The Purest Hook (Second Circle Tattoos #3)

“It’s time to go,” yelled a man in a tight-fitting black polo shirt.

The guys walked on ahead of Dred. They always did. He’d been the driving force behind the band, they had argued when he’d suggested switching up the order. So as usual, he would go last. The telltale screams from the fans echoed around the arena.

He let go of her hand and followed them toward the stage but paused as he reached the edge of the curtain.

“Hey, Pix,” he shouted. “So we progressed, right? We hung in my room and I kissed your pretty little fingertips. When are you finally going to agree to go on a date with me?”

Pixie shooed him on to the stage. “Go, your fans are waiting.”

“Not stepping onstage without an answer, gorgeous.”

He could hear the crowd.

“Dred! Dred! Dred!”

Pixie shook her head and looked up at him through her bangs. “When I’m a millionaire.”

Dred threw his head back and laughed. “Good one, Pix. I could probably make that happen.”

He turned and walked onto the stage. What had started out as pure sexual interest was quickly developing. Her quirky musical tastes, the easy way she took care of people, and the fact she hadn’t fallen at his feet all added up to something that scared him a little. He wasn’t really equipped to deliver on anything more than bedtime fun and hot conversation, but for once, he considered trying.

Grabbing his guitar off one of the roadies, he raised his other hand in the air. The crowd erupted, moving en masse toward the stage. A wave of energy surged over him. To his left, Elliott stood, his signature Schecter guitar on a shorter strap to give him easy access to the upper frets. To his right, Nikan was jumping on the balls of his feet, yelling at the crowd, while Jordan stood further back, away from the brightest lights and pyrotechnics.

Dred took a deep breath. He lived for this. For this moment when they could pour their souls out to nearly twenty thousand people.

The lights flashed toward the audience, and his fingers found their place on the strings. Lennon cracked his sticks together, the timing of the four count set his own heart pounding. On the first beat, all four guitars strummed the opening chords of a song they’d written in his bedroom twelve years ago. Dred leaned into the microphone and growled out the guttural vocals.

As he reached the chorus, he turned toward Pixie, more relieved than he should be to find her staring at him. She held his gaze as he let out a high scream. Her eyes widened and she bit her lip. Shit, what was the next line? He flicked through the lyrics in his head, heard Elliott come in with harmony, and picked it up from there.

Pixie looked like she was giggling, and he smiled at her before he faced the crowd.

Performing for thirteen years, not once had he forgotten his lyrics. Nikan laughed like an idiot next to him and waited for the instrumental break for him to step away from the mic so they could play their guitars together.

The mass of bodies in front of the stage turned into a surging swaying mass. He kept an eye on the crowd. A bit of moshing was one thing, but no way would he let a wall of death fly. He wanted everyone to leave the stadium in one piece.

They blew through the rest of the set, and before he knew it, their main playlist was done.

“It’s time for us to go,” he yelled. The crowd screamed. “Thanks for coming out tonight. This tour has been fucking crazy, see you soon, Miami.”

A young woman with dark hair and a red bra poking out of a black leather vest held up a sign. CALL ME. Her cell phone number was listed underneath. He smiled at her, but his mind was somewhere offstage where Pixie was surrounded by the rest of the Second Circle crew. They were her family, like the band was his. Lennon came from behind the drum kit, and they put their arms round each other.

Pyrotechnics went off all the way around the stage as the crowd screamed and cheered. He hugged each of the guys, then ran off the stage to pull Pixie from Harper and Drea. The break between the end of the act and the encore was approximately four minutes, and he had plans to use them wisely.

Pixie looked at him, her eyes wide in shock as he grabbed her hand.

“Quick,” he said to her, tugging her down the stage steps. There was no way he could make it back to his dressing room in time, so he hurried them along the black curtain that surrounded the stage into a darkened corner. He pushed her gently against the wall, trapping her in his arms.

“Watching you watch me, Pix . . . drove me crazy. You going to let me kiss you?” he begged. “Please.”

Scarlett Cole's books