Chapter 3
There was once a terrible aristocrat in the history of piano.
His name â glorious and dreadful alike â was Franz Liszt.
And his masterpiece, the Transcendental Ătudes, remains every pianistâs nightmare.
What are the Transcendental Ătudes, you ask?
Just by name, they sound like something requiring superhuman power â and indeed, thatâs exactly what they are.
A set of studies written for Liszt himself, and only he could truly play them.
The original publication title was Ătudes for Transcendent Technique. That says it all.
My right hand calmly scribbled on paper.
ăCanât play it?ă
âIâItâs not that I canâtâŠâ
ăNo. 10.ă
I stared at the piano keys, an odd heaviness sinking in.
The 10th Transcendental Ătude â commonly nicknamed âThe Scrubberâ â was infamous for one reason:
in the middle section, the left and right hands overlap in a bizarre tangle of movement.
Perfect synchronization between both hands was only the beginning â the rest was pure devilry.
But hesitation lasted only a second. I straightened my back and nodded firmly.
âFine. Letâs do it.â
My right hand rose first onto the keys. I followed, left hand trembling slightly with tension.
The performance began.
Dengâ!
It didnât last beyond a few measures.
I turned, bewildered, toward my right hand.
ââŠThat wasnât so bad, was it?â
ăAgain.ă
The right hand moved back to the keyboard with stern insistence. I sighed, lifted my hands again, and began.
Dengâ!
The right hand twitched irritably.
I swallowed the rising frustration. The last thing I needed was for my own hand to go on strike.
ăAgain.ă
<003>
I rubbed my sore wrist.
Funny â this time, it was my left wrist that ached. That was new.
Never in my life did I think Iâd play Lisztâs Transcendentals again.
And never â never â did I imagine my teacher would be my right hand.
I sneaked a glance at it. Was it my imagination, or did it look annoyed as I massaged the other hand?
âWhat are you, really?â
It couldnât even be bothered to pick up a pen this time. Instead, it scrawled lazily on my palm:
ăA hand.ă
I sighed at the short, halfhearted answer.
Well, what did it matter? Knowing what it was wouldnât change the miracle that I could play again at all.
Silence lingered for a while.
There was something Iâd wanted to say â but it stuck in my throat.
âHey.â
I lifted my hand lightly, as if greeting it.
âLetâs enter a piano competition.â
The right hand tilted toward me, as if looking at my face.
Maybe it thought Iâd lost my mind â after all, I couldnât even press a proper key just a few days ago.
Then it moved.
ăDo whatever.ă
ââŠWait, really?â
ăHeated hand massager, wrist brace, pain patchesâŠă
It started scribbling furiously on a notepad. I peered over its shoulder, realizing those were things I needed to buy.
âFine, fine! Write all you want! Iâll get everything for you! Oh, my preciousââ
Smack!
Before I could even finish, it slapped me clean across the face.
As I rubbed my stinging cheek, it coolly returned to writing out the list.
Somewhere deep inside, an odd worry surfaced.
ââŠDo I come off as annoying to other people too?â
* * *
The next morning, 9 a.m.
Yawning wide enough to crack my jaw, I pushed open the academy doors.
It was early lesson day.
I was heading for the lounge to grab coffee when something on the bulletin board caught my eye.
[Cantabile Piano Academy â Annual Recital Notice]
I stopped mid-step and scanned the announcement.
âSo itâs recital season again, huhâŠâ
Recitals werenât just for the students. Teachers, parents â everyone got judged.
How well did the teachers teach?
And how well did the students learn?
Parents didnât listen for joy. They observed.
And when results failed to impress, students often left the academy⊠or gave up entirely.
It was, in every sense, a stage of judgment.
âFeeling pressured?â
Yoon Ah-young appeared beside me, wearing an awkward smile.
Strange. Sheâd been avoiding me all week â and now she was the one to approach.
I exhaled slowly. âCanât really say no, can I?â
âHowâs your wrist?â she asked.
Her words made me freeze.
ââŠHow did you know about that?â
âI saw it once â through your sleeve. You didnât seem to want to talk about it, so I pretended not to notice.â
âAnd now youâre suddenly asking?â
âYou look like youâve recovered.â
I blinked. What?
She smiled gently. âActually, I came back to the academy that night â the night of the staff dinner.
Iâd forgotten my wallet.â
I swallowed hard.
So she heard it.
That nightâs performance â every note.
There was no point lying. But what was I supposed to say?
That my right hand had gained sentience and occasionally slapped me when it felt like it?
Yoon Ah-young closed her eyes briefly.
âYou played Tempest, didnât you? At first, I couldnât tell who it was.
But Iâve never heard a performance like that before â not in this academy, not in my life.â
I nodded faintly.
She was right. Iâd been both the player and the audience that night.
Every note had stolen my breath; the sound itself seemed to possess me.
And now she looked straight at me.
âIâm sorry.â
âHuh? For what?â
âI didnât believe you â when you said you studied at Eastman.
Everyone knows you never play.â
I gave a dry laugh. âIf youâd believed me, that wouldâve been weird.â
I hesitated, then ventured carefully, âCould you⊠keep it to yourself?â
âOf course.â
âYouâre not even going to ask why?â
âYouâve kept it secret this long. Iâm sure you have a reason.
If it were something I should know, youâd have told me already.â
She bowed politely. âIâve got a lesson now!â
âAh, sure. Good luck.â
As she walked off, I scratched my head, watching her leave.
Could I really trust her? Maybe. She didnât seem the type to gossip.
âWell, if it gets out⊠it gets out.â
* * *
âLetâs wrap up for today.â
âIâll stay and practice a little longer.â
Choi So-eunâs expression darkened as she stared at her sheet music.
âMom said sheâs coming to the recital.â
âThatâs great. Sheâll finally get to see youââ
âSheâll just tell me to quit piano and study instead.â
Her lips pressed tight.
âYouâre seventeen, right?â
âYes.â
âStill plenty of time before college. Donât stress so much. Youâve been working hard.â
âI donât have talent.â
ââŠCome again?â
âWhen I saw you play that night,â she whispered, âI realized â no matter how much I practice, Iâll never play like you.â
I stared at her, startled.
So-eun was always quiet, almost shy. I never imagined she was carrying that kind of despair.
But the truth? Even I couldnât play like that.
Not like him â my right hand. That damned genius.
Even if I trained for life, Iâd never reach that level.
So-eunâs voice trembled. âItâs all because of Dad.â
âYour father?â
âHe got transferred out here. I was studying piano in SeoulâŠ
Kids there are already past Black Keys, playing Pathetique and The Chase!â
âThatâs impressive.â
âOf course it is! Kids in Seoul are insane!â
âGot any videos?â
She blinked, confused, but unlocked her phone and played one.
A small studio appeared on screen. The teacher nodded, and the performance began.
Danâdaradanâ!
Chopinâs The Chase.
I watched in silence.
The longer it went on, the more my jaw dropped â and the darker So-eunâs face grew.
âWowâŠâ
âGood, right?â
âGood? They suck.â
Her eyes went wide. Mine too â at my own bluntness.
âThe rhythmâs dragging all over, no concept of phrasing, no dynamic control â
this isnât a chase, itâs a panic. At my old school, professors would throw you out for that.â
She blinked. âWhat school did you go to?â
Oops.
âUh⊠far away. Doesnât matter. Want to hear what real âChaseâ sounds like?â
âYes!â
Her face brightened instantly.
I spread my right hand dramatically before her.
âSo-eun, my right hand is possessed by a demon.â
ââŠWhat?â
âThe Piano Demon. Ask nicely, or it might flick your forehead.â
So-eun giggled, clearly thinking it was a joke.
âPlease, Piano Demon!â
Good. Now donât you dare refuse me, I thought.
The right hand twitched, then descended to the keys.
âAlright thenâ ow!â
It twisted hard against my thigh.
âTeacher? Are you okay?â
âHa⊠ha, yeah. Just⊠stretching.â
It never misses a chance to mess with me.
Then the hand glided onto the keyboard. So-eun flipped through her music bag.
âIâll get the scoreââ
âNo need.â
I knew The Chase by heart â to the bone.
I inhaled deeply.
And the studio filled with fire.
Chopinâs âThe Chase.â
Not a name given by Chopin, but by listeners â for the way its furious tempo evoked pursuit and flight.
A chase across the keys.
Right hand the hunter, left hand the hunted.
My right hand blazed across the keyboard, leaving my left scrambling just to survive.
Each run, each leap â impossibly sharp.
Even the pedal needed split-second precision to match its madness.
The performance was breathless, devastating, transcendent.
When Iâd studied at Eastman, Iâd attended every recital by the top pianists â but Iâd never heard this.
And the most absurd part?
Even now, the right hand was holding back.
If it wanted, it could devour my left whole.
Still â I wouldnât let it.
I chased it with everything I had.
A final chord thundered through the room.
Silence fell.
Panting, I wiped the sweat from my forehead â almost with my right hand, then stopped myself.
If I stained it, it might just tear out my hair in front of the student.
So-eun could only stare, wide-eyed.
âSee the difference?â
ââŠNo.â
âYou will, one day. Just keep practicing. Youâll get there.â
Her smile returned â small, but genuine.
Good. The shadow in her voice had lifted.
Knock knock.
As I packed up, Yoon Ah-young peeked into the room.
âStill not done?â
âJust finished.â
âThen hurry! Everyoneâs gathering in the directorâs office.â
âWhatâs up?â
âWeâre picking the performers for the recital!â
Right â even the teachers had to earn their spots.
The recital wasnât only about the students proving themselves.
Teachers, too, were tested â their performance representing the academyâs pride and credibility.
I grabbed my notes and pen and followed her out.
âWonder whoâll make the stage this yearâŠâ