Mystery
published

The Ninth Chord at Ashwell Hall

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Ashwell Hall's concert grand becomes the instrument of a public humiliation. Piano tuner Etta Calder discovers a punched paper roll repurposed to trigger stage devices that expose private grievances. As a premiere approaches, Etta must use her craft — precise mechanical knowledge of tracker rolls, valves and pneumatic chests — to prevent a calculated spectacle and decide how to respond when the manipulator is caught.

mystery
craftsmanship
theatre
moral choice
loneliness to connection
mechanical intrigue

Fine Adjustment

Chapter 1Page 1 of 34

Story Content

Etta Calder arrived at Ashwell Hall with the sort of punctuality that made clocks feel embarrassed. She carried two cases: one for tools, one for the ritual of tuning she kept wrapped in oilcloth like a quiet superstition. The city had a particular drizzle that morning, not sharp enough to sting but enough to gloss the cobbles, so the welcome sign over the hall glowed as if polished by the weather. Ashwell itself liked small ceremonies — Tuesday market tarts that came with candied citrus peels, an evening street organist who never learned the same melody twice, and a volunteer usher who folded programmes with the intensity of a craftsman shaping a violin. Those details had nothing to do with Etta at first, and yet they were the kind of background warmth a precision worker noticed without meaning to.

The concert grand sat under a soft lamp like a patient animal. Etta unlatched the fallboard, inhaled the particular dry perfume of felt and cast iron, and set her toolkit beside the bench. She listened first — not to the tuning forks or the A440 she would summon, but to the instrument’s small complaints: one sympathetic buzz near middle D, a stubborn key that thudded if nudged, a minuscule clatter beneath the action as if a screw were sighing. Tuning, for her, was a conversation where you nudged a neighborly argument toward accord. She liked to think it was the best kind of conversation people still indulged in.

Maya Chen found her halfway through a routine inspection, a thermos in one hand and a stack of schedules in the other. "You're early," Maya said. Her voice held the tone of someone who managed crises daily and arrived at them with thrift-store calm. She looked at the piano, then at Etta's hands. "You always talk to them like they owe you money."

Etta smirked. "Some of them do," she answered, and the smirk was real — dry humor like a varnish. "This one owes a damping felt and a polite temperament."

Maya laughed, a quick thing that loosened the air. They had known one another long enough that jokes were a kind of shorthand; the barbs and the kindness slid past one another easily. The relationship between the stage manager and the tuner was professional meat wrapped in a thin paper of friendship. Maya handled people and schedules; Etta handled things that made people sound as if they hadn't been entirely compromised by life. They respected the clean edges each brought.

The hall hummed; technicians fussed with lights at the wings. Harrison Ames, the city's particular star, ran through a passage near the rear. His playing had the momentum of someone who expected to be adored. Etta had tuned his pianos for years and had learned two things: his tempo could be both a comfort and a weapon, and his hands told stories his face tried to keep secret. She tightened a string, coaxed a stubborn tuning pin with her lever, and felt the action settle beneath her palms like an animal easing into sleep.

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