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  LIGHT DREAM

  Book 1, part 2 in "Love in Illyria" Series

  by Adalind White

  Copyright © June 2018 by Adalind White

  This book is the conclusion of the Dreams Duet set in the "Love in Illyria" series. The love story has a happily ever after at the end of the duet.

  The following story contains mature themes and occasional bad language. It is intended for adult readers.

  This story is set in a fictional European country created by the author. Illyria does not exist. Please read the Author's notes for more information

  All characters, names, events, brands, companies, and locations are created by the author. Any resemblance to actual persons, organizations, and settings is purely coincidental.

  If you'd like to use any part of the book in any way, please email [email protected] to ask for permission.

  Table of Contents

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Author's Note

  Rockstar vs Heiress

  Chapter 1

  Vy

  SHE LEFT THE BLACK ROSES IN HER CAR. She had asked about them, but the people at the club only knew they came from Magnifique. The Magnifique website was stunningly beautiful and head-spinningly expensive. That took Philippe off the list of suspects. Most likely they were from Carter, and he probably waited for her to talk about it.

  She told Carter everything, but she never mentioned the roses.

  Half an hour after leaving Dusk, she sauntered into Carter's control room, and flopped onto her favorite chair, without greeting him. He wouldn't reply anyway. She spun around a few times, idly scrolling through social media on her phone, until she got dizzy. She arranged and rearranged the height of the chair, knowing that it was going to screech loudly.

  No reaction from Carter.

  She ordered pizza from her favorite all-night takeaway place, saying aloud all the ingredients Carter hated. She rolled her chair all the way next to him. She craned her neck and shoved her face as close as possible, short of smushing it into his arm. She watched the hairs on his arm move with her breath.

  "I have a new project for you," he said, without turning his head.

  He sounded sickeningly faint. Vy's heart shrunk. She hadn't heard him sing in weeks. The Waves kept working on their new album behind closed doors. She was booked all across Illyria thanks to Carter's agent. Always alone. The Waves hadn't had a live gig since New Year's. Two months to the day.

  She hoped this was the beginning of another mind game. She couldn't accept anything being wrong with Carter. Hating him was too much fun.

  She pushed her chair back until it hit the wall.

  "I want you to sing with the Waves in Viaverde. At the Summer Festival."

  "The one in July?"

  "It's the only one," he said without the bite of derision she expected for her stupid question.

  "Why?"

  "Because no one expects it. I talked to the band already."

  "Wait, what? You're serious?!"

  He handed her a music sheet. "This song, I want us to sing this one together."

  She recognized the song immediately. "The one who got away". One of his earliest hits. A difficult song that Carter hadn't sung in years. She knew it and hated it. The lyrics were uncomfortable in their honesty.

  She wanted to make fun of him for being so serious. She scrambled for a joke that would break the tension. She had no idea what had happened to him, but the impulse to hug him overcame any other ideas. She rolled her chair back to him and put her arms around his bony shoulders.

  He pushed her away gently. "Don't get mushy on me."

  She didn't have a clue what was going on, but she knew his voice as well as she knew her own. And something was definitely wrong there, but for once, she didn't want to know.

  "And since it's a long way until July," he said. "This should occupy your time until we start practice."

  He handed her a printed email. The IBC logo made her cringe. What now?

  "Celebrity Jungle?" she exclaimed. "You want me to go on Celebrity Jungle?"

  "Don't tell me you're afraid."

  She snorted loudly, not even deigning that slur with a reply.

  "I can't think of a single person more suitable to be on that show," he said. He watched her with that intense gaze that drilled all the way into her soul. "Do you have anyone more pressing to do?"

  "You're such an asshole," she said.

  "It takes one to know one."

  "I am a perfectly nice person, thank you very much," she said tartly.

  "Sure you are," he said, irony dripping off his venomous tongue. "The show starts on Monday and filming is only four weeks. You won't even have time to miss me."

  "I wouldn't have time to miss you on a trip to Mars."

  He pressed his hands over his heart, pretending he'd been pierced by an arrow.

  She felt better to see him clowning around. His offer to sing with the Waves had shaken her deeply. Flying to some godforsaken place where IBC filmed that crazy show, eating insects and sleeping in tents could make for a nice vacation compared to life as Carter's apprentice.

  Two days into the shoot, she realized that Carter had been wrong about one thing. She already missed him. She missed listening to him talk about music. She missed the sound of Dirty Thursday on her phone when he called her to the studio in the middle of the night. She even missed the disappointment in his eyes when she didn't sing the way he wanted.

  Three weeks into the shoot, she was the only one out of the ten contestants who seemed to enjoy living in the tropical hell hole. She was getting adept at skewering cockroaches and spiders with cutlery, and hitting annoyingly loud nocturnal birds with stones until they flew away.

  Late one evening, Melinda Wilmotte, the weather girl from the morning show, was peeling the potatoes from the last box of provisions dropped by the production company. Vy was across from her, dicing them, when she saw the snake slithering toward Melinda.

  She could shoo the creature away, but she decided it was a good time to try the technique they learned during the basic preparation. They hadn't had animal protein in a long time, and as far as she knew most snakes were edible. She stood up slowly, and took a few slow steps toward the snake.

  "What the hell are you doing?" Melinda asked.

  Vy ignored her, and focused on the snake. When Melinda followed her gaze, she yelped, dropped the knife and ran. The snake got spooked and slithered through the grass like a ribbon of black quicksilver. Vy's hand darted and caught its tail. She immediately started to drag it backwards slowly, then gently put her foot a few inches behind its head.

  On the far side of the clearing, she was aware of people gathering, but she focused on the little creature. She bent at the waist and in a smooth move she caught its head in a light but firm grip. It was cold and slimy to the touch but it wasn't disgust that changed her mind. The creepy little thing seemed scared and vulnerable.

  She walked to the edge of the clearing that served as their base camp, and released the snake back into the woods.

  "There you go, Mister Snake," she whispered. "Stay away from us humans from now on."

  A round of applause greeted her when she walked back into the campsite. She took off her straw hat and executed a perfect courtly bow. When she straightened up, she noticed that apart from h
er fellow contestants, Randall Storm, the show's presenter, was also there, with a film crew.

  "That's a hell of a welcome," Storm said, still applauding.

  "What's wrong?" she asked immediately.

  They still had another full day of isolation until Storm was supposed to show up in person. Until then, they got their tasks through the PA system, and they were filmed by the fixed cameras.

  "Nothing's wrong," Storm said. "Come on, gather around the fire everyone."

  Vy wiped her palms on her cargo pants and sat down cross-legged on the grass, with her face away from the cameras. Storm was going to have another surprise for them, and she hated getting her first reactions on camera. She'd seen the last few seasons of Celebrity Jungle as preparation for the show, and she was sure that there were more cameras than the ones they could see. She'd "accidentally" stepped on a couple of them.

  "You have five more days, and it's still all to play for," Storm said.

  Vy tried not to smirk. On points alone, she was way in front of the others. She'd scored more points than anyone else, taking on the toughest tasks, and volunteering for all the bonus challenges. But she'd learned enough about how IBC needed to inject drama in their shows to know that they were about to mess with the ranking.

  "We brought a very special guest, who will stay with you for the rest of the competition. Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to the Celebrity Jungle, rock royalty, Mr. Andrew King."

  The man stepped from the shadow of the thick forest and sat on the chair next to Storm.

  Un-freaking-believable! They had brought the one person who could mess up her concentration. She wondered if Carter knew about it. She shook herself. Carter couldn't know that Andrew King was her kryptonite.

  She glanced at him, and his head immediately turned, catching her eyes before she could pretend she was looking at Storm.

  Andrew

  When IBC contacted him to be on the show, he'd said no as soon as he read the list of contestants. The temptation to say yes was too strong, and it had nothing to do with his need to protect her. After the dozens of stories about Vy pulling crazy courageous stunts, he didn't doubt she'd be in her element on this show.

  Carter's visit had come as the real shock. He could see how much it was costing his lifelong rival to ask for his help.

  "IBC wants to rig the game," Carter said. "They'll introduce a new element in the Jungle because she's far ahead on points since week two. They're worried the audience will stop watching when they see there's a clear winner."

  "Why do you want me to go?" he asked, knowing that Carter was well connected in IBC and he must have had a hand in their offer to be there.

  Carter forced the words through clenched teeth. "Because you'll be fair."

  "I already turned them down," he said.

  "Tell them you changed your mind." Carter stood up and paced slowly across the room. "I told her to go. She thinks she's brave and she can take it, but when they will mess with the rules, she will be heartbroken. I don't want her to become jaded."

  "Very noble of you."

  "Fuck you."

  "Are you still trying to persuade me to go on the show?" he asked, amused yet weary of Carter's distress.

  "Yes. Listen," Carter said then remained silent for a long time. "I have some health issues, and she needs to be strong. She needs this win."

  "What health issues?"

  Carter shook his head. "I'm in treatment. I have a decent fighting chance."

  For a moment, he wondered if Tim was lying. In the end, it didn't even matter. IBC had manipulated the audience's perception of Vy on Sing. They had done far worse things to him all those years ago. If he could help the girl, he should.

  That was how he got to Celebrity Jungle in time to watch Vy Cesara catch a snake with her bare hands.

  They had given him the script only when he got on the plane, and when he read the challenges he was supposed to introduce in their lives, he was glad he accepted.

  After Storm's speech, he stood up and walked to the refrigerator plastered with the logos of the show's sponsor. The fridge was chest-high and it was wider than himself.

  He read aloud the first challenge.

  "You all know the lake teaming with fish and water snakes north of the camp. In that lake, there is a locked chest. Inside the chest there is the key that can open this." He slapped his hand on the fridge. "For a hundred points and all the delicious food inside, the volunteers-"

  Vy's hand shot up. He went on speaking.

  "-will have to cross the jungle using only the compass in their basic kit, follow the clues to find the key to the chest, swim under the water of the lake and open the treasure chest, then run back with the second key. Whoever has the shortest overall time, gets the points. Who else is signing on for this?" he asked, after nodding at her to acknowledge her waving hand.

  "I'll do it," Dorian said.

  He was one of the three people below Vy. If he made it, the hundred points at stake would close the gap. The other two guys who still had a chance to win, also raised their hands.

  "All right people. We have four contestants," he said. "Get a good night sleep. It's a long way to the lake. It starts at dawn."

  He waited for the director to wrap the filming, and went back to his chair next to Storm.

  "Did you change your mind?" Storm asked.

  "They said I could take part in any of the challenges," he said with a shrug.

  "For what it's worth, I hope you don't win," Storm said. "You're the only one who can share the food with them, and that doesn't make for good TV."

  At least he was honest about it. Storm shook his hand and left with the TV crew. They probably didn't have to worry about him winning. He hadn't done anything more taxing than his gym routine in years. He couldn't even remember when he'd last swam into anything other than an indoor pool.

  While they filmed, someone had set up his tent. It looked like a small sturdy cabin compared to the squat and flimsy tents in which the contestants slept. He was contractually obligated to spend time with them outside the challenges, so he went and sat in the grass, next to them.

  "Want some?" Dorian asked, offering him a plastic plate with some fried potatoes.

  He shook his head. "I ate on the plane."

  "What's the catch?" Shane Matthews asked.

  Shane was one of the three men competing the next day.

  "You find the challenge too easy?" he asked, not allowed to tell them that the catch was that if the winner shared the food with the others, he, or most likely she, would lose a hundred points.

  "There's always a catch," Vy said.

  Melinda puffed derisively through her nose. "You're the one to talk?" she said. "You always win."

  "Yeah, Vy," Shane said. "You don't seem to be scared of anything we had to face so far. Did you lie on the interview? When they asked us what our worst fears are?"

  Vy shrugged. "Nope," she said. "I don't like spiders or snakes or bathing in cold water, but I'm just not afraid of these things. I'm not afraid of heights, or the dark, or things that go bump in the night. I'm just... not."

  "What are you afraid of?" Dorian asked.

  That was an excellent question. He was afraid for her.

  "I'm afraid of flying. But I still do it." She turned to look at him. "I was afraid of losing Sing."

  "Yeah, like that matters any more," Dorian chimed in. "TC is parading you all over Illyria."

  "And he is writing me beautiful songs," she said. "But that doesn't change the fact that I lost. It matters to me."

  It mattered to her because it mattered to Carter. The bond between Vy and Carter had grown strong. He had noticed it in the way she sang on stage. Carter had confirmed it when he had asked for his help. It went beyond a sexual connection or even a romantic attachment.

  He was strangely relieved. Carter was better for Vy than he would have been. For all Carter's faults, he hadn't done any of the things Andrew himself had done or dreamed of doing with Vy. He did
n't know where that belief came from, but it made his heart feel lighter than it had in ages.

  Chapter 2

  Vy

  THEY PICKED NUMBERS OUT OF THE HAT. Shane had been the first, Marcello second, and she was third. On the grass, under the shade of a tree, Dorian Leclerc who was the last to go, lay on his back with his eyes closed, getting ready for his own turn.

  Shane's forearms were scratched, so she picked up a long sleeves shirt to go with the multi-pocket cargo pants. She loosely braided her hair to keep it of her eyes, and to prevent it getting caught in whatever bushes she might have to go through to get to the key.

  She ran down the path as soon as she heard the buzzer. The clues took her way out of the path to the lake, and, as she expected, the first key was in a tree hole. To get to it, she had to put her arm through a thorny plant that must have left the gashes on Shane.

  Judging by the smell, there was something else in that hole. She remembered the contestants complaining about the disgusting smell of the tiny critters filling places where they had to stick their hands.

  The thorns tore at her sleeve, and a few made it all the way to the skin, but the worst part to feel for the key while those things crawled over her skin. The week before she had managed to stay in the spider house longer than anyone else, she wasn't going to back away from these little creeps.

  She jerked her hand out as soon as she had the key and clasped it to the bracelet on her left wrist.

  She retraced her steps back to the path to the lake, then ran all the way to the shore. She shimmied out of her clothes and walked into the cold water. By the time the water got to her ankles, her teeth were chattering. She picked up the pace and soon she was deep enough to start swimming.

  The chest was easily reachable and she ignored the sensation of the fish brushing against her skin while she unlocked it. The cold and the lack of air were causing her a severe headache and made it difficult to take the first key off the bracelet and insert it in the hole. Her lungs seemed on fire while she clasped the second key to her bracelet.

  She burst out of the water like a dolphin and gulped air greedily. At the edge of the lake, she put on her shoes and ran back to the camp in her swimming suit, abandoning her clothes. She rushed past King and the others and hit the button of the timer next to the fridge. When she checked her time, she saw she was almost ten minutes faster than the best time so far.