Authors: Carol Pavliska
Cleo hesitated to respond, and Julian drew in a sharp breath. “Big Red, are you serious?”
Cleo shrugged her shoulders. Was she?
Julian grinned with a glint in his eye. “My green-eyed monster is jealous. I must say, this is a turn-on for me. I’m terribly ashamed for that.”
“You should be,” she muttered. The cloud of suspicion lifted. It was hard to be suspicious of Julian when she was actually
with
him.
He crossed his arms. “You don’t really suspect me of being unfaithful, do you?”
Was now the time to take this on? And
did
she suspect him of being unfaithful? The last time she’d visited a rock star on tour was still fresh in her memory. “You’ve been avoiding me. And I’m not naive. Don’t make the mistake of assuming I am.”
Julian’s jaw dropped. “You’re serious, aren’t you?” He uncrossed his arms and ran his hands through his hair. “I haven’t been avoiding you.” He didn’t say it with gusto, and the monster reared its ugly head again. What was he hiding?
“Angel, ask anyone on this tour. Ask the guys, ask the women following us—those women in there, they all know—ask anybody.”
A middle-aged man walked up and slapped Julian on the back. He was Seth, the band’s manager, and Cleo knew Julian couldn’t stand him. “Hey, you made it!”
“Fuck off, Seth.”
Seth’s bright smile didn’t falter, it simply disappeared as if it had never existed. “Okay, I see I’ve interrupted something, but Wayne wants your guitar when you get the chance. He needs to tune it.”
He started to walk off, but Julian called him back. “Seth, have I been socializing with groupies on this tour?”
Seth straightened up, cleared his throat, and recited, “Julian hasn’t been interested in any of the ladies. In fact, all the guys have been monogamous on the tour, as far as I’m aware.”
Was he reading from a teleprompter?
“Shit, Seth. Would you say it like you mean it?”
Seth looked at Cleo quickly, then turned back to Julian. Heat crept up Cleo’s neck to her cheeks, and she clenched her jaw until it hurt. Humiliation had just reached new heights.
“Honestly, Julian, I’ve been too busy to notice who’s been fucking who. Sorry. And you’d better hurry and get your guitar to Wayne.”
Seth walked off, and Julian turned to Cleo. “Listen, I don’t have time to do this right now. You’ve just fucking got to trust me, okay?”
Maybe he wasn’t being unfaithful. But something was going on, and Cleo was going to get to the bottom of it. “You need to know something, Julian. There is only one thing I’d never forgive you for, and it’s cheating. I don’t care about the rules on the road, do you understand me?”
“Of course I do. And I promise you’ve got nothing to worry about. I would never, ever—”
The dressing room door opened and Dean’s head poked out. “Julian, man! Glad you could make it. You took your sweet time, though.”
“I had to pick up Cleo from the airport. Not that it’s any of your business.”
Dean took the snide comment in stride, gave a little shrug, and waved at Cleo. “Hi, Cleo. Didn’t see you at first.” Looking pointedly at Julian, he added, “He didn’t tell us you were coming.”
“Again, none of your business,” Julian said, grabbing Cleo’s hand and heading toward Dean and the dressing room.
A young girl stood behind the door, firmly attached to Dean’s left arm.
Oh, boy.
Dean glared at Julian, who smirked in response. Melissa and Tanya might have a system worked out, but apparently, so did the guys. And Julian had bucked it. Not something she’d expect if he was cheating.
Cory stepped away from the mirror, where he’d been preening. “Here’s our muse,” he said, grinning from ear to ear. Faded skinny jeans, a black T-shirt, and a studded leather jacket—as if he’d stepped right off the pages of
Rock ’n’ Spin
. “Julian didn’t tell us you were coming.” He set down his comb and came over for a hug. “This is your first show, right? Have you heard the song yet?”
Julian grunted, and Cory went silent.
“What?” Cleo asked.
“Nothing,” Cory said, looking apologetically at Julian. “Enjoy the show.” He went back to teasing his hair.
Cleo raised her eyebrows at Julian. He gave a blank face back.
So many secrets.
A shrill giggle came from the corner where Dean and the girl sat petting and kissing. “Stay out of it, Big Red,” Julian warned under his breath.
“Maybe I’ll go over and inquire as to Melissa’s health?”
“You’ll do no such thing.” Julian steered her by the elbow to a table loaded with food.
She glared at him, but her stomach growled. She picked up a small piece of sushi and popped it in her mouth. The crowd in the arena began to chant, and she stopped chewing to listen.
Lazros! Lazros!
She swallowed before letting her mouth drop open. “Do you hear that?”
Julian shrugged it off, but a smile tugged at the corner of his mouth.
A long-haired boy burst into the dressing room. “We killed them!” he shouted. Cory, Dean, and Gus clapped, but Julian stood silently impassive. Actually, he wasn’t impassive. He crammed his hand in his pocket, clenched his jaw, and his right eye twitched.
“Opening band,” he said to Cleo. “Zombie Scourge. Idiots. And shits, too. Do you know they set their bus on fire?”
“Smitty’s awesome on the guitar, Julian,” Dean said. “You’re just a jealous prick.”
“He’s nothing but a fucking shredder,” Julian said. “No soul and no art. You don’t recognize that because you’re nothing but a mediocre bassist.”
“Fuck you,” said Dean.
“Fuck you,” said Julian.
They were
really
not getting along. “What’s a shredder?” Cleo asked, hoping to stop what might prove to be an unending volley of profanity.
“Someone who plays furiously fast riffs,” Julian said. “They’re a dime a dozen.”
He dug through his duffel bag and pulled out a pair of baggy cargo shorts and some old-school Doc Martens. She frowned as he stripped right in the middle of the room, then had to stifle a gasp. She could count all of his ribs. “How much weight have you lost?”
Dean let out a nasty laugh. “Yeah, Julian, why are you so skinny? Lost your appetite?”
“Shut up, man,” Cory said, tensely.
Julian shot Dean a look that would have frozen fire before stepping into his shorts. They hung so low they were almost obscene. Only his boxers kept him from breaking laws.
“I’m fine, love. I don’t eat much on tour.”
Maybe so. But still. While she was here, she was going to feed the hell out of him. “I guess it’s hard being vegan on the road.”
Seth walked by and slipped a stinky, lit joint between Julian’s lips. “This will make you hungry,” he said.
Julian took a huge drag and handed it back to Seth. Cleo felt like the nerd kid at the party—she’d never seen Julian smoke pot—and tried to look cool with it. Most likely a big fail.
Holding the smoke in his lungs, Julian leaned over and laced up his boots. Then he stood, blew the smoke out with a grin, and slapped a beanie on his head. No shirt, of course. He was ready to rock.
The VIP pit wasn’t a pit at all—you actually had to climb steps—and contained the best seats in the house. Donnie sat next to Cleo, having shed his chauffeur’s hat and jacket, and he screamed himself hoarse.
“I could so get fired for this,” he yelled in her ear. “And it would be worth it.”
Cleo oscillated between being a fun-loving concertgoer and a shell-shocked Alice in Wonderland. She hadn’t really known what to expect from Julian’s performance. She knew Dead Ringer was a physically active band onstage, but she hadn’t been sure of what that would look like for Julian.
It looked hot.
Her man had some moves, and Cleo felt every one of them. His thinner torso was still sexy as hell, and it gleamed with sweat. His hips seemed connected to his guitar, and oh, how they moved. She was flushed and embarrassed by how he made her ache, right there among hordes of people. Donnie’s cheeks were flushed, too, although she assumed for entirely different reasons.
The show was almost over, and Dead Ringer still hadn’t played “Just a Little Sting.” Cory stood at the mic and signaled he had an announcement to make.
“You are some lucky motherfuckers tonight,” he yelled. The noise level in the arena rose, indicating the crowd definitely felt they were lucky motherfuckers.
“You’re about to be the first people
ever
”—he paused for effect—“to hear Julian’s new song.”
Julian had written a new song! Cleo cheered with the masses until her voice blended in with the communal roar. Now she understood the meaning behind raising the roof. How did Julian stand it? Was the biofeedback that effective? It must be. Otherwise the tour would have ground to a screeching halt.
Cory walked off to the side of the stage as everyone quieted down as much as a crowd that large could. Then he sat himself on an amp, and the spotlights went crazy. They combed the entire arena, cutting out slices of mayhem here and there, before finally settling on Julian, who stood at the center mic.
Cleo’s heart banged away. He was going to sing. Holding her breath, she watched him fiddle with his guitar and pedals amid the continuing roar of the crowd. He adjusted his pants, shook the hair out of his eyes, wiped his hands on his rear, messed with the guitar strap, and relocated his beanie to the back of his head.
The crowd went silent. “This is for the love of my life, the woman who holds my heart, and it’s called ‘Playing Cleo.’”
Cleo went numb, then she sizzled and tingled all over. Julian looked in her direction, and everybody and everything else disappeared. It was just the two of them, alone among thousands of people. She blinked back tears and held her breath as the first note rang out from the white Les Paul, soaring like an arrow to her heart. It was the song he’d played on the love seat that night. He’d fine-tuned it and turned it into a slow, soulful ballad, but it was the same song. The memory of what it had done to her made her squirm in her seat. And that was
before
he began to sing.
I’ll play you, baby
You’re my symphony
I’ll play you, baby
Like a melody…
The crowd swayed with their arms in the air, like a giant sea anemone. The refrain came along, the melody turned catchy, and Cleo instinctively knew Julian had a hit on his hands.
I’m playing Cleo and I’m playing her fast
I’m making her wail, making it last
She’s every color there ever was
Every person I’ve ever loved
She’s every note that’s ever been played
Every promise I’ve ever made
When it was over, the arena exploded. Julian, seemingly oblivious to all the excitement, simply waved toward the VIP pit where Cleo stood, then threw her an over-the-top
Dating Game
kiss. “I love you, baby,” he yelled. In front of tens of thousands of witnesses.
He loved her.
He handed his Les Paul to the guitar tech, then strutted offstage, hair swinging back and forth.
Cleo finally got it. He was good at this. It was who he was, and who he wanted to be. How could she ever ask him to stop?
The concert wasn’t over. The crowd was on its feet, stomping, clapping, and yelling. Soon a cadence emerged as they chanted, “Sting! Sting! Sting!”
Dead Ringer came back out, and Cleo screamed her throat raw with everyone else. Julian donned a guitar, a Fender this time, and turned to face Gus, who had climbed back onto his impressive throne of drums. With psychic skill and perfect synchronicity, the two of them broke instantly into the intro of “Just a Little Sting.”
Julian shone like a brilliant beacon of awesomeness, and Cleo was up on her feet dancing the entire time. He wailed out an unbelievable solo, the same one a rock critic in Denver had said was “like the world’s longest orgasm.” Cleo agreed, and as the final note faded away, she did, too.
She came to in seconds, confused by the sea of fuzzy, nameless faces staring down at her.
“Are you okay? We’re calling for help.”
She sat up against protestations, and the room spun. “No, no. Please don’t do that. I’m just a little dizzy.”
“You passed out,” said Donnie. “Don’t try to stand.”
“I’d do what he says,” said a gravelly voice. Cleo winced at the sound and looked over Donnie’s shoulder to see Sheik barreling her way. He pushed through the small gathering of the curious and knelt beside her, staring into her eyes before announcing, “She’s all right.”
“Are you a doctor? Your bedside manner needs some work.”
“Nah, but I know a swooner when I see one.” He held out his hand. “Let’s get you backstage with some cool water.”
“I did not swoon.”
“Then we’d better call an ambulance,” he snapped.
“Okay, so I swooned.” She stood—knees shaking—and clasped Sheik’s meaty hand.
Come to think of it, except for the one piece of sushi she’d had backstage, she hadn’t eaten anything all day. She’d meant to get something at the airport during a layover but hadn’t had time.
“I’m not sure you’ve apologized for how you spoke to me earlier,” she said, trying to gain her balance on her platform boots.
“I spoke to you earlier? I don’t even remember. Now let’s get your ass down these steps.”
Before she knew what was happening, Sheik had picked her up and tossed her over his shoulder.
“What are you doing?”
“Swooner coming through!” he shouted to no one in particular.
Cleo resisted the desire to pound on Sheik’s back. It would only draw more attention. Donnie scuttled along behind them but didn’t dare initiate a confrontation with Sheik, who unceremoniously plunked Cleo down as they arrived at the stage.
“Follow me,” he said. The crowd parted for him like the Red Sea, and he led Cleo backstage.
“Cleo, if you’re okay, I’m going to go get the car,” Donnie said.
“I’m fine,” Cleo reassured him. “See you later.”
Donnie glanced at Sheik, who nodded his head. “It’s under control. This is my watch.”