Somewhere around the time I was trying to convince Haley to take the deal it dawned on me how much of a raw deal Davis gave me with the bet. He played me for a dope, drawing me in with the one thing he could: Lexi. And like the big dumb wrecking ball that I am I walked straight into it.
The one thing Davis didn’t consider, though, is that I’m also damned good at what I do. If I pull this off, it wouldn’t be the first time I’d achieved something nobody thought I could. One month to get a single into the charts sounds impossible, but taking it one step at a time isn’t. That’s where I come into my own; getting my hands dirty, making things happen, dragging myself and everyone around me up the mountain, inch by inch.
I pace up and down outside the best recording studio in Hollywood, punching my fist into my hand, my body tense, spoiling for a fight. I feel like I’ve got a bucket of adrenaline whizzing around inside of me. I roll my shoulders and wind my neck, trying to loosen myself up.
Eventually, Haley arrives. I hear her car before I see it, a sputtering, clattering Datsun with three differently-colored body panels on it. It jerks and rolls into the parking lot before stopping and farting out a thick puff of black smoke. Haley steps out with a smile and a kind of laid-back beauty that deserves way more than that Datsun.
“You made it,” I smile.
I walk over to her and give her a quick hug before placing a hand softly on her back and starting to guide her toward the studio.
“Wait. My guitar’s in the back seat,” Haley starts, pulling away from me.
“Shh, you won’t need that. We’ve got everything you need inside.”
“Okay,” she says, casting a backward glance at the guitar case in her car.
“You’re gonna love it. Trust me. I’ve got a great set-up for you,” I say, opening the big glass door for her and ushering her down the corridor. “It doesn’t get much better than this. Twelve of the top fifteen number one singles this year were recorded here.”
“Wow.” Her breath rushes out in an awed gasp as she eyes the gold records lining the walls.
I stop and turn to face her. “It doesn’t get much better than this. There’s a six-month waiting list to get just half an hour in here.”
She smiles nervously. “How did you book it so soon?”
“A combination of persuasiveness, old favors owed, and threats. Not necessarily in that order.”
I continue walking and push through the control room door, holding it open for her as she steps inside slowly.
“Haley,” I say, as the three men milling in front of the mixing board stand up and come forward. “This is Baptiste,” I say, and the crisply-dressed, boyishly-handsome man swaggers forward and tips his baseball cap in a gesture that would look ridiculous if he wasn’t so naturally cool. “You probably know him already.”
“Of course,” she says, as if dazed, “you’re like on every record on the radio right now.”
“Business is branding,” he says, with a half-smile.
“This is Duke, a guy you definitely won’t have heard of,” I say, nodding toward the tall, skinny hipster with shoulder-length, lank blonde hair. “But he’s had a part to play in more than a few songs in the top ten for the past five years.”
“Pleased to meet you,” he says, shyly.
Haley nods in reply.
“And Dennis, the best engineer since Geoff Emerick.”
Haley’s mouth falls open as I invoke the name of the engineer who worked with The Beatles.
“Hey,” the short, grumpy-looking guy in plaid says nonchalantly.
“Hi,” Haley says, meekly, her eyes big as saucers.
“What do you think of the studio?” Baptiste asks, eyeing Haley with curious interest.
“It’s…” Haley looks around at the stylishly-designed equipment and trendy seating that fills the room, then glances through the glass toward the gigantic recording booth’s array of neatly-arranged instruments, pedals, and microphones. “It’s really…high-tech.”
“Wait til you hear the song,” I say, after the guys take their seats again. “It’s a guaranteed hit. It’s been knocking around for months, and the only reason it isn’t out already is the gigantic bidding war going on over it.”
“Um…thanks?” Her expression is slightly confused, but I figure it’s probably just that she’s overwhelmed. I grin.
“I did everything I could to get this song for you, Haley. It’s perfect. Dennis, cue it up.”
I watch Haley’s face as the music starts, a winding electronic melody that you can’t get out of your head if you hear it just once, a beat that drops with enough oomph to keep every club goer moving from here to Berlin, then a hook – sung by Baptiste on the demo – that no teenage girl on the planet could resist.
Baptiste, Duke, and I rock our heads to the impulsive, driving rhythm. Haley’s face barely moves. I gesture for Dennis to cut the music and put my hand on her shoulder.
“Haley…you okay?”