Unstoppable (Fierce) (25 page)

Read Unstoppable (Fierce) Online

Authors: Ginger Voight

“I’m sorry,” I started but he held up a hand.

“You don’t have to explain,” he said. “You just have to come with me.”

I shook my head but he wasn’t having it. He pulled me from the room and led me toward the elevator, ultimately to a car out front.

“Where are we going?” I asked.

“Home,” he said simply.

He took me back to the Brooklyn brownstone. Before we exited the car he handed the driver a hundred dollar bill and my hotel key card. “Bring her stuff,” he instructed before pulling me from the car and leading me up the steps.

“This is a little inappropriate, don’t you think?” I asked as I scanned the darkened street for PING reporters.

“Like I give a shit,” he said as he pushed open the door. He stared down at me with those deep, almost hypnotic eyes. “Inside, young lady.”

I didn’t argue.
I followed him into the living room like a good little girl.

“I don’t know what’s going on with you, Jordi,” he said as he pulled me down onto the couch beside him. “But I do know it won’t get any better if you’re left alone to lick your wounds. You’re staying with me the rest of the trip.”

“But Andy…”

“Already knows,” he filled in. “It was her idea.”

“But PING…”

“Is irrelevant,” he said, echoing what Jace had said. “Your problem is you’re worried way too much about how things look to people who simply don’t give a damn.
They need you to fail. They need you to do something they can criticize. They are always going to find something wrong with what you do or say.” He took my chin in his hand. “Fuck ‘em.”

It was such a Jace thing to say tears immediately sprang into my eyes. He pulled me into his arms and held me there, which caused the dam to break. He rocked me gently as he stroked my hair. “My poor, miserable Jordi,” he crooned. “How long are you going to carry your pain?
There’s no shame in letting it hurt. But eventually you have to let it go or it’ll kill you.”

He held me until I soaked his shirt, his hair fanning around my face like a halo. I was mortified by my behavior, but when he tipped my chin so I could look at him, all I could see was total acceptance.
It was like Jace, or Corey, or even my Dad.

He bent to kiss me slightly on the cheek. “Do you know how loved you are?” he asked. I shook my head. No, I didn’t know. I don’t think I ever did. “Well, you are,” he assured. “I love you. Andy loves you. Even
Renata and Grandma Lydia love you,” he added with a grin that made me laugh. “Everyone on tour loves you,” he continued. Then, finally, “Jace loves you.”

I shook my head. “I just make him miserable. Shelby’s a better fit,” I muttered.
“They’re the perfect couple.”

“Don’t tell me that you’ve bought into the press about that.”

I shrugged. “It’s not press. I walked in on them in Philadelphia. They were in his dressing room and he was massaging her leg.”

“And why would that
matter to a happily married woman?” he wanted to know as he brushed some hair away from my eyes.

I wondered what
Vanni would do if I told him the truth. What could he do? What could anyone do? I was stuck and I knew it. I turned away from those all-seeing brown eyes. “It doesn’t matter,” I found myself repeating, as if I said it enough it would actually be true.

He pulled me from the sofa and sat me at his piano. His fingers danced along the keys, as if trying to find a melody. I watched him as he closed his eyes. Each note he played traipsed across his face until finally he found what he was looking for.


She doesn’t know
,” he sang. “
She can’t believe… she’d find the person that would never leave
.” He turned his head slightly to look at me. “
She hangs onto the past and every ghost, all lies that hide who loves her most. She’s beautiful but she can’t see just how perfect she is to me
.”

I placed my head on his shoulder and closed my eyes. Even after all these years, Vanni Carnevale was my guardian angel, throwing me a life line with that amazing voice.
I wanted to believe his lovely words right up to the moment I came face to face with Jace the following day. His green eyes were cold and his jaw clenched as he stared at me. I wanted to ask which sin, exactly, he was punishing me for, but he stalked off before I could utter a word.

Someone who didn’t bother to hide his contempt for me was Eddie, who showed up that night just in time for the after-party. I was standing next to Vanni, which seemed to piss him off even more. He practically dragged me from the crowded restaurant and threw me into the hired car. “You got a lot of fucking nerve, I’ll tell you that,” he hissed after the driver closed the privacy glass.

“What’s the matter, Eddie? Pissed you don’t have a spy cam to catch me and Vanni? That would fetch an even prettier penny for you, wouldn’t it?”

He grabbed me by the arm and pressed me against the seat. I could smell the alcohol on his breath.
“You’re nothing but a two-bit prostitute,” he bit out. “Going on to the next one up the chain. I was the hottest guy in Oswen, you got me. Jace was the hottest guy on Fierce, you got him. Now Vanni. It only makes sense.”

“I’m not after Vanni,” I shot back, though I really didn’t know why I had to defend myself to him. He had banged
enough desperate groupies he could have started his own fan club. “He’s happily married,” I said, referring to Vanni, who had never been anything but supportive to me.

“So are you,” Eddie pointed out with an evil grin. “Remember Philadelphia?” he asked as his hand slid up my thigh.

“That was a mistake,” I said as I slapped his hand away. His face hardened and he grabbed my chin in his hand, planting another hard kiss against my mouth. He didn’t stop until I submitted.

“That’s right,” he said as he lowered me against the seat. “You’ve always known who you belong to. And you’ll keep coming back for more.”

He instructed the driver to keep circling the city while he kept advancing on me in the back seat. Despite all the years between Shane and Eddie, I found myself once again caving just so it would be over and he would leave me alone. I went limp like a rag, which infuriated him more. His hands grew impatient and demanding, digging so deeply into my skin it was like he was trying to leave bruises on my bones.

I hummed Vanni’s song in my head, trying to recapture any moment of my life when I truly believed I was worth more than I had allowed myself to become.

 

 

CHAPTER TEN

Boston, Massachusetts

March 15, 2012

 

 

Once Eddie
sank his teeth deep in my backside, he was reluctant to let go. He followed the tour on to the next stop in Boston, where he decided he wanted to see all the sights. PING faithfully reported our traipsing around Bean Town, with their own spin on it, of course.

FIERCE DIVA AND HUSBAND TRY TO RENEW SPARK IN BOSTON
!

HUBBY STAKES CLAIM, DRIVING DISCORD AMONG TOURING STARS!

Eddie helped them out along the way, posting public updates on social networking sites to share with the world how we were “reconnecting.”

It’s like a second honeymoon. Love experiencing the world with my superstar.

He even ninja’d photos of us or of me when I was least expecting. Regrettably he posted those, calling me beautiful to the world but never to my face.

By the time I showed up for rehearsals that Thursday, I couldn’t look anyone in the eyes. I couldn’t take seeing the pain in
Jace’s face again, and I knew Vanni would see right through the paper-thin façade.

Only Shelby bought the wh
ole lie, hook, line and sinker. I attributed that to the fact she wanted to believe it all.

Why wouldn’t she want to believe it? Her life had improved over the last few weeks. She got the better music set, she got time alone with Jace and the media loved her. She was the sweetheart of the tour. If we did any impromptu meet and greets, she was the
inspiration behind it. It started in Chicago, when she insisted we meet the crowd gathered in the parking lot behind the arena. After that, word got around fast and the crowds were growing each and every city we went to. They would chant for their favorites, and after a while everyone managed to go out and sign some memorabilia or take photos with their fans through the fences that generally separated the parking lot from the back entrances.

Needless to say, by Boston Shelby’s fan base had grown to the size of
Jace’s and Vanni’s. Video of her singing Jace’s intro song had more than a million views, whereas mine languished around the 500 thousand mark.

PING even had something to say about that.

FIERCE SWEETHEART TAKES OVER DIVA’S SONG, CREATING TENSION ON TOUR!

But the real comparison
s of her popularity versus mine were detailed in colorful, and often misspelled, comments candidly listed below either video. As it turned out, anonymous commenters weren’t exactly shy about how they treated the objects of their disdain. After seeing the words “hippo,” “wide load,” and, my personal favorite, “Snatchsquash,” I decided to give up reading Internet comments for Lent.

Unfortunately
Eddie always gave me the highlights anyway.

Eddie was good for
unloading a lot of information I didn’t care to know. Despite his staking his legal claim to me as my husband, he wasn’t shy about his future plans to win the heart of the fair maiden whose popularity was skyrocketing. He was climbing on my back to catch the tail of her comet, and he took particularly glee in telling me this. In fact, the less I fought him, the meaner he got about it. We were behind closed doors most of the time, where his drinking and his abusive behavior reared their ugly heads. There were no PING photographers to impress, no Shelby to snowball. It was just me and him, and he made no bones how he felt about being stuck with the lowest head on the totem pole.

Not so coincidentally, that was where my binge eating flared up as well.

He’d rip open old scars and I’d pour chocolate sauce on top of it until it stopped hurting.

It was a marriage made in hell.

I thought about Shelby’s purging and wondered how easy it was to do it. I knew that my binging had undone all the progress I made with Maggie, but I couldn’t say no to the overwhelming impulse to eat. It was all I had left. I lived in denial with every single bite, but that only lasted long enough to try on my new clothes from Tempestuous. When I was measured prior to the tour, I had lost nine inches thanks to the genius that was Maggie. Per Tempestuous’ more generous sizing chart, my 44/38/45 fit a more socially accepted 14/16. This was a huge improvement from the size 20+ I had worn in the past, including my entire reign on
Fierce
. It also meant I could fit into a 1X rather than a 3X. However, thanks to touring, and my new eating habits because of it, half of the clothes they sent fit a little too tight for my comfort. I hadn’t measured again; to be honest I was petrified to see those numbers going the other direction. But even with my head in the sand I knew I either had to return the tight-fitting clothes for a 2X, (18/20,) or I could keep them packed away and pray I lose those precious few inches that separated me between incremental progress and total failure.

So I thought ever so briefly about purging like my thin friend, b
ut I never could bring myself to do it. The mere thought of vomiting was enough of a deterrent. Instead I stuffed myself into my tight clothes and just prayed the cut of the clothes hid the extra bulges.

As far as I was concerned, neon lights were pointing out each and every one.

By the time I got to the arena, I felt like a big, fat loser. It bled into my performance, which Terrell cut short. He gave the band a short break while he took me aside. “You’re getting weaker every single week, Jordi. What’s going on?”

“Just the back I guess,” I offered my pat excuse, but he wasn’t having it.

“Bullshit. You were fine once you went back to your regular set. It’s this half-hearted ballad stuff that has zapped your energy. So what’s up?”


I’m just not loving the set,” I confessed. “People use my number to get refreshments or go to the bathroom, or even find their seat.”

“Then you have to make them pay attention,” Terrell said. “The problem is that this was never your set. You need something edgier. You sound like you’re auditioning for a school play every time you sing these ballads.”

I nodded. Thanks to my back, I couldn’t perform all of Shelby’s songs, so I had to improvise with the covers she used on the show. I was never crazy about Shelby’s set, but after singing them for weeks I had grown to hate them. I had wanted to suggest a few different songs, hell… even my songs… but I didn’t want to complicate the tour the way I had complicated the show. I had a hard enough time overcoming my diva reputation as it was. “Sure that won’t cause the band to revolt?” I asked with a teasing smile.

He laughed. “I bet they could use the change as well. You think you’re bored!” He consulted the calendar on his phone. “Think you can be in Orlando by Sunday?” he asked. “That way we can practice one new song by next week?”

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