Free Read Novels Online Home

The Rhyme of Love (Love in Rhythm & Blues Book 2) by Love Belvin (3)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

~2~

 

“Now, we don’t do private room visits, but the warden allowed this one only once. The inmate’s confined to his seat, so there’ll be no touching or physical exchanges. It’s the usual thirty minutes,” the beefed up correctional officer with the name Smith on his badge ran down as we walked the concrete hall, smelling of bleach and oppression. “If for some reason, you wanna end the visit, just speak up and a guard’ll be in immediately.”

I knew that meant the conversation would be monitored.

We made it to the steel door where two other guards had been posted. Smith gave a single nod to let me know he was opening it. He stepped in first, which hindered the view of the tiny space with a high window, no bigger than four by six feet with bars running through it. He advanced further than the table where my host sat, and I was able to see how small the room was. That’s when I was hit with an uncanny resemblance of the chick who was holding my heart in Arizona. The correctional officer stopped at the side of the chair across from Donovan Williams. I stopped, too, returning the curious stare Van was throwing me.

“You gotta sit for this, duke,” Smith commanded.

My eyes shot over to him and his wide posture reminded me I was on government territory. I moved toward the seat and pulled it back. As I sat down, I noticed Van’s sharp gaze on me. I couldn’t tell if he was star-struck or sizing me up. I still didn’t know why he’d extended the invitation.

Smith gave both of us a final gaze before stepping out. When the door closed behind me, I peeped the chains attached to his wrist bracelets. I imagined his feet wore similar jewelry.

A smirk broke around Van’s mouth. “I ain’t think you’d come.”

“Why wouldn’t I? You call, family come through.” My sarcasm wasn’t accompanied by a smile. In fact, I knew it was hard for him to read my position. I’d had years of practice at creating a blank canvas on my face.

He snorted, head shifted to the side as he chuckled, “Family.” Then his eyes were on me again. “That’s why I asked my lawyer to get you down here—by the way, big ups on finally getting me a real one to replace the ghost ya mans tried passing off.”

My forehead lifted. “Ghost?”

“Yeah. He was a ghost. People said they seen him...heard from him, but I ain’t never really see the nigga to know if he was a real person or just my imagination. This one could have me out after my next court date…out in a month.”

I nodded my understanding and palmed down my beard as I sat slightly reclined in my chair.

“Wynter don’t talk much about you. I ain’t even know y’all was fuckin’ before the media blasted about the wedding.”

My brows lifted again, and I gave a nod.

A smirk lifted on half his face and he bent toward the table to scratch his baldie. “You been like a ghost in my world, too. I hear about you on t.v. and my niece tell me she married you, but I ain’t never laid eyes on you in person to say you connected to something so precious to me.” He watched me closely.

“That’s why I got the special invite”—My eyes circle in the air—“to ya palace?”

“My palace…” He snorted again, head ducked, and eyes went to the corner of the room. “Yeah, man. That and to warn you I’ll be home soon.”

“And?”

He faced me again, his head leveling, and eyes squinting. “And I’mma find out the details of the fuckery you and ya mans got my peoples into. And if it ain’t on the up and up, I’m blowing up everybody’s spot. I ‘on’t give a fuck who you is. Wynter better than a public hoax. She a real one. A good girl. She may be covering while I’m in here, but I know how to get shit outta her.” His whole posture screamed warning.

I wanted to laugh, but his rundown on Wynter’s character wasn’t funny.

“What makes you think some fuckery’s going on?”

“C’mon, man!” He laughed dryly. His hands splayed over the table, exposing his palms. “Because of that question right there! You ‘on’t even know how tight we is. She do, though. She slipped up and confessed it. A couple of times, too.”

A panic lanced through me.

“What she say?” I projected calm.

“It ain’t just what she said, it’s what’s still the same in her world.” I shook my head and shrugged, asking him what. My usual protective wall to the side, if we were talking Wynter, we were talking my life. My fucking world. I wanted to know more. “For one, when I spoke to her last week, she slipped up and complained about her student loans. I pay half for her.”

“Half?” my anxiousness slipped.

He shrugged. “My car’s in her name. In exchange for her credit, I paid half the student loan. The car been paid off, but my payments to her still good.”

“Why?”

“‘Cause I know she need the help, nigga.” He laughed, flashing a shallow dimple, again reminding of a piece of joy. “Because that’s what family do. We look out for each other.”

I found that strange. Wynter hadn’t had any family in her corner since she entered my world. Everything she’d done in exchange of helping with my appearance had been for her uncle, Van. He couldn’t be far off in his generosity. But I was still confused. How could he be the only one in her corner? She said she lived with his side of her family for a minute before she stayed on campus, then moved in with that fuckboy of a friend of Van’s.

“She told you she had student loans.” I smacked my hands together at my waist. “And?”

“And? She got student loans and credit card debt. I help with those, too, since she took a L in pay.  Why the fuck would my peoples have any bills if she married a damn millionaire? I’m down and she still in debt.”

I wished people would stop equating her connecttion to me with money. More than that, what the fuck kind of deal did Mike cut with her?

She’s out there by herself

When I thought about it, she had no rent, utilities, or food to pay for since we married. But that didn’t account for the debt she had when she became my wife.

“Wynter ain’t marry me for money,” my tone was low, steady.

“She never would. My pops ain’t raise no gold digger!” he yelled. The door pushed open and Smith took a step inside, studying us. Van raised his palms, wrists confined by wide metal bracelets attached to the table. After a few seconds of inspection, satisfied, Smith closed the door. “Man, listen. I just need you to know that you may got her mixed up in your shenanigans, but she got family you gotta answer to. She may be in this with you, but I’m her blood. I’m the one shelling out cash to keep her shit together. And I don’t know what arrangement y’all done made, but don’t get shit twisted, my G, I’mma get outta here, thanks to your lawyer plug. When I get out, I’mma make sure everything legit. You feel me?”

I was dazed, but not by Van’s weak threats. He posed no harm other than his influence with Wynter. Van wasn’t a reputable killer, just protective of his niece, and I couldn’t be mad at that. What had me thrown was her financial situation. She’d never mentioned money. Ever. I thought we’d grown to a place of her trusting me. Now, I was feeling like all the connecting we’d done in the couple of weeks before she left for the L.I.T. boot camp was just physical. That shit hurt.

“I hope we got a understanding.”

“Nah, we don’t if you think I’m pimping out my wife.”

“You ain’t?” he challenged with that question.

“Nah.” I felt my head shake as my eyes journeyed to the wall behind him, running with visuals of a lonely Wynter Haile. “She’ll be the first to tell you I ain’t a perfect husband, but I can assure you I ain’t the type to have my wife struggling…”

A flash vision of her rocking at the foot of the bed in Saint Justin when she thought I’d been turned off by her bold sexual exploration appeared out of nowhere. Then the look of restrained pain in her eyes in front of the fireplace at my place in Sparta when I told her more about the craziness with my aunt, Patty. She was real. With me. Why couldn’t she open up as much to me as I’d done to her?

“Looks to me you do. Them bills still there just like I’m still in here. S’all good. I know my place in her world. I’ll take care of her. Just like I been doing since she was a pup.”

I shook my head. “You don’t get it. I ain’t know.”

“You should. She ya wife. Right?” The snarl he gave was one I could see him giving to one of his cellies. My patience was running short.

“She kept this one from me, tying my hands. Can’t address something that’s kept from you. Just like you couldn’t when ya bestie was fuckin’ her under your clueless ass nose.” His face tightened from conviction. I wasn’t supposed to know that as a fake husband. “Yeah. How it feel to know that sick mothafucka took both ya nieces’ innocence, pitting them against each other.”

“She told you that?”

“Wynter could’ve died in that car accident,” was my response. 

Wynter, baby

Van started his comeback about not liking it but having to deal with it because they kept it from him. But more important thoughts flooded my mind. Wynter. It took a while, a long while for me to come back to the room. It felt like I’d been out for a while, lost in thought. I could tell my mind took a trip for a minute by the way Van eyed me with new passion. I sat up and cleared my throat.

“She may be secretive, but you need to know she—we—don’t pimp her out on no whack shit. Best believe if I was out there, she woulda never got down with Mike fuckin’ Brown. That’s on my seeds, my G.” He basically repeated his argument, this time with less bass.

“You made that clear already.”

“To make sure you know, family,” he spat back the term I hit him with earlier. “Pops ain’t raise none of us to be used.”

I stood from the table. “Grandfather.”

“What?” he asked with pinched brows.

“You mean her grandfather.”

“Yeah. Him. What?”

I shrugged. “Just making sure I got this family orientation thing straight.” I ruffled him.

“Yeah. Just make sure you remember what I said.”

“Loud and clear.” I moved for the door then I turned over my shoulder. “Since my old lady likes to be prideful, how can I get the information about her debtors to settle them?”

I didn’t think he’d be able to help, but I tried because I had no other way of finding out.

“My sister, Wanda, moved back to Jersey with mom dukes. She got a stack of her mail that gets re-routed.”

“Give your lawyer her number. Matter of fact,” I scratched the back of my head. “I’ll make sure he gets you my direct number. I wanna get that information.” Van went quiet. His face still screwed, eyebrows tight. After a few seconds, he nodded. I tapped on the door for the guards. “And let’s keep this between us. See if Wanda can do that.”

“Wynter won’t like it. She ain’t with that secret shit,” he warned.

“Shit, do I know.” The door opened, and I saluted my uncle-in-law. My charming smile warmed my face, hiding my inner-torment. “Welcome to my family, Van.”

You can do it! Less than five minutes to go

My legs rotated, thighs burned as they pushed hard in cycling. I was being lazy. The elliptical should have been my cardio down choice, but my thighs felt like rubber from the work I put on them during my workout today. I started off with weights and squats then ended here on the bike. Sweat dripped embarrassingly everywhere. I was grateful no one utilized the gym here. I was sure I looked a sight. Sheldon used to tease me about my excessive perspiration. I’d sweat moving furniture around, running down to the local bodega, during sex. He said sex with me was like a pre-shower, he’d always walk away wet all over except for when we had quickies.

I got used to his jokes but being here at a multi-million-dollar home felt like an intrusion. The team at L.I.T. Music spared no expense for this boot camp, as they termed it. They rented a nine-bedroom ranch style home to house seven candidates for their label. The program began a week ago and already I’d learned more about music and creating a track than I thought possible. I was in way over my head and fought like hell every day to not let those around me know just how much.

We were hosted in a plush and rather capacious ranch in Paradise Valley, an affluent neighborhood just outside of Phoenix. The house was huge—no estate in the middle of nowhere in Sparta, New Jersey, but…—and trimmed with contemporary fixings. I didn’t feel stifled from living on top of strangers. In fact, it seemed the red carpet was rolled out for me. Most days I didn’t feel worthy of sitting amongst such talented and striving artists, and each day I was grateful for the distraction.

Just a few more to go… I encouraged myself.

I didn’t feel movement behind me until someone appeared at my side. At first I noticed the can of Red Bull he sipped on as he rounded me on the stationary bike. Those green eyes gleamed with approval, though his face looked a bit tight and wrinkled. I could tell he’d just woken up.

“Damn!” he croaked. “How could you get up so early after last night?”

Trying to focus my breathing, I answered, “I went to bed at a decent hour. I didn’t stay up to play around.”

For a while, Teke didn’t speak. My eyes moved to the mirror ahead, keeping my head up this time.

“You’re really dedicated to this?” I watched his hungry eyes brush against my legs, ass, waist, and arms, making me feel self-conscious in my tank and shorts. 

I was fully aware Teke was attracted to me, although he hadn’t pushed too hard since I met him at the start of the camp. I figured it was out of respect for my spouse. Lately, I’d been feeling he’d been testing me out, something I wasn’t fond of. He would ask questions, seeking some sort of answers. It was all good, because I had shit to give.

Teke was one-third member of R&B group, B City that hit the scene last summer. They were cute, lively, and talented. He and his bandmates, Jon and Irv were coincidentally from Jersey. Jon and Irv were from Newark hence the group’s name. B City was short for Brick City, one of Newark’s nicknames. I learned since being here, Teke was from suburbia Cranford. It helped understand his gregarious personality. To the young girls across the country it was charm. To most of who shared the room with him it was assholeness to the max. The biggest heartthrob of the trio was Teke. Not only was he handsome, charismatic, and could hold a note, he was also talented instrumentally. He played the piano and guitar. I was sure the girls’ focus, however, was on those captivating green eyes and roasted almond skin. He wore his hair in short twists, similar to someone else I knew, but shorter and all around his cap. And he knew how to squint his eyes to give the false impression of deep interest.

Bottom line was Teke thought a lot of himself. So much, I believed his bosses at L.I.T. Music sensed it. I remember the first day we reported to camp. It was at a studio in Phoenix.

There was a total of nine of us the first day—two dropped a few days into it. Though in drib drabs, we were all present to report in at our appointed time of seven o’clock. Most had said they were able to stop at the ranch to drop off their things before coming. Some even had time to grab a bite. But all showed on time. 

Except Teke. His bandmates were all there, waiting in the circle we’d seemed to have formed, which included the L.I.T. executives, minus Young Lord, at the top. We waited in silence, I was sure most, if not all, as anxious as I was to find out what was next. Then Jackson Hunter, the only black founder of L.I.T. Music, spoke up.

He moved into the circle, eyeing everyone around. He was handsome, stylish, and stately in his apparel and presentation.

“We’re all here for two reasons.” He gestured to himself and his partners. “For us, it’s to make history. For you, it’s to be a part of it. During this three-week period, everyone will be on the same playing field with learning how to create music, but not everyone will have the same learning curve. We were supremely selective with our pickings.” I questioned that. I had no experience! “Even if you thought you made the cut with a lack of merit, I can assure you, you were carefully and strategically vetted.” He was intimidating, this one.

Young compared to his counterparts, good looking, and articulate, this Jackson Hunter guy upped my anxiety as he strolled around, inside the circle. “Some of you have experience in producing, vocal arrangement, instruments, writing—hell, even artist and repertoire. Some of you are engineers and others are orchestrating tracks. But are you good enough to be a part of the L.I.T. Music hit factory? Because that’s what you’ll be tested for. We’re going to give you the tools to learn the game, but you’re going to have to spit out what we give you with a remixed version.”

He sauntered around with his hands clasped behind his back, eyes often on the floor. “Your slot may be secured on this farm we’ve created for you, but your name isn’t locked on our roster. At the end of this boot camp, we’ll either thank you for your time and send you back home, or offer you a compelling, exclusive contract to be a part of our hit factory. It’s that simple, ladies and gentlemen.”

Sounds of flip flop tracks captured our attention. The group turned to the back to find the culprit. Jackson, I noticed, did not. Then the group made way for a tall figure with sandy blonde tips on his twists. His smile was charming and his exotic eyes beamed with mischief as he regarded Jackson and his partners. The room remained quiet as Jackson circled. He stopped at Irv, the beautifully bronzed member of B City.

“Irv, what was your motivation for requesting to be a part of this boot camp?” Jackson asked, his back now to Irv as he continued his leisurely stroll.

With an expression of nervousness, Irv’s mouth moved wordlessly before he spoke. “Uh… To make good music for band groups. I wanna bring them back. Make hits and do hardcore A&R’ing, especially in R&B.” Irv’s response ended with a proud smirk.

He likely didn’t know how he’d make it to the other side of that surprise question. I caught when he nodded haughtily at Teke, across from him. Teke flashed an enchanting smile and winked in return.

“Interesting,” Jackson remarked, head still toward the floor. “We’ll touch on A&R a little during the time you’re here, but I can cut to the chase and tell you the reason why groups are a high-risk concept with a short shelf life is because of the lead singer.” Huhn? I watched the expressions of a few others representing the same sentiment. “See, the lead singer is usually the most alluring. Sometimes they’re the most talented and can quickly sense their own value to their group members and label. They throw hissy fits, want to control the image of the group, often remind everybody they’re the lead…even show up late for events.”

All eyes flew to Teke, whose enchanting gleam waned. His forehead wrinkled, too.

“I can also tell you”—Jackson continued—“the first to show for studio times, interviews, and meetings are the members with the most to lose. Eventually the label has enough with the prima donna bullshit and stops pouring money into their marketing and shelf them legally. All because of that one pompous, bratty ass lead singer. The other subpar members probably never did anything wrong. Their livelihood depended on that group…they handled their business. What’re they gone do now? Me? If I was a part of a group, knowing my talents were inferior to the lead and I wasn’t the moneymaker—probably ain’t even all that good looking, I’d do a Mike Bivins.” He finally glanced up to Irv as he made it back to him around the circle. “I’d use my head and intuition to compensate for not being born with lead qualities.” He raised his palm, offering it to Irv. Confused, Irv slowly lifted his and tapped his boss’. “Welcome to the L.I.T. Music boot camp, Irv. I think you made a wise decision to come.”

Winded, I blinked hard, trying to process what had just happened. It took the next few days to understand.

“I got a regimen, too,” Teke huffed, playfully defensive. “You ain’t the only one. I wake up early in the morning, gotta thank God…” His eyes twinkled, telling of his remix of Ice Cube’s “It Was a Good Day.” “…grab grub, get my energy on, and right now, as I’m talking to you, I’m checking my social media for comments.” He waggled his phone in the air.

My time sounded on the bike. I was done. “Okay,” I breathed out, planting my feet on the floor. “You really check it? What do you look for?” I reached for my towel to wipe down my face.

“Once in a while, I’ll entertain the hecklers,” he hummed, studying his phone. “Like this one. I took a pic of me in the booth last night. And this one asks why was I wearing that whack old school jersey. So when I get stuff like this…when people are bothering me, coming to my page to clown me, I have the time to respond back in the mornings. So,” his voice hiked, emotionally removing himself from the situation. “I’ll click on her handle to get to her profile.” He tapped the phone. “Lucky for me, her page is public. So I can get a clear view of my opponent. And as we can see here, she’s in no position to come at me about my appearance when she’s big as a house—no, a big ass university. So let me tell her.” He placed his energy drink on the floor then returned to his phone, thumbing away. 

My face fell. “Really? You have the time to do this?”

Do celebrities really have the time to devote their mornings to stuff like this?

With pinched brows, I asked, “What are you typing?” I grabbed my water bottle.

Still writing away, he shared, “I’m calling her every fat, hippopotamus bitch I can spell in the moment.”

“And what good is that going to do?”

“Welp, I’m also telling her this’ll be some motivation for her to lose weight. After all, I see her in some kind of nurse uniform, she should know the importance of being fit and looking good.”

“That may not be a nurse uniform. It could be a home health aide’s. They don’t make nearly as much as most nurses. She may just be an everyday girl who can’t afford what it’ll take to lose a substantial amount of weight.”

“Yeah, but you were an everyday girl. Right?”

“Yeah.”

“And I see you’re taking out the time. You’re working out.” His brows hiked suspiciously.

“Yeah, because I was taught how to work out and lose weight by someone in the industry, who has the resources to share with me.”

“But no one’s making you do it.” He continued to fight. “You’re doing it on your own now. In here every damn day, it seems like.”

Yeah!” I sang with sarcasm, tickled by a man conversant with petty. “But there’s a huge eating component in this, and I was able to learn that from someone in the industry and able to implement it because I have a personal chef at home, who cooks my meals. And there’s a state of the art gym for me to learn in and use at my leisure. And not to mention, I don’t have to get up at five in the morning, fix my kids something to eat, get them on the bus, and then make it to work on time myself. Then get off at six o’clock—six-thirty after working a nine-hour day, resume my responsibility with my kids, and end the day.”

“Because you don’t have to—”

“But I am a representative of that community, who knows nothing about yours in terms of fitness and ‘looking good’ as you said, because we don’t have the benefit of time and resources.”

“Oh. Look at this.” He rolled his neck playfully. “You know the best of both worlds.”

“No. I only really know one. I’ve just gotten a taste of the other. And I think it’s inconsiderate and snobbish of you to judge her on her appearance alone.”

“Shit! She judging me on my appearance. That’s how we met!”

“And that’s when you should pretend to have too much on your plate to even notice. The best response is a non-verbal one.” I gave him a fake smile and took off.  

Teke was on my heels as I headed toward the door to leave the gym.

“Anyway,” he grumbled behind me. “I came looking for you to see what you got in that poem book. Even got outta bed earlier than usual to look for you.”

“You mean to tell me you do your admin social media work even later in the day?” I spat quietly over my shoulder.

I could hear him chuckle at my dig. “I wanted to know if you wanna lay out a few of them against melodies before we hit the studio tonight.”

That offer stopped me in my tracks. The studio we’d been using was a rather large one in Phoenix. Dave Munsnick, one of the L.I.T. Music executives owned it. He was actually a resident of Arizona, though he traveled a lot. That was why they opted for this to be the “farm” as they referred to it often, where the camp took place. It was isolated, and Dave had the studio with multiple rooms, equipped for recording and engineering.

Everyone knew I was a composer-aspirant. I shared how I kept a book of poems inspired by love and intimacy. I didn’t think it would be wise to reference it as fucking in this professional setting. Though these folks had colorful languages and lifestyles themselves.

Teke referencing my poems struck interest immediately. He must have detected it in my eyes.

“You down?”

My regard fell to my misted frame. “Yeah. Just give me time to get washed and make a smoothie.”

“Cool.” He smiled. Green orbs sparkling. “Meet you in the dining room?”

My smile surfaced.  A big one. “It’s a bet.”

Anticipation and excitement danced in my belly as I trekked up the stairs to my room. It was a long haul and away from mostly everyone else. For the first time, it didn’t matter. I’d been working on music. My music. I’d done this a time or two back in Sparta. I couldn’t wait to do it again. 

When my mind was fried, baby…

You opened up and said come inside…glide, baby. 

Now, I don't wanna just slip and slide, baby.”

Jemah, a producer from Chicago, sang from the printout to a catchy cadence while snapping her fingers. My heart pounded with anxiety. Teke’s head bobbed with her, seeming to keep up.

I wanna get lost and hide, forever stay inside...of...you, baby.

High off your ecstasy, I almost died, baby.

To...come...down...I really tried, baby.

But you became the drug I need, baby.

My...addiction...forever feed, baby.” Her arms went into the air as did her one knee as she stretched back in her seat and squealed. “That is fucking hot, shortie!”

Jemah stretched across the table and high fived me. I couldn’t help my blush. I’d written that piece two years ago during a crazy bout of loneliness and horniness.

“Where’d that one come from?” she asked excitedly. “There are so many ways we can spin it. We can even slow it down,” she argued to Teke, who was unusually quiet.

“You don’t like it,” I observed, not taking it personally.

Teke wrote most of B City’s music. He’d also written for Jasmine Sullivan and Fantasia. Like Jemah here, who had her own impressive list, he knew his business.

“I do,” he mumbled, pulling out another sheet I printed for them. I chose to bring three down for us to choose from. “I’m just looking for something less…” He stalled, reading. “…sexual and more passionate—maybe even sensual. Maybe.”

When my eyes shifted to Jemah, she was wearing the same baffled expression I knew I was. If he didn’t like any of these, I could print more. I had close to a hundred of these babies with me.

“Yo, I gotta track on my Mac right now for that “Baby” piece,” she tried to argue.

Not convinced, Teke pulled up a paper, laying it on top of the rest. “Like this one.” He lifted his guitar and positioned it, so he could read from the printout.

At first, I was mesmerized, unable to identify my ownership of the words. His timber was soft, melody delicate as he added his own adlibs. What he made of the first verse, slid from his lips with such ease. It was when he created the chorus that I snapped out of the rawness of emotion he’d cast me into.

If you wanna change the rules…

Baby, I’mma play it cool.

I never shunned, and I won’t start now.

I could’ve loved you and I can’t stop now.

Your pain is my muse…

It’s your love that I choose.

But if you wanna pull the plug…

I’ll release you for love.”

His head bobbed though he stopped singing. “The bars from ‘your pain is my muse’ is where the bridge can start.”

Then he went to finish with the lyrics. When he was done, I didn’t realize he was gazing at me.

“What do you think?” he asked. I glanced up at him then my eyes skirted to Jemah. “You don’t like it? Should it be up tempo and not a ballad? Or more of a ballad?”

Taking a deep breath, I decided to gain a hold of myself. I was giving off the impression there was something wrong with his translation. It wasn’t that. The energy they were picking up was because hearing those words shot back to me reminded me of how tender I still was since leaving Sparta. I’d been numb from those feelings, refusing to acknowledge them. In fact, I buried them and put my focal point on this camp…other than hyper-checking social media for any signs of the lover I’d known briefly. These thoughts of mine—experiences—being converted into lyrics burned.

Taking a deep breath, I tried blinking away the hurt. “I think it sounds incredible.” I tried for a smile. “Just perfect, Teke.”

“Okay,” he pulled the paper closer and fixed the guitar in his hand, preparing to give it another go.

“Yeah. I can work with this,” Jemah acquiesced, grabbing her copy. “Let’s break down the keys and harmonize.”

Teke nodded in agreement and began to strum the strings of his guitar, and Jemah toyed with a few notes. They spent the next few minutes vocally arranging the song, all without the benefit of instruments other than Teke’s guitar that coincidentally sounded amazing.

Later that night, at our studio session, Dave waited for us in the orchestra room next to a piano. This orchestra room was rather large. I was told it was built with enough space to accommodate a seventy-five-member orchestra. At the center stage of the vast room was a grand piano with a woman on the bench facing diagonally. She was white with milky skin and red thinning hair. She smiled infectiously, and the closer I grew to the stage, the more defined her features became. She was an older woman based on the lines in her face and the one-inch gray roots of her scalp.

“Okay, guys. Tonight, we start talking composition. I know many of you have done a bit of this, but remember, this training is all encompassing. There was the way you’ve done composition, now learn how L.I.T. Music does it”—Dave waved his arm to bring into focus the woman—“with Diane Roberts. For the benefit of those unfamiliar with this modern-day legend, she hails from the U.K.…Croydon to be exact. She’s worked with countless upper echelon acts. Some before your time like Celine Dion, Michael Jackson, Andrea Bocelli, Sting, Barbara Streisand, and Whitney Houston, just to name a few.”

I was familiar with most of those names and already convinced this woman had her time in the industry. His eyes roved down to her, seated at his side. Hers rose to meet his.

“I wonder if they’re still fucking?” Teke, standing next to me, mumbled.

My eyes flew wide.

Dave continued, “Names you would recognize are Pixie, Adele, Ed Sheridan, Beyoncé, Alana, Taylor Swift, Ariana Grande…” he hesitated instead of stopping. My goodness! “Sam Smith…and Brielle.” He beamed down at her. “Funny how you crossed the pond just to work on her project.”

“Young Lord called and…” She raised her palm.

Dave laughed along with her. “Well, she’s hot off the plane from L.A. She’s been at work with Young Lord on Brielle’s new album, and she agreed to spend a few days at our camp here to share nuggets of experience.”

Gasps and whispers sounded from our small group. I could tell they were surprised and stoked at the news. Teke and Irv slapped palms, expressing their excitement. I was happy my damn self. I couldn’t believe I was sharing the air with someone who was in the same room as Pixie and Brielle. Holy shit!

“So,” Ms. Roberts cleared her throat. “I’ve been brought up to speed with what you’ve gone over so far. I do not profess to be a master but would love to share tidbits of what I look for and to, when building a song. Sometimes it begins with a chord.” She tapped a key on the baby grand. “And oftentimes, it begins with meaningful words, perhaps a line. Who are my writers here?” Several people raised their hands, Teke included. When he glanced my way and saw mine down, he raised it for me. Ms. Roberts’ eyes hit me and she frowned. “Why can you not answer honestly for yourself, love?”

My belly leaped with anxiety. I glanced over to Teke, expressing my serious disdain for him in the moment.

After licking my lips nervously, I answered, “Because I’ve not written anything—yet,” I qualified.

“Oh, no?” she chirped, peering over to Dave.

With a steady smile, he replied, “Wynter is our fresh investment…new blood with promising and untainted talent.”

“Oh,” she remarked, midsection leaping as she did. “Do you have a particular piece you need developed?”

Laughter sprinkled over the group I was amongst.

“Try a whole damn book of ‘em,” Teke chuckled…with pride? 

Ms. Roberts’ face folded. “I don’t follow…”

“Mrs. McKinnon here keeps a book of passionate poems she’s converting into lyrics,” Dave clarified.

The woman nodded toward me. “Is that them there?”

I glanced down and found my leather portfolio clutched in my hand. My head shot up. “Yea—yeah!” I cleared my throat. “Yes, it is.”

“Anything you’re working on now?”

“Yup,” Teke chimed in. “Me, her, and Jemah”—he pointed to Jemah on the other side of the group—“just put melody and vocals to one earlier this afternoon. We were hoping to record it tonight. Some dope shit.” He nodded with a compelling smile.

With parted lips, my gaze bounced between him next to me and Ms. Roberts. After a beat, Ms. Roberts’ eyes trailed back up to Dave and murmured something we couldn’t hear, by design I was sure. She shrugged. “Okay. Let’s start there. Bring that magic book on up.”

Dave spoke to her using the same volume. Her eyes seemed to have lit with new inspiration, and I knew my marital status had been discovered. I was just relieved to know her interest came first. I couldn’t move at first, inexplicably stuck on stupid as fuck. She spoke again, but I didn’t catch what she said. I then saw Teke and Jemah moving for the small stage.

“Hey,” Teke called back to me en route. He stopped to wave me on. “Shake that shit off and let’s make history with this hit-maker.”

I swallowed hard and willed my feet to move. When they did, I hit the stage, opened my portfolio to the piece we’d decided on, and the trio got to working on it right away. Teke and Jemah harmonized the first round. After, they gave their ideas for instrumentation and arrangement. Ms. Roberts added her recommendations as she tried out chords at the piano. The other members were released to work on their projects until it was their turn with Ms. Roberts. For the next two hours, I watched my first poem be translated into music—to be recorded next…or referenced, as they called it. The plan was to work on the song over the next couple of days and get it recorded as L.I.T. Music would do for pitching to one of their artists.

This was all too much. Moving way too fast. As she was correcting, Ms. Roberts must have picked up on my mental distance at one point. Her soft hand rubbed over my stacked ones. My eyes trailed from the point of our connection to her blazing brown eyes.

She smiled kindly. “It’s okay. You’ll get used to seeing them off to caring—and not so caring—hands soon enough, love.”

I tried for a smile as I nodded, hoping to assure my over-dramatic behavior right now wasn’t as severe as it appeared.

I could feel them at the side of my face. They were insistent, patient, yet determined. I turned to green eyes sparkling with a sentiment I knew could prove to be dangerous if I didn’t address it sooner or later. This was not just some lifetime dream I was achieving. Other lives—far more prominent and reputable than my aspirating title—were at play here and I needed to move with the smarts I came here with. I didn’t want to get lost in this fantasy of an opportunity and cause damage bigger than my layman mind could conceive.

Search

Search

Friend:

Popular Free Online Books

Read books online free novels

Hot Authors

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

Random Novels

Southern Spinster (Frostville Book 2) by Cassie Mae

Innocent Target (Redemption Harbor Series Book 4) by Katie Reus

Sassy Ever After: Sass Me If You Can (Kindle Worlds Novella) by Codi Gary

Ariston (Star Guardians) by Ruby Lionsdrake

Small Great Things by Jodi Picoult

Defender by Diana Palmer

Forever Girl (Tagged Soldiers Book 2) by Sam Destiny

FEELS LIKE THE FIRST TIME by Scott Hildreth

Hold On Tight (Man of the Month Book 2) by J. Kenner

Office Fling: A Single Dad Baby Romance by Amy Brent

Playing For Keeps: A York Bombers Hockey Romance (The York Bombers Book 3) by Lisa B. Kamps

Badder (Out of the Box Book 16) by Robert J. Crane

Disorderly Conduct by Tessa Bailey

The Pleasure of Panic by JA Huss

Returning for Love: A Western Romance Novel (Long Valley Book 4) by Erin Wright

Major Dad: An Older Man Single Dad Military Romance by Mia Madison

The Right to Remain Single: A Ghostly Mystery Romance Novella by Monajem, Barbara

Fixed Infatuation by Stacy Borel

Christmas Kiss by Smeltzer, M.A.

Claiming Chastity: A Fake Marriage Romance by Tia Siren, Candy Stone