The Silent Sister (39 page)

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Authors: Diane Chamberlain

BOOK: The Silent Sister
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Celia no longer wore that short edgy hairstyle that was on their Web site and CD covers. Now her dark hair was in a sort of bob, the razor-cut ends radically layered and choppy. It was a very cool cut that made her look younger and hipper than Lisa, and my heart cracked a little. Lisa's life hadn't been easy. Not as a child under pressure to perform, or as a fifteen-year-old giving birth away from her family and friends, or as a seventeen-year-old on the run. Yet when the song was over and she lowered her fiddle, her smile softened her face and I saw the light inside her. The joy over what she was doing. Over the life she'd created for herself. She started playing again, the bounce of her hair like a symbol of the freedom she'd stolen for herself. I looked away from the stage, lowering my gaze to the back of the chair in front of me, suddenly wounded. She had a healthy family and I didn't. I wanted to be happy for her, but I couldn't help it. That hurt.

I must have stared at the back of the chair in front of me for a good five minutes before I looked at the stage again, and it was as though I was finally hearing the music for the first time. They were good musicians, all of them. Lisa sang harmony, but the vocals really belonged to Celia and Shane. The fiddle, however, was Lisa's alone, and when she took off on a solo riff, she had the audience on its feet. I stood up myself, but my knees shook and I had to clutch the back of the chair in front of me to stay upright.

They took a break about an hour in. Holding tight to Violet, I waited in line to use the too-small and overworked restroom. I wanted the numbness another beer would give me, but I couldn't afford the foggy brain that might come with it, so I bought a bottle of water for the second half of the show.

When they took the stage again, my anxiety intensified as I realized I had no idea what time the performance would end. As they played song after song and the minutes ticked by, I began to panic. What if they rushed out of the building afterward? Ran from the stage to a waiting car in the alley behind Dulcimer? What if this whole trip had been for nothing?

And why had I stupidly picked a seat in the middle of a row?

I waited until the end of the next song before getting to my feet. Mumbling “Excuse me” over and over again, I stepped on toes and forced people to stand as I slid past them, trying not to whack any of them with the violin case.

The burly guy dressed in black had been leaning against the brick wall, watching the concert, but when he saw me heading for the stage door, he took two steps forward to block my entry.

I gave him the warmest smile I could manage, and he leaned over so I could speak into his ear. I had to shout to be heard, the music was so loud this close to the stage.

“I need to see Jade after the show,” I said. “I'm her sister and I have her old violin.” I thought it would be best to go with
sister
rather than
daughter,
although I was certain either word would set off alarm bells when Lisa heard it. The guy frowned at me and I remembered reading Lisa's online biography:
the only child of a doctor and a nurse.
I hoped he'd never read her bio. I smiled at him again. “I wanted to surprise her with it,” I said.

“Let me check it out,” he shouted into my ear, and I followed him to a narrow shelf on the wall near the door. I couldn't blame him. For all he knew, I was carrying a weapon in the case. I worried that Lisa might see Violet as exactly that.

I rested the case on the shelf and opened it. He didn't try to remove the violin, but felt all around it with his fingertips. Then he shouted, “Come with me.”

I closed the case and followed him through the door into a corridor painfully lit by bare fluorescent bulbs in the ceiling. A few closed doors were to my left, and an open door on my right led into an office. The woman with the purple hair sat at a desk, and she looked up when the guard and I appeared in the doorway.

“What's up?” she asked.

“This is one of the band's sister,” the guard said.

“Jade's,” I said to the woman. “I live nearby and I brought her old violin. I thought she'd like to have it. Can I see her after the show?”

I could tell the woman wasn't buying it. “She didn't say anything about anyone coming.”

“No, I know. I didn't think I'd be in town, but I am, so I wanted to surprise her.” I was speaking quickly. I sounded like I was making up my story on the spot. Which I was.

“I checked the case,” the guard said. “It's a real violin.” He glanced down the hall. “I've gotta get out there,” he said. He left me standing in the doorway as he retreated back the way we'd come.

The woman looked at the digital clock on the wall. “I'll ask her when she's off the stage,” she said, getting to her feet. “Sounds like they're wrapping up now.” I could hear the applause, louder than before. “What's your name?” she asked.

I didn't want to tell her my name, but could see no way around it. “Riley,” I said.

“Okay.” She walked past me. “You take a seat in here.” She pointed to one of the two chairs near her desk. “I'll let her know.”

I sat down and watched her disappear into the hallway. I was breathing fast and hard, my hands sweaty on the violin case. This wasn't going to work. She'd tell Lisa and Lisa would panic and escape before I had the chance to see her. I sat there for a few minutes, Violet on my lap. The applause wound down and I heard the sound of chairs scraping the floor and the hum of a hundred voices. I pictured Lisa leaving the stage. The woman with the purple hair approaching her. And then I couldn't stand it any longer. I stood up and rushed into the hallway to find my mother.

 

52.

Jade

Celia dropped onto one of the fake antique dressing room chairs. “I'm getting too old for this,” she said, but she was grinning.

“Remember Bonnie Raitt,” Jade reminded her, as she did whenever they felt tired. Bonnie was one of their musical heroes and, at sixty-three, still touring. Jade and Celia were more than twenty years younger. It was true that they were wiped out after every performance, but they were also having the time of their lives. Jade had known from the age of five how it felt to perform in front of an appreciative audience. There was no drug in the world that could get her that high.

“I want to call the kids before we get something to eat.” Celia reached for her backpack. “The guys said they'd wait.”

“Good idea.” Jade snapped her fiddle case shut and set it on the floor next to her chair.

Celia was pulling her phone from her backpack when the woman with the purple hair—her name was Kat, Jade remembered—poked her head into the room.

“Jade?” she said. “There's a girl out here who wants to talk to you.”

Jade fought a groan. There was nearly always some aspiring musician who wanted to talk to them after a show, maybe to tell them how much he or she loved their music or to get tips on making it to their level. It was both a rewarding and tiring part of touring. She glanced at Celia, who gave a nearly imperceptible shake of her head.

“Please tell her sorry,” Jade said. “She can e-mail me if she—”

“She says she's your sister.”

A chill ran up her spine. Whether it was anticipation or stark terror, she couldn't have said. She glanced at Celia, whose eyes were wide with fear.

“I don't have a sister,” she said to Kat.

“I have Violet with me!” A voice came from somewhere outside the room.

Kat quickly stepped back into the hallway, pulling the dressing room door closed behind her. “You can't go in there!” she shouted.

“Oh, my God!” Jade was on her feet, heading for the door.

Celia stood up to grab her arm.
“No,”
she said. “Don't!”

She brushed Celia's hand away and pulled the door open. “Let her in!” she shouted to Kat. She tried to see behind Kat to the girl in the hall.

Kat reluctantly stepped aside and a young woman walked toward her. She was only slightly familiar. Her wavy dark hair reached her shoulders. She wore no smile and her brown eyes were apprehensive.

Except for a brief glimpse from her mother's bedroom seven years earlier, Jade hadn't seen Riley since her eighth birthday in that Morehead City restaurant. The woman in front of her could be an imposter, although her gut told her differently. Those dark eyes, the long lashes, the shape of her mouth—yes, this was her daughter. She reached for her and saw the fear leave Riley's eyes as she stepped into Jade's arms. Riley's body shook beneath her hands and Jade knew she was crying. She pressed her cheek against her daughter's hair, only vaguely aware of Kat quietly retreating into the hallway, shutting the door behind her, and of Celia's hand where it rested on her back. She knew Celia was afraid—and that she should be as well—but the only emotion she felt at that moment was the pure relief of once again holding her baby girl in her arms.

“It's all right, it's all right,” she whispered into Riley's hair, the way she had when her daughter was tiny.

They stood that way for at least a full minute, though Jade knew it could never be long enough. The pure emotion would give way to conversation at some point, and conversation was bound to lead in a direction she couldn't bear, so she held Riley as long as she could. Finally, Riley pulled away from her arms, wiping her eyes with her fingers. Jade felt Celia's gaze on her, trying to read her face. She couldn't find her voice. Her hand was still on Riley's arm, her fingertips unable to completely let go.

“I brought you something I thought you might like to have,” Riley said.

She recognized the case the moment Riley held it out to her. The beautiful worn leather. The old tag with the colored-pencil drawing she'd made of a violet.

“Violet,” she whispered, reaching for the violin, but Celia abruptly stepped between her and Riley.

“This isn't good, Jade.” Celia looked at her, her face contorted with worry. “You're acting like this is no problem. What are you thinking?”

She knew it wasn't good. She knew only terrible things could come from this meeting, but right then, she didn't care.
Let me have this moment
,
Celia,
she thought. Still, Celia stood like a wall between Riley and herself.

“I know everything,” Riley said to her, as if Celia wasn't there.

Celia spun around to face her. “You need to get out,” she said.

Jade put her hands on Celia's shoulders. “Look, she's here,” she said firmly. “We can't change that. She's here and I want to talk to her. Please.”

Tears welled up in Celia's gray eyes. So rare, her tears. She wrapped her hands around Jade's wrists where she gripped her shoulders.

“It'll be okay,” Jade said in an empty promise. She let go of Celia and turned back to Riley. “Come here,” she said, guiding her to one of the chairs. “Sit down and tell me what you mean about knowing everything. How could you possibly…?” Her voice trailed off. She hoped Riley
didn't
know everything. There were some things she never wanted her to know.

Riley glanced at Celia, and Jade realized she was afraid to speak in front of her.

“It's all right.” She pulled a second chair close to Riley's and sat down on it, their knees almost touching. “There are no secrets here.”

“Jeannie.” Riley clutched the violin on her lap. “She told me.”

Jeannie
. Hearing her name alone was enough to make Jade miss the woman who had helped her through one of the toughest times of her life. “Oh, Riley,” she said. “I'm so sorry you—”

“Daddy died about a month ago,” she said. “I didn't know if you knew.”

“I did,” she said. “I sent him a postcard about our tour and when I didn't hear from him, I got worried. I found the obituary online.” She'd cried for days. She owed him so much. He'd taken enormous risks to give her a life of freedom, and although he resolutely never spoke to her about Riley, he'd been her only link to her daughter. “I'm sorry,” she said. “Were you really close to him? I know so little about you. He never let me know anything about—”

“What do you
want
?” Celia interrupted, her gaze riveted on Riley. She still stood near the door, and she sounded icy cold, the way she did when she was scared. “You two are chatting like you don't have a care in the world.”

“Shh, it's all
right,
Celia,” Jade said, then looked back at her daughter. “I've wanted to see you—to
be
with you—your whole life,” she said. “I hope you understand—”

“Celia's right,” Riley interrupted her. “Everything's
not
all right. I came here to warn you.” Her knuckles were white on the violin case. “Danny knows everything,” she said. “He blames you for so much. It's irrational, but that doesn't matter. He has a good friend who's a cop, and he plans to tell him who you are. I think the police will be waiting for you at the concert in New Bern.”

There wasn't a sound in the room. Jade's blood turned to ice in her veins and her heart thumped hard in her ears. Standing out of her sight, Celia was so still Jade wouldn't have known she was there.

“I feel like it's my fault,” Riley said. “I told Danny I thought you might be alive before I realized … everything, and once I did, I tried to keep him from discovering what I'd found out, but—”

“You
told
him?” Celia accused. “What, exactly? What did you tell him?”

“Celia,”
Jade chided, but her whole body trembled. “Please.”

The door suddenly opened and Shane stood in the hallway, Travis a step behind him.

“Did you talk to the kids yet?” Shane asked. “We're starving.”

Jade looked at Celia. “You go. I need to talk to Riley.”

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