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It was just a SIMPLE song on stage — then George Strait LEFT THE AUDIENCE BREATHLESS.

“You’re early,” Bill said without looking up. Couldn’t  sleep. Danny set his bag on the edge of the stage and took a slow look around the room. Everything was as he’d left it. Friday night, chairs up on the tables, the stage empty except for the house drum kit in the back corner. the PA system standing dormant but faithful. What are you reading? Bill didn’t answer right away.

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He set his phone face down on the bar. Something he did when he didn’t want Dany to see the screen. Dany noticed but said nothing. That was their dynamic. Bill withheld. Dany didn’t push. It had worked well enough for 5 years. We’ve got a situation, Bill said finally,  picking up his coffee cup. Danny looked at him.

What kind of situation? The kind that’s going to require you to be flexible today. I’m always flexible. More flexible than usual. Danny walked to the bar and leaned against it, folding his arms. Bill, what happened? Bill set down the cup and exhaled slowly through his nose. I got a call last night late after midnight from a man named Roy Tennyson.

You know that name? Danny thought about it vaguely. He’s involved in some of the bigger country bookings out of San Antonio. He manages logistics for several major artists. Yes. Bill paused and the pause felt heavy, deliberate. He called because there’s been a change of plans with a benefit concert that was supposed to happen in Austin this weekend. Venue issue.

Something about a structural problem in the building condemned by the city. the whole thing. They needed an alternative fast and they called you. Roy Tennyson grew up in Harland Creek. His mother still lives here. He knows this room. Bill picked up his phone again, turned it over in his hands without looking at it.

The artist doing the benefit is George Strait. The name landed in the room like something physical. Danny went very still. George Strait, he repeated, benefit for the Texas Rural Children’s Fund. Small, intimate. He specifically wanted something small. After the Austin venue fell through, Roy said George actually liked the idea of doing it somewhere personal, somewhere with real Texas roots.

Bill finally looked directly  at Dany. They’re coming here tonight. Dany stared at him for a long moment. Outside, a car passed on the highway  and the distant sound of it filled the silence. Tonight, Dany said, “Tonight.” Doors at 7, show at 8. They’re bringing some of his crew, but they want to use our system as much as possible.

Which means you Bill held his gaze. I need you at your best today, Danny.  I’m always at my best. I know you are. Another pause. I just need you to remember that tonight of all nights things might feel different  for you given given everything. Dany looked away. He knew what Bill meant and he didn’t want to examine it too  closely.

George Strait had been his father’s favorite artist. Had been the soundtrack of his childhood. Sunday afternoons in the garage, his dad working on the old Chevy, the radio crackling out ace in the hole or the chair or oceanfront property while Dany sat on an overturned bucket and watched and thought that life was a wide uncomplicated country road stretching  straight to the horizon.

“I’ll be fine,” Dany said and picked up his canvas bag from the stage. He got to work. By 900 in the morning, Dany had run a full diagnostic on the PA system, replaced two questionable cables in the monitor chain, and  was deep into calibrating the house equalizer when the front door of the rusty spur  opened, and a woman walked in carrying a notebook, a camera bag, and the energy of someone who had places to be and wasn’t going to let the closed sign on the door stop her.

She was maybe 30, with auburn hair pulled back in a practical ponytail, wearing a light denim jacket over a green shirt. She had an alert,  focused look about her, the kind of person who noticed things. She stood just inside the door and looked around the room with quick assessing eyes before spotting Dany on the stage.

“Is Bill Harrove here?” she called. Dany climbed down from the stage. He stepped out. I’m his sound tech. Can I help you? She walked toward him  with the directness of someone accustomed to getting past the first line of resistance. Norah Whitfield. I write for the Harland Creek Courier and I’m freelancing for Texas Monthly this week.

She held out her hand  and Dany shook it. Her grip was firm. I heard there might be a significant music event happening here tonight. Dany looked at her carefully. Where’d you hear that? Harland Creek is a small town. She smiled slightly. Roy Tennyson’s mother told her neighbor who told her sister  who works at the diner where I had breakfast this morning. She tilted her head.

Is it true, George? Straight. Danny exhaled. You’d have to talk to Bill about any official comment. But you’re not denying it. I’m not saying anything at all. That’s almost the same as confirming it. She looked around the room with clear appreciation. This is a great space, old, real. She turned  back to him.

What’s your name? Danny Callaway. You’re the sound technician. Sound engineer, he said not unkindly. There’s a difference. She noted that he could see it register. She pulled the notebook from under her arm and clicked her pen. How long have you worked here? 5  years. You from Harland Creek originally? Originally from Coleman.

Moved here after he stopped. After a while, she looked at him with the steady patience of someone who had learned that incomplete sentences were more interesting than complete ones. But she didn’t push. Coleman, that’s about 2 hours west. Two and a half. She glanced at the stage, at the equipment Dany had spread out in methodical order.

You know your way around all of this. That’s the job. You play? The question was casual, thrown in as she was looking down at her notebook. Dany felt it like a small stone dropped into still water, the ripples spreading out in directions he’d spent years trying to ignore. used to. He said guitar. Guitar. She wrote something down.

He had no idea what. What made you stop? Life,  he said, and the word came out flatter than he intended. A door closing. Norah Whitfield looked up from her notebook and met his eyes. She had green eyes, direct  and unhurried. She seemed to make a decision about not opening that door further, at least not yet.

Well, she said, capping her pen. I’ll come back when Bill returns, but I’d  love to talk to you more later if that’s all right. Background on the venue, the atmosphere. The kind of thing that gives a story texture. I don’t have much texture, Dany said. She smiled. A real one this time, reaching her eyes.

Mr. Callaway.  In my experience, the people who say that have the most. She left him with that and went to wait at the bar. Bill returned at 10:30 with Roy Tennyson. Roy was 53, lean and efficient with closecropped silver hair and the manner of a man who existed in a permanent  state of organized controlled urgency.

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