Page 1 of Lead




  Lead

  A Stage Dive Novel

  Kylie Scott

  PAN BOOKS

  About LEAD: Stage Dive 3

  Stay up all night with the sexy rockers in Stage Dive, the epic New Adult series from New York Times bestselling author Kylie Scott, author of Lick and Play.

  As the lead singer of Stage Dive, Jimmy is used to getting whatever he wants, whenever he wants it, whether it's booze, drugs, or women. However, when a PR disaster serves as a wake-up call about his life and lands him in rehab, he finds himself with Lena, a new assistant to keep him out of trouble.

  Lena's not willing to take any crap from the sexy rocker and is determined to keep their relationship completely professional, despite their sizzling chemistry. But when Jimmy pushes her too far and Lena leaves, he realizes that he may just have lost the best thing that ever happened to him.

  With special thanks to Jo Wylde, Sali Pow, and Natasha Tomic.

  Dedicated to the Australian Romance Readers Association.

  Contents

  About LEAD: Stage Dive 3

  Dedication

  Acknowledgments

  Prologue

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Epilogue

  About the Author

  Also by Kylie Scott

  Praise for the Stage Dive series

  ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

  With thanks to my husband and family for yet again enduring the madness of another deadline. Their love and grace under pressure is astounding. I couldn't do it without their whole hearted support and willingness to eat microwave meals.

  Big thanks to everyone at St Martin's Press and Pan Macmillan Australia and the UK. Special thanks to my wonderfully supportive editor, Rose Hilliard, Haylee and Catherine.

  Thanks to my lovely agent Amy Tannenbaum at the Jane Rotrosen Agency for her unflagging belief in me and excellent advice. Also to Chasity Jenkins from Rock Star PR & Literary Services for her friendship and assistance and to By Hang Le for the awesome graphics and love.

  An extra special thanks to the ladies in Groupies. You guys rock.

  Book blogging is an act of love. I don't think you could pay someone enough for the around the clock single-minded dedication to reading, reviewing, and keeping the romance community informed of breaking news and new releases etc. (As always, I know I'm going to forget important people so please excuse me ... ) Natasha is a Book Junkie, The Rock Stars of Romance, Maryse, The Smut Book Club, Totally Booked, Aestas, Give Me Books, Love n Books, Angie's Dreamy Reads, Globug and Hootie, The Autumn Review, About that Story, The Book Pushers, Wicked L'il Pixie, Heroes and Heartbreakers, Hopeless Romantic, Smexy Books, Under the Covers, Book Thingo, Shh Mom's Reading, Hook Me Up, Ana's Attic, Kaetrin, Nelle, Jodie and Jess from Indie Author's Down Under, Sassymum, the ladies from Fictionally Yours Melbourne, Angie, Mel and the Triple M Bookclub, The Book Bellas, Random Hot Guy of the Day, Verna Loves Books, Valley of the Book Doll, Up All Night, Lit Slave, Three Chicks, Love Between the Sheets, Rude Girl, Joyfully Reviewed, Night Owl, Crystal, Cath, Dear Author, Twinsie Talk, Love Affair with Books, Harlequin Junkie, Sahara, Kati, Martini Times Romance, Booktopia, Rosemary's Romance, and many many more. If you took the time to read and review one of my books, then thank you.

  PROLOGUE

  Two months ago ...

  The man's mouth kept moving but I'd long since tuned out.

  They weren't paying me enough for this. Impossible. Day two on the job and I was ready to throw myself out a window. The music biz will be fun they said. It'll be glamorous they said. They lied.

  "... is that so hard to understand? Am I getting through to you? An eclair is a long, chocolate-frosted donut with custard in the middle. Not this, this ... round thing you've bought me. AGAIN," the idiot thundered, jowls shaking.

  Over at her desk, his P.A. slunk further down in her seat, just in case he decided to make her the next target, no doubt. Fair enough. She probably wasn't getting paid enough either. Only a masochist would enjoy this for under a hundred bucks an hour. Usually I tried to get temp jobs that lasted a couple of months or so. Long enough to make some money, short enough to avoid getting caught up in any drama.

  Usually.

  "Are you listening to me?" Fake-tanned flesh turned from orange to a startling shade of burgundy as his anger grew. If he had a heart attack, I wasn't giving him mouth-to-mouth. Some other brave soul could make the sacrifice.

  "Miss ... whatever your name is," he said. "Go back to the shop and get me what I asked for this time!"

  "Morrissey. My name is Lena Morrissey." I passed him a napkin, taking care not to touch him because a true professional always kept her distance. Also, the guy was just that repugnant. "And this is for you."

  "What is it?"

  "It's a message from the duty manager at the donut shop apologizing for the lack of long, tasty, phallic-shaped eclairs. Apparently they don't get baked until later in the day," I said. "Since you failed to believe me when I explained this to you yesterday. I thought you might be more inclined to believe it if it came from a higher authority in the donut world."

  The poor perplexed darling looked from me to the napkin and back again.

  "His name was Pete. He seemed nice, you should call him if you need further verification. You'll see I got him to write his number down there at the bottom." I tried to point to the digits in question but Adrian snatched his hand back, scrunching the napkin into a ball of rubbish. Oh well, I tried.

  Sort of.

  Laughter burst forth from the corner of his office. A good-looking guy with long blond hair grinned at me. Glad Blondie was amused. I on the other hand was probably definitely about to get fired.

  Wait, was that Mal Ericson from Stage Dive?

  Fuck a duck, it was.

  So the three other men must be the rest of the band members. I tried to avert my eyes, but my eyes had other ideas. Famous people. Huh. At least I'd managed to see some up-close before getting my ass canned. They didn't seem particularly different than us normal human beings, just a little prettier, perhaps. Even with having sworn off men, their wow factor couldn't be denied. The two guys with dark hair and fair faces were huddled together, flicking through some documents. They'd be David and Jimmy Ferris, the brothers. Ben Nicholson, the bass player, and largest of them all was stretched out, hands behind his head, fast asleep. Kudos to him. Not a bad method of getting through a meeting.

  Mal gave me a finger wave. "Lena Morrissey, huh?"

  "Yes."

  "I like you. You're funny."

  "Thanks," I replied drily.

  "Mal, buddy." Adrian butted in. "Let me just get rid of this ... woman. And we can finish up our business."

  The corporate monster turned his beady little eyes back to me. "You're fired. Get out of here."

  And there you had it. Big sigh.

  "Not so fast." Mal rose to his feet and just kind of swaggered on over. Talk about snake hips. "So you do admin-type shit here?"

  "I did. Yes."

  He gave me an easy smile. "You don't seem very impressed by me, Lena. Am I not impressive to you?"

  "Sure you are. I guess I'm just a bit busy getting fired right now to fully appreciate the magnitude of the moment." Hands on hips, I looked him in the eye. He was cute and I bet that smile of his worked on lots and lots of women. But it wouldn't be working on me.
"Rest assured, later I'm going to freak right out."

  He leaned against the doorframe. "I've got your word on that?"

  "Absolutely."

  "I'm trusting you here."

  "And I appreciate that, Mr. Ericson. I won't let you down."

  He gave me a huge grin. "You're a bit of a smart ass. I like that."

  "Thanks."

  "You're welcome." Cocking his head, he tapped a finger against his lips. "You single, Lena?"

  "And you want to know, why?"

  "Just curious. Judging by the frown, I think the answer there is yes. And shame on my brothers everywhere for overlooking such a fine girl as yourself."

  Quite a number of his "brothers" hadn't overlooked me. They'd chosen to screw me over instead, hence the frown. But no way in hell was I telling him that.

  "Uh, Mal?" Adrian tugged on the thick gold chain around his neck as if it were a collar.

  "Just a sec, Adrian." Mal gave me a slow looking over from top to toe, eyes lingering on the swell of my breasts. Big boobs, a lack of height, and childbearing hips ran in the family. My mom was exactly the same so there was really very little I could do about it. The lack of luck in love seemed more exclusive to me, however. Mom and Dad had been married nearly thirty years and my sister was about to be wed, not that I'd be attending. Long story. Or a short and shitty one, you pick.

  Either way, I was just fine and dandy as I was, flying solo.

  "I really think you could be the one, Lena," said the drummer said, pulling me from my thoughts.

  I blinked. "That so?"

  "It is. I mean, look at you, you're so cute and cuddly. But what I especially love is how you're giving me that go-fuck-yourself look from behind your foxy glasses."

  "You like that, do you?" My smile was all teeth.

  "Oh, yeah. Big time. But you're not for me."

  "No?"

  "Sadly, not." He shook his head.

  "Damn."

  "Yeah, I know. You're really missing out." He sighed, slipping his hair back behind his ears. Then he looked over his shoulder. "Gentlemen, that problem we were talking about earlier. I believe I may have found a solution."

  David Ferris looked from Mal to me and back again, his forehead creasing. "You serious?"

  "A hundred and ten percent."

  "You heard her, she's a secretary." The elder Ferris brother, Jimmy, didn't even look up from the papers. His voice was smooth, deep, yet deeply disinterested. "She's got no qualifications."

  Mal snorted. "Because all the ones with the fancy degrees have done such a fucking bang-up job. How many have you fired or run off now? Time to come at the problem from a new perspective, dude. Open your mind to the wonder that is Miss Lena Morrissey."

  "What are you talking about?" I asked, mystified.

  "Guys, guys." The asshat, Adrian, started flapping his hands about in a panic. "You can't be serious. Let's stop and think about this."

  "Give us a minute, Adrian," said David. "He isn't easy to live with. Think she can handle it?"

  Jimmy snorted.

  "Yeah, I do," said Mal, bouncing on the balls of his feet all excited like. He put up his dukes, as if for fighting. "Show me what you got, Lena. Knock me out. Come on, champ. You can do it. Put me against the ropes!"

  What a nutter. I swatted his teasing fist away from my face. "Mr. Ericson, you have approximately five seconds to start making sense or I'm out of here."

  David Ferris gave me a small smile. Of approval, perhaps? I don't know and it didn't matter. This circus had gone on long enough. I had explanations to go make to the temp agency. Given this wasn't the first time I'd butted heads with a jerk at a job, my hopes for forgiveness were low. I might have been asked to moderate my attitude a time or two. But really, life was too short to take shit. Let people walk all over you and you got what you deserved. I'd learned that the hard way.

  Shoulders slumping in disappointment, Mal sighed. "Okay, okay. Don't play with me. See if I care."

  He and David shared a look. Then David nudged his brother with an elbow. "Might be worth thinking about."

  "She gives Adrian shit and suddenly she's the one?" asked Jimmy. "Seriously?"

  "Mal's right, she's different."

  Adrian made a small sound of despair. Petty or not, my heart thrilled to hear it. Perhaps today wasn't a complete write-off after all.

  "Tell me, Lena," said Mal, his grin splitting his face. "How do you feel about Portland?"

  "Doesn't it rain there constantly?" I asked. In all honesty, the idea of heading quite that far up into the Pacific North West did not appeal.

  Mal groaned. "I know, lovely Lena, I know. Trust me, I've tried to get them to move back to LA, but they won't budge. Portland's where the Ferris bros be hanging these days. Even Benny boy's settled in up there."

  Ben, the bass player, opened one eye and gave us both a tired look. Then he closed it and went back to sleep.

  "C'mon, Jimbo," said Mal, bouncing about on the spot again. "Help me convince her Portland doesn't completely suck ass."

  Finally, at long last, Jimmy sighed and looked up at me.

  What Mal couldn't do to me, this one did with ease. Everything paused, apart from my pulse, beating loud behind my ears. The man was beautiful in much the same way as the stars. I could only look upon him with longing, he was so far out of my reach. Still, moments like these are meant to be momentous. Fate shifting beneath your feet should feel big. But instead of mood lighting and dramatic music, I got a cranky cold blue stare from a guy in a razor sharp suit. Dark hair fell over his face and collar, framing the cheekbones of an angel but the jaw of a stubborn child. Every other discernible inch of him appeared to be fully grown male. The way he held his jaw, however ... well.

  And the man might be pretty, but he sure as hell wasn't nice. I'd met enough not-nice men to know. Trust me to find him attractive.

  So I frowned straight back at him.

  His glare went up a notch.

  I matched it.

  "Why, you two are getting along like a house on fire already! It's like you've known each other for years. I think she'll make you a wonderful live-in assistant," said Mal. "Tell him, Lena."

  "A live-in assistant?" I parroted, clueless.

  "Since when did I need an assistant?" Jimmy looked me over from top to toe, lips tight with obvious disapproval.

  "Since you can't seem to keep a sobriety companion." His brother returned calmly, a little coldly even. "But it's your call. If you don't want to give her a go, the record company'll find you another companion. Someone suitable."

  Jimmy cringed and the broad shoulders filling his suit curved inward. I almost felt bad for him. The guy might not have the sunniest of dispositions, but it wouldn't hurt his brother to show a little support. Siblings. What could you do?

  "They gotta luck out and get someone you can stand being around eventually, right?" asked David. "You're doing great, but we can't afford for you to get off track now."

  "I'm not going to get off track."

  "We go on the road soon and your routine'll be shot to shit. Sort of situation where you could fall back into old habits easily. You heard what that latest therapist said."

  "All right, Dave. All right. Christ." Despite his brother talking, Jimmy's ice-cold gaze never left me.

  I stared back, unperturbed. It wasn't my style to back down from a challenge.

  "I'll hire her," he said.

  I laughed. "Um, Mr. Ferris, I haven't agreed to anything yet."

  "But there are conditions," Jimmy continued.

  Beside me, Mal thrust his fists in the air, making muted crowd-type noises. My comment seemed to have been overlooked entirely.

  "I don't want you getting in my face all the time," said Jimmy, staring me down.

  "One moment, please. So, you're offering me a job as your live-in assistant?" I asked, just to be sure.

  "No, I'm offering you a trial period as my live-in assistant. Let's say a month ... if you last that long."

>   I could make it a month with him. Probably. The money would need to be good, however. "What does the position involve and what does it pay?"

  "It involves you not getting in my face and it pays double what you make here."

  "Double?" My brows crept skyward.

  "You don't report back to anyone about what goes on with me unless I go into meltdown," he said. "Then you only talk to one of the guys in the band or our head of security. Got it?"

  "What sort of meltdown, exactly, are we talking about?"

  "Trust me, if it happens, you'll recognize it. What was your name again?"

  "Lena."

  "Tina?"

  "No. Lena. L.E.N.A."

  Adrian made a faint gargling noise like someone was choking him. But it didn't matter. The only thing that mattered was the way Jimmy Ferris's forehead smoothed out. The anger or tension or whatever it was disappeared from his face and he gave me a thoughtful look. He didn't smile. Didn't even come close to it. But for just a moment, I wondered what it would take to make him.

  Curiosity was a killer.

  "Le-na," he rolled my name off his tongue like he was trying it on for size. "Okay. Stay the fuck out of my way and we'll see what happens."

  CHAPTER ONE

  Jimmy was losing it.

  The hotel room door shuddered, something smashing loud against the other side. Inside, voices were raised, but the words were indistinct. Maybe I'd just hang out in the hallway for a while. It was tempting. All of this was my own damn fault, I should have been dust weeks ago. The facts were, despite the great money, me and this job didn't mesh. Every time I opened my mouth to tell him I quit, however, the words disappeared.

  I couldn't explain it.

  "Hey." Ev wandered toward me in a simple black dress, her fingers twining nervously. Her blonde hair had been pulled back into an elegant chignon.

  "Hi."

  "David's in talking to him."

  "Right." I probably should have worn a dress too, gone traditional. The last thing I wanted was to publicly embarrass Jimmy on a day like today. Only November in North Idaho could be butt-chapping cold. For a native of warmer climates, they didn't make tights thick enough to combat this sort of weather.

  The band and their entourage had been in Coeur d'Alene for just over a week and Jimmy's mood had been black since our arrival. Worse even than normal. Mal's mom had passed four days ago, losing her battle with cancer. From what I could gather, Lori had been like a surrogate mom to the Ferris brothers. Their own had apparently been little more than an oxygen bandit, abandoning them early. I'd only met Lori a couple of times. No one could dispute she'd been a beautiful soul.