Authors: Stephanie Lawton
“But?”
He sighs. “But I guess I’m worried about you. You know, the usual. Last night…” His gaze wanders all over the room. Finally, it settles on me. I smile. “Never mind. I’ll be keeping
my eye on you, though.” He stands and wraps an arm around my shoulders. I fight the urge to wince, aware of last night’s injuries. He gives me a gentle squeeze and kisses the top of my head.
“Way to go, kiddo. You’ll knock ’em dead.”
On Monday morning, Isaac says pretty much the same thing, though not in so many words. When I finish, he smiles and pats my shoulder.
“Knew you could do it.”
I glow.
Chapter Three
“So what’s the best part about the NEC? Besides, you know, that it’s prestigious, you have one-on-one instruction, and you become famous?” I peek over my shoulder, but Isaac’s not looking at me. I got the school’s information packet in the mail yesterday. I may have spent a few hours petting the pretty, glossy photos and hitting “repeat” on the enclosed CD.
“Wish it was that easy.” He blows out a big breath. “Pretty great, I admit. But I had a hard time at first. Coming from here”
—
he gestures out the window
—
“was rough. Big city life isn’t like here, where you know everyone. Plus, it gets cold as hell.”
He’s reliving some pleasant memory, I can tell. I wonder if his memory matches any of my daydreams about Boston. Maybe he’s walking down the street, soaking in the neon lights; sitting in a concert hall on a Saturday evening; wolfing down pizza at a little eatery where the waiters are all struggling musicians. I’ve dreamed of these scenarios time and again.
“Still, it’s a great place. Traveled a lot doing master classes and with the orchestra, but Boston is a world of its own. Can’t explain it right. Always something to do and great
people-watching
. Seen things you wouldn’t believe.” He grins.
“Like what?” I hope to draw him out a little more. Usually I can count his words on fingers and toes, but today I’ve run out of digits.
“Well, like snow piles big enough to bury a car. Fall leaves. Skating rinks. People from all over the world.”
I’ve never seen snow. His list only fuels my already overactive imagination.
Eleven months until graduation, and I’ll see these things for myself.
That night, I empty my change jar, count out quarters, and drop them into my front pocket. I have six minutes until the city bus stops a block away from the back of the studio.
God knows what she’d do if she knew.
I’m distracted from this dreadful thought by the
people-watching
. Or rather, people who watch
me
. There’s an obvious line between the haves and have-nots in parts of Mobile. By riding public transportation, I clearly infringe on the de facto segregation everyone tries to ignore.
A young black girl in too-small, mismatched clothes sits across from me. She doesn’t even try to hide the fact that she’s staring. She’s about ten years old, but her eyes tell me she’s seen things I couldn’t dream of. Grimy hands clutch a tattered stuffed unicorn and a plastic shopping bag from the grocery store located at the bus stop before mine. Through the thin white plastic I see she’s got a Red Bull and condoms. I’m not sure which disturbs me more
—
that someone would send her out to buy those things, or that she may have bought them for herself.
I bolt out of my seat when the bus squeals to a halt at my stop. The bar, Felix’s, is located downtown, so Mama would have a complete meltdown if she knew I was here, but I try to come
at least once a month when she’s out at one of her committee meetings. Tonight’s a big one, so she shouldn’t be back until late. Daddy’s hardly ever around and isn’t an issue.
I slide into my usual seat across the room from the tiny stage, just big enough to accommodate an upright piano and a few other musicians. Percy, the bouncer, nods to me, and the bartender tips an imaginary hat. The waitress brings me my usual soda and saunters off to refill her hard-drinking customers. The whole staff knows I’m underage, but they let me in because they know I come here to listen, not sneak booze.
The band tonight is the Cotton City Rollers. Although he also plays trombone, Lenny plays piano during the off-season, and he’s on a kick tonight. Everyone taps their toes, drums fingers on the tables, or waves invisible handkerchiefs in the air.
That includes Isaac Laroche, who beats the drum line on the brown bottle in his hand.
I’m so busted.
I slink down in my chair and cross my arms. I know it won’t help, but I do it anyway.
Nothing to see here, folks.
Just an underage girl on the wrong side of town.
No such luck. He spots me and heads over. He’s got on a gingham button-down shirt and bizarre surfer shorts with flip-flops.
He’s accessorized by clutching a beer
. This is certainly a different side of him.
“Isn’t this a school night, little girl?” He smirks. My first instinct is to beg him not to tell my parents. And cry. Instead, I try a different tactic.
“Aren’t you too old to talk to ‘little girls’ in a bar?” For effect, I twirl my hair around a finger. “Besides, it’s June, remember? No school?”
“Touché. Just didn’t expect to see you here, Miss Casquette. You sure you’re only seventeen?”
“I didn’t expect to see you here either,
Mr. Laroche
.” I uncross and cross my legs.
“
Please
, it’s Isaac. I’m not
that
old, and it sounds creepy coming from you. Especially in a place like this.” Amusement flickers in his eyes as he locks them on mine.
I hold my breath. He turns his head to watch the band. Even in the dim light, I see the muscles in his square jaw clench and relax. I follow the line down to his broad shoulders and that little curve that connects his shoulder to his chest. I can’t help but compare him to the boys at school. He’s even bigger than R.J., and older. He doesn’t look a thing like a stereotypical pianist. In fact, he looks like he could be the bouncer.
“Okay,
Isaac
, here’s a little secret.” I smile up at him, despite the unease that flops around in my stomach. “I come here to listen to Lenny, the guy on piano tonight. His band always plays at the Mystics’ balls.”
“I know.”
“Oh, right. Well, I love this stuff.” It’s the kind of music that’s best heard live because it changes every time it’s performed. It’s so different from what I play. I admire the musicians’ abandon and ability to improvise
—
two things I can’t do. “Most people
—
you know who I mean
—
don’t know about this place. So how come
you’re
here?”
He doesn’t answer. Instead, he lifts his chin toward the seat next to me. I give him my good-girl smile. He takes that as a green light and sits down, careful to leave a modest amount of space between us. I lick my lips, which have suddenly gone dry. This new tactic could get me in trouble.
He leans in close. “Can I tell
you
a secret?”
Oh, this is bad. This is very bad.
“I’ll keep yours if you keep mine.”
Wait, did I just say that out loud?
“Fair enough.” He stares off again, listening to Lenny’s solo.
I can almost hear the little angel on my left shoulder do battle with the devil on my right. If I keep this up, I’ll be schizophrenic. Which, when you consider my family, is a definite possibility.
Go ahead and flirt. You’re in a bar. The rules don’t apply here. And he stared at you. Stared! You could totally score an older guy.
Oh, shut up. He’s not into you. Just look at yourself. How could he be? He’s just buzzed. Plus, he’s Mr. Cline’s nephew. It’d be like making out with Mr. Cline.
I choke on my drink.
He still stares at the band, thank goodness, caught up in the bluesy riffs that float on the smoky air. His eyes are darker tonight, almost charcoal in the dim light from the stage. There are lines just forming at the corners of his eyes and deep concentration grooves between his brows, like he scowls too often.
He takes a sudden swig of his beer, and I’m jolted out of my reverie as though I’ve gotten caught red-handed. As though he felt me studying his profile. I’m surprised at his next words.
“My secret is that I used to come here when I was your age, too. Got tired of the canon stuff and wanted to see how the other half played, so to speak. That’s why I minored in Jazz Studies.” He snickers. “Although I
did
sneak a few beers now and then, unlike you and your…” He waves toward my drink.
“Coke.”
Gulp.
“Ah. Can I get you another?”
“Thanks, but no. I have to get back before Mama comes home.”
“Aw, leaving so soon? Mean to tell me your mama doesn’t let you sneak out to bars and talk to older men? Can’t imagine why.” He winks.
I seriously forget to breathe.
Relax,
it’s the beer talking.
I punch him in the shoulder.
“Hey, you promised to keep that a secret. I know you’ve been in Boston for a while, but you’re back in ’Bama now.” I channel Vivien Leigh and give him my best Southern belle. “You’re bound by a code of honor to keep your word.”
No matter where you end up in life or how long you’re gone, if you’re from south of the Mason-Dixon Line, the code of the Southern Gentleman is in effect. And the minute you violate it, your mama will know by some Southern sixth sense.
“Yes, ma’am. Nothing short of a voodoo curse could get me to spill it.” He places his hand over his heart. “Hey, did you drive here?”
Do not get in his car. Do not get in his car. Do not
—
“No, I took the bus. There’s a stop a few blocks down from the back door of the studio. Mama checks the hood of my car to see if it’s warm.”
“Jeez. Doesn’t she trust you?” His question is like a bucket of cold water.
I look away.
No, she doesn’t trust me. She
—
The waitress comes by to collect my empty glass. I dig into my purse to find my wallet but hesitate, distracted by the other contents. They’ve been rearranged. Again. I push that realization aside and flick open my wallet to get a couple of dollars. By then, Isaac’s beat me to it.
“Said it yourself, I’m back in ’Bama now. It’d be rude not to pay for your Coke since I invited myself over to your table.” When I protest, he puts up a hand. “Besides, your daddy pays me enough to teach you. I can spare a couple of dollars.”
“Fair enough. That’s kind of you, Isaac.”
He puts down a tip for the waitress and stands, stretching his large frame. “Think I’ll go now, too. Have to meet with the
maestro
tomorrow morning.” He rolls his eyes.
Outside in the suffocating heat of the evening, we part ways. I turn to walk to the bus stop. Across the street, a homeless man yells something unintelligible. Even though it’s ninety degrees, he wears several layers of grimy clothes, jeans torn at the knees and an army-green stocking cap.
“Hey, purty thang!
Mmm-hmm, a redhead, too.
I’m mighty hungry. Got some change?”
I ignore him but he gets louder. When he gets to his feet and stumbles to the curb, I pick up the pace. But what he says next stops me in my tracks.
“The Lord is watching you. He see what you are, what you gonna do.”
An unnatural breeze dries the sweat on my forehead and I shiver. Isaac’s black Charger appears, and he lowers the tinted passenger-side window.
“Guess I’ve been in Boston too long. My manners are gone. Let me give you a ride home, and I’ll drop you off a block away so you don’t blow your cover.” I open the door and get in, all previous resolutions forgotten. “Those buses are scary. And you won’t have to deal with
him
.” He nods to the man hobbling across the street.
“I’ll take you up on your offer. Thanks.” I pull on my seatbelt and don’t look back.
***
“Don’t you
do
anything?” R.J. asks. He looks like he’s imitating Daddy. He stands in the doorway of my bedroom with his hands on his hips. R.J., short for Richard Junior, is the male version of me, except his hair is more brown than red, and he’s a few inches taller. We both have athletic builds, but he developed his during high school football.
“What do you mean, don’t I
do
anything? I’m reading, obviously.” I roll over onto my side. Besides music, books are my other passion. R.J. thinks it’s a waste of time. “And what
should
I be doing, your majesty?”
“I don’t know. Something. Anything.”
“You do realize it’s ninety-four degrees outside, and it’s not even”
—
I glance at my bedside clock
—
“ten o’clock yet.”