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Page 48
Page 48
With my guitar slung across my back, I walked through a door backstage. I didn’t recognize anyone, and that didn’t bother me one bit. I’d always been a bit of a floater, meeting people along the way.
As I’d expected, there were twice as many girls back here as bands. A few were eyeing me suggestively. A few were really f**king hot, like off-the-charts hot. One had tits that were huge and perky and still f**king real. Another girl bent over to whisper to talk someone else, and I could see half her ass in her short skirt. Fuck me. The girls didn’t look like that in Princeton.
And I had a hot piece of ass all to myself, and she had been in my bed all day. Self-control had never been my strong suit. I could look but not touch or kiss or f**k. Just look. That was possible. With some difficulty, I averted my gaze entirely and kept walking.
I was about halfway through the backstage area when a guy stopped in front of me. He didn’t look familiar, but I was bad with faces anyway. He was dressed casually in dark jeans and a polo, yet I could tell he had some authority to him.
“Grant McDermott, right?” the guy asked, pointing his finger at me.
“Depends who’s asking.”
“Hollis Tift.”
We shook hands.
“I’ve heard a lot about you, Grant.”
“That so?” His tone made me cautious. Who is this guy?
“Mostly good things.”
“Sounds accurate.”
The guy cracked a smile, and he looked younger than I’d thought he was. “Did you really tell Frank Boseley to go f**k himself?”
Frank Boseley—well, that was a name I never thought I’d hear again and also one I wasn’t going to soon forget. He was the ass**le label scout from BankHead Records who had treated me like a chump.
“More or less. I think I actually said that he was a f**king piece of shit, and I wasn’t some f**king dick he could jack off with.”
Hollis laughed and nodded his head. “Yeah, that’s better than when he told the story.”
“You know the guy?”
“We have mutual friends.”
Ah, he was a label scout or at the very least someone in the industry. I should have been ecstatic to talk to this guy. Miller would go nuts if I didn’t follow through with this in some way.
“Surprised you’re even talking to me after I shot down your friend.”
“Friend is such a loose term. Frank is more of an acquaintance. And I couldn’t be happier with how things turned out.”
“Why’s that?”
“Because I was the one who brought you here. Didn’t Miller tell you?”
I shrugged. “He didn’t go into specifics.”
“Well, I didn’t really go into all that many specifics with him. I was waiting to see your show here. I was at the Halloween performance. You sold me when you pulled that girl onstage. Clever. It didn’t even look like you were faking it.”
I hadn’t been, because I’d pulled Ari onstage. This guy had been there. I was reeling.
“So, are you a scout?” I asked flat-out.
“A scout of sorts. I represent a number of artists for Pacific Entertainment.”
Fucking Pacific Entertainment. They were top-notch. Right up there with some of the best labels from Sony and Universal.
“Nice gig.”
“It has its benefits. Do you have a minute? Perhaps I could introduce you to one of my clients?” Hollis offered.
I glanced around backstage as if someone might snap me out of what was happening and tell me it was all a joke, but no one appeared. Miller, McAvoy, and Vin hadn’t shown up yet. I was here to meet people from the label all on my own.
“Sure. Why not?”
Hollis spoke to the people he recognized as we passed them. Some, he even stopped to introduce me. I wasn’t going to remember them for shit, but it was a nice gesture. Some of the bands I knew. I couldn’t remember faces, but music, that was a different story.
We rounded a corner, and Hollis stopped in front of a black door.
He knocked twice and then entered. “Hey, guys!”
“Hollis!” two guys cheered.
Another one yelled out, “Hey, man!”
The room smelled like booze and pot. A myriad of girls were sitting on different guys’ laps. People were lounging on the furniture and taking shots at the bar. It seemed like the exact place I would have wanted to be just a few months ago. Maybe I still did.
Hollis walked around as if he were everyone’s best friend. A handshake here, a fist bump there, and a few snide remarks until he’d made a full circuit.
“Guys, this is Grant McDermott. He’s the lead singer of ContraBand.”
“Stellar,” one guy said. He looked completely obliterated.
“Dude, nice Gibson,” another guy said.
I really wanted to say that these guys looked familiar. There was a nagging feeling at the back of my mind, but I just couldn’t place them. And maybe I should care more, but I didn’t.
“Grant, this is Donovan, Ridley, Joey, Nic, and Trevor.”
Oh f**k!
“The Drift.”
Chapter 34: Aribel
As soon as I opened the door to my room, everyone started speaking at once. I hadn’t expected to be bombarded, and I jumped clear out of my skin. I groaned at the sudden movement, and I couldn’t keep from wincing at the soreness between my legs.
“Ah!” Cheyenne shrieked. “I know that face.”
“What face?” I asked defiantly.
“You did it, didn’t you?”
“Did what?”
I knew I wasn’t going to keep this from them. Cheyenne, Shelby, and Gabi had been trying to get me to lose my virginity in the year and a half since I started living with them. It had been downright shocking to them that I still had my V-card after all this time. Well, I guessed I didn’t have it anymore.
A smile touched my lips.
“You did! That smile!” Cheyenne continued.
“Cheyenne, leave her be,” Shelby said.
“But did you?” Gabi asked in her soft voice.
“You guys are so nosy.” I tried to walk around them to my luggage. I seriously was in need of a shower and change of clothes.
Cheyenne started giggling. “You can’t even walk straight.”
“I’m fine.”
“We’re just excited for you,” Shelby said, smacking Cheyenne on the arm.