“Ma’am,” Madison snapped to the nearest server, “call security. This vagrant is touching a two-million-dollar instrument.” Guests turned. Phones lifted. I said nothing. I simply set my leather tool roll on the bench and began packing it, slowly, deliberately. That was when Conductor Restrepo, silver-haired and frantic, pushed through the crowd. “Eleanor! Thank God you’re still here. The middle C is drifting again, can you—” He stopped, reading the room. Madison’s smile froze. “You know her?” Restrepo laughed, sharp and incredulous. “Know her? Madison, this is Eleanor Briggs. She tuned for Horowitz. She tuned for your grandfather every Sunday for forty years in this very hall. That Bösendorfer is alive tonight because of her ears.” The color drained from Madison’s face in real time. But I wasn’t finished. I lifted the small brass plaque mounted beneath the piano’s lid, the one no guest ever notices, and turned it toward her. “Donated in loving memory of Harold Vance. Maintained in perpetuity by E. Briggs, by request of the donor.” Her grandfather’s handwriting. His final wish. “My contract,” I said quietly, “is with the estate, not the gala committee. If I walk out tonight, that clause voids. The piano goes back to the Cleveland Institute by morning.” Madison’s mouth opened. Nothing came out. The pianist scheduled to perform Rachmaninoff in twelve minutes appeared at her elbow, pale. “Without that instrument, I’m not playing. My rider is specific.” Three hundred guests. Live broadcast on PBS. A canceled headline. I picked up my tool roll and walked toward the exit, my thrift-store coat trailing behind me like a closing curtain. At the door I paused, turned, and met Madison’s eyes. “Sweetheart,” I said gently, borrowing her own poisoned word, “a tuner listens for what’s out of place. Tonight, it wasn’t the piano.” The chandeliers kept shining. The Bösendorfer stayed silent. And somewhere in the hush, I heard Harold Vance laughing.
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