She opened her mouth to speak and then closed it, looking at him contemplatively. “When was the last time you took a break?”
That was easy. “My first piano lesson.”
“Before that?” she asked with a degree of consideration that made him nervous. Though he didn’t know why.
“I don’t take breaks.”
Now she would use that truth as an excuse and say she didn’t need time off, either.
She surprised him by asking very seriously, “Ever?”
“Ever.”
“You do need a break.”
So Zephyr and Gregor insisted. “If the number of compositions you have created in the past years is any indication, so do you.”
That seemed to startle her. “Music is my life.”
“According to both my doctor and business partner, that attitude is not a healthy one.”
“I exercise.”
He remembered seeing her home gym when showing Cole Geary around her house. “So do I.”
“I eat right.”
“So do I.”
“Then why are they so concerned for you?”
Neo shrugged. “Got me, but if it’s bad for me to be so obsessed by Stamos and Nikos Enterprises, then it stands to reason your single-minded pursuit of music needs tempering.”
“I don’t want to spend the day being dissected by strangers.”
“Not going to happen.”
“Why?”
“They’ll be too busy watching me in wonder.”
She laughed at that as he’d meant her to do. “It makes me cranky to think of my house getting torn up.”
“It won’t be torn up. Cole gave me his word that you’ll barely be able to tell they were even here.”
“How is that possible? I saw the list. They can never get it all done in one day.”
“In fact, they can.”
“Money talks?”
“In even more languages than I do.”
A smile played at the edges of her lips. “I’m fluent in Mandarin, Italian and German.”
“You are accomplished.” He himself spoke Greek and English, of course, but Japanese and Spanish as well. “I understand the Italian and German, considering your passion for piano composition, but why Mandarin?”
“I like the way it’s written.”
“You are fluent in the Kanji?”
“Yes, though I’m still studying. I have a pen pal from the Hunan province and he tutors me. He’s a scholar and something of a recluse.”
“What do you write to him about?”
“Music, what else? He plays and composes on the guzheng. It’s kind of like a Chinese zither. Unlike the older and more traditional guqin, which only has seven strings and no bridges, it has sixteen to twenty-five strings with movable bridges. He can create complicated and very beautiful compositions on it.”
She was babbling. She was still nervous about leaving with him and letting the security company do their job. But she was going to do it. He was proud of her.
“How do you share your music?”
“We both have Web cams.” She laughed, but it didn’t sound like she found that funny. “It’s kind of pathetic, but I see more of him and my other online friends via the Internet than I do anyone else.”
It was unfortunate, not pathetic. One day, he would help her make that distinction. “Have you ever wanted to visit him in person?”
“Yes.”
“Naturally, you have not gone.”
“I would. Though not easily, I can travel anonymously, but I have no one to travel with.”
“So, it is not simply leaving your house that bothers you?”
She lifted her shoulders in a half shrug before turning back to her breakfast without answering.
He wasn’t done with the subject however. “You don’t like being recognized as Cassandra Baker, the renowned pianist and New Age composer.”
“Something like that.”
“But you wouldn’t answer your door to the locksmith.”
“No.”
“Why?”
“My father used to say I was debilitatingly shy.”
From her tone, Neo guessed the other man had considered that a liability, most likely to his brilliantly talented daughter’s career plans.
“Were you always shy?”
“My mother said I was an outgoing toddler. That’s how they learned I was a musical prodigy. I was always trying to entertain them and discovered the piano at the age of three. I played music I had heard from memory.”
“That’s amazing.”
“That’s what my teachers said.”
“They started you with a teacher at age three?” He could not help the appalled shock in his tone.
“Mom came down sick and I guess my parents saw the lessons as a way to divert my attention from her so I would not demand too much of her time.”
“That would imply you spent significant time each day playing piano.”
“I did.”
“How much time are we talking here?”
“I don’t remember exactly.” Though something in her expression belied that claim.
“Take a guess.”
“A couple of hours every morning and evening before bedtime.”
“Impossible.”
“Entirely possible. And that does not count the time I spent practicing on my own.”
“You must be mistaken.” Children often miscalculated the length of time spent doing something, or so he had heard.
“I used to think I might have been, too. However, I found the records of my lessons in a box of papers after my father’s death and there it was in black and white.”
“What?”
“Proof my parents did not want me around.”
“That is a harsh assessment.”
“How did you end up in an orphanage?” she asked challengingly.
“My parents both wanted something different from life than being a parent.”
“Harsh assessment, or reality?”
“Touché.”
“I have often wished I hadn’t found those records. I preferred the gentler fantasy that I mistook the number of hours I spent working on my music before I was old enough to go to school.” She bit her lip and looked away, old sadness sitting on her like a mantle. “Cleaning out the house of my parents’ personal possessions was supposed to be cathartic.”
“Who told you so?”
“My manager.”
“And