âMorning.â
I smile at Josh as he enters the kitchen and makes a beeline for the coffee maker.
âHey. What time did you get home last night? I didnât hear you come in.â
He pours coffee into his favorite mug and leans against the kitchen counter. âIt was late. Like two a.m.â
âOoh. So the date went well?â
He shrugs. âEh. She was okay.â
Putting my book down, I look at him across the room, wearing gray sweatpants and a white V-neck T-shirt. The front of his blond hair is longer now, hanging down almost to his eyes, and it makes him look edgy and sexy. Heâs been doing a lot of photoshoots lately and even landed a hair product commercial not too long ago.
âJust okay?
âShe has a lot of shoes.â
I raise an eyebrow at him. âDo you feel threatened by shoes?â
âNo, seriously, Piper. She has about a thousand pairs of shoes. She collects them. She has an entire room in her condo just for shoes. Theyâre all sorted by color and heel height. It was scary.â
âWell it could be worse. She could collect dolls,â I tease.
âI wouldâve jumped out the window. I love fashion, but having that many of anything isnât normal.â
âItâs expensive, too.â
âNo doubt. They were all expensive brands. I donât know how she can even afford that many shoes.â
âMaybe she steals them.â
He gulps the last of his coffee and puts his mug in the dishwasher.
âIâm not going to see her again. I tried. Sheâs nice but I think sheâs got hoarder potential or at the very least will run me into debt in six months flat.â
âYou do realize you have double the dating pool and you still canât find someone you like? Maybe youâre being too picky?â
Shrugging, he looks out the window into the backyard. âIâm not settling for someone just to be with someone. Iâm happy. I have friends, I have family, I have you and Lyric. I donât need a shoe hoarder or a guy who wants me to call him Daddy. Iâm all set.â He turns back to me. âWhereâs Lyric?â
âSheâs in the playroom with Acorn doing that puzzle you gave her.â
âHave you been online this morning? Read any of the entertainment news?â
I narrow my eyes at him, suspicious of his random questions. âNo⦠I havenât been on my laptop yet. Why?â
âYou might want to. Looks like your boyâs on a bender.â
âWhat are you talking about?â
He just shakes his head. âGo look. Iâll be out raking the backyard if you want to talk.â
Dread sends a feverish chill through me as I check on Lyric and then retrieve my laptop from where I left it on the coffee table last night. Sitting on the couch, I pull it onto my lap, wait impatiently for the dial-up to connect, and then open up my AOL account. I click on the Entertainment section and there it is.
The beginning of the downfall.
Thousands of Las Vegas concert-goes were disappointed and rightfully outraged last week when No Tomorrow front man repeatedly botched his own lyrics, cursed at fans, and stumbled around on stage in a clear state of intoxication before walking off stage mid-concert and refusing to come back.
Sources confirmed Von Bleu then disappeared with no contact for four days and was found wandering incoherently in the desert. He is currently hospitalized for dehydration and exposure but is in stable condition.
Back-up vocalist Reece Blackstone publicly apologized to No Tomorrow fans for canceling the last three shows of the tour and claims Blue has been suffering a breakdown from extreme stress coupled with a recent shoulder injury. He advised that Blue is receiving treatment and they will resume working on their new album soon.
Thereâs a video alongside the article, and I immediately regret clicking on it. Like a train wreck, I canât look away from the ugliness of it. Even though I just read the details of his behavior, seeing him so out of control on stage, a complete disheveled drunken mess, barely able to stand or speakâlet alone singâis devastating and cringeworthy. Fans are yelling and booing at him, and I can understand why. The man stumbling around is nothing like the soft spoken, charismatic vocalist they came to see.
I want to bleach my brain. The videos and photographs make me nauseous on so many levels. And that whole disappearing thing. Just the thought of him walking into the desert, most likely with nothing but his guitar and his backpack, is disturbing.
Worried, I chew my thumbnail while I try to process my thoughts. I want to call or email Reece and make sure Blue is really okay, but he may tell me things I donât want to hear. Iâm not sure I can be trusted to stay away if Reece tells me Blue is in a lot worse shape than this news article is letting on. And then what? Do I fly out there to see him? Get dragged further into this spiral of push and pull with him? If heâs this much of a mess, it will destroy me to leave him. Iâll want to bring him home with me and try to fix him. And him? Heâll probably fight me like a wild animal and ricochet between making me leave and begging me to stay. But other than Reece, who else does he have? What if he needs me?
I open up my email program and search for Reeceâs email address, which I added to my contacts the day he came to talk to me and gave me his card.
âMommy?â
I look up from the screen. Josh holds Lyric in the doorway. Acorn is beside them. âUncle Josh is gonna teach me to plant flowers. Will you come, too?â
I hover my fingers over the keyboard for a few seconds, and then I exit out of the email. Standing, I smile at my beautiful baby girl. âI would love that,â I reply, catching Joshâs slight approving nod.
I need to focus on the good things in my life, and theyâre all right here in front of me.