Spotlight Read online Eden Finley (Famous #2)

Categories Genre: M-M Romance, Romance Tags Authors: Series: Famous Series by Eden Finley
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Total pages in book: 99
Estimated words: 100441 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 502(@200wpm)___ 402(@250wpm)___ 335(@300wpm)
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The paparazzi are forced to stay outside by law, but they’re growing in number. And when we walk past them, they don’t even blink.

Oh, the joys of being invisible.

Kind of ironic when all I want to do is stand out in a crowd.

It’s all I’ve ever wanted.

Not that I don’t love my life. I just want more.

I put Chase in the back seat and pull Ryder’s car around as close to the entrance as I can get.

Ryder makes a break for it as soon as I pull to a stop. He’s got Kaylee in his arms, and she’s got her head buried in his shoulder so they can’t get photos of her face.

Ryder’s expert-fast at buckling her into her seat, and then he jumps into the passenger side while asking paparazzi to back up.

I take off before his seat belt is even on.

For a few blocks everyone in the car is silent.

I’m stunned speechless, Ryder looks pissed off, Chase is generally good at picking up tension in a room, and I can’t tell if Kaylee is still upset she had to leave or if the big, bad men shoving cameras in her face scared her.

“Shit,” Ryder hisses.

Kaylee gasps. “Daddy said a bad word.”

Damn, that’s adorable.

“Your car,” Ryder says to me.

“We caught the bus. I can pull up to a stop on line fourteen to get back home.”

“Where do you live?”

“Beverly Hills.”

When he looks at me surprised, I remind him, “Crashing in my brother’s pool house, remember?”

“Oh. Right. We can take you. It’s the least I can do to thank you for helping back there.”

“It’s not out of the way?”

“Don’t worry about it. I insist. Drive to your place, and then I’ll take Kaylee home.”

“Thank you.”

We fall back into silence.

The easy conversation we had back at the play center is gone.

“Does that happen a lot?” I ask stupidly. Of course it happens a lot. “I thought it was illegal for them to take photos of Kaylee? Didn’t Reese Witherspoon’s diva fit make new laws?”

“The law actually states they can’t harass the children of celebrities. They’re free to post any photos they get.”

“And that back there isn’t considered harassment?”

“The law is vague. I can bring charges against them and try to sue them in a civil suit, but the one time I inquired how to do that, the lawyer advised me it would be more detrimental to Kaylee’s mental health having to go through something like that—talking to psychologists and giving testimony that she felt threatened and harmed—than if I just let it be.”

“That’s the stupidest thing I’ve ever heard.”

“Uncle Lyric, don’t say stupid. It’s mean.”

“Not if something really is stupid,” I mumble under my breath.

Ryder’s easy smile is back. “Don’t say bad words, Uncle Lyric.”

Damn, why do I like his teasing voice so much?

“But, Daddy, you said shit!”

I bite my lip to stop from laughing at Ryder’s defeated slump.

“I’m not going to hear the end of that,” Ryder says.

“Kids swearing is so adorable.”

“Adorable is one word for it.”

I almost hate that there’s little traffic for once and we make it home in relatively good time. Good time for LA, anyway.

Ryder Kennedy is nothing like I expected him to be. Not that I’d thought much about him at all before this.

In the media, he’s portrayed as the humble one everyone wants to be friends with. I can totally see it.

When we inevitably pull into the circular driveway of my brother’s ranch-style home that screams old Hollywood, I reluctantly turn off the car.

“What does your brother do again?” Ryder asks, dipping his head to stare up at the house through the windshield.

“Entertainment lawyer. He has some pretty big names on his client list.”

“Ah. That explains some more things. I’m learning a lot today.”

“What things?”

He side-eyes me. “This isn’t me being conceited or anything, but you don’t treat me like I’m a celebrity.”

“Sorry, should I be kissing your a—”—I glance at the back seat where the kids are listening intently—“feet?”

“Not at all. And after overhearing what you really think of me, I’d be disappointed if you suddenly did. But, I don’t know … most people—even the ones who hate Eleven’s music—gush and fawn over us. It’s unnerving.”

“I’m fanboying on the inside.”

Ryder laughs. “Good to know.”

“The way I see it, the difference between a celebrity and a struggling artist is a record deal.”

“That’s so true it’s scary.”

“Thanks for dropping us off. Saved us a long bus ride.”

“Thanks for your help with the paparazzi.”

“No problem. I have Chase Thursday and Friday afternoons after school and alternating Saturdays if you want to set up a playdate with the kids.”

“Yeah!” little Kaylee says behind us. “I want a playdate!”

Ryder nods. “I’ll contact you.”

“And don’t forget, the nanny offer is always open.”

“Do you ever give up?”

“Never. Don’t know the meaning of the word.” Apparently, I’m as stubborn as my father. But unlike him, I won’t let the industry suck me in and then spit me out.


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