The Night A Club Singer Heard A Mob Boss Say Ten Thousand Dollars-myhoa

The spotlight burned Elena Jimenez’s skin before she even sang the first note.

It was not the flattering kind of heat that made a person feel beautiful.

It was dry, close, and unforgiving, the kind that showed every tired line under her makeup and made her dress cling where she had spilled apple juice that morning while getting her 5-year-old daughter ready.

Image

The microphone stand was cold under her fingers.

That small chill helped.

It reminded her she was still standing in the Blue Note, still working, still doing what she had promised herself she would do until the bills stopped looking like threats.

The room smelled like stale beer, old smoke trapped in velvet curtains, cheap perfume, and the lemon cleaner the bartender used too late and too quickly.

Somewhere near the back, a glass hit a table with a soft click.

The bass player tested one low note.

Marco leaned toward the microphone and smiled the smile he used when tips mattered.

“Ladies and gentlemen, please welcome back to our stage, Eliza James.”

Elena breathed in.

Eliza James was not real.

Eliza James was the woman with smooth hair, a clean stage name, and a voice people paid to hear.

Elena Jimenez was the woman who had clocked out of an insurance office at 5:12 p.m., checked the claims queue one last time because her supervisor had been watching, and still missed the first bus by forty seconds.

Elena was the woman who rode the second bus with her work shoes pinching her toes and a grocery bag between her knees.

Elena was the woman who gave Mrs. Patel a folded twenty to watch Maya and apologized because the twenty should have been thirty.

Elena was the woman who kissed her sleeping daughter on the forehead, changed in a bathroom that smelled like baby shampoo and mildew, and took the night shift at a jazz club because rent did not care if a mother was exhausted.

Eliza was easier.

Eliza could lift her chin.

Eliza could sing.

So Elena closed her eyes and let the first notes come out.

At first, her voice was careful, almost shy.

Then the melody opened under her, and something in her chest opened with it.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *