Read Black Girls and Bad Boys: Changing his Tune Online
Authors: Neneh J. Gordon
Tags: #bwwm contemporary romance, #interracial romance bwwm, #bwwm, #black women white men romance, #african american erotic romance, #interracial bwwm, #multicultural romance novel, #mixed race love story, #rock star romance novel, #rockstar love story
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I
f Angie wanted to be his shadow, he’d make damn sure it wasn’t a
comfortable ride. Some pills had dulled the ache in his head, but he was still
feeling fragile. Instead of jogging down the stairs to the front door, he took
his time and put on his sunglasses before they hit the full glare of the sun
coming in through the windows.
“Where are we off to?”
He thought about ignoring her, but he didn’t want her to think even
less of him than she already did. “To get some fresh air.” Actually, that gave
him an idea. His mouth curled into a smile. She wouldn’t approve. But then,
that was the point.
He grabbed a set of keys from the table by the door and stepped out
into the mild autumn day. He took in a good lungful of air and immediately felt
less jaded. To think he’d got himself in a position where he could lose this
place. He shook his head. No way would he let that happen.
“Do you play an instrument?” He asked as they walked down the steps
to the drive.
“No. I’m not very musical.”
He stopped. “But you like rock music, right?”
She shook her head. “Not really. I’m more into jazz.”
“Jazz?”
“Yeah, you know – John Coltrane, Charles Mingus.”
Great. So she was going to be precisely no use at all when it came
to the new album. “Have you listened to any of my stuff? No, don’t answer
that.” He didn’t need her to leave footprints all over his ego.
He unlocked the black Mercedes coupe and lifted open the gullwing
door. Angelique stared for a moment, then recovered and opened the passenger
door. That reaction was the main reason he’d bought the car. Even after owning
it for two years, seeing those doors swing upwards never failed to put a smile
on his face.
He climbed into the driver’s seat and closed his door. Watching her
stretch up and struggle to do the same was a small victory.
“Buckle up.” He turned the key and drove them out onto the road.
***
T
hey drew more than a few stares as they drove into town. Noah
parked up in the street and she turned as if she was about to say something,
but she changed her mind and got out.
Saying nothing, he strode down the pavement and into his favourite
shisha lounge. He could feel her bustling along behind him. The air was thick
with fragrant smoke that brought back memories of lost nights with friends.
“Aren’t these places illegal?” she whispered as he headed for the
counter.
He got a mouthpiece and some flavoured tobacco. “Do you want a
drink?”
She peered around them, looking worried. “I don’t think we should be
here.”
“Relax.” He ordered them two coffees and made straight for a table
in the far corner. There wasn’t a lot she could do, so she sat down opposite
him. She was still staring at the hookah in front of her when the drinks
arrived. He had to admit it was an impressive one – an undulating silver body
sitting on top of delicately engraved blue glass. He got it fired up and took a
puff. The disapproval on her face made him choke on the smoke. “Do you want
some?” He held out the hose to her.
She wrinkled her nose and shook her head.
Watching her discomfort wasn’t as much fun as he’d expected. “It’s
not what you think. It’s not even real tobacco – they aren’t allowed because of
the smoking ban.” He offered it again.
“What is it then?”
“Herbal.”
She looked sceptical.
“Smell the air. There’s no proper tobacco.” He watched her take a
look around the room. “And none of the other, either.”
“It doesn’t smell like tobacco.”
“See?” He held the hose out one more time.
“No. I’ll pass.”
Sitting back, he took a long drag of the vanilla smoke and closed
his eyes. His headache was trying to make a return. He blew out a perfumed
cloud, doing his best to exhale his tension along with the shisha. He wasn’t
being very fair to her. John had only been trying to help.
When he opened his eyes, she was still sitting on the edge of her
seat, her hands jammed under her thighs.
“So, what do you do for fun?”
She looked at him like he’d asked her for her murder weapon of
choice. “I don’t get out much.”
He could believe it. Barely any makeup, no jewellery whatsoever – not
even a wedding ring. And less chat than any woman he’d ever met. “You always
this talkative.” He took another drag on the pipe, blowing the smoke up towards
the ceiling.
“Sorry.” She wrapped her hands around her coffee, looking down into
the mug. “I’m a bit distracted at the moment.”
“Man trouble?”
She looked up at him, her eyes huge and sorrowful. Then she made
herself smile and he wondered if he’d imagined it.
“Something like that. What about you? What’s your tale of woe?”
“Tale of woe? What are you, medieval?”
“No, go on. There must be something behind all this
self-destruction.” She took a sip of her drink.
That raised his hackles, but then he thought about what she was
asking. Why was he determined to screw everything up? “I don’t know. Boredom?”
She shook her head. “You drink yourself unconscious and do drugs
because you’re bored?”
“What do you want me to do? Take up knitting?”
“Why not? It’s less damaging.”
“You haven’t seen my knitting.”
She didn’t laugh.
“Angie, I’m a rock star. It’s what we do.”
A grin broke across her face. She let out a melodious peal of
laughter and slapped her thigh. “Did you hear what you just said?”
“What?”
“You’re happy to throw your life away so you can live up to some
cliché?”
To be honest, the words had fallen out of his mouth without him
thinking about it. Most things in his life happened that way. He put the pipe
to his lips, but the smoke didn’t taste so good any more. They fell into
silence. His thoughts turned to the new album he’d promised. Another
thoughtless turn in his messed-up existence. “I’m done. Let’s go.”
***
N
oah marched up the high street, employing every inch of his long
legs so that Angelique had to hurry to keep up with him. She considered asking
where they were going now, but thought better of it – his mood had changed from
belligerent to mournful in the space of three seconds. There was something more
fundamental under all his smart remarks. He could do with some time to think on
it.
He made his way to the seedier end of town and came to a stop
outside The Kitty Shop. Seriously? Strippers in the middle of the day? It was
like he was a little kid showing off by trying to shock her. Fine. If he expected
her to run away at the sight of some naked breasts then he was about as
immature as she’d imagined.
“Are you coming?” He couldn’t hide the smile that threatened to take
over his face.
“Wait.”
He paused on the doorstep, obviously thinking she was about to
protest.
“No alcohol, okay?”
“But it’ll cost a fortune to buy a lemonade in there.”
“Then don’t go in.”
“Oh, I’m going in. You?”
“If you promise not to drink.”
“It’s too early for me anyway.” He stepped inside and held the door
open for her to follow.
The interior was as dark as it would have been at one in the
morning. She’d never set foot in one of those places before, but it seemed like
one of the more upmarket clubs.
Noah paid the entry for both of them and they stepped under the
disco lights. Unsurprisingly, it was pretty empty. Waitresses in short skirts
wandered around the mainly unoccupied seats while high-heeled girls gyrated on
the stage and hung off poles. Most of the women seemed to know him, but they
might have been that familiar with all of the punters.
She hadn’t been put off going inside, but that didn’t stop her
giving him a dirty look as they sat down. “Do you come here a lot?”
“Why? Am I offending your feminist sensibilities?”
“Yes.” It might have been different if the women in those places
looked like they genuinely wanted to be there, but they all seemed to share the
same haunted expression behind their fake smiles.
“You didn’t have to come with me.”
But of course she did. She had to keep an eye on him.
“I’ll be back in a minute.” He slid out of his seat.
It crossed her mind that he might be up to something. At first she
thought she should give him the benefit of the doubt, but then she went looking
for him. One of the waitresses told her where the toilets were. When he hadn’t
come out after a couple of minutes, a cold weight settled in the pit of her
stomach.
She gave the door a thump. “Noah, are you okay in there?” He didn’t
reply. Of course he didn’t.
She rushed back to the entrance and asked one of the bouncers to
check the men’s toilets for her. He raised an eyebrow, but he agreed to do it.
He came out shaking his head. “Nope, there’s nobody in there.”
Her heart pounded. “You checked the cubicles?”
“Empty.”
No. No, no, no. Her first day on the damn job and she’d lost Noah
Trent.
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A
ngelique took an eye-wateringly expensive taxi back to the house,
praying that Noah would be there when she arrived. No such luck. His phone went
straight to voicemail every time she called it.
At least John wasn’t there either. As far as she knew, he wouldn’t
be back until tomorrow. So as long as the missing rock star turned up before
then, she stood a chance of holding onto her new job.
She was too on edge to get herself anything to eat. Keeping busy was
the only thing that would stop her falling to pieces. She went up to the suite
and stood in the middle of her room. His bedroom was on the other side of that
door. John had told her he and the cleaner had given all of the rooms a
thorough search before she’d arrived. But there’d also been a clutch of bottles
lying around when they’d been in there a few hours before.
It was part of her job to keep him out of temptation’s way. She’d
failed to watch him closely enough while they were out – and she wouldn’t let
that happen again – but in the meantime, she could always make sure there
wasn’t anything in his room that shouldn’t be there. She pulled open the door
and walked inside.
An hour and a half later, she’d turned his bedroom and bathroom
upside down and located a small, solitary bag of coke. It took her another half
hour to put everything back. Tidying up calmed her down and gave her time to
figure out what she was going to say to Mr Shisha Lounge. This was never going
to work if he didn’t want it to – no one ever got clean and stayed that way if
they weren’t doing it for themselves.
When she was done, she looked around her own room. There was a good
chance he’d hidden something in there too. She was sliding her hand down the
back of the chaise longue when she heard the front door bang shut.
Footsteps started up the stairs. All of the irritation and unease
she’d been working to get rid of flooded back and she stormed out to meet him.
He stomped upstairs, his head drooping so that his long hair
obscured his face.
“Noah.”
He ignored her, not even looking up as he walked past.
That was the final straw. “Backside!” She grabbed him by the arm and
spun him around. “This was in your room.” She held up the little bag of white
powder.
He tossed his hair out of his face, his jaw tense with anger. “How
dare you?”
“Me? How dare I? Look at everything you have, Noah. And you’re going
to throw it all away for the sake of a quick fix. You know what your problem
is?”
He glared at her, his face a stone mask.
“You’re spoilt. You said you’re bored, well you’re just self-indulgent.
Some of us have got real problems.” It made her sick to think of all the money
he must have frittered away to end up so close to losing his house.
Folding his arms, he straightened up and squinted at her. “Alright
then, Saint Angie. Since I obviously don’t have a care in the world, why don’t
you tell me what your problem is?”
She fell silent, thoughts of Lewis racing through her mind. What
would he say if she told him she was an alcoholic too? What would he think of a
woman who’d put the drink before her own child?
The sneer slid off his face. “Go on, what is it?”
It was worse to see him look at her with something approaching
concern. Conflict, she knew how to handle. If he was nice to her, she might
just crumble. “Forget it. I’m going to flush this down the toilet.” She waved
the coke in his face. “Don’t bother getting any more because it’ll go the same
way.” She fixed him with her sternest look, hoping she seemed more in control
than she felt. He reminded her of Lewis – especially when he looked at her with
those wide brown eyes. That’s how she knew he wasn’t completely lost. But it
was also a way for him to manipulate her.
She turned to leave, but this time, he caught her by the wrist. His
touch burned into her skin, sending shockwaves all the way up her forearm.
“Look, I’m sorry. I wanted a drink. I even went to buy a bottle of
vodka. But I didn’t. You can smell my breath.” He leaned in closer and she
snatched her arm away.
“Please. Don’t do that. I don’t like to be touched.” No one got to
lay hands on her. Especially not men.
He stared for a fraction of a second, then backed off. “I’m sorry. I
didn’t know.”
What was the matter with her? She was more screwed up than him.
“It’s... It’s okay. I believe you about the drink.” She had no idea why, but she
did. “Noah, do you want to get clean?”
She looked into his eyes and watched him think long and hard about
it. Had he sunk low enough to really want it? She thought back to the day she’d
decided to quit drinking for the last time. It was nearly two years since she’d
touched any alcohol. And more than two and a half since she’d lost custody of
her son. Those seven months in between made her more ashamed than anything in
her life.
“Do you want the truth?”
She nodded. There was no point going forward with a lie.
“I don’t know. He swept his hair back off his face, combing his
fingers through it. “I think about where I’m headed sometimes and I feel like
I’m dying. But then that just makes me want another drink.” He looked away from
her. “If I stop, what will I have left? Best case scenario – I go on tour and
make enough money to get out of debt – what happens then? What do I do? How do
I fill the hole?”
He looked into her eyes and she thought her heart would break. It
was the question all addicts were trying to answer in some way or another. “You
have to work that out for yourself.”
Looking away, he tucked his hair behind his ears. The silence
between them stretched out. It was obvious she hadn’t given him the response he
wanted. “I can tell you one thing. Keeping busy helps.” Anything that stopped
you thinking about what you could be drinking was a godsend.
“Well, I’ve got plenty to keep me occupied.”
Of course. The new album. “Are you really going to write and record
a whole album in time for the tour?” He slumped a little and she wished she
could bite back the words. “Why don’t you get your guitar out? It might make
you feel better.” She watched him mull it over. Everything was so close to the
surface with him. Whatever came into his head was instantly written all over
his face.
It was a huge part of what made it so hard to dislike him, even
after his terrible behaviour. That and his big brown eyes.
“Well, there are a couple of riffs that have been stuck in my head
ever since I got home.”
“Why don’t you try them out? See what you come up with?”
He sucked on his full bottom lip. “Wait here.” He bounded past her
into the suite and came back moments later with a battered old acoustic guitar.
Its body was a mesh of scratches and stained varnish.
“I thought you had one of those double-necked electric things.”
He dashed halfway down the stairs and beckoned to her. “Come on. The
acoustics are better in the conservatory.”
She put the coke in her pocket to deal with later. His enthusiasm
was infectious. He was almost at the bottom before she caught up with him. This
wasn’t what she’d been expecting – she’d braced herself for a full-blown
argument when he got back.
“This,” he placed a reverent hand on the strings of his old guitar,
“is the secret of my success.”
She tried to hold back the laughter, but she just couldn’t.
“Don’t laugh. I’ve had this guitar a long time.”
“Yeah, I can see that.” She didn’t mean to mock. It said something
about him that he wasn’t hung up on having the latest, most expensive kit.
“It’s what I do all my writing on.” They crossed the marble floor of
the hallway and he threw open the doors to the conservatory.
The entire room was furnished in white – the chairs, the tables, the
window frames – and light bounced off every surface. He went straight to the
electrical equipment in the far corner.
“What’s that?”
“I want to record this. Take a seat.” He gestured to the rattan sofa
with plump white cushions and she perched herself on the end of it.
Noah pulled out a straight-backed chair and folded his lanky frame
into it, resting the guitar on his thigh. He strummed a chord and the
atmosphere in the room sharpened.
Neither of them spoke as he picked his way through various note
combinations, warming up for the real playing. Angelique leaned over the sofa
arm, captivated by his concentration. He looked different again – serious and
in control. She was glad she’d suggested this. All of the bad feeling between
them had evaporated as soon as he laid his hands on the guitar.
The strumming gave way to an actual tune and he hummed along,
stopping every now and then to pick up the song from the beginning again. The
run of notes was bright and uplifting. His rich, warm voice filled the space,
raising the hairs on the back of her neck.
She’d never really listened to his music before. Now she knew why he
was so popular. And there she’d been assuming it was because all the girls
fancied him.
He played one last chord and clapped his hand down on the strings to
silence them. “What do you think?”
She gave him a little round of applause. “Pretty good.”
“It’s not quite there yet, but I don’t think it’ll need much more
work.”
“I’m impressed.” When he’d said he wanted to write a new album
before the tour, she’d dismissed it as an idle boast, but now she could see he
stood a good chance of seeing it through.
“I’ve still got a long way to go.” He looked down and started to
play again. Something slower this time. The tune came more hesitantly and she
was sure he was playing out a difficult time in his life. There was so much of
him laid out there it made her uncomfortable. This time, he sang a lyric over
the top.
Too many nights
Too many fights
I never wanted it to end
Then I did
He looked up, meeting her eye as he raised his voice to repeat the
refrain. It sounded like the story of a bad break-up, but she knew he was
singing about the drink and the drugs. She could feel it. The air in there was
suddenly as thick as treacle. She got to her feet.
“Are you okay?” He rose, placing the guitar on the floor.
“I’m fine. I’m going to make a cup of tea, do you want anything?”
The words came out almost double-speed. It was well over a year since her last
panic attack, but she was perfectly aware of the warning signs. She had to get
out of there before she made a fool of herself.
“Angie, what is it?” He came towards her, reaching out before he
remembered her aversion to physical contact and backed off.
She fled the conservatory for the kitchen, too embarrassed to
abandon her excuse. At the sink, she poured herself a glass of water, but her
hands were shaking too much for her to drink any of it.
“Angie.”
She turned to see him standing nervously in the doorway. She hated
being called that, but she’d let it slide for too long to say anything now.
“What is it?” He stepped inside, but hung back. “What’s wrong?”
He wasn’t a bad person – the concern on his face showed that – but
he was in a bad place. It had been different back at the clinic. Maybe she’d
made a mistake accepting this job.
“Talk to me.”
Taking hold of herself, she fought down a few breaths and carried
her water over to the glass dining table. “I’m supposed to be looking after
you, not the other way round.” She took a drink, her nerves a little steadier.
“Have I upset you?”
She met his gaze. “No. You haven’t done anything.”
“That’s not true. I’m sorry about earlier. I shouldn’t have taken
you to that place.”
“And I shouldn’t have let you run out on me.”
“What were you supposed to do? Come in the men’s toilets with me? It
wasn’t your fault.”
She sighed and drank some more water. It seemed the panic attack
wasn’t going to make an appearance after all.
“I feel better, you know? After talking to you.” He moved his hand
across the table towards hers, stopping short of touching her.
“I’m glad.”
“If you ever want to talk about your stuff...”
She shook her head. It was kind of him to offer, but that wasn’t
what she was there for. “I’m fine. There’s nothing to talk about.” As far as he
was concerned, that had to be the case.
***
A
s the afternoon eased into evening, Noah had to admit that
Angelique was right about keeping busy. His financial difficulties meant he’d
had to let go of the household staff, so he offered to help her cook dinner and
they dirtied nearly every pan in the kitchen making chicken pasta.
He tried to remember when he’d last cooked something for a woman and
came up empty. The girls he usually hung out with were more of the takeaway
pizza type. If they had an appetite for anything other than class-As that is.
The house was filled with the smell of garlic and tomatoes by the
time they sat down to eat and his stomach growled in appreciation. Angie made
sure he had an extra-large helping, but for once he was looking forward to it.
They sat at the kitchen table with glasses of ginger beer to go with their
food.
“Cheers.” She held up her glass and he clinked it with his.
“Cheers.”
He was too hungry for small-talk and she’d made it clear she didn’t
want to discuss what was bothering her. After wolfing down the pasta, he pushed
his chair back from the table and poured himself another drink.
“If I wasn’t on the wagon, I’d be having a coffee with a large slug
of brandy right about now.”
“I can do you the coffee if you like.” She knocked back the last of
her ginger beer and got up from the table.
“Black, two sugars please.” He watched her carry the kettle over to
the sink, growing more and more irritated. Okay, she was easy on the eye, but
she was getting on his nerves. He wanted a drink. He’d poured his heart out to
her, let her hear his new songs – which he never did with anyone – and she
wouldn’t open up even a crack. And what was all that stuff with the ‘I don’t
like to be touched’?