Home > The Happy Ever After Playlist(70)

The Happy Ever After Playlist(70)
Author: Abby Jimenez

My heart broke a thousand times every second that I looked at her.

I was going to go out there.

I didn’t even have control over it. My body had taken on some involuntary reflex in response to her sudden presence. The pull was so strong it felt like my very existence had just tipped in her direction and everything was sliding toward her. I took a step…

And then some fucking guy was opening her car door for her and helping her in with a hand on her back.

 

 

Chapter 44

 

 

Jason

 

 

♪ If I Get High | Nothing But Thieves


I don’t even know how I made it back to the venue in one piece.

I’d tempted Fate by going to the gallery, and Fate had called my bluff. I was fucking destroyed.

Seeing her with somebody else tore through my heart like a hot knife. It took the wind right out of my lungs.

Men had always looked at her, even when I held her hand. I went mad thinking of someone else touching her. Of her smiling at their jokes or cooking them dinner.

I’d been following the updates to The Huntsman’s Wife. I checked it every day. It was the only direct link I still had to her. She’d started posting regularly while she was living in Ely and she was cooking the game Dad had in the freezer. But a few weeks ago she’d posted a recipe for wild boar.

Dad didn’t hunt boar.

I didn’t think much of it at the time. I thought maybe it was something old, from when Brandon was still alive, that she hadn’t gotten around to sharing. But now that I knew she was dating, my mind went crazy wondering if she was seeing someone who hunted, obsessing about who she cooked for, who she was spending time with.

I knew she hadn’t been ready to date when she met me, so I’d hoped, for my own selfish reasons, that she would stay single for a while, that maybe we had been a special circumstance. It was the only thing that had kept me halfway sane all these months. But she wasn’t waiting. She was seeing someone.

Nobody would ever love her like I would. She would never find the same devotion, even if she looked for a lifetime. I knew that with every cell of my being. She’d never know about it, but it would always be there. When she married someone else, had children, when she grew old, I would still be out there in the world, cherishing her in secret. If she ever needed anything, I’d make sure she had it. It would be my penance for the rest of my life for not being able to do it in person.

Three hours after the gallery, I was in my dressing room, sitting with my head in my hands, like I had been for the last hour. Jessa was on and I had about thirty minutes to showtime. I’d go through it like the puppet I was now. My label finally had its marionette. Everything would be an act from this point forward because I had nothing real left to give. All my joy in life had been drained out of me.

Someone knocked on my door. I didn’t move. I didn’t even look up. “Yeah?”

“Um, it’s Courtney. Can I come in?”

I let out a tired breath and dragged myself to my feet to open the door.

She stood there biting her lip. “Um, Lola’s here.”

My face brightened into one of my rare smiles. “Really? Where?”

She threw a thumb over her shoulder. “She’s in Jessa’s dressing room. She came to see you. I didn’t want to tell her where your room was in case—”

“No, it’s fine. Can you bring her?”

She nodded.

I was actually excited to see her. I wanted to see how she was doing. I’d called her a few times in rehab. She’d never come to the phone or called me back.

A moment later someone knocked on my dressing room door. I opened it, and when I did, I stood there, staring.

The woman standing there was nobody I knew. Even as I recognized her, it still was nobody I knew. The transformation was so shocking it disarmed me completely.

She smiled. “Hello.”

Her hair had grown out a bit. It was brown, not red. She wasn’t wearing any makeup, and a scattering of freckles I never knew she had peppered her nose. She had a red tote bag on her shoulder and she wore a baggy T-shirt, leggings, and flip-flops.

She looked five years younger. She wasn’t a rock star three months into rehab, she looked like a college student studying for finals. A babysitter after the kids had gone to bed, waiting for the parents to come home.

“Hi,” I breathed. “God, you look…you look different.”

She laughed a little, sucking her lips together. “Can we talk? Is that okay?”

“Yeah. Yes. Sure.” I let her in and closed the door behind her. She sat on the couch and I took the chair across from her. I couldn’t stop staring. I didn’t even blink. How was this the same person from all those months ago? The same woman who’d shown up at my trailer, three sheets to the wind and staggering across my fucking lawn?

The gaunt, sharp edges of her cheekbones were gone, and so was the death she’d carried behind her eyes the last time I saw her.

Her clear green irises settled on me. “Thank you for seeing me. I wouldn’t have blamed you if you didn’t want to.”

“No, I’m glad you’re here,” I said. “How have you been? You look good.”

Her hand went self-consciously to her head. “When it gets a little longer, I can get extensions.” She laughed nervously. “I actually kinda like it because I don’t get recognized.”

She put her hands into her lap and stared down at them for a long moment. “I wanted to apologize to you. And to Sloan. I was messed up for a really long time. I wasn’t myself and I’m not proud of how I acted.”

When I didn’t respond, her eyes came up to mine. “I didn’t know that was your girlfriend that night. I’d never seen her before, and Jessa had said Sloan was in Minnesota. I thought it was your assistant or something walking your dog.” She swallowed. “This is the first time I’ve really been sober and stable in almost three years. I know that’s not an excuse, but—”

“It’s okay,” I said, putting up a hand. “I accept your apology. If you accept mine.”

Her face went soft. She let out a long breath as if she’d been holding it. “I’ve been talking to Ernie about representing me. I need someone honest, you know?”

I smiled a little. “He’s a good one.”

She nodded. “Most of them aren’t. You’re really lucky.”

I studied her while she seemed to struggle with what to say.

“I, um…I was wondering if you would ever consider letting me tour with you? I mean, it doesn’t have to be full-time or anything,” she said quickly. “Maybe just the biggest venues? Or holiday specials?”

I leaned forward with my elbows on my knees. “There’d have to be rules,” I said. “You’d need to stay sober.”

Hope flashed across her face. She nodded.

“Stay on your medication. And if you fall off the wagon, you exit yourself. You don’t make me do it.”

She nodded again and I sat there, searching her face for the old Lola.

I didn’t see her.

I put out a hand.

She looked at my small olive branch, and her chin quivered. Then she took my hand and shook it.

Hot Books
» House of Earth and Blood (Crescent City #1)
» A Kingdom of Flesh and Fire
» From Blood and Ash (Blood And Ash #1)
» A Million Kisses in Your Lifetime
» Deviant King (Royal Elite #1)
» Den of Vipers
» House of Sky and Breath (Crescent City #2)
» The Queen of Nothing (The Folk of the Air #
» Sweet Temptation
» The Sweetest Oblivion (Made #1)
» Chasing Cassandra (The Ravenels #6)
» Wreck & Ruin
» Steel Princess (Royal Elite #2)
» Twisted Hate (Twisted #3)
» The Play (Briar U Book 3)