"Kelley Eskridge - Strings" - читать интересную книгу автора (Eskridge Kelly) STRINGS
By Kelley Eskridge **** SHE TOOK THE stage, head shaking. Her jaw and the tiny muscles in her neck rippled in sharp adrenaline tremors. She moved her head slowly back and forth while she walked the twenty yards from stage right to the spotlight; it was always the same, this swooping scan, taking in the waiting orchestra, the racks of lights overhead, the audience rumbling and rustling. She moved her head not so much to hide the shaking as to vent it: to hold it until center stage and the white-light circle where she could raise the violin, draw it snug against the pad on her neck; and at the moment of connection she looked at the Conductor and smiled, and by the time he gathered the orchestra into the waiting breath of the upraised baton, she had become the music once again. After the final bows, she stood behind the narrow curtain at the side of the stage and watched the audience eddy up the aisles to the lobby and the street and home. She could tell by their gentle noise that the current of the music carried them for these moments as it had carried her for most of her life. Nausea and exhaustion thrust into her like the roll of sticks on the kettledrum. And something else, although she did not want to acknowledge it: the thinnest whine of a string phantom music high and wild in a distant, deep place within her head. тАЬExcuse me, Strad?тАЭ She jerked, and turned. The orchestraтАЩs First Clarinet stood behind her, a little too close. тАЬIтАЩm sorry.тАЭ He reached out and almost touched her. тАЬI didnтАЩt mean to startle you.тАЭ тАЬNo. No, itтАЩs O.K.тАЭ She felt the tension in her smile. тАЬWas there something you wanted?тАЭ Her right hand rubbed the muscles of her left in an old and practiced motion. тАЬOh. Yes. The party has started; we were all wonderingтАжYou are coming to the party, arenтАЩt you?тАЭ She smiled again, squared her shoulders. She did not know if she could face it: the percussion of too many people, too much food, the interminable awkward toasts they would make to the Stradivarius and the Conservatory. She had seen a Monitor in the house tonight, and she knew he would be at the party, too, with a voice-activated computer in his hands; they would be soft, not musicianтАЩs hands. She wondered briefly how big her file was by now. She wanted desperately to go back to the hotel and sleep. тАЬOf course,тАЭ she said. тАЬPlease go back and tell them IтАЩll be there just as soon as IтАЩve changed.тАЭ Then she found her dressing room and began, unsteadily, to strip the evening from herself. |
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