The piano room was as grand as any other in the club, with luxurious drapes cascading to the floor in swaths of rich velvet and golden sconces glowing softly against the deep rose walls. A proud Steinway grand stood center stage, its polished black curves gilded silver by a blanket of moonlight.
Seated in front of it, her back to me and her fingers flying over the keys at a speed that was almost dizzying to witness, was Isabella. Sheโd entered the sonataโs final movement.
A bold trill announced the start of the first theme, which twisted and stretched and turned upside down over the next two-hundred-something odd measures. Then, it was quiet, an intermission before the second themeโs choir hummed into existence.
Soft, haunting, dignifiedโฆ
Until the first theme crashed in again, its rushing notes sweeping over its successorโs quieter existence with such force it was impossible for the second not to bend. The two themes curled around each other, their temperaments diametrically opposed yet inexplicably beautiful when conjoined, climbing higher and higher and higher stillโฆ
Then a plunge, a free-falling grand finale that nosedived off the cliff in a magnificent splash of double trills, parallel scales, and leaping octaves.
Through it all, I stood, body frozen and pulse pounding at the sheer impossibility of what Iโd witnessed.
Iโd played the same sonata before. Dozens of times. But not once did it sound like that. The final movement was supposed to be thick with sorrow, an emotionally draining twenty minutes that had earned it mournful superlatives from commentators. Yet in Isabellaโs hands, itโd transformed into something uplifting, almost joyful.
Granted, her technique wasnโt perfect. She leaned too heavy on some notes, too light on others, and her finger control wasnโt quite developed enough to bring out all the melodic lines. Despite all that, sheโd accomplished the impossible.
Sheโd taken pain and turned it into hope.
The last note hung in the air, breathless, before it faded and all was quiet.
The spell holding me captive cracked. Air filled my lungs again, but when I spoke, my voice sounded rougher than usual. โImpressive.โ
Isabella visibly tensed before the last syllable passed my lips. She whipped around, her face suffused with alarm. When she spotted me, she relaxed only to stiffen again a second later.
โWhat are you doing here?โ
Amusement pulled at the corners of my mouth. โI should be asking you that question.โ
I didnโt disclose the fact that I knew sheโd been sneaking into the piano room for months. Iโd discovered it by accident one night when Iโd stayed late in the library and exited in time to catch Isabella slipping out with a guilty expression. She hadnโt spotted me, but Iโd heard her play multiple times since. The library was right next to the piano room; if I sat near the wall dividing the two, I could hear the faint melodies coming from the other side. Theyโd served as an oddly soothing soundtrack for my work. However, tonight was the first night Iโd heard her play something as complex as the โHammerklavier.โ
โWeโre allowed to use the room after hours if thereโs no one else here,โ Isabella said with a defiant tilt of her chin. โWhich I guess there now is.โ She faltered, her brows drawing together in a tight V.
She moved to stand, but I shook my head. โStay. Unless you have other plans for the night.โ Another involuntary glimmer of amusement. โI hear neon skate parties are all the rage these days.โ
Crimson bloomed across her cheeks, but she lifted her chin and pinned me with a dignified glare. โItโs impolite to eavesdrop on other peopleโs conversations. Donโt they teach you that at boarding school?โ
โAu contraire, thatโs where the most eavesdropping happens. As for your accusation, Iโm not sure what you mean,โ I said, tone mild. โI was merely commenting on nightlife trends.โ
Logic told me I shouldnโt engage with Isabella any more than necessary. It was inappropriate, considering her employment and my role at the club. I also had the unsettling sense that she was dangerousโnot physically, but in some other way I couldnโt pinpoint.
Yet instead of leaving as my good sense dictated, I closed the distance between us and skimmed my fingers over the pianoโs ivory keys. They were still warm from her touch.
Isabella relaxed into her seat, but her eyes remained alert as they followed me to her side. โNo offense, but I canโt picture you in a nightclub, much less a neon anything.โ
โI donโt have to take part in something to understand it.โ I pressed the minor key, allowing the note to signal a transition into my next topic. โYou played well. Better than most pianists who attempt the โHammerklavier.โ โ
โI sense a but at the end of that sentence.โ
โBut you were too aggressive at the start of the second theme. Itโs supposed to be lighter, more understated.โ It wasnโt an insult; it was an objective appraisal.
Isabella cocked an eyebrow. โYou think you can do better?โ
My pulse spiked, and a familiar flame kindled in my chest. Her tone straddled the line between playful and challenging, but that was enough to throw the gates of my competitiveness wide open.
โMay I?โ I nodded at the bench.
She slid off her seat. I took her vacated spot, adjusted the bench height and touched the keys again, thoughtfully this time. I only played the second movement, but Iโd been practicing the โHammerklavierโ since I was a child, when Iโd insisted my piano teacher skip the easy pieces and teach me the most difficult compositions instead. It was harder to get into it without the first movement as a prelude, but muscle memory carried me through.
The sonata finished with a grand flourish, and I smiled, satisfied. โHmm.โ Isabella sounded unimpressed. โMine was better.โ
My head snapped up. โPardon me?โ
โSorry.โ She shrugged. โYouโre a good piano player, but youโre lacking something.โ
The sentiment was so unfamiliar and unexpected I could only stare, my reply lost somewhere between astonishment and indignation.
โIโm lacking something,โ I echoed, too dumbfounded to dredge up an original response.
Iโd graduated top of my class from Oxford and Cambridge, lettered in tennis and polo, and spoke seven languages fluently. Iโd founded a charity for funding the arts in underserved areas when I was eighteen, and I was on the fast track to becoming one of the worldโs youngest Fortune 500 CEOs.
In my thirty-two years on earth, no one had ever told me I wasย lacking
something.
The worst part was, upon examination, she was right.
Yes, my technique surpassed hers. Iโd hit every note with precision, but the piece had inspiredโฆnothing. The ebbs and tides of emotion thatโd characterized her rendition had vanished, leaving a sterile beauty in their wake.
Iโd never noticed when playing by myself, but following her performance, the difference was obvious.
My jaw tightened. I was used to being the best, and the realization that I
wasnโt, at least not at this particular song, rankled.
โWhat, exactly, do you think Iโm lacking?โ I asked, my tone even despite the swarm of thoughts invading my brain.
Mental note: Substitute tennis with Dominic for piano practice until I fix this problem.ย Iโd never done anything less than perfectly, and this would not be my exception.
Isabellaโs cheeks dimpled. She appeared to take immense delight in my disgruntlement, which shouldโve infuriated me more. Instead, her teasing grin almost pulled an answering smile out of me before I caught myself.
โThe fact you donโt know is part of the problem.โ She stepped toward the door. โYouโll figure it out.โ
โWait.โ I stood and grabbed her arm without thinking.
We froze in unison, our eyes locked on where my hand encircled her wrist. Her skin was soft to the touch, and the flutter of her pulse matched the sudden escalation in my heartbeat.
A heavy, tension-laced silence mushroomed around us. I was a proponent of science; I didnโt believe in anything that defied the laws of physics, but I couldโve sworn time physically slowed, like each second was encased in molasses.
Isabella visibly swallowed. A tiny movement, but it was enough for the laws to snap back into place and for reason to intervene.
Time sped to its usual pace, and I dropped her arm as abruptly as Iโd grasped it.
โApologies,โ I said, my voice stiff. I tried my best to ignore the tingle on my palm.
โItโs fine.โ Isabella touched her wrist, her expression distracted. โHas anyone told you that you talk like an extra fromย Downton Abbey?โ
The question came from so far out of left field it took a moment to sink in. โIโฆaย what?โ
โAn extra fromย Downton Abbey.ย You know, that show about the British aristocracy during the early twentieth century?โ
โI know the show.โ I didnโt live under a rock.
โOh, good. Just thought Iโd let you know in case you didnโt.โ Isabella flashed another bright smile. โYou should try to loosen up a bit. It might help with your piano playing.โ
For the second time that night, words deserted me.
I was still standing there, trying to figure out how my evening had gone so off the rails, when the door closed behind her.
It wasnโt until I was on my way home that I realized I hadnโt thought about the CEO vote or its timing once since I heard Isabella in the piano room.