The Final Note
Elara stared at the violin in her hands. She was minutes away from her final conservatory audition, the one performance that would determine her entire future, but her mind was blank. The piece—a difficult, emotional concerto—felt impossible. She had prepared for this moment for five years, but the music was failing her now.
A soft, almost imperceptible sound broke her focus: the faint, gentle plink of a piano key, followed by the quietest possible chord. It was her late piano tutor, Professor Alistair, practicing the accompaniment—the one he always played for her, with that unique, reassuring cadence.
Focus, Elara, the sound seemed to whisper. You know the melody.
She took a deep breath, placed the bow on the strings, and started to play. The music flowed through her, flawless and passionate. Every tricky transition, every high note, every emotional swell was guided by that phantom accompaniment—a subtle, supportive counterpoint only she could hear, pushing her to her very best. When she finished the final note, the auditorium was silent, then erupted in applause.
After the judges dismissed her, she went backstage, ecstatic but exhausted. She passed a display case dedicated to the conservatory's history and froze. Inside, sitting on a velvet cushion, was an old, well-loved score for her concerto.
Beneath it was a small brass plaque: "In Memoriam: Professor Alistair Vance, Beloved Tutor (1940-2025). He never missed a student’s final performance."


