My head explodes. I feel like I’m stroking out. I’m literally blinded by my panic. “That’s enough! You’re going to head back to your hotel right nowto wait for me. Do you hear me? I’m leaving my place now. Meet me at your hotel!”
She giggles with glee. “Goodbye, Reed. I’m hanging up now, and then I’m going to turn off my phone until morning. So, don’t blow up my phone all night with texts and voicemails, ya freakin’ psycho.Ciao, stronzo! Sleep tight!”
I’m stumbling. Tripping as I race to my walk-in closet to throw onclothes over my sweaty body. Forget showering. My house is burning down around me, and I need to grab only my most valuable possession.I need to grab Georgie!
“Tell me the name of that bar, Georgina Marie! That’s acommandfrom the head of the label that’s making his artists available to you!” I hop on one foot as I try to throw on jeans with one hand while holding my phone to my ear with the other. “Georgie? Georgina Marie Ricci!”
But it’s no use. The line has gone dead.
Georgina Marie Ricci, the most diabolical woman alive, a woman who takes scorched-earth tactics to a whole new level, is gone.
69
GEORGINA
Tuesday 10:57 pm
After I hang up with Reed, I get out of my parked rental car and begin walking the three blocks to my destination: a small bar in West Hollywood called Slingers that features live music every night. Hopefully, Troy Eklund is performing tonight, as Slingers’ online schedule promises, because I’ve got a crap-ton of questions for him.
I haven’t decided if I’m going to come right out and tell Troy I’m a writer forRock ‘n’ Roll,researching an article about Reed Rivers—and, oh, by the way, I’ve gota bunch of questions about a lawsuit you filed against Reed six years ago!—or if, instead, I’ll pretend to be some random chick in a bar with a boner for musicians. My gut tells me I’ll get a whole lot more information out of Troy if I play Star-Struck Groupie. But I figure I’ll play it by ear and decide on the fly.
Everything I know about Troy, I’ve learned from two admittedly unreliable sources—the internet and the pages of his six-year-old lawsuit—all of which can be summarized, as follows:
Ten years ago, when Troy was eighteen, he started a band calledThe Distillery in Sacramento. Troy was his band’s front man and guitarist, and, even at eighteen, had so much swagger, you’d have thought the kid had arrived in our world via the future, already knowing his rock stardom was in the bag.
For three years in Sacramento, The Distillery played local bars and gigs, until finally catching the eye of one Reed Rivers—a shrewd and brilliant young businessman with an up-and-coming indie label that had recently scored back-to-back smash debut albums from two young bands: Red Card Riot and Danger Doctor Jones, as well as a number one smash debut single from 2Real.
With the ink barely dry on The Distillery’s deal with River Records, Troy and his bandmates moved to LA—into Reed’s house, as a matter of fact—where they began writing, and then recording, their debut album with Reed’s guidance.
Troy’s complaint didn’t list the address of Reed’s house, but, given that Reed purchased his present hilltop castle five years ago, and the events alleged in Troy’s lawsuit happenedsevenyears ago, Troy and his band must have stayed in Reed’s much smaller first house. A place Reed once told me would have fit inside his present garage. Which means Reed and those Distillery boys almost certainly got up close and personal during those several months together.
According to Troy’s complaint, Reed and the band had many “detailed” conversations during the band’s stay with Reed, about music, in general, and the band’s bright future, specifically. According to Troy, Reed always said the “sky was the limit” for the band—and for Troy, in particular. Troy claimed Reed made multiple promises to him during this time period. Promises Reed didn’t wind up keeping.
According to my research, Reed wasn’t shy about expressing his admiration for The Distillery during those early months. Reed was variously quoted as saying The Distillery was “lightning in a bottle” and “like nobody else.” Regarding Troy, in particular, Reed called him a “future star.”
For their part, Troy and his bandmates returned Reed’s enthusiasm, calling their deal with River Records a “dream come true” and Reed, specifically, “a genius.”
After several months of hard work, The Distillery’s album was completed, and Reed teed up everything for the upcoming release,including having the guys shoot a music video for their debut single. By all accounts, the stars were aligned for The Distillery to take the world by storm in the same way Red Card Riot and Danger Doctor Jones had already done.
But, then, out of nowhere, mere weeks before the band’s debut album was scheduled to drop, something happened that made Reed abruptly scrap the album, unceremoniously dump the band from his label, and physically beat the shit out of Troy. What was it that made Reed turn so viciously on a band he’d so vocally supported and admired?Well, a woman, of course.What else? Specifically, an “unnamed woman” with whom Reed had previously “been involved”... and with whom Troy had apparently had sex within two weeks of the scheduled debut album release.
In other words, according to Troy, Reed dumped Troy and his band, and physically assaulted Troy, thereby forfeiting all the time and money Reed had invested, merely to exactrevengeupon Troy for screwing the wrong woman. Now, really. Does all that sound like something Reed would do?
Hell yes, it does!Duh.I saw the way Reed looked at C-Bomb that night at the RCR concert. Like he wanted to kill C-Bomb for merely flirting with me. I also saw the way Reed handled that PA who’d walked in on us. He was absolutely ruthless with that poor girl. Like a mob boss. Plus, backstage at the RCR concert, Reed himself told me he’d “trained” his artists not to hit on anyone he’d been involved with. Well, now I know what he was talking about. He was referring to the incident with Troy.
But even without all that direct evidence to make me believe Reed did precisely what Troy accused him of doing, I’d still believe it, if only because Reed settled Troy’s lawsuit. Reed himself told me he doesn’t settle a case, unless it has merit, or Reed believes ajurywill think it does. In regard to Stephanie Moreland’s lawsuit, Reed settled because Leonard advised him a jury would hate him. Also, because California law is clear about the consequences of a boss screwing an employee. But, in this instance, my gut tells me Reed settled Troy’s lawsuit because it was flat-outtrue.
What happened to The Distillery after they got unceremoniously dumped by River Records? They broke up. Apparently, Troy’sbandmates were too pissed at him for fucking the “unnamed woman,” whoever she was—cough, cough, Isabel Randolph—to want to continue making music with him. They couldn’t release their existing debut album, since River Records owned it, according to the ironclad terms of their record deal. And everyone in the band was far too pissed at Troy at that point to sit down and try to write new music. For crying out loud, the band was even prohibited fromperformingany of the songs on that debut album, without the label’s written consent—which, of course, it refused to give. And not only that, according to the complaint, Reed went so far as to “blackball” Troy in the music industry, thereby ensuring Troy’s presentandfuture music career was DOA.
So, that was that. The Distillery was dead, and Troy thereafter became a lone wolf pariah who eked out a meager music career by performing in small bars. I don’t know what Troy received in settlement—there were no details on that in the court file. But whatever payment he got, it obviously wasn’t enough to keep Troy off the schedule of dive bars like Slingers a full six years later.
Speaking of which, I reach the front door of Slingers and show my ID to the bouncer, who stamps my wrist and allows me to enter the darkened bar. And there he is. Troy Eklund. Playing an acoustic guitar and belting out a song on a small stage in the corner.
I stand, stock still inside the door for a moment, blown away. No wonder Reed signed this guy. He’s mesmerizing. Talented and hot as hell. I already knew what he looked like, thanks to YouTube. But, still, in person Troy Eklund is a smoke show. No wonder the “unnamed woman” screwed him. I’d screw him, too. In fact, who knows? Maybe, if Troy plays his cards right, I’ll screw him tonight.
I take a seat at the bar and order a beer, and then swivel around to watch Troy’s performance. It doesn’t take long for him to notice me staring at him like a hungry dog.
When his gaze mingles with mine, I flash him my most brazen “I’m looking for a sexy good time” smolder. And in response, Troy winks at me, not missing a beat in his song.