has.â
âIâm very glad to hear it,â Frank says with a half smile. âGlad to hear the worldâs wrong about teenagers all being delinquents and technology junkies.â
I smirk. âI couldnât be even if I wanted to. Do you know Jeanette has an encyclopedia instead of a computer?â
Frank clucks and shakes his head. âAn encyclopedia in the living room and a bandoneón in the basement,â he says in a loud voice. âShe does sound like something from another age.â
âI heard that!â Jeanette calls. âDonât you have a lesson to teach, Frank Schwartz?â
âOkay, okay.â He winks at me and points to my case. âMay I?â
I nod, and he places the case on the couch beside him. He lifts the bandoneón out like a baby, caressing the bellows and touching the buttons tenderly. He opens and closes it, playing a few notes, his face full of the same awe that I feel every time I touch it. I smile at him, and he smiles back. âYouâre a very lucky person, Ellie.â
âI know,â I say.
He plays a rendition of Ãstor Piazzollaâs fiery âOtoño porteño,â and he totally throws himself into it. Every muscle in his face is tense, and his body moves to the music. Everything around us falls away, and I find myself sitting on the edge of my seat with my mouth hanging open. I want to play like that, and I want him to teach me. Above all, I want him to know Iâm worth teaching.
The piece comes to an explosive finish. I applaud until my palms hurt. He falls back on the couch, exhausted, and the bandoneón case crashes to the floor, the hidden envelopeâand its contentsâgliding out.
I didnât even plan to bring the envelope, not until the last minute when I was going out the door and it suddenly felt wrong to leave it behind. It had spent decades hiding there in the bandoneón case after all. Separating them now seemed somehow like messing with history.
Iâd never let the bandoneón case out of my sight, so it wasnât like Iâd lose it or anything. I donât know why I didnât think about what would happen if Frank saw what was in the envelope.
If Alison were here, she would say this happened for a reason. She was a great believer in Everything Unfolding As It Should, and she always said that the key to happiness is celebrating opportunities instead of wasting time being frustrated or baffled by them.
With everything spread out on the floor, though, celebrating opportunity is the last thing Iâm thinking about. Frank stares at the envelope and then at me, like I might be a juvenile delinquent after all. I begin to babble, my voice low so Jeanette wonât hear, because it suddenly feels weird to have kept this a secret from her. âI found it the other day. Hidden in the lining. Iâve been trying to figure out where it came from. Like a mystery, you know?â Even I can hear the pleading note in my voice. I donât want him to go all responsible-citizen on me, calling the police or something. âI havenât even told Jeanette yet.â
He picks the papers up off the floor, and his expression changes from confusion to shock. He closes his eyes and seems to be considering his words. âEllie,â Frank says, âthereâs a story here.â
âI know.â Iâm about to tell him what I found online when he asks how much I know about Argentine history.
I wish Iâd done more than skim those pages of the encyclopedia the other day. âIt used to be a Spanish colony?â
He nods, waiting.
âItâs a republic,â I add, remembering the words I read on the money.
âAll true,â he says. âDo you know what was going on in Argentina in 1976 though?â
I want to tell him yes, but I have to shake my head.
âMilitary dictatorship,â he says. âFrom 1976 to 1983. The military ran the country by
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