So screw them. If this is what they were giving me, I wasn’t just going to do a bad job. I was going to make it my worst show ever.
I started feeling a little bad about my plan and was afraid to go through with it, but once I got ready, with no one except Bill prepping me backstage, I knew I wanted to go all out. I began with “Guys vs. Girls” like I always did on this tour, but I didn’t want to mess up too bad at the beginning. I sang a little flat, enough so that what Rog calls the lay listener could pick up that something was off. Or what Rog called the lay listener. Not that he’d departed the realm or anything, but in a way, he did. When someone is out of your life and you’ll never see or talk to them again, it’s sort of like they’re dead.
On “RSVP (To My Heart),” I flattened it out more, and I moved slower than my dancers so it looked all out of rhythm and it might make them go off pace. I basically spoke the words to “This Bird Will Always Bee There for You” and didn’t even move. By then the crowd could probably tell I was tanking it, even the seven-year-olds. On “You Hurt Me,” I made it seem like I forgot the words and stopped singing halfway through, and came in late on purpose to the third verse.
Eventually the boos began. I’d never been booed at a concert before, only a couple times at other events where there are haters, because if someone pays seventy-five dollars or whatever to see me, they probably love me, especially girls. And once there were a few boos, from the older girls and their parents, more came in. If I’d been giving a concert to ten people and one booed me, no one else would follow. When you get people in a big crowd, they’re sheep, like Internet commenters.
I waved my hands like, Bring it on, and the boos got louder until it seemed like the whole audience was yelling, and even though it was what I’d wanted, once I actually heard it, it was the worst feeling in the world. I couldn’t tell what was worse: no one paying attention to you, or everyone hating you. I felt ambivalent about it. I didn’t even know if I could recover now or if I should just give up and end the show, and so what if it meant we had to issue refunds.
I looked at my dancers and singers and instrumentalists, who were all staring at me like, You’re screwing us, too. When I turned back, I saw a person in a wheelchair on the wings of the stage, hidden from the crowd.
Jane.
Walter was standing behind her, and she was still looking pale and weak, but she was there. She looked confused, I guess because of the audience reaction, but gave me a little wave.
Something switched inside me. I didn’t want to hear the boos. One more second of it and I might die. All the bodies in the darkness around me were people who only wanted me to sing good, and I’d make their night. Their month . I wanted to hear their applause again, more than anything.
I faced the crowd. “I’m sorry, everyone,” I said. “My voice was off before, but it feels better. I’m gonna sing an a cappella number to make it up to you.” The band wasn’t expecting this, but I motioned for them to let me go, and I sang
I want you here, I need you here
Baby, babe, you always grieve me
I want you here, I need you here
Baby, please don’t ever leave me
It blew out of the water all the a cappella renditions I’d ever done. Even better, I drew the crowd into a sing-along by the third verse. And I knew I’d won them back, and that now they loved me more than they ever had before because for a while I made it seem like I didn’t care if they loved me or not, and that they could just as easily turn on me again but it didn’t matter to me. They worshiped me. Fans are like babies that way. You don’t give them their milk, and they cry their eyes out, then you give it to them and they suck it down and shut up and forget they were ever upset.
The rest of the concert was A-plus work, and I went out for a second encore and did an a cappella version of “Guys vs. Girls,” which I rarely do, but I couldn’t do anything wrong that night. Jane was waiting for me in her wheelchair when I came backstage.
“You were great,” she said.
I didn’t smile or anything. I just stayed in the Jonny Zone. “I know.”
“Sorry I got here late.”
“I thought you weren’t coming at all.”
“I bargained to get out early, and took a cab all the way here. I couldn’t stand the idea of missing one of your shows.”
I shrugged.
“You want to clean up and we’ll go to the hotel?” she asked.
I nodded and walked past her, but when I was right behind her I smelled her perfume, and I know it’s Chanel No. 5 but to me it smells like Jane, and I couldn’t help it, so I hugged her from behind around her shoulders and neck for a second, and she seemed a little surprised but put her hand on my arm, and then I let go and went to my room.
CHAPTER 19. Detroit (Second Day)
Jane had basically made a full recovery by the morning and didn’t need the wheelchair anymore. She was supposed to take it easy the next few days, which I think even she was going to stick to. The original plan was for me and her and Walter to fly to New York ahead of the others, who’d take the bus and would have a day off, so I could do press and prep for my miniconcert with Tyler Beats. But I didn’t know how much publicity they’d want now with everything that had just happened.
Me and Jane took our own car to the airport, and Walter rode in a taxi ahead of us. He’s too big for all three of us to fit into the backseat sometimes, and Jane’s luggage fills up the trunk. A few minutes into the ride, I said, “I’ve been thinking more about school.”
She put down her phone. “What about it?”
“Like, maybe going to it.”
“Why’s that?”
“I don’t know. It seems like it’s something a regular kid should be doing.”
“Uh-huh,” she said. “I can understand that.”
Boxy warehouses passed by us along the highway. Most cities were ugly on the way to the airport. It’s like they didn’t give a shit anymore since they knew you were leaving anyway. “The thing is, you know, you’re not exactly a regular kid.”
“I know.”
“Other people go to school because they have to. You don’t have to.”
“But what if I want to?”
“No one’s stopping you, if it’s something you want to do. It’ll be a tough adjustment, but Nadine can tutor you after school. And we could refer Walter somewhere else.”
“Refer Walter somewhere else?”
“He wouldn’t be your bodyguard anymore. The school wouldn’t let you bring a bodyguard. The point is that you’re supposed to be a regular student. None of the other celebrity kids are allowed to have one.”
I hadn’t thought about that. I might not even be the most famous student there.
“What about after school?”
“That wouldn’t work. He wouldn’t be able to live on a part-time salary, and if we’re not working, I can’t justify spending a full salary on someone who works only a few hours a day. I’m sure we could find someone else willing to do it, though.”
“But when I go back on tour, he’d work for us again?”
“I imagine he’d be someone else’s bodyguard by then. And we’d have whoever we end up with.”
The sky was the color of a mouse and matched the highway and all the buildings. The outside was like an animal that changed its color to blend in. “I’m still mulling it.”
“Entirely up to you, baby.” She returned to her phone.
We found Walter outside the airport and did our thing where we get special treatment and skip all the lines, even the business-class line, and killed time before the flight in the private lounge area. They were always filled with businessmen working on their laptops, so I didn’t need to wear my baseball hat and sunglasses.
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