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Authors: Honey Palomino

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BOOK: Jett
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“I’m bad, Colt.  I’m real bad.  I need your help.”

☼ ☼ ☼ ☼ ☼ ☼

She would be out soon.  I would watch from my car, make sure she got on the bus okay, and then I would go home for a little while.  

It was my job to make sure she was safe.  It was my job to make sure she was clean.

She wasn’t clean.

Especially not after last night.  She was just lost.  I could save her, if only she would let me, if only I could get a little closer to her.  If only she wasn’t afraid of me.

She had done so much for me, and she didn’t even know it.  All those years they made me kill people in the Army, she was there with me, whispering in my ear, telling me she loved me, soothing me with her songs while I laid in my bunk and cried myself to sleep every night.

She was the only person I could talk to.  The only one that listened.  

Now that I didn’t have to kill people anymore, now that they finally sent me home, she was the only thing I wanted.

I would do anything to get close to her.  I just needed to be patient, and eventually, she would be all mine.

The doorman opened the front door of the Four Seasons, and my heart began racing when I saw her emerge.  I grabbed my binoculars, peering through them until I had her in my sight.  I knew she had to have seen my note, but with the huge sunglasses she was wearing, I couldn’t see the look in her eyes like I had hoped.  Her eyes were my favorite part of her body, and she constantly insisted upon covering them up, depriving me of my most treasured pleasure.

Quickly, she disappeared into her shiny red tour bus, and I sighed with deep disappointment as I placed the binoculars on top of the black leather jacket on the seat beside me.

☼ ☼ ☼ ☼ ☼ ☼

The bus was my only real home.  

I spent so much time on the road, I didn’t bother to keep some big house in Los Angeles, or an apartment in New York.  It always seemed wasteful to me.  Why buy a huge home that was just going to sit there empty?  Why pay gardeners and housekeepers and pool boys to take care of a place that I never had an opportunity to spend time at?  It’s not like I had a family to provide a roof for.  I was alone.  Just like I always had been.

Alone, in a sea of people orbiting my every move.  

Once, a few years ago, I had bought a secluded little cabin in the woods outside of Portland, in a tiny town called Rhododendron.  By some miracle, I had found myself with a few days off, and decided I wanted to going skiing.  I had never been, and I rented a cabin smack dab in the middle of the forest in the foothills of Mt. Hood.  I spent one blissful weekend there, and after learning the riverfront cabin was for sale, I bought it on a whim.  

My big plan was to come back several times a year, get away from everyone, get away from my life, sit by the river and just unwind, spend some time in nature.

I hadn’t been back once.  

It was pathetic. I was pathetic.

You’d think by now, I would have found a way to put my foot down, to tell my manager and the record label that I needed time off, but every time I complained about it, they just pressed harder.  My protests were met with guilt trips about all the people we employed when we were on tour, the families that depended on us, and all the promotion that we were contracted to do for the new album.  And the album after that.  Which meant we would have to tour again to promote that one.  And on and on.

It was an endless cycle, an endless circus, and I was the main attraction.  And what did I attract?  Greedy industry freaks.  Crazies.  Stalkers.  Fanatics.

This latest stalker was the scariest of them all, and I had had my fair share.  When I confronted Rex after I found the note in my room that morning, he had no explanation for me.  He said I was all locked up in my room when he left for the night.  

Unfortunately, I didn’t remember much at all, at least not after I had fallen asleep in a tangled mess with the other three.  Rex said they had left before he did.  So, what happened after Rex left for the night?  How did the stalker get in my room? That’s what I wanted to know.

And nobody had an answer for me.

Not only was I furious, but I was terrified.  I was, luckily, in one piece, and that was saying a lot.  I wasn’t the safest person in the world, I knew this, but by the time I was done with my show for the night, and once I had a few drinks, the last thing I wanted was to spend the night alone in my hotel room.  A girl needed a little company.

And besides, I thought that was what we were paying Rex for. Protection. But after last night, I was convinced I couldn’t depend on him.

So, yeah, I was terrified, and I was pissed.  I was pissed at Rex.  I was pissed at Seth, my manager.  I was pissed at the record label.  Nobody would listen to me.  I was nothing but a commodity to them, someone to push up on a stage so the public would push their money to us in return.  

For years, I had been complaining about my schedule.  And for almost as long, I had been complaining about security.  This Jack person had been sending me stuff for months now, somehow always finding me, no matter where I was staying.  But this was the first time he had been in my room.  All the other times it had been delivered.

I shuddered as I thought of how awful things could have turned out.  He could have easily done a lot more than just tape a creepy fucking note on the door.  

This morning, after I found it, the first thing I did was confront Rex.  When I got nowhere with him, I called Seth.  As usual, he was less concerned with my safety than the numbers from last night’s show.  Sure, he made a perfunctory play at showing concern, but it was obvious he was dismissing the severity of the situation.

But me?  I was fed up.  I wasn’t about to let some crazy lunatic get near me without a fight.  I knew I needed someone I could trust implicitly, and there was only one person in the whole world that came to mind.

Colton Joshua James.

As soon as I hung up the phone with Seth, I called Ciara.  

I hadn’t talked to her in years, not since that time she showed up at the show in Vegas, telling security I was an old friend, and finagling her way backstage.  We only had a few minutes to catch up, as I had to jump on the bus to get to the next show that was hours away.  

She looked exactly as I remembered, she hadn’t aged a day.  That’s one good thing you could say about the James family.  They had good genes.  She and her brother Colt had always been good-looking, despite the fact that they always looked hungry and were wearing ill-fitting clothes.  

Things like that didn’t matter when you looked like that. 

“How is Colt these days?” I asked, hesitantly.  The last I heard he was still behind bars for making hands down the stupidest move out of any of our friends back then. 

I was surprised to see Ciara’s eyes light up when I mentioned his name.

“Jett, he is amazing!  You wouldn’t believe it.  He’s sober, he’s out!  He just got out, and he joined up with a motorcycle club. It’s hard to get a real job when you’ve got a record, you know?  But these guys he’s riding with are good for him.  They’re like a family.  They all take care of each other.  You wouldn’t recognize him.  He’s a whole different person now.”

“Oh, yeah?”  I replied.  Colt and I had always had a connection.  We were close.  Almost closer than Ciara and I were.  I was never the girly-girl like Ciara was back then.  I related more to the boys, and Colt became one of my best friends.  

We were just kids, hell, he was thirteen when he left, and I was twelve.

After the explosion, he went to jail right away, and that triggered an investigation into his parents.  They took Ciara away and locked up their parents.  And just like that, my two best friends were gone.  It sucked.

“Well, you look great, Ciara,” I told her.  And she did. It made me wonder what Colt looked like now.  She gave me her number, and we promised to keep in touch.  But I never called.  

So, I wasn’t surprised when I heard the iciness in her voice when I called her this morning.  

“Jett, what a surprise,” she murmured dryly.  “It’s been a long time.”

“I know, Ciara, I’m sorry I haven’t called,” I said.  “I’m constantly touring, my schedule is insane.”

“Oh, that’s alright, I understand.”  Her voice told me she didn’t understand at all.

“I sure do miss you, though!  I think I have another show coming up in Vegas soon, but I can’t remember the date.  I’d love for you to be my guest, okay?  Bring the family.”  Ciara had moved to Vegas with her husband and two kids years ago.

“Oh, sure, sure…” she said, her voice trailing off.

“Ciara, I need to get in touch with Colt.”  

“Colt?” she asked, her voice full of surprise.

“Yeah.  I might have a job for him.  I need some um…help.”  

“Oh. That’s weird.  Okay, well, hold on, and I’ll get his number.  You know, Jett, he’s very busy with the club.  He’s the VP now.  I doubt he has time for you.  Hold on a sec.”

The VP, huh?  She gave me Colt’s number after a moment, and I thanked her, promising to get in touch about the show soon.

I called him right away.  When I heard his voice, the past flooded through my head, and all those hours of sitting and talking in the bed of his parents’ pick up truck seemed like they had just happened yesterday.

I spilled everything. I told him about the grueling schedule, the lax security, and Crazy Jack, as I had taken to calling him.  I told him about the note I found in my room, and I smiled in satisfaction as I heard him growl with anger.

“He was in your room?!” he asked, his deep voice booming through my cell phone.

“Yes.”

“You didn’t wake up?  You didn’t hear anything?” he asked, incredulously.

“Um, well…I had a little bit to drink.  So, I was sleeping a little more soundly than usual.”  
More like it was the only way I could get to sleep
, I thought.

“Oh,” he replied, followed by a long pause.

“I, um…I hear you’re sober now. That’s great. Ciara told me.  She said you’re in some biker gang now or something.”

“Motorcycle club. And yeah, I am. It’s not a big deal.”

“No? I guess. I can’t imagine not drinking, but you know…the stress of the road and all that.”

“Yeah, sure, I get it.  So, Jett, why are you calling me?  Why are you telling me all this?”

“Oh. Well, I have a proposition for you.”

It took a lot of convincing, but I think I sounded so desperate, the poor guy felt guilty after a while.  When he finally told me he would fly out, I jumped for joy.  

BOOK: Jett
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