Current location: Novel nest Vocal Resonance: His Hidden Muse Chapter 3

"Vocal Resonance: His Hidden Muse" Chapter 3

Chapter 3 — The Ghost of Wembley

The plush, acoustic foam of Studio A’s private listening lounge absorbed all ambient sound, creating a heavy, deadened silence. The lights were dimmed to a deep twilight blue.

It was an exclusive session—just Marcus Vance sitting on the leather sofa with a legal pad, Melody standing silently by the door like a shadow, and Kaelen Thorne pacing behind the console.

"This is the title track for Wembley," Marcus announced, his voice tight with financial anticipation. "The label wants a stadium anthem, Kaelen. Let’s see if you delivered."

Kaelen didn't answer. He reached out, his long, scarred fingers pushing the master fader to the top. He hit play.

The room exploded into a wall of sound. It was classic Kaelen Thorne—a dark, atmospheric indie-rock track driven by a thumping bassline and heavy, melancholic guitar riffs.

Then, his vocals hit. His studio voice was a force of nature, a gritty, passionate roar that had sold out stadiums across Europe. Marcus nodded aggressively, already calculating the streaming royalties.

But Melody didn't nod.

As the second verse transitioned into the bridge, her ears picked it up instantly. It was subtle—a minor, microscopic shift in the vocal track. Kaelen had dropped precisely four cents sharp on a sustained high C, and the digital pitch correction hadn't fully masked the strain. He hadn't compensated for the frequency drift. He hadn't heard his own voice properly.

Melody kept her head down, her heart hammering against her ribs. She didn't say a word. She kept her lips pressed tightly together, deliberately hiding behind her image as the brainless, out-of-order typing machine.

Kaelen abruptly slammed his hand onto the spacebar, killing the audio. The sudden silence was deafening. He spun around, his icy blue eyes scanning the room, landing on Melody.

"Well?" he demanded, his voice dangerously quiet, laced with an underlying, frantic irritability. "What are you staring at, typing machine? You look like you've seen a ghost."

"N—Nothing, Mr. Thorne," Melody stammered, pulling her 2XL hoodie tighter around her torso, her round glasses slipping slightly. "The... the bass sounded very... powerful."

Kaelen let out a harsh, mocking laugh, but his eyes remained hollow, darting nervously between her and Marcus.

"Powerful. Brilliant critique from a laundry basket. Get the hell out of my sight and print the lyric sheets for the B-sides."

As Melody slipped out the door, she caught a glimpse of Kaelen’s hands. They were trembling. He was staring at the mixing board with a look of sheer, unadulterated panic, his knuckles white as he surreptitiously rubbed his left ear.

The Ghost of Wembley

At 2:15 AM, the encrypted line on Aethel connected with a violent, jagged surge in the blue soundwave. There was no greeting from the other end. Only the sound of ragged, hyperventilating breaths and the distant, violent roar of the Malibu surf crashing against the cliffs below.

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"Kaelen," Melody said, her velvety contralto instantly filling the dark room of her apartment. She didn't wait for him to speak. She could hear the sheer terror vibrating through the digital static. "Breathe with me. Slow down. I'm right here."

A choked, broken sound escaped Kaelen's throat. It was a sob—dry, painful, and completely stripped of the god-like arrogance he wore like armor during the day.

"I'm going deaf, Siren," he whispered, his voice cracking into a jagged fragment of misery. "It’s happening. Faster than the doctors said. Today... today in the studio, I couldn't hear the high-end frequencies on the master track. I’m losing the C note. I’m losing everything."

Melody froze, her fingers tightening around her condenser microphone. The sheer, terrifying vulnerability of his confession hit her like a physical blow.

The brutal, untouchable superstar who had humiliated her hours ago was currently weeping into her headset, his entire soul exposed and bleeding.

"The label... Marcus... they think I'm a god," Kaelen wept, his voice shaking violently as the dam finally broke.

"They’re selling out Wembley Stadium for next spring. A hundred thousand people, Siren. A hundred thousand people waiting for a man who won't even be able to hear his own band. I'm a fraud. I'm a fucking ghost hiding behind digital pitch correction. If they find out... if the world finds out I'm broken, they’ll abandon me. Marcus will discard me like trash."

Melody felt a profound, unexpected ache bloom in her chest. The anger she had carried all day evaporated, replaced by a deep, maternal sorrow. She wasn't just a survival employee anymore; she was the only pillar holding up a collapsing god.

"Listen to me, Kaelen," she murmured, her voice dripping with an intense, commanding tenderness that wrapped around his fractured ego.

"You are not a fraud. Your music doesn't belong to your ears; it belongs to your soul. Wembley will not be your funeral. I won't let it be."

"You don't know what it’s like," he choked out, his breathing gradually slowing down as her velvet voice began to tame the manic static in his skull.

"To be trapped in a room full of bloodsuckers who only want a piece of you... Today... today my new assistant... that stupid, stuttering girl..."

Melody’s breath hitched in her throat. She stayed perfectly still. "What about her, Kaelen?"

"When the track played... she just stood there," Kaelen whispered, his voice slurring slightly as the exhaustion of his panic attack began to pull him under.

"She didn't say anything. But her eyes... Jesus, Siren, when she looked at me through those ridiculous glasses, I felt like she could see right through me. I felt like she knew I was in agony. It terrified me. It made me want to destroy her just to keep her from looking at my weakness."

Melody closed her eyes in the dark, tears gathering at the corners of her lids. The dramatic irony was almost too heavy to bear. He was running from her daytime eyes, only to throw himself completely into her nighttime arms.

"She doesn't know your secrets, Kaelen," Melody whispered softly, her voice a soothing, hypnotic lullaby designed to bury his suspicion. "Nobody knows but me. You are safe with me. Let the static go. Sleep."

A long, shuddering sigh came through the headphones. The blue soundwave on her screen smoothed into a beautiful, rhythmic wave.

"Siren..." he murmured, his voice fading into a deep, desperate drift. "You're the only real thing left..."

Ten minutes after the line went dead, Kaelen Thorne stood on the expansive wooden deck of his Malibu mansion. The torrential rain had stopped, leaving behind a cold, biting mist that rolled off the Pacific.

He was barefoot, his silk shirt open to the wind. In his right hand, he held an unopened, three-thousand-dollar bottle of vintage Russian vodka. He stared down at the dark, swirling water of his infinity pool, his face hardened into a mask of dangerous, obsessive determination.

With a cold, deliberate movement, he twisted the cap off and inverted the bottle, pouring the pale, expensive liquor directly into the dark pool water, watching it disappear into the filters.

He didn't need the alcohol tonight. Her voice was his drug now.

"Who are you?" Kaelen whispered into the crashing sound of the ocean waves, his icy blue eyes narrowing into slits of pure, possessive fixation. "Where are you hiding, Siren?"

He gripped the empty bottle until his knuckles turned white, swearing a silent, lethal vow to himself in the dark. He would use every resource he had.

He would tear Los Angeles apart. He would find the real woman behind that velvet voice, and when he did, he would never let her go.

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