Read You're Still the One Online
Authors: Rachel Harris
Real life was far from a fairy tale, but it did teach her humility, and for that, she was grateful. Thanks to the calculating eyes tracking her every move, judging her before she could even say a word, Ella had discovered that if she wanted the industry’s respect, she’d have to earn it.
That truth prompted her to hold down two part-time jobs while busting her ass at Tennessee State University, where she recently graduated with honors in commercial music. Come August, she was more than prepared to take her rightful place in her father’s company. Not that anyone, especially her former classmates, ever saw it that way.
Arabella had an incredible job waiting for her while so many of her friends struggled to even get an interview, and she knew she was blessed. But the constant scrutiny and second-guessing was what led to her secret application at Strange Wheel. Scoring the internship under her mother’s maiden name had been the first true validation of her talent—and a giant first step in proving she was more than a brainless legacy.
“Aw, crap.”
Ella blinked away the memories. Kurt was gone, their drinks were on the table, and a
napkin with what suspiciously looked to be digits scrawled on top rested under her friend’s tumbler.
Le sigh.
“What?”
Lana waggled a finger at her face. “You’ve got that glowing look again. You’re thinking about New Orleans, aren’t you?” She set her elbows on the table and leaned in with a scowl. “Ever stop to think you’re being selfish, chasing your dreams and leaving your poor roommate all alone?”
Ella rolled her eyes as she took a long pull of her drink. “It’s only for the summer,” she vowed, grateful that Kurt had at least gotten her order right. “Between texts, calls, and Skype, you won’t even know I’m gone. Besides, I’m still hoping you’ll join me for the fourth.” Stirring her straw, she added wistfully, “Fireworks, a couple of Hurricanes, and a crowded Bourbon Street? Imagine the damage you could do.”
Lana’s eyes twinkled with mischief, her bout of impending loneliness forgotten. “Hmm. I don’t know. Think they can handle me down there?”
“Sweetie,
no one
can handle you. We just try our best to keep up.”
Her friend laughed and raised her drink in salute.
“A toast,” she declared. “To an incredible summer kicking butt and chasing dreams.” She waggled her eyebrows and added, “And a hot night filled with possibilities.”
As the
clink
of their glasses permeated the air,
the skin at Ella’s nape prickled with awareness. A shocked gasp parted her lips.
Lana’s gaze drifted to the left. “Future conquest at eleven o’clock.”
Arabella nodded, though she hadn’t needed the warning. Her body was well aware, firing like it always did whenever Charlie was near, even when she merely watched him from the shadows. Pushing, prodding, begging her to step out and take a chance. For once, she intended to heed that call.
Honestly, she didn’t need much. She didn’t expect forever. She simply wanted one night to live out her fantasy. For as long as she could remember, Charlie Tucker had been
the
guy, and tonight, all she wanted was for him to see her as more than just a little kid. To actually see her as someone desirable.
To simply see…
her
.
…
Charlie tugged at the tie that was hell-bent on choking him, and his sister swatted his hand.
“Stop messing with it,” she chastised, fixing the impossible knot at his throat. “It’s supposed to be this high. You’d know that if you bothered to dress up more than once every blue moon.” Grace leaned back to inspect him, touched his newly scruff-free cheek, and gave a satisfied smile. “There. You actually clean up pretty nice when you bother to try. Much less hooligan and more James Bond.”
Charlie snorted and shot her a look. “Hooligan? What are you, eighty?” Then, ignoring her frustrated sigh, he slid two fingers behind his stiff collar and yanked. “And don’t get used to the monkey suit. The only reason I’m in this thing is so boss-man can see me play nice for the cameras, and then I’m getting the hell out of here. Tyler and the boys owe me for this.”
When another sweeping glance of the room proved Stone was still MIA, and torture-by-tie wasn’t ending any time soon, he grabbed a hoity-toity puff pastry thing off a passing tray. It was gone in one bite, and his stomach grumbled. He should’ve grabbed the whole platter.
“I’ve got to say I’m impressed,” Grace commented, her tight voice indicating she was anything but. “You weren’t lying before. You’re literally just standing here, sucking up oxygen, and they’re circling like piranhas.” She indicated the dozens of women staring appreciatively in his direction, not a one deterred by her presence. “How do they know I’m not the love of your life? We could be madly in love, eager for a moment alone, and they’re waiting around for me to slip off to the bathroom.” She scrunched her nose. “It’s seriously disgusting.”
“You’re the one theoretically hooking up with your brother,” he commented dryly. She elbowed him in the ribs, and a grin curved his mouth. He glanced back at the crowd and spotted a former hookup shooting him daggers.
Nadia? Natasha?
He knew it started with an
N
. Taking hold of his sister’s elbow, he casually nudged her a couple steps to the left.
“It’s not even me they’re after anymore,” he told her, leaning his back against the wall. “They want their five minutes of fame and a picture to post on Instagram, but tonight, they’re wasting their time. The last thing I need is Stone catching me with another woman.” Grace side-eyed him. “Well, you know. One that doesn’t share my DNA.”
Charlie’s luck with the fairer sex was nonexistent. Sure, the hookups were fine, but it was the aftermath that sucked. The latest hoopla took the prize, though, and it explained his presence here tonight.
Usually, he stayed away from industry shindigs. They were for the birds, all glad-handing and sucking up, fake laughs and canned compliments. Not to mention the stupid clothes. But, as it turned out, there wasn’t much Charlie wouldn’t do when it came to securing his future. This side of legal, that is.
Ignoring the hope-filled eyes trained in his direction, he turned to his sister. “Distract me,” he said. “Tell me something good. Anything that doesn’t involve photographers, mayors’ daughters, or scandalous headlines.” He glanced down at Grace, and his frown lines softened. “How’s my niece doing?”
“Better,” she replied, her face transforming with a relieved smile. “Ever since your talk with her, Abby’s been real good. She carries that notebook you gave her everywhere she goes, jotting down her thoughts and who knows what, putting it all into lyrics.” Grace’s voice caught on the final word, and she paused to collect herself. A lump rose in Charlie’s throat. “I can’t thank you enough for whatever you said to her. Music has given her a way to get her emotions out of her head and onto paper. And that…God, Charlie. It means the world to us.”
For the first time in months, the tightness in his chest lessened and Charlie was able to draw a deep breath. He’d been throwing a Hail Mary when he suggested it, hoping what worked for him would work for Abby, too. Music silenced the white noise, helped him make sense of the world. Hearing that it did the same for his niece, knowing that he gave her that outlet, was like a missing piece finally put back into place. It was a good first step in fixing the hurt that he’d caused.
Grace put her hand on his arm. “She’s busting at the seams to come visit you this summer. She keeps telling her friends that her big famous uncle is gonna record her songs.”
“It’ll be an honor,” he whispered, feeling a renewed sense of purpose.
Helpless didn’t cover what it had felt like watching his strong, incredibly bright niece turn inward. First, it’d been the loss of her smile in their video chats. The same smile that had stolen his heart sixteen years ago when she was born. Then it was learning she’d withdrawn from dance and social clubs, knowing how much she loved being a social butterfly. But it took Abby being admitted to the hospital for anxiety-related vomiting and fatigue, and subsequently placed on antidepressants, for Charlie to get his ass on a plane and back out to Franklin. Back where he should’ve been all along.
Kids today dealt with too much shit. Unrealistic expectations, bullying, social media. They didn’t have that crap when he was younger. When he’d needed to zone out, he headed to the lake and went fishing. Nowadays, kids hid behind computers and their phones…and then, they didn’t even
talk
on their phones. They texted. They posted pictures of kittens on Facebook, or tweeted snarky comments about society, but they didn’t share what bothered them. They held it close to their chest. Some of this he’d known from interacting with fans and watching TV, the rest he’d learned from Abby.
It was because of her that Life & Lyrics was born.
And that led to the monkey suit.
The stupid pictures floating around wouldn’t stop his new foundation from getting off the ground. Grace just confirmed it; Life & Lyrics had the potential to help a lot of kids—teens like Abby—and though Charlie screwed up pretty much every aspect of his life other than the stage, he’d prove tonight that he could get his act together. Soon, with no new scandals added to the list, and the damn media off his back, Stone would agree to become a member of the board and back the foundation, and Charlie’s dream would become a reality.
Grace yawned and glanced at the watch on her wrist. “Any sign of your boss yet?”
“Nope, not yet.” He dropped the back of his head against the wall. “But he’ll show eventually, trust me on that. When he does, I need to be here.” He looked down into her tired eyes and smiled. “But just because I need to hang around this suckfest doesn’t mean you have to.” Charlie nudged her shoulder. “Go on home. I’ve monopolized you enough.”
She laughed. “Please, as if wearing something other than yoga pants is a hardship. I got to see you in person and not just on some dang magazine cover,
and
I got out of the house. That makes for a killer night in my book. Poor Sam’s the one stuck at home tackling Mount Laundry.”
“I’ll bring him by a six-pack tomorrow,” he replied with a grin.
A sudden rush of gratitude and longing swelled within him. Maybe it was being back in Nashville after so long away. Maybe it was talking about his niece, or spending time with his oldest sister. It was probably the most fun they’d spent together in years. No conflict, no judgment, no—
“Besides,” Grace continued. “You needed a night out without a random groupie suctioned to your arm.”
And there it was.
He shook his head, a chuckle rumbling his chest. She really couldn’t help herself, could she? “Hear you loud and clear, Mother Hen.”
She shrugged without a hint of apology. “What can I say? Old habits die hard, baby brother, and just because you’re some big shot country star doesn’t mean I’ll stop worrying. In fact, I worry more. It’s the dreaded curse of being the oldest.”
“Just like keeping you on your toes is the burden of the youngest.”
Growing up, Charlie didn’t have one mom—he’d had six. One by birth, and five older sisters who’d viewed him as a life-sized baby doll. Naturally, one would assume they’d smothered him with attention, but that wasn’t the case. Oh, they coddled him plenty and gave tons of unsolicited advice. But for the most part, Charlie ran wild.
To hear the tabloids tell it, he still did, but that just pissed him off. Sure, he had fun. He loved women, they loved him back, and when he wasn’t on the road, he liked to let loose. But so what? Wasn’t that his God-given right?
Charlie worked damn hard for what he got, and he loved making music. But this gig of his wasn’t all it was cracked up to be. Take tonight for example. Here he was, standing in a room filled with people, a good third eyeing him like a piece of chocolate, and yet he felt completely alone. So, yeah, he accepted willing, eager companionship when it came his way. He was a hot-blooded male. Sue him.
Grace tilted her head, ever the mind reader. “You know, there are
plenty
of nice girls in Nashville,” she said wistfully. “I suspect the same holds true for Magnolia Springs.”
One hour. They’d lasted longer than he’d thought.
“Nice girls,” Charlie repeated. “Like the mayor’s daughter, perhaps?” His sister had the good sense to wince, but the victory rang hollow. “Yeah, I’m not thinking a nice girl’s the answer, either. Clearly, I only bring them down to my level.”
Grace frowned, but it was the truth. The mess with Maddie Clark was nothing but a misunderstanding, but the fact that neither she nor her father were here tonight proved how badly he’d screwed up. The mayor got off on being seen with Nashville’s finest, and his support was good for business, plain and simple. Another reason that Stone was pissed.
“No,” he declared. “No more women.” The words tasted like ash on his tongue, but if that was what was required to get his foundation off the ground, so be it. “Until Blue leaves for our fall tour, my one and only focus will be Life & Lyrics. That’s it. No more parties, no more hookups, no more chances for the paparazzi to get another headline. I promised our publicist that I’d stay off the grid this summer and keep my damn head down.”
In other words, he’d be boring. Charlie would prefer doing that here, where he could make sure Abby was okay, but that wasn’t an option. The band relocated to Louisiana two years ago, and they had to rehearse for the tour. Not to mention Nashville was too dangerous right now. Normally he could fly under the radar without arousing too much attention when he was on his own—it was when the whole band was together, or even just he and Tyler, that the paparazzi came into play. But that was under
normal
circumstances. Scandals involving the mayor’s daughter tended to shake things up.
Step one in Charlie’s boring summer plans: find someone organized to help lead Life & Lyrics. He’d hoped he’d found that in Maddie Clark, but that notion went to hell in a handbasket after the recent…er…photographic
hiccup
in the papers.