Phantom: Act 1 – Scene 1
Phantom (Tattered Curtain Series)
Scarlett
My heart races as the crowd cheers. Itâs a rush that I could never describe, even though Iâve been dying to feel it for years. I should be exhausted after the way Iâve been rushing around, getting ready for the show, but energy vibrates through my veins. My nerves have been working in overdrive ever since Jilliana called out sick at the last minute, leaving the lead role for her understudy.
Me.
I bow again with my fellow castmates, reveling that Iâve finally achieved the dream my father worked so hard to get for me.
âItâs going to be you in the center of that spotlight, Lettie, bowing to your adoring masses.â
And I am.
Itâs exciting and thrilling and feels like Iâve accomplished everything he wanted.
But still⦠itâs everything he wanted. I thought it would be everything I wanted too, but itâs not enough. I havenât figured out that missing piece, but when I do, holy shit itâs going to feel like heaven. Which is slightly terrifying considering the way I feel now.
Definitely canât forget to take my meds tonight.
My best friend squeezes my left hand. Jaimeâs gorgeous smile blazes on his bronze face and his dark-brown eyes sparkle in the spotlight.
âSoak it in, Scarlo. Youâve earned it.â His voice carries over the cheers and my smile widens on my already aching cheeks. All at once we bow one final time before rushing backstage.
As soon as we get past the open curtains, Jaime and I wade through the cheering and celebrating cast to sneak to my nearby dorm which doubles as my dressing room. Once Iâm inside the door, I immediately look toward my makeup desk, only to find empty space on the corner. I barely have time to hide my frown before Jaime shakes me by the shoulders playfully.
âScarlo, baby doll, you nailed it tonight. Iâve been listening to you practice for months but where did that come from? We have the same vocal coaches, and they never taught me to sing like that!â
âI donât know.â I chuckle, a little uncomfortable with all the praise. âJust all the practicing paid off, apparently.â
If he knew the truth heâd totally freak out. It was just me and my dad my whole life, so Jaime is the brother Iâve always wanted. He hasnât just protected me from the worldâs dangers, heâs protected me from myself, too. Ever since I had my first full-blown manic episode last year, heâs made sure Iâm taking care of myself. If he found out that I was practicing with a voice and music inside my head, heâd lock me right back up in the loony bin. And that canât freaking happen.
âWell, whatever youâre doing, keep doing it, cher.â His unique mix of Latino and Louisiana accents is always strong when heâs excited or has been drinking. Honestly, right now, it could be both, since he likes to take a shot or two of tequila before a show.
As excited as I am about my debut at the New French Opera House, I still canât shake my nerves so I go to my makeup desk and begin to search through my drawers.
âShit, are you feeling up?â
Jaime knows me so well, itâs scary. I shake my head slightly at his question of whether Iâm feeling like I could be on my way âupâ to a manic episode.
âNo⦠I think? I slept fine last night but these nerves are going to keep me up. It might be the start of something if I donât get them under control. Nothing to worry about yet, though.â
I place my plastic pill organizer on the counter before popping one of the as-needed anxiety meds Iâm prescribed to slow down my racing heart at times like this. I take a long swig from my water bottle on my desk to wash it down.
âProud of you, Scarlo.â
My eyebrow rises. âFor what?â
âTaking care of yourself. Rocking the stage tonight. Take your pick, babe. Youâre gonna be better than your dad ever couldâve dreamed.â
Jaime didnât know my father. We only met after my dad died and I was deep in a depressive stage. He bulldozed his way right past my defenses and now that my dad is gone, Jaime has been my personal motivational coach and my voice of reason.
But now thereâs one other voice I desperately wish I could hear from. It never appears when others are around, so Iâll have to be patient. And Iâll definitely have to make sure no one finds out Iâm hearing shit again. Itâs been months of hearing the voice and music and Iâve had no other trouble. Maybe auditory hallucinations arenât so bad so long as everything else is under control?
A throat clears from the open doorway and I shift to find a man I havenât seen in years.
âOh my god, Rand? I thought that was you up there!â
âScarlett, itâs so good to see you.â
My friend from childhood throws his arms around me. I fight the urge to stiffen at the all-but-forgotten touch and force myself to hug him back, water bottle and all. He squeezes me close and the scent of gardenias itches my nose, reminding me of the pungent gardens where he grew up. I pull away to evade the smell but grin at him.
âWhat are you doing here? Itâs been, what? Ten years?â
âYupâ¦â He chuckles warmly. âTen whole years. Itâs been way too long.â
âYeah, jeez. Thatâs forever.â I step back and take a moment to drink him in while he seems to do the same.
His thick blond hair is gelled back and as tidy as ever, going well with his perfectly tailored suit. Those handsome boyish looks I had a crush on when I was twelve have aged well into preppy male model features. Heâs freaking gorgeous. When his hand rests on my lower back, my nerves skyrocket.
âI saw your performance and wanted to come tell you how stunning you were out there. But I didnât realize youâd beâ¦â His clear-blue eyes flick to Jaime before resting back on me. âPreoccupied.â
âJaime? Oh, god no. Heâd be more interested in you than me.â I laugh and turn to Jaime for confirmation, but my friend has a frown on his face and his arms crossed.
âWho are you, again?â Jaime asks abruptly, making my eyes widen.
âSorry, I got caught up in the moment.â I point my water bottle between my past best friend and my current one.
âJaime, this is my friend, Rand. Rand, meet Jaime.â
Jaime bows with a flourish that stretches the long white sleeve of his ruffled poet shirt, revealing his leather skull bracelet he stubbornly refuses to take off, even during a performance.
âJaime Dominguez, a.k.a. her best friend. And from the way youâre looking at me, I guess I should clarify that Iâm her gay best friend. No need to go pissing on her.â
âRand Chatelain,â he replies and winks at me. âAnd thereâs no need to mark my territory. Scarlett knows where we stand. She and I go way back. My family helped support her fatherâs music career down here.â He tugs me in for another hug and I sink into it this time, much more prepared than the last. âAnd, oh, Little Lettie, how Iâve missed you.â
My dadâs endearment rolls into me like a freight train. This whole night has been a cluster of emotions and a damn tear wells in my eye. Ugh, what an emotional mess. So embarrassing.
âIâve missed you, too,â I automatically answer before extricating myself from his hold and trying to get a grip. My heart still hasnât calmed down and seeing my childhood crush has it going off the charts.
âSo youâre a Chatelain?â Jaime asks, his voice nearly a monotone. âWhat are you doing here?â
âUm, Jaime, heâs from New Orleans,â I whisper harshly. âHe has every right to be here.â
âNot on this side,â Jaime adds cryptically.
âJaims, what does that even mean?â I chuckle and narrow my eyes at him to cut the attitude. But his expression is guarded and strained, and his gaze is solely on Rand.
Thankfully, Rand doesnât seem fazed by my friendâs sudden rudeness, instead observing the room with that piercing gaze of his.
When we used to sit and people-watch during the day on Bourbon Street growing up, I thought Randâs clear eyes made him practically omniscient. He seemed to know everything about everyone, even the tourists. As he studies my dorm room now, I wonder what heâs thinking.
Thereâs the small living room, my makeup-slash-study desk corner, and a kitchenette. In the other room is a simple bedroom and an adjacent bathroom. Itâs not much, but itâs more than living out of a suitcase and after traveling with my dad all my life, thatâs all I need. Still, that old girlish habit of trying to impress him rears its ugly head.
âSorry, Rand, I donât know whatâs gotten into him. The guy just needs a good tequila shot after a show. Heâs a shadow of his normal self when heâs already given everything to the stage.â
âA shadow of his normal self, huh?â Rand really focuses on Jaime for the first time and glances at him up and down. âThe New French Opera House is neutral,â he states without further explanation, confusing the hell out of me, but Jaime seems to understand as his eyes narrow slightly. Itâs like theyâre speaking in some kind of strange boy code.
âOkay⦠well, to be fair, you do hate opera. Or at least you used to.â I elbow Rand in the ribs and he rubs his side playfully.
âI donât hate opera. Your warbling as a kid wasnât ideal, but tonight? Fuck Lettie, you were a vision.â
His eyes rove over my white lace dress and I shift on my feet from the intensity of his gaze. I canât stop my nervous smile as I silently wish my anxiety medication would freaking kick in already.
âThank you. Iâve been practicing a little bit since my warbling days.â
Rand laughs heartily and the tension breaks in the room. Sort of. At least until he walks toward my desk. When he picks up my pill organizer and shakes it, the air in my chest freezes.
âAre you sick? I saw you taking medication.â
âWow. So not your business.â Jaime tsks.
A blush heats my cheeks. I totally agree, but I answer anyway, âOh, yeah, Iâm fine. Itâs nothing. Just a little anxiety.â
He shakes my pill organizer for emphasis again. âThatâs a lot of drugs for just anxietyââ
âNo joda, Chatelainââ
âItâs okay!â I interrupt before my old best friend and my new one are at each otherâs throats for no reason again.
These types of conversations make me want to crawl in a hole and hide, but Iâve promised myself that I would normalize it. The cast knows. The whole school practically knows. Why not my childhood friend?
âThe medicine is because⦠I have bipolar disorder. Type one, to be exact.â I shrug my shoulders and resist the urge to curl the rest of the way into a ball.
Randâs jaw goes slack and his tan cheeks redden as he sets the pill organizer down. âOh, shit. Iâm⦠Scarlett, Iâm sorry. I didnâtââ
I wave away his apology. âNo big deal. Or at least Iâm trying to make it not a big deal. Itâs just like any other illness. If I donât take my meds, symptoms can flare back up. The only difference is that sometimes my symptoms mean I can go a little cray.â I smirk at my friend whoâs seen it all. âJaime knows.â
âYeah, no need to get a suite at Château Psych anytime soon.â
Rand shifts uncomfortably at our jokes. His blond brows have nearly shot up to his hairline, but I can tell heâs trying his best to be nonchalant as he not so casually wraps his arm around my waist. A shudder races up my spine like a cold chill. âSounds like youâve got a lot to tell me, Little Lettie. What do you say we catch up over drinks?â
While I practically worshiped him as a kid, that abruptly ended right before he went back to boarding school. Weâve both grown up now, though, and things are way different than they were back then. Our age difference doesnât matter anymore, for one. Honestly, heâs a catch, and I should be ecstatic over all the attention heâs paying me right now. But ever since Dad diedâand everything that happened afterâitâs been hard to get excited or even be around people at all.
Thatâs why I like the voice.
I shake the thought from my mind, remembering that Iâm supposed to be answering the very real people right in front of me.
Before I can open my mouth, a crash from the hallway makes me jump from Randâs grasp.
âShoot. Sorry about that.â A chuckle echoes from the hallway. I recognize Maggie Bordeauxâs soft pitch instantly. Sheâs a constant presence at Bordeaux Conservatory of Music and while she may be the theater schoolâs assistant director, she might as well be promoted at this point, since the real one, Monty Arquette, doesnât know what the hell heâs doing. âSorry, yâall. I dropped my walkie-talkieâOh.â
Maggie stops midsentence and digs into her back jeans pocket for her phone.
âYouâre Rand Chatelain. Whatâre you doing in the French Quarter?â
âThatâs what I said,â Jaime grumbles.
âWhy does everyone keep asking that?â I try to laugh to defuse the situation but it comes out flat as Maggie and Rand eye one another.
She breaks her gaze first, glaring down at the phone in her hand. Her cloud of tight, springy corkscrew curls tries to fall into her eyes, but she pushes them back. In the dim hallway light, her screen glows against her dark-brown cheeks as she grimaces and mutters, âGuess that answers my question. I shouldâve been more worried about my texts than my walkie-talkie.â
A cocky smile Iâve never seen on Rand before flashes across his face. âLet me guess, your husband texted you? Go ahead and tell him that Scarlett was just about to say yes to drinks tonight. Werenât you, Lettie?â
Alarm flares in Jaimeâs eyes. âBut what about the after-party?â
âAfter-party? Where?â Rand asks. âThat could be fun. I donât care where we go. I just want to catch upââ
âCast members only,â Jaime interjects and itâs on the tip of my tongue to argue with him, but I catch a glimpse of something white on my makeup table.
Excitement spikes through me again and now all I want to do is shoo everyone out of here so I can be alone. I look away quickly to not garner suspicion and I catch Randâs pout. His disappointment subdues my excitement into guilt.
I was about to blow him off when I havenât seen him in years and heâs gone out of his way to reconnect. It really would be good to catch up. Iâve shunned so much of my past to protect myself from my own emotions. Maybe itâs time to open up again.
âItâs in Madam Gâs speakeasy, Masque,â I offer. âYou should come.â
The warmth in his eyes and the gentle pressure on my hip where his hand squeezes me tells me Iâve done the right thing. But my focus isnât on him anymore as I try my best to keep my eyes off my makeup desk.
âIâd love to, Lettie.â
My own grin wavers, and I extricate myself from his hold. The nickname feels too soon to hear again, but Iâll do my best to take it one step at a time.
âGreat! Iâll just, um, Iâll meet you down there, if thatâs okay? I need to freshen up a little and get out of these clothes.â
âFreshen up if you want,â Jaime cuts in. âBut you look fabulous and the rest of us are wearing our costumes with our masks since itâs closing night. Come on Rand, letâs give the lady some space. Mags and I will escort you down there.â
I can feel the air around Rand thicken. âI donât need an escort.â
âOf course you donât. But we know the password and Iâm sure you donât since itâs a cast secret.â
Rand turns to me with a small frown. âAre you sure? I can wait so I can walk you there.â
âTrust me,â Jaime answers for me. âSheâs safe here.â
âIâm good, I promise. Iâll see you guys down there. Ten minutes, tops.â
Rand searches my face until Jaime lands a loud clap against his shoulder, making him wince.
âCome on, Rand. Letâs give the poor girl some space. Itâs not like sheâll get lured away by the Phantom of the French Quarter.â
I roll my eyes as Jaime wags his brows and Maggie turns the sterling silver skull hanging from her necklace.
âYou New Orleanians and your superstitions. Thereâs no ghost. This place isnât haunted, itâs heaven. There are no ghosts in Heaven, just angels.â
âYou always did believe in angels and demons.â Randâs smile is genuine and warm with nostalgia.
My dad used to sing me stories for hours, playing them on his keyboard or guitar to a jazz riff heâd been working on with whatever band he played with at the time. His favorite was about how heâd sold his soul to a devil and that heâd been stalked by demonic shadows ever since.
Selling your soul for talent isnât a new idea, obviously, but at seven years old, I took my dadâs word as gospel. He made the devil, demons, and angels sound like muses in their own right. I asked him about when Iâd get my own once. Heâd laughed and kissed my head, saying I was too good for a demon, but someday, if I practiced hard enough, Iâd get my own angel. I used to even believe him.
But the day he died taught me something very important. With the hatred I felt that night and the wild emotions I experienced afterward, thereâs no way Iâd get an angel. An angel wouldnât want anything to do with me.
A demon, howeverâ¦
âWell if youâre sure youâre okay to stay, I guess Iâll go.â Randâs voice trails like heâs expecting me to change my mind, but the fact that heâs still questioning me grates on my nerves.
âIâm a big girl now, Rand.â I smile and wink as I step back, trying to hide why I want everyone to leave. âSo shoo! Iâll see you in a second.â
Thankfully, Jaime pulls him away before he can protest anymore and starts down the hallway. Maggie grabs the handle to my dressing room door.
âMy daughter, Marie, has a babysitter tonight, so Iâll head out earlier than everyone, but hopefully Iâll see you down there in time.â
âYou will. Iâll be there before you know it.â
She nods and steps out, shutting the door behind her. As soon as the door is closed, I whip around to face the prize on my makeup table.