Free Read Novels Online Home

The Love Song of Sawyer Bell (Tour Dates Book 1) by Avon Gale (15)

Luckily, all the van needed was a coolant flush and to replace a leaky hose, and that was a quick fix, meaning they weren’t going to put any of their upcoming shows in jeopardy. It meant adding a night in Dallas, but Vix couldn’t say she was sorry about that, since it gave her some time alone with Sawyer.

They both promptly took showers after arriving in the room, but this time they weren’t hot ones. Vix cranked the air up, and they flopped down on the bed, both in their underwear and tank tops, letting the coolness soak into their skin. Waiting for that tow truck in the summer sun had been brutal. Seriously, fuck Texas.

Sawyer had been quiet since talking to her mom, and Vix knew that she’d speak when she was ready. Vix glanced over at the violin case, lying on the spare bed, and wondered if she should encourage Sawyer to play something.

“I think I knew they’d understand,” said Sawyer, before Vix could suggest a private concert. “I think that’s why I didn’t tell them.” She turned toward Vix. “Isn’t that fucked up?”

“Nah.” Vix shrugged. It had never seemed like Sawyer’s parents were the overinvested stage parents you saw on television. The person who was hardest on Sawyer was Sawyer herself. “I’m a little creeped out by your high school orchestra teacher Googling you, though.”

Sawyer smiled briefly. “Ratted out by the authorities. And I was so close to getting away with it too, see?” She said the last in a mock-twenties gangster accent.

“You would have, if it weren’t for that meddling teacher.” Vix pushed up on her elbows. “So they’re cool, and they’re coming to the show in Memphis.”

Sawyer nodded. Her eyes looked far away, an unhappy tension still playing over her features. “Yeah.”

“You aren’t happy? You are happy? What are you feeling right now, exactly, because it seems like maybe you should be less stressed?” Vix raised her eyebrows. “Although, you know, I get the whole thing about wanting to be rebellious and having no one react as strongly as you want them to.”

Sawyer stared at her. Her smile was genuine. “You don’t have the chops or the life experience to be that smart, Victoria.”

Vix stuck her tongue out, happy to see Sawyer smile. “Stop trying to sound like a Pitchfork writer. Did you want them to be mad? Tell you that you’re wasting your life by not going back to Juilliard?”

She was absolutely not going to consider what that might mean for the two of them. No.

“No. They said when I got back, they’d help me find someplace I could transfer.”

“Okay,” said Vix, slowly.

Sawyer rested her hands on her stomach. She was staring straight ahead. “I don’t want to go to college, though. Anywhere. I want to do what I’m doing, and play music that I like.”

Vix blinked. “Are you saying— Wait, what?”

“If you guys want me to stick around, that is. I want to be a part of the band.”

Vix wondered why she wasn’t squealing gleefully and pouncing on Sawyer, happy at the thought of having her girlfriend on tour with her all the time.

Because what if this ends up like you and Jeff? What if you end up hating each other, and you lose your band and your music?

“Don’t sound excited,” Sawyer deadpanned. She wasn’t smiling anymore. “If you don’t think it’s a good idea, say so.”

“I— It’s not that I don’t love the idea of playing music with you.” Vix wasn’t sure they should be having this conversation right now, but when else would they have the opportunity and the privacy? “It has nothing to do with that. This is a hard life, Sawyer. And it’s gonna be like this for a long time, maybe always. There’s no guarantee we’ll ever make it any bigger than we already are. Hell, I’d be thrilled if we made it to Racer’s level.”

“It doesn’t bother you,” Sawyer said. “The idea of things being this way, with the touring and the van and all the rest of it. Does it?”

“Well, I mean, a little. Like, it’d be sweet to have a tour bus, you know? But no, I pretty much knew what I was signing up for when I decided this was what I wanted.” Vix chewed on her bottom lip. “I’m going to say something, and I don’t think you’re going to like hearing it.”

Sawyer glanced up at her. “Good, that’s totally what I want right now.” She settled her hands behind her head.

“We don’t have to talk.” Vix reached out and traced her fingers over Sawyer’s skin. “I can cheer you up with sex and we can save the conversation for later.”

Sawyer shook her head. “Nice idea, but now that you said that, I have to hear what you were going to say. Protip, Victoria—saying ‘I’m gonna say something you don’t want to hear’ and following it up with, ‘or we could have sex’ is, like, the worst buzzkill.”

Vix rolled her eyes and rubbed Sawyer’s stomach. “Okay, but I want it out there that I gave you the option.”

“Just say it.” Sawyer turned her head away. “I know what it is, anyway.”

“Then I don’t have to say it,” Vix countered.

Sawyer was quiet, and she didn’t look back at Vix. But she reached out and curled her fingers around Vix’s. “I want to hear you say it.”

“Fine. You thought you wanted Juilliard too. And then you were miserable for, what, three years? And hung in there because you thought you had to?” Vix took a deep breath. “Hey. Look at me.”

Sawyer turned, and she looked young—wide eyes glittering with tears, lips pressed tight together and trembling.

“I don’t want to ever be the reason you’re miserable, Sawyer.”

Sawyer disentangled her hand from Vix’s and wiped at the tears spilling over her lashes and onto her cheeks. “I know.”

Vix wasn’t sure she did, but she didn’t press. One thing at a time, here. “Being with the band full-time means you don’t have a life, pretty much. You have us, the van, and shows. In between tours, you do your laundry and get ready for the next one. About the only time we’ll ever be in one place is when I’m writing new stuff, and then you have to find a place to live and a way to keep yourself fed. There’s no health insurance. There’s no insurance for anything, really.”

There’s no insurance we’ll stay together, either.

Sawyer swallowed hard, but didn’t speak.

Vix reached up and wiped tears off Sawyer’s cheekbones with her thumb. “I love having you on tour with us. I love talking about stupid shit with you, and I seriously love your sense of humor and how it’s, like, seven thousand times more sophisticated than fart jokes.”

Sawyer gave a tiny hiccup of a laugh at that.

“And yeah, I mean, the sex is great too. You’re hot as hell and getting to be a menace with that strap-on.” She smiled, then went hell-bent for leather because why the hell not? “And Sawyer? I love you.”

And that was why Vix didn’t think it was a good idea for Sawyer to join the band. But how could she say that? You couldn’t tell someone you loved them and then follow it up with, I love you, but I don’t want to be with you all the time.

Sawyer dashed at her tears again. “I can’t believe you said you loved me while I was crying.”

Vix gave a little shrug and tried a smile. “I’m a horrible girlfriend, what can I say?”

“You’re not. Then again, you’re the only one I’ve ever had, so.” Sawyer sat up, looking pretty and miserable. “I love you too. Obviously. I mean, I’m sure you knew that.”

“This is why I write the music,” Vix murmured, leaning in to kiss her. Sawyer tasted salty like her tears and minty like toothpaste. “I’m glad you’re not mad at me.”

“I’m not mad.” They repositioned themselves so they were lying down again, moving easily into each other’s space, limbs tangling together. Now that the heat of the Texas day had been sufficiently chilled away, it was starting to get unpleasantly cold in the room.

“It would be different if I did all that for someone else, you know?” Sawyer asked, head on Vix’s shoulder. “If I auditioned for Juilliard because I was trying to live up to my parents’ expectations or whatever. It’s worse because I wanted it. I wanted it, I got it, and I hated it. It was like . . . a betrayal, I guess. I kept waiting for it to be better, because it was supposed to be better, damn it. And it never did. I kept hating it, and being mad at myself for hating it, and I wasted three years of my life because I couldn’t walk away.”

She looked at Vix. “And I know what you’re saying. That I’ll want this, and then I won’t want to walk away if I need to. Because my track record with that is shit.”

Vix didn’t know what to say. “Promise me that you’ll think about this, okay?” Vix took a deep breath. “Don’t let this thing with us be the reason you give up school and sign on for tour vans and truck stop showers. You and me . . . we can make it work. Even if you’re in school.”

She could tell Sawyer was surprised by that. “I didn’t think you’d want that.”

“I mean, it’ll suck. And if you say something about me needing to hook up with men to sate my rampant bisexual desires, we’re gonna watch some YouTube videos that explain why that’s bullshit.” Vix snuggled closer, wanting to get up and turn off the air but too cold to consider moving away from Sawyer’s body warmth.

“Sexy ones?” At Vix’s snort, Sawyer laughed softly and kissed her. “Not to sate your rampant sexual desires, no. But hey, it’d suck not to get laid regularly, and if that’s my rampant lesbian desires talking, well, there you go. I wouldn’t feel right about you denying that part of yourself—the sexual part, not the bi part. As in, it seems restrictive. And you’re kind of a horndog.”

“Shut up,” Vix scoffed, then bit her gently on the shoulder. “Look who’s talking. But I know what you mean.” She did, too. Sawyer was discovering her sexuality for the first time, and it seemed awful to ask her to repress it all for the rare times they’d see each other if Sawyer was in school somewhere. She groaned. “This is stupid. Why’d we have to fall in love?”

“We’re awesome together?” Sawyer snuggled closer. “I don’t know what the right thing is to do, here.”

“Well, we have a little while left to figure it out,” said Vix.

“Like a week,” Sawyer reminded her.

“That’s an eternity in tour-time,” said Vix. “That’s, like, a million miles of highway, a thousand pee breaks—”

“Look, I can’t help it I drink water so I’m not chronically dehydrated like you, Miss Coke Zero addict.”

Vix continued without stopping. “—and a thousand fart jokes that Kit, Connor, and Jeff will think are hilarious.”

Sawyer made a noise. “Ugh. Don’t remind me.” She yawned, fingers tracing over Vix’s skin. “You have goose bumps.”

“I think I set that thermostat the coldest it will go.” Vix shivered dramatically. “You should turn off the air, though.”

“You turned it on! And set it on polar bear!”

“You’re taller,” said Vix. “It will take you less time to get across the room.”

Sawyer snorted a laugh and disentangled herself from Vix. She gave a purely girlish shriek and dashed across the room to deal with the air. Vix turned the covers back and crawled underneath them.

“I know we had a lot of really intense conversations,” said Sawyer, as she climbed in next to Vix. “But don’t you think it’d be a shame to let this hotel room to go waste?”

Vix did, indeed, think that.

Search

Search

Friend:

Popular Free Online Books

Read books online free novels

Hot Authors

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

Random Novels

Mountain Man Bun (Mountain Men of Linesworth Book 3) by Frankie Love

Tarq by Cass Alexander

Up in Smoke: A King Series Novel by T.M. Frazier

Ignite by Kinley Cole

Lieutenant Commander Stud by Carter, Chance

Special Forces: Operation Alpha: Barbie (Kindle Worlds Novella) (GSG 9 Ciro Book 2) by Kendra Mei Chailyn

Tease (Club Deep #1) by Penny Wylder

Her Knight in Shining Stone (The Gargoyles of New York Book 1) by Tamsin Baker

Little Sister Next Door by Riley Rollins

All For Erica at Christmas (All For Love Book 1) by Elisa Leigh, MK Moore

Gambit (Games of Chance Series Book 1) by T.L. Cannon

Cyclone: A Paranormal Romance (Savage Brotherhood MC Book 7) by Jasmine Wylder

Gabe's Revenge (McLeod Security Book 2) by Doris O'Connor

Alien Dragon by Sophie Stern

Desire for Days (Sexy in Spades Book 3) by Maggie Dallen

Right Man/ Wrong Groom: Paradise Cove Series - Destination Wedding Book 1 by Patrice Wilton

Summer by the Lake by Kay Gordon

Hearts on Air by L.H. Cosway

Bear Bait (Hero Mine Book 1) by Harmony Raines

Steele by Kelly Gendron