My Rock #8 (The Rock Star Romance Series - Book #8) (8 page)

BOOK: My Rock #8 (The Rock Star Romance Series - Book #8)
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“Tristan!”
Since the boys were old enough to make sounds, Elly had made me promise not to
say fuck in front of them, ever. It had taken some doing since that eliminated
half of my functioning vocabulary, but that would have been my first slip in a
long time.

“Sorry,” I said. “I was just going to say none of
you have any faith in my good sense. But since you knew how I was going to
phrase it…I guess I can see why.” Brandi and Elly both laughed and the boys,
thinking we were laughing about them since they were usually the center of all
the action, giggled too. It was so cute I had to go kiss them again.

“Let’s go, potty mouth,” Elly told me.

Elly drove us to Burbank in her SUV. The traffic was
pretty light since it was so early. On the way home, we wouldn’t be so lucky. I
wanted to take the bike but she didn’t want me looking wind-blown on TV, she
said. We’d be sitting bumper to bumper on the I-5 somewhere before the day is
over and then she’d wish she had listened to me. The one thing I hated about
L.A. is the traffic. When I was on the bike, I could make my own lanes most of
the time.

We made it to the studio and into the green room
where we were supposed to wait just in the nick of time, apparently. Everyone
looked really nervous like they were afraid I wasn’t going to show, even my own
band.

“Hey, guys!” I said when we sat down.

“Hey,” the three guys said back.

Carl, the drummer said, “That hot girl from that new
comedy show is on right now.” He pointed up at the television and we all looked
up.

I didn’t think she was all that hot. She had big
tits and a nice ass, but her nose was funny and her hair looked
fake
. Elly was hotter, but if I said that right then it
would have embarrass her, so I didn’t. Instead I said, “Why don’t you go for
it, Carl?”

“Nah, she’s way out of my league,” he said.

“That’s what I thought about Elly,” I told him.
“Just look at us now.”

Carl looked over at Elly and smiled. Then he said,
“He’s right, you know. A girl like you is not supposed to be hanging around bad
boys like us.”

Elly was nodding as she said, “I know but I’ve
always had a thing for the bad boys.”

We chatted with the band for a while and when Hot Girl
came back in the room, they called me out to make-up. Elly kissed me and wished
me luck. I was praying that Jerry gave them the list of things not to talk
about…one of which was my parents.

I got all made up and prissy like a girl and then
they called me out. The studio audience was a lot smaller than a concert one
but it was still cool that they all got to their feet for me when I came out. I
waved and blew kisses and played to the crowd like Elly told me too. It was an
older crowd, but they still seemed to like me. I had to hug or kiss all five of
the women hostesses of the show before we all took a seat at the big dining
room table on the center of the set.

“So, Tristan, we hear you’re making a new CD,” the
lady who was a retired news anchor said. “What can you tell us about it? When’s
it coming out?”

“It should be out on the Tuesday before Halloween,”
I told her. “I think it’s my best one yet. My band is just amazing and, best of
all, my wife agreed to do a duet with me on this one.”

“Aw, that’s sweet,” one of the other ladies said.
“Is it a song you wrote?”

“Yeah, it’s kind of a song about us. I think it’s
going to be the best one on the CD.”

“Tristan, we heard you had twin boys! What’s that
like?” asked another woman.

I couldn’t see myself on the monitor, but I’m sure
my chest was puffed out and I was beaming as I said, “It’s indescribable.
They’re so
amazing,
I can’t stop looking at them some
days.”

The ladies smiled and then one of them said, “Do you
have any pictures of them?”

Elly and I had tried to keep their little faces out
of the media, but the paparazzi had caught us out shopping or eating more than
once and snapped pictures and printed them without our permission. We talked
about it before I came on the show and decided that since those pictures were
out there, it would be safe to show them off now. I took one of them out of my
wallet that had been taken on their first birthday. One of the ladies handed it
to the camera man and within seconds my handsome boys were on the big screen.

“Oh, Tristan!
They’re beautiful!” The ladies told me. I knew that already, but politely
thanked them anyways.

“Tristan, I’m going to ask you something, and
it’s
okay if you don’t care to talk about it…” I was
thinking, fuck! She’s going to ask about my parents or the boy band. Instead
she said, “I hear you’re about five years clean and sober now. For some of our
young viewers who might be struggling with addiction, maybe you could share
your secret.”

“Honestly, I don’t have a secret. I owe my sobriety
to my wife Elly. She’s the one who made me realize that my life was worth more
than that. Once I realized it was worth more, I wanted more. I’m a better man,
a better human being than I ever was and I owe it all to her.”

“Well, they say behind every great man is an even
greater woman.”

“That’s my Elly,” I told her, honestly, “Only she’s
not behind me, ever. She’s always beside me. She’s my biggest inspiration, my
biggest fan, and the love of my life all rolled into one.”

The ladies at the table were all saying, “
Awwwww
….” and so was the audience.

“I have a question,” the lady who used to be a stand-up
comedian said. “I heard that you flew out to New York a few months ago to visit
a sick little girl in the hospital.”

“Yeah, her name was
Becca
and she was twelve.” It made my chest hurt to talk about her. I’d only met the
little girl once at the urging of my agent. He was only interested in the
publicity it would generate. I saw how brave she was and how beautiful she was
and it really affected me. She died about a month later. It still hurt me to be
reminded of that. “She loved math and animals and soccer. She was an example of
the kind of person I wanted to be. She had acute lymphoma and she told me she
knew she was going to die. She passed away about a month after I saw her.

“That’s so sad,” the news anchor said.

“Yeah, it was really sad for us as humans because
it’s one less good person in the world. In twelve short years I think she had
learned more about human nature and compassion that most of us learn in our
lifetime, or she was just born with it. Either way, the world was lucky to have
her, if only for a little while.”

“That was a good thing you did,” one of the other
ladies said, “You must be one of those good human beings yourself.”

“I hope so, but the truth is I owe my life to the
love of a twelve year old girl.”

They looked shocked by that and one of them said,
“What do you mean?”

“Elly always tells me she was twelve when she fell
in love with me. I’m glad she didn’t know me then because I wouldn’t have
been deserving
. But she held onto that for a lot of years
and that’s why I’m alive today, I guarantee you. So, like I said, I owe my life
to the love of a twelve year old.”

I was glad after they took their break then they
said it was time to perform. I joined my band up on the little stage in the
corner of the set and I was back in my element. We did one of the songs from
the new CD and the audience loved it. After we performed, the ladies had a few
more questions for me, nothing major, and that was it. I walked off that stage
realizing that this talk show thing wasn’t as bad as I’d been afraid it would
be. I knew one of these days someone was going to ask me about my parents….or
worse yet, interview them. For the moment, I was just thankful they didn’t.

 

CHAPTER
FIFTEEN

ELLY

I sat in the green room and watched Tristan’s
interview on the TV mounted up in the corner. When they asked about his
sobriety, I was nervous for him. I know that he doesn’t like talking about it
because he is afraid that it will inevitably lead to questions about his
parents. Or, worse yet in Tristan’s eyes, someone will think of him as weak. To
him, there would be no worse punishment. I could see on his face through the TV
screen that he didn’t really want to answer it. I held my breath, waiting for
him to speak. When he did, the tears came gushing out of my eyes so fast that I
didn’t realize I was crying until they were rolling down my cheeks. He was
saying things about me that he had said to me before….but not so eloquently. I
wondered if he’d rehearsed it, if he’d planned on saying all of that. But, I
decided that I didn’t care. What he said about a twelve year old saving him
with her
love, that
was about me, I knew that for
sure. I cried again when I heard him say that and I’m sure it won’t be the last
time. Every time I thought about how proud he seemed to be of me up there when
he talked about me and our little family and how he remembered that I was only
twelve years old when I fell in love with him, I
teared
up all over again. All that time I was talking about how infatuated I was with
him as a kid when we first got together, I would have sworn he was tuning me
out.

I got up and left the green room. I didn’t like
being in there alone and I suddenly wanted to be closer to Tristan. I asked the
security officer where I could stand backstage and he showed me. I looked out
at the small stage he was on and, just like what he’d said about the babies, I
couldn’t stop looking at him. I couldn’t imagine my life without him and I loved
him more every day. Even on a tiny little stage in front of a small audience of
people, he was killing it. My beautiful husband was going to be immortal. No one
would ever be able to forget he existed because his music was going to live on
forever.

I listened to the words of the song he was singing.
It was one I hadn’t heard before and it was about a “bad boy” who fell in love
with a “good girl.” The chorus of the song talked about her being out of his
league, the way Tristan had said it earlier about me. It’s a sweet song, but
absolutely untrue where Tristan is concerned. I had problems and faults just
like he did, or anyone else for that matter. The difference was that I’d had a
great support system and Tristan had pretty much crap. I was glad we found each
other so that I could be there for him, but I wasn’t taking credit for all the
hard work he’d put in and all the growing up he’d done himself. He’d turned into
a fine man, and since he’d had so many odds stacked against him, I thought he
deserved extra credit.

He finished his song and then went back to talk to
the ladies. They asked him some more questions about his record label and he
talked some more about the babies, then they said good-bye and let him go. I
was waiting for him so that as soon as he walked off the stage, I could tell
him how much I appreciate him saying such nice things about me. He didn’t give
me a chance. Instead of walking up to me, he walked into me. He walked up; put
his hands on my hips and his face down close to mine. After shooting me another
grin he put his lips against mine. He kissed me softly with his lips first all
over my mouth before I felt the sliver of his tongue slip through. My own
tongue didn’t even wait for directions; she hurriedly tangled herself up with
his.

As we kissed, deeply and passionately, I lost all
conscious thought of where I was or who I was with, except Tristan. He wasn’t
the only one in the room…he was the only one in every room. When he broke the
kiss he looked down into my eyes and I said, “Thank you for all of that out
there. You know though that no matter who it had been that encouraged you to go
to rehab, you did all of that work and you’ve stayed sober yourself.”

“I know. I’ll give myself credit for that, but I
meant it…I think I would have died if you let me continue down the path I was
on. If I hadn’t died, I’d at least be living on the streets, maybe banging on
my guitar to get people to throw money in my case. I was an alcoholic, a drug
addict and an all-around lousy, miserable person. By all rights, you should
have run as far away from me as you could get…but you didn’t. You stuck it out
and you saved my life.”

“I saved it for me,” I told him with a grin. Brandi
was right not to argue with him, he never let anyone else win.

“I will never be able to tell you how glad I am that
you did. I love you, Elly.”

I kissed him again and said, “I love you, too.”

The
End

 

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