Lost in NashVegas (27 page)

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Authors: Rachel Hauck

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BOOK: Lost in NashVegas
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She screams. “The whole town is going nuts. Buttons popping all over the place.”

“W-what are you talking about?” I can feel the blood draining from my face.

“Emma Rice recorded ‘Your Country Princess.'” She screams again.

Oh my gosh.

“So, how'd it happen? Brilliant plan to surprise us. Scaredy-cat Robin McAfee moves to Nashville and sells her first song before the summer is out. Oh girl, you showed those naysayers. Sounds like Emma changed the chorus a lot, but I suppose they do that sort of thing. But, what a fabulous voice. A great comeback song. She's going to owe you big. Did you go to the studio when she recorded it? Robin, I'm shaking, and it's not even my song. How'd you keep it a secret—”

“Arizona, stop. I didn't sell the song.”

“Huh? What do you mean? Emma wrote a song like yours?”

“No, someone sold it to her without my permission.”

“You've got to be kidding. Who in all God's creation would stoop so low?”

“You tell me.”

She sucks in a deep breath. “Oh, Robin . . .”

“Arizona, please, I'm begging you, do what you can to squelch the town celebration. Please.”

“I'll do what I can, but gee, Robin, if I act like it's no big deal, they'll think I've gone over to the Dark Side. I'm your best friend. And the whole town remembers the night you finally made it center stage with ‘Your Country Princess.'”

Trapped in my own triumph. “You think Jude Perry will print a big headline in
Freedom Rings!
above the fold?”

“Probably.”

We hang up, and I scurry into the computer room to send Jude an e-mail. I roam around on the web until I find the
Freedom Rings!
web page and an e-mail link to Jude.

Dear Jude,

Please, please don't print a story or a headline or even
a one-sentence congrats on the “Around Town” page
about “Your Country Princess” being on the radio. It's a
long, long story, and some day I promise to give you the
scoop. But please, not one word. I'm begging you!!! Please.

Your friend, Robin McAfee

When I click
Send
, my stomach goes kerplunk. “Lord, let Jude get this before press time.”

As Jude's e-mail zips through cyberspace, I see several messages from Eliza. It's been awhile since I checked e-mail, apparently. Her first one is from August.

I click on the subject line: Keith Urban
.
Smiling, I read.

NashVegas,

You dog! I can't believe it. You actually talked to
him? And hugged him? For me? I'm moving to
Nashville when I graduate.

I love Shakespeare, but our professor is v. boring.

Love you,
Cambridge.

There's a second one, dated the first week of September. The subject line reads: Sweet Home, Alabama
.

Dear NashVegas,

I'm so glad to be home! The Alabama air never
smelled sweeter. Europe was great, Cambridge a blast,
but there's no place like the hills of Freedom. Or
Auburn's campus.

I hope you're sitting down for this, but my friend
Chelle talked me into getting football tickets, so guess
what I'm doing every Saturday? Yep, sitting in the
stands, watching football. It's fun if you're into really
cute frat men sloshing beer all over you.

We've been in class for a few weeks already. I got
home from Cambridge and hit the ground running,
though I managed a short weekend home. Momma told
me about Nashville Noise. I fell out. Our Momma, a
signed artist with Nashville Noise? No way. You
must've freaked when you saw her picture. And, she's
the background voice on Grace Harding's biggest hit?
Unbelievable. But ya know, it explains her pinched face
when it came to you and music, doesn't it?

I'm not into school this semester after the summer of
studying, but I'm so close to graduating, I grit my teeth
and forge ahead.

Oh, guess what, I'm tutoring one of the football
players, Joel Hawk. Knowing him makes the games a
little more exciting. He's one of those big muscle guys
who tackles or runs around behind the quarterback.

He's cute in a no-neck, obtuse sort of way. And oddly
enough, more interesting than my Shakespeare prof
when he talks football. Thees and thous versus x's and
o's? I like x's and o's.

Paris rendered no Greek Tycoon, or any man remotely
close. I'd have settled for a handsome Englishman with a
lot of credit on his MasterCard, but alas, 'twas not meant
to be.

I miss you! Momma tells me you're singing at a
Bluebird Songwriter's Night, so I'll be there.

Love,
Back at Auburn
P.S. Anymore K.U. sightings?
Think he'll be at the Bluebird
when you're there?

I laugh out loud at her P.S. Yeah, Liza, Keith will be there. We're tight now, you know. Best buds.

But Eliza's insight on her summer of Shakespeare reminds me life doesn't always turn out like we expect, but we go on living anyway. As long as Jude gets my e-mail and complies, I can live with Freedom folks thinking my song is a hit. Right? Right.

I click
Reply
and type Eliza a short note.

Back at Auburn,

I'm glad you're home, safe. I've missed you. Lots
going on around here. I'll have to call you. Great for
Chelle to get your nose out of the books and have fun
with life. Sorry about Shakespeare and the Greek
tycoon.

No more run-ins with K.U. And are you crazy? He
will NOT be at my Bluebird night. Even if hell froze
over. If he wanted to come, I would beg him to stay
away. I'll be nervous enough as it is with you guys in
the audience.

See you soon. Love you,
Nashville

I click
Send
and am ready to exit Yahoo when a new e-mail arrives from Eliza. Subject line reads: !!!!!!!!!!!

Ahhhhhhh!!! I just heard Emma Rice's new single. Oh my gosh! Why didn't you tell us? Details. I'm on my
way to class, but call me or e-mail or something. I can't
believe it!

So, the frenzy has started. I click out of Yahoo. I don't have the energy to respond. Walking out to the foyer, I hear Graham at the front desk, talking to Ella.

“We can grab a bite to eat, maybe—” He looks over at me and stands straight.

He seems guarded, but he's been that way all summer.

“Robin. What's up?” He winks at Ella though he's talking to me. What is wrong with him these days?

“Did you hear Emma Rice's new cut?”

He props his elbow on the top shelf of the reception desk and leans toward Ella. “I've been busy. What's up with her new cut?”

“She's singing ‘Your Country Princess,' although she titled it ‘I Wanna Be.'”

He drops his chin to his chest and tugs his hat over his eyes. “She's singing your ‘Your Country Princess'?”

“Do you know of another? Yes, my ‘Your Country Princess.' Graham, I didn't sell the song to Emma.” I slap my hands on my hips, waiting for him to turn livid. “Someone stole it.”

He laughs and fiddles with the NSAI newsletter on Ella's desk. “Sure, someone stole it. Robin, come on. Who would steal your song?”

“That's what I'd like to know, Graham.” I moan. “Emma Rice doesn't even know I'm alive, and she's belting out my song. The chorus is different, but the rest is exactly my lyrics and melody.”

Graham stoops to pick up his guitar. “You mean to tell me someone sold her a song exactly like yours.” He makes a kissy face at Ella. “Well, they say there's nothing new under the sun. Like ideas are all over the place. Hanging in the air.”

“Are you saying someone had the same idea as me?”

Graham throws his arm around me and walks me to the basement stairs. “It's possible.”

“That's insane.”

“Stranger things have happened.” He stops outside Writers Room number two. “Listen, I have an appointment with a new writer in a few minutes.”

Crossing my arms, I lean against the doorframe. “Do you know who wrote the song? Or, who's credited with writing the song?”

He tunes his guitar. “Robin, if I were you, I'd put the button on saying Emma Rice is singing your stolen song. Ain't no better way to make an enemy.”

Crud.
I flop down on the love seat and cover my eyes with my arm. “What should I do?”

Graham tunes his guitar. “Move on, Robin. Forget about the song. It's too late.”

“Easy for you to say. Emma Rice is not making a comeback singing your sophomoric lyrics over the airwaves.”

“She's not singing yours either. Better decide that right now.” He stays focused on retuning the top E string.

“You're right—” Outside the door is a light knock.

“Phoebe, come in.” Graham greets her with a blinding smile.

Phoebe's hips sway as she enters. “Thank you for meeting with me. I'm sooo excited.”

“Phoebe, this is Robin McAfee.”

“Nice to meet you,” she gushes, her contact-lens blue eyes stuck on Graham.

“See ya, Robin.” Graham pulls me off the sofa and shoves me out the door.

Skyler calls later for an emergency latté at Caffeine's. “Did
you talk to Marc?” she asks, digging in her Prada bag for change. “I haven't had time to get anywhere with your song.”

Not finding another quarter to pay for her mocha, Skyler dumps her purse contents on the counter. Dollar bills hit the counter and float to the floor.

“Good grief, it's a Prada junkyard,” I say, stooping to pick up two fifties. “Granddaddy always said you can find valuable things at a junkyard.”

“I was in such a rush when I stopped by the bank.”

“I hope you don't organize your cases like you do your purse, Sky.”

“My cases are
why
my purse is like this. So, did you talk to Marc?” She hands Reuben, the guy behind the counter, a fifty.

“He laughed and said if he was going to steal a song, it wouldn't be from me.”

“Smart aleck.” Skyler scrapes the junk back in her purse.

“Hi, Robin,” Reuben says, “what'll it be?”

“A White Chocolate Symphony, please.” I help Skyler lighten her load by scooping up all the loose change. “You still owe me ten dollars.”

“Fine, here, take this too.” She flips me one of the fifties. “Happy—” She glances at her watch. “Happy September twelfth.”

“And to you, cuz.” I wave the bill at her. “I'm not too proud to take it.”

“Robin, when do you play here again?” Reuben asks. “We have a lot of requests for the nervous songwriter chick.”

Great, I'm getting a rep. “I'm on the schedule for sometime in November, after my songwriter's night at the Bluebird.”

He takes the mountain of change from my hand and pops open the register. “It's sorta nerve-racking, isn't it?”

“Sorta?”

“Say, Reuben,” Skyler says, “have you heard about Emma Rice's new single? Maybe who wrote it?”

He looks over from where he's blending my Symphony. “No, why?”

Skyler shrugs. “Just wondering. Her new release is really good—‘I Wanna Be
.

'”

Reuben passes over my drink. “Not really into Emma Rice. She's more like my mom's generation.”

“Fine.” Skyler rolls her eyes and snatches a couple of napkins from the dispenser.

I laugh. “Thanks, Reuben.”

We sit outside for a few minutes in the warm September sun.

“I saw Graham in the NSAI office a half hour ago. He advised me to let it go. Don't sully my name accusing Emma Rice.”

Skyler sips her latté. “I hate to agree with him, but he's right. By the way, how'd he seem? Nervous? Suspicious?”

“Neither. He flirted with the receptionist, Ella, then shoved me out the door when his cowrite showed up. A cute chick with big blue eyes. I bet she's never written a song before today.”

Skyler smirks. “Probably not even today.” She closes her eyes and turns her face into the breeze. Her sleek dark hair flutters over her shoulders. “When I get back to the office, I'll dig around some more.” With a sigh, she shoves out of her chair. “I need to run. No time for leisurely coffee breaks these days.”

“Thanks for all you're doing to help.”

“You'd do the same for me,” she calls over her shoulder as she walks toward her car. “Besides, you'll get my bill.”

25

“So, you're back.” Susan West motions for me to take a seat.

“I am.” I perch on the edge of her sofa, my confidence already leaking.

She leans forward with her elbows on her knees. “Do you like what you've written?”

I look up from tuning my guitar. “Y-yes.” If I can't feel confident, it'd be nice to at least sound confident. But no.

It's been a week since I heard my song on the Big 98. I've worked hard to put it behind me, go on with my songwriting, forgetting I could've been accredited with a hit. But the irony of sitting in Susan's office for a pro critique while
my
song has Music Row buzzing burns my buns.

Susan says, “Whenever you're ready.”

“Okay.” With my hands trembling, my mouth dry, and my hopes on hiatus, I start my first song, “She Was Seventeen
.
” To my surprise, Susan lets me sing it all the way through.

“Better,” she says, smiling and nodding. “Much better. Sort of has a '70s folk sound to it.”

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