me.
Heidi clears her throat. “She’s not.”
Because James and Shiner Bock more than likely think I’m the biggest bitch who ever existed, the next twenty minutes of conversation is a strained and incredibly awkward tribute to my brother’s band. Finally, James wanders off because he swears he sees one of their other friends.
Heidi shoots me a sympathetic look and mouths, Sorry. I respond by giving her an apologetic smile. It’s not her fault that I’m in a bad mood. The last thing I want to do is ruin her final evening in New Orleans by being a buzzkill.
When I push my chair back, she bites the corner of her bottom lip, frowning, as she starts to get up too, but I shake my head. “I’ve got to take care of a few things in the room, but I’ll be back.” Of course, I have no intention of returning, and I’m sure she already realizes that.
“Text me if you need me, okay?” she says, which actually means, Come drink with us if Wyatt lets you down again.