Read Random on Tour: Los Angeles (Random Series #7) Online
Authors: Julia Kent
Tags: #genre fiction, #contemporary women, #Literature & Fiction, #Humor & Entertainment, #Fiction, #General Humor, #BBW Romance, #humor, #romantic comedy, #New Adult & College, #Humor & Satire, #General, #coming of age, #Women's Fiction, #Humorous, #Contemporary, #Romance, #Contemporary Fiction, #new adult
“Drugs?”
“Yeah.” He looked away. “And Dad didn’t come home for a long time. The guy was high as a kite and huge. By the time Dad walked in, he was...well. I hadn’t hit puberty yet, and he was big.”
“Oh, God. Your dad walked in?”
“Yep. Beat the fucking shit out of the dude. Nearly tossed him out the window, and we lived on the third floor back then. Kicked his ass down a staircase.”
“Your trial must have been awful. Testifying when you’re only thirteen. It was hard enough at twenty-two for me.”
He jolted, then froze.
Oh.
“There wasn’t a trial, was there?” I asked, my voice high, my body going cold and numb.
“No.”
“Did your dad—”
“No.”
“I’m sorry. I’m an idiot for bringing this up, here, now, while we’re in bed together and we—”
He pressed a finger to my mouth. I went quiet.
“There’s never a wrong time to talk about the truth.”
I gave him a squeeze. He softened slightly.
“Did your dad get you any help?”
He made a short, distinct snorting sound. “He told me to forget it happened. Threw the guy down the stairs, came back in the apartment, told me it was my fault, to forget it happened, and went into his bedroom. We never talked about it.”
“Your fault? No medical attention? What?” Horror filled me. Some deep, reptilian part of me knew that I was deflecting my own emotional struggles about my sexual abuse by talking so openly about his.
Throwing myself into his story was easier than grappling with my own.
There was also a part of me that was about to cry for the thirteen-year-old child that Tyler had been.
“No.”
“And you got over it...how?”
His neck tightened. His jaw clenched. His breath became even. Too forced. He was controlling his emotions with great effort.
“By not talking about it.”
I pressed my ear against his heart and listened to it quicken, then steady. My eyes filled with tears and I let them drop into his chest, like a baptism. Like an offering. And we rested like that until I drifted off to sleep, my mind filled with too much to handle awake.
Tyler
As she fell asleep in my arms, her curves a warm comfort I didn’t know I needed, all I could think was:
I’m not good enough.
I couldn’t make her come.
I couldn’t give enough.
I tried. Fuck, I tried. And as she had wept in my arms my own eyes had teared up, my throat tight with anger and anguish. Anger for what those monsters did to her and anguish that I couldn’t fix it. Maggie explained it and I got it on some level. Of course she couldn’t come. The mind makes hellish spirals that go deeper than we realize when we go through bad shit.
Unscrewing the corkscrew is a hell of a lot harder than putting it in there.
This had been it, though. This was all I could give her. She’d done nothing but sacrifice for me and in the moments we had made love what I offered felt like something more than just giving. I was getting something back, too. Not just sex. Not just my own orgasm. Not just a fuck. She opened herself up to me. She trusted me. She made me “that guy,” the guy she wanted. Two months ago she tried and I’d shot her down.
And now?
Now I’d failed her.
I was too fucking tired to do anything but let sleep take over.
Hours later I woke up in the dark. Maggie snored lightly next to me, her back facing my front. We weren’t exactly spooning. Some of her hair stuck to my mouth. We smelled like sweat and sex.
I liked that scent.
I loathed myself, though. I sat up slowly and rubbed my eyes. The morning light was that kind of eerie glow you get before sunrise. I climbed out of bed, peeling her arm off me, and quickly got dressed. No time for a shower.
But I had time to scribble a note.
Afterward, I sat in the greyish dark, staring at the changing light as it peeked out over the horizon. Maggie’s breath changed, then she rolled over, the air whooshing out of her, muscles going limp. Then regular breathing again, her face slack with sleep.
God, she was so fucking beautiful.
She deserved so much more than I could give her.
I grabbed Lena’s guitar, put $200 in her backpack on top of the note, and paused. Maybe this was a bad idea. Maybe I should stay.
But she’d given so much to me. If I got to the main road fast enough, I could hitch a ride with a trucker and get to L.A. on my own in the nick of time. Spare her the last leg of this fucked-up journey.
Spare her from me.
I could be more of a man for her in the future. A real man, with money and stability and a fucking driver’s license. Shit. I had nothing right now but the last hundred bucks, Lena’s borrowed guitar, my clothes, and a raging case of falling for the woman who was smiling in her sleep right now.
That smile nearly broke me. Nearly made me stay.
I closed my eyes and imagined that future me, coming back to her in St. Louis or Boston. Coming back with something to give.
I wasn’t enough for her now.
Which was why I needed to let her go. Make her go home. This wasn’t the end. But it was the end of me being so dependent on her.
I couldn’t bear it.
I couldn’t bear failing her again.
Chapter Twelve
Maggie
I woke up to an empty bed.
That, alone, wasn’t alarming. The little cots were tiny, and so maybe Tyler needed more space to sleep. I looked. Nope. No Tyler.
Okay.
So, maybe he was using the bathroom?
I looked around some more.
No
guitar
.
I sat up and muttered, “What the fuck?” under my breath, my hands gaining purchase on the hard, plastic-covered mattress under me.
And then I saw it on the floor.
A note.
I groaned before I even reached out for it, my eyes coordinating with my hands to get my fingers on it, the sound from my throat involuntary.
It read:
First of all, don’t panic. I’m not some asshole who sleeps with women and leaves them in the morning with just a note of thanks.
My eyes filled with tears. It made it hard to read the next part:
And this is more than a note of thanks, so bear with me. You know I suck at words. At least, the spoken ones. I’ve always been better with written ones, but not much better.
Maggie, I feel like a total jerk for everything I’ve put you through. I showed up on your doorstep with nothing but my clothes and a little money. You listened to my story and listened to Charlotte and Darla and came to my rescue. People don’t do that. No one rescues me. You did. I’m grateful. I’m so fucking grateful.
The tears spilled over as my heart squeezed down to half its normal size. Something about this note made me fear reading it all the way to the end. My inner thighs ached with an exquisite kind of pain, and the ache spread up through my belly, between my breasts, and into my throat as I slowly, painfully, read on:
I have nothing to give you but these words. And the $200 I left for you in your backpack. Before you freak out, that’s all I have to give to say thank you. And no, I don’t pay for sex, so stop thinking that shit.
I smiled in spite of myself, thinking about Darla’s story of waking up to an empty hotel room after she met Joe and Trevor and how those idiots left her a stack of twenties and a note. What the hell was it about these band members and their stupid weird abandonments?
Last night was amazing. This whole trip was even more amazing, though. I didn’t need the sex to know how real and gritty and fucking astoundingly beautiful you are. I knew that the first time I set eyes on you. You are a woman who sees into people and finds the marrow. You stole my soul the minute you came on to me, and you stole my heart when you kissed me out in the desert yesterday. You steal things from me, Maggie. You take everything good I have left and you capture it inside you and show it to me so I remember it’s there. The only way I can get it back is to be with you and show you the rest of me.
And last night was the first step.
I’m on my way to L.A. By the time you read this, I’ll—
I flipped the page over.
—be with some trucker and getting closer to the concert. Don’t follow me. Go home. I can’t help you drive anyhow, and this time you won’t have to stop every thirty minutes so more gummy bears can catapult out of our respective asses.
I snorted, sniffed, then cried a little more.
I’ll be back in St. Louis as soon as the concert’s over and I can get Darla to give me an advance. I’m coming to see you, Ms. Maggie, whether you like it or not. Now, go back to Lena and tell her she’s a very good packer.
“Ha,” I said aloud to no one.
And if I didn’t make myself clear: we still have a lot of ground to cover and a lot more learning to do about each other. I’ll be back for you. Just make sure you’re there.
Yours,
Tyler
p.s. You have a body carved by God.
“FUCK YOU!” I screamed, balling the paper and throwing it at the wall. It barely arced, sailing limply in the air and falling with an ineffectual sound. That felt symbolic; everything I thought, felt, and did in these seconds felt ineffectual.
So I sat on the bed and sobbed. Sunlight peeked in through the window, around the faded pink curtains that must have once been bright red. Tyler had given me the most precious gift he could have ever offered me: sensuality. Mutual respect. A series of touches and strokes, kisses and murmurs, sighs and moans that etched into my memory, over-writing what had been corrupt and replacing it with breathtaking pleasure.
I rescued
him
?
He rescued me right back.
And he thought he could do this? Just send me on my merry way back home through twenty-two hours of driving, back to Lena, back to the empty house where I’d hang out for a week or two until I went to Massachusetts to manage girls at science summer camp?
No.
I jumped up, face hot from crying, and pulled on my clothes, not even bothering with my shoes as I shot out the door and ran to the campground office. Rosita was at her desk and looked up, alarmed.
“Maggie! What’s wrong?”
“Have you seen Tyler?”
“Oh, honey,” she said, her face tight with confusion. “He left earlier. Walked up to the road. Haven’t seen him since—”
“Did he have his guitar?”
“Yes.”
I closed my eyes, as if that would stop the truth from being true. “When is Andy coming?” I choked out.
“Not for another hour or so. He called. Said Bert got the part and was working on the car now.” She gave me a sympathetic look. “Maybe Tyler’s there?”
Yeah. Right. I made a noise that said about as much.
“How ’bout you take a shower and by the time you’re packed up, I’ll bet Andy will be here.”
A shower. She was right. I couldn’t actually do anything other than curse Tyler out in my head. Might as well wash away all the traces of him from my body. God knew there was more than enough of him on me.
I turned to do exactly what she suggested when she said, “I’ll brew you some coffee. Come on back when you’re packed up.”
I nodded and murmured my thanks, then turned toward the cabin.
He had gutted me. That note. Last night. This morning. My stomach growled and twisted, groaned and gurgled. I needed food. I needed coffee. Most of all, I needed answers.
I needed Tyler.
By the time I stripped down and climbed into the shower, I was in the middle of an ugly cry. The worn wood of the shower door reminded me of him. My hands on the soap dish were the same hands that stroked and lathered his back yesterday. The tiny space felt like a warehouse with only one body in it. My hands felt like lead balloons as they reached up and shampooed my hair.
My tears mixed with the hot water and left me bathed in holy water of a sort.
When I stood in front of the mirror, which had tiny spider cracks around the edges, I was red-rimmed and hollow. The comb caught in my tangled hair and as I pulled, a new wave of tears hit me. It took me a moment to really get the fact that I wasn’t crying because I was sad.
I was just crying.
Emotions can overflow and pour out. Without Tyler there to crack wise, or a dilemma to figure out, the feelings just
were
.
A loud horn blast filled the air outside. I grabbed my backpack and raced to the office, wiping my face. Andy appeared, driving the chug-a-long tow truck like it was the greatest machine on earth.
“You ready? Bert’s got her done nice and early.”
“Is Tyler with you?” I asked, trying to keep the shake out of my voice.
“No,” Andy said, drawing out the word. “He supposed to be?”
I just snorted and climbed in. As we hit the main road, I realized I never did take Rosita up on that offer of coffee.
Tyler
I was an asshole.
But I was an asshole who wouldn’t be a burden to her any more.
If she was smart, she’d read my note, cry, scream a little, go run in the desert and call me names—and then do exactly what I asked her to do.
Maggie was a smart chick. She’d know I was right. And by the time she read that note, I was riding shotgun to this trucker, Bill, who wanted to tell me all about how Jesus Christ is his personal savior.
And as long as he got me to the concert on time, he could tell me all about it. There was no way I was going to walk very far—my quads were killing me from pushing that car out of the road in the middle of the desert last night, and it hadn’t been easy to even climb up into the cab of Bill’s old truck.
I just needed a ride.
I just needed to make it there on time.