Authors: Shona Husk
âOh good.' She grinned and started up her car.
âNot the fun kind of bad.' His voice sounded different, like all the life had been sucked out.
âOh ⦠do I want to know?' This was not a booty call. He sounded worried, not excited to be talking to her.
There was a pause. She was beginning to think she didn't want to know. She wasn't sure she wanted to be involved with whatever was going on.
âCan you pick me up and then I'll explain?'
âWhere?' She was not driving to the ass end of Perth to get him.
âI'm almost at the Fremantle train station.'
âOkay, I'll be there waiting ⦠going to your place after, I'm guessing?'
âYeah.' He sighed. âThat would be good.'
Right. What the hell was going on? He'd been going to a family dinner tonight. He hadn't been thrilled about it. Now she wasn't thrilled either. She wasn't his taxi service ⦠or his girlfriend.
She parked near the train station exit; not many people were coming out and she spotted him straightaway. She wound down her window and called him over. He got in and closed his eyes, not moving to even put his seatbelt on. She didn't start driving.
How bad had his evening been?
His family couldn't be as bad as hers.
Dan drew in a breath. âYou know when you think things are going to go to shit, but you think you're being paranoid, but then it happens and you kick yourself for not listening to your gut?'
She knew that feeling, especially when it came to family. âYeah ⦠was dinner that bad?'
âIt fell through bad and kept on going. And then I fucked up.' He squeezed his eyes closed, obviously hurting.
She wanted to reach out, but wasn't sure how to. It wasn't what they did. So she tried to lighten the moment. âNo one is dead?'
He started laughing, but there was no joy in it. âOnly me when it all comes out.'
Now she was really worried about what he'd done that could be so bad. âDo I need to kick you out of my car? You know I'm not here for this.'
She tried to keep her voice light but couldn't mask the worry for him, and for herself. What they had was escalating and she was losing control ⦠had lost control. Every time he rang she jumped. Worse, she was hoping he'd ring.
She liked him.
And not in the fuck buddy way.
She swallowed. She was falling for him. He wasn't just the hot guy on stage anymore.
Dan opened his eyes. âI know. There's no one else I could call who wouldn't make me feel worse.'
He leaned over and kissed her. His lips were cool and hungry, as though he couldn't be sure when he'd get to taste her again. For a moment she gave in, knowing when he fessed up she may not want to be kissing him.
Please don't ruin this for me.
She wanted to keep on liking him.
Indigo drew back. âJust tell me what is going on.'
Dan gave her a quick rundown on what had happened during dinner after she'd agreed to drive him to his place. She was sure he was leaving bits out, but having his ex turn up to a family dinner and arguing with her had to be bad. Then having his family be on her side worse. She could see what he meant about going downhill.
She parked on the street out the front of his place. âAnd then?' She knew there was more as he'd said he'd made it worse.
âYou can park in my bay.' He pointed to the empty spot.
âWhere's your car?' Maybe it was still at his parents' place, but she doubted it.
âThat's the second part of my tale of woe.' He looked at his hands.
She looked at him and raised her eyebrows. He had a flair for the dramatic. Something she hadn't picked up on when watching him perform. Somehow her one-night stand with a rock star was becoming so much more and that was terrifying.
While she was falling for him, she doubted very much that the feeling was mutual. He'd only call her up until he was tired of her or someone more interesting came along. She was becoming too available. That had to stop.
After tonight.
Tonight he wanted her and he'd called her ⦠because he had no one else. What would he have done if she'd ignored his call?
She parked in his spot. Turned off her car and looked at him.
He unclipped his seat belt and drew in a deep breath. âYou're going to think I'm dumb.'
âFamily can make us do dumb things.' She unclipped her belt so she could twist around and look at him. âYou aren't the only one with a messed up family.'
He lifted his head and looked at her. âYeah? You got a scheming father and a lying ex in the closet?'
âNot quite.' Did she tell him? It was another step closer. They were showing scars and swapping war stories. He was waiting for her to say something. She never spoke about her parents. Couldn't. âMy parents are the unhappily married type. They scared me off anything permanent.'
She hoped that he'd get what she didn't want to say aloud. She wasn't girlfriend material.
He nodded as if understanding. âI think my parents are happy. I dunno.' He frowned. âMy father thinks money can fix things. He thought he could use Lisa to fix me.'
âYou don't need fixing.' She put her hand on his leg.
He smiled. âYou are the only person who thinks that at the moment.'
What about his band mates? What else was going on? âLife's not that bad. New album, new singleâyou're living the dream.'
âI know. I know that but I'm fucking it up. I can't get anything right.' He swore, then covered her hand with his. âWhen Lisa rocked up I started matching my father drink for drink.'
Indigo groaned. She knew exactly where this was going. Drinking was a socially acceptable hobby where she'd grown up. If you weren't getting pissed most nights you were doing it wrong. It hadn't been her scene. She wasn't popular enough to be invited to the parties. She'd seen the fallout though. Wrecked cars. Wrecked reputations and an unplanned baby. âTell me you aren't as stupid as you are beginning to sound.'
She knew where his car was now. Parked somewhere. Unless it was wrapped around a pole. But Dan didn't seem injured, and if he had been in a car accident surely he'd be in hospital under observation, or at least in a cell after being charged by the cops.
He was silent, like he didn't want to admit it to anymore.
âWere you in an accident?' She made her voice softer this time. He'd said no one was dead except for him when the truth came out.
He shook his head. âI ran a stop sign. I got pulled over ⦠I have to go to court and I'm going to lose my licence.'
She breathed a sigh of relief. âAt least you didn't hurt anyone.' Then she punched him in the arm. âWhat the hell?'
âOw.' He rubbed his arm. âDid you miss my explanation of dinner?'
âSo your ex is a troublemaking clinger and your family loves her. Drinking never solved anything.'
âBullshit. It takes away a whole lot of agony.' There was a snarl like a wounded animal beneath his words. The smiling, laughing, good-time guy was gone.
Who was this stranger in her car?
Every time she'd seen him they'd been drinking. She'd been in his car after he'd been drinking. That thought made her sick. She'd trusted him. Her stomach rolled. âWhen was your last AFD?'
âWhat?' He frowned.
âAlcohol-free day? How much did you drink before I got into your car and you drove?' It was her life. She deserved to know all of the risks and to make her own choices.
He blinked and frowned. âI don't know ⦠It's fine. This is the first time I've been over the limit.'
âThat you've been caught over.' She corrected, then she swore several colourful and coarse curses. âWhat were you thinking?'
âThat I had to get through dinner sitting opposite to my lying bitch of an ex. That I have been trying to get over what she did for the last six months and yet I keep getting kicked in the nuts. I'm fucking sick of it.' His fist thumped his leg. âMy father cut off my funds unless I quit the band. We're all broke, waiting, praying for some money to come in.' He scrubbed his hand over his face. âThere's some behind the scenes information you didn't need.' He seemed to wilt as though he had run out of everything. âSell the story, you might make some money. No one else is.'
âYou think that's what I'm going to do?' She wasn't that person.
âLisa would if she thought it would win her points with my family. Lisa is only interested in the money.'
How much money did his family have? He was well out of her league. Further than she'd thought. âI don't care about the money or lack of.'
He gave her a small smile. âYou came up to me because of what I do.'
Yeah, she had. Now everything she knew couldn't be undone. She'd never be able to listen to the music and not think of him and everything she knew.
She breathed in and then out as she looked at him. Even after his rough night he was still looking too good. She knew he rolled out of bed looking like he was ready for trouble while she was still tangled in the sheets. This was the moment when she either pulled him back into bed or showed him the door.
She either opened up or closed up.
When he looked at her there was something there. Something that made her heart jump and it scared her. They were too different. He was two different people. The man on stage, the rock star, and the one she now knew had problems he didn't know how to fix.
She couldn't be his superglue. He'd go as soon as he was back together and she'd be the one left broken. It would be better if she let him go now.
How could she when he was bleeding all over her car. He needed a friend.
She didn't know how to be that person. She wasn't friends with guys. She used them the way they used her.
âYeah I did.' That was on her, she'd started this because she hadn't been able to resist. It was time she took responsibility for what was happening, because he wasn't. âI like you but, well, you've been drunk the whole time we were together.'
Would he have even looked twice at her if not for that free beer?
He put his hand over hers. âThere is a difference between drunk and taking the edge off.'
âYeah? Next time you drive tell that to the person you kill.'
He pulled back startled. âI wouldn't â¦' But he seemed to realise that he had no argument.
She brushed away a tear that had no right to be falling. They weren't together, so they weren't breaking up, so there should be no pain to be felt. âCall me when you are sober.'
âYou aren't my mother or my ex. We were supposed to be fun.'
She shook her head. She didn't want to be with someone who couldn't face their problems and make a plan to deal with them. Her father hid in his affairs. Dan was hiding in a bottle. âWell, now it's not.'
He pressed his lips together. âFine.'
âFine.'
âHave a nice life.' He opened up the car door and got out.
âHope your liver holds up to the rock star life,' she called after him, wanting the last word.
He slammed her car door and stalked toward his door. He fumbled the keys and bent to pick them up. Her vision blurred. Goddamn tears. What the hell?
She started the car, needing distance between the man she'd thought he was and the man he'd turned out to be.
Dan didn't look back. After the night he'd had, he didn't need her yelling at him. He should've walked home from the train station instead of calling her, but he'd wanted her. When he was with her nothing was quite as bad. His hand was shaking as he locked the door, then he rested his forehead on the cold wood. He listened as her car finally reversed and drove away.
In his gut he knew he wouldn't be seeing her again.
She wouldn't take his calls.
Assuming he wanted to call her, which he didn't. He had enough people telling him what to do. He didn't need someone else reminding him that he had screwed up, again.
Which he had. He lifted his head and let it fall back against the door.
âDumb fuck, what are you going to do without a licence?'
There was no way he was going to be able to slip that one past the band. And he was going to have to go and get his car tomorrow before someone reported it as abandoned and it got stickered or towed.
He sighed and didn't move. He was tired, yet wired with uncertainty. There was no way he was going to court with his father at his side. He'd go alone.
No one outside of the band needed to know.
Indigo knew.
He groaned. He'd been thinking with his dick when he'd called her. What were the chances she'd tell someone? How much did she hate him right now? Hate the band? His head thunked against the door. He missed her already.
She was probably deleting all his songs from her phone.
Now he knew why Ed had warned them all to pull their heads in. Fucking with fans was fraught with danger. He'd seen the warning signs but had ignored them, the same way he'd ignored so many other warnings.
It was as if he was incapable of doing the right thing in any part of his life.
Being with Indigo had felt right. It was why he'd wanted to keep seeing her. She was the best thing in his life. He'd smiled with her ⦠drunk less with her. She probably wouldn't see that as a compliment. It had been easy with her, no tricks or games.
She'd left ice-cream in his freezer. He'd bet she was never coming back to eat the rest with him.
The weight and the tiredness returned, wrapping him in a blanket of bone deep weariness that had made it hard to even get up in the morning for months. No one knew how hard it had been to keep going last year. To get through Christmas, record the album. When he and Mike had gone out, Mike had picked up while he'd concentrated on getting blind drunk.
He had to move and go to bed. His feet were sore from walking to the train station and his pride was smarting. His heart was also bruised. This one was fresh and painful over the old scars that were still healing.