Trinity (Moonstone Book 1) (23 page)

His hand fell helplessly at his side. “Security has taken your mother out.”

I nodded. To be truthful I didn’t care a hoot about my mother right now. She hadn’t thought about me for one second when she’d burst into that room back there. She’d been thinking of herself just like she always did. Thought about herself and Kent and what would never be.

“Trinity I am so sorry…” he began, “as soon as I realized you were here and so was Melissa and my parents I came straight away. I didn’t know what they would do but I was scared. I had no idea your mother would show up.”

I snorted. “You and me both.”

“Babe…” he reached for me again but I moved back. My eyes filled with tears that I tried to blink back as I bravely met his gaze.

“You lied to me,” I whispered, “you knew something like this, this huge thing, and you didn’t tell me.”

“I didn’t want to hurt you.”

“You didn’t tell me.”

“Babe I am so sorry…”

“I think you should go,” I whispered staring at the tiles on the floor. I couldn’t think with Luke in front of me and I was suddenly so very tired.

“I can’t leave without you.”

My heart clenched and my chest hurt but there was a pain in there that was greater than anything. The pain of being lied to. Luke was part of a world that didn’t want me, that would never accept me. Look at my mother. She had tried to infiltrate that world and had instead wasted twenty years pining for a man that would never be hers. More than anything I didn’t want to be like my mother.

Thank god this had happened now and I had learned my lesson earlier than she had.

Raising my head, I met his steady gaze, trying to see past the pain I saw reflected in his eyes. I knew Luke loved me and I knew he had rose-colored glasses on when it came to
us
. It was up to me, for the first time, to be the brave one. The strong one.

“You have to, Luke,” I whispered, “You have to leave without me.”

He blinked at me as if he didn’t believe what I was saying, but I kept my gaze steady even as I felt the hot tears running in rivulets down my cheeks.

“Trin…”

“Leave Luke,” I snapped, “and please, please, just let me be.”

I had said it, and I meant it, but I hadn’t expected my insides to snap, something to crumple within me as he turned and walked out, the bathroom door closing shut behind me as he walked away. And then I lost it completely, falling to the floor in tears, curling into myself.

He was gone. He was really gone.

Chapter Twenty-Seven

 

Four months later

 

“Aaagh turn it up! Turn it up!” Molly screamed so loud I swear my eardrum was about to burst. Laughing I reached forward and turned the radio up so that the sound of Shawna on drums, Olivia on keyboards, Molly and Gwen on guitar filled the small space. Then there was me. My voice. It sounded like me and yet it didn’t. It didn’t simply because I couldn’t believe my voice was actually on the radio.

We were actually on the radio.

Pulling my car to a halt outside of The Silver Den, which was now called that since Tony had had the sign fixed. We waited until the song finished, singing along like we were teeny boppers.

It wasn’t national radio, it was only the small local radio station but it wasn’t the first time we had heard ourselves and it wasn’t the first time we had been on radio. Or television either. Our video clip played on MTV quite regularly although I still had trouble watching that without being amazed that that was actually me.

For the clip they had dressed me a whole pile of what at first I thought were scraps of black material. Then they had made me stand outside on a green field and set up massive fans around me that blew so strong that I was sure they would blow me over. Then I had to sing the song —gypsy girl—over and over although I wasn’t actually recording my voice thank goodness because it was hard to sing into so much wind. At first I had thought it was ridiculous but I had to admit, when I watched the clip on TV, it was incredible. What I had thought just looked like scraps of rags swirled around me in the wind and they had used fancy computer graphics to make it look like I was dancing in a fairy kingdom, complete with tiny fairy folk coming out to join in my dance.

“C’mon girls,” Gwen said dragging us out of the car, “we’ve still got our Saturday night gig.”

We all followed her, on a high from hearing our own song on the radio. It never got old. By habit my eyes swept over the cars in the car park looking for
his
. It wasn’t there and I sighed inwardly. It was never there, and I should stop hoping to see him again. It’d had been four months now and I had heard nothing from him. Gwen had made sure he wasn’t home when I had gone to collect a few of my things from his flat and even though it had been hard to walk back in there again I made sure I collected everything. There was no point leaving more than my heart behind with him.

Instead of taking my things back to Mark’s house I had moved into a share house with Gwen and Molly. It wasn’t flashy, it was small but clean and we had set up a makeshift rehearsal studio in the garage. It was the first time in forever that I felt as if I had an actual home and an actual family. Moonstone might not be my blood family but they were family nonetheless. They had seen me through the toughest few months of my life when my
family
had turned their backs on me.

Changing into my stage outfit I applied some silver lining to my eyes before stepping back to examine myself in the mirror. I looked tough, I looked like a rock chic and for the first time I thought I looked like myself. I was Trinity. I was just getting to like who I was. What I had been through in my life only made me appreciate how strong I really was. I wasn’t the coward I’d always thought I was. I was someone brave enough to turn her back on her abusive and violent mother and walk away. I was someone who was strong enough not to reach to the father who had rejected and neglected her for all those years. Kent Newton might be my biological father but that was as far as it went. He’d made no contact to see me since that night at the wedding and I was glad.

He had his own family and his own life and so I did I. I didn’t belong in his world and I was oh so fucking glad.

Suddenly I was aware that the usual chatter and noise in the change room was non-existent. I glanced at my watch wondering if I had missed call but we still had a few minutes to go. I turned around, wondering where everyone had gone and froze.

Luke
.

I couldn’t breathe and I hated how my body instantly reacted just to the sight of him. He looked amazing, dressed in dark jeans and a white polo shirt and my heart literally fluttered in my chest just from looking at him. His hair was longer and a light stubble grazed his jaw, but it only made him look sexier in my eyes. Reluctantly I let my eyes meet his, my whole body trembling when I did. I wondered if he knew, if he could see the effect he had on me just from standing before me.

His eyes glittered down into mine and the warmth I’d always seen in them was still there.

“Hi,” I said after a long moment of just staring at him. My voice sounded tight and strangled.

“Hi,” he replied, his eyes sweeping me from head to toe. I knew what he was seeing, my sexy, on-stage persona. Short black leather skirt, cropped black singlet, and silver studded boots. His eyes lingered on a tattoo that stretched across my bared stomach. “Fake?”

I shook my head. “No actually. That one is real.”

He nodded as if he expected as much and drew in a deep breath. Was it my imagination or did he sound shaky and nervous. Even if he did I was sure it was no match for the tumult of emotions that were currently coursing through me.

“What are you doing here?” I asked eventually.

He smiled, a small smile that didn’t quite reach his eyes. “I wanted to see you. I saw your clip and I’ve heard the song on the radio. I wanted to see you and say…” his voice petered off and his gaze flicked away from me for a moment. He ran a hand through his hair and drew in a steady breath and I smiled inwardly, pleased that I obviously affected him still too.

“Yes?” I prompted when he stayed quiet.

“Congratulations?”

I smiled and relaxed a little. “Thanks. I appreciate it.” And I really did. I wanted to make Luke proud, even if we weren’t together I wanted him to be proud that he had once known me, that I had once been his girl.

“You look great, Trinity.”

I let my gaze wonder over him. “So do you.” I paused. “You’ve graduated?”

“Yep.”

“Well congratulations to you too.”

And then we just stood there staring at one another. There was so much I wanted to say and yet I didn’t want to talk at all, I just wanted to be there, right in this moment with him in front of me. The air around us thickened and I had to twist my fingers to stop from reaching out and touching him. Touching him felt as natural as breathing, to be able to not touch him felt strange but I had no right to touch him anymore. Was he seeing someone? Had he fallen in love with someone else? I wanted to ask and yet I didn’t want to know either.

“I should go,” I said after what felt like long moments had stretched between us. I didn’t want to go, I wanted to stay here with him, but it was nearly time to go on stage. The girls would be waiting and so would the audience.

“I miss you,” he said quickly and quietly.

Damn it. My heart pressed against my ribs and my belly flipped. He missed me. I missed him more than anything, sometimes the missing felt like an ache and I had cried myself to sleep too many times to count in the last few months. But I had to remember why I put myself through such pain.

“You lied to me.”

“I was scared of losing you,” he told me, “I knew that if you knew that your father was part of my world that you would want nothing to do with me.”

I shook my head. “You don’t know that, and you weren’t prepared to give me the benefit of the doubt.”

“I know. And I lost you anyway.”

I swallowed. “I don’t belong in your world Luke. I can’t…”

He stepped forward. “I don’t want you to be anything other than
you
. I don’t want anyone else but you, Trinity.”

Blinking at him, a bubble of hope swelled in my chest.

“I’m so sorry for what happened, for not telling you when I first found out, for not stopping that horrible scene at the wedding…”

“That wasn’t your fault,” I frowned at the memory, “that was my mother’s fault.”

“If I had told you though…”

“Trin?” Molly stuck her head around the corner. “I’m sorry to interrupt but I don’t think we can stall any longer.”

I nodded, indicating that I was coming and she disappeared again. “I have to go on now. Are you staying for the show?” I hoped he was. I’d missed seeing him at the bar whilst I performed on stage.

He smiled. “Yes.”

And then before I knew it he reached out a hand and touched my face, tracing my jaw before he lowered his head and pressed his lips against mine. Immediately my arms wrapped around his back, pulling him closer to me as I returned his kiss. I had no idea what I was doing, I knew that this would probably a very bad idea, but it was Luke and kissing him just felt right.

“I love you, Trinity,” he murmured against my lips as we pulled apart. “I never stopped. You are all I think about.”

My pulse quickened at his words. “I love you too.”

He smiled, “Do you think… I mean I know you are a huge rock star and all now with a dazzling future ahead of you, but do you think that maybe…”

“Maybe?” I whispered. From beyond him I could hear the audience calling my name. Over and over they chanted.
Trin-it-y. Trin-it-y.

“Maybe we could find a way forward from here,” he said, “maybe we could start again.”

I closed my eyes and inhaled deeply, breathing his words and his scent deep into my soul. My skin prickled from where he touched and my pulse beat a rapid pace, trying to keep up with the emotions running through every fiber of my being.

Opening my eyes I stared into his and smiled up at him. “I think I’d like that. I think I’d like that a lot.”

He smiled and pressed his mouth to me one last time as the roaring from the audience in the bar grew louder.

“They’re calling your name,” he murmured, “you should go.”

I nodded and moved past him, our hands the last thing to part as I stepped out on to the stage and to the audience waiting for me and calling my name.

 

 

The End

 

 

www.andibremner.weebly.com

 

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