In the Absence of You (18 page)

Read In the Absence of You Online

Authors: Sunniva Dee

BOOK: In the Absence of You
10.94Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

EMIL

A
ishe walks the aisle of the bus
with hips swaying and skirts flowing. She glances at me from beneath long strands of midnight-black hair striped red, and when I meet her stare, her lips roll in a smile. She’s never far away, guessing my wishes, sometimes before I know them myself, handing me extra ice, a napkin—a fork.

In restaurants, she rests her chin on my shoulder, lending warmth and support. At night, I don’t have to make an effort. She comes to my bunk on her own. On hotel nights, Bo has Troll factor in an additional hotel room, because I’m calmer with Aishe, he states.

I
am
calmer with her. It’s been five days since I announced our arrangement to the band. I waited until we stopped to fill gas at a truck stop. She and I decided we’d break the news at the same time, so she got off to meet up with Shandor on the crew bus.

“So, dude,” I’d started, referring to them all as one. “Aishe and I are gonna hang out on the tour.”

“What do you mean, ‘hang out?’” Nadia asked, tangling her arm with Bo’s in the corner of the back-lounge sectional. As always, the two of them got up early and packed up the flip-out bed to turn it into a common room before the rest of us even woke up.

Uncomfortable, I shrugged. “Everyone knows what ‘hang out’ means.”

“She’s his
tour
girlfriend,
” Troy explained, voice cold with disdain.

“You were listening to us last night? Perv,” I said.

“Right, like you’d have to
listen
. You’ve got to quit grunting when you come, asshole.”

What?

After Bo, the single most careful being on this tour is Troy. Quiet, cool, polite. Measured in everything he does. Unlike me, Troy never speaks without thinking.

“What’s your problem, Troy? Just say it.” I crossed my arms, staring at him until those weirdly light eyes met mine. He opened his mouth, stare flashing with anger. Elias thumped back in the seat, entertained, rocking the cushion behind us.

“Nothing,” Troy clipped. “Be careful with her. That girl’s too good for games.”

“I’m not playing a damn game, all right? You know what I’d do if I played games?” I let out a laugh. “I’d play games that had nothing to do with chicks and a whole lot to do with Russians.”

“Russians?” Elias twisted his lip, considering because he’s a moron. I couldn’t tell if he was acting or just that stupid. “White Russians? Or does it involve bullets?”

“Shut the fuck up, Elias!” Bo never explodes, and yet he did yesterday.

My brother. I love that guy so much I’d follow him to hell and back. I wish him all the best, always. I don’t know if I’ll be there for the always. I’d like to meet his baby one day.

Fuck.

Troll froze at Bo’s outburst. Slowly, he closed his laptop and steadied his elbows on the table. “All right, calm down everyone. Go ahead, Emil. What’s the deal with Aishe and you?”

“We’re going to try out the relationship thing,” I said, which I might not have done if Troy hadn’t turned into a goddamn prick and Bo hadn’t exploded. I couldn’t look at Nadia. Because of Bo’s reaction, her eyes had turned glassy. She stroked her boyfriend’s arm, and he slid into repair mode, tucking her against him and kissing the top of her head.

“Aishe’s telling Shandor as we speak. As you might know, he’s not a fan of her being with anyone, especially not me.”

Nadia had more questions, I could tell, but she didn’t speak up, probably because she didn’t want Bo to blow up again.

“So she won’t be your, quote, unquote, ‘tour girlfriend?’” Troy asked, his voice dripping with contempt. “You’ll be in an actual
relationship?”

What the hell?

I whipped around, glaring at him. “Yeah. Okay, guys. Here’s the thing: Troy likes to take notes on what I do with my sleepovers.”

“Do you understand that she’s not some random chick you can play with, Emil? We’re talking
Aishe!
Get it?” Troy sucked in a breath, reeling himself in late.

“It wasn’t even me, dude.
She
was the one suggesting it.
She
wants to be my tour girlfriend, okay? I told her I wasn’t ready for anything besides groupie action, but she insisted, and we’re giving it a try.”

“Oh how noble of you,” Troy muttered. “Bet you accepting had nothing to do with the free flow of sex.”

Elias snorted out laughing, while Bo leaned forward, meeting Troy’s glower with one of his own. “Troy, let it go. Let’s hear him out.”

“I don’t have to promise her anything. That’s the whole point! Plus, this way she won’t have to see me with someone else.”

“As I said: noble.”

“What’s your
deal
, Troy?” I shouted. “I don’t know how to
not
be with her, okay? She’s insistent, beautiful, sweet—I mean, what am I supposed to do?
Share
if you’re full of awesome ideas on how to handle this.”

“How about saying no? Or is that too simple of a word for you? When she climbs into your bunk, tell her fucking no!”

“Shut up, dude. Have you ever tried to reject a girl and have her not listen? I’m sad as shit twenty-four seven, and the last thing I need is a girl I like walking around being as sad as me
because
of me. You’re just— Ah fuck you all. This way, at least one of us is happy.”

Elias was the only one finding our exchange humorous. He couldn’t stop snickering. “Aww, poor Emil,” he pouted out. “He’s so sought after the chicks decide where he puts his cock now.”

The bus door opened and closed as I lunged for Elias’ neck. Troll wedged between us and kept the jerk out of reach.

“Excuse
me for trying to inform you guys nicely!” I roared. “You’re all a bunch of bozos.”

“‘Bozos?’” Elias laughed, slapping his knees like some cartoon character while Bo dug his fists into me from behind, helping Troll keep me from bashing Elias’ face in.

“Discussion over,” Bo snarled. “Aishe just returned, and this isn’t a band meeting where we vote on shit. Emil has informed us that he’s got a girlfriend, and we’re happy for him. We’re
not
against it, and we’re
not
making fun of him.”

Aishe’s silhouette grew bigger as she tiptoed down the aisle on high heels. Seconds later, she breached the bunk area and peeked in through the door to the back lounge. “Hey, guys.”

“There she is. Come on in, Aishe,” Bo said, recuperating his cool self. “We were talking about you.”

I studied my tour girlfriend, hoping she hadn’t overheard too much. I shouldn’t have worried; in Aishe’s stare, I saw a female with a will of steel, someone who knew what she wanted—someone who just
got
what she wanted.

I’d had that vile feeling of having made a mistake, but watching her made me relax. She didn’t hesitate when she slid an arm around my neck, and I tilted my head to better receive her kiss, showing my friends that I was in this one hundred percent.

“Hey, baby,” she murmured, easing seamlessly into her new role as my girlfriend. What balls, especially considering the disagreement she’d walked into. “Do we have their blessings? Shandor’s were… a bit forced.”

Her statement loosened the tense mood around us. Of course, Elias was the first one to laugh, damn hyena. Next, Nadia let out an unused giggle. Bo loves it whenever Nadia finds something funny these days, so a smile broke through on his face too.

“Well, congrats, kids. We’re happy for you,” Troll said, instigating polite mutterings of “cool” and “good for you.”

It’s strange to have a no-brainer girlfriend with me on tour. We’ve got this quiet understanding. Being with me makes Aishe happy. She’s company to me. She gives me heat when I need it.

I’ve gotten into the groove of not signing boobs or making tramp stamps with Sharpies, but if I’m honest, I didn’t stop for Aishe. I did it for my bitchy girl back in Los Angeles.

For Aishe, I don’t sleep with anyone else. I don’t miss the thrill of one-night stands, because really, it never was my thing. When I catch up with Aishe after a show, there’s no sadness in her eyes now, and that makes me feel damn good.

“The Entertainer” is still my favorite. There’s nothing better than pointing my gun at myself at the end and pulling the trigger. Oh the rush, even if it’s not real.

When I sit up, vision hazy with lust and victory, I find her black stare below the stage. Red feathers and shiny hair form a silhouette, right there at the very front.

Every night, she breaks away from her stand for “The Entertainer.” She wants to support me. Send me a message, maybe, but it’s one I don’t want to learn, a first no from this girl. I’m not tour-dating her to get
noes
.

All of my
noes
should come from Zoe.

Only once did Aishe ask me to drop the revolver act. It was after I got us the 1897 replica without a permanently affixed orange plug. I explained that it’s not happening. She’s a smart girl, so she didn’t push her luck and she hasn’t asked me since.

Aishe is busy packing up her after-show merch. I don’t feel guilty when I get off stage, lock the door to one of the dressing rooms, and call Zoe.

My Zee, she doesn’t pick up. She never does. I star-sixty-seven her and get ready for her to not pick up again. When I’m right, I imagine her at Scott’s diner in L.A., working late, a double shift—because she’s not out on a date with some dipshit—and I sing Percy Sledge’s “When a Man Loves a Woman” to her.

Zoe doesn’t understand. If she did, she wouldn’t shun me. Smoky, husky, and road-worn, my voice does what the rest of me can’t do. I don’t start my voicemail with words she won’t listen to. I dip straight into the middle of the song, for lyrics she needs to hear.

I tell her I love her.

I tell her I gave her all that I am.

I tell her I’m desperate. That I’m trying to remain sane. That her love is precious, so precious, and I ask her to please, please not treat me so bad.

When the
beep
cuts me off, it’s ironic. We’re the biggest indie band in America. Tonight’s venue held eight thousand ecstatic fans, some crying when we left the stage after our last encore. I’m about to head into a meet-n-greet where girls will go apeshit—they’d do anything I asked of them just for a small piece of me—

Yet, here I am, pleading for crumbs from a phone company that’s blocked my communication with the only person who matters.

Air bursts out of me in a chuckle. Isn’t it great though? There’s always something keeping the emperor grounded.

The door handle rattles.

“Dude, you got the deli trays in there?” Elias yells.

“Yeah, hold on.” I let him in. Then I scan the corridor, which is clear, with the exception of a long, green skirt and a myriad of bangles flowing toward me in a steady rhythm.

I cross my arms and wait in the doorway. It’s nice to watch her walk like that, small feet peeking out below the silk and dark eyes trained on me. Aishe sees me. Oh yes, always. It’s good to be the center of her attention.

When she arrives, delicate fingers trace my cheek, and she explains that I need to shave. She can’t wait to get to the next city, she whispers, because she wants me alone in a hotel room. She’ll personally shave me too, she says.

Silly.

I close my eyes, surrendering to Aishe’s touch, enjoying her comfort and letting it replenish me. The vacuum after Zoe doesn’t disappear, but it’s smaller with Aishe close by. There’s guilt over not paying back all she gives me, but what can I do?

Life’s full of bullshit, and some of it has to be suppressed. For me, that something is guilt. There’s nothing I’d rather do than erase everything about Zee and chuck in all that Aishe deserves.

“How are you?” she asks, catching on to my mood.

“Oh fine. Good show, right?” I ask, clearing my throat. It’s not like I’ve been cheating on her by singing to my ex.

“Very nice,” she agrees, eyes light at first, then darkening as she thinks about my Russian roulette spoof. I don’t want her to focus on it every time. It’s only the fifth night, but I see a pattern.

“Don’t do that,” I say. “You can’t decide over me.”

“I know. Sorry. It’s just sad to see you happy when you click the trigger.” Her lip trembles, but then she lets go of me and heads for the deli trays. Bo enters, asking for the cheeses. I point—next to the veggies—and he fills a small plate and takes it with him, to Nadia, I suppose.

By the time Aishe turns, her lip isn’t trembling anymore. She’s brave again, the way I want her. My perfect tour girl.

Other books

Devoted by Riley, Sierra
Family of Women by Murray, Annie
A Writer's Notebook by W. Somerset Maugham
Life's Greatest Secret by Matthew Cobb
The Wheel Spins by Ethel White
The Empty Coffins by John Russell Fearn
My Funny Valentina by Curry, Kelly
The Sound of the Mountain by Yasunari Kawabata, Edward G. Seidensticker
Instead of Three Wishes by Megan Whalen Turner