Playing by Ear (Country Roads #1) - Chapter 17
Added 2020-10-02 17:27:05 +0000 UTC
Even though I got home at almost midnight, I was up early to catch Mom before she went to work. I hadn’t seen her in days and she looked incredibly tired. Ever since we’d moved here, she’d basically worked seven days a week to keep us afloat except for a rare day off here or there. It was a wake-up call, in a sense. It reminded me of what I was really doing this for.
The recognition and support was great, but if I kept pushing, I’d be able to make an actual difference in our lives. My goal needed to be helping Mom quit one of her jobs and still be able to keep food on the table, because I didn’t know how long Mom could take working every single day.
“You look beat,” I said, sitting across from her. “You were asleep when I came home last night. It’s been a while since that’s happened.”
Despite how much she was working, she had still made breakfast for us.
“It was just a tough day yesterday. One of the other crews quit, so they added half their schedule to our list of buildings to clean. Plus, I haven’t had my coffee yet.”
“Thanks for making breakfast.”
“Of course, kiddo. I’ll always make breakfast for us. Since we don’t have Saturday mornings anymore, this is the only special time we have left. I feel like I hardly get to see you anymore.”
“I know. My schedule has gotten crazy. I mean, not as hard as yours, but it does make it hard to find time together. I do have something for you, though.”
I hadn’t seen her since I was paid on Friday, so I hadn’t had a chance to give her the check I’d gotten from the bank for half my paycheck. She took it and half looked at it before looking again, more seriously.
“Charlie,” she said, starting to sound angry. “We’d agreed you would keep half your check.”
“That is half my check,” I said, smiling.
“What? How? This is twice what it should be.”
“They’re paying me to play, as well as for the work in the kitchen. I only play for half an hour and my cut of that is almost as much as what I make for all the other work. What’s even better is they said last night that, since I’m bringing out a whole new crowd for them, they’re going to give me the entire first hour. I haven’t actually talked to Willie yet about how that changes my cut, but knowing Willie, I’m betting I’ll get a larger share. Plus, the band gets paid based on the audience, and if my hour manages to bring out a whole new group, there will be more overall to spread across all of us, in addition to getting a larger percentage.”
I was surprised when she didn’t seem excited by that.
“Charlie, I’m not sure this is a good idea. This is the kind of thing that led your dad to skip college and try making it as a full-time musician. We both saw how that worked out. I don’t want you getting a taste of this life and letting it push you into bad decisions.”
“I promise it won’t, Mom. I understand that my first priority is school. It’s why I’m only playing one day a week.”
“You’ve been going to practice a lot too.”
“Most of that extra practice time was coming out of the time I spent training with Chef, so it’s not that much extra time, and we’ll be back to only practices on Friday’s next week.”
“Charlie, I want you to listen. You’re young and it’s hard to see where things could end up. I watched your dad go through this and heard a lot of horror stories over the years. You just started playing for them two weeks ago, and they’ve already increased your time. What if this goes well? Will they ask you to play Friday nights and Sunday nights? What if they see the extra money and decide to add music to the rest of the week?”
“Chef believes in schooling. He makes sure I get my homework done first, before anything else. He might expand it to Sunday and Friday, but I’d bet he gets me out after my set and lets Willie finish off the second set on Sundays. That would mean I’d be coming home the same time I do now, working in the kitchen. He wouldn’t push me to do something that would hurt my school work.”
“Maybe, but I think it’s time I call this Chef of yours and have a serious talk with him.”
“Mom, please don’t mess this up for me.”
“Charlie, I need you to remember who’s in charge here. I love you. I want you to have everything you dream of, but you’re only sixteen years old. I know this lecture’s going to go in one ear and out the other, because I’m sure you’ll hear it from other grown-ups and discount it, but I want you to listen. Do you know the big difference between grown-ups and kids, even teenagers?”
“You’re smarter than us,” I said, perhaps a bit too flippantly.
“No, and watch the sass. We aren’t smarter, not really. You kids surprise us all the time with just how intelligent you are. What we have that you don’t yet, is experience. We’ve been where you are and made the mistakes. Most of the time you aren’t going to listen to us, and you’ll make the same mistakes, and that’s fine. That’s how you’re really going to learn. Sometimes, though, you need to hear us, especially when the mistakes are too big and you can’t change your decisions afterward. This is one of those times. If you make the choice to follow your dreams and don’t take the necessary steps, just in case those dreams don’t pan out, you won’t be able to go back and get the education you need, at least not easily. I want you to follow your dreams, sweetie, but I want you to be smart about it.”
“I promise you, I’m not going to become Dad. Ever! I plan on going to college, and honestly, this is the only way I see that happening. Can you look at me and honestly say we have any hope of paying for college, even community college, where we are now. Loans and grants only go so far. I think this is a way I can make some money and put it aside for college. I promise I will not let playing music get in the way of what’s important.”
“You’d better not. I’ll let you keep playing, but I want you to understand that if your grades slip, you will not be playing anymore. I’m also going to call and have a talk with this Chef of yours.”
“Okay, but please be careful. I know how you get when you go full mamma bear, and I really don’t want to waste this. Not just the music, but all the training I’ve been getting. I’m in the best shape of my life, and I love it. I even love learning to cook now that I’m working Saturday mornings. I can’t remember a time I was happier than right now, and the Blue Ridge is a big part of that.”
“As long as he promises me that he’ll look out for your best interests and then never breaks that promise, we’ll be fine.”
I groaned and dropped my head down onto the table into my arms.
“Now, tell me what your plans are for today.”
Hanna showed up after Mom had left for work. She was a little later than I’d thought, since it would take time to get down there, but since I was bumming rides, there wasn’t much I could say.
The first stop was Walmart, where she helped me pick out a few new clothes. It wasn’t a lot, since the remaining half of my check wasn’t all that large, but it was enough to add a little variety into my dates and when I played. My original plan went out the window as soon as she saw what I was planning on picking out.
“Nope, no dress pants,” she declared as soon as I started heading towards a rack of pants.
“I thought I should have a pair to wear when I play at the Blue Ridge. The rest of the band wears button-up shirts and slacks, and a few add vests or whatever. I thought if I wore slacks and a button-up shirt, even if it wasn’t white like theirs, it would be close enough.”
“Charlie, not only do you not need to dress like them, but you shouldn’t.”
“Why?”
“The whole point of you playing is to bring a different feel. They don’t need another old blues musician. They have that. They need a young guy who plays modern music to bring in a new audience. You’re that guy. You just need to dress the part.”
“Okay, then how should I dress?”
“Well, if you were playing rock, I’d say a t-shirt with an open flannel. Country and we’d go hat and denim or plain button-up. For you though, your best bet is a t-shirt and jeans.”
“That’s what I wear to school every day. Seems like cheating to wear that on stage too.”
“What you wear to school is … umm,” she stammered, trying to find a diplomatic choice of words.
“Cheap.”
“I’m trying not to be mean.”
“I know. I don’t have any illusions of who I am, Hanna. We’re poor. Until now, the only things we could afford came from Goodwill. That’s what I’m trying to change. Just tell me what I should get. I’m not going to get mad just because you point out that my clothes are old and worn out.”
“I wasn’t trying to say that. The shirts you have are what a teen boy would wear.”
“Which I am.”
“At school you are. On stage, you’re an artist. Not all t-shirts are the same. Since form-fitted shirts won’t really be available here and can be a little pricy, we’ll go with a plain or maybe ribbed shirt a size down from what you normally wear.”
“Won’t that be tight?”
“That’s the point. You’re starting to put some meat on your bones and getting a little muscle definition. If you keep working with Chef, it’ll be noticeable, and will look good in a tight shirt. The jeans you have are fine. Hell, some people pay a lot of money to have new jeans that look worn out. We’ll still get one good button-up, so you have some options for dates with Rhonda, although I bet once she sees you in a tight t-shirt, she’ll probably prefer that, too.”
“I’m not sure about this.”
“Trust me. On this, I’m right. You want to stand out, and this will look good.”
“Fine, I trust you. Only because I don’t have a clue when it comes to clothes. If I look like an idiot, though, I’m going to come after you.”
“Yeah, yeah,” she said, waving me off and heading towards the shirts.
We ended up finding some on clearance that looked half-way decent and had the fit she liked. I was right when I said I’d feel weird wearing them. It felt like the fabric was trying to squeeze me to death. The only real problem we had was finding ones that didn’t end up being too short. A few labels were out, since once we went down a size, the shirts barely got to my waist.
In the end, we got one button-up shirt and two t-shirts. It wasn’t really enough, but she promised to take me again on the next payday, and the couple I had should work for me. She did say that if I felt too self-conscious, I could pair the button-up shirt with it, since it was plain and dark and would look good over the t-shirts.
Our next stop was the mall. It was an interesting experience. We spent an hour and a half walking to several shops, where I’d stand off to the side while Hanna picked through racks of stuff, holding it up, and then putting it back. I thought she’d end up not buying anything, but eventually, we got to one store where she seemed to like the product better, picking out several things to try on.
Considering the things she was saying, it seemed like she was familiar with all the stores where she couldn’t find anything, which apparently never had anything she liked. I made the mistake of asking her why she didn’t just go to the store where she seemed to always find stuff she liked, and skip the places where she couldn’t find stuff.
“They might have something good,” she said, looking at me like I was an idiot.
“You said, ‘these places never have anything good.’ If I went somewhere a half dozen times, and never liked what they had, I’d assume they never did and stop going.”
“It’s not that they never have anything I like, it’s just not the right stuff I’m looking for.”
“It all looked the same as this to me.”
“That’s because you’re a guy. You don’t actually know anything about fashion. Plus, I like shopping; it’s fun to see what they have and if it’ll work.”
“It’s fun to go somewhere you always decide nothing matches what you’re looking for, confirm they still don’t, before going to the place that always has stuff you like?”
“Yes. Now shut up and tell me if this skirt looks okay.”
I gave her my opinion, which she promptly declared I was wrong and it was ugly. I wasn’t sure why she kept asking my opinion, since she made it clear she didn’t think I knew what I was talking about, but she did. I honestly think she just liked the interaction and being able to tell someone about clothes, more than anything else.
In the end, she did find some things she liked, buying a few of them. While I won’t say it was the most enjoyable morning I’ve ever had, it was nice to just hang out with Hanna.
I realized on Monday, as we got to school, how much better my mood had been since starting to play on Saturdays. This was the third week in a row I’d started the day happy and upbeat.
My math teacher, who I actually liked despite hating the subject, was the person who ruined my mood this time. Once we were all in our seats, she announced it was time for the first quiz of the year, to check in on how we were doing with the section we were on.
While I’d paid attention in class, mostly, and done every piece of homework, I was still struggling with a lot of the concepts. I could do the steps that consisted of simple arithmetic, but once we got beyond that into algebraic equations, I just couldn’t work out what to do. I knew you had to move numbers and letters around to find out what the letters meant, but sometimes they were in parenthesis, and sometimes they were set up like fractions, and I just didn’t know what to do. The furthest I’d ever gotten with Mom was essentially elementary math, with fractions and word problems.
I was the very last one done, eventually just giving up and leaving some problems uncompleted. We graded it in class, and to say I bombed it would be charitable. My conversation with Mom was sitting in the back of my head the whole time we went over the problems.
I’d promised her I’d find a way to go to college, but I was so far behind in some subjects, that it honestly didn’t seem probable. I’d tried to get help at lunch a few times, but they’d start explaining the problem, only to realize that they had to go back four or five steps, needing to explain more straightforward concepts. In the end, they just got frustrated and gave up. I didn’t blame them, I was equally as frustrated.
While I knew I wasn’t a genius, I didn’t think I was dumb. Considering I could keep up in some of my classes just fine, that seemed to be confirmed. Yet, every time I got into one of the math or science classes, I was hopeless. I wasn’t sure there was any way I’d make up the years of little to no teaching in those subjects, which meant graduating high school, let alone getting to college, would be impossible.
What was worse was, once Mom found out how much I was struggling, she would almost certainly put a stop to me playing on weekends.
“Hey, what’s wrong?” Rhonda asked as we walked away from English.
I hadn’t been able to shake how bad I did in math, and had been somewhat distant again during class; not ignoring her, but clearly acting ‘off.' This was starting to become something of a pattern, me having a bad day and becoming distant. Hopefully, she didn’t take it personally, since it was difficult to keep from getting in my own head.
“Sorry, I just bombed a math quiz.”
“It’s just a quiz,” she said, trying to be helpful. “You can make up the grade.”
“It’s not just the one quiz, I’m really struggling. My mom did her best, homeschooling me, but I missed too much, and I’m not sure I can catch up.”
“You still have time; maybe they’ll move you to an easier class if you ask.”
“Maybe, but that would still be a problem. My mom made it clear that school comes first, and if I start having problems, she expects me to drop playing music and focus on it.”
“What? Why would she do that? You’ve got real talent.”
“She saw how my dad did, chasing his dream of being a rock star. She doesn’t want me to go down the same path, and she’s already pretty hard against me playing as anything other than a hobby. It won’t take much to push her over the edge.”
We’d walked outside and sat on the bleachers to eat, although much of my appetite was gone.
“So, you think she’ll make you quit?”
“Maybe, unless I can turn things around. I’ve been able to get through getting my homework in, so that grade is okay, although I haven’t really understood a lot of it and needed a bunch of help. I just can’t bomb any more quizzes or tests.”
“I wish I could help, but I’m not that great with math. My sister is the brains of the family.”
“It’s okay, just having someone to talk to about this helps.”
She stopped eating and leaned against me snuggling into my shoulder. The feel of her pushing against me did help. I knew I still had to deal with math and it was still a big problem, but at the moment, I didn’t care so much. It was a problem for later.
“Rhonda?”
“Yeah?”
“Will you be my girlfriend?”
“Yes,” she said, snuggling against me harder. “So, I guess this means you want me to go with you when you change lunch tables now, huh?”
“Yes, but you don’t have to. Just because we’re dating doesn’t mean I’m going to make you choose between your friends and me. I’ll still sit with you at your friends’ table sometimes too, either way.”
“Right answer. It’s fine, I’ll go with you, but if my sister starts giving me a hard time …”
“Then, I’ll stick up for you.”
I wrapped my arms around her and put my cheek against the top of her head. We sat like that for a while, just enjoying each other’s presence.
I told Hanna that afternoon that I’d asked Rhonda to be my girlfriend. She said she was happy for me, but didn’t seem to think it was particularly earth-shattering news. I was probably taking it more seriously than everyone else, since I hadn’t really dated before and definitely never had a girlfriend before.
They’d all started in junior high and had a string of relationships by now. I was sure the newness would eventually wear off, but for now, I was just really enjoying it.
Even though I was still worried about my math grades and what I was going to do about it, I wasn’t as depressed about it as I had been. Rhonda and I talked on the phone every few days before, but that night our phone call was a lot longer. We didn’t really talk about anything in particular, just made idle chit chat while we each went about our night.
Once again, school managed to put a dent in my good mood. This time it was in Coach Bryant’s class, which shouldn’t surprise me at all. If ever there was a place to ruin a good mood, it was around him.
To be fair, this time he actually had a reason to call me out. I’d been daydreaming and hadn’t been paying particular attention when he called my name, pulling me out of my reverie.
“Mr. Nelson. I know you think you don’t have to pay attention like everyone else, so show us how smart you are. We were discussing the characteristics that we use to define a civilization. I gave you six. Name three for me.”
Shit, I was screwed. I’d done the required reading and the book had talked about that, but hadn’t answered that specific question.
“Umm … Agriculture.”
“At least you got the obvious one. Two more.”
“Language?”
“Is that a question?”
“No, language.”
“A shared system of communication. One more.”
“An army?” I said, guessing completely.
“This, ladies and gentlemen, is why it’s important to pay attention in class. Some of you,” he said, not even pretending not to look directly at me, “think you’re too good to put in the work. I’m here to tell you that isn’t how the world works. My boys can tell you how hard I make them work on the field. I know some of you are less athletically inclined …”
He paused to look at me again before continuing, “So you might not have had the chance to learn this. Take Mr. Nelson’s incompetence as a life lesson. You have to do the work and stay focused if you want to win. Or, you can follow Mr. Nelson here and decide winning isn’t everything. Someone’s gotta make fries for the rest of us. Now, let’s continue …”
I tried to keep the anger off my face. The last thing I wanted to do was let him see he’d scored some hits. It wasn’t easy, considering the three football players in the class who seemed to think my embarrassment was hilarious.
I could have kicked myself, in hindsight. I knew Coach Bryant had it in for me, and I’d made myself an easy target by daydreaming.