Read Running with Scissors Online
Authors: Unknown
But it was a change. At this point, he’d take any opportunity
to get out of this bullshit rut he’d gotten himself into.
Even if it meant being in close confines with the
ex-boyfriend and band he’d screwed over.
11
fidgeted in a chair beside the rickety table in the
a.j.band’s motel room, tapping out a nervous rhythm
on the armrest. Everyone was wound up, waiting for Kristy to
come back in. Nobody in the group was thrilled about their
manager’s long shot of an idea, but without any better ideas,
they all waited impatiently for the verdict.
When the door opened, every member of Running with
Scissors sat bolt upright.
Kristy stepped in from the motel’s breezeway, cell phone
in hand, and shut the door behind her. The band members
exchanged glances. A.J.’s heart pounded—he was pretty sure
he didn’t hear anyone breathing, and he was holding his
breath too.
“Well?” Richie fidgeted against the headboard of one of
the beds. “What’d he say?”
She exhaled hard. “He’s not in a good spot to drop
everything and leave for a handful of shows.”
That prompted a few frustrated sighs and some whispered
swearing. Someone thumped a fist on something.
“
But
.” Kristy held up a hand. “And you all need to
hear me out on this one. He is willing to come back for a
semipermanent position.”
12
“Semipermanent?” Shiloh cocked her head. “Meaning?”
Kristy ticked the points off on her fingers. “The duration
of this tour. The upcoming album. And the headlining tour.
After that, we’ll have to play it by ear.”
Beside Richie, Connor muttered a few curses.
Shiloh shot him a glare and then turned to Kristy. “He’d
really come back for that long?”
Kristy nodded. “It’s the only way he can justify leaving his
job on short notice. And quite frankly, I can’t blame him.”
“Then maybe he doesn’t want the opportunity after al ,”
Connor said through his teeth. “He did quit, remember?”
Kristy narrowed her eyes. “He did, and he also knows the
music as well or better than anyone in this room.”
A.J.’s chest tightened. Jude’s command of music was
legendary, but A.J. wasn’t too sure he liked the idea of having him around, especially in the long term. It would be great for
the band as a whole, of course. But not necessarily for him.
Not that he—or the band—had any choice.
“So.” Kristy folded her arms loosely. “What’ll it be? Do I
book him a ticket? Or do we keep looking?”
“I say bring him back,” Shiloh said. “I know things are
tough between Jude and Connor, and yeah, it was a dick
move on Jude’s part to leave like that, but let’s face it—we’d be stupid to let him go again.”
“What she said,” Vanessa chimed in. “Jude can eat shit
and die for all I care, but we don’t have a choice. We don’t have to like it, and we don’t have to like him, but we need the jerk.”
The rest of the band gave nods and murmured affirmatives,
aside from Connor. He definitely wasn’t thrilled.
“I don’t believe this,” he grumbled. “He’s the reason we
almost didn’t get signed!”
13
“But you
did
get signed,” Kristy said in that tone that meant her patience was wearing thin. “And I assume you want
to stay that way, so it’s either bring in Jude, or pack your shit and go home while another opening act takes over, and kiss
your headlining tour good-bye.”
Every head turned toward Connor, the unspoken question
thrumming in the air:
Is that what you want?
His lips pulled tight as he glared up at Kristy. “There’s
no way Jude’s going to be ready to go onstage in Denver. No
fucking way.”
“Well, maybe you should’ve thought of that before you
and Wyatt—”
“I get it,” Connor snapped.
“Somehow I don’t think you do. Look, nothing can be
done about Wyatt, and Jude is the only one who can get in
here and save your collective asses. Connor, look at me.” When
he met her gaze, Kristy said, “Unless you want to go back to
playing for double-digit crowds who just want to drink with
a little background music, I would suggest you and Jude leave
your bullshit in the past.”
Connor scowled. “It
is
in the past. I’m over it.”
A.J. and Richie exchanged incredulous looks. If Connor
was over Jude, then that had happened in the past fifteen
seconds or so. Hell, one of the first things A.J. had learned
upon joining Running with Scissors was that if you wanted
to fuck with Connor, all you had to do was mention Jude.
And if you fucked with Connor, you’d be on your way out of
Running with Scissors on a moment’s notice. That had been a
bone of contention that helped drive Wyatt away.
Over Jude? My ass.
Kristy didn’t look convinced either. She folded her arms
and arched a thin eyebrow.
14
Connor sighed, deflating a little. “I’m serious.”
“So am I. Jude is bailing us out big time. We just need the
two of you to get along, and everyone—
everyone
—to let
the past go and be adults about this. All right?”
More nods. More murmurs.
Kristy lowered her arms and rolled the visible tension
out of her shoulders. “Bottom line is our problem is solved,
at least for the foreseeable future. I’ll have Jude meet us in
Omaha, and from there you guys are going to need to find any
time and space you can, and rehearse, rehearse, rehearse. He
knows the music, but he’s going to be rusty, and none of you
have played with him since he left. If anyone wants to hash
out any bullshit, suck it up and wait until we aren’t in hot
water if someone walks out. Got it?”
Connor muttered something A.J. didn’t understand, and
no one asked him to repeat it.
“Everyone get some sleep.” Kristy started for the door.
“We’re on the road bright and early tomorrow.”
She left, and after the door had closed, Connor sagged
back against the chair opposite A.J.’s. “This is bullshit.”
“It’s the only option we have,” Richie said.
Connor rolled his eyes. “You don’t think I could go on
Craigslist right now and find a desperate bassist who—”
“Oh, save it.” Vanessa shook her head. “Running with
Scissors doesn’t need a random desperate bassist. We need
someone who knows our music and won’t make us all sound
bad. Like it or not, that’s Jude.”
“Connor, please.” Shiloh touched his shoulder. “We all
know this is going to be hard on you. None of us are thrilled
about the idea either, but we don’t have any other options.
Can you guys just, you know, get along until—?”
15
“We’ll be
fine
.” Connor shrugged away from her and
pushed himself to his feet. “I need some air.” He stormed
out of the room and slammed the door so hard it rattled the
whole building.
In silence, everyone stared at the door as if Connor
might suddenly come back in. Yeah, right. One of the
other
first things they’d all told A.J. was that when Connor said he
needed some air, let him go. He’d be back—eventually—but
for the love of God, do not go after him.
Shiloh turned away. Folding her arms, she leaned against
the wall beside the brown burlap drapes. “Why am I suddenly
hoping they’ll get back together?”
Every head snapped toward her.
Richie’s eyes got huge. “Please tell me you’re joking.”
Shiloh scowled. “Well, if they were fucking again, then
they wouldn’t be trying to kill each other.”
A.J. sat up a little. “That might—”
“You’re probably right.” Vanessa pursed her lips. Then she
sighed and shrugged. “Part of me wants to choke them if they
even look at each other, but I can’t really argue with you, to
tell you the truth.”
Richie grunted in agreement. A.J. couldn’t argue either.
Connor was easiest to deal with when he and his guy du jour
were on speaking terms and sleeping together. But God help
them all if there was even the slightest lover’s quarrel. Bringing an ex—especially
that
ex—into the picture was going to make things interesting.
Vanessa cursed. “Well, Connor’s going to be easy to live
with for a while.”
A.J. sat up a little. “Maybe we’d—”
“Can you blame him?” Shiloh asked. A.J. gritted his teeth.
Why he tried to interject in these conversations, he didn’t
even know.
16
“Uh, yeah,” Richie said. “Actually, I can blame him.” He
sat back against the headboard, lacing his hands behind his
head. “He has nobody to blame but himself for this shit with
Jude, and he fucking knows it.”
“That wasn’t entirely Connor’s fault,” Vanessa said.
“Remember? Wyatt quit, and so did Jude.”
Richie huffed. “Connor brought that on himself—and
us—both times. If someone treated me the way he treated
Jude, I’d cheat too.”
“Wouldn’t you just have broken up with Connor before
things got so ugly?” Vanessa said. “I mean, why bother sticking around until it’s that bad? They were both idiots for dragging
it out, just like Wyatt was an idiot for thinking Connor was
over Jude.” Rol ing her eyes, she added, “And Connor
is
an idiot for being hung up on that jackass.”
Shiloh scowled. “Enough. Come on. Jude’s not a bad guy,
and neither is Connor. They just suck at relationships, and
Connor’s super protective of the band. Fact is, we wouldn’t
have gotten this far without either of them.”
“Yeah, they got us really far,” Vanessa said. “And that
almost didn’t matter since Jude decided to fuck
us
after he was done fucking Connor.”
“Okay, yes.” Shiloh shrugged. “And Wyatt quit, so—”
“So I’ll smack him if I ever see him again,” Vanessa said,
“but I have to work with Connor, and now Jude too. I’m
pissed at all of them, but those two are going to be here.”
“True,” Shiloh said. “But the fact is, Jude’s just here
temporarily. It was his choice to do what he did, and he knew
what was at stake. If he and Connor don’t get along this time,
we all know who’s getting the boot.”
A murmur of reluctant agreement rippled through the
group.
17
“Well.” Vanessa stretched her arms as she stood. “Kristy’s
right. We’re on the road early tomorrow. I’m going to call it
a night.”
Shiloh nodded. “Same here. Let’s go.”
The girls left. Connor hadn’t returned yet, so the tension
in the room had eased, at least for the moment. Richie went
out for a smoke, leaving A.J. alone with his thoughts.
A.J. sat back and stared up at the ceiling. His fingers
kept time with his heartbeat, tapping softly on his leg, and
his other knee bounced as his heel tapped out the piece he’d
been practicing earlier. Try as he might, he could not get
comfortable. Even though the bassist crisis was averted, and
things weren’t as up in the air as they’d been since Wyatt’s
departure, A.J. didn’t like this. He didn’t like it at al .
He’d been at the recent meetings where they’d all panicked
over what to do now that Wyatt was gone, but he was fairly
sure there’d been conversations behind closed doors too. This
group had been friends since they were kids, and Kristy had
been their manager since the band’s early days. A.J. had been
part of the group for a year and a half, coming in on the heels of Jude’s departure, but he still felt like an outsider.
What if the band settled their drama and decided to keep
Jude after al ? And what if they decided he was better behind
the drums than he was on the bass, and decided to—
Easy, A.J.
He slowly released a breath. Jude was coming back
temporarily. He wasn’t going to replace A.J.
He screwed them over. They’re not going to boot me out and
keep him.
I hope.
18
Three days later, Running with Scissors arrived in Omaha.
While Schadenfreude prepared to take the stage without their
opening act, Running with Scissors settled into a shithole
motel on the other side of town. Hopefully their crappy
tour bus would be repaired soon—in addition to a volatile
lead singer and a missing bassist, the band had been dealing
with a bus with no running water for the last week and a half.
Because they weren’t at each other’s throats enough already.
And yes, they were lucky to even
have
a shower and a toilet on their bus, but God help them when those things quit working.
Kristy came into the guys’ room, where everyone was
hanging out, and jingled a set of keys. “I’m going to get Jude
from the airport. Anyone coming with me?”
Connor smirked. “He can’t get a cab?”
“He could, but since he’s saving our asses, I thought
picking him up myself was the least I could do.”
Connor’s lip curled, but he didn’t argue.
A.J. shifted and then stood. “Do you mind if I come with
you, Kristy? Since I’ve never met him?”
“Not at al .” Kristy smiled. “Let’s rol .”
He thought he felt some invisible daggers coming his way,
but didn’t bother checking if Connor was glaring at him. Or if
any of the other band members were. He just followed Kristy