Read Her Forbidden Rockstar: A Forbidden Rockers Novel Online
Authors: Sarah Robinson
“Friday night, my art gallery opens. I never want to be the one who makes you cry ever again. If there is even the smallest part of you that thinks this is meant to be,” he told her, pointing to the both of them. “Then come find me there. If not, if you want to be with Turner, then go get married, and you will never have to deal with me again. If that is the case, if you are not there on Friday night, then I will leave you alone. I won’t bother you again.”
Logan closed the gap between them and kissed her gently on her forehead, his hands on her upper arms.
“I just want you to be happy, the happiest that you can possibly be. Even if that means I don’t get to be part of that painting. You deserve happiness, Caroline.” Logan let go of her arms, brushed a strand of hair out of her face, and then walked away.
He headed around the corner, toward the elevator, and Caroline leaned back against the door, her heart pounding. She gulped and placed her hand on her chest, trying to calm herself.
She turned and slowly opened the door, trying to stay quiet. There was still no movement from the bedroom and the rest of the apartment was quiet so Caroline sighed and headed back into the living room, plopping down on the couch. The television was still going, but Caroline stared at it blankly.
Her mind was swarming with thoughts and empty all at the same time.
CHAPTER TWENTY
Thursday morning, Caroline woke up and stared at the ceiling, trying to convince herself why she should get out of bed. She looked at the clock and knew it was time to start getting ready for work, but for some reason her body wouldn’t cooperate. She continued to watch the clock and the minutes ticking past.
Turner was already gone, which was typical for the last few days since they were avoiding each other. Things couldn’t possibly be more awkward between them.
Caroline could see the pain on Turner’s face every time that she looked at him or every time he saw the ring box still sitting on their dresser. He had no doubts in how much he loved her and she knew it was devastating him that she couldn’t seem to return that certainty.
Caroline grabbed at the phone on her nightstand and tapped in the number for work, holding it to her ear and waiting for one of the firm’s secretaries to pick up. After a few rings, a high pitched voice with a New Jersey accent, greeted her.
“Hi, this is Caroline Sanders, one of the paralegals for Mr. Rosen. Could you please inform Mrs. Ward that I won’t be able to make it into work today? I woke up with a terrible cold and I am worried that I might have the flu, I really don’t think I could manage through a day at the office and I don’t want to get anyone there sick,” Caroline lied to the lady.
The woman immediately voiced her concerns and best wishes for Caroline’s speedy recovery and promised to relay the message to Caroline’s supervisor. Caroline thanked her profusely, trying to really sell her lie, and then hung up the phone.
Caroline then finally pulled herself out of bed and went to her closet, picking out some comfortable clothes to wear for the day. She spied her suitcase in the corner of her closet and suddenly had an idea that for the first time all week made her feel calm.
She quickly grabbed a smaller overnight travel bag and began throwing an outfit and some other essentials into the bag. She got dressed and brushed her hair, fixed some makeup, and brushed her teeth. Once she was ready she grabbed her travel bag and her purse and headed out the door.
She paused at the front door and swiveled around, making a quick detour to the kitchen, where she pulled a pad of paper and a pen out of one of the kitchen drawers. She quickly scrawled out a note to Turner, explaining where she was and promising to be back tomorrow to meet him at the restaurant that he had made a reservation at.
She headed out the door, locking it behind her, and practically skipping down the stairs in eagerness to get out of her situation for a few hours.
Caroline got down to the street and hailed a taxi to take her to Penn Station. Within thirty minutes, she was boarding a train headed to the Hamptons, hoping that seeing her parents would bring her the clarity, and even the comfort, that she needed.
ღ ~ ღ ~ ღ
The train ride went by quickly for Caroline as she watched the world pass by the window and let her mind be blank. All the stress of the last few days had reached a boiling point for her that morning. She was a grown woman, but today she needed her parents.
She needed a hug from her mother and reassurance from her father that everything was going to be okay. She felt a little silly that at her age she would come running to her parents, but she knew that even though they had their differences, her mother and father loved her.
When she finally arrived in the Hamptons, she hired a town car to take her up to her parent’s house, which was further north and a lengthy drive up the coast. She enjoyed the luxury of the leather in the black town car, compared to the taxi that she had been in earlier which may, or may not, have had multiple types of bodily fluid strewn about.
The quiet town allowed the driver to speed up and Caroline arrived home faster than she had expected. She thanked the driver and gave him a large tip, then headed up the front steps to the door, toting her bag and purse with her.
She didn’t bother knocking, but rather walked right in and dropped her bags in the foyer.
“Mom? Dad?” Caroline called out loudly from where she stood as she pushed the door shut behind her.
She didn’t hear any response, but Rosie walked in from the side room.
“Ms. Caroline? What are you doing here? What a lovely surprise!” Rosie greeted her and came to give her a hug. Caroline accepted the hug greedily, needing the affection.
“Are you staying the night? Let me take your bags,” Rosie told her and Caroline confirmed that she would stay just the one night and head back tomorrow.
“Where are my parents, Rosie?”
“Straight out back, my dear. They are having lunch on the veranda. I will tell the chef to bring out another plate, you must be starving.” Rosie told her.
“Thanks, Rosie!” Caroline quickly headed down the hallway and took a few turns before reaching the back door.
She stepped out onto the veranda to see her parents sitting at the table with the umbrella open over them, shading them from the sun. The table was elaborately set with fine china and dishes of food as well as wine in front of both of her parents plates. Upon hearing the door open, they both looked in her direction and their faces lit up.
“Carrie!” her mother exclaimed and popped right up out of her seat, hurrying over to embrace her daughter.
Her father was only steps behind and wrapped his arms around them both in a tight hug.
Her mother smiled at her and gently smoothed a piece of Caroline’s hair down. “Carrie bear, what are you doing here? Come, sit, and eat.”
“Just thought I would come up for the night, get away from the city and relax a little.”
Rosie must have told the chef quickly, because one of the kitchen staff was already at her side with a plate of hot food to set in front of her. Caroline hadn’t realized how famished she was until she smelled the delicious food and realized that she hadn’t eaten yet that day. She quickly picked up a fork and dug in to her meal.
“Well, that’s wonderful, baby. I am so happy to see you, your father and I don’t have any plans today. I was just going to do some gardening,” her mother told her while she continued eating.
“And I was thinking about playing a round of golf on the putting green out back,” her father told her before taking a big gulp of juice from his glass. Caroline nodded her head and took a few more bites of her lunch.
“Turner proposed to me,” Caroline told them quietly, looking up to gauge their reactions.
“Oh my goodness, that’s so exciting! Let me see the ring!” Her mother motioned for her hand, wanting to take a look.
Caroline looked back down at her plate.
“I haven’t said yes yet. I haven’t said anything yet. I told him I needed a week to think about it,” Caroline responded, now avoiding their eye contact.
She heard her father clear his throat and her mother sit back in her chair. Both of them were just staring at her, waiting to hear more of an explanation, so Caroline sighed and put down her fork.
“I don’t know what to do. I’m supposed to meet him for dinner tomorrow night to give him my answer. If I don’t say yes, then we are going to break up I’m sure. If I do say yes, then we are going to be engaged. After only six months of dating,” Caroline told them.
“So, what are you leaning toward?” her mother asked.
Caroline shrugged, still confused, and then finished up what was left on her plate. Her parents didn’t pry any further, but just finished lunch quietly instead.
ღ ~ ღ ~ ღ
Her childhood bedroom still looked like she was going to come running in and toss her backpack onto the bed and pull out the dolls in her toy chest to play with. Caroline was laying on her old bed with its pink, flowery comforter beneath her and her head resting on a combination of pillows and aged stuffed animals.
She stared up at her ceiling at the boy band posters that she had plastered everywhere when she was thirteen years old. If she was thirteen now, Logan’s picture would probably be up there too, she thought.
The girl who laid in this bed years ago and dreamt about growing up and falling in love had never pictured simple. She had never pictured easy and she had never pictured herself following the cookie cutter lifestyle that most people around here expected of her.
The types of families she grew up with in the Hamptons all followed a very particular lifestyle and path and to deviate from that was scandalous. Logan would be scandalous. She closed her eyes and pictured Logan’s face, smiling. As she was thinking of him, a knock interrupted her. Caroline’s mother poked her head inside the door.
Her mother walked over and sat on the side of her bed. “Hi, sweetheart.”
She ran her hand through Caroline’s long tresses that were flung out across the bed in random patterns.
“Hi, Momma,” Caroline said, turning her head to face her.
“I am worried about you, baby girl.”
“Mom, don’t be worried. There’s nothing to be worried about,” Caroline told her. The two were silent for a moment as Caroline continued to stare at the ceiling.
“Did I ever tell you about Eduardo?” Her mother said after the brief pause. Caroline, still laying on her bed, turned her head back to look at her mother.
“No, who’s that?” Caroline inquired, curious. Her mother smiled and got this far away look in her eye as she gazed out the window by Caroline’s bed.
“He was my professor in college, art history class. We would go to museums after class together and talk about the art work. We could spend hours talking and never get bored. He was only a little older than me and he looked like he could have stepped right out of the pages of a magazine.”
Her mother smiled and glanced back at Caroline.
“Mom, you had a crush on your professor?” Caroline laughed and propped herself up on her elbows to pay closer attention to her mother.
“Not just a crush, my dear, an affair. We loved each other. Every moment we were alone, we couldn’t keep our hands off one another. It was electric, something between us that was indescribable. We knew it was risky, he could have lost his job. If my parents had found out, all hell would break lose. But, we couldn’t help ourselves. There was something between us that we had to explore and would have regretted it if we didn’t.”
“Why are you telling me this, Mom?” Caroline said softly, thinking of Logan, and how she felt similarly about him, as her mom was describing with Eduardo.
“Because Eduardo was the love of my life. I am so glad that I found him and that when I did find him, I let my whole heart open up to him.”
“What about Dad?”
“Oh, I love your father, honey. But Eduardo... that was different. That wasn’t just love, it was the other half of my soul. It was magnetism. My heart telling me that it had found its missing piece.” The far away and dreamy look was in her eyes again.
“Well, why didn’t you marry him then? What happened to you guys?” Caroline asked.
Her mother sighed and looked down at the bed. Her eyes had gone from dreamy to cloudy in a flash.
“He was killed. He was driving to come see me and he never showed up. I only found out on the news the next day what had happened. A truck hit his car and he died alone in the middle of the street.” A tear slipped out of the corner of her eye.
Caroline was silent but reached out and held her mother’s hand. After a quiet moment, her mother cleared her throat and tried to regain her composure.
“Anyway, I mourned and grieved for months and months. I met your father about a year later and the rest is history. I love your father so much, Carrie, but Eduardo was my soul mate and I will love him until the day I die.” Her mother finished, standing up and walking towards the bedroom door.
“Mom, why did you tell me all this?” Caroline sat up in bed and asked her.
“Because, darling, I didn’t get a chance to be with my other half. You have that chance and you’re throwing it away.”
With that, her mother walked out of the room, leaving Caroline staring after her, stunned at her mother’s final comment.
CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE
Caroline had slept in late at her parent’s house on Friday without intending to. She had planned to catch the eleven o’clock train out to the city, but by the time she woke up it was almost two in the afternoon.
Panicked, she rushed through a shower and brushed her hair. She snuck into her mother’s closet and rifled through her dresses. After way too much time dragging her feet and trying on different outfits, she found one that she knew would be perfect for the evening. It was a black wrap dress that accentuated her every curve and hung just above her knees, a flowing pattern that spread out when she twirled around.