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******
"The lower register chords will need slightly more physical weight from my fingers to naturally project past the first twenty rows, without your amplification board artificially over-compensating and muddying the mix."
The audio director blinked, his mouth slightly open.
"You always play to the actual, living acoustic environment," Marvin stated, as if this were the most obvious, basic rule of existence. "The microphone handles everything entirely beyond the natural projection. But the natural projection needs to be calibrated by the artist for the space as it actually exists in this exact moment, not as it existed in an empty room during rehearsal."
He paused, adjusting his cuffs.
"Furthermore, the upper register of my vocal will also need slight adjustment. The ambient body heat of the room will warm the acoustics slightly, which is actually correct for the emotional tone of this song. I will leave the earpiece monitor mix exactly where it currently is, and I will simply trust the warmth of the room to carry the high notes."
The veteran audio director was completely, quiet for a long moment. He looked at the soundboard, and then back at the boy.
"You've... you've really done your homework, kid," the director breathed in sheer awe.
"I always do my homework," Marvin purred, offering a smile. "And I never, ever fail a test."
---
Marvin stood entirely alone in the dark, velvet wings for exactly eleven minutes before the Best Original Song presentation officially began on the stage.
He was completely, still.
It was not the frantic, vibrating stillness of human nervousness being managed. It was not the twitchy, superstitious stillness of a terrified performer doing pre-show rituals or vocal warmups.
It was simply the stillness of an entity who had entirely finished preparing, and was now existing in the specific moment that follows preparation. The quiet, eternal moment of being utterly ready that immediately precedes the doing.
The Incubus soul inside the boy—precise, lethal, and constitutionally, biologically incapable of the pathetic, sweaty anxiety that the human body it inhabited could in theory produce—was rapidly, silently calibrating its magic.
He did it with the cold focus of a predatory creature that had spent bloody centuries intimately understanding human emotion at the microscopic level of its fundamental, biological mechanics. And he was now preparing to deploy that understanding in front of the largest human audience it had ever addressed simultaneously.
Hundreds of millions of people. A live worldwide broadcast. Sixty-nine countries are watching simultaneously.
He adjusted the calibration slightly for the massive scale. He dialed the vocal frequency up to a level that would bypass the television cameras and strike directly at the souls of the viewers sitting in their living rooms.
"Mr. Meyers," the stage manager whispered, her voice trembling slightly as she looked at him. "You're up in thirty seconds. Break a leg."
"I intend to break more than that, madam," Marvin smiled.
The velvet curtains parted. The stage was his.
---
In a quiet, upscale suburb of New York, thirteen-year-old Scarlett Ingrid Johansson was intensely watching the Oscars from the living room of her family's apartment.
She wasn't just casually watching. She was watching with the hyper-focused attention of someone who had been obsessively studying films since she was very young, and had been working in them since she was eight. She was watching this ceremony with the complex, mixed interest of a professional-in-formation, a critic, and a genuine, breathless fan of the medium.
She had devoured *Kung Fu Panda* the week it came out. She had read *Ready Player One* back in November and had thought deeply about the dark, futuristic world-building for weeks. And she had listened to the *Marvin 1* cassette tape with the intense kind of analytical attention she only gave to things she was trying to deconstruct.
She didn't just want to passively *receive* the music; she wanted to intellectually *understand* the terrifying mechanism of it.
She wanted to identify the specific, invisible craft decisions that somehow produced such devastating specific effects on her nervous system.
The haunting craft of 'Song of Enchantment' was something she was still frustratingly working through. She had listened to the track dozens of times in her bedroom every other day, lying on the floor, trying to rationally understand how a completely wordless vocal composition consistently produced in her the exact same, overwhelming quality of melancholic lustful feeling. She had not arrived at a complete answer.
Which was, in itself, informative to a thirteen-year-old actress. It told her that the answer was not fully contained in the basic, technical decisions of chord progression.
It meant that something else—something invisible, and magnetic—was operating beneath the surface of the audio.
When Billy Crystal's sharp opening monologue addressed Marvin specifically, and the broadcast camera found him sitting in the audience, Scarlett dropped her magazine, sat forward on the edge of the couch, and stared intently at his face.
He was—she had privately thought this many times before, looking closely at glossy magazine photographs, and watching the Grammy broadcast—extraordinary in a way that the still photographs somehow tragically understated. Which was unusual in her industry. Most professional photographs of beautiful Hollywood people approximated their beauty entirely adequately, often improving it.
But the photographs of Marvin merely captured something fundamentally real about the basic geometry of his face, while entirely missing something profound that she could not physically identify. Some heavy, magnetic quality of *presence* that a static, two-dimensional image simply couldn't hold.
The moving television image was vastly better. The live, moving image caught the quality of his attention—the slow way his blue eyes moved, the composition of his physical stillness. And it produced in her chest the exact, fluttering response that she was rapidly learning to recognize as one she had never previously had to a boy she had not personally met and it was fleeting for them.
"He's... he's really something else," Scarlett murmured softly to the room, which currently contained her mother and her older brother, who were watching the broadcast with her.
"He's very talented, honey," her mother agreed distractedly, sipping a glass of wine.
"That's not what I meant," Scarlett whispered back, frowning slightly. But she quickly decided not to elaborate on what she had actually meant, because what she had meant was a confusing teenage infatuation that she was still developing the emotional framework to articulate. And her family's living room was not the right venue for a confession.
Hours later, when the sprawling ceremony finally reached the highly anticipated Best Original Song presentation, and the stage announcer boomed the words that preceded the performance—*"Performing the Best Original Song nominee 'My Heart Will Go On,' Marvin Meyers!"*—Scarlett sat up completely straight. She slowly put down the glass of ice water she had been holding, her hands trembling slightly, and focused on the screen with the completeness that she strictly reserved for things that were genuinely worth focusing on.
The massive, black grand piano was the very first thing the sweeping camera showed. The Shrine's legendary concert grand was positioned perfectly center stage, with a single, harsh white spotlight illuminating it in the otherwise completely darkened, cavernous auditorium.
Then, Marvin walked gracefully to it from the shadows of the velvet wings.
The camera caught the walk perfectly—the slow glide across the massive Oscar stage of a twelve-year-old boy in a midnight blue tuxedo with the Heart of the Ocean necklace rested around his neck, slightly oversized for his stature, yet it complemented him well and did not appear out of place.
He was entirely alone. He possessed the quality of unhurried, complete composure that Scarlett had been obsessively watching on broadcast screens for eight solid months. And the devastating impact of that composure did not diminish with repetition. It only grew stronger.
He sat down at the piano bench. He looked out at the massive room of six thousand Hollywood elites.
Then, he played.
The very first, delicate notes came cleanly through the television's cheap speakers, and Scarlett immediately felt something violent happen to her breathing. She noted it with the detached awareness of an actress who was simultaneously experiencing profound emotion, and coldly observing her own experience of it.
The haunting Celtic motif, played in the heavy register that his hands produced on the piano keys, instantly reached something deep inside her. It arrived somewhere vulnerable that she was not fully prepared for, even though she had heard the pop version of the song a hundred times on the radio.
Then, he began to sing. And Scarlett Johansson felt tears instantly prick the corners of her eyes, completely unable to look away from his face.
---
Seventeen-year-old Adriana Lima was watching the Oscars from the humid living room of her family home in Salvador, Bahia, Brazil. She had taken a rare, desperately needed small break from the grueling international circuit.
She was watching the global broadcast with a visual quality that was frustratingly dependent on the satellite signal's chaotic cooperation with the atmospheric conditions of a stormy March evening in northeastern Brazil. The picture occasionally flickered into a snowy fuzz, but the audio remained relatively clear.
She had been successfully modeling internationally since she was fifteen. That demanding, often brutal career had forcefully given her a professional, clinical relationship with human beauty. She intimately understood the genetic mechanics of what physical perfection actually was, exactly how it was artificially produced with contouring and lighting, and how different people possessed it in wildly different, asymmetrical degrees.
She had, in the harsh course of navigating the fashion industry's upper echelons, developed a fairly precise internal calibration for the distinct difference between people who were merely "attractive," and people who were mathematically "extraordinary."
Marvin Meyers fell into the second category. In fact, he sat at the very top of it, in a way that Adriana was not entirely sure how to account for.
She had first seen his face on the glossy cover of an American music magazine her older cousin had brought back to Brazil the previous September. The striking photograph had caught her attention in the exact way that very, very few photographs of male models ever did. The boy's face possessed a quality that she instantly recognized—as a working professional who spent her days dissecting the limits of high-end photography—as something camera lenses were simply not equipped to fully contain.
The magazine face was clearly generating a magnetic field that the camera was only catching a flat approximation of. And because the approximation was *that* extraordinary, it meant the living, breathing original was something else entirely. Something dangerous.
She had then sought out and listened to the music, primarily because the face was so devastatingly interesting. The wordless melodies had done exactly what they apparently did to everyone who encountered them with genuine attention: they reached directly into her chest and squeezed.
Now, she was sitting cross-legged on the cool tile floor of her living room, watching the Oscars with the intense, unblinking attention she normally reserved for studying archival runway footage of Naomi or Cindy. It was a focused, professional evaluation of something deeply worth studying—plus something else.
Something less professional, and infinitely more personal, that she was comfortable acknowledging internally but required no further, embarrassing examination. She had a massive crush.
When the camera finally found Marvin after Billy Crystal's opening monologue, Adriana leaned forward. She looked closely at his face on the pixelated screen, her dark eyes scanning his features.
He was twelve years old. In two short years, he would be fourteen. In five years, he would be seventeen.
These were simple, biological facts. And they were also, in the immediate, intoxicating context of watching him walk across the Oscar stage toward a grand piano, completely and utterly beside the point. Age was just a number on a passport; power was an eternal, recognizable currency. And the boy walking across the screen was radiating absolute, unbothered dominance.
She watched him sit gracefully at the piano.
She watched his blue eyes sweep over the room of Hollywood elites—the producers, the veteran actors, the billionaires—with the casual indifference of a man surveying a mildy interesting garden. She watched his long, elegant hands find the ivory keys with the settled quality of someone effortlessly returning to a native language.
Then, he played.
The heavy, resonant sound coming through the cheap television speaker was completely inadequate to fully contain the acoustic magic that was obviously happening inside the Shrine Auditorium. But it was entirely sufficient to carry the essential qualities of it.
The haunting voice reached her with the devastating effect that Marvin's aura reliably produced. It was a feeling she had spent several months reading dramatic descriptions of in American magazines, and she was now experiencing it in its purest, live Oscar-performance version.
Something heavy and wet blossomed in her chest.
She slowly lifted her hand and placed it flat over her collarbone, pressing against her racing heart.
She sat completely frozen on the tile floor for the full, duration of the performance. She was not moving. She was barely breathing. She had a sad, beautiful smile on her face, and thick tears were silently, continuously tracking down her cheeks, completely ruining her careful mascara.
When the song finally ended, and the piano faded into a breathless silence before the auditorium erupted, she remained very, very still for a long moment, staring at the screen.
Her mother appeared quietly in the doorway of the living room, holding a dish towel, looking at her weeping, teenage daughter with gentle concern.
"He's very good, Adriana," her mother whispered softly in Portuguese.
"Yes, Mama," Adriana breathed, wiping a tear from her cheek, her eyes never leaving the television screen where the boy was taking a measured bow. "He is."
---
Marvin's hands found the keys.
The massive Shrine Auditorium—which currently contained six thousand powerful people conducting themselves with the highly managed, bored attentiveness of an industry in its most formal, televised public configuration—underwent a massive shift in atmospheric quality in the exact first four seconds of the piano's opening.
*****
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