Read Running with Scissors Online
Authors: Unknown
or not, this was madness. They were performing tomorrow
night. A little over twenty-four hours from now, they’d
be taking the stage in Denver, playing for a crowd that was
already impatient for Running with Scissors to get the fuck
through their set so they could see Schadenfreude like they’d
paid through the nose to do.
Jude rested his bass on his leg and positioned his hand on
the neck. He absently warmed up, plucking his way through
a few scales. The medical tape was gone now, revealing raw
fingertips, but they didn’t seem to hinder his ability to play.
Shiloh handed him a tattered page. “Here’s the set list for
tomorrow night. Where do you want to start?”
Jude’s lips quirked as he scanned the list. “The bass line for
‘I Never’ was pretty complicated, wasn’t it?”
“You tell me.” Shiloh shrugged. “I’m just a lowly singer,
remember?”
Jude laughed. “All right. Let’s start with that one.
Everything else is fairly simple, if memory serves.” He handed
the list back to her. “I don’t suppose you’ve got recordings, do you?”
“I have them on my phone.” She pulled her iPhone out of
her pocket. “Everything we ever recorded.”
“Good. Could you play ‘I Never’ for me?”
She cued up the song, turned the volume to max, and
hit Play.
As the song started, no one spoke. Eyes closed, Jude
bobbed his head and tapped his foot in time with the
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music. No, that wasn’t right. His chin dipped and his fingers
drummed in time with the bass line, but his foot tapped in
time with the percussion.
When the track was almost over, Jude put his fingers on
the strings. Without opening his eyes, he said, “Play it once
more?”
Shiloh restarted the track.
This time, Jude played along. At first, his fingers skimmed
over the strings but only grazed them, not drawing a sound
from the bass beyond the faintest hiss of skin over steel.
Then he actually started playing, and almost immediately
fell into perfect sync with the track. His tone, his tempo—it
blended perfectly. Even when he screwed up a note once,
it was subtle, and Jude recovered so quickly that A.J. wondered if he’d imagined the slip.
“Stop the track,” Jude murmured.
Shiloh pressed Pause, and the music stopped.
Except it didn’t. Jude kept playing, and it was as if
everything on the MP3 had shut off but the bass line.
Then he too stopped. “Okay. I think I’ve got it.”
“You think?” Shiloh laughed. “I don’t know. You want to
try it a few more times to make the rest of us feel better?”
Jude chuckled. “Let’s see how the set goes, and we’ll work
on whichever ones need it.”
Each piece was the same routine. Jude listened to the
track. Then he played alongside it. Then he played alone. And
every fucking time, he nailed it. A.J. had heard the stories of Jude as a musician, and seeing—and hearing—was definitely
believing.
Once Jude had been through the entire set list, he went
through it again. This time Richie joined in, and A.J. tapped
out the percussion on the table. It wasn’t perfect, but he was
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quickly becoming convinced that it would be enough for
Jude to learn the piece and hold his own onstage. A few more
hours of this—assuming Jude’s hands could take it—and he’d
be golden.
All the while, Connor watched silently from the sidelines.
His expression was neutral, his gaze shifting from his coffee
cup to his bandmates to something outside. He was difficult
to read, but at least he didn’t seem so hostile at the moment.
People could say what they wanted about him—when it came
down to it, he was a hard worker who put his career and his
band ahead of most things. If A.J. had to guess, he’d have bet
money that no matter how much Connor would’ve liked to
choke Jude, he was grateful as hell for competent fingers on
strings right then.
A.J. was grateful too. Whether anyone liked the solution
or not, Running with Scissors had averted a crisis, and they
had Jude to thank for it.
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he rol ing rehearsal gave Jude some hope that things
t might level out with his bandmates, but that hope
didn’t last.
He hadn’t even finished retaping his fingers before a
heavy, conspicuous silence set in. As soon as the instruments
were back in their cases, everyone had dispersed to their
various seats, putting as much space between each other
as their confines allowed. The “leave me the fuck alone”
radiating from Connor was damn near visible to the naked
eye, which was no surprise. And Jude supposed it wasn’t
much of a surprise, either, that Richie kept his headphones
on most of the time, Vanessa wouldn’t look at him, and even
Shiloh kept her distance. A.J. buried his nose in a Kindle and
didn’t talk to anyone unless he had to.
As he surreptitiously watched his bandmates—his
childhood best friends—from behind his sunglasses, his mind
went back to their optimistic early days. Back when they’d all
practiced until blisters turned to cal uses, dreaming about an
inevitable future with Running with Scissors in lights on the
sides of stadiums. Shiloh coveted a shot at playing Madison
Square Garden. Connor would’ve sold his soul for Wembley.
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Richie and Wyatt wanted to headline one of the big festivals
like Coachella.
And time and again, they’d all fantasized about what it
would be like to cruise around the country in a tour bus. They’d imagined themselves playing practical jokes on each other,
stopping to take ridiculous photos in front of landmarks,
and creating new music while the scenery rolled past. Icy,
uncomfortable silence hadn’t been part of the agenda.
Which meant that right now, damage control needed to
be a little higher on Jude’s agenda. He needed to figure out
a way, little by little, to reconcile with everyone. There was
no point in approaching Connor yet, but maybe he could nip
some of this tension in the bud.
So, when the bus pulled into another rest stop and
everyone wandered off, he stepped outside for a cigarette
and waited for his opportunity.
Vanessa was the first to return. She glanced at him, then
lowered her narrow-eyed gaze, stuffed her hands in her
pockets, and hurried past him.
“Vanessa, wait.” He dropped his cigarette on the pavement.
“Can I talk to you?”
She turned around, glaring at him. “About what?”
“About—”
“Actually, I don’t care.” She put up a hand. “Whatever it
is, I’m not fucking interested.”
He sighed. “Vanessa, please. Can—”
“Don’t even try to get put out with me.” She stepped
closer, lips pulled back across her clenched teeth. “Let me
guess: you want to make things right and smooth everything
over so we can all have peace and quiet. Am I close?”
He gulped. Then nodded.
“Yeah? Well, you can kiss my ass.”
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“Look, it—”
“Do you have
any
idea how much you fucked us back
then? Any idea at al ?” She threw up her hands. “StarFire
Records was at that festival, Jude. StarFire. Records. And
you know what? They were looking for us. So were Vista and
B&I. They’d heard our demos, and when they found out we’d
gotten one of the unsigned slots at RockClimb, they were
going to be all over us.”
His stomach clenched. “Yeah, I knew they were going to
be there.”
“Did you know we tried to contact them after the
festival?”
He winced.
She folded her arms tightly across her chest. “They’d all
signed other bands at RockClimb. The guy at StarFire even
said if we’d been there—”
“I get it. I do. I really do. And if I could change—”
“You can’t change it,” she snarled. “That’s the fucking
point. You can’t. The only reason we have a record deal now
is that Shiloh and Kristy begged and pleaded with Hurricane
Records to give us the fucking time of day.” She shook her
head, lips contorting with disgust as she held his gaze. “We
could have been with StarFire, Jude. All you had to do was
suck it up and deal with Connor for one more fucking week,
and
we could have been with StarFire
.”
Before he could say anything else—and she probably
would’ve cut him off anyway—Vanessa spun on her heel and
stomped onto the bus.
His shoulders slumped. Okay, so maybe damage control
was going to be harder than he thought. As the other band
members came back, he couldn’t even look them in the eyes.
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I screwed you guys out of a StarFire deal. I’m sorry. I don’t
know what else to say.
Once they’d all come back, he joined them on the bus,
put in his earbuds, and listened to anything that drowned out
the lack of conversation.
When it came time to stop for lunch, they were well into
Colorado and not too far from Denver. They were ahead of
schedule, so there was no reason they couldn’t stop, sit down,
and have a relaxed meal, but the consensus was fast food.
No one was objecting to anything that could be acquired,
brought on the bus, and eaten with minimal interaction.
After his spat with Vanessa, Jude had to admit he was grateful
for that today.
As he picked at his cooling fries, silence echoing in his
ears whenever his MP3 player changed tracks, he cast subtle
glances at his bandmates. What he needed now was an ally.
Maybe he couldn’t bury the hatchet with the entire band at
once, but one-on-one, it was possible.
Connor was obviously not an option. A.J. was a stranger.
Vanessa was out of the question for the time being. Richie
avoided conflict and confrontation at all costs.
Which left . . . Shiloh.
Her back was to him now, though, her own earbuds
separating her from the tense silence, and there was no privacy on this bus. He’d have to wait. But if he had a shot at making
peace with anyone, it was her.
He just had to find the opportunity and hope she was
willing to hear him out.
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Jude didn’t find his opportunity until that afternoon.
Kristy, Connor, and Vanessa had gone off to deal with
some issue or another with the venue, and Richie and A.J.
were hanging out with Schadenfreude’s roadies.
Shiloh was alone at the table on the bus, typing away on
her phone beside a steaming mug of tea.
“Hey.” He stopped beside the table. “Can I talk to you for
a minute?”
Shiloh thumbed the handle on her cup, but nodded. She
tapped her throat and shrugged apologetically.
“Yeah, I know. It’s okay.” To save their voices, she and
Connor both stayed almost completely silent in the hours
leading up to a show. Shiloh had nearly fucked up her voice
beyond repair a few years ago, so she was extra careful now,
and it wasn’t unusual for her to go on vocal rest for a full
twenty-four hours before performing.
He slid in across from her and folded his hands in his lap.
“I think . . . I think I’m the one who needs to do the talking
anyway. Just stop me if you want to.”
Shiloh nodded again.
“So all this tension, it’s . . .” He swallowed. “Connor’s not
the only one who isn’t thrilled about me being here, is he?”
Shiloh bit her lip. Her eyebrows pulled together, and the
way she held his gaze seemed to ask,
What do you
want
me
to say?
He rested his folded hands on the table. “I get it. I do. And
there’s no way I can change what happened. What I did. All
I can say is that I’m sorry. There’s . . . I can’t say that enough.”
She lowered her eyes, her expression offering nothing.
Not sure if he really needed to say more, or if he just
needed to fill this uncomfortable silence, Jude went on.
“I fucked up, and nobody knows that better than I do.
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I’ve been kicking myself ever since. Connor and I, we weren’t
happy, and I . . . I should have just called it quits with him
instead of doing what I did. At least that would’ve done
minimal damage to the band. And believe me, if I could go
back and change it, I would. In a heartbeat.”
Without meeting his eyes, she picked up her phone and
started tapping on the screen. He gritted his teeth, thinking
she was ignoring him and responding to a text.
Okay. Message received. Apparently you don’t want to—
But then she turned her screen toward him, and on the
notepad app, she’d typed out:
Why?
He swallowed. “Which part?”
She typed again and held up the screen.
Why did you quit?
Jude took a deep breath and pushed a hand through his
hair. “Because I felt like an asshole. For cheating on Connor,
and for letting my thing with him cause so much strife within
the band. It was a stupid, shortsighted thing to do.” He paused.
“Leaving the band, and cheating on Connor in the first place.”
Shiloh nodded, as if to say
Go on
, but he wasn’t sure
what there was to add. Any explanation he gave would just
sound like he was trying to rationalize things that had been