My chin tilts higher as I shift to another note.
My heart is calm instead of beating like crazy.
Is it because of what happened at the homecoming dance with The Kings? I played the triangle in front of a crowd of fourteen-year-olds. Maybe it affected me more than I thought.
With a deep breath, I glance up.
And it doesn’t freak me out.
I glance at the piano again and then look up again.
My stomach doesn’t clench. In fact, it’s a little exhilarating to see how much people are enjoying my music.
It’s a victory. And after the week, no after the weeks that I’ve had, I needed one.
I’m okay.
For the first time since I can remember, I smile when I play. My fingers run over the keys, dancing to a rhythm that no one else understands. I close my eyes and let it flow how it wants to.
Music welcomes me. Envelops me. It’s a tide that sweeps over my entire body. Rough on the surface, fragile underneath.
I didn’t have time to prepare a hip-hop backing track or plan a concert that flows smoothly. This is just me. My blood. My heart. My everything. Like I shoved a hand into my chest and pulled out my intestines.
When I’m done, I hear applause. The pop up event is alive with movement. Waiters dip in and out of tables. Couples of all ages sit, entwined, facing the stage. Not a single table is free. In fact, there’s a line of customers watching and waiting beyond the velvet ropes that cordon off the event.
The shame returns, fierce and crippling. It’s worse this time because I know what it feels like to play as myself. The liberation. The authenticity. The wig and makeup feel even heavier on me now than they did before.
I hurry off the stage and nod at the two violinists who walk up next.
The manager of the event is underneath the drinks tent. He gives me a thumbs-up. I wave awkwardly in return.
My phone chimes.
I glance down in surprise when I see they deposited more than the agreed upon amount in my account. Since when did Gorge pay right after a performance instead of three days later?
I’m not going to complain. This will go a long way in putting something towards the rent.
“Hey.”
At the sound of my brother’s voice, a bucket of cold water splashes over me. After mom died, I gave him so many chances.
He’d just found out his mother was a drug addict and he had two half sisters who were just as poor and messed up as he was. It was probably a lot to take in. I understood.
But he didn’t reach out to us for weeks. And then, when we asked him for help, he told me to jump off a cliff. Maybe he didn’t use those exact words, but it was clear we were nothing but a burden to him.
I swore to cut him out of my life and pretend he never existed, pretend mom never told us he existed.
So why is there a part of me that wants to get a hug from him?
Keeping my back to him, I cough. “What?”
“I just wanted you to know that you play really… well…” He steps in front of me suddenly and his eyes widen with amazement. “Cadence?”
“How did you…” I realize I just gave myself away and redden. Terrified, I glance around, noticing all the waitresses giving us a weird look. Did they hear us?
His eyes bug. “Itisyou.”
I look up into my brother’s face. We first met a day after I received mom’s suicide note. He came to the house wearing dusty jeans, a stained button down and old sneakers. His hair was thick and wavy and he didn’t look anything like me or Vi.