Free Read Novels Online Home

Legend: A Rockstar Romance by Ellie Danes (12)

I stayed out in the gardens, finding all sorts of little enchanting corners to photograph. By the time I made it back up to the mansion, it was lunchtime. I found Storm and Tyson in the kitchen, arguing again. I swallowed a smile and wondered if it was their favorite pastime.

“We made you a sandwich; it’s on the cutting board,” Storm called.

“I can’t believe you didn’t tell me any of this. Storm, this is a major investment!” Tyson slapped his palm on the kitchen island to drive home his point. “You can’t put all your money into one venture.”

“It’s not all my money. Wasn’t that what we were just talking about?” Storm bellowed. He threw up his hands in frustration. “The rest of my money is tied up in this house and all the stuff in it.”

“So, that’s it? Time to liquidate your father’s life?” Tyson yelled.

I snatched my sandwich off the cutting board and tried to back out of the kitchen door. The argument seemed very private even though both men looked exhausted, as if they’d had the same fight many times before.

“Wait, maybe Cora can help.” Storm marched over to the cellar door and motioned me to follow.

“I’m sorry. I didn’t mean to intrude,” I said.

“Nonsense. This is the perfect thing for you to photograph. You’d make a mint off selling prints,” Storm said. “Tell her, Tyson.”

Tyson crossed his arms firmly over his burly chest. “There’s a vault downstairs that keeps Ian Morris’ full collection safe. I was just pointing out to Storm that special precautions will have to be taken before we can just sell the place and move.”

“Do you really want to lug around such priceless things?” Storm asked Tyson. “Wouldn’t it be better to sell it all to collectors and museums, people who would really care for it?”

“You won’t feel that way when you actually see what’s in there.” Tyson refused to believe Storm could really shed everything his father had given him.

“Ah ha! I’ll take that bet.” Storm strode across the kitchen toward me. “Looks like you’ve got yourself another assignment: photo archiving my father’s collection.”

I felt ridiculous cowering in the doorway, holding an overstuffed sandwich. I should have been miles away at a monthly report meeting, not in the middle of what felt a lot like a family argument.

“What investment?” I tried to change the subject.

Storm shook his fists at the kitchen ceiling and then stomped outside. Tyson and I watched him stride across the back lawn, change direction, and head straight for the old greenhouse.

“Guess with a name like Storm you have to expect that now and again.” Tyson gave me an apologetic shrug. “Want a soda or anything?”

I remembered the sandwich in my hand and took a big bite just so I didn’t have to say anything. The cellar door was still open, and I was too curious. I sidled over to glance down while Tyson took my choking and chewing to mean a soda would be nice. He cracked it open and handed it to me as I stared down the steep cellar staircase.

“Don’t worry. It’s not all packed away in cobweb-covered boxes. Ian was a serious collector.” Tyson flipped on the lights. “Though I suppose you’ll want to take things out of cases to get the best photographs.”

I edged back to the kitchen island to finish my sandwich; a carefully maintained collection did not seem like the right place for a quick snack.

“A serious collection?” I asked.

Tyson looked up, his sad thoughts breaking up. “What? Oh, yes. Ian was already an avid collector before I started working for him. Before Storm was even born.”

“That’s a lot of stuff to hang on to,” I said.

Storm’s manager blinked his eyes hard. “I know. And it’s not that I don’t want Storm to be happy. It’s just I think he’d regret selling everything later in life. Seeing that would be worse than hearing him yell about it today.”

I felt bad for Tyson. He was clearly caught in the middle, but this was also his life. I finished my quick lunch and grabbed a notepad off the counter.

“I’ll just take notes today, but let’s go see it,” I said.

An hour and a dizzying crash course in true rock ‘n’ roll history later, I dragged myself back upstairs and blinked down at my notes. It had been like uncovering a pharaoh’s tomb or a sunken ship, and I leaned against the kitchen island to catch my breath.

Tyson grinned as he shut the cellar door. “You’ll have to ask Storm about the Crossroads Guitar. He swears that Ian played it one night.”

I nodded and wove my way to the door, needing some fresh air. “I’ll just go see if Storm’s still in the old greenhouse.”

I took my time through the gardens, trying to sort out everything I had seen and learned. It was easy to empathize with Storm’s need to get free of everything. But the truth was I had seen so much of Storm in the collection. It had been as if Ian had handpicked pieces of Storm’s personality, items that had truly formed his son’s extraordinary life.

If Storm liquidated the collection, he would quickly find he had sold off little pieces of his own soul.

The closer I got to the old greenhouse, the better I could hear the music coming from inside. I skirted closer to the juniper bushes, in the hopes that Storm wouldn’t see me. I had found myself humming his new song, and I wanted to hear more.

Storm’s guitar playing had been the biggest surprise to me. It wasn’t the same pop frills that had made him so instantly famous. His sound had mellowed, morphed into a new blues voice, and it felt earthy and grounded even as the melodies soared.

Just as I reached the door, Storm’s improvising picked up an old familiar tune. He found himself playing one of Ian Morris’ most famous songs. There was a sudden stream of obscenities and then a twang as Storm stopped playing.

“Why’d you stop?”

Storm flinched and caught me peeking in the door of the old greenhouse. “I thought you and Tyson were busy up at the house.”

“That collection is overwhelming. I ran at my first chance,” I said.

His frown softened. “I think my father liked it better that way, all carefully preserved and protected. That way, it was more fun when he went in and just grabbed things off the wall.”

I inched farther into the old greenhouse. “Tyson told me half the reason the cases were created was to stop Ian from messing around with everything.”

Storm laughed at that. “Makes my father sound like an overgrown toddler. Sounds about right.”

“Except for the whole cosmically talented thing,” I pointed out. “Why don’t you play his songs?”

“They’re kind of unavoidable.” Storm scrubbed the back of his neck and considered his old, beat-up guitar. “I don’t know. The same reason you cringe every time someone says your photography shows talent?”

I groaned. “That’s one step away from being called an artist and, in my experience, artists cause chaos and uncertainty.”

Storm’s laugh filled the old greenhouse. “Exactly! And everyone wonders why I grew up wanting a simpler life.”

I took my chance and sat next to him on the dusty wicker sofa. Storm had brought a few amps from the house, unrolled a vintage Berber rug, and made the old greenhouse a comfortable clubhouse. Pulses of heat swept through my body as I remembered the first time we had been there, but I didn’t want to let that get in the way of being there with Storm.

It had never occurred to me that my childhood was very similar to the boy in the mansion. Growing up, the Morris Mansion had been a dazzling place of legend. All the local school kids knew there was a boy there our age, and we’d assumed he lived like a prince. Now it turned out Storm was more like me; wishing for structure and discipline in an artistic house full of chaos.

“I’d even give up simple for normal,” I said.

Storm leaned back on the sofa and sighed. “That’s what I keep telling Tyson. Maybe he should just stay here. You and I can run away. Let’s get a little house in the midwestern suburbs.”

My heart tripped into a fast gallop. Storm’s suggestion was just a joke, but even so, there was the lingering feeling that it could be just us two against the world.

“Tyson wants to stay,” I said to change the subject and slow my heart rate.

Storm heaved himself off the sofa. “I know. I don’t get it, though. This place works him ragged, I don’t do anything but complain, and he could have left a thousand times.”

“Family’s weird like that,” I said.

“He must be insane. I mean, we were born into our weirdness, but Tyson chose to stay with me and Ian.”

“And maybe that woman he’s been flirting with in town,” I pointed out.

Storm stopped pacing around the rug and gaped at me. “A woman? Tyson?”

“She’s one of those crazy people who’s adopted a messed-up family, too.” I stopped myself and held my breath. Had I given too much away?

Luckily, Storm was still distracted by the idea of Tyson being in love. “Oh, my god, is it that bouncy little woman? I’ve seen them talking on Main Street, down by that art gallery.”

“Her name’s Susie Q.” I would have told him anything to avoid more talk of my mother’s gallery.

A brightly whistled version of Susie Q’s namesake song burst through from the old greenhouse’s back door. Bobby, a Murtaugh local who traded penny stocks and spent the rest of his time at the record store, strolled in. He was hauling a large instrument case that bumped to the floor when he stopped, surprised to see me. My heart was in my throat, but Bobby was well-known for keeping his mouth shut.

He winked at me. “I’m early?”

Storm laughed. “Late as usual. You didn’t bring Rick with you?”

Bobby glanced back at me. “Ricky’s organizing my trunk or something. He’ll be right in.”

“Bobby plays stand-up bass,” Storm explained. “And the owner of the record store, Rick, plays drums sometimes. They’re nice enough to jam with me now and then.”

“We play. Rick gossips,” Bobby said.

I stood up. “I should get out of your way.”

Bobby was content to stay out of everyone’s business, but he was right about Rick. As soon as my old classmate and friend saw me, there would be no more pretending I was a renegade journalist turned photography. My big lie would be exposed, and I hadn’t even told Storm about how badly his departure would affect Murtaugh!

Storm caught my hand and stopped me. “Rick’s been nosing around ever since the night of the party. Better to let him meet you or his imagination will run wild.”

“Cora?” Rick appeared in the greenhouse door.

I shook free of Storm’s hand and rushed over to greet Rick before he could give me away. “Nice to see you again! Ricky here was nice enough to let me take photos in his record store when I arrived in Murtaugh.”

Rick chewed his cheek. “Photography?”

Storm stepped in. “She just poses as a journalist; turns out photography is her real passion. Tyson’s hired her to archive Ian’s collection and take some good shots of the house.”

“Sure. Great.” Rick sidestepped me and put down the drum he was carrying. “You two met at the party?”

“Gossip,” Bobby said.

Storm laughed and caught my arm again. “Maybe you want to take off before he really starts the interrogation.”

As much as I wanted to stay and hear their unlikely trio play, it was better to run away. Ricky was an old friend and would keep my secrets, but he looked unhappy. I needed to get out of there and compose a text message to Rick, trying to explain everything.

First, though, I had to figure it all out myself. What was I really doing at Morris Mansion?

Search

Search

Friend:

Popular Free Online Books

Read books online free novels

Hot Authors

Sam Crescent, Zoe Chant, Flora Ferrari, Mia Madison, Lexy Timms, Claire Adams, Alexa Riley, Sophie Stern, Leslie North, Amy Brent, Elizabeth Lennox, Frankie Love, Jenika Snow, Jordan Silver, C.M. Steele, Madison Faye, Mia Ford, Kathi S. Barton, Michelle Love, Delilah Devlin, Dale Mayer, Bella Forrest, Sloane Meyers, Amelia Jade, Eve Langlais,

Random Novels

The Lei Crime Series: Black Sand (Kindle Worlds Novella) by Aliyah Burke

My Husband the Enemy by Emery Cross

Sugar (The Henchmen MC Book 12) by Jessica Gadziala

Her Billionaire Lion: A Zodiac Shifters Paranormal Romance: Leo by Dominique Eastwick, Zodiac Shifter

Blue Alien Prince's Captive Bride: A Sci-Fi Alien Romance (Royally Blue - Celestial Mates Book 4) by Zara Zenia

Daddy’s Home: An Mpreg Billionaire Romance by Shaw, Alice, Shaw, Alice

Wild Souls (The Kingson Pride Book 3) by Kristen Banet

The Young Elites by Marie Lu

Begin Again: Allie and Kaden's Story by Mona Kasten

Down & Dirty: Axel (Dirty Angels MC Book 5) by Jeanne St. James

Ada's Protective Mate by Jo Palmer

Braden: A Seventh Son Novel (McClains Book 3) by Kirsten Osbourne

Making Music: A Serrano Novel (Book 1) (The Serranos) by Bryce Winters

Special Delivery by Deborah Raney

A Kiss Away from Scandal by Christine Merrill

Unfaded (Faded Duet Book 2) by Julie Johnson

Miracle on 5th Avenue by Sarah Morgan

Dark Paradise by Winter Renshaw

Possession: Blue Line Book Two by Brandy Ayers

Lord of Chance (Rogues to Riches Book 1) by Erica Ridley