(((NOTE: This story is quite longer than my usual works. Based on feedback, I wanted to spend more time getting to know the characters and their world first. As such, nothing explicit happens until roughly halfway through. Also, note that nothing explicit occurs with any character under 18 years of age.
Thank you, and enjoy!)))
-- Ms. Mesh
CHAPTER ONE
My daughter Anabelle has always been a fantastic singer. She started lessons at age 5, and was the talk of the town before long. With a voice lovelier than an angel's, me and my wife were always full of pride. Growing up in the age of Britney Spears and Christina Aguilera, Annie wanted to be a famous Idol like them when she grew up, but I always told her to stay in school and finish her studies. Talented as she was, fame was always a longshot, and I wanted our little girl to be taken care of.
Unfortunately, my wife grew ill when Annie was eleven, and her condition only worsened before losing the fight shortly before our girl's thirteenth birthday. Before she passed, my wife asked both Annie and I to see her separately so that she could make private requests of us both. Her request to me was that I not die alone; find someone new, remarry and have the additional children we'd always planned but she'd never be able to give me. I told her I would, but my heart died a little -- I was prepared to spend the rest of my life with her but was now forced to move on.
What she told Annie I had no idea, which was the point. However, it must have lit a fire under our daughter, because she became more determined to succeed than ever. Annie had always been a B-student at best, but after her mother's death, she was almost straight A's. She was able to enroll in the finest private high school with paid tuition and took advantage of their elite music program. I didn't think it was possible, but Annie's singing got even
better,
and she even learned to play the piano almost as well.
Shortly before Annie turned sixteen, I got called into the school, and while I expected to be told that Annie was in some kind of trouble or failing one of her courses, I was instead told that she'd be participating in a music festival in a nearby city, and they wanted me to go with them as chaperone. Annie was scared I'd refuse, but I readily agreed, unwilling to hold her back. She did like I asked and was doing
amazing
in school, so I had no objections to giving her whatever she wanted besides. She was giddy as could be and told me I was the best Dad in the world.
New best day of my life.
That festival was a turning-point in our lives. Annie was sensational -- easily the major highlight of the event, and the crowd went crazy over her rendition of Whitney Houston's "One Moment in Time", giving a standing ovation. She came running to me in tears, terrified and excited at the same time. Of course, I was even prouder than ever and told her as much.
We were approached by a well-dressed man who gave us a business card and said he represented an agency that pushed talent like Annie's. He said that she had one of the greatest gifts he'd ever seen and felt confident she could reach the big time. Naturally, I was divided; I was wary of allowing my daughter to be exploited...or worse...by the horrors of show business, but at the same time, this was her big chance.
I took his card and told him we'd call later with an answer, and after spending a couple of days talking things over, Annie seemed ready. She was smarter and much more capable than someone her age should be, so I carefully tried to warn her of the risks.
"I'll be okay if you're supporting me, Daddy," she said. "And I'll always tell you everything. I'll never lie, and I'll never do anything behind your back. No matter what
anyone
says, I won't push you away."
I felt a little more confident and gave my blessing. The next day, we gave the agent a call.
Things progressed faster than either of us were ready for. Annie said goodbye to her friends and schoolmates at her Sweet Sixteen, and the two of us moved to San Francisco so that she could perfect her singing, dancing, musician and songwriting skills, as well as start recording demos. Again, I was
stunned
by the difference it made; with professional coaching and production, Annie sounded as good as any music star I'd ever heard.
It was then that it finally hit me: this was actually happening.
My little girl was going to be a star.
But I was putting the cart before the horse a bit, because roughly a year later came our first major snag.
"They want to sign me and send me on tour, Daddy," she told me one day. "And before that, I'd need to get completely made-over."
"What kind of make-over are we talking about?" I asked. She was prepared. She brought out her tablet and clicked on it a few times, bringing up a mock image of herself that someone had made in some kind of Photoshop or CG editor or something. And when I saw it, my jaw hit the floor.
Annie was already blond, but more on the "sandy" side of it. In the image, her straight, sandy hair had been completely consumed by a bright, golden blond that made her look like a Barbie doll with fuller and wavier hair, like an ocean of gold.
And that wasn't all.
Annie wore makeup and lipstick like any teenage girl, but she'd always been on the modest side -- not wanting to look plain, but afraid of standing out too much. But in the mock-up, she was wearing full eyeliner, fake eyelashes, and a deep dark red lipstick that made her lips look even plusher than before. If I didn't recognize the shape of the eyes and face, I would hardly believe that the image was supposed to be of
her.
But the worst of it was the outfit. While Annie had always preferred wearing loose denim and had always felt too modest to show off anything more than an inch or two of her stomach, or to wear skirts any higher than just above the knee, the "her" in the mock-up was wearing an outfit that had bare shoulders and stomach, along with a skirt that rode up high onto her thigh. Also, Annie barely wore heels higher than four inches, but in the image, she was sporting a full six-inch arch.
All in all, I wasn't looking at an image of my daughter. I was looking at some vapid piece of eye candy that was supposed to
take her place
.
"Err...can't say that I'm in favor of that change, honey," I told her, trying to sound supportive but still honestly voicing my misgivings.
"Yeah, I figured," she whined. "It...makes
me
kinda nervous, too. They
really
want me to look like that when I go on tour? But they say that I won't stand out enough if I don't do it, and I might even blow my chances."
"I understand that, honey," I told her. "But
I'm