Epilogue

On the first weekend of the fall, Max Erlich bounded down the steps of the music shop onto Greenwich Avenue, lugging his guitar. He had found it on Craigslist, an old Gibson—for all of sixty bucks—and he was learning how to play. His dad had bought him a series of lessons on Saturday mornings at ten.

Down the hill, his mom was grabbing a latte at Starbucks or window-shopping at Richards while she waited for him.

Since what had happened, they never let him get too far away.

Outside the store, a guy was playing on the street. Kind of a grungy, older dude. Max checked him out—one suffering from a severe wardrobe malfunction. An old green army jacket and a crumpled cowboy hat.

Ever since he’d started messing around on Ryan Frantz’s guitar at lacrosse camp, learning to play had become Max’s new passion in life. He played in his room at night, on his bed, teaching himself little riffs from his favorite artists, Daughtry and Coldplay. He wasn’t exactly musical—neither of his parents played anything or even pushed him in that direction. His sister used to take dance; that was about the extent of it.

But he liked how it made him feel, surprising himself with some new riffs. His teacher, Rick, claimed he had a knack for it. And besides, Samantha Schall thought it was kinda cool, and she was certainly texting him a lot more now.

The guy on the bench seemed like he was waiting for a lesson. But as Max listened, he was actually sounding pretty good.

He picked away at it—a vintage Martin—with nimble, worn-down fingers. It seemed to come naturally—he muttered some lyrics under his breath, not even looking at the instrument. It sounded a bit like country, Max thought. He recognized the tune.

The dude could play!

The guy finished, finally looking up from under his hat. His face was wrinkled, and he had a scar on his cheek. A couple of other people who had stopped uttered a few words of praise and moved on down the street. He didn’t have his hat out and didn’t seem to be looking for money, and truth was, on Greenwich Avenue, that wouldn’t go over big.

Max grinned at him, impressed. “Sweet!

The guy nodded back in appreciation, with yellowed, ground teeth and a mustache on his weathered face. He noticed Max’s guitar. “You play?”

Max shrugged. “Learning. But I like what you were doing there. Neil Young?”

“Fogelberg . . .” The man shook his head. Then he smiled. “Maybe a bit before your time.” He strummed a few more chords. “I could show you, though.”

For a moment Max thought, Sure, awesome! He’d kill to learn how to pick like that. Then he remembered his mom, down the avenue.

“Sorry, wish I could,” he said. “I gotta go.”

“Responsibilities, eh?” The guitar player grinned. “I getcha.” He rested the guitar on his knee. “Listen, you seem a good soul. I could meet you here sometime. Maybe next Saturday. Show you a few things. Just you and me. How’s that sound?”

It sounded good, actually. But then Max hesitated. “I don’t know . . .” The guy seemed cool and all. Maybe a little old. Not much of a threat.

“I tell you what . . .” The guy dug into his pocket and came out with a scrap of paper. A matchbook, actually. And a worn-down pencil. “You can give me a call, when you’re around. I’ll meet you here. Nothing fancy. I’ll have you picking like a pro in no time . . .”

He slowly printed out his name and his number in a shaky hand. He handed it to Max. “How’s that?”

“Cool!” Max glanced at it, then looked around, suddenly a little wary. “Sorry, I gotta go.”

“No worries. I’m Vance, by the way,” the man said.

“I’m Max.” He folded up the matchbook, about to put it in his pocket.

“Nice to meet you, Max. You remember, next Saturday maybe? You let me know.”

“Okay.” Max put the matchbook in his pocket and had started down the hill when the guy called after him. “Hey, Max!

He turned.

“Stays our little secret, right? No reason to involve anyone else.” He winked. “You know how parents are.”

Max grinned. “Yeah, I know.”

He headed down the hill, not sure if he would keep the guy’s number or toss it into a bin. It all seemed a little weird.

Still, he’d sure like to be able to play like that.

At the bottom of the block, Max took a look at the matchbook, at what he’d written. The shaky letters, Vance.

On the cover, there was a logo he was familiar with.

CBS, the television company. He’d seen it a million times. He stared, wondering where a guy like that would have come in contact with it.

That big wide eye. Staring at him.

He’d keep it, he decided. Max folded it up and put it in his pocket.

Samantha Schall’s smile was the kicker.

Man, he said to himself, I’d give anything to play like that.

Eyes Wide Open
Cover.xhtml
Title_Page.xhtml
Dedication.xhtml
Epigraph.xhtml
Contents.xhtml
Prologue.xhtml
Part_1.xhtml
Chapter_1.xhtml
Chapter_2.xhtml
Chapter_3.xhtml
Chapter_4.xhtml
Chapter_5.xhtml
Chapter_6.xhtml
Chapter_7.xhtml
Chapter_8.xhtml
Chapter_9.xhtml
Chapter_10.xhtml
Chapter_11.xhtml
Chapter_12.xhtml
Chapter_13.xhtml
Chapter_14.xhtml
Chapter_15.xhtml
Chapter_16.xhtml
Chapter_17.xhtml
Chapter_18.xhtml
Part_2.xhtml
Chapter_19.xhtml
Chapter_20.xhtml
Chapter_21.xhtml
Chapter_22.xhtml
Chapter_23.xhtml
Chapter_24.xhtml
Chapter_25.xhtml
Chapter_26.xhtml
Chapter_27.xhtml
Chapter_28.xhtml
Chapter_29.xhtml
Chapter_30.xhtml
Chapter_31.xhtml
Chapter_32.xhtml
Chapter_33.xhtml
Chapter_34.xhtml
Chapter_35.xhtml
Chapter_36.xhtml
Chapter_37.xhtml
Chapter_38.xhtml
Chapter_39.xhtml
Chapter_40.xhtml
Chapter_41.xhtml
Chapter_42.xhtml
Chapter_43.xhtml
Chapter_44.xhtml
Part_3.xhtml
Chapter_45.xhtml
Chapter_46.xhtml
Chapter_47.xhtml
Chapter_48.xhtml
Chapter_49.xhtml
Chapter_50.xhtml
Chapter_51.xhtml
Chapter_52.xhtml
Chapter_53.xhtml
Chapter_54.xhtml
Chapter_55.xhtml
Chapter_56.xhtml
Chapter_57.xhtml
Chapter_58.xhtml
Chapter_59.xhtml
Chapter_60.xhtml
Chapter_61.xhtml
Chapter_62.xhtml
Chapter_63.xhtml
Chapter_64.xhtml
Chapter_65.xhtml
Chapter_66.xhtml
Chapter_67.xhtml
Chapter_68.xhtml
Chapter_69.xhtml
Chapter_70.xhtml
Chapter_71.xhtml
Chapter_72.xhtml
Chapter_73.xhtml
Chapter_74.xhtml
Chapter_75.xhtml
Chapter_76.xhtml
Chapter_77.xhtml
Chapter_78.xhtml
Part_4.xhtml
Chapter_79.xhtml
Chapter_80.xhtml
Epilogue.xhtml
Authors_Note.xhtml
About_the_Author.xhtml
Also_by_the_Author.xhtml
Credits.xhtml
Copyright.xhtml
About_the_Publisher.xhtml