Protecting Nicole – Perception Read Online Shandi Boyes

Categories Genre: Alpha Male, Erotic, Funny Tags Authors:
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Total pages in book: 96
Estimated words: 91146 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 456(@200wpm)___ 365(@250wpm)___ 304(@300wpm)
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This one is straight-up country.

The pride in my voice can’t be missed. “That’s good, River. Real good.”

“But too bland.” River’s sigh is silent, but I don’t need to hear it to know his confidence is torn to shreds when Knox continues dissing his design while walking down the empty aisle. “It’s no different from what every other Tom, Dick, and Harry is putting out. It’ll get lost in a sea of millions.”

“Conformity is a well-known trait of the music industry.” I haven’t studied music for years, but some truths never change.

River hums, agreeing with me, but Knox isn’t as easy to get over the fence. “Not at Knox Records. We want to be different. Unique. We’re not going to follow the masses. We’ll carve our own road.” The admiration in his eyes pisses me off when he flicks them to Nicole, who is making her way down the aisle even though the exit is directly across from her. “And the glory we’ll achieve will all be thanks to her.”

It dawns on me that Nicole isn’t joining our discussion when she sidesteps Knox to enter the bathroom. This private jet only has one washroom. It is next to my seat.

I feel like shit so I may as well smell like it too.

Just when I think my mood can’t sour any more, it nosedives off a cliff as Knox tells Nicole he’ll join her in a minute. He doesn’t keep his voice down or try to hide his intentions from the flight attendant collecting River’s empty glass of coke. He proudly announces his intent to join the mile-high club, even with the jet no longer in the air, to anyone willing to listen.

I’ve never wished to be deaf until now.

Knox raps his knuckles on my chest, stealing my focus from the “in use” sign on the bathroom door. “I didn’t come here to bust River’s balls about his shitty cover design.” I shift my eyes to River to silently assure him his cover is the perfect fit for a country-pop artist while Knox continues tossing out insults as if they’re compliments. “I wanted to give you a heads-up so we don’t face any incidents on the way out like we did on the way in.” He props his ass on the armrest of my seat. I assume he’s going to give me a rundown on the best way to protect Nicole from the vultures of the media, so you can imagine my shock when he says, “I’m not paying you to come between Nicole and the paps.” Before I can remind him that I didn’t sign any of the forms he tried to hand me earlier, payment details included, he adds, “Any publicity is good publicity.”

“They’re making her out to be a homewrecker. Every article I’ve skimmed the past hour is running the same set of false claims.”

Well, I assume they’re false. But what do I know? I thought Nicole was single when we hooked up, and I was soon proven wrong.

“And?” Knox asks, his voice humored. “You said she’s in every magazine. Do you have any idea how much that type of exposure is worth? You can’t buy coverage like this.”

“But Nicole doesn’t want fame this way.”

Knox tries to act as if River never spoke. I don’t let it slide, however. I peer past Knox, who’s blocking my little brother from my view, before gesturing for River to continue.

Against Knox’s grumbled warning for him to keep his mouth shut, River discloses, “She could have had a record deal years ago, but she didn’t want it off her friends’ backs. She wanted to make it on her own.” He spins his laptop to face me. The screen is filled with a hideous album cover that makes Nicole look like she's starring in an infomercial for retro aerobics videos. Her clothes are fluro, her hair is teased out, and she’s wearing puffy socks. “That’s why she goes by Nikki J.”

“The media knows who she is,” Knox defends, his back up.

River’s defenses are just as high. “Because you include it in every press release you send out.”

“You what?”

That question didn’t come from River or me. It came from Nicole, who is exiting the bathroom with a platinum-blonde wig hiding her identifiable locks. “We agreed that we would do this from the ground up. That it would be our victory.”

Her “we” and “our” cut through me like a knife, but the glare she hits Knox with during her statement makes them more papercuts than fatal wounds.

“I tried. I swear to you, I did,” Knox defends, his voice almost babyish as he tries to subdue her with charm instead of facts. “But no one was interested until your connection to Rise Up was exposed.”

How the fuck can that be? Nicole had only seconds to prepare before her performance last night, and she hit it out of the park. I was in complete fucking awe and desperate for more, so how aren’t disc jockeys rushing for the chance to play her songs?


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