Chapter 28
Twenty-Eight
GRAY
The conference call with Marcus and the label executives begins with Marcus jumping straight into the financial stakes.
“Gentlemen, this is a once-in-a-lifetime chance to capitalize on our album's highly anticipated release.
We're discussing not only an opportunity for unprecedented growth but also the substantial risks that come with it.”
I'm sitting in our studio, the rest of the band scattered around me, their expressions ranging from eager anticipation to cautious skepticism.
Zep is tapping his foot impatiently, wondering aloud if we are truly ready for such a big endeavor.
Andrew, ever cautious, is fully committed but stresses the importance of managing this wisely, especially with my recovery journey in mind.
Wyatt, contemplating deeply, acknowledges the enormous pressure but also recognizes the incredible chance for the band to expand.
Marcus's voice booms through the speaker, filled with the manic energy that once sent me to find relief at the bottom of a bottle, as the mixed emotions swirl around the room.
“You're sitting on a goldmine. The offers available right now would make your head spin. Madison Square Garden, the Hollywood Bowl, and international festivals are chomping at the bit to book you. We have to strike now.”
Andrew leans forward. “So, what's the proposal, Marcus?”
“Eight months, forty-five cities. Starts in three weeks.
We're calling it the 'Resurrection Tour.’ We'll play major cities like New York, Los Angeles, Chicago, and Miami. The tour is expected to generate around $150 million, based on ticket and merchandise sales. The contract guarantees a seven-figure payment, with more bonuses if we hit streaming and merch goals.”
The word 'Resurrection' slices through me. It’s a bitter reminder of the person and choices I clawed my way back from. My throat tightens, air thins, and I'm dragged to the morning after Rhea left, when I was alone and crumbling. The suggestion that my recovery is now a brand hook, exploited for ticket sales, feels like a huge violation. Dread coils inside me. Am I just a story for them? The shadow of relapse isn’t gone. It’s always going to lurk just beneath this shiny offer, waiting for the perfect opportunity to comfort me in ways I can’t go back to.
“The money is insane. We're talking about seven figures guaranteed, plus additional bonuses for merchandising and streaming. This is generational wealth, boys,” Marcus continues.
Zep and Wyatt exchange glances. I can see the temptation in their eyes. After years of incredible success, this is a significantly higher payday that could set them up for life.
“Eight months is a long time, and three weeks isn't much notice.” I waver, with everything here at risk of disappearing forever. Rhea is at risk of flying away again.
“That's the music business, Gray. Opportunity doesn’t wait.” Marcus is relentless.
“What about a smaller, regional tour?” Andrew asks.
Marcus laughs, sharp and dismissive. “Nobody pays top dollar for regional tours. It's all or nothing. Venues are holding dates, so I need an answer by the end of business tomorrow.”
I hesitate. “Any flexibility?”
Marcus fires back, “It's full commitment only.”
After he hangs up, the silence in the studio is deafening. Everyone's looking at me, waiting for me to say something, but guilt and anxiety swirl inside me, sharper than ever.
A wave of emotions washes over me. The immense remorse over dragging her into my chaos swells inside.
The protectiveness I feel towards her stems from the fact that she lifts me up, gives me so much strength and love, and my eternal gratefulness is soul-deep that she's at my side. Her hurt expression lingers in my mind, fueling my determination to protect what we have and how far we’ve come together.
Rhea had said quietly, “I never expected to love a celebrity until I met you three years ago. We’ll figure this out.” Her words anchor me, but I feel the weight of my obligations and the dread of disappointing both her and the band.
The paparazzi invasion over the past week has been relentless.
They've turned our peaceful village into a circus, camping outside Mountain Mornings, following Rhea to the grocery store, shouting questions about whether she's the reason I got sober…
questions they have no business asking. Yesterday, a photographer scared Duke so badly that he wouldn't leave Rhea's apartment for hours.
I know this is wearing on Rhea, and it hurts to see the stress in her eyes when she thinks I'm not looking.
Last night, as we sat on the porch, I asked her how she was holding up.
She commented that she was okay, but I feel like she was holding back for my sake.
“It's also life-ending money if it kills Gray's sobriety,” Parker says.
“Not saying we should, just that we consider it,” Cody counters, but it still feels like pressure.
“There's nothing to consider,” Parker says, scanning the room.
Zep throws his hands up. “What about us? We all have a stake here. How can we support Gray and each other?”
Wyatt nods. “Yeah, Parker's right. We need ways to keep Gray feeling in control on the road.”
“We can do a check-in system. We can take turns making sure Gray's okay, set up meetings,” Cody suggests.
Andrew adds, “And maybe some basic rules for the tour that’ll keep us accountable and looking out for each other.”
“Gray's been sober for almost eight months. Maybe he's ready?” Wyatt asks.
“Ready?” Andrew snaps. “Were you not here last year when he was scraped off the concrete in an Atlanta alley. They thought he was going to die.”
“That was different. Gray's different now,” Zep argues.
They talk about me as if I’ve vanished, like my struggle is something abstract, not sitting right here, breathing hard.
The walls feel too close, and the air is thick, prickling against my skin.
I can’t take the weight of their expectations pressing in.
I rise, almost fleeing, desperate for space before I choke on the need to be everything for everyone.
“I need to get out of here,” I say, already heading for the door.
“Gray—” Andrew starts, but I'm gone.
I drive to Xavier’s house without really thinking, muscle memory taking over when my brain can't function. My sponsor lives in a modest ranch house on the outskirts of Dahlonega, with a front porch that's seen hundreds of conversations between broken people trying to put themselves back together.
He takes one look at my face and immediately puts on coffee.
“Talk,” he says simply, settling into his usual chair while I pace his living room like a caged animal.
I tell him everything about the tour offer, the money, the band's division, and the pressure. But mostly I talk about the fear, the bone-deep terror that eight months on the road will unravel everything I've worked so hard for.
“What scares you most?” Xavier asks when I finally run out of words.
“Losing Rhea. Losing myself. Everything will be gone.” Am I clinging to recovery as a shield? Am I truly afraid to fly, terrified of failing if I soar? That uncertainty claws at me.
Xavier is quiet for a long moment, considering. “Fear of success and self-preservation can look similar from the outside. But you're the only one who knows which one this is.”
“That's not helpful, man.”
“It's not meant to be helpful. It's meant to be true.” He leans forward. “Gray, you've been in recovery for 237 days. That's a miracle. But it’s still early in the process. Most people recommend a full year before making major life changes.”
“This isn't a life change, it's a career opportunity,” I sound ridiculous to my own ears, arguing for the very thing I’m terrified of.
“Eight months away from your support system isn't a life change?” He lifts a challenging brow.
The truth lands hard. Eight months on tour isn’t just work.
It’s night after night in hotel rooms with temptation one door away.
It’s airports and strangers, and the insistent need to perform, to keep smiling, not to fail.
It’s a thousand cracks in the armor of my sobriety, each whispering that one drink won’t matter.
But I know better. I can't forget where that road goes.
“I could ask Rhea to come with me.” The thought tugs at a knot in my chest. Would she really want to leave the coffee shop she loves, her new roots, just to follow my uncertainty around the country? I can’t assume she’d say yes. The price of dragging her into my world feels steep.
“You could,” Xavier agrees. “But what would that cost her?”
My phone buzzes with a text from Dr. Hannah, my therapist, responding to the emergency session request I sent earlier.
Dr. Hannah: Can do a video call in an hour. Hang in there.
Xavier sees me check my phone and nods approvingly. “Good. You're using your tools. That's what they're for.”
“Whichever way I turn, I betray someone. Say yes, take the risk, and ask Rhea to sacrifice everything. Say no, and I cost the band its shot, and its very future. The burden isn’t just mine.
We owe each other honesty now. We need to specify how a final decision is made, even if it’s not unanimous.
I want Rhea there, too, because none of this happens in a vacuum. Inclusion isn’t optional.”
“Welcome to recovery,” Xavier says with a sad smile. “Where you learn that sometimes there's no perfect choice, just the choice you can live with.”
An hour later, I'm back at the studio, laptop open for my emergency session with Dr. Hannah. Her familiar face fills the screen, professional but warm, the woman who's helped me untangle twenty-five years of trauma and poor coping mechanisms.
“Tell me what's happening,” she says.
I go through it all again, but this time I focus more on the emotional weight than the practical details—the guilt, fear, and anger at having to choose between my dreams and my health.