Free Read Novels Online Home

Sweet Crazy Song: A Small Town Rockstar Romance (Kings of Crown Creek Book 2) by Vivian Lux (4)

Ruby

My email was up on my classroom computer. Three notes from parents and a faculty wide announcement were all waiting for my responses. But I was just staring at the screen, my finger hovering over my mouse. Frozen in place.

Gid wasn't in the music room right now. I could feel his absence like a missing tooth, and I couldn't keep my mind from probing that aching, empty space. He wasn't there. He wasn't going to be in the break room later with my coffee already poured and ready. He wasn't here in the school with me. He was ashes in an urn.

The last email Gideon has sent me was dated six days ago. And as I read and re-read it, I kept waiting for the tears to come, but they seemed to have all dried up, leaving only that physical ache.

It didn't seem fair that the last note I got from my mentor wasn't even spelled right. I could tell he was dashing it off real quickly, in a hurry to head out and get home. "Gonna be playing the Crown Tavern Sat. If your not busy, come cheer an old man on."

Too much of a hurry. This email was sent the day he died. He never played that show.

Half of me was filled with sorrow to see a ghost in my inbox. The other half was filled with anger that his last words to me were so mundane. He had no idea that he was going to die. It was as much of a surprise to him as it was to all of us that he hit that icy patch on Whalen Station Road. One single car, alone on the highway, wrapped around a telephone pole.

He hadn't hit anyone else, he hadn't hurt anyone's property or anything on his way out, but he did manage to knock out cable for the whole west side of town. He would have like that, I think. More of a fitting tribute than the fussy urn Izzy had picked out.

I clicked on the email and dragged it over to the side, into a folder marked "Save." I never looked through that folder. I just felt comforted knowing that it was there. That my digital memories sat ready for me to run through them, whenever I felt brave enough to venture into them once more. Until then, I'd keep them safe.

A soft knock startled me out of my funk. I looked up to see Madison Keely with her perpetually running nose staring across the top of my desk. Which meant that...

"Good morning," her father said softly.

I sat up straighter, smoothing my hand down my skirt and trying to find my smile.

Luke Keely stood in the doorway, smiling back. His light eyes looked bleary, but his ruddy face was cheerful enough.

He was also wearing a red shirt today. A red shirt to go with his red face. Totally the wrong color for him. I smiled for a moment as Claire's loud, drunken manifesto from our last girls' night played out in my head. And they expect us to dress all cute while most of them have no more fashion sense than a toddler!

Jonah definitely knows how to dress though. That thought popped into my head, buzzing around like an annoying mosquito. I reminded myself that a stylist most likely chose his clothes for him, but there was no denying he wore them well.

Poor Luke. You could tell he didn't have a wife at home to act as a stylist for him.

And the way he acted around me, I could tell he was hoping to change that problem. "Morning Maddy!" I cooed to his daughter. "Could you go hang your stuff in your cubby?"

She nodded, all solemn big eyes. "And let's wipe that nose, okay honey?" I told her, handing her a tissue.

"Right," Luke said, patting his pockets. "I never remember to pack Kleenex. Her mom always had them in her purse because she - "

"It's fine," I said, cutting him off before he could launch into the spiel about his ex. Madison's mother apparently was in league with the Devil himself, to hear Luke tell it. I wasn't exactly sure how to tell him that shit-talking about his ex did not make me eager to accept his offers to take me out for drinks after work.

Luckily Luke was quick on the uptake. "Sorry we're a little early today. Maddy decided that four thirty eight was a good time for us to be up and at 'em."

Maybe other schools, in bigger towns, had closed door policies. Maybe other schools in bigger towns had organized drop-off and pick-up times where parents couldn't just wander into the school at all hours and chat up the teachers. But Crown Creek Primary was not that kind of school.

And I wasn't the kind of teacher who could enforce that sort of discipline anyway. With the students, sure. But not the parents. I related a lot better to kids than these people who were supposed to be my peers.

"You're going to be tired, Maddy!" I said brightly, turning away from Luke. "Are you going to have a good day today?"

"Yes, Miss Riley," she mumbled sleepily.

I turned back to Luke who shrugged helplessly, tugging at my heart. He knew I had a soft spot for his kid. "She's been doing really well in spite of the issues at home," I told him. "You're doing a great job."

The corner of his mouth flicked up. "I'd love to hear more about it," he said with a shy smile. "Over drinks?"

I swallowed. I'd been dancing around the idea of going out with Luke Keely since the school year began. Gideon had called him my "ardent swain." He'd joke about bringing a baseball bat with him, fending off my suitors and I laugh and turn red and remind him that he wasn't my father. And then his eyes would get all soft and he'd remind me that nobody could replace him.

I looked down, blinking at the flood of memories. First my real dad, then my surrogate dad. Life seemed determined to deny me father figures.

"Sure," I finally said, remembering that Luke was waiting for an answer. "I'll let you know when it's a good time, okay?"

"Right sure," he said, immediately contrite. "I'm sorry, by the way. Gideon was a good guy."

I couldn't remember ever telling Luke Keely I was friends with Gideon King, but it was a small town. He probably knew way more about me than I wanted him to.

At that, another harried looking parent showed up at my door. Soon my classroom was filling up. Lisbeth, my student teacher showed up right in time to help little kindergartners with giant book bags shrug out of their winter coats and direct muddy boots towards the cubbies.

Outside in the hall, a close knot of solemn looking women in long denim skirts floated past.

Dee, whose classroom was next to mine, appeared in my doorway with a mug of coffee and wide eyes. "You see that?" she stage-whispered, pointing down the hallways.

I leaned out into the hall, unable to keep from staring. The women were all wearing the signature dark, homesewn looking clothes that marked them as part of the breakaway religious sect. "God's Chosen in public schools." I shook my head. "Wow. The district must have caught up with them."

"Their bogus 'homeschooling program' must not have passed state requirements," Dee sniffed. We watched as a few solemn children separated from the equally solemn adults. There was none of the usual bluster and tears from the mothers. I recognized the two hands on the shoulders blessing from running into the Chosen around town. Their community clung to the south end of Crown Creek, on land donated by a rich farmer who'd fallen under the sway of their leader. It was a sad cluster of houses that couldn't possibly be up to code.

But the sight of Chosen was not too surprising, not around town anyway. What was surprising was seeing them here in the schools. "Wonder if the new school board stopped taking the bribes?"

"Dr. Schneider is a stickler and I doubt the threat of eternal damnation is enough to keep her off getting kids an education." I liked our new board director. With her straight across bangs and diminutive stature, she looked more like a high schooler than someone in charge of the high school and I think she relished the startled reaction people gave her when she spoke up. I could only imagine the hell she'd given the Chosen's fussy elders. "Seriously though, they didn't think to tell us? What are we going to do with these kids?"

"I only see five. Hopefully that's it."

"I know. They are not going to fit in. It's going to be tough."

Dee glanced at me. "You doing okay? I'm sorry I couldn't come to the funeral, Kayleigh was throwing up."

"Oh no, again?"

"This place is a petri dish. She's been sick since she started." Dee's daughter was in the other kindergarten class. "I'm just waiting for my turn." She ran her hand down her belly. "Stomach flu is my diet plan these days," she grinned, lifting her shirt to reveal a thin line of toned tummy. Dee was a demon runner.

"Don't let them see you," I whispered, glancing at the knot of Chosen women who were hanging in the hallway, seemingly uncertain about leaving their kids in our heretical care. I lifted my fingers in a tentative wave and was rewarded with tight, cramped smiles. "Your belly is totally sinful. They're gonna pray for your soul," I whispered to Dee.

"Good, I need all the help I can get," Dee grinned. She put her hand on my shoulder. "Gid was an awesome guy. Have you listened to the tapes yet?"

I knew what she meant but I shook my head. "Not since - " I trailed off and blinked, my eyes suddenly filling.

"Of course. Yeah not since he -"

"Right."

"I'm glad he gave them to you though. When you're ready, you can hear him singing any time you want. Pretty cool he wanted to pass his recordings on to you."

I nodded, but the same niggling feeling I'd had since he handed me the box tickled at my brain again. When Gideon had handed me the box full of old tapes and demos, I asked him point blank why he wasn't giving these to his nephews. He'd laughed it off, saying that he could jam with them any time. Make new music just as soon as they got home.

They hadn't come home quick enough. And now the only thing left of his music was in a box in my living room. He'd given it to me, but it felt wrong to hold on to it now that he was gone. But it also felt wrong to bring it over to the Kings. I felt protective, wanting to curl myself over that cardboard box and shield the remnants of Gid left in the world. What if the Kings didn't want it? Or worse, what if they didn't appreciate it the way they should?

I found myself wishing like hell I could run up to the music room and ask Gideon what he thought. He would know the right thing to do, for sure.

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, Elizabeth Lennox, Leslie North, Amy Brent, Frankie Love, Bella Forrest, Jordan Silver, C.M. Steele, Madison Faye, Jenika Snow, Dale Mayer, Mia Ford, Kathi S. Barton, Michelle Love, Piper Davenport, Sloane Meyers, Delilah Devlin, Amelia Jade,

Random Novels

Watcher (The Shades Saga Book 1) by Knox, Ana

The Billionaire From Portland: A Sexy BWWM Billionaire Romance (United States Of Billionaires Book 10) by Simply BWWM, Lena Skye

Awakening Of A Soul Keeper: Prequel To The Soul Keeper Series by Brienne Dubh

How to Dance an Undead Waltz (The Beginner's Guide to Necromancy Book 4) by Hailey Edwards

Definite by Ryan, Kaylee

Mountain Daddies Secret Virgin Girl: A Virgin's Secret Romance Between 2 Mountain Men by Sara Adams

Royal Bastard: A Bad Boy Royal Romance by Emilia Beaumont

The Gender Game 2: The Gender Secret by Bella Forrest

Endless: Dragon Wars, Book Five by Rebecca Royce

The Four Horsemen: Reckoning by LJ Swallow

Tyrant by T.M. Frazier

Cocky Roommate by Claire Kingsley

Because You're Mine (Psychological Thriller) by Marin Montgomery

Never Say I Love You by Pennza, Amy

Bad Bad Bear Dad: A Fated Mate Romance by Amelia Jade

Outlaw (The Hidden Planet Book 3) by Sophie Stern

His Baby: A Babycrazy Romance by Cassandra Dee, Kendall Blake

Here Comes The Groom: Special Forces #1 by Karina Bliss

Sleeping Beauty (Not Quite the Fairy Tale Book 7) by May Sage

Shiftr: Swipe Left for Love (Olsen) BBW Bear Shifter Romance (Hope Valley BBW Dating App Romance Book 11) by Ariana Hawkes