The Prince's Bride (Part 1) - J.J. McAvoy Page 0,66
song about love and longing, and we were watching how that love had died.
That code.
I now understood Wolfgang’s comments from before.
For almost two hours, I—and the rest of the audience—were held captive by her voice.
“She’s very good...” My voice trailed off as she began to play the piano for her last song. I could not speak. I was not sure what they played in heaven, but I was sure it was something close. Her song, it was full of hope and joy...it was like the sunshine finally appearing after the storm. At the end, the whole place erupted into cheers so loud that I felt the ground shake.
“Thank you all for coming out and supporting me! I love you all!” she said to them, waving.
“We are Wyntor’s storm!” Wolfgang cheered beside me.
I shook my head. “Let him have his moment,” I whispered to Iskandar, who looked ready to reach over and smack him.
“Are you ready to go, sir?” he asked me instead.
I nodded. However, before he could step forward, a large round man with tattoos up both his arms came forward. He pointed to the three of us and waved us forward. Wolfgang went forward, speaking to him first before coming back to me.
“Ms. Wyntor called for us to come backstage.” He seemed more excited about it than me.
I followed them as they led us under a black curtain behind the security and through a dark hall. It took only five minutes for us to reach a plain white door, which the large man knocked on.
“Come in.”
The bouncer looked to us and nodded for us to do so. When Iskandar opened the door, she was lying face down on the couch. Wolfgang tried to enter as well, but Iskandar yanked him back out by his collar and closed the door behind me.
“You called for me, Your Highness,” I teased, bowing my head to her.
“Yes, I did, Clark Kent,” she replied, not bothering to get up.
“Clark Kent?”
She nodded, shifting only her head to look at me then pointed to her own face. “What’s with the glasses? Do you really think people won’t recognize you because of the glasses and a hat?”
“It’s worked so far.”
She sat up completely, looking at me. “Are you sure you’re not stalking me? Everywhere I go now, you just pop up?”
“You called me here, remember. If you want me to go—”
“No,” she said quickly, getting up now, too. “I called you because I wanted to know if you wanted to get dinner.”
What? I looked her over carefully, unsure of what was happening. “You are asking me out on a date?”
“No, I am offering you food.”
“The difference?”
“I am saying thank you,” she whispered, coming closer to me. “I was really nervous, and then I heard you call out to me. I also thought back to what you said in your letter. It helped. So, I wanted to say thank you.”
“You do not have to—”
“But I want to.”
The longer I stared into her brown eyes, the more lost I became, and I found myself agreeing.
She grabbed her coat. “Is there anything you want?”
“My mind is a bit disheveled right now, so you decide,” I admitted, rubbing the back of my neck.
“Disheveled how?”
“Your music was...your singing is stunning, truly. I was not expecting that.” I really did not know what to say.
“What were you expecting, then?”
“No, I mean, when my sister listened to your music, I use to just brush it off as depressed-sire music —”
“Depressed siren?” She scoffed.
“In a good way.”
“Right...thanks.”
“I enjoyed it!” I asked.
“Yeah, sure, you did.” She stuck her head out of the room. “Katie, is it possible for me to go out the back...”
Her voice trailed off when she did not find the woman she called out for, only Iskandar. He turned to face her and blocked the view of anyone else to peer inside with his frame.
“With all the people, miss, you would be drawing attention to yourself and...” His eyes shifted to me. “It would be better for you both to wait until everyone else has cleared the building.”
“Can’t I just wear a hat and glasses, too?”
“Two Clark Kent’s then?” I teased from behind her. “That definitely will not draw attention.”
She whipped back around to me as Iskandar closed the door. “I was offering you food to be nice. Now your bodyguard is trapping us together again.”
I shrugged. “Maybe it is fate.”
She pointed between us. “Fate has nothing to do with this. Money does.”