“She can do it,” Alex said confidently.
“What about bass?” Darcy asked. “You’ll need someone to play with you.”
Elizabeth nodded, conceding his point but not having a ready answer.
“What about one of the guitar techs? I think Simon can play bass,” Caroline said.
“I can play,” Charles volunteered.
“Are you sure?” Caroline asked in a tone that was much more appropriate for a sibling than a manager.
“I don’t like it,” Darcy said darkly. “Playing the warm-up set and then our show. I think that’ll be too much.”
Charles looked at Jane, who squeezed his hand, then turned to the others. “It’s not too much. It’s just for one set and it’s only for a week.”
“I don’t know, Charles,” Caroline frowned. “Maybe we should find someone else.”
“We don’t have time,” Charles insisted. “I can do it. I know half the songs already.”
“Excuse me,” Rachel spoke up loudly. “That was Anne,” she announced, as she closed her phone. “She’s on her way with Collins.”
A mass of groans and rolled eyes accompanied this statement. “Did you tell her not to come?” Darcy asked impatiently.
“I didn’t get a chance. Her plane just landed.”
Darcy swore softly.
“Let me play for Lizzy,” Charles insisted. “If it turns out to be too much, we can try something else.”
“Maybe in a few days, Jane could start to transition back in by just playing and not singing,” Elizabeth suggested. Jane nodded in agreement.
“Jane is not going back on until the doctor says she is ready,” Darcy said firmly. “Charles, if you really think you can do it, then go ahead. I’m not going to fight with you on this.”
“It’ll be fine, Will,” Charles said easily.
Richard, as usual, had nothing to add. “When are we going to have time to rehearse?” Charlotte asked.
Lizzy shrugged and looked at Alex and Caroline. “That will depend on our travel schedule,” Alex said.
“I’m going to work that out, and I will have some answers at breakfast, if that is all right with everyone,” Caroline told them.
The meeting broke up to regroup ten minutes later in the dining room. Elizabeth found herself alone with Darcy as the room emptied out.
She noticed the hard set of his jaw. “You’re not happy with this, are you?”
He shook his head.
“What would you have done?” she asked, wanting to know if there was an option she didn’t know about.
“When we had a problem before, I stopped the tour,” he told her flatly.
“Yes, well, that was fine for the Slurry tour. But being that this is not the LBS tour, I don’t think that’s the answer.”
He looked away. An idea sprung up in Elizabeth’s head that she knew could not be right. “You would have stopped the tour for us?” she asked incredulously.
“I did, didn’t I?”
“But that was just for one night. You can’t stop the whole tour for a week, not for us; that’s crazy.”
“I know,” he said simply. “That is why we are going on. But I don’t like it.”
Elizabeth studied him openly. “Can I ask you something?” Her curiosity was risking more trouble, but she had to know.
Darcy’s head moved down and up once, slowly in response as his eyes held hers.
“What is your problem with Charles and Jane?” she asked calmly. “I understand being concerned,” she explained. “I know I am, but you seem so virulently opposed to them. I just want to know why.”
Darcy’s eyes expressed his surprise and interest in her question. “You’re concerned?”
“Certainly,” Elizabeth affirmed. She paused for the right words. “Jane only sees the best in people. She doesn’t have a healthy sense of doubt. And she and Charles seem to be going really, really fast. I don’t want to see her getting hurt.” She looked up to Darcy challengingly. “But I don’t glare at them every time they are sitting together. Jane is an adult, and unless she asks for my advice, I’m keeping my opinions to myself.”
“Are you suggesting that I am not?”
Elizabeth buried the spark of anger that flashed at his words and replied politely, “I’m not suggesting anything. I’m asking why you seem to object to their relationship so strongly.” Her eyes held on to his, not giving an inch.
Darcy looked away, staring at a distant point while he answered thoughtfully. “Charles is… impulsive when it comes to his relationships with women. He falls in love quickly and he falls hard. It’s no secret that some of his relationships have ended quite badly.”
“And you think Jane is playing him?” she asked softly.
“No,” he answered quickly. “But I do worry that this might not last and that we have a very long tour ahead of us. Frankly, Lizzy, I don’t want to lose another opening band.”
Elizabeth thought carefully. “So you don’t object to Jane herself?”
“I don’t know Jane,” Darcy answered honestly. “I only met her a month ago. Jane seems like a good person. She’s a pretty girl with a nice voice. But in this business, girls like that are a dime a dozen, and many of them are ambitious enough to do something more to get ahead.”
His candor surprised Elizabeth. “Is that how you see her? A pretty girl with a nice voice?”
“At this point, yes,” Darcy answered easily. “The important thing is that even if Jane isn’t in this to advance her career, if she gives off the appearance that she is it could be damaging to both of them.”
Elizabeth was silent for a long moment. She realized that an answer was required, but she really didn’t want to continue the conversation. “Thank you,” she said, “for answering my question. It’s… thank you.”
“Do you want to go down for breakfast?” Darcy asked, not understanding her reaction.
“No,” Elizabeth shook her head. “I’ll wait for Charlotte and Jane,” she said with a weak smile. “Thanks.”
Darcy looked at her again, his dark eyes searching hers, then he turned and left the room without a word.
Elizabeth sank to the couch, drew up her knees, and put her head down. She felt like crying, and she had no idea why. She had asked Darcy the question and he had answered her honestly. He was worried about the tour. What more did she expect? He thought of them as “pretty girls with nice voices.” When had she ever believed there might be something more? She was simply a performer, an employee. It was important for him to maintain a good working relationship, but nothing more. When had she ever wanted it to be something more? She detested him, didn’t she?
It didn’t matter. She hated to admit it, but Darcy was right. They had a long tour in front of them, and a friendly, respectful, and distant relationship was best for everyone. And frankly, she realized as she recalled his interactions with his staff, she was lucky to be getting that, rather than the arrogant way he treated most of the people on the tour.
Richard smiled attentively at his companion. Charlotte had frequently found herself sitting beside him. The rest of the tour members were quite willing to leave the drummers alone so that they could eat without the table rattling from Charlotte’s and Richard’s never-ending rhythms.
This morning was no different from the others, with the exception of a knowing look being exchanged. As Richard ate, Charlotte reported on the morning’s events.
Richard looked from his plate to the subject of their conversation. “Poor Lizzy,” he commented. “Well, it makes sense she would be a little cranky this morning. After all, she was probably more upset than Jane about the accident.”
Charlotte nodded. “Plus, now she has the solo show to worry about.”
“Yeah,” Richard agreed. “She needs to get laid.”
Charlotte almost spit out her coffee in shock at what she heard. She looked at him and she started laughing, covering her mouth with her hand.
“I’ve heard it’s very good for relieving stress,” Richard continued, his voice casual.
Charlotte had to bury her head against his shoulder, she was laughing so hard. When she finally calmed down enough that she could look at him, she said in a forcibly subdued voice, “I’ve heard that.”