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IDOL
by Elizabeth Lynx
IDOL
Copyright © 2019 by Elizabeth Lynx.
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission except in the case of brief quotations em- bodied in critical articles or reviews.
This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, businesses, organizations, places, events and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.
For information contact:
[email protected]
http://www.elizabeth-lynx.com
Book and Cover design by Elizabeth Lynx
Photography by Prometeus
Dedication
To my husband. My rock star.
Table of Contents
IDOL
Dedication
Table of Contents
Stories by Elizabeth Lynx
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One
Two
Three
Four
Five
Six
Seven
Eight
Nine
Ten
Eleven
Twelve
Thirteen
Fourteen
Fifteen
Sixteen
Seventeen
Eighteen
About the Author
Stories by Elizabeth Lynx
Stories by Elizabeth Lynx
Upcoming Releases
Idol, book 1 Price of Fame, standalone novella, releases September 5th, 2019
Mogul, book 2 Price of Fame, standalone novella, releases September 26th, 2019
Star, book 3 Price of Fame, standalone novella, releases October 17th, 2019
Royal Disgrace, book 5 of Cake Love, standalone, releases November 7th, 2019
Lost & Found
Dirty Secret, prequel, standalone
Cabin Fever, book 1 Lost & Found, standalone
Living Hell, book 2 Lost & Found, standalone
Multi-Author
Happy New You
Cake Love Series - standalone
Rules of Payne, book 1, standalone
The Attraction File, book 2, standalone
One Wild Ride, book 3, standalone
The Spy Ring, book 4, standalone
Cake Love: Boxed Set, Books 1-4
Him Her Them Series
Her Night with Him
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MAKE SURE YOU GET THE BONUS CHAPTER for Idol + an EXCLUSIVE Blurb and SNEAK PEEK of Star, the next in the series when you sign up for my free author newsletter ⇨ http://bit.ly/IdolHoneymoon
Little did he know when he woke up this morning that a short redhead would destroy his perfect, Maserati driving world.
Those were the first words I said when I set eyes on the hot-as-sin rock star’s long, wide...car. It was beautiful. Hunter Six was gorgeous. He may be rich, famous, and one of the most talented singers of this century, but that didn’t mean he could get away with what he did to my mom.
Willa Jones just played you, bro.
THAT’S WHAT MY BROTHER said to me after a beautiful redhead ripped apart my life with a little piece of chalk. Let me preface that with a fact: The image she drew of a specific part of my body was a whole lot bigger in real life. Despite her ridiculously inaccurate depiction of me, she tricked me into taking my picture. My days of living in obscurity, taking a break from the rock-star life, were numbered, destroyed by a fiery redhead.
When she finally threw the chalk to the ground and left, I watched a particular part of her body sashay away and knew I’d never get her out of my head.
One
Willa
“LITTLE DID HE KNOW when he woke up this morning that a short redhead would destroy his perfect, Maserati-driving world.” I smirked and folded my arms as I stared at the white car in the café parking lot.
“Willa, if you’re about to do what I think you’re about to do, don’t,” Emmie said as she pushed her thick, wavy, mocha-colored hair from her shoulder.
Niki checked her phone messages for the third time this morning.
“I agree with Emmie. You don’t want the police involved . . . again.” It was the first cool late September day here in the sleepy town of Libertyville, Maryland. The leaves were developing a tinge of red and yellow, while the green tried its best to keep up the fight.
Emmie, Niki, and I were one of the first to be born and raised in the planned town, built in the early 1990s. Every feature, community, and tree were mapped out and designed to appeal to the average working American. Sort of the American dream in town form.
A bit artificial and in some places, over-the-top, but it was home. And we loved it.
It had that small-town feel but was nestled twenty minutes down the road from the big city. What I loved most about Libertyville were my two best friends, who I’d known since I was three years old. Right now, they stood next to me and tried their best to persuade me from making a stupid mistake.
But they also knew that stupid mistakes were my specialty.
“Emmie, give me your pocket chalk.” I held out my hand as I continued to stare at the white Maserati, or the nickname I had for it in my head, the compensation dick.
Her lips thinned as she gave me the side-eye.
“I’m sorry. What I meant to say was, Emmie, would you please give me your pocket chalk?”
“No.”
I turned to her and squared my hands on my hips. “Are you serious? I said please.”
“We came here for coffee this morning for our weekly Monday morning chat.” She waved a hand between herself and Niki. “I didn’t come here—and I am pretty sure Niki would agree with me—to be a part of your Law and Order scheme of the week.”
My hand flew to my chest as I gasped. “You two are my friends. You should be supporting me. Encouraging me. Girl power. Women’s lib or whatever catch-phrase I can insert to get you two to help me.”
They both shook their heads like creepy twins in a horror movie, that is, if the twins looked nothing alike.
“He’s parked in a handicapped spot and doesn’t have a tag.”
There was no handicapped license plate or tag hanging from his rearview mirror. Whoever drove the car was the worst douche since douches were first created hundreds of years ago.
And yet, that wasn’t the real reason I wanted to fuck with the driver.
“I admit, that’s bad, but not bad enough to mess with his car,” Niki said, finally looking up from her phone to assess the situation.
“I won’t even touch his precious baby. Scout’s honor.” I held up two fingers.
“You were never a Girl Scout, even though I begged you to sign up in third grade so we could hoard all the cookies,” Emmie said as she adjusted her death grip on her purse as if I was about to snatch it from her. Which I was, because it held the chalk.
“You could have been a Girl Scout.”
“My mom didn’t have the time or money to make that happen. And Niki’s mom kept sending her to tap lessons, so she never had time for Girl Scouts. You were our only hope.”
I rolled my eyes at the same fight we’ve been having for twenty years. I thought by twenty-eight, she’d be over the Girl Scout cookie scheme, but the woman held a grudge like a one size too small thong held on to an ass crack.
Pointing to the car, I said, “Can we focus on the problem at hand here?”
“I have to get to work, Willa. I run a company and people depend on me to be on time. Just because you think this guy isn’t disabled in some way that would require this parking space, doesn’t mean you should punish him. Yo
u aren’t the law enforcement. You’re a reporter. Maybe, instead, write a piece about people illegally parking in handicapped parking spaces,” Emmie offered.
I bit my lip and let out a breath. “Was.”
“What?”
“I was a reporter. I got fired last week.”
Maybe that’s why I couldn’t let it go. Why did this guy get all the money while being a total ass-hat, yet I got fired from a job I didn’t like anyway. I needed to work for the same reason everyone else needed a job—money.
My friends enveloped me in a hug. It was times like these I was grateful to have them in my life. Their support, comfort, and the kind words I knew would follow to help lift my spirits were what got me through these rough times.
Niki pulled back and gazed at me with a frown. “What did you do this time?”
“Can your boss sue you for libel or was it something caught on tape?” Emmie added.
“Wow. The love right now is . . . overwhelming,” I said as I thinned my lips.
I pulled my hand behind my back, holding something I didn’t want them to know I had until the time was right, and backed away.
“We’re sorry. It’s just, well, you’ve been fired from every job you’ve ever had. Even the lemonade stand you made with Darci, your neighbor, growing up. I remember when she fired you. Said you used too many lemons and the mix was sour.”
Darci was stingy and wanted all the profits for herself. I was only helping with that stand to be nice to her because my mom said she had no friends. I learned why she didn’t that day.
“You two were right. I was fired. I called my boss insane and a few other names I won’t repeat in front of such upstanding ladies.”
Niki snorted as Emmie smirked and shook her head.
“He went on about how the town had some secret society that catered to the wealthy. That the country’s elite built Libertyville to act out their wild fantasies all under the disguise of a quiet suburban town. Crazy talk. So, I called him on it. Apparently, my boss didn’t like hearing the truth.”
Niki nodded. “Yup, he’s crazy.”
“See, Niki agreed, yet I was the one being punished for being truthful. My crazy boss got to dictate what’s seen in the paper and this driver—who obviously has money—could break the rules and get away with it? That’s wrong.”
“I know it’s not fair, but life was never promised to you on a silver platter. If you need money, I can always—”
“Stop. I’m not taking your money.”
Emmie had butt loads of the stuff. For a girl who grew up with a single mom who worked two jobs just to feed her and her sister, she was the only one of us that made good on the promise we made in this very parking lot fifteen years ago. Back when the Hella Ella Café was Sweetie Times Frozen Yogurt. The three of us sat on the curb during the summer, dreaming of what our lives would be like when we grew up.
Emmie wanted to run a magazine. Not only did she own three different lifestyle magazines, but she was about to create a Vidtube series starring the lifestyle guru, Vera. The woman worked her ass off to make her dream come true.
Niki also dreamed of the entertainment world, but as an actress. She was old-Hollywood beautiful with bleached blond hair and big blue eyes. We all knew it was a matter of time before Niki made it because she was as talented as she was gorgeous—two of the requirements to make it in the movies. But, as of yet, the most she had done was a few appearances on a network series and a starring role in an indie film made years ago that had yet to be released.
These two were working on their dreams while I took any job I could get to pay the bills.
“You know, that series I’m creating will need some music. Something soft and universal, but with your voice—”
“Again, not going to happen.”
I dreamed of being a singer . . . working in the music industry. But how could someone become a singer if they were afraid to sing in front of the people they knew?
I could sing to a crowd as long as I didn’t know a soul in it. Which made it impossible as my friends and Mom would walk through fire to support me by showing up. I loved them and loathed them for it.
“You wouldn’t have to sing with anyone around. I could set up time in a recording booth where you couldn’t see anyone and—”
I took a step closer toward the car and held up what was hidden behind my back. The chalk.
“How did you . . .?” Emmie dug through her bag but found it empty of chalk. As put together and perfect as her life was, she had this weird revenge goal. In her eyes, if a business was terrible or treated her and others poorly, she’d mark the outside of the building with chalk. Then she knew where to go when she had money to buy out the place and make it how she wanted.
Niki and I nicknamed Emmie, the Mogul.
“Tiny body, tiny feet, but most importantly, tiny hands.” I held up my hands and wiggled my fingers. “It pays to be small.”
Marching toward the car, I bent over and began to draw on the black asphalt in front of the Maserati. It took longer than I had expected, and I was sweating by the time I was done, but it was worth it.
He deserved this for what he did.
“Parking only for those with tiny peens and fart breath,” someone murmured from behind. “I like the tiny penises squirting curlicues. Makes the insult a bit more fun,” he continued, but this time, he pushed thick blond hair that hung below his chin behind his ear, revealing a dimple.
Fuck me sideways, this guy was gorgeous in a scruffy, rugged sort of way . . . and oddly familiar.
“Is, uh, this your car?” I asked and inwardly prayed he’d say no.
“Yes.”
What could be worse than being fired yesterday? Being murdered by a wet dream today.
Two
Hunter
“SHE TOTALLY PEGGED you, bro,” my brother said behind me before he burst out laughing. Which turned into him wheezing and gasping for breath. For a moment, I thought he’d chuckle himself to an early death.
“He’s your brother?” The sexy redhead’s heart-stopping green eyes flickered from my face to my brother. Her lips quivered and I wondered what they’d look like wrapped around my cock.
Normally, I didn’t fantasize about women who called my dick small or used the word peen to describe it, but her thick, pouty lips, her thin yellow sweater—which did nothing to hide her perky tits—and those amazing eyes did something to me.
More importantly, they did something to my cock.
“Unfortunately. What did he do to you?”
I turned just in time to see my brother wave at his wheelchair miming the impression that I caused him to be wheelchair bound.
“You’re worse than I thought? You caused your brother to be in a wheelchair? My God, you’re a monster,” she said with a sneer.
“Ha, ha, Tucker. Time to explain that your big brother didn’t actually cause you to be in that wheelchair.” I forced a smile at my brother. Internally, I wanted to put him in a hospital bed for causing this hot-as-sin woman to look at me like I was evil incarnate. I loved my brother, but that didn’t mean I had to like him all the time. Tucker liked to joke, mainly at my expense. It was how he showed his love.
Tucker flashed his most innocent grin, compelling all the women standing there to instantly believe anything he said.
“He doesn’t have to explain anything. I’ve seen how you drive. It’s no wonder he’s in a wheelchair.” The redhead’s hands settled on her hips, pushing her fingers into that soft, plump skin that peeked out from under the sweater. She cleared her throat. I tried for an innocent smile as I turned my eyes back up to hers. But she wasn’t buying it.
“Eyes up here, asshole.”
Was it weird that I was totally turned on right now? Her chest jutted out as she stood taller, and I couldn’t help but notice. And by notice, I mean stare, apparently.
“Wow, Willa, you were right. This guy is an asshole. And I just thought you were being your usual stick-up-the butt self.”
The brunette with the golden eyes stepped closer, as did the blonde. They shielded their friend from my assholery.
At the mention of asshole and her name—Willa—in the same sentence, my mind quickly flashed to images of what her ass looked like under those skin-tight jeans. It’s what first caught my eyes as I held the door open for Tucker when we left the café. I wondered why he stopped in the middle of the doorway and when I followed his line of sight, I realized it was a sexy ass hidden under gray jeans, attached to a petite redhead. How could we not stare? She was bent over in front of my car; her rear end up in the air, doing something on the ground. As I came to find out, it was leaving a review of my body parts for all to see.
Not that she knew what my cock looked like, but I had the strong urge to discredit her findings with the real deal. But whipping out my cock for three women in a parking lot wouldn’t go down well with the police, or my agent.
I held up my hand. “Wait a minute . . . I came here to get coffee with my brother. Now it’s World War Three in front of my car and directed solely at me. What is going on?”
Willa shouldered through her friend’s barricade and stood an inch from me. If I arched my chest, I bet I could scrape those perky nipples with a rib or two. It was pathetic that I was contemplating that idea, but my mind raced with ideas for any physical contact with her.
I got my wish when her finger dug into my chest. As she increased pressure with that cute, itty-bitty finger, my cock went from shrugging with slight interest to growing with enthusiasm.
“You! You are what’s going on. Five days ago, I saw your car nearly run over my mother as she tried to cross the street. I had to race over to help her. Luckily, she fell back onto the grass-covered curb, so it was a soft fall. But I took her to the hospital anyway.”