Read Running with Scissors Online
Authors: Unknown
shake the certainty that, yes, actually he
had
been staring at him like that.
A.J. exhaled. He pressed his forearm against the shower
wall and leaned forward a bit, stretching his back as the water beat on his exhausted muscles. The buzz from the show was
wearing off fast, zapping what little energy he had left, but
there was no shaking off his arousal that was intensifying
by the second—especially as he let his brain play out every
possible thing he and Jude might’ve been able to do in this
tiny shower stal .
Maybe they couldn’t have fucked in here—not
comfortably anyway—but, hell, who was he kidding?
He’d fucked in cars that barely accommodated properly
seated passengers, and he’d once had a threesome in his
slightly-larger-than-a-futon bed back in LA. He could make
this shower work if he wanted to.
And if Jude wanted to.
And if that look on his face had been any indication, he
had wanted to.
A.J. swore. His cock hardened and his frustration
deepened—what if he could have had Jude in here now to
help him take care of this?
That was a moot point, though, and when he was less
turned on, he’d remember why it was just as well they weren’t
hooking up. All he could think of at
this
moment was this erection that needed attention. His hands were practically
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numb and his arms ached from the shoulders down, but he
closed his fingers around his cock and pumped it.
He pressed his forehead against his other arm. Eyes
squeezed shut, he fucked into his fist and bit down on a
groan just in case somebody else had come back. Just what he
needed—Jude walking onto the bus, hearing him jerking off
in the shower, and . . .
Joining him. Brazenly stepping into the bathroom,
stripping off his clothes, and wedging himself into the stall
with A.J. Pushing A.J.’s hand out of the way. Jerking his cock.
Maybe rubbing both of their cocks together.
And kissing.
Fuck. He stroked himself faster. His spine tingled as he
pictured himself pinned up against the wal , finally finding
out what Jude’s mouth tasted like and if he was the kind of
kisser who’d take the lead, or if he’d turn to putty in A.J.’s arms and let him take over. Jesus. The thought of Jude surrendering, letting himself be pinned, kissed, fucked—
A moan slipped through his lips, and he no longer gave
a damn if anyone heard him. His arm burned with fatigue.
His knees trembled beneath him. He leaned harder against
the wal , gripped himself tighter, stroked harder . . .
His orgasm knocked him off-balance as he imagined
himself fucking Jude’s mouth with his pulsing dick, watching
Jude swallow every drop while his eyes begged for more.
He shuddered once again, and relaxed. Jesus.
After he’d rinsed off his hand and arm, he had just enough
presence of mind to shut off the shower—no sense hogging
all the hot water before his bandmates returned—and then
stood there, trembling, panting, dripping, until his vision
cleared.
His hands were shaking badly, as much from drumming
as from jerking off, and toweling himself down proved to
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be a challenge, but he managed. He put on the clean boxers
and T-shirt he’d brought into the bathroom with him, and
stepped out.
No one else had returned yet. The whole world still
thumped with the bass from Schadenfreude’s show, so the
rest of Running with Scissors was likely still watching from
backstage.
Which meant he still had the bus to himself. He could
breathe. Maybe read for a while. Maybe fantasize a bit more
about Jude.
He climbed onto his bunk and lay back.
Read. Fantasize. His eyelids drooped. Sleep, maybe.
Heavy muscles. Heavy eyelids.
Schadenfreude’s bass faded away. So did his thoughts.
And without the postshow adrenaline to keep him going
through the postorgasm lethargy, he gave in and drifted off.
He awoke to the sounds of his bandmates riffling through
duffel bags, wandering in and out of the bathroom, and
chatting casually over the sounds of activity outside. Jesus.
This late at night, and the roadies were still working? And
the band—who were usually considerate as hell after hours—
were being this noisy?
He swore and rubbed his eyes. Bright lights too.
The scent of coffee made it to his bunk. Seriously? They
had all the lights on and were drinking coffee this late?
Jerks.
Wait. He fumbled for his phone, which he kept between
his mattress and the wal , and winced when the screen came
to life. As his eyes focused, he squinted.
Well, shit. No, they weren’t working and making noise
after hours—it was almost eight in the morning.
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He stumbled out of his rack, stretched, and shuffled into
the living area. Vanessa and Richie were goofing off on their
phones, some empty McDonald’s wrappers crumpled on the
table between them. Connor and Kristy were nowhere in
sight, and a wisp of smoke outside the window zeroed him
in on exactly where Jude was.
From one of the armchairs, Shiloh smiled over her
Starbucks cup. “Morning, sunshine. I was starting to wonder
if you’d gone into a coma or something.”
He laughed sleepily. “Nah, I’m good. Just needed some
sleep, I guess.”
“Apparently so.” She glanced at her watch. “Well, grab
coffee if you’re going to. The bus is rol ing out in like twenty.”
“Shit. Already?”
“Says the guy who slept in.”
“Yeah, yeah.” He went back to the sleeping area, quickly
changed into a pair of jeans and a T-shirt, and headed out.
Near the door, Jude was finishing up his cigarette. A.J.
paused, and their eyes met.
Was I imagining what I saw last night?
Jude slowly exhaled some smoke, drawing A.J.’s attention
right to his lips.
Fuck
.
“We’re hitting the road soon,” Jude said. “If you’re getting
coffee—”
“Right. Right.” A.J. shook himself. “I’ll . . . I’ll be back in a few.” He was thankful for the urgency of his coffee mission—
anything to distract him from staring at Jude like an idiot.
Before he went too far, though, he found the bus driver
checking the tire pressure.
“Hey, Bob.” When the driver turned, A.J. gestured over
his shoulder with his thumb. “I’m just going to grab some
coffee. Ten minutes, max. Don’t leave without me, okay?” 90
“Thanks for the heads-up.” Bob gave him a good-natured
salute. “Holler when you’re back, and we’ll pull up anchor.”
“Will do.”
He was on his way back with a triple-shot espresso when
he saw Connor going the same direction, struggling to carry
two boxes that were apparently heavier than they looked.
“Hey, Connor. You need a hand?”
“Oh, thank God.” Connor groaned and set the boxes
down with a
thud
on the pavement. As he stood, he shook out his hands. “I thought I could carry both, but . . . not so much.”
“No problem.” A.J. took one of the boxes and carefully
balanced his coffee cup on top. “Where did these come from?”
Connor flexed his fingers gingerly, then picked up the
remaining box. “The ticket office. They wanted some flyers to
hand out at the door, and this is what’s left.”
“Nice of them to give them back and not toss them.”
“Right?” Connor nodded in the direction of the bus. As
they started walking, he said, “You disappeared last night.
You all right?”
“Yeah, yeah.” A.J. adjusted his grip on the box. “Just
needed to crash and burn, I guess.”
Connor grimaced sympathetically and nodded. “Happens
to everyone. This touring shit is brutal.”
“No kidding.”
Connor shifted the box onto one arm and let the other
fall to his side. “How are you holding up otherwise, though?”
“I’m okay. It’s draining, but it beats the hell out of a
regular job.”
Connor laughed. “You can say that again.”
A.J. hesitated. Then, “How are
you
doing?”
Connor sobered. His gait slowed, and then he stopped.
“I’m . . .” Sighing, he set the box down again. “It’s weird.” 91
“I can imagine.” A.J. set the other box at his feet. “Are you
okay?”
“Does it really matter?” Connor rubbed his eyes with his
thumb and forefinger. “I never should’ve fucked things up
with Wyatt.”
A.J. chewed his lip. “Do you think he’d ever reconsider
quitting?”
“No.” Connor shook his head. “I tried cal ing him last
night after the show, but as soon as he realized it was me . . .”
That wasn’t surprising. Those two had been prone to
shouting matches at the slightest provocation. Wyatt hadn’t
been at all above walking out before Connor could even finish
screaming at him. Nothing had been more fun for the whole
group than the two of them being trapped on a moving bus
together when things got really ugly.
He shook himself. “What do you think we should do? As
a band?”
“I don’t know.” Connor rubbed the back of his neck with
both hands. “Shiloh seems to think everything will be fine. I
guess I need to talk to Vanessa and Richie. And Kristy. Figure
out if there’s any possibility of auditioning someone else,
or . . .” He waved his hand. “I don’t know.”
A.J. gritted his teeth.
Thanks for including me in that list.
“Anyway.” Connor rolled his shoulders and crouched to
pick up the box. “We should get back.”
“Right. Yeah.” A.J. picked his up too, and they continued
toward the bus. He quickly changed the subject, and they
shot the shit about last night’s show. This was the Connor
everyone liked. When he was mellow, everyone could
breathe. His short-tempered side was missing in action, and if
he’d just stay like this all the time, there’d be a hell of a lot less tension on the bus. But like everyone in the band, the touring
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and the close confines took its toll on Connor, so A.J. could
understand why his temper was so threadbare sometimes.
Especially with Jude around.
That thought smacked him in the face. He chewed the
inside of his cheek. Jude drove Connor insane just by being
there, and he distracted the hell out of A.J. But how much
worse would it be if he and A.J. indulged in temptation and
then had to face each other the next day? And what if people
found out? Or what if things went to shit? All they’d done last night was have a short, tense staring contest backstage, and
they’d barely been able to look at each other this morning.
Taking that staring contest any further would be a recipe for
disaster.
He followed Connor onto the bus and quickly zeroed in
on Jude, who was parked in a chair with his bass across his lap and the brim of his baseball cap casting a shadow over his eyes.
Connor brushed past Jude, whose head turned slightly as he
apparently followed him with his gaze.
Then he looked at A.J. Despite the tinted lenses, A.J. was
pretty sure they’d made eye contact, and he broke it almost
immediately, ostensibly to continue after Connor and stow
the boxes of flyers.
If things were this weird after exchanging a look, and after
A.J.’d jerked off to thoughts of Jude that no one knew about
but him, then actually doing anything was the mother of all
bad ideas.
And hopefully he’d remember that next time he and Jude
were alone together.
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he bus stopped somewhere in . . . New Mexico? Jude
t couldn’t remember where they were, or where they were
heading. Every time he dozed off, he woke up to more scrubby
desert or farm country. Sometimes a truck stop, sometimes a
town he couldn’t identify.
They weren’t performing tonight or tomorrow, so that
meant two easy nights in a row. The vocalists could rest their
voices. The instrumentalists could rest their hands. Thank
God for that—his fingers were still painfully raw. The roadies
were probably all comatose on their buses. Jude swore they’d
been running themselves ragged nonstop ever since he’d
arrived in Omaha.
At a truck stop off Interstate 40, he stepped outside to
stretch his legs and his lungs. He’d barely taken his first drag before Richie joined him.
“Hey.” He gestured at Jude’s cigarette. “I’m out—can I
bum one?”
“Yeah, sure.” Jude handed him the pack.
Richie slid one free, used Jude’s lighter, and the two of
them smoked quietly for a moment before Richie spoke.
“So, you and Connor.” He inclined his head, exhaling
smoke through his nose. “It’s still pretty weird, huh?”
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Jude cringed. Since that confrontation in Omaha, he
and Connor had barely said more than two words to each
other, and he’d hoped like hell that no one but him noticed
the tension, though that had obviously been wishful thinking
from the start. “I’ll bet it will be for a while. Not surprising, but . . . Guess I made that bed, so now I get to lie in it.”
Richie studied him. Then he shook his head. “I’m never
going to get why you guys can’t just let that shit go and move
on. You dated. Now you’re not dating, but you still can’t put