Unforgettable - Linda Barrett (ebook audio reader .TXT) š
- Author: Linda Barrett
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āOh-h, she has momās name, too.ā With that, Emily took out her violin, and Jen knew exactly what to expect. Amazing Grace. The prayer her protĆ©gĆ© sister played every night before bed to connect her to their mother.
āIām not strong,ā whispered Emily, tucking the instrument under her chin. āExcept when Iām playing. When Iām with Mozart, when Iām lost in that worldā¦nothing can hurt me.ā
Jenās breath whooshed out, and she clasped her sisterās shoulders. āYouāand Iāare stronger than we think, Emily. Thatās what Iāve learned. We are as strong as we need to be. Your worldāeven without Mozartāwould be fine.ā
And Iām a fine one to talk. She needs Mozart like I needed Gloria Gaynor.
Emily whispered, āI canāt believe that this year is my last one with the Boston Youth Symphony. I donāt want it to end.ā
Change. Her little sister was afraid of change. Jen understood that too well.
āOh, honey. Youāre heading into your next adventure is all. First, Tanglewood this summer. Didnāt you say Maestro Perlman would be there again this year? Then the New England Conservatory. Come on, play for me.ā
Where was Mike when she needed him? Elite quarterbacks knew how to handle people. She was the worst psychologist in the world.
Emilyās first note brought Jenās thoughts to a halt. No matter how often she heard her sister play, she always forgot how magnificent her music was. She recognized Mozartās A Little Night Music. Emilyās eyes had closed, her bow flew as if of its own accord, and Jen knew the girl had, indeed, become part of another world.
She waited a bit before approaching. āEnough, Em. You need to be awake for Bobby in the morning and focus on him. Mundane, real world stuff. Got it?ā
The dreamy eyes sparkled. āI think I can handle my nephew. You go to your rehearsal. No worries.ā
Right. In the Delaney family, there were always worries. But she wouldnāt let Doug Collins be one of them. She hadnāt even mentioned him to Emily, which proved her point. He was forgettable.
##
A few minutes before ten oāclock the next morning, Jen greeted other members of the All-City Chorus in the lobby of the Commonwealth Theater. Excitement reverberated. The group had only two full rehearsals left before their performance.
āPeople! People.ā
Jen turned toward the speaker and listened. āWeāve got an almost sold-out house. Our reputation is growing.ā
āOr weāve coerced more family and friends to buy tickets!ā joked one of the singers.
Jen chuckled along with the rest. Sure, family and friends would attend, but also music lovers and supporters of community talent. She loved being part of this volunteer chorus. It seemed to round out her family time and career interests. And it added to her social life. Girlfriends. Guy friends. Her days were full. Busy. No lonely moments. She made sure of that.
āGood morning, Henny-Penny.ā
She froze for a moment, and her heart raced. Keep your cool, Jen.
Pivoting slowly, she finally nodded. āGood morning, ramblinā man.ā
He winced. āFive years in New York. Hardly rambling.ā
āDepends on your outlook, I guess. Sorry, Iāve got to get inside and on stage with the others.ā
āHowās Lisa doing?ā
āExcuse me?ā Her thoughts whirled. Nothing about the birth was in the papers today. Sheād checked before leaving her apartment. Boston loved their QB, and Mikeās life was publicāmost of the time.
āDeduction...and a hunch. I heard your directions to the driver last night. Brigham and Womenās. And you were speaking with Mike.ā He shrugged.
āLisaās doing just fine.ā And thatās all sheād give him.
His expression softened. āIām glad, Jen. Very glad.ā
That gentle voice, so warm and caring, reminded her of the man she used to know. Her heart ached for a moment, but she avoided his glance.
He held the heavy door open, and she walked through, feeling his eyes track her progress to the front of the theater. She joined the mezzo-sopranos on stage, all the while fighting the urge to turn around. When she couldnāt postpone it a moment longer, her glance darted to the door in the back.
Gone. He was gone. She sensed her relief, then her disappointment. Now that was something she needed to figure out.
Lowering her gaze when she detected movement, she saw Doug settling into an aisle seat as though he had all the time in the world. What had happened to the apartment search? His work with the new play? Where were his actors? Time was money. Not that she knew where his funding came from, but stillā¦he seemed to be wasting both time and money.
Not her business. She focused on the choral conductor and put Doug out of her mind, where he belonged.
Four-part harmonies, solos, duetsā the group had worked on a variety of ways to represent the Great American Songbook, the most enduring songs from the 1920ās through the 1950ās. Jenās mouth often trembled at the memories this music called up. In her mindās eye were pictures of herself singing with her mom, dad and Lisa as they cleaned up the kitchen after dinner every night. Each one could carry a mighty tune, each voice blending with the others. āJust like the Von Trapp family,ā her dad would offer with a grin. His eyes twinkled and his smile never faltered as the family made short work of the cleanup. A happy man.
And thenā¦she shudderedā¦only the five kids remained.
Jen blinked and willed herself back to the present. Memories could still bite. She viewed the music binder in front of her, paid attention to the conductor, and allowed herself to become immersed in the practice. A full rehearsal. Corrections. Improvements. More than a hundred voices strong accompanied by a piano and small chamber group of instruments. Her jazz solo came just before intermission. Summertime from Porgy and Bess. By the time she took the mic, she was ready. She eyed the conductor, listened for the musical intro.
Her smoky voice gave sympathetic quality to the words, while the backup chorus added a spiritual mood. Like Emily, she could have been alone as she got lost in the music, in the emotional depth of the song and the atmosphere it evoked.
Silence followed her last note. Silence before the congrats and spontaneous applause. She was jerked from her inner world, saw and heard the approval from her peers. Sheād put herself into it and knew she wouldnāt be able to sing better on performance night.
Her gaze traveled to the back of the auditorium. Dougās seat was empty, but the door behind him was swinging shut. Perhaps his reappearance had sparked memories sheād carefully packed away.
His presence was getting to her. She had to admit that truth. Theyād been happy together for four years. Maturing, sharingā¦trusting. So sweet and good. Could she have acted too hastily? She didnāt know. But that was then. What she did know was that she needed to move on with her life, a full life, but a life she could control.
He was late. Only Jen could have made him lose track of time, place and purpose. It wasnāt just her voice, it was the whole package. The girl he remembered had evolved into a woman. A woman who didnāt want any part of him now.
He made his way to the management office of the theater, secured keys to the buildingās side door and workshop rooms he and the cast would be using, and took the stairs to the third floor. A large conference room would be fine for the initial readings. Heād meet the regional theaterās creative team ā producer and director ā in person the next day, and auditions would begin the day after. The call had gone out, and he had a solid list of local actors to consider.
Staging a play was a cooperative venture. The most important part to Doug, however, was the play itself. The writing always was. With two successful works behind him in New Yorkāand he still marveled at his luckā heād now begin the intense challenge of bringing a new story to life. He couldnāt be happierā¦professionally.
He rearranged chairs, checked electrical outlets and touched base with his director and producer. They sounded as excited as Doug. After depositing a load of pads and pens on the table, he made his way downstairs, pausing to peek into the auditorium. Jenās rehearsal was still going strong. He headed to the exit door, and almost bumped into a young woman with a little boy.
āWhoa. Sorry.ā
āItās okay,ā she said. āCome on, Bobby.ā She shifted the case she carried and took the childās hand.
Doug looked again. A violin case. He studied the girl. āEmily? Is that you, all grown up?ā
Her brows came together, a frown appeared as she studied him. And slowly, her forehead cleared. āOh, I recognize you. Jenās boyfriend from long ago.ā
Long ago. Well, in a young girlās life, five years would be a long time. āDoug Collins.ā He held out his hand. āYou were such a little thing when I first met you. Maybe about nine years old.ā He felt himself pause. The child had had real problems. āHow are you doing?ā
Her slow smile reassured him. āFine, but Iām running late. I hope Jenās rehearsal is over before mine begins. Hey! Does she know youāre here?ā
āOh, yeah. I saw her last night, as a matter of fact.ā
āReally?ā She turned away. āWell, Iāve gotta go now. Cāmon, little man.ā
But the ālittle manā had thrown his nerf football down the hall and was diving in for aā¦.
āTouchdown! Auntie Emmy, Auntie Emmy! See?ā
āOh, I see all right. Letās go find your Auntie Jen.ā
The boy took Emilyās hand without a fuss, and Doug watched them enter the auditorium. His appointment with a Realtor was coming up, but mumbling ājust five minutes,ā he followed them.
##
Jen heard her nephew before she saw Emily. Wasnāt her sister a bit early? From her seat near the front of the theater, she waved them to her. And then she saw Doug behind them.
Darn it! Had they met already? What crummy luck. She stepped closer to greet them and swung her nephew into her arms. āMaking TDās, Bobby?ā
The child grinned wide enough that his six front teeth were revealed to all. āDaddyās in hop-i-tal with Mommy.ā
āYou have a sister, Bobby. Isnāt that wonderful?ā
Doug chimed in next. āAnd youāre the big brother. That little baby is lucky to have you.ā
Emily rolled her eyes toward Doug and gave Jen an inquiring glance.
Sighing, Jen shrugged.
āThe carās outside,ā said Emily. āThat was Mikeās idea, and Luis will take me to BUās rehearsal hall. Sorry if I showed up early. Iām a bit nervous. Hereās Bobbyās tote bag with extra clothes and sandwiches. What time shall I tell Luis to pick you up?ā
āI canāt stay any longer, now that our big boy is here. Iāll tell the conductor Iām leaving, but at least my solo is as good as I can get itā¦.ā Thinking out loud, she began putting words to action.
āSlow down a sec,ā said Doug. āIāll look after him if you donāt want to leave yet.ā
āIām okay with him.ā Jen turned toward her sister. āTell Luis Iāll find my own way home. Not to worry.ā
āI guess your place, since itās closer, or the house? Lisa will want to know.ā
Geez. āThanks, Em.ā Now Doug would know where she lived. āIāll call her. Now, just go.ā Emily gave Bobby a kiss and left.
Jennifer faced Doug, her chin raised. āI feel like youāre crowding me, Doug. You said you returned to Boston for your career. I hope thatās true. I hope youāre using
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