My Rockstar Crush (Scandalous Billionaires #4) Read Online Lindsey Hart

Categories Genre: Alpha Male, Billionaire, Forbidden Tags Authors: Series: Scandalous Billionaires Series by Lindsey Hart
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Total pages in book: 75
Estimated words: 71698 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 358(@200wpm)___ 287(@250wpm)___ 239(@300wpm)
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The tour bus is spacious, but this back room isn’t as big as one might think it would be. The queen-sized bed takes up most of the room, but there are a few built-in nightstands attached to the back wall, a small closet on the far side, two windows with the blinds tightly closed, and a whole lot of Matt’s stuff strewn about.

Matt shoved most of his bags against the far wall, but it wasn’t done with much care. His guitars, on the other hand, are neatly placed in the corner, their cases carefully aligned and blocked in with a row of duffel bags to keep them from going anywhere.

Wilder eyes me from the bed like my small black duffel bag contains the end of the world. “I hate this room,” he grunts. “Everyone would have accused me of being a diva if I’d taken it, but that wasn’t why I didn’t.”

I know that, but I don’t interrupt him.

“I like being in the bunk. It’s closed in, pressing down all around you. I find that comforting,” he continues.

I found the bunk to be as coffinlike as everyone said it was, at least at first. On the first tour I went on, I don’t know how many audiobooks I listened to just to take my mind off the crushing claustrophobia.

I unzip my bag. “What else do you find comforting?” I ask, trying to divert his attention from it.

He narrows his eyes. “You’re trying to distract me.”

“I absolutely am. Talk to me about something else, and it might work. Think good thoughts. Think about tomorrow night when you’re on the stage staring down the massive crowd, singing your heart out, and listening to thirty thousand people echo it back at you. You wave your arms, they wave their arms. You tell them to clap, they clap. You want them to riot, they’ll riot. You ask for their lights up in the air, they’ll give them to you. Whatever you ask for, they’ll give back to you. They love you, but you loved them all first. You’ve given everything you have to them. Every award you get, you thank them. Every opportunity, you turn it back to the fans and every single person working behind the scenes.”

All this time, I’ve been prepping the IV while trying to angle my body away from Wilder so he can’t see it. It’s not like I’m going to trick him, but I’ve always thought that watching someone set something up is unnerving. The unholy anticipation and all that.

I drop down on the side of the bed and set my hand on his shoulder. As always, the contact sends a charge of electricity through me at dangerous levels. He’s still soaked, his skin pallid and clammy. I need to get him out of these clothes and into something clean, or at least stripped down and tucked under the blankets.

I ignore my hopeless hormones and concentrate on reassuring Wilder before he rolls off the other side of the bed and tries to drag himself out of here to escape. “I know you’re distrustful, but you know who I am. I think, most days, you even feel like I’m an okay person.”

“You’re super nice, Carissa. Everyone thinks so.” He only manages a tiny, watery smile, but it’s still utterly disarming. Wilder has this gift. Every time he looks at a person, he listens as though they’re the only person in the world. He doesn’t just pay lip service. He actually remembers what people tell him. Their experiences are special to him. “You’re incredibly kind. I find that, out of everything, kindness is always in short supply.”

“I happen to know that of any fanbase, yours is full of people who value kindness above all because that’s the example you’ve set.” I smooth my hand over his shoulder, trying to comfort him while, at the same time, having an internal nervous breakdown over the fact that I have zero right to this level of intimacy. Not that it is. Not in the traditional sense. This is one thousand percent platonic. I would comfort any other nervous, sick patient this way. “You could just close your eyes and pretend I’m just a friend who wants to help you feel better so you can get on the stage for one last time and give the performance of your life.”

His brow tilts up slightly, but if he’s surprised at anything, it’s only that I’ve tipped my cards, proving that I suspect something. “One last time?”

“Last show of the tour,” I correct hastily.

He’s not fooled, but he lets it go, falling back on his classic dry humor. “Probably the last time I’ll ever eat gas station chicken that looked like it was ten days old too. I only did it because Matt was being such an asshole about it.”


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