Rock Star (23 page)

Read Rock Star Online

Authors: Jackie Collins

BOOK: Rock Star
7.17Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

She’d beamed. ‘I’m proud of yer, lad. We all are.’

And they all were, except Brian, who still treated him like his snotty-nosed kid brother. ‘You’d better save your money,’ Brian had said airily. ‘It won’t last.’

It had lasted long enough to give them two more hit singles and a successful album. Now they were on the last leg of a sold-out European tour. Next stop – London. After that Kris planned to sit down and discuss how they were going to conquer America.

America was the world.

And he wanted it.

 

Rafealla

1977

Mother decided finishing school was in order. Preferably Switzerland. And she finally settled on L’Evier, an exclusive, expensive all-girls school nestled deep in the lush green countryside.

‘Why finishing school?’ Rafealla complained. ‘I’m nearly seventeen. I’m too
old
for school.’

‘One year, and then we’ll send you to a suitable American college. You’re looking forward to that, aren’t you?’

If I survive a year in Switzerland,’ Rafealla groaned.

Touching her lightly on the cheek her mother smiled. ‘You’ll survive, my darling, you’re just like your father.’

It pleased Rafealla when Anna spoke of her father. She cherished every mention of him – after all, she was so young when Lucien died, and her memories were vivid and very precious.

She often wondered how different her life would have been were he still alive. No England. No castle in the country. No stepfather. No Rupert.

Ah . . . Rupert. He truly was like the brother she’d never had, and she loved him very much. Right now he was travelling across America with a backpack and the daughter of an earl. Everyone hoped they would marry. Everyone except Rafealla – in her mind she was saving him for Odile.

L’Evier turned out to be a strict prison, with lights-out at ten, and a formidable headmistress. Rafealla took classes in English literature, languages, cooking, singing, social graces, and history of the arts.

She hated every minute. What kind of life was she preparing for? She had no desire to marry some rich titled man and live in luxury giving great charity.

Phoning Odile in Paris she complained bitterly. ‘This is a real crock.’

‘Leave,’ Odile said simply. ‘My design college is the greatest. Ask your mother if you can come here with me. You don’t learn much, but the male talent is
vrrooooom!

‘She’d never let me. Not after I made the mistake of telling her about that New York flasher in the South of France.’

‘Stupid old Marcus Citroen. He does it to everyone – including the maids. You should
never
have told your mother.’

‘I know. Now she thinks you’re all a bunch of perverts!’

‘How crazy. Maybe I’ll have mama telephone her and beg for your freedom.’

‘Would you?’

‘Why not?’

Isabella Ronet and Lady Egerton had a long chat, the result of which was that Rafealla stayed in Switzerland. Both mothers decided that the two girls – although lifelong best friends – were not always the best influence on each other.

So Rafealla slogged it out at L’Evier, loathing it more and more as each day passed, only enjoying her singing classes and choir practice. She had a strong, deep, voice, a talent obviously inherited from her father.

Some of the girls at school were unbearable little snobs who ostracized her because her skin was darker than theirs.

‘Touch of the tar brush, dear?’ Fenella Stephenson, one of the ringleaders, asked one day as they stepped out of the communal showers.

‘Sorry?’ said Rafealla,. reaching for a towel and tying it across her chest.

‘I thought they had a policy here’, Fenella sneered. ‘No
blacks
allowed.’

Rafealla felt a rush of colour sting her cheeks. Fenella was unpleasantly plump. ‘Funny,’ she said, keeping her voice nice, and even. ‘And
I
thought it was
fatties
they didn’t allow in.’

The ensuing fight would have thrilled any voyeur of young girls. They went at each other with no thought of modesty as their towels fell off and they rolled on the cold stone floor.

‘Black bitch!’ Fenella yelled.

‘Fat white tub of lard!’ Rafealla retorted, as they kicked and thrashed, pulling at each other’s hair.

A crowd of enthusiastic girls gathered, cheering them on with pithy comments. Nothing like a good fight to break up the monotony.

‘What is this fiasco?’ demanded the piercing voice of the principal as she pushed her way through to reach the scene of the crime.

Quickly Rafealla grabbed her towel. ‘Sorry, ma’am,’ she said, in spite of a split lip and a threatening black eye. ‘I slipped on the tiles, and Fenella was helping me up.’

‘Is this true, Fenella?’ thundered the principal, not believing a word of it.

‘Yes, ma’am,’ said Fenella, struggling to cover herself, obviously relieved at Rafealla’s discretion.

‘Golly!’ said Rafealla, innocently widening her eyes. ‘You should
do
something about these slippery tiles. Wouldn’t it be awful if somebody
sued
the school one of these days?’

The principal glared at her, pursing thin lips. She hadn’t liked Rafealla from the moment she’d arrived. She reminded her of another girl quite a few years earlier, a girl called Lucky Saint – or Santangelo as it turned out. A gangster’s daughter of all things, and a troublemaker from the beginning. Because of Lucky they’d had to have extra locks fitted on all the windows to curb any nocturnal wanderings.

Yes. Rafealla had that same dangerous quality. She’d probably end up getting expelled just like Lucky – in spite of being Lord Egerton’s stepdaughter.

As it turned out Rafealla lasted the term, gaining top grades in languages and English literature, and great praise from her singing teacher. She also became good friends with Fenella, and organized a diet for her that really worked. After their unfortunate introduction, they found they had mutual acquaintances, and that they lived quite near each other in the English countryside. With prejudice out of the way, they got along extremely well, although no one could ever replace Odile as Rafealla’s best friend.

When vacation time rolled around, Fenella invited her to spend a weekend in Oxfordshire at her family’s estate. Her father was a property tycoon, and her mother a society butter ball. Rafealla had to control her laughter when she met Lady Stephenson. The woman was outrageous, dressed in more frills and flounces than a drag queen!

On Saturday night Lady Stephenson had an invitation-only fancy dress ball for five hundred of her most intimate friends.

‘Mummy does this twice a year,’ Fenella disclosed. ‘She says she sees everyone in a different light when they’re wearing costumes.’

Rafealla dressed up as a Chicago gangster in one of Fenella’s brother’s suits which was several sizes too large for her, a black shirt, bold white tie, and beige fedora – under which she stuffed her long dark hair. With no makeup she looked like a beautiful, fierce young man.

When Eddie Mafair appeared – in costume as a pirate – she knew, with a deep sigh, he was never going to recognize her.

On the contrary. One look and he was by her side.

‘What a bore these things are,’ he muttered. ‘How about you and me taking off early?’

She could hardly believe her luck. ‘Yes,’ she said quickly.

Glancing around, he said, ‘Meet me here in an hour. I suppose I must be sociable. Bloody boring way to spend an evening.’

A cryptic exchange to say the least. No
Nice to see you again
, or
How have you been?

With difficulty she managed to get through the next hour, checking her watch every ten minutes. It seemed like an eternity. At the allotted time she was ready and waiting.

Eddie Mafair appeared twenty minutes late, unapologetic and flushed. Taking her arm he guided her outside to an open sports car parked on the edge of the driveway. Hopping around to the driver’s side he failed to open the passenger door for her.

Opening it herself, she climbed inside, wondering if she should have warned Fenella of her adventure. Wouldn’t they worry when they couldn’t find her at the end of the party?

What the heck! She was past caring. She had thought about Eddie Mafair for almost three years and now the great moment was here. Nothing was going to spoil it.

Casually turning the ignition with one hand and reaching for a cigarette with the other, he said, ‘Eton or Harrow?’

‘Sorry?’

‘Which
school
do you go to?’

‘Oh. L’Evier in Switzerland.’

Pulling the car to a sudden halt he said in a surprised voice. ‘Isn’t that a
girl’s
school?’

‘Of course it is.’ With a gesture she pulled off the fedora, and her long hair tumbled loose.

‘Jesus Christ!’ he said.

‘What?’

Choking on his cigarette, he managed, ‘Nothing, nothing.’

‘You
do
know who I am, don’t you?’ she asked suspiciously.

Quite indignantly, his choking fit abated, he said, ‘I most certainly do.’

‘Rafealla,’ she reminded him.

‘I know,’ he said testily.

Eddie Mafair was a strange one. The sooner she gave him a blow job and got him under her spell, the better.

*    *    *

Two hours later they lay naked under tangled sheets in Eddie Mafair’s mews house in Chelsea.

An hour to get there, driving at breakneck speed. A glass of neat vodka, and Billy Joel on the stereo repeatedly singing ‘Just the Way You Are’. And then sex. No kisses. No lingering buildup. No caresses. Just straight to it.

Inexperienced as she was, Rafealla soon realized something was wrong as he jabbed away with a soft penis. Eddie Mafair had what Odile crudely described as ‘two inches of cock and dynamic fingers!’ Only he didn’t have dynamic fingers.

Far from being dismayed, Rafealla knew she had to help him over his unfortunate hurdle. Instinctively she said what he wanted to hear. ‘I’m a virgin. I’ve never been to bed with a man before.’

Well, the virgin part was accurate. And she’d never actually been
in
bed with a man. The beach – yes. The woods – yes. And many other places. But never bed.

‘You’re so . . . manly,’ she breathed. ‘I love being with you.’

And that did the trick. Eddie Mafair performed like he hadn’t performed in a long time. And Rafealla let all thoughts of saving herself for a husband drift by the wayside. All she could think about was Eddie. She loved him. It was as simple as that.

 

Bobby Mondella

1977

‘Black,’ Nova Citroen said. ‘Silk.’

The tailor nodded.

‘And white. All white. Very clinging.’

‘I understand.’

‘A dozen shirts. A dozen pair of pants. No colours.’

‘Yes, Mrs Citroen.’ ‘Oh, and he dresses to the left.’

The tailor didn’t miss a beat. ‘Yes, Mrs Citroen.’

A flick of her elegant wrist dismissed him.

When he was gone she paced around the living room of the Century City penthouse with views stretching all the way to Catalina. Picking up a cigarette, she didn’t light it, merely held it thoughtfully between her manicured fingers.

Today was the day.

She had waited long enough.

*    *    *

Bobby, sweat dripping from his body, begged for mercy. ‘Enough,’ he pleaded.

‘More curls,’ his personal exercise instructor insisted. ‘Those arms need it.’


Nothing
else needs it’, Bobby gasped, dropping the weights and flopping on his back.

‘Tomorrow,’ said his instructor, a short man with formidable muscles and torturous smile. ‘Can’t wait!’

So . . .
Bobby thought.
This is what it’s like to be number one.
Hell – he’d had more fun when he was fat and a men’s room attendant.

Life, at the moment, was nothing but work. And not the real thing: preparation – back-breaking, gut-busting, getting-ready preparation.

His daily grind included dancing, voice practice, movement, and weight training for the ultimate body.

Then there were publicity photos to do, hair stylists to see, nutritionists to consult, and daily jogging for hours on end.

And then, of course, there was Nova.

Nova Citroen.

What an incredible woman!

Closing his eyes, he thought about the past year.

He’d shaken hands with the devil, and his whole world changed overnight.

*    *    *

Amerika wasn’t pleased when she heard about Bobby’s defection. She was angry and hurt – and above all incredulous. ‘How can you do this to yourself?’ she asked, her lower lip quivering with emotion. ‘Don’t you have any black pride? Marcus Citroen is a
killer.
He’ll own you, exploit you, then drop you.’

‘No way,’ Bobby argued.

‘What makes you think
you’re
so different?’ she spat, her voice shaking. ‘Arid how can you walk out on me?’

‘Blue Cadillac are willing to pay you a lot of compensation.’

Her eyes flashed. They’d
better
.’

He didn’t know what else to say. Light conversation was out of the question, and he couldn’t explain about Sharleen.

‘I suppose it has something to do with that tramp’, Amerika said icily, reading his mind.

Springing to her defence, he said, ‘C’mon. Don’t call Sharleen names just ’cos you’re mad at
me
.’

‘Hey – Bobby,’ Amerika jeered. ‘Why don’t you admit she’s got your balls in her pocket, and be done with it?’

He’d shown her the courtesy of telling her himself. Now he walked out with a clear conscience.

Sharleen bubbled with joy when he gave her the news.


Oooh
, Bobby, Bobby, Bobby! You’re wonderful! The best!’ She hugged him tight. ‘An’ it’ll be good for you too, honey. Just wait. If Marcus says he’ll make you number one – well, baby, he’s gonna do it.’

‘I just want to be certain you’ll be all right,’ he said, full of concern.

Kissing his cheek she murmured, ‘I’ve learned my lesson. I won’t make a mistake again.’ A pause. ‘Do I get my apartment back?’

Other books

Mr Two Bomb by William Coles
Protect and Service by Mina Carter
His Haunted Heart by Lila Felix
Off the Record by Sawyer Bennett
Wild Summer by Suki Fleet
Irish Coffee by Ralph McInerny
Inquest by J. F. Jenkins
The Serpent's Bite by Warren Adler
The Wilt Inheritance by Tom Sharpe
The Palace Guard by Charlotte MacLeod