Public Secrets
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Chapter 49 : now, five years from now. It makes the idea of growing older pleasant somehow."&qu
now, five years from now. It makes the idea of growing older pleasant
somehow."
"Rock stars don't get old." He frowned, and for the first time Bev heard
a trace of sarcasm, or was it disillusionment, in his voice. "They
could start playing Vegas in white suits."
"Not you, Bri." She tightened her arm around his waist. "Ten years from
now, you'll still be on top."
"Yeah. Well, if I ever buy a white suit with sequins, kick me in the
a.s.s."
"With the greatest pleasure." She kissed him, lifting a hand to his
cheek to soothe as she might with one of the children. "Let's put Emma
down."
"I want to do right by them, Bev." s.h.i.+fting Emma, he started down the
hall to her room. "By them, and you."
"You are doing right."
"The world's so tucked up. I used to think if we made it, really made
it, people would listen to what we had to say. That it would make a
difference. Now I don't know."
"What's wrong, Bri?"
"I don't know." He laid Emma down, wis.h.i.+ng he could put his
finger on the reason for the restless dissatisfaction he'd begun to
feel. "A couple of years ago, when things really started to break for
us, I thought it was fab. All those girls screaming, our pictures in
all the mags, our music on every radio."
"It's what you wanted."
"It was, is. I don't know. How can they hear what we're trying to say,
what difference does it make how good we are, if they scream through
every b.l.o.o.d.y concert? We're just a commodity, an image Pete's polished
up to sell records. I hate that." He stuffed his frustrated fists in
his pockets. "Sometimes I think we should go back to where we
started-the pubs where people listened or danced when we played. When
we could reach them. I don't know." He pa.s.sed a hand through his hair.
"I guess I didn't realize how much fun we were having then. But you
can't go back."
"I didn't know you felt this way. Why didn't you tell me?"
"I didn't know myself really. It's just that I don't feel like Brian
McAvoy anymore." How could he explain that the feeling he'd revived at
Woodstock had stubbornly faded in the year following it? "I didn't know
how frustrating it would be not to be able to go out and have a drink
with the lads, or sit on the beach without people swarming around,
wanting a piece."
"You could stop. You could pull back and write."
"I can't stop." He looked down at Emma, sleeping peacefully. "I have to
record, I have to perform. Every time I'm on stage or in the studio, I
know, deep down, that this is what I want to do. Need to do. But the
rest of it ... The rest of it sucks, and I didn't know it would.
Maybe it's Hendrix and Joplin dying the way they did. Such a waste.
Then the Beatles breaking up. It's like the end of something, and I
haven't finished."
"Not the end." She laid a hand on his shoulder, automatically kneading