(February
14)
Leah
heard her phone chirp. Sidney had texted
twice since she had practically hung up on him, saved by the bell. She was a jerk for not calling back, and she
knew it. But she didn’t know what to say. The flower arrangements stood like judges on
her desk, scowling.
We’re okay, she had told
him. That was true. They weren’t bad, they weren’t good - they
were right down the middle, in between something and nothing. Friends.
It had been so easy for Leah and Sidney to get there and so damned hard
to stay. Cole Harbour had almost made
them something else then Pittsburgh had nearly taken it all away. She was scared of disrupting their precarious
balance, but it was tipping farther every time she ignored that noise.
This
time the voicemail notification sounded.
Leah closed her eyes, unsure if she could handle the sound of his
voice. Would he be mad? Hurt? With
morbid curiosity she dug the phone out - and saw a Toronto area code she didn’t
recognize.
That had better not be James, she thought as
she typed in her passcode.
“Leah,
my name is Kevin Jefferson with the selection committee for the Soundcast
Performance Contest. We received your
entry and you’ve been selected as a performer for the Nova Scotia contest date,
next Saturday in Halifax. Please give me
a call back to confirm and check your email for the paperwork you’ll need to
submit by Wednesday. Congratulations.”
Her
heart pounded so loudly she missed the last sentence. Suddenly Leah was terrified. Not of the singing; after the anthem in
Pittsburgh she could handle this. Some
of the fear was about playing piano but the song was both simple and shorter. Lyrics she knew so well sprang to mind – it
was the words that scared her.
They’re true, they’re right, she repeated in
her head. The words were everything she
felt and couldn’t say – not to Sidney, hardly even to herself. If she could tell them to strangers it would
make them stronger; maybe strong enough to stand up to her own doubts. Leah forced herself to call Kevin Jefferson
back and accept. Then she called Gina
and spilled the whole thing.
“Oh
my God, you’re gonna win! Two thousand
dollars, Leah!”
“I’m
not gonna win,” Leah laughed despite her still-racing heart. “But I am going to do it. I have to.”
“You’re
gonna be Carly Rae Jepsen,” Gina insisted.
“You
haven’t even heard the song! It’s not
that kind of song, G.”
Her
best friend in the whole world didn’t care.
“Soon Sidney won’t be famous enough for you, babe.”
That
night, Leah went to her sister’s house and set up in the basement. Her own apartment would not do for real
practice. She plugged in her keyboard
and played, then sang, then did both together.
No microphone. Just her voice and
the individual notes. Kate paced
upstairs – Leah wouldn’t let her listen, not yet.
___
(February
15)
Friday
night came and with it an odd, almost kinetic energy. Leah felt great. She went to Madigan’s with Gina and Travis,
cowboy boots and all. She drank. She even asked Ricky Calvert to dance. Looking around the room, Leah saw people who
thought they knew everything about her. Maybe
they did. Sidney was on her mind, as
always. Between this place and the club
in Pittsburgh was a world of difference.
Sid managed in both – not smoothly, but he managed. Leah was beginning to think that maybe Cole
Harbour was too small for her after all.
That called for a round of shots, then more beers. Before she knew it, last call was calling her
up on stage.
“You
all know Leah,” the band leader said.
People clapped politely. Leah
wondered if they secretly hated her for this tiny slice of spotlight, any more
than some of them hated her for being so close to Sidney. She wondered if they could ever adore her like
that. No way, she knew – he was superhuman, all she could do was
sing. Still it was something, and it was
what she had.
Better than nothing. She stepped up to the microphone as the song
for the night started to play - Jo Dee Messina’s “Bye Bye.” It was the perfect song for how Leah felt
tonight. A little sad, a little mad, a
little over it - but in a good way. If
that was possible. Also she was a bit
drunk and that always made her stronger.
Boy you sure look good there standin' in
the doorway in the sunset light
Maybe I read you wrong thinkin' you could be my Mr. Right
Maybe I read you wrong thinkin' you could be my Mr. Right
Let
people think she was singing about Sidney.
At least she wasn’t singing Carrie Underwood’s ‘Before He Cheats’ or
some other country done-me-wrong song. The
only thing for Leah to do was get over Sidney.
It would be hard, if not impossible, but Leah refused to be angry about
it. She could only blame herself for
falling in love with the hometown hero.
I've got pride, I'm takin' it for a ride
Bye bye, bye bye my baby, bye bye
Bye bye, bye bye my baby, bye bye
It
wasn’t really goodbye, of course. Like
their parting in the airport, it was a million things left unsaid and a lot of
falling short. But Sidney was Sidney and
Leah would take what she could get. That
meant giving what she could in return – friendship. Which meant returning all
his unanswered phone calls, and soon.
She
smiled as she sang the most obvious line that wasn’t about her and Sidney, but
should have been:
Baby what did you expect me to do
Just sit around and wait on you
Well I'm through watchin' you just skate around the truth
Just sit around and wait on you
Well I'm through watchin' you just skate around the truth
And I know it sounds trite: I’ve seen the
light.
The
crowd was particularly appreciative tonight – whooping and clapping. Even the band leader looked extra impressed. “You’ve been practicing,” he said.
On
the way out, a few other people told her that was her best performance yet,
that she sounded fantastic and confident.
Gina snickered alongside her all the way to the car.
“You
sound ready to win some money, baby!” she said.
Leah
felt ready – not to win, just to perform.
The adrenaline of a live crowd always helped, but the key was to pick a
song people knew. It excited them. Singing a song no one but her bathroom mirror
had ever heard before would be a whole new experience. Her song would only work if she really sold
it. After tonight, Leah knew she was as
ready as she’d ever be.
Speaking
of things she was ready to do, Leah sat down on her bed. It was nearly two in the morning and she’d
had more than enough to drink, but she was on a roll. Sidney was still the most-dialed number in
her phone. Before the jitters could take over, she hit send.
It
didn’t even ring. “Hey. Thanks for calling, leave a message.”
Leah always
thought it was funny that Sid didn’t have his name on the recording. The reason was obvious but so was his voice –
anyone calling, even a fan who got his number somehow, would know they had
reached Sidney Crosby. Leah smiled at the
idea of him trying to be stealthy.
“Hi. It’s Leah.
I, uh, I owe you about a hundred calls.
Sorry it’s so late, I just got home and I figured you’d be sleeping but
I didn’t want to wait. I, um… I miss
you, Sid.”
Okay stop now, she told
herself.
“Call
me tomorrow, okay? And not like me, when
I say okay and then I don’t call. Okay?”
She
disconnected, shaking her head. Word
vomit onto voicemail, the classic drunk dial.
____
(February
16)
Sidney
hit his alarm with his whole fist. No
snooze today, there was a game in four hours.
His routine called for getting up and eating right away, so he could eat
again in an hour and feel full for the noon game. Damned national television.
As
was his habit, he checked his phone. It
had been days of calls and texts to Leah, days of disappointment when she
didn’t call back. He thought he’d made
progress with Valentine’s Day but had nothing to really show for it. On long nights in quiet hotels in other
cities, he convinced himself it was the road games and scheduling that kept
them from connecting. But home in his
own bed, where she could have been and hadn’t, Sidney felt the ghost of Leah
fading faster the more tightly he tried to hold on.
His
message icon was blinking.
“Holy
shit,” he said right out loud. If it was
Colby Armstrong or Jack Johnson or some other friend from far away, he’d be
disappointed. If it was Duper or Tanger
or Flower, Sid would kill the guy at practice for getting him this excited.
“Hi.
It’s Leah.”
His
heart stopped. As if she needed to
introduce herself using the voice he heard in his dreams. Now that voice was apologizing for being so
distant, which was a nice way of saying she had ignored him. At least she admitted
it.
“I miss you, Sid.”
He
flopped back onto the pillow like he’d been hit. She wanted him to call. She didn’t say not to call at eight in the
morning.
“’lo?”
Came the mumble answer over the line.
“Leah,
hey,” he said quietly.
“Sidney.” Her voice was soft and drowsy, like it had
been twice before – the night he woke her to say the lockout was over and the
morning he woke next to her before he had to leave. Best and worst moments of their short
relationship, really. “I’m sorry, I
never called you back, I….”
“It’s
okay,” he cut in. He wanted to say ‘It’s okay, baby’ or something, but
figured that was pushing his luck. At
least she was on the phone. Most of the
fault here was his and he wanted Leah to feel just bad enough to never
disappear again. Also if she could
magically teleport into his bed, instead of one twelve hundred miles away, that
would go over well too.
“You
have a game today.”
“Yup,
couple hours.”
“You’re
also leading the NHL in points too, aren’t you?”
“Mmhmmm,”
he nodded. “A lot happens when we don’t
talk for a week.”
He
heard her roll over. “Yeah, like Neal
drops out of the scoring race.”
“Oooh,
I’m telling him you said that,” Sid joked.
Neal was having a bit of a scoring drought and would not appreciate
anyone noticing, especially anyone named Leah.
She
laughed softly, a sound that went through Sidney like a knife. Since their first date at the rink he’d been
trying to make her laugh. Except when he
was trying to make her gasp. It was nice
to hear one of the two again. Sidney
felt like this was a big step in the right direction. If she didn’t hate him, maybe she could still
love him. He would take small steps.
___
Leah
felt the familiar pull of Sidney’s gravity even from so far away. It wanted to drag her out to sea like a rip
tide. The whirlpool was right where her
heart should have been - she closed her eyes against the dizzy feeling rising
in her chest. Traitorous thoughts flashed to mind.
Tell me you love me. Tell me this is everything and I’ll stop
swimming. I will drown for you if you
tell me you’re drowning too.
No no no, she told herself. Not
again.
“Well
you go tape your stick and sacrifice a unicorn or whatever you do before games,
and I’ll watch later to see if it worked.”
“Okay,”
he laughed, “only if you’re watching though.
Unicorns are expensive.”
“Please. Just write Reebok on it in Sharpie and send
them the bill.”
He
giggled, that high pitched sound that matched nothing about him. It spread to Leah and she laughed too. That was a relief, even if she felt far from
normal.
“Good
luck today,” she said.
“Thanks. And Leah?
I miss you.”
“I
miss you too, Sid.”
“I
know, you said that in your message,” he reminded her.
“Well,
I was drunk,” she scoffed.
“You still
meant it.”
“True.”
“You
also said you really want to come back to Pittsburgh and visit again.”
Leah’s
blood went cold: had she said that? No
way she said that. She did, of course,
but it was the bad kind of true that should not be acted upon. If she went back to Pittsburgh, she would
never make it out of Sidney’s house. If
that’s what he wanted - well, Leah had no more illusions about that. He would have to work harder than a phone
call and wait until she could keep herself together in his presence.
“Well
I can’t just drop my big, important life in Cole Harbour, you know,” she
said. For once that was actually true –
she had things going on. “But someday,
Sid.”
____
Sid maneuvered
through the door and sat down heavily, the crowd still on its feet. He’d just had his first goal of the
afternoon, to go along with two assists.
Sweat fogged the inside of his visor.
“What
is into you?” Neal cuffed him on the shoulder as they slid down the bench.
Sid
had been saving it for a moment like this.
“Leah said you should score more, you’re getting boring.”
James’
eyes went appropriately wide. “You
talked to her.”
“Yeah,”
Sid said like it should be obvious. Neal
had been the knight in shining armor for one night, that didn’t give him the
right to know everything. “This
morning. From bed.”
Neal
stood, ready to jump the boards for his shift.
He looked back at Sid and lifted one eyebrow. “You’re in bed and she’s talking about
me? Guess we know what kind of scoring she
wants me to do.”
Sidney
told the numbers on the back of Neal’s jersey to fuck off, but he was out of
earshot. If Leah was thinking of
anything it was Sidney. She thought of
him in the middle of the night when she was drunk, and first thing when he woke
her up. Somewhere at home in front of
her TV, she was thinking of him now.
____
(February
23)
“You
ready?” Kate asked.
Leah
smiled at her sister. Kate and her
husband Tommy, plus Gina and Travis, were the only people in Halifax to see
Leah compete in the performance contest.
They were the only people who knew about it.
The
contest was being held at the local performing arts theater. The judges were seated on a riser in the pit
where the conductor usually stood. Only
about five hundred of the two thousand seats were filled, scattered throughout
the bottom section. Twelve acts had been
selected and Leah would be number eight.
Currently, number seven was guitar soloing his way through a song Leah
had not bothered to hear. She wasn’t
here to win, she didn’t care about the competition. She just wanted to know that she could do
this and do it out loud.
“I’m
ready.”
Leah
smoothed the front of her dress – a new one, with coral colored overlay against
a nude satin sheath. It was girly and
flirty and appropriately modest for a girl about to sit at a piano. On the stage, the contest had provided a
beautiful baby grand. Three of the first
seven contestants used it so Leah knew it was in tune. She moved her fingers as she thought the
notes in her head, mapping them out in a visualization exercise to help imprint
the pattern on her mind. She’d read that
hockey players used it all the time to see themselves scoring goals.
Kate
hugged Leah, wishing her luck, and went back to sit in the audience. The guitar guy reached his last note. Leah felt the edges of her perception closing
in, like they always did when she performed.
She
thought of Sidney. The song was about
him – to him, really – so he had to be there in a way. Leah used her trick from the anthem
performance, picturing the back of his jersey; big name and numbers in white, the
dark curls against his neckline as he lowered his head, waiting for her to
sing. He would be standing still so she
could just focus on him.
Outside
the crowd applauded. The emcee bantered
while the judges made their notes about performer number seven. The few moments of silence were perfect. Leah heard the song’s first note, holding it
in her mind so she’d know just how to start.
The rest would follow.
When
her name was called, she walked right out on stage.
___
Leah
held her finger to the key, letting the last note evaporate like a drop of
water. Her song was over. Almost before it had begun, she had finished without
any trouble. Rising applause met the
dying music and only Leah felt the tiny moment of silence in between. In that moment, she let the image of Sidney
fade from her mind’s eye. Then she blinked
toward the judges and crowd and smiled.
Gina
was on her feet, screaming. Kate, Tommy
and Travis quickly followed suit. Leah
loved them so much for that. Around
them, everyone else was also clapping and a few more stood.
I guess it was good, Leah thought, grin
growing wider.
The
emcee appeared from between curtains and congratulated her like he had everyone
else. She carefully stood, bobbed a
little bow and made her way off stage like someone else was controlling her
body. It wasn’t until she passed out of
the lighting and into the wings that her self-awareness came rushing back.
“Nice
job!” someone passing by squeezed her arm.
Performer number nine said it was great.
A production assistant handed her a small bottle of water and Leah
gulped a sip down a throat she hadn’t realized was dry.
Suddenly,
a pair of arms seized her from behind. “Oh my God!” Gina said. “That was amazing!”
Leah
wiggled free to turn around – Gina hugged her again from the front, Travis
wrapped around them both.
“Thank
you. It was so weird, I…,” she
stopped. “What?”
Gina had
tears in her eyes. Kate had a look on
her face like someone had stepped on her heart.
“Oh
honey,” Kate pulled her in. She didn’t
say anything else.
Leah
hadn’t told them what the song was about.
She hadn’t told them anything, really, about herself and Sidney. Gina and Travis knew some of the racier details
but Leah had never once said she loved him.
She assumed they could tell. She
had also assumed he felt the same way. Now
Leah knew: like that moment she was stood in the airport waiting for Sidney to
say it, hearing the words out loud changed everything.
This time,
Leah had changed it for herself.
“It’s
okay,” she said. “I’m okay. I promise.”
____
Most
of the five hundred spectators had stayed to the end, believing their friend or
family member had a chance at the top spot and prize. Ten minutes after the last singer finished
the emcee announced the votes were all in.
He asked all the contestants to line up on stage in order of performance. Leah stepped in next to number nine, the girl
who’d complimented her coming off stage.
“You’re
going to win,” the girl whispered.
Leah
laughed.
“Ladies
and gentlemen, thank you for joining us today.
Soundcast is very proud to sponsor this event and six like it across Canada. As you know, Nova Scotia is our last stop and
the finals are next weekend in Toronto.
Today’s winner will receive a two thousand dollar cash prize and be
invited, along with our second place finisher, to perform in those for the
grand prize of ten thousand dollars. Everyone
here today has been fantastic, and we thank you all for coming out to support
them. Now without further ado, judges,
may I please have the names?”
The
judges were lined up at the corner of the stage. Leah wondered if they had a hard time
choosing – she’d barely heard any of the other songs. Her own performance had been such an out of
body experience, maybe afterward she could ask the judges what they’d thought.
“Today’s
second place finisher, joining us for the finals in Toronto, is… David Matelem.”
The fourth
performer in line stepped forward, a young guy in a button down who Leah
remembered had also played the piano.
The emcee asked David where he was from, what inspired his song choice
and said he’d see them again in a week.
“And
tonight’s first place prize of two thousand dollars and a chance to sing for
ten thousand in our final event is… Leah Hanlon.”
Leah
froze. Surely she had imagined
that. Right? Next to her performer nine was whooping and
grabbing her arm. Performer seven patted
her on the back. The emcee motioned for
her to step forward. As Leah put one
foot in front of the other and broke the line, sound came rushing back.
It
was Gina. Screaming at the top of her
lungs.
Leah roused
herself and moved up next to the host.
“Surprised,
Leah?”
“Uhhh,
yeah,” she admitted with a giggle. “I
am.”
“Well
your performance today was no surprise, since we only select the best for Soundcast. Tell us, where are you from?”
“Cole
Harbour.”
“Ahhhhh,
figures,” he said knowingly.
Don’t don’t don’t…, Leah thought.
“Nova
Scotia’s most famous hometown. You win
the finals next week and you might give that Sidney Crosby guy a run for his
title.”
Everyone
laughed. Leah tried not to die. Her song didn’t mention Sid by name but
anyone who remembered the lyrics could put it together now. There were reporters here too, people who
could ask around about her. Now she’d be
singing this song to a crowd in Toronto… well,
that will be better, Leah knew. More
people, more possibilities. She’d be
anonymous there, just another girl with a love song.
“So,
tell us. That very personal song of
yours, who’s it about?” the emcee asked.
Leah
gave him a real smile. “No one you know.”
____
Great update! So happy that Leah is forging her own path and showing some independence. Can't wait to hear about what happens in Toronto! Don't keep us waiting too long, love this story!
ReplyDeleteI love this story too much I think. It's too hard waiting for an update. Please, please post more updates soon! Love your writing!
ReplyDelete:) :) great way to start my day! I love this story so much!!! I can't wait for the next update!
ReplyDelete