A high school reunion is about to get down and dirty and a whole lot more complicated!
Rock Star
A Bad Boy Homecoming Novel
Stacey Kennedy
Releasing June 27, 2017
A high school reunion is about to
get down and dirty and a whole lot more complicated in this new erotic romance
from USA Today bestselling author Stacey Kennedy.
Veterinarian, Rae Evans expects to attend a dreadful ten-year high school reunion. Instead, she’s confronted by a past she’s never gotten over. The love of her life, Travis Walker, has returned to Catfish Creek, and the now-famous rock star wants only three things: Her. Naked. And screaming his name.
Veterinarian, Rae Evans expects to attend a dreadful ten-year high school reunion. Instead, she’s confronted by a past she’s never gotten over. The love of her life, Travis Walker, has returned to Catfish Creek, and the now-famous rock star wants only three things: Her. Naked. And screaming his name.
Fresh off
his last world tour, Travis has returned to town to get a dose of reality. With
fame casting a superficial cloud over Travis’s life, he’s scrambling to stay
afloat. He needs an anchor, and Rae is that for him. But as he finds himself,
he’s determined to remind Rae of the heat that once burned between them.
Before they
know it, their one hot night is three, and soon, just like ten years ago,
Travis holds the strings to Rae’s heart. But Rae’s not that young girl who
watched her high school sweetheart race off to become famous. She’s a woman who
knows what she wants and realizes when a man needs her. She just has to decide
if she should put the past on repeat, or walk away from it forever.
Travis Walker made women’s panties disappear.
On most nights, anyway.
Tonight, sitting on a wooden stool set
upon the stage at Catfish Creek High School’s conference center, only one woman
was on his mind. His fingers strummed over the strings of the guitar, mouth
rested near the microphone, and after he sang the final two lines of the
chorus—I wanna kiss you under the
moonlight. And love you ‘til the sun comes up—the applause from the crowd
reopened his eyes.
Sparkling string lights and masquerade
masks hung from the ceiling above him, reminding him that he wasn’t surrounded
by thousands of his typical screaming and wild fans. In his Texas hometown, he
stared out at teachers, old friends, and classmates, all dressed in formal wear
and masquerade masks.
From his seat in the spotlight, he
recalled playing for smaller crowds on this very stage back in high school.
Those had been some of the happiest days of his life. Now, fresh off his last
world tour, he realized he loved that scene, too. The energy of a smaller
crowd, who knew him personally, and a larger crowd, who thought they were in
love with him, was so different he couldn’t compare the two, but admittedly, he
missed the intimacy that came from a smaller venue.
Done with his song, and with the crowd
quieting, he slid the guitar strap over his head and handed the instrument back
to a member of the band that’d been hired to play at Catfish Creek High
School’s ten-year reunion. When he jumped off the stage, he sighed in relief,
finding that all the cell phones pointed in his direction were now put away,
and the flashing lights were gone.
That’s when he set his focus on what
mattered tonight: finding her. Rae
Evans—the muse behind the song he sang tonight, Moonlight.
He scanned the crowd overtop the
decorated tables with their gold chairs, but the beauty had escaped him
somehow. He recognized Annie Flowers, the librarian, who gave him a little
wave, and Christopher Christianson, the principal, who was grabbing a drink
from the bar. Travis could have sworn he spotted Rae entering the masquerade
ball when he began his song. Desperation now clawed at his chest.
Determined to find her, he moved
farther into the crowd, just as his cell vibrated in his pocket. Knowing
exactly who it’d be, and that he couldn’t ignore the call, he reached for his
phone and then frowned at the text from his manager, Scott Price.
Awesome
job. The video is already up on YouTube. Fans are loving it. The mask was a
nice touch. Don’t miss your flight in the a.m.
Travis shifted the black masquerade
mask around his eyes, and the muscles along his shoulders tightened with the
reminder of the weight they carried; of the need for him to always be on point,
and the fact that nothing, not even his high school reunion, was sacred
anymore.
Life had changed dramatically since the
last time Travis stepped foot in the conference center. But he didn’t want to
think about the shit weighing on him, so he fired off a response—I’ll be on it—then tucked his cell phone
back into his pocket.
He had tonight to fix everything that
was wrong with his life, and he wouldn’t waste it.
In the eyes of his manager, Travis had
come to the reunion to put on a show and to look real to his fans. But Travis hadn’t come for the publicity; he had
come for one very good reason: to find his anchor—the woman who stopped his
world from spinning wildly out of control.
Lately, in a sea of chaos, he’d finally
stopped drowning and saw a way back to the happiness he once had. That
happiness had started with Rae, and surely, she was his way to find himself
again.
One touch. One taste. He wanted to
remember what that happiness felt like.
Again, he searched the crowd, ignoring
the way some men glowered at him, and some women batted their lashes. Rae. That’s whom he’d come here to see
tonight. Only her.
The band behind him started playing another
ballad, and that’s when he found her, staring right at him from across the room. She wore a sleek, black, strapless
gown around her slender figure with matching long, black gloves.
His muscles surged with adrenaline, and
he went to move toward her when a hard voice came from behind him.
“Karly wants you to play another song.”
Travis slowly glanced over his shoulder
to find the biggest asshole in Catfish Creek High School history, Jason, a
blond-haired, slender, one-time big shot. Rae was best friends with Kate, and
Kate had loved—and later married and divorced—the dipshit behind him.
Times had changed.
Travis didn’t owe Jason anything now,
and he certainly didn’t owe the reunion’s event planner, Karly, shit. “You can
tell Karly that I told her I’d play one song, and that’s exactly what I did.
Bother me again, and we’ll have a problem.”
Jason didn’t make a move or say a word
in rebuttal. Once a coward, always a coward.
Refocused on the only person who
mattered tonight, and pulled by the energy only Rae conjured, Travis stretched
out his fingers, shedding his frustrations as he moved with purpose through the
crowd. Her pretty, hazel eyes surrounded by dark makeup followed his every
move, and she yanked him forward with a simple look.
She’d always been a pretty girl, but
she’d grown into a blindingly beautiful and stunning woman. Her gown fit her
like a glove. A gold filigree mask somehow made the creaminess of her skin
appear richer. She wore her shoulder-length, brown hair in big waves framing
her round face.
Tonight, she didn’t look so fresh-faced
and innocent. She looked sexy as hell, and just the sight of her again caused
Travis’s cock to swell eagerly.
While he’d talked to her through email,
text, and the occasional late-night, drunk phone call every birthday and
Christmas over the last ten years, he hadn’t seen her. Not since that day on
his parents’ porch. Sure, he’d kept an eye on her through the Catfish Creek Chronicle when they
featured her for her charity work, and also on the website for the vet clinic
she owned. But after he’d walked the path that led away from her, he’d never
found his way back. Life got busy. New friends were found. Fame overtook
him.
Now, he was…home.
When he finally reached her, the air
between them felt charged. “Rae,” he said.
Her eyes warmed. Dark, red-painted lips
curved. “Travis.”
Christ, he remembered how those lips
tasted. How she tasted—every goddamn
inch of her.
Beneath her mask, those pretty eyes now
turned a little suspicious. “Why didn’t you tell me you were coming to the
reunion?”
Perhaps he should have called, but… “I
wanted to surprise you.” Because there were important reasons he returned to
his hometown, ones that he didn’t want her to know about. Yet.
It all began with an article in the Catfish Creek Chronicle.
Dr. Rae Evans feels she’s done
what was needed to help the animals in Catfish Creek, and she’s ready to begin
a new journey. She’s looking to open another clinic in one of the neighboring
towns.
At
twenty-eight years old, she’d achieved what she hoped to do by thirty, and that article reminded him of the guy he
used to be when she’d first made those plans. He wasn’t the same man who left
Catfish Creek all those years ago, and he didn’t know when exactly he lost
himself. While Rae had likely found all the happiness she wanted in her
success, he simply wanted to find his way back to the carefree guy he once
was.
To do that, he had to come back to the
place where he was the happiest. He had to come back to her. “But to tell you why I wanted to surprise you, I need to tell
you a story.” He offered his hand. “How about we dance, and I’ll share it.”
For a second, he thought she might
refuse him. She simply stared at his hand.
When her eyes met his again, and she
slowly slid her palm into his, the tightening in his chest eased. He closed his
fingers around hers and sensed her soften, making him smile.
Reliving that infectious energy she
carried, he led her into the middle of the dance floor, then he spun her around
and pulled her to him, nice and close, sliding his hand across her lower back.
She laughed softly, eyes twinkling behind her
mask. “You’ve still got the moves, I see.”
“My moves will never fail me.” He
grinned.
The band played the perfect song.
Something a little sexy and slow, keeping her hips swaying perfectly with his.
He did nothing to shield his erection, but one look into her eyes told him that
was all right. With her breasts pressed against his chest, her cheeks a little
pink now, he noticed the heat in the depths of her gaze. He’d recognize it
anywhere. That fire felt like it belonged to him—always had, always would. Yet
in the past, she’d shy away from that desire. Now, he noted how she firmly held
his gaze, telling him she wasn’t the young lover he once had.
“How long are you staying in town?” she
asked, in an obvious attempt to divert their attention away from his cock.
“Just tonight.” He stroked his thumb
over the back of her hand, keeping her as close as he could, inhaling her
flowery scent that had faded from his memory. “I fly out bright and early in
the morning.”
“Only tonight?” She shot him a
questioning glance. “You came all the way here from New York just for the
reunion?”
“You seem surprised.”
She shrugged, seemingly unaffected when
another couple bumped into her, her interest obviously centered on him. “Seems
like a long way to come for only a few hours.”
A very good point, indeed. “Well, you
see, that brings us to my story.” He sent her out, twirling her around before
bringing her in close again and returning the smile she gave him. “But I think
we need to go back even further for you to truly understand.”
“Go on,” she said, watching him
closely.
He paused, collecting his thoughts,
then he began. “You’ll never hear me complain about my life. I have far more than
I probably deserve.”
“That’s a good thing,” she said firmly,
even as a playful grin teased her lips. “You have a pretty amazing life, and
you’d better not complain to me about all the fabulous trips you get to take
around the world, or you might lose a tooth.”
He chuckled but leaned in, calling her
out. “And how do you know so much about my life? Reading up on me?”
“A little,” she admitted.
That’s what he liked most about Rae.
She was honest, through and through. The fact that she followed his life could
bite him in the ass later, but at this point, there was no going back, so he
pushed the conversation along. “So, then you know that I have a very good life.
I travel. I stay in fancy hotels. I eat at amazing restaurants. I never have to
lift a finger. I have everything that anyone should want.”
Her eyes searched his. “But it’s not
the life you want?”
Of course, she caught on. He didn’t
expect otherwise. That’s why he’d come to the reunion—to be with someone who
truly knew him. “It’s not that I don’t want the life I live,” he explained
gently. “It’s that something is missing. Something very important.”
“Which is?”
“The guy I used to be.”
She began nibbling her lip like she
used to do in high school when she became confused. “What do you mean?”
“I can have anything I want, Rae. There
is nothing that’s not available to me.” He slid his hand along her spine,
pulling her in closer, leaving no room between them. “But the guy I was when we
were together…I don’t know him anymore.”
Her eyes softened, and her voice grew
quiet. “That’s really kinda sad, Travis.”
“It is what it is.” He shrugged, not
wanting to get stuck on the things he couldn’t change. “My manager told me that
I’d been invited to the reunion and saw it as a business opportunity. But I saw
it as a personal one.”
The song shifted to something faster,
and the crowd began to fill the dance floor, bumping into his back. He refused
to let her go, holding her tightly against him. “Do you want to know the real
reason I came to the reunion tonight?”
“Yes,” she said, a little breathlessly.
“I came to relive the past, Rae.” He
released her hand, wrapping his other arm around her and bringing his mouth
close to hers. “That’s the only reason I’m here. I want to remember what it’s
like to be with a woman who knows the real
me.” He was encouraged by her shiver. An involuntary movement that spoke of
her willingness to give him all that he wanted and more.
Hot and hard, he dropped his head into
her neck, inhaled the subtle hints of her flowery perfume, and said into her
ear, “We have a chance that many people don’t get. To go back and feel what we
felt before.” He dragged his nose across her neck in the way he knew she liked,
feeling her quiver under his hands. “Tomorrow, our lives will return to normal.
Nothing will have changed. You’ll live here, entirely focused on your clinic
and your life, and I’ll live mine in New York. Tonight’s our one free pass to
dip into the past, and I want to take it. Because tonight, Rae”—he brushed his
lips across her neck, and a soft moan escaped her mouth as he murmured—“I want
one more taste of you.”
She gasped and stepped back, blinking
rapidly. “I…sorry, excuse me. I need to get some air.” Then those pretty pink
cheeks and wide, excited eyes were gone, her dress trailing behind her as she
ran for the door.
Travis shoved his hands into the pockets of his suit and grinned. He didn’t mind hunting her, it sweetened his reward.
Travis shoved his hands into the pockets of his suit and grinned. He didn’t mind hunting her, it sweetened his reward.
STACEY
KENNEDY is
the USA Today bestselling author of the Dirty Little Secrets and Club Sin
series. She writes deeply emotional romances about powerful men and the wild
women who tame them. When she’s not writing sensual stories, she spends her
time in southwestern Ontario with her real life hero, her husband, their two
young children, and her other babies: a mini labradoodle named Jax and a
chocolate labrador named Murphy. Stacey is a proud chocolate, television show,
Urban Barn, and wine addict. She likes her heroes in her books like she likes
her coffee . . . strong and hot!
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