I hear the wobble behind my first couple of notes and work to get my breathing under control, consciously relaxing my shoulders as I let the words float and then soar from my body. My mother told me once that she imagined gilded musical notes flying out of her mouth over the heads of her audience, and I see those notes shimmering everywhere in the hall now as I find my full voice for the chorus. It may not be the kind of song my mother would have performed, but the tone she gave me suits it well. I look at Bella and she’s grinning, almost laughing with pure joy as she runs the back of her hand up the piano keys, building her performance pace for pace with mine. She plays out of her skin, elation on her face every time I steal a look at her, and we feed off each other because we know damn well we’re knocking this thing out of the ballpark. It’s such a gift of a song; the entire audience knows it and is with us. I feel the music, I am the music. Bella and I are afloat on our sea of musical notes and I never want the song to end because this high is so heady. By the time we reach the last line, I know for sure I’m not going to miss that big note, and I throw my arms out to the sides to create enough space in my lungs.
And then it’s done. It’s over, and Bella hurtles across the stage to me and crushes my ribs with her hug. I’m momentarily disorientated, but then I’m back in the room with Bella and aware of thunderous applause. Bells and I hold hands and take a deep bow, laughing, and then another because it goes on and on. The Belotti family are on their feet, Maria swiping her eyes with a handkerchief, Sophia cheering as if her favorite team just hit a home run, all of Gio’s sisters clapping. And then there’s Gio, statue still beside Maria with his hand splayed over his heart, pride shining from him brighter than the footlights lining the stage. It’s pride in Bella, of course, and I bask in the glow too for my part in helping her get here to take her bows.
“We did it,” I say, when she looks at me and shrugs, laughing and incredulous.
The next few minutes are a blur of backstage congratulations and Bella is quickly swamped by other kids, so I take a seat out of the way and watch the hubbub. I never had this. I used to watch TV shows set in high schools with green-eyed envy, even though most kids trudging to school every day would probably have swapped with me too. For a while, at least. They’d have loved the freedom and unpredictability of my days, but how I yearned for the support network and friendships of theirs.
“Iris!” Bella swings round and calls out to me. “Come over here.”
Her friends turn too, so I slide off the table and join them. I’m thirty-four years old and rendered shy by this gaggle of teenage girls. I’m relieved when I hear my name called again and see Sophia heading our way, bouncing several steps ahead of the rest of the Belotti clan.
“Eat your heart out, Lady Gaga,” she half shouts, pulling Bella close as she grabs my hand in hers. “You two fucking killed it!”
A teacher spins around and frowns at her, and Bella’s friends dissolve into laughter. I catch Gio’s eye and can’t work his expression out, so after a second I glance away.
“Dad, is it okay if I go back to Ruby’s? Her mom said she’ll bring me home later.”
Gio isn’t the kind of father to burst his shiny-eyed daughter’s bubble with a no.
“You better get used to that,” Maria says softly, noticing his face after Bella walks away with her friends without glancing back. “Five of you, and it never got any easier.”
Someone has finally opened those fire doors and we make our way outside, hit by the chill as we spill from the stuffy, overexcited school hall to the bitingly cold car park.
“Walk you home?” Gio says, Bella’s school bag slung over his shoulder.
“Sure,” I say, as his family say their goodnights and scatter into various Brooklyn-bound vehicles.
“Do you need me to tell you how good you were tonight?”
I consider his question as we make our way out onto the street. Objectively, I know we did well. I felt it, that same lit-from-within freedom as busking in the park.
“I guess I’d rather know what you thought,” I say.
We’re far enough from school to be clear of prying eyes, so he puts his arm around my shoulders as we walk.
“I thought a lot of things,” he says. “I watched Bells up there tonight and it got me right here.” He touches his heart. “Pen would have been so damn proud.”
I’ve learned since losing my mother that there is always a missing piece at any festivity or celebration. Other things and other people do not fill in that space, the river simply flows around it.
“And then I looked down the line at my family’s faces, and they were all so caught up in the moment, not worrying about Papa or all the other stuff, so that was a gift for them as much as for me.”
Gio told me this morning that preparations are being put in place for Santo to come home in time for Christmas, and they have all been buoyed by this news. Maria has gone into overdrive making adaptations at home; he isn’t fully recovered by any means, and it’s going to be a physical challenge as much as a mental one. He hasn’t recovered his missing memories yet either, but it’s going to mean so much to them all to have him in his rightful place at the head of the dinner table at Christmas.
“And then there was you up there onstage too,” he says. “I saw how you made room for Bella. Your voice…you could so easily steal the show, but you didn’t. I noticed all the moments where you held back to let her shine. I went to watch my daughter, but I couldn’t take my eyes off you.”
I don’t think I’ve ever felt as seen, and it moves me beyond words as we walk the quiet streets back through Little Italy. Belotti’s striped awnings beckon us, and when we reach the doorway he tugs me in and presses me against the wall with his body weight, the glass door in shadow beside us.
His kiss says thank you for tonight, and then the inevitable fire between us takes hold and his kiss tells me he doesn’t know how to handle this heat. I don’t either. My kiss tells him that I can’t control how much I want him, that it’s always like this when he touches me. He drops Bella’s school bag and pushes his hands into my hair, tipping my head back to slide his mouth down my neck. I don’t feel trapped. I feel desired, and outrageously turned on.
“If I was twenty years younger I’d unfasten your jeans right here,” he whispers, breath hot against my ear.
“What would the neighbors say,” I reply, half laughing, half gasping when his cold hand slips inside my sweater.
He stops just long enough to open the door and tug me out of the way of prying eyes, and then we throw our coats off, he tips me back over the nearest table and, as promised, unfastens my jeans.
We clutch each other afterward, breathless and spent, and I know I’ll never walk through that door again without looking at this table and remembering tonight.
“Bella asked me if I’ll stop coming here once we find the recipe,” I say.
He strokes my hair and sighs.
“Am I a selfish man, amore? I’ve allowed her to love you a little, because I do, and now I risk her marshmallow heart.”
There is so much to unpack in that sentence that I have to pause to drink it all in. He called me amore, and it fell from his lips so naturally that it almost went unnoticed. He said his daughter loves me a little, and that he does too. A little is not nothing. It’s a conversation we’ll have another day, because right now his concerns are for Bella.