The Rockstar I’ve Loved for So Long

BOOK: The Rockstar I’ve Loved for So Long
8.32Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

The Rockstar I’ve Loved for So Long

By 

Marian Tee

 

 

Copyright 2013 by Marian Tee

 

All rights reserved. This book or any portion thereof may not be reproduced or used in any manner whatsoever without the express written permission of the publisher except for the use of brief quotations in a book review.

All characters appearing in this work are fictitious. Any resemblance to real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.

 

 

He loves me hard. He loves me sweet. He loves me all night long – and then some more. 

He’s my first crush, my first lover and he even promises to be my first and last.

All I have to do in return is promise that I won’t ever forget he’s not mine because Dylan Charbonneau is the world’s favorite rock star boyfriend.

 

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

 

I owe my humblest and sincerest thanks to God, my family, and partner Allen Tan.

This book wouldn’t have been as pretty – inside and out – as it is now if not for the help of
CT Cover Creations
and
The Passionate Proofreader
.

Last but not the least, thank you to my fellow boxed set authors – Liliana Rhodes, Mina V. Esguerra, Caitlyn Duffy, Ava Lore, and K.T. Fisher – I’m so honored that you guys trusted me on this one. I hope we can work on something like this every year!

 

Prologue

 

Sabrina “Bree” Wyle should have worn her glasses, shouldn’t have let vanity get the better of her. But like most good ideas, it came a little too late and now she was dying of curiosity. 

The guy on stage had the most beautiful voice – and that was all she knew. Stupid impaired eyesight only allowed her to make out a figure in white – and that was it. 

Something about that voice made Bree catch her breath. She didn’t love rock music like her friend did, but she had attended this concert anyway, figuring it was about time she came out of her shell.

She was fourteen already and she
still
hadn’t had her first kiss. Everyone she knew had theirs when they weren’t even in their teens. 

Tonight was all about being girly
and
not dorky, but it had been an epic fail – or at least it had been until
this
guy came on stage.

Squinting hard, she tried to make better sense of his features. Dark hair? Tanned skin? Really tall? She just couldn’t tell, and she and Saffi already had front row seats, courtesy of her chaperone’s famous last name.

Tugging at Saffi’s sleeve, she whispered self-consciously, “Tell me. Is he gorgeous?” Bree didn’t want to risk anyone accidentally hearing her ask about a guy. Especially
this
guy. It just wasn’t done for a dork like her to even
dare
have a crush on a rock star.

“Yup!” Saffi clucked her tongue. “You really should’ve worn your glasses, Bree.”

“Easy for you to say,” Bree huffed. Saffi, who was older by four years, might be a bigger nerd than her, but she would never have to worry about looking like one.

Saffi looked like a cute doll. Bree didn’t – unless it was ideal to look like Chucky’s oversized teenage sister.

Saffi sighed. “You’ve got the strangest hang-ups about your looks! You’re stunning, voluptuous—”

“Yeah, yeah.” Bree thought the world of Saffi, but she was
too
nice. She wasn’t blind about her looks. She was too everything that was not right. Too curvy, too fair, too ordinary with too brown hair and too brown eyes.

The rock star was singing the last lines of his song, which was haunting and catchy at the same time. Impressive for a self-composed song from someone who wasn’t even a pro.

Thinking about that voice saying her name was enough to make Bree blush. Oh God, she really did wish she had brought her glasses with her. She’d risk wearing it outside school just to know what this guy really looked like.

The song ended and the huge crowd of high school girls screamed. Bree shrieked with them and so did Saffi, who was sort of a professional screamer – the kind that didn’t go hoarse even after screaming nonstop for
hours
.

“Is he gone?”

“Backstage,” Saffi confirmed.

Bree’s shoulders slumped. And
there
went her first crush. Well, it was sweet while it lasted.

They met with Silver, one of Saffi’s older brothers, at the side of the stage, where he had been hanging out with his own set of friends. If Saffi was Bree’s chaperone, then Silver was hers. It had always been so since Saffi was the baby of her family.

“How did you find your first concert, Bree?” There was a grin in Silver’s voice that made Bree grin back.

“It was great.”

Pause.

And then Silver said, “Aaaaah.”

Bree scowled. “Saffi, you always did have a big mouth!”

Saffi giggled.

“I know him, actually. Well, he’s more like an acquaintance,” Silver said. “His name’s Dylan Charbonneau and we’ve bumped into each other a few times in some parties. He’s enrolled in one of those art colleges in NYC.”

Bree suppressed a sigh.
Dylan Charbonneau.
Even his name sounded way out of her league.

“Is it okay if you guys wait for me here while I check out the souvenir booth?” Saffi asked. “I saw something I want to buy.”

Silver raised a brow. “Really? You listen to rock music?”

Bree kept her face blank at the question.

“It’s not rock music. It’s more like, a fusion of dance and European rock,” Saffi answered very seriously.

“We’ll go with you,” Silver said.

Saffi didn’t answer.

Knowing it was because Saffi didn’t want any of her family to know about how much of a hardcore fangirl she could get over Staffan Aehrenthal, Bree said quickly, “I, umm, need to go to the restroom. Could you walk with me first and then we can catch up with Saffi after?”

She could feel Silver looking at her and Bree did her best not to squirm. Silver March might have a reputation for being one of the country’s most charming playboys, but it didn’t mean he was stupid. Far from it.

Saffi added helpfully, “You have to walk her to the restroom first, Silver. She’s
blind
.”

Bree glared. Silver laughed.

“True,” Saffi’s brother confirmed.

“I changed my mind,” she said huffily, knowing the two gorgeous individuals before her would
never
understand what it meant to grow up as a four-eyed geek.

“I was kidding,” Silver said, albeit with a grin still underlining his voice as he patted her head. “Come on, off we go.”

Silver was usually a touchy-feely kind of guy, but with the younger girl he was careful about the boundaries, knowing Bree wasn’t comfortable about getting too close.

“Here, Bree,” he said, knowing she would have a harder time seeing with most of the lights already switched off. 

Silver turned to check on Bree over his shoulder and saw her following him – to the
wrong
door. She squinted at the door, where the word BACKSTAGE was written. 

He opened his mouth to call her back—

Bree opened the door.

—and decided to shut up, a smile playing on his lips. Little Bree needed an adventure to shake things up a little bit in her life, and this would be the perfect way to get it.

He followed her inside quietly, shaking his head in warning when one of the lackeys stationed at the inner hallway was about to reprimand Bree for trespassing. 

The other guy quickly shut up, as he should.

After all, he was Silver March, and this was his town.

 

****

 

Third
time should be the charm, Bree thought, face still red at what had happened when she had opened two
wrong
doors. She didn’t know what those rooms were, but they definitely weren’t the ladies’ rooms – or if they were, then they were
fully
occupied.

The sounds the couples had been making in those rooms, followed by the outraged shrieks of the girls – Bree didn’t need glasses to figure out what they had been doing.

She knocked on the door, waited for someone to freak out from the inside, and breathed a sigh of relief when no one answered.

Finally!

 

****

 

Dylan raised a brow when someone knocked on the door and turned the knob without waiting for him to answer. He had specifically told Andy to keep everyone away while he rested, so what was this? Had another groupie bribed Andy to look the other way?

As the door opened completely, he started to snap at the intruder but found himself shocked instead when a young girl came in and immediately bumped into the shoulder-high shelf to her right.

“Ouch!”

Dylan barely managed to keep himself from laughing.

She turned to the other side and bumped into another shelf. “Oww!”

Dylan slowly and firmly pressed his lips together.

This time she raised her hands mid-air and started groping her way forward, like someone playacting as a ghost.

If she continued without turning, she would bump into him directly, Dylan mused. 

Should he step out of her way?

He didn’t even have to think about it.

Not a fucking chance.

This was just too good to pass up.

The girl continued taking baby steps towards his direction. She had a serious look on her tiny heart-shaped face and for some reason, it made her adorably cute in his eyes. Unlike most girls her age, whose fashion sense bordered on either too slutty or too colorful, this one looked very…sweet and fun, with her striped collared blouse and swirly black skirt that fell just an inch above her knees.

She wasn’t the most stunning girl he had seen, but she was certainly the most…interesting.

 

Bree froze when her hands came into contact with what was
definitely
not something that was supposed to exist in the ladies’ room.

Was this for real?

She moved her fingers tentatively, wondering if she had perhaps imagined wrong for whatever reason.

Bree whitened when reality reasserted itself.

No. She had not imagined wrong. 

This was a guy’s naked chest she was groping like a nympho.

She let out an embarrassed little squeak, backing away in panic, and found herself falling backwards when she tripped on her own feet.

 

“Whoa.” Dylan caught the girl in time, the movement forcing him to clutch her body close.

She let out another squeak, softer but with greater feeling, like someone close to literally dying with embarrassment.

It made Dylan grin as he slowly helped her back to her feet. “You okay?”

She nodded and frowned at the same time. The voice sounded familiar. Somewhat older, too. Maybe one of the maintenance guys?

“Sorry,” she mumbled. “I can’t see where I’m going. I, umm, forgot my glasses.”

Sure she did
, Dylan thought, grin widening.

“So, umm, where’s the ladies’ room?”

“I’ll guide you,” he said as he took her hand without waiting for an answer. It felt soft and small in his own, which was callused because of sports and music combined.

His touch was…hot. The thought made her uncomfortable and even more self-conscious. This was so not her, crushing on an older man and one – since Bree was a student and he was obviously employed by the school – she wasn’t even allowed to like. A lot of girls she knew were attracted to the idea of dating someone forbidden, but Bree had never been that kind of girl.

She heard him open the door for her. “You can go in now,” he told her gently.

“Thanks.”

The girl came out after a few minutes, remarkably fast for someone of her gender. “How did you find the concert?” Dylan asked as he once again took her hand to guide her out. He felt her tremble at his touch and even though she was still a kid in more ways than one, her very obvious reaction to him pleased Dylan immensely.

“It was my first, actually, and it was really great!”

Her face had brightened as she answered, and the sight made him blink a little. 

“It was great…even if you didn’t see a thing?” he teased.

Bree choked on her laughter. “I couldn’t see the guy singing,” she confided, “but he had the most beautiful voice.”

“I don’t think so.”

Bree frowned. “He
does
have a great voice!”

“Nah. I think you’re lying.”

Unthinkingly planting her hands on her hips in an aggressive pose, Bree demanded, “Why do you say that?”

Several moments of silence passed.

Bree started to fidget, feeling like the older guy was just gazing at her and there was something about it that…

She swallowed. 

Something was wrong. But not in a bad way.

Did that even make sense?

Bree swallowed again when suddenly the guy cupped her chin and made her look up. “You’re a liar.”

“I’m not.” Oh, drat. Why did her voice sound so husky all of a sudden?

Other books

Tuck's Treasure by Kimber Davis
The Battle of Hastings by Jim Bradbury
Where the River Ends by Charles Martin
The Optician's Wife by Betsy Reavley
Murder on the Prowl by Rita Mae Brown
Blood and Politics by Leonard Zeskind
Nadine, Nadine vignette 1 by Gabriella Webster