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Authors: Kenya Wright

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BOOK: Flirting With Chaos
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Now what do I do?

His blue-eyed gaze greeted me. He had a gorgeous face outlined in ruffled brown waves. He embraced me, encasing my body in hard, muscular arms and the scent of designer cologne. When I was a little girl, he’d towered over me. Now he was still taller, but my head at least reached his shoulders. Not sure of what else to do, I hugged him back and readied my lies. He’d have questions, ones that I’d rather not answer and things that I avoided thinking about.

“Where have you been?” He leaned away from me and looked just like Jude, just older with less of a tan.

He wore no shirt. Sleek layers of muscle wrapped around his waist and shoulders. An intricate pattern of colorful tattoos decorated both of his arms. It was a mural of his life—stars intertwined with musical notes; guitars interlocked with microphones; nude, big-breasted angels riding bulky demons. Those arms and that face had adorned the covers of magazines for years. Now he was a legend of rock history. To obtain his interview would mean lots of money and required skilled maneuvering through his agent, publicist, bodyguards, entourage, and any of the other people that walled him away from society. Just driving onto his property had required Thompson’s and my name to be checked against a long list of approved guests at the front security gate.

“Where have you been all these years?” Kaden asked.

Here we go.

“I was in Miami, and now I’m up in Sarasota at Ringling College of Art and Design.” I edged away from him.

“Well, I know that, but why haven’t you returned my calls, emails, or any of the messages I sent through Jude? I travel the world with my tours and movies; it’s hard enough to keep in contact with Jude, but with you it’s been impossible.” Hurt glazed those blue eyes.

My stomach clenched into guilty knots. “I thought it would be best if I kept minimum contact with Dad’s friends.”

He crossed his arms over his chest. “Why?”

“To ease the mourning process.” I stared down at the ground. “I’m sorry.”

“No. That’s fine.” He placed his fingers on my chin and lifted my face. “I don’t want you to feel bad or anything. I just really wanted to be in your life. You’re Jack’s girl, for God’s sake. You’re Rainbow.”

I cringed at the nickname. “No one calls me that anymore. I only go by Rain.”

“You’re Rainbow to me.” His gaze traveled down my body. He instantly looked away, cursed under his breath, and moved around me to the door. “You’ve grown a lot since I last saw you.”

I followed him into the house. “Well, I was sixteen.”

“Well, you’re damn sure not still sixteen. You’re bloody captivating.” He captured my hand and guided me through the solid white entryway toward the kitchen as the door slammed closed behind us. A huge staircase rested on our right. On our left were sitting and entertainment rooms full of awards for the band Depraved Minds. In a smaller room, where not many people ventured, stood my father’s prized piano and so many memories of him that it suffocated me to even think of stepping inside. My stomach twisted into gloomy knots as we passed its doorway.

An abstract expressionist painting done by Jackson Pollock hung on the center wall above the hallway to the kitchen. One of the best things about Kaden was his incredible eye for art. The painting exemplified the artist’s great drip-painting method. I’d read in several of Pollock’s interviews that many times he had simply set a canvas on the floor and then poured and dripped paint on it until he believed it was done. It was similar to Kaden and Dad’s songwriting process. I had witnessed them creating song after song on the
After the Storm
album. They would lay blank sheets of music on the floor right next to their instruments and spill out pictures of themes and symbols that inspired them. For hours, they fondled piano keys and caressed guitar strings, searching for the song they yearned to sing.

“Did you ever do beauty pageants like your mom? If you did, I bet you won tons of them.”

Has he forgotten what I looked like as a teen?

“No way. Mom tried.” It was one of the few things I’d put my foot down on when it had come to my overbearing mother. No freaking beauty pageants. “I couldn’t do it. Being Miss Jamaica’s daughter and then entering a pageant would pretty much send a whole lot of unwanted expectations and criticism my way.”

“I forgot she won. When Jack met her, she was dreaming about being Miss Jamaica. It was all she talked about. So many years have passed by.”

“Yeah.”

“Can I get that for you?” He gestured to the gift bag.

“No.” I put it behind my back. “I’ve got it.”

Why didn’t Jude tell me his father was in town? I’m going to kill him.

“It’s been five years.”

“Yeah.”

“That’s too long, Rainbow.” He got in front of me before I could walk into the kitchen. “No more avoiding me. I know the whole band could’ve done more for you after your dad…did what he did. I think we were just all taken aback by that tragedy. But you’re a woman now. I’m here for you if you ever need me. Call me any time.”

“I’ll try.”

He shook his head. “Do more than try.”

“Dad! You have any condoms?” Jude rushed down the staircase with only his boxers on, and what a glorious sight that was.

Nervousness from earlier surged back into me.
Goodness.
He was honey poured over an athletic body. Short, sandy-blond curls outlined his face, which boasted full lips, high cheek bones, and long lashes that any woman would envy. Even with those soft features, his face appeared hard and sculpted by an artist. “I need a few condoms. I ran out.”

It’s early in the evening and he’s already having sex with some female. This night gets better and better.

It was then that Jude noticed me standing there.

“Fuck! Rain, what are you doing here so early?” He glanced at his watch. “I thought I was supposed to pick you up in three hours.”

“I wanted to talk to you about something.”

“What?” He skipped over to me and pulled me into a hug. “You better not be canceling out on me. Damn, I love this dress, and your hair is so sexy. What’s this bag about right here?”

“Nothing.” I tried to move the bag out of his reach, but he yanked it out of my hands.

Everything fell out. The packet of condoms, warming strawberry lubrication, furry glow-in-the-dark handcuffs, my iPod full of the unique playlist for tonight, and the hotel key card all dropped to the floor in front of him. The urge to escape bounced around in my body. Silence met my ears. No one moved for a few seconds, and when they did, it was in a rush to sling everything back into the bag.

I covered my face. “This is so embarrassing.”

A smirk plastered on Jude’s face. “Dad, could you give us a minute?”

“Sure.” The handcuffs dangled in Kaden’s fingers as he studied them.

Just awesome.
They were meant to be a joke to lighten the mood, but now Kaden probably thought I was a horndog.

“Dad, could you go ahead and give us some time?” Jude cleared his throat. “Now, please.”

“Oh, yeah. My bad.” Kaden avoided looking my way. “Rain, don’t leave this house without finishing our conversation.”

“Okay,” I mumbled.

Once he disappeared into the kitchen with my handcuffs tucked in his back pocket, I scurried toward the door. “Okay. Pretend you didn’t see that. I’ll see you tomorrow. I’m actually feeling a bit sick now.”

Jude seized my waist from behind and towed me back to him. “Stop, Rain.”

I leaned back into him, not wanting to show him my blushing face. “I’m not playing. Pretend that didn’t just happen.”

Laughter bubbled out from his chest. “Lube, really? Who’s that going in, me or you?”

I spun around and hit his chest. “Not funny. And you didn’t see that or anything else. We won’t talk about this.”

“We’re definitely talking about this.” He covered his mouth, but a chuckle burst from between his fingers. “Holy shit. Did you see my dad’s face?”

“Hello. It didn’t happen.” I waved my hands. “Nothing occurred.”

He studied the apples on the front. “I give you an A for symbolism.”

Years ago, he’d proclaimed in a drunken stupor that the act of a woman giving her virginity to a man was like Eve handing over the apple to Adam.

“The world would change for everyone involved,” he had slurred. “She’d see things clearer and so would he. No more Garden of Eden for her. She’d be cast out into deserted territory, Rain. Save your apple! For all of the world’s sake, save your apple!”

I had called him a moron, and he’d passed out on my bed.

“Jude! What’s taking so long?” a female yelled from upstairs.

“Just a minute!” he called back.

“Who’s that?” I leaned to the side.

“Vicky.”

“One of your dad’s groupies?”

“Of course.”

Of course.

I sighed.

“Well, there are your condoms. Feel free to use them on your dad’s groupie.” I gestured to the bag and simply accepted that I’d made a bad decision in choosing him. “Tonight’s a bust anyway. Let’s just hang out tomorrow.”

“What the fuck?” He dropped the bag and caught me before I could turn around again. “Now you’re mad? That’s not fair. I didn’t even know you would be here or that you would…you know…want me to…deflower you.”

“Deflower?” I buried my face into my hands. “Just kill me now.”

“That
is
what you wanted, right?” He moved my hands away from my face. “You were going to ask me to take your virginity, or am I to assume that you intended on taking mine?”

“You’re so not a virgin.”

He fluttered his long eyelashes. “I could be.”

“I thought I told you to forget about it.”

“No way. We’re discussing this.”

“Jude! Can you bring up some wine too?” Vicky, the groupie, called out.

“You better get her that wine.” I rolled my eyes. “See you tomorrow.”

“Hell no.” He brought me back. And just like that, his face shifted from fun-loving to pissed. He pressed his lips into a straight line, and his blue eyes glittered with an edge of annoyance. “I planned all types of shit for us tonight. In fact, I’ve been putting it all together for months.”

“I didn’t know—”

“Of course you didn’t. It’s a surprise.”

“None of it can wait until I’m less embarrassed?”

His right cheek twitched as if he was holding in laughter. “Rain, you’ll be embarrassed for years after this. I’m going to make sure I remind you about that moment for a long, long time. You might as well stop pouting like a baby.”

“I’m not pouting.”

He poked my bottom lip. “Yes, you are.”

“Fine. Just a little.” I tucked some of my curls behind my ear. “Do we really have to hang out tonight?”

“Hell yes. You just got back yesterday, and I don’t get to see you much anymore. You’re always up there painting with geeky guys that aren’t as awesome as me. You barely come home. You said your summer was mine this year.”

“It is.”

He raised his hands in the air. “And this is your birth weekend!”

“Oh God.”

“I have twenty-two surprises for you.”

“I’m turning twenty-one, not twenty-two.”

“Doesn’t matter.” He shrugged. “I had an extra surprise pop up this time, so we’re starting a new tradition. For each of our birthdays, we add an extra surprise for luck.”

“I’m scared.”

“You should be.” He winked. “Are you pissed at me?”

“No.”

“Let me go tell Vicky that plans have changed.” He motioned his head toward upstairs. “I’ll tell her never mind on the sex. I’ll just jump in the shower and get ready to go.”

“You might as well have sex with her.” I bent over, picked up the bag, and tossed it to him.

He caught it with ease. “No way I’m hooking up with someone else while you’re here. I’ve been waiting forever to see you and—” he dangled the apple bag “—how can I even think about another woman with this shoved into my head?”

“No.” I envisioned him messing with his dad’s groupie and cringed. “I’m taking back the crazy thought that you should be my first.”

“It doesn’t matter. It’s too late. You can’t take it back.”

“Actually, I can.”

He held his hands against his chest. A mock hurt expression spread across his face. “You hurt me bad, Rain. You hurt me bad.”

“Just go upstairs and have fun with Vicky. Eww, by the way.”

“My dad’s teaching me the most important lesson in life.”

I shook my head. “What’s that?”

“Sharing.”

“I think I just vomited in my mouth.”

“Oh, no. Don’t throw up now. Save all of that for later. So, change of plans. I’ll be down after I shower and dress. Don’t leave.” He twirled the bag and stared at it for a second.

“I’m not staying here with your dad,” I whispered.

BOOK: Flirting With Chaos
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