Tyler & Stella (Tattoo Thief)

Read Online Tyler & Stella (Tattoo Thief) by Heidi Joy Tretheway - Free Book Online

Book: Tyler & Stella (Tattoo Thief) by Heidi Joy Tretheway Read Free Book Online
Authors: Heidi Joy Tretheway
Tags: New Adult Contemporary Romance
questions while the opening acts perform, but I want to write about the music more than the personalities, so once the opener starts I leave the trailer and walk through several security gates to the main stage area.
    Other than a lone photographer, I’m the only member of the press here so far.
    The crowd gathers behind a wavy orange plastic fence held up by metal stakes. There’s a five- or six-foot gap between the fence and the stage for media and security, giving us up-close access.
    I groove with the first opening band, Shaken Heart, noting how they’ve become tighter and more polished since I wrote about them several months ago. The lead singer looks amazing in her new pink hair and sparkling mini-dress, and sweat glistens on her skin as she sings about heartbreak and hope.
    I feel my off-the-shoulder black shirt sticking to me on this humid night and sweat trickles down the back of my leg beneath my skirt. The sun is fading and I’m desperate for a breeze off the water to cool me down.
    When the next band, Quatrain, takes the stage, the pitch of the audience’s roar rises higher. Everyone’s in an amped-up party mode this Fourth of July, no doubt anticipating the headliner band and fireworks after dark.
    More photographers and reporters filter in around me. I use my phone to capture a few Instagram photos and a Vine video, sending them to The Indie Voice ’s social feeds. Being a reporter is never just about writing for print—there’s also social media, the news blog, the website, and a dozen special advertising sections to fill.
    Even though my full article isn’t due until tomorrow, tonight I still have to feed the beast.
    I stuff my phone back in my purse and jot down impressions in my tall, skinny notebook while Quatrain’s members gyrate on stage.
    They’re selling sex—sweaty, hard-edged and uncensored—and it’s impossible not to connect with their intensity.
    I get bumped from behind by the crowd, which presses harder on the flimsy plastic barrier. The stakes holding it up bow forward, shrinking my safe passage between the crowd and the stage.
    I press my body close to the stage and let the burly security guards push back the crowd, but the guards are like a few dozen sandbags against a tidal wave of people.
    The sunset is deep purple shot with fiery red when members of The Ruins explode onto the stage, and in the crowd it’s pandemonium. A sea of faces illuminated by stage lights are panting, screaming, and practically foaming at the mouth in their enthusiasm.
    I turn from the crowd to observe the five rockers who favor pyrotechnics and staggering stage setups when they play the largest arenas. Their sound is different tonight. It’s richer, and it takes me a moment to figure out why.
    There’s an extra member. My eyes zoom to the tall, lanky bass guitarist who grins widely through a duel of instruments with another guitarist.
    Tyler.
    I stumble back a few steps from the stage, trying to get a better view of him on my tiptoes. Immediately, I regret it as crowd members jostle me, screaming and reaching as far as they can past the barrier toward the band.
    I pull away from them and tap another journalist, a heavy older guy I recognize from a few of the larger gigs I’ve covered.
    “What’s with Tyler?” I yell in his ear to be heard over the crowd and The Ruins. “The bassist from Tattoo Thief?”
    The man turns to the stage to spot Tyler in the back, on the opposite side from where we are. “Guest appearance,” he shouts. “He’s sharp. Really adds to the sound.”
    I’m open-mouthed with surprise as Tyler plays through the first half of the set. I should be reporting on the way The Ruins is playing tonight, with big departures from their recordings that make the songs feel fresh, but all I can do is stare at him.
    The way he swivels his hips when he’s playing a long chord. The way his dark brown hair falls across his forehead when he’s looking down and concentrating. The way he

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