This isn’t an angsty, tear-your-heart-out, ugly-cry romance. This is a
love story.
Kira Abelman forgot what it was like to have fun. She spent her teens at
the front of the stage cheering for Immortal Angel at every show. Her life had
been filled with excitement and adrenaline. Now, as A&R rep for her
father’s record company, she’s overworked, overtired and spread thin.
A fleeting encounter with a sexy, bearded and tattooed roadie lights up
her boring life with passion. But with 3,000 miles between them and careers
that send them in different directions, can Kira finally get her happily ever
after and prove that fairy tales do come true?
Minutes later, she stood on the curb staring into the eyes of a man she’d
met 48 hours ago. Never had someone had such a profound effect on her before or
changed her life in such a short time. She found the fun and carefree girl she
used to be, without knowing she’d lost her. She’d let her career consume her
time and become her main priority, but not anymore. Brett showed her how to
enjoy life again, and she was going to take advantage of it. “Thank you for the
most remarkable few days I’ve ever had. You’re an amazing man.”
“You’re an amazing woman.” He wrinkled his brow and frowned. “Why does
this sound like goodbye?”
“It is goodbye, Brett. We live on opposite sides of the country. You’re
off touring with bands. I’m in New York buried up to my eyeballs in work.”
“I thought we’d keep in touch.”
“I want to,” she said, weakly. “But . . .” She didn’t need to tell him
what would happen. They’d exchange a few phone calls. Time between calls would
lengthen until they were just a memory. Maybe they’d get to see each other once
or twice before time and distance pulled them apart. She refused to be just a
quick roll in the sheets whenever they happened to be in the same city at the
same time. She wanted a relationship. Companionship. The long-distance thing
never worked, and she wasn’t going to put her heart through the wringer. It was
better to have a clean break now.
She stared into his expressive brown eyes, and her heart hurt. He looked
so sad. His hard and confident gaze turned soft and pleading, and she couldn’t
hurt him with the truth. She cupped his face in her hands, purposely running
the tips of her fingers through the grain of his beard. She rubbed her cheek
against it so she wouldn’t forget what it felt like. It was a soft, bristly
feeling that she would reminisce about for a long time to come.
“Call me when you get to New York,” he whispered in her ear.
She nodded. “I will.”
With his hands pressed against the small of her back, he brushed his lips
against hers in a soft kiss filled with passion. His probing tongue pushed
deeper and bathed her mouth with a last kiss. She savored it, memorized every
swirl of his tongue, the way his arms felt around her, and the way his chest
pressed against hers. She moaned at the way his facial hair tickled her cheek
as he rotated his mouth in a slow circle.
She swore she wouldn’t cry, but she had no control over the tears that
swelled on her lower lids. It was crazy that he had this effect on her after
only two days. “I’m gonna miss you.”
“This isn’t goodbye.” His voice was shaky with emotion and barely audible
as he repeated, “This isn’t goodbye.”
It was, but she didn’t want to say it out loud. “Thank you,” she
whispered. “For reminding me life was passing me by.”
He kissed the tips of her fingers on each hand, hurriedly, as if he
wanted to taste every bit of her before she left.
“Is the tour coming to the East Coast at all?” she asked, against her
better judgment.
“No. We’re headed back west.”
“Oh.” She dropped her gaze, and he lifted her chin with his knuckle.
“This isn’t goodbye.”
Jenna Galicki writes in multiple genres including m/m/f, m/f, and m/m. She is predominantly known for her Radical Rock Stars Series. The Prince of Punk Rock (Radical Rock Stars Book 1) was a finalist in the 2015 Bisexual Book Awards.
A native New Yorker, she now resides in Southern California. She's a Rottweiler enthusiast and an avid music buff. When she's not hunched over a computer, you can find her front row at a rock concert.
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