Once Upon a Sure Thing (Heartbreakers #2)

Clapping rings loud in my ears.

Jackson, Miles, and Campbell give a standing O. Jackson holds up his phone, pointing to it, letting me know he caught it on video.

“Chemistry,” the guys all shout, practically in unison.

But I’m not supposed to have chemistry with my best friend.

That’s the problem.

“What the hell just happened here?” I whisper to Ally, befuddled.

Her mouth opens, and her eyes go wide, and she blurts out, “I have an appointment. I need to go.”

She takes off, leaving in her wake a trail of chemistry and coconut and confusion.





Chapter 8





Miller



“Don’t just stand here!” Miles gestures wildly to the door. “Go after her.”

But my feet stay planted as my brain tries to process the new side of Ally. “But she said she had an appointment.”

Campbell guffaws. “She’s your best friend, and she just took off like her ass was on fire. Follow her.”

Jackson gestures to the door too. “Listen to your elder and listen to the younger people who know best. Go!”

I’m not even sure what to say, or if Ally’s upset, but I do what they tell me, bolting from the studio, scanning the hall for the woman in the blonde wig. Or maybe I should be looking for Ally’s brunette hair with that bright purple streak. Maybe she’s yanked off the wig, tossed it in the trash can, darted down an alley, and started climbing up the walls, parkour-style. Or maybe I’ve seen too many movies.

Either way, I rush to the lobby of Platinum Sky and ask the receptionist where Ally went. The kind lady with huge glasses and a happy-to-help grin points to the elevator. “She went thataway.”

And now we’re both living in a comic book panel.

I step into the elevator, stab the G button, and will the lift to move faster. Maybe Ally thinks I’m upset with her?

When I reach the ground floor, I blast by security and out to the street to find Ally standing against the building in the brisk December air, bent at the waist, breathing heavily.

Concern threads through me. I reach for her elbow, and she flinches when I touch her. “Are you okay?”

She waves her hand in front of her, still hunched over. “Needed to get some air.” Her voice comes out soft and a little squeaky.

“Are you sure?”

She nods then lifts her face, the blue eyes I know so well peeking out at me from underneath her vampy wig like Charlize Theron in Atomic Blonde. “Are you mad at me?” she asks in that sweet soprano.

I laugh and shake my head. “No. Why the hell would I be mad at you?”

Her eyes are nervous. “I was worried you’d think I tricked you.”

I rub my hand on her back, and she straightens. “Even if you had sent in an audition tape in full costume with a prosthetic nose and colored contacts and who knows what else, I wouldn’t be mad. In fact, I’d probably think that was awesome. What you did was totally ballsy.”

A hint of a smile appears. “Yeah?”

“Also, for the record, you can pull tricks on me any time because it will literally never bother me.”

She laughs lightly and takes a deep breath, then swallows and meets my eyes. “Sorry I took off. Everything hit me when we finished singing, and I needed to breathe.”

I narrow my eyes and study her, as if I’m conducting a full appraisal. “Chest moving up and down. Air coming in and out. Check. Your oxygen intake system seems functional now.”

“Did you hate it?” Her voice rises as she asks the question, laced with nerves.

I scoff, surprised she’d even think that. “No. I thought you were incredible. I was just kind of shocked that it was you. And I was shocked that we actually sounded decent together.”

That smile of hers widens, occupying as much real estate as it possibly can on her face. “You thought we sounded good together?”

“We had chemistry out the wazoo. Hell, we had it out the kazoo. But what did you think?”

“Of our ’zoos?”

I nod, laughing.

She shakes her head, her sunshine-blonde hair moving perfectly in tandem with her. She shrugs then nods.

“Yes, no, maybe?” I ask, trying to translate her sign language.

“It was hard for me to focus on anything but staying in character. I didn’t think you’d even want to listen if it was just me.”

My brow creases. “Just you?”

She stares me down. “You’ve made it clear you thought we sounded terrible together.”

“It wasn’t unfounded. You’ve heard the way we sang ‘Santa Claus Is Comin’ to Town.’”

“That’s why I wanted to show you I could sing in another style. I wanted to show you what I’m capable of. That’s why I had to audition as someone else—for you to take me seriously.”

Understanding flicks on like a light bulb. It blares so brightly, I nearly squint. Ally doesn’t want to sing with me for kicks. She needs this gig.

My heart goes heavy as concrete in my chest. I want to help her, but I don’t want to lose her. I don’t know how to have both Ally the friend and Ally the bandmate. The first band I played with after the Heartbreakers broke up was a disaster. I started Candid Bandits with my best buddy from college on guitar and me on keyboards. Craig and I knocked out three good tunes before we started butting heads on everything. And I mean every-damn-thing: the style, the practice schedule, the distro plans. We could never get on the same page. I kept making suggestions, but eventually, he let loose and said I was a know-it-all. “You think you know everything because you were in a band before. So what? Things are different now.”

And they were different two weeks later, when he quit and ditched our friendship too.

From Craig to Tiffany, the writing is on the wall. I don’t play well with friends.

“Ally,” I say softly. “Of course I take you seriously, but do you really think we should form a duo together?”

Her expression falls, morphing from adrenaline-fueled excitement to fresh disappointment. “You don’t? I thought you liked how I sang as Honey.”

“I loved it. But I don’t want to lose you as a friend.”

She stares at me as if I’m speaking Turkish. “How would you lose me as a friend by singing with me?”

“You know what happened with Craig?” I ask, reminding her, since I’m pretty sure Ally knows all my stories. She knows about the Tiffany debacle too. “That’s what worries me. My best bud from college is persona non grata. The drummer I dated slaughtered my Xbox. It seems easy to play or sing together with a friend, but then you have to agree on so many things that are more important than whether you want to see Love, Simon or Ready Player One.”

She whispers, “Love, Simon.”

I whisper back, “Ready Player One.” Then I sigh. “That’s my point. It’s like going into business with your bud. Everyone thinks it’s a good idea on the surface. But what happens when you disagree? Or you want to go in different directions?”

“How did you deal with it when it was your brothers?” she asks, with an earnestness that nearly breaks me.

Because they’re my brothers, I want to say. Because we’re family. That’s the difference—they’re stuck with me. She has the choice to ditch me anytime. “Because when I was a dick, they couldn’t disown me. I can’t bear the thought that you’d realize I’m really an asshole to work with. And I am. I’m a total asshole as a bandmate.”

She quirks up the corners of her lips, but it’s not a smile. It’s more like she’s trying to make sense of me. “And you don’t want me to be exposed to the butthead side of you?”

“Yes,” I say, pleading. “If we play together, something could happen to our friendship.”

She seems to fasten on a smile. “I get it.”

“I’m sorry.” I reach for her shoulder, squeezing it.

She side-eyes my hand. “Miller,” she says, in that voice women use when they’re going to put men in their place. “This isn’t an I’m sorry moment. We’re all good.”

“I feel bad though.”