back to the foundation.
Which, like I said before, is where I'm happiest.
Once the Big Riff was cleaned up, Pearl started playing. I'd figured she was going to blow us away with some kind of thousand-note-a-minute alternafunk jazz, because she'd been in that Juilliard band. But everything she played was sweet and simple. She spent most of her time poking around with her mouse, diluting the tones flowing from her synthesizers until they were thin enough to sneak through the folds of the Big Riff.
In the end, I realized that Pearl was playing some of the lines she'd erased from Moz's part. Even though she'd simplified them, the whole thing wound up bigger, like an actual band instead of two guitarists trying to sound like one.
And then came the moment when the whole thing finally clicked, totally paranormal, falling into place like an explosion played backwards.
I yelled, "You know, we should record this!"
Moz nodded, but Pearl just laughed. "Guys, I've been recording the whole time." She pointed at the computer screen.
"Really?" Moz skidded us to a halt. "You didn't say anything about that."
I eyeballed him to calm down. The Mosquito is always afraid that someone's going to steal our riffs.
Chapter 3
Pearl just shrugged. "Sometimes people choke when you press the red button. So I just keep my hard disk spinning. Here, listen."
She fiddled with her mouse, popping in and out of the last two hours, little snatches of us, like we'd already been turned into cell-phone ringtones. In a few seconds, she pinned down the one-minute stretch where the New Big Riff had somehow flipped inside out and become perfect.
We all sat there, listening. Moz's and my mouths were open.
We'd finally nailed it. After six years...
"Still needs a B section," Pearl said. "And drums. We should get a drummer."
"And a bass player," I said.
She looked at me. "Maybe."
"Maybe?" Moz said. "What kind of band doesn't have a bass?"
She shrugged. "What kind of band has only two guitarists? One thing at a time. You guys know any drummers?"
Moz shrugged.
"Yeah, they're hard to find," Pearl said, shaking her head. "The System had a couple of percussionists but no real drummer. That's part of why we sucked. But I know a few from school." She shrugged.
"I know this girl," I said. "She's great."
Moz looked at me, all buzzy again. "You do? You never told me about any drummer."
"You never told me we were looking for one." I shrugged. "Besides, I don't really know her, just seen her play. She's fawesome."
"Probably not available, then," Pearl said, shaking her head. "There's never enough drummers to go around."
"Um, I think she might be available," I said. What I didn't mention was that she didn't exactly have real drums and that I'd never seen her playing with a band, only in Times Square, asking for spare change. Or that she might also be sort of homeless, as far as I could tell. Unless she really liked playing in Times Square and wearing the same army jacket and pair of jeans every day.
Totally fool drummer, though.
"Talk to her," Pearl said. She shot a mean look at the egg-carton-covered door to her room. "Listen, I think my mom's home, so maybe we should quit. But next time, we'll write a B section for the Big Riff. Maybe some words. Either of you guys sing?"
We looked at each other. Moz can sing, but he wouldn't admit to it out loud. And he's too genius a guitarist to waste in front of a mike.
"Well," Pearl said. "I know this really lateral singer who's free right now, sort of. And in the meantime, you can talk to your drummer."
I smiled, nodding. I liked how in a hurry this girl was, how she was motivating us. And she looked pretty hot doing it, all focused and in charge. Six years of jamming, and all of a sudden it felt like a real band was falling into place. I was looking at the posters on Pearl's wall, already thinking of album covers.
"Drums? In here?" Moz said.
My gaze swept across all the amps, cables, and synths. There was about enough room for us, all this crap, and maybe someone playing bongos. No way could a whole drum kit fit in here, even if they weren't exactly drums. And with egg cartons jammed into the windows, the place was already reeking of rehearsal sweat. I could imagine what a hardworking drummer would do to that equation.
That was another reason I'd never bothered to mention her to Moz