Read Running with Scissors Online
Authors: Unknown
tonight, though. All the way here from California, his
stomach had been in knots that those twelve-dol ar bottles of
booze on the plane hadn’t been able to touch. His bandmates
had every reason to want nothing to do with him. Kristy had
undoubtedly warned them against giving him shit since he
was bailing them out. That didn’t mean they’d be thrilled to
see him.
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Kristy pulled into a parking space outside one of those
cheap motels where people either got knocked up or
murdered.
He craned his neck, scrutinizing the decrepit clapboard
shithole beneath a faded sign. “Record company’s really
making you guys travel in luxury, aren’t they?”
Kristy sniffed. “Yeah. If Schadenfreude’s bus had broken
down, they’d be staying in the goddamned Four Seasons. But
whatever. It’s only until after this show.”
He turned to her. “What’s wrong with the bus?”
“Plumbing issues.” She dropped her keys into that giant
ever-present purse. “If the mechanics value their lives, we’ll
have it back by the time we hit the road tomorrow, and y’all
will be sleeping in it in Denver.”
“Great.” He swallowed. “Do I need to sleep with one eye
open?”
She laughed uncomfortably and patted his leg, something
she only did when she was trying to sell somebody bullshit.
“Oh come on, honey. It’s all in the past.”
“Yeah. Not-the-very-distant past.”
She sighed. “You’ll be fine.”
“At least let me have a cigarette first.” He paused. “You got
a light?”
Kristy rolled her eyes and then dug through her purse.
After a moment she found a cheap BIC lighter and handed
it to him. “Do we need to have a talk about your smoking?”
“Not if you want me to get through this tour without
turning into a nervous wreck.”
She scowled but shrugged. “Okay. When the tour’s over,
we’re—”
“Yeah, yeah.”
“I mean it.”
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“I know you do.”
They got out of the truck, and Jude lit up a cigarette before
he helped A.J. unload what little luggage he’d brought along.
He’d been itching for a smoke for hours, especially since the
Denver airport, where he’d spent a way-too-fucking-long-
layover, had cruelly eliminated its smoking lounges. Now he
needed two or three in a row, not only to kill the craving but
to settle his nerves. There was no telling how this was going to play out, but he wasn’t all that optimistic.
He extinguished the cigarette beneath his heel. Kristy
pushed herself off the truck, which she’d been leaning on, but
A.J. didn’t move. He stood beside her, and he studied Jude,
holding his position as if he knew without a doubt that Jude
wasn’t stopping with a single cigarette.
Smart kid.
Jude pulled out a second smoke.
Kristy glared at him but didn’t say anything. She probably
wanted to get this over with as much as he did, but she was
apparently willing to cut him some slack this one time.
Through the thin cloud of smoke, Jude surreptitiously
watched A.J. The drummer was playing on his phone now,
so those intense eyes were focused elsewhere, giving Jude a
chance to stare for a minute. And checking A.J. out was easier
than thinking about what awaited him behind one of those
numbered doors, so he damn sure took the opportunity and
stared.
Drummers always developed gorgeous muscles in their
arms and shoulders, and A.J. was no exception. His biceps and
shoulders stretched the limits of his tight T-shirt, and even
the subtle motions of his fingers skimming across the phone
sent subtle, mouthwatering ripples up his toned forearm.
I wonder if he takes his shirt off when he’s performing.
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Jude coughed and looked away, hoping A.J. hadn’t noticed
him choking on his own smoke. Or staring at A.J.’s arms.
It wasn’t just that Jude couldn’t help drooling over what
drumming did to a man’s physique. He also missed the effect
it’d had on his own body before he’d stopped drumming.
His tattoos masked some of the new softness, but it was still
obvious to him. A constant reminder that he was trading a
life of percussion for the slow onset of carpal tunnel.
The carpal tunnel was a moot point now, though. He
had his wrist splints with him in case he needed them, but it
wasn’t like he was spending forty hours a week at a keyboard
anymore. He might shred his fingers on the strings or strain
his muscles and tendons a million different ways onstage, but
the days of plunking data into spreadsheets and wearing the
numbers off a ten-key were behind him.
Yep. It’s behind me.
Whether I like it or not.
As he blew out some smoke, he fidgeted. His skin itched,
as if reality were pushing itself in through his pores. There was no turning back, was there?
“We’re sorry to see you go,”
his boss had said without an ounce of sincerity.
“Are you sure you can’t give me a full
two-week notice, though?”
“I wish I could. This came up kind of . . . suddenly.”
“I see.”
The look—piercing eyes over wire-rimmed
glasses—had told him in no uncertain terms this resignation
was a one-way ticket.
Don’t even try to come crawling back in
a few months when you’re done playing wannabe rock star with
people who wouldn’t piss on you if you were on fire.
“Jude?” Kristy’s voice startled him. “The band’s waiting,
honey.”
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He swallowed. There was nearly three-quarters of an
inch of ash on the end of his cigarette after he’d let it burn
unnoticed for . . . however long he’d been lost in thought.
“Right. Yeah.” He tapped the ashes, took another drag, and
then crushed this butt beside the first. Then he picked both
up and, since there was no ashtray nearby, tossed them in the
gravel where they wouldn’t ignite anything. “Okay. Let’s do
this.”A.J. picked up Jude’s duffel bag, and Jude took the bass, and they followed Kristy up to the second floor breezeway. At
the door of room two twenty-one, she paused and turned to
him. “You ready?”
“Not really.”
A thin eyebrow rose. “Jude, are you—”
“I’m never going to be ready.” He nodded toward the
door. “Let’s just . . . get this part over with.”
Before I decide to
stand out here and smoke every cigarette I have left.
His skin prickled, and he glanced at A.J. Their eyes met
briefly, but the drummer quickly lowered his gaze.
I hope you aren’t this timid onstage, kid.
Kristy swiped her keycard, pushed open the door, and
gestured for him to go inside.
He stepped in. And stopped. And swallowed.
Holy shit, was this weird.
Time ground to a halt, and no one in the room seemed
to be moving or breathing. Everyone just stared at each other.
He absently tapped the tips of his fingers against his thumb,
tape clicking against tape and the dull impacts stinging his
raw, bandaged skin. He couldn’t stop, though. He needed
some sort of release for all this nervous energy, and this was
the subtlest thing he could manage.
Everyone had changed, and everyone was the same.
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Shiloh’s hair had been almost white when Jude left,
hanging halfway down her tattooed back. Now it was black,
cropped so short it barely reached the edge of her tightly
clenched jaw. Was the third eyebrow ring new? He couldn’t
remember for sure.
Richie was a little heavier. Vanessa was a little thinner. Not
surprising—Jude had heard that touring took its tol . Nobody
made it from one end to the other without wearing the effects
of sleep deprivation, eating like a coyote, and performing
night after night. He wasn’t looking forward to those effects
himself, but he envied his bandmates—
former
bandmates—
for those visible reminders of the past few weeks. He’d have
preferred that form of self-destruction over chain-smoking
his way through a miserable job beneath fluorescent lights.
As they stood in silence, it slowly sank in just how long it
had been since they’d all been in the same room. The people
looking back at him—they were strangers now despite almost
twenty years of history.
Wyatt was conspicuous in his absence—Jude couldn’t
remember a time when the band was all together and Wyatt
wasn’t kicked back in a chair, his fingers moving constantly
across his bass strings like a spider perfecting its web.
And farthest away from Jude, sitting up against a
headboard with his legs crossed and his fingers working
at a loose thread on his laced-up black boot, was Connor.
His blond hair was pulled back, dark eyes fixed right on
Jude, and no, a year and a half hadn’t been enough time to
let bygones be bygones. The time apparently hadn’t done
a thing to temper the anger that smoldered in his eyes just
like the night Jude had come clean. God knew how much
worse it had gotten when Connor found out that Jude had
quit the band—like a coward, Jude had told Kristy and the
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others, but hadn’t had the balls to face Connor again. The
guilt had been too much then, and it was still too much now.
Jude tore his gaze away from his ex and shook himself.
“Wow. It’s, um, been a long time.”
Connor glared at him, and though he didn’t speak, the
Not nearly long enough
came across loud and clear.
Richie sat up, brushing a few black curls out of his face.
“How you been, man?”
Jude rocked from his heels to the balls of his feet. “Good.
Good.”
I should’ve smoked three.
“How’s the tour been going?”
“It’s been great up until recently.” Shiloh stood. She
glanced at her bandmates, then the floor, and finally met Jude’s gaze, a tentative smile forming on her lips. To his surprise, she stepped closer and hugged him. “It’s good to see you again.”
“You too.” Jude swallowed, returning her embrace. She let
him go, and no one else got up to offer so much as a handshake.
“Well, um, I’m a bit late, but congrats. On the record deal.”
“Thanks,” each muttered, aside from Connor.
Jude tapped his fingers harder against his thumb, letting
the sting and the percussion ground him. His gaze shifted
from one bandmate to the other, and his stomach sank deeper.
He’d grown up with them, and now they couldn’t even make
comfortable small talk. Fuck—this was going to be a long
tour.Kristy checked her watch. “It’s getting to be about
dinner-thirty, so why don’t you all figure out something
to eat.” She cast a sweeping glance at the band members.
Immediately, Richie, Shiloh, A.J., and Vanessa were on their
feet and heading for the door.
Shiloh slung her purse over her shoulder. “I think I saw a
Chinese place up the road.”
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“Chinese again?” Vanessa made a face. “Ugh. Can’t we
just get a damn pizza?”
“I think there’s a Subway close by too.” Richie held open
the door. To Kristy he said, “We’ll bring back whatever we
find.”“Good.
Go
.” She shooed them out, and when the door closed, suddenly the room was almost empty. Voices and
footsteps faded down the breezeway, leaving Jude and Kristy
and—
Connor.
Jude gulped.
Fuck.
He locked eyes with his ex, and the hatred written all over
Connor’s face faltered for a second, his features softening just long enough to twist the guilt a little harder in Jude’s chest.
Even as Connor’s cold expression returned, Jude couldn’t
help—for a couple of seconds—seeing the man he’d been in
love with at one time. Had it really been that long since he’d
woken up looking into those eyes? He didn’t miss the Connor
who was sitting there glaring at him. Seeing the other side of
him, though—that “how could you?” beneath the veil that
had briefly lifted—hit him harder than he’d thought it would.
He swallowed, breaking eye contact. This was a mistake,
wasn’t it?
“So, what now?” Connor huffed sharply. “Do you want
us to dance or something?”
“Enough.” Kristy stood between them, arms folded, and
gave them each a pointed look. “All right, you two. Here’s the
thing. I know you guys have all kinds of baggage and shit that
neither of you has let go, and I don’t need a couple of powder
kegs on this tour.”
Connor opened his mouth to speak, but a glare from their
manager shut him up fast.
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“Listen,” she snapped. “I’m going to step outside, and
you two have until the rest of the band gets back with dinner
to settle this enough that you can function as bandmates for
the next few weeks, and work together on the next album.
You don’t have to like each other, but over my dead body
are you going to make this tour miserable for the rest of the
band. Talk. Get it out of your systems, and then I don’t want
to hear another word about it, or see so much as a dirty look
while Jude is back in the band. Clear?”
Jude nodded. “Yeah.”
“Whatever,” Connor growled.
Kristy eyed them both.
Sometimes she struck Jude as a frazzled mom trying to