Copyright 2021, PostScriptor
Thanks you Randi for inviting me for this story concept. It was an interesting thought to consider β what happens after the end of an affair. More on this at the end of the story.
First my apologies! I caught Covid (not a bad case) in mid-December and it left me fatigued for about three weeks, and then probably another three weeks to recover to my normal strength. So I ended up with a smaller window to write the story, have it read by others and sent off to an editor to clean it up. I'm finishing it the day before it is supposed to be turned in. Only one reader (other than myself and Word) and no editors. Forgive me the errors that you will no doubt find. I would have normally read this through ten or fifteen times searching for errors.
And thank you Marty for doing a read through with your changes given the time constraints.
Two things about the story: please don't complain that there is cheating in the form of a fairly long extramarital affair. That is what the story is SUPPOSED to be about! With no affair, there is no 'end of the affair.'
Second, Please tolerate all of the classical music references. I know that when I read a story that includes notes about a rock or jazz or country musician, I will search for them on YouTube to listen to the music. Most of the time, they are not even to my eclectic tastes, but I try to give them a good hearing. I listen to a lot of classic Rock, Jazz, Pop, Latin and other music in addition to classical myself. If you don't know these pieces, give them a shot! LOL
* BTW Yuja Wang and Lang Lang are both famous, living pianists. Listening to ANY of their music is worthwhile.
I hope that you enjoy!
~~~*~~~
I turned to the woman in my bed. We had just finished a marathon session of making love.
"Love, we have to talk..." I reached over and took her naked body in my arms.
"Oh god," she replied, her voice almost cracking, "You are telling me its over, aren't you."
"We need to. It isn't fair to Helen or Tom. They deserve to have all of our hearts. This is the most difficult thing I've ever had to do." We both had tears in our eyes.
"I know that. For me too. You know that I love you and I always will."
"As I love you."
~~*~~
JEREMY
I am Jeremy Keyes, a propitious name for a pianist, everyone agrees, although being told so often, it only gets a small smile from me these days. I am a top-tier classical pianist, which sounds impressive until one realizes that there are tens of thousands, or hundreds of thousands, perhaps millions of similarly skilled pianists in the world today. Okay, probably not millions β but lots of them.
And like MLB, or the NBA or the NFL, there are thousands who aspire to what turns out to be fewer than one hundred spots, maybe fewer than 50. These days that also means competing with extraordinary women pianists who show up on stage in such sexy clothes, that male members of the audience buy tickets just to see and watch them play. Think Yuga Wang.
I attended, from the age of 16, one of the most prestigious music schools in the U.S. β in a sense not really a 'school' comparable to most schools and Universities, because the curriculum consisted of was limited to music theory and music history and was otherwise practicing my art and spending one-on-one time with my instructors. No 'general ed' requirements, no majors and minors, and no formal diploma. But in the music world you don't need a diploma, because if one of the instructors introduces you to another established musician, that is all that is needed.
My mentors, if you will, were all people who had been well-known, indeed, famous, concert pianists at an earlier time in their lives, who had for one reason of another, retired and now devoted their efforts towards developing the next generation of concert level musicians. Anyone admitted into the school is expected to be a concert musician; if you are not of that caliber, go somewhere else. You want to be a music teacher, go to a state school.
But even with the kind of entrΓ©e into the world of professional musicians, getting started can be an extended, arduous task that requires more than a little luck.
One way of getting ones feet onto the musical 'cursus honorum' is by winning a world-renowned piano competition. But prep for such a competition requires that for six months or more you focus on the compulsory pieces as well as the optional music where you are expected to dazzle the audience and judges. Then there is the piano concerto that you will be required to play with orchestra.
While you are doing that (and you still may not win; ever wonder who Van Cliburn's runner-up was?) you are NOT expanding your repertoire except for the limited pieces for the contest.
Most great piano teachers, and for that matter, most great concert pianists think that contests are a waste of time unless you have run out of other possibilities.
So we come to the other alternatives.
Several of the pianists who were my contemporaries at the school had teachers who immediately lined them up with famous orchestral debuts. They got a real kick-start for their careers. But for me, yes, there were similar slots for concerts, but they were one or two years away! Believe me, I accepted the offers, but how could I live in the meantime?
My primary mentor presented the answer. He was a long retired (he was already 90 years old!), but still famous pianist and teacher, Saul Orenstein.
He called me into his office one afternoon.
"Jeremy, my boy, we have spoken before of how we can together work to accelerate your career. We have arranged for a number of concerts with the major orchestras and conductors, but several of my colleagues were able to schedule their favored pupils for the earliest openings. I'm sorry that I let them get the jump on me!" he said with a twinkle in his eye.
"And, as you know, I don't want you wasting your time on piano competitions if we don't need to. So, I have decided to use another alternative that dates back hundreds of years: we are going to assemble a small group of wealthy patrons to sponsor you for the next several years. They will provide funding for your living and travel, and perhaps even more important, they are all highly connected individuals and will find and set up opportunities for you to give recitals and concerts with some of the excellent, if less well known orchestras, in cities across the U.S. and Europe.
"I have arranged for six such people to come here to the school next week. You will play a short recital for them and then we will have lunch with them and set up our plan of attack. Is that satisfactory to you?"
What could I do but agree with his plan?
It was less than a week later that this little conclave happened in one of the small (some would say 'intimate') recital rooms at the school. The assembled group was interesting; most of them were older, and they were equally divided men and woman. The one exception was a young blond woman (I estimated in her early thirties) who was extraordinarily attractive and seemed enthusiastic about being there. I later discovered that her family had been close friends of Saul's for over sixty years, beginning with her Grandfather. All of the people in the room knew Saul (of course) and they also seemed to know one another as well. Perhaps that should have been expected. I guess that the 'big money' people in the classical music arena constitute a small world.
In any case, we first had a short meeting where I was introduced to each of them and a few words were exchanged, but the real test would be the music.
There was limited time for me to play, but Saul and I had selected pieces that I had played for so long that my fingers could almost play them without my thinking about them. That was how you avoided stage fright β being so prepared that you knew you wouldn't flub things up.
The usual way in recitals is that you play a selection or two from a variety of musical periods, starting with the earlier music, and then moving up to more recent music. So you might start with a Baroque piece (by Handel or Bach), then something from the Classical period (e.g. Mozart), then to the Romantic period, and finally something more modern.
I skipped Bach and Mozart, and went directly to a Schubert Impromptu Opus 90 #1, followed by the first movement of the 'Das Lebewohl' Sonata number 26 by Beethoven. I played Chopin's Etude 'Revolutionary' (a favorite since I was 14 years old) and the second Brahms Intermezzo from his Opus 117 (another long-time favorite.) I took a little break and then finished my recital by playing Scriabin's dramatic Etude #8 and the 2eme (2nd) Arabesque by Debussy.
Then the young blond woman (Ericka Blumenthal was her name) asked if I could play a piece by Franz Liszt. Of course I could, so I sat back down at the keyboard and played 'Un Sospiro', and just for kicks I played another short encore piece 'Etincelles' (Sparks) by Moszkowski.
All of my potential sponsors seemed pleased with my playing and the cabal was organized at lunch.
Each of the sponsors pledged to provide a certain amount of money (an amount that I thought was staggeringly large, but to the wealthy people gathered at the table was trivial), with the understanding that if it turned out that more was required, they would be hit up again.
Saul then looked around from person to person and proposed that Ericka would be the central player in the hub, tracking the money coming in and going out, and coordinating the travel and concerts that the group would arrange.
All of them seemed content with the arrangement, and there I was at 21 years old preparing for the life of a concert pianist!
"Jeremy," said Saul, as the group was leaving, "you and Ericka should find somewhere to discuss the logistics of how this will work. I must go and give my goodbyes to my friends and thank them for supporting me by supporting you. It is a sign of the great trust that they have in my judgment with regard to pianistic talent."