Chapter One: Don’t Touch Dad’s Shit (Oops)
They say curiosity killed the cat.
Well, Frodo’s still alive and I’m still nosy, so I think that saying is full of crap.
It started the way most trouble starts: I got bored. Like, really bored. Like, “I already played with all my LEGOs, chewed three pencils, reorganized my rock collection by shininess, and scared my neighbor by barking at him like a dog kind of bored.
So I did the one thing I’m not supposed to do.
I went into Dad’s garage.
It’s not even a normal garage. It’s a weird haunted junk cave filled with spiderwebs, old coffee mugs with scary stains, and stuff that smells like history and farts. There’s a big sign on the door that says DO NOT ENTER and another one that says KAYLA I MEAN IT in Sharpie.
But Frodo gave me that look—you know, the “do it, you coward” look that only black cats can pull off without saying a word.
So I did.
Inside, it was dark and echoey and smelled like secrets. I tripped over a bowling trophy, almost got murdered by a falling rake, and then—bam. I saw it.
The guitar.
It was stuck behind a bunch of dusty boxes and covered in cobwebs, but I swear it was glowing a little. Like it had a soul or something. It wasn’t a normal glow either—it shimmered like oil in a puddle or a holographic Pokémon card.
And when I touched it?
ZAP.
Static shot through my fingers and my hair poofed up like a freaking poodle. Frodo yowled. Somewhere, a car alarm went off. I swear I heard a whisper say, “Play me.”
So I did what any totally rational, definitely mature seven-year-old would do:
I flipped off the garage, grabbed the guitar, and yelled, “Screw it!”
Then I strummed.
And time broke
Chapter Two: Mick Freaking Jagger (and Other Problems)
Have you ever been thrown through a tornado made of glitter, lightning bolts, and screaming?
Because that’s what time travel feels like.
One second I was in Dad’s garage, clinging to a cursed guitar and wondering if I’d just peed a little. The next second, I was falling—falling—through what looked like a lava lamp from outer space. Frodo was somewhere behind me, yowling like he’d just seen a vacuum.
Then—THUD.
I landed face-first in someone’s armpit.
“Oi! What the bloody hell?” a British voice shouted.
I scrambled up, covered in sweat that wasn’t mine. People were running around, tuning guitars, yelling about microphones, and passing joints like they were snacks. I looked down and realized I was standing in the middle of a dressing room—leather pants, leopard print coats, and enough hair product to start a fire.
Then I saw him.
Mick. Freaking. Jagger.
He was shirtless. He was strutting in place like he’d been born dancing. He had the swagger of someone who’s never been told to sit still a single day in his life.
And I—Kayla Sue Whatever-My-Middle-Name-Is—just stood there with a glowing guitar, my cat, and a face full of holy crap.
“Who brought the tiny goblin?” asked a guy with a bass and incredible cheekbones.
“I’m not a goblin,” I said. “I’m seven.”
“Right,” Mick said, squinting. “Is she part of the stage act?”
I opened my mouth to explain—or scream—when Frodo launched off a table and knocked over a stack of vinyl records. Everyone jumped like it was a bomb.
“Frodo, no!” I yelled. “You can’t break history!”
Too late.
A record hit the floor and started spinning. I swear the guitar vibrated in my hands, and then—just like that—the room dissolved. The air twisted. My toes buzzed. Mick Jagger’s beautiful lips screamed something I couldn’t hear—
And I was gone.
.Chapter Two (continued): Goblin Girl Meets Rock Gods
“Wait—don’t go!” I shouted at the universe, but the time-vortex-whatever paused just long enough for me to not be sucked away.
Mick Jagger stared at me like I was an alien, which—fair, honestly. I was a small child holding a glowing guitar, standing in his dressing room like I belonged there.
“I swear I’m not here to murder you or whatever,” I said quickly, trying to sound chill. “This guitar made me time travel. It’s Frodo’s fault.”
Frodo licked his paw and blinked like, You dragged me into this, lady.
The other band members stared at me, but Mick leaned in close. Not threatening, just… curious. His voice dropped into something calm and sharp, like he was tuning into a weird frequency only I gave off.
“You alright, love? You don’t look from ‘round here.”
“I’m not,” I said. “I’m from the future. And Indiana.”
Keith Richards muttered something like, “We’ve done worse,” and lit a cigarette.
I clutched the guitar tighter. “You’re, like… legends. You’re gonna be huge. I mean, you already are, but it’s gonna get insane. Tattoos-of-your-face level insane.”
Mick grinned. “Flattery’ll get you places.”
“I don’t care about flattery,” I said. “I just—”
I paused. Because the truth was poking at me like a splinter. “I don’t fit in at home. Not even close. But here, with this guitar, I feel like maybe I do. At least a little.”
There was a silence. Not awkward. Just thick. Like something heavy and old and magic had passed through the room.
Mick looked at me and said, softer this time, “Being different’s not the problem, darling. It’s the world that gets itchy when someone doesn’t match the wallpaper.”
I stared at him.
“You’ll be alright,” he added. “Just keep playing.”
And then—because the universe is rude—the record finally hit the ground, let out a crackling sound, and everything shimmered again.
“Wait!” I shouted. “Can I come back? Like—later?”
“Sure,” Mick called, already blurry. “We’ll be here.”
“2022!” I yelled as the colors wrapped around me again. “Don’t die before then!”
Keith cackled and yelled, “We’ve tried!”
And then—whoosh.
The world broke again
🎙️ Interlude 1 – After the Rolling Stones
We landed on a rooftop.
Not in a cool superhero way. More like I tripped over air and Frodo crash-landed in a pile of laundry. Which is weird, because who leaves laundry on a roof?
The London sky was the color of cold toast. A breeze smelled like rain and cigarette smoke and old songs.
I sat on the edge, kicking my feet and holding the guitar like it was a nervous pet. Frodo hopped up beside me and flopped down with a sigh.
“You ever feel like the world’s too loud and too quiet at the same time?” I asked.
Frodo blinked.
“Like everyone else has the script, and you’re just ad-libbing your whole life?”
He licked his paw.
“I think Mick Jagger might be my new therapist.”
Frodo stretched and yawned like, You’re not wrong.
I leaned back on my elbows. “He told me rebellion isn’t a bad thing. That not matching the wallpaper might be the point.”
Frodo nudged my knee.
“Do I match anything?” I asked.
He purred and curled up in my lap like punctuation.
Maybe that was his way of saying: You don’t have to match. You’re the freaking color palette.
Chapter Three: Jazz, Jitterbugs, and One Very Confused Seven-Year-Old
When the time-tornado spit me out again, I didn’t land in someone’s armpit this time, which was a win.
But I did land in a trash can.
“OW! What the—FUDGE MUFFINS!”
(I was trying not to say the f-word anymore. I made it like… half a second.)
Frodo landed beside me with an elegant thump like, I told you this was a bad idea. He immediately started grooming himself like he hadn’t just quantum-leaped into a garbage pile.
I peeked out of the trash can.
It was nighttime, but everything glowed. Streetlamps hummed. People laughed and danced on the sidewalk in their sharp hats and shiny shoes. A trumpet wailed from inside a club down the street. The rhythm made my heart thump weird. Not scared—just… new. Electric.
A newspaper floated by in the breeze:
Harlem, New York – May 1927
Oh.
Ohhhh.
I was somewhere between jazz and Black excellence and forbidden poetry, and it was glorious.
I pulled myself out of the trash like the classy lady I am and marched toward the sound. The music tugged at the guitar like it was waking up again.
“Frodo,” I whispered, “I think this is where words dance.”
The club was called The Jungle Room. (Badass, right?) Inside, it smelled like cigars and something fried. A woman with gold earrings taller than my face snapped her fingers at me.
“No kids in here,” she said.
“I’m not a kid,” I said. “I’m a… historical observer with a cat.”
She squinted. “Your mama know you’re out time-travelin’, baby?”
“I don’t think my mom even knows what year I’m in.”
That made her laugh. “You wild. Fine. Just don’t touch nothin’ and stay near the back.”
Inside, the room vibrated. A trumpet player blew like his soul was on fire. A poet stood off to the side scribbling in a notebook like his hand was possessed. Everyone moved like the beat was the law.
I wanted to cry.
Not because I was sad. But because it was the first time I saw quiet people—people who maybe felt like me—explode into something loud without saying a word.
It made me believe in something. Not sure what. Just… something.
A woman in a velvet dress slid onto the piano bench and began to sing. Her voice filled the air like smoke and honey and grief.
“You’re not lost,” she said between songs, looking straight at me like she knew. “You’re just still writing your part.”
My heart cracked open like an egg.
And I whispered, “Damn.”
Frodo purred.
Chapter Three (continued): The Softest Kind of Loud
After the singer finished her set, the room shifted. The dancers slowed. The lights dimmed just a touch, like the building itself was exhaling.
I wandered toward the back, where the poet was still scribbling—tall, with round glasses and a jawline that meant business. He looked like he’d been born with ink in his veins.
I meant to sneak past, but my guitar let out a tiny hum. Just a little whrrrr, like it had something to say.
He looked up. “That your instrument, little miss?”
I nodded. “Kind of plays me, honestly.”
He chuckled and slid his notebook shut. “That’ll happen.”
I stared at him. “Your poems were cool.”
“‘Cool’ is not the word most folks use.”
“Well, I’m seven,” I said. “My vocabulary’s still cooking.”
He smiled, not like I was cute, but like I’d said something worth hearing. “What’d you hear in them?”
I shrugged. “You were mad, I think. But soft about it. Like… like you were yelling in cursive.”
His eyes widened a little.
“I didn’t know you could be mad like that,” I added. “Usually when I’m mad, it explodes out. Like BOOM! But you’re mad in a way that feels like… jazz.”
“Jazz is mad,” he said. “Mad that folks don’t listen, don’t see, don’t care. So it bends. It swings. It stomps with grace. Just like poetry. Just like you.”
I blinked. “Like me?”
He nodded. “You’re not loud. But you sure ain’t quiet either. You’re what I’d call a soft storm.”
A soft storm.
That sat in my chest like a warm coal.
“Rebellion doesn’t always gotta be thunder,” he said, tapping his pen against his notebook. “Sometimes it’s a whisper that keeps showing up. A note you can’t un-hear. A girl in a trash can who refuses to disappear.”
I grinned. “You’re weird.”
“Takes one to know one,” he said.
Just then, Frodo started purring like an engine and the guitar buzzed again—time was pulling me forward.
I waved fast, like I’d been friends with him for years. “What’s your name?”
“Langston,” he said with a wink. “Now go write your part.”
And just like that—swirl, zap, BOOM—the club vanished, and I was spinning again, but not like before.
This time, I carried a new kind of beat inside me.
🎙️ Interlude 2 – After Harlem
We sat on a fire escape, still humming with jazz.
It wasn’t really a fire escape anymore. Time had already started pulling away, taking the club and the music with it. But somehow the air still carried saxophone smoke and perfume and truth.
I dangled my feet through the bars, staring out at a skyline that didn’t look like anything I’d seen in my life—but also kind of looked like me.
Frodo was curled up beside me, tail twitching like he was dreaming of piano keys.
“I think poems are spells,” I said, breaking the quiet.
He didn’t open his eyes, just flicked an ear.
“I mean—Langston didn’t yell or stomp or scream. But I still felt it in my guts, you know?”
Frodo yawned.
“Do you think I could write like that someday?”
He stretched and rested a paw on my guitar.
I traced the strings. “He said I was a soft storm.”
Frodo cracked one eye open. A long, cat stare.
“Do you think that’s a real thing?” I whispered. “A storm that doesn’t shout?”
He blinked.
And somehow, that was enough.
We sat there, suspended between centuries, between noise and silence. And for once, I didn’t feel like I had to fill the space.
I just was.
Me.
A little loud.
A little soft.
A little storm.
Chapter Four: Purple Thunder and Metal Mayhem
I didn’t land in a trash can this time.
I landed in a pile of wigs.
Pink, glittery, and stacked higher than my math scores. Frodo popped out of a curly silver one looking personally offended.
We were backstage again—this time in a place that smelled like hot hairspray, electric ambition, and something burning (possibly on purpose). Flashing lights buzzed overhead. People in platform boots and mesh shirts ran past me yelling things like, “Five minutes to wardrobe!” and “WHERE ARE THE PURPLE PANTS?!”
A poster on the wall caught my eye:
“PRINCE + METALLICA – DOUBLE BILL – FIRST AVENUE, 1982.”
My mouth fell open.
Frodo pawed at the stage curtain, and I peeked through the gap.
Prince stood in the center of the stage like the Earth spun for him. He wasn’t walking—he was gliding. His eyes were eyeliner lightning bolts. His outfit sparkled like a disco ball having a spiritual awakening.
The crowd screamed, and he didn’t flinch.
He just whispered into the mic:
“Dearly beloved…”
And then the bass dropped.
Across the stage, Metallica exploded into sound like a jet engine made of guitars. One of the speakers cracked. A guy headbanged so hard his sunglasses flew off.
I was stuck between smooth lightning and molten rage—and somehow it all worked.
I tried to sneak closer—obviously—when someone caught me by the collar.
“Kid, you can’t be—”
“She’s with me,” a voice said, smooth and sharp like silk wrapped around a blade.
I turned.
Prince.
Standing three feet away. Looking at me like I was a new chord he hadn’t tried yet.
“You’ve got time on your fingers,” he said, nodding at the guitar. “And a question in your eyes.”
“I just…” I looked toward the stage, where Metallica’s drummer was trying to fight his own kit. “I don’t get how any of this works. It’s all so different. So… much.”
Prince tilted his head. “Rebellion doesn’t have to match.”
I blinked. “But you’re calm. He’s… on fire.”
“That’s the point.” He walked to the edge of the curtain. “Metallica burns. I bleed. Both are true. Both are loud.”
I stood there like my brain had short-circuited.
“What about me?” I asked. “What if I’m just… noise?”
He smiled. Not a soft smile. A knowing, sharp one. “Then make it music.”
The lights surged. Prince stepped back on stage without looking back. Metallica tore into another song like they were mad at gravity.
Frodo looked up at me.
I looked down at the guitar.
And I whispered, “Time to play louder.”
🎙️ Interlude 3 – After Prince & Metallica
We found a quiet corner behind the amps.
Okay—“quiet” is a lie. One of Metallica’s guitar riffs was still echoing through my skull like a jackhammer playing hopscotch. But at least there weren’t any flying wigs or stage managers yelling about smoke machines.
Frodo hopped onto an overturned milk crate and started licking his shoulder like he hadn’t just witnessed musical whiplash.
I slumped beside him. “Okay. That was… a lot.”
He flicked an ear. Like, You think?
“Prince speaks in riddles. Metallica is a riddle. And I think I almost became deaf. In both ears. Emotionally.”
Frodo yawned.
I hugged my guitar to my chest. “He said rebellion doesn’t have to match. That burning and bleeding can both be loud.”
Frodo flopped into my lap like a purring mic drop.
“You ever feel like there’s too many versions of you?” I asked. “Like—sometimes I want to sparkle. And other times I want to scream. And then I just end up… sitting weird in a hoodie.”
He purred louder.
“I think I’m afraid people will pick the wrong one. The wrong version. And then expect her to show up every day.”
Frodo stretched until one paw touched my chin.
“You’re right,” I said. “Maybe I am all the versions.”
He looked up like, Finally.
“Okay, fine. I’ll be a glittery storm cloud with drumsticks.”
I gave him a forehead boop.
“Next time, you get onstage.”
He licked his paw and rolled over like, Not my tempo, kid.
Chapter Five: Flannel, Feelings, and Two Divas in a Denim Limo
I knew we were in the ’90s before we even landed.
The air smelled like teen spirit, hair gel, and emotional damage.
Frodo and I crash-landed in a pile of thrifted flannel shirts next to a vending machine that only sold Surge and weird vibes. My guitar buzzed with a low, moody hum, like it knew we were entering Sad Boi territory.
A poster on the wall read:
NIRVANA – MTV UNPLUGGED – SEATTLE, 1993
I exhaled slowly. “Okay. Deep breath. No glitter this time.”
Frodo nodded solemnly.
I crept into the venue and found a seat in the back. Everything was dim. Candles flickered onstage. Kurt Cobain sat in the middle like a storm pretending to be a person. His voice wasn’t loud. It was aching. Every lyric sounded like it had been stitched together with someone’s broken heart.
I didn’t cry.
I just felt… seen.
Not like a spotlight.
More like a mirror.
Later – Backstage
I found myself wandering near the green room, guitar still buzzing gently in my hands. I didn’t want to leave yet. I needed… something. I didn’t know what.
And then—because time is weird—I heard a Canadian accent say:
“That was heartbreaking, wasn’t it?”
I turned.
Shania Twain.
In leopard print. Holding a donut.
Next to her?
Celine Dion. Wearing sunglasses inside and sipping tea like she was on her way to save the emotional world.
“Oh my god,” I whispered. “Did I fall into a Canadian power ballad portal?”
Celine looked at me over her sunglasses. “You are very small.”
“I’m seven.”
“Explains the energy,” she said.
Shania squatted next to me. “You okay, kiddo?”
“I think Nirvana just stabbed me in the soul. In a good way. Is that normal?”
Shania nodded. “Happens to the best of us.”
I looked between them. “So… what is this? You guys don’t exactly scream ‘grunge.’”
Celine smiled. “We’re here because emotion is universal. Doesn’t matter if you scream it or sing it at full volume with seventeen backup violins.”
Shania handed me half her donut. “And don’t forget—rebellion doesn’t have to be sad. Sometimes it’s fun. Sometimes it’s rhinestones.”
“I thought being sad meant you were strong,” I said.
“It can,” Celine said. “So can surviving.”
“Or being really, really loud about loving yourself,” Shania added with a wink.
I nodded slowly, holding the donut like it was sacred. “I think I needed this.”
Celine gave me a tissue and said, “Drink some water. You’re full of feelings.”
Just then, Frodo jumped onto the vanity and the guitar began to glow again.
“Already?” I groaned. “I was just starting to emotionally unpack!”
Shania squeezed my shoulder. “Take the joy with you, too. It counts.”
Celine kissed the top of my head and whispered, “You are not too much.”
Then—flash, fuzz, WHOOSH—
Time broke again.
But this time, I carried heart in one hand and grit in the other.
🎙️ Interlude 4 – After Nirvana, Shania, and Celine
It was raining when we landed.
Not like dramatic movie rain—more like soft drizzle. Gray skies. Rooftop puddles. The kind of rain that doesn’t even try to stop you. It just shows up and stays.
Frodo was already curled on an old blanket someone had left on a fire escape. He looked like a puddle with whiskers. I sat down next to him and pulled my knees up under my chin.
The guitar wasn’t buzzing. It was just… there. Quiet.
“I didn’t know you could feel this much and still be okay,” I whispered.
Frodo blinked up at me.
“I thought big feelings were dangerous. That if you didn’t shut them down, they’d… I don’t know. Break everything.”
He purred gently. Like a little engine of understanding.
“But Kurt—he felt everything. And he made it into music. And Shania? She’s like glitter glue. And Celine could probably cry an entire lake and still hit a high C.”
Frodo flicked his tail.
“I guess I just…” I paused. “I didn’t know it was allowed. To feel all of it. The joy and the ache.”
Frodo scooted closer until his head bumped against my side. I ran my fingers through his fur.
“I used to think I had to pick one thing. Be one thing. Happy or sad. Loud or quiet. Sharp or soft.”
I glanced up at the sky.
“But maybe I’m just both.”
Frodo yawned like, Obviously.
I leaned back against the brick wall and whispered, “Thanks for staying with me.”
He gave me a look like, Where else would I go, dummy?
And we just… sat.
Letting the rain fall.
Letting it feel okay to hurt and heal.
Chapter Six: Bubblegum Breakdown
We landed in a place that sparkled aggressively.
There were sequins everywhere—on jackets, boots, microphones, probably someone’s cereal. A giant poster behind me read:
“POP GALAXY TOUR – Britney, Christina, Mandy, Jessica – 2002”
“Oh no,” I whispered.
Frodo immediately ducked under a rolling makeup cart and gave me a look that said: Absolutely not.
I stood in the middle of a dressing room that looked like a glitter tornado had thrown up in it. Lip gloss tubes were scattered across a pink velvet couch. Someone had labeled their eyelash glue “DO NOT TOUCH” in very serious Sharpie.
There was a monitor showing the stage. Britney was performing.
She smiled so wide it looked painful.
Backstage
I wandered through the hallways, trying to stay out of the way. A backup dancer sprinted past me yelling, “SHE NEEDS A WARDROBE CHANGE IN TWENTY SECONDS OR SHE’S GOING TO EXPLODE.”
Frodo hissed. Possibly at the concept of time itself.
I ducked into a quieter side hallway where someone was sitting alone on the floor, still in costume. Glitter boots. Hair curled to perfection. Tears streaking down her face.
I froze. She looked older than me—but not by much. Maybe fifteen.
“Hey,” I said. “Are you okay?”
She jumped, wiped her face, and gave me a smile so fake I almost cried for her.
“I’m fine!” she chirped. “Just tired. It’s, like, a lot, you know?”
I sat next to her. “Yeah. I do know.”
She looked at me sideways. “You in the show?”
“I’m not even in this decade.”
“…what?”
“I’m time traveling. It’s a whole thing.”
She blinked. “Okay. Cool.”
We sat in silence.
She finally whispered, “I don’t even know who I am without the songs and the sparkles and the rules.”
I looked down at my guitar. It buzzed like it was listening.
“You’re still you under all that,” I said. “Even if it’s buried. Even if no one else sees her.”
Her eyes welled up again. “How do you know?”
“Because I’m weird and messy and feel too much, and people try to fix me all the time. But the people I’ve met on this trip? The ones who make real music? They don’t sparkle because they’re told to. They sparkle because they mean it.”
She let out a laugh—small and real this time. “You’re intense for a kid.”
“I contain multitudes.”
Frodo hopped onto her lap and started purring.
She scratched behind his ears. “Thank you,” she whispered. “For being the first person all day who didn’t ask me to be okay.”
Just then, the guitar buzzed harder. The air shimmered.
I stood up fast. “I gotta go.”
She looked up. “Will I see you again?”
“Probably not. But I hope you see yourself.”
And then—pop, fizz, flash—the glitter turned to stardust.
And we were gone.
🎙️ Interlude 5 – After the Pop Machine
We landed behind a billboard that said SHIMMER HARDER in ten-foot bubble letters.
It was quiet back there. The kind of quiet that only shows up after a very loud lie.
I sat down in the dirt. Frodo flopped beside me with a grunt like even he was over it.
“That place was like… Disneyland if Disney ran on shame,” I muttered.
Frodo licked glitter off his paw like he was personally offended by sequins.
“She looked perfect,” I said. “The girl backstage. Every piece of her was flawless. Except the part that felt real.”
He blinked slowly.
“I used to think being good meant being good at stuff. At school. At pretending I wasn’t overwhelmed. At smiling even when my brain was on fire.”
Frodo rested his chin on my knee.
“But it’s not. Is it?”
He didn’t answer. He didn’t have to.
I leaned back and stared at the fake stars on the billboard blinking in patterns. “I don’t want to be shiny if it means being invisible underneath.”
Frodo purred—a deep, low rumble that buzzed straight into my bones.
“I think the scariest thing,” I whispered, “is not being seen. Not for real. Like people clap for you, but they don’t know you. They only know the sparkle.”
He nudged my hand until I pet him. Slowly. Like the world wasn’t ending.
“I don’t want to be clapped for,” I said. “I just want to be held.”
Frodo yawned. Like, That’s more than enough, kid.
And we sat there in the dirt behind the billboard, letting ourselves not shine.
Just exist.
No stage.
No makeup.
No performance.
Just me.
Just Frodo.
And finally, the sound of my own breathing being enough.
Chapter Seven: Beats, Bars, and the Sound of Resistance
I landed in a crowd.
Not a quiet one. Not a chill one. This was a march. People were holding signs and chanting. There were speakers blasting music from a flatbed truck that had been turned into a mobile stage.
Frodo launched himself out of my backpack like he’d just smelled injustice.
I looked around and realized we were in a city—maybe Chicago or Atlanta or Oakland. It was 2016. I could feel it in the air. Thick with anger. Hot with hope.
Someone handed me a sign that said “No Justice, No Peace.” I held it. It felt right.
The truck speakers crackled.
And then the beat dropped.
“Alright” by Kendrick Lamar.
People lost their minds. They screamed every word like a prayer, like a promise, like proof.
And just when I thought I’d explode from all the fire in my chest—
A hand landed on my shoulder.
“You made it,” a voice said.
I turned.
Kendrick. Freaking. Lamar.
He was calm. Still. Sharp-eyed and steady like he’d already lived this day a hundred times.
“You a traveler?” he asked.
I nodded. “Time traveler. With a cat.”
He looked down at Frodo. “Respect.”
Moments Later – Side Street Cypher
Kendrick led me to a side alley where a cypher had broken out. People were freestyling truths while the crowd kept beat on trash cans, walls, whatever they could find.
There was a guy with a hoodie and heartbreak in his voice—J. Cole—spitting about systems, schools, stolen chances.
And right next to him?
2 Chainz. Drenched in gold, rhyming about survival, respect, the weight of being seen as a joke when you’re smarter than the room.
They were different. One calm. One loud. One sharp like knives.
But they were together.
And that hit harder than the bassline.
Conversation in the Alley
J. Cole looked at me and said, “You look like you got a million thoughts and no outlet.”
“I’m seven,” I said. “And autistic. And ADHD. And kind of overwhelmed by literally everything that’s ever happened.”
2 Chainz laughed. “Then you’re one of us.”
I stared. “But I’m just a kid.”
Kendrick leaned down. “You feel it, don’t you?”
I nodded. “Like everything’s broken and no one wants to fix it. And when I say that, people either laugh or change the subject.”
“That’s because you’re telling the truth,” he said. “And truth makes people flinch.”
“But you make music,” I said. “You yell the truth. And people still listen.”
2 Chainz grinned. “That’s ‘cause we don’t ask permission.”
J. Cole added, “You don’t have to wait to grow up to fight. If you feel it now, you name it now.”
Kendrick looked me in the eye. “Your voice is a weapon. Sharpen it.”
The Crowd Again
We went back to the street. Someone passed me a mic.
I stared at it. My hands shook.
“I don’t have a verse,” I whispered.
“You don’t need one,” Kendrick said. “You just need to speak.”
I raised the mic to my mouth. My throat was tight. My thoughts were loud. But I opened my mouth anyway.
And I said:
“I’m seven years old and I’m tired of pretending I’m not angry.”
The crowd roared.
I kept going.
“My brain works different. That’s not wrong. I’m not wrong. I’m not your project or your pity or your problem. I’m a person.”
And the beat kicked back in like the city itself was nodding.
Frodo yowled in approval.
Someone handed me a pair of sunglasses. I didn’t put them on, but I held them like armor.
I belonged.
Not because I was loud.
But because we were.
🎙️ Interlude 6 – After the Protest
We sat on top of a bus shelter under a sky smeared orange and blue—sunset trying to hold on, night creeping in.
The crowd was still chanting below. The beat had faded, but the rhythm? Still alive. Still thumping in my chest like a second heart.
Frodo curled beside me, eyes half-closed, tail flicking like a metronome.
“I didn’t think they’d listen,” I said softly.
He blinked.
“I mean… I’m just a kid. A weird kid. One who fidgets too much and talks too fast and forgets what she’s saying in the middle of saying it.”
I ran my hand across the guitar. It buzzed like it agreed with me.
“But Kendrick listened. And J. Cole. And 2 Chainz didn’t laugh at me. He said I was one of them. Like… like I belonged.”
Frodo rubbed against my arm, purring slow and steady.
“Do you think this is what power feels like?” I asked. “Not like yelling, but like… being heard. Even if your voice shakes?”
He stared at me for a long time. Then finally rested his head on my foot like, Now you’re getting it.
I looked out over the rooftops.
“There were so many people. Angry. Loud. Brave. Together. I think I forgot what it felt like to not feel alone.”
Frodo let out the tiniest meow.
“I think maybe—maybe rebellion doesn’t have to be about burning everything down. Maybe sometimes it’s about showing up anyway. With your friends. With your scars. With your cat.”
He flicked his tail in agreement.
And then I whispered, “I’m not just a problem to be solved.”
Frodo nudged my hand like, No, babe. You’re the solution they never saw coming.
We sat in the glow of sirens and stars.
Not scared.
Not small.
Not silent.
Chapter Eight: The Day the Music Died (But Not For Long)
No crash this time.
No thud, no beat, no rhythm.
Just… silence.
I opened my eyes to a world made of grayscale. Concrete walls. Flickering lights. Everything so clean it felt dirty.
Frodo jumped out of my backpack and hissed.
“This isn’t right,” I said. My voice echoed. A single word echoing in a place where nothing else made a sound.
A sign blinked on the wall:
“UNITED FUTURE ORDER: SOUND IS DANGEROUS. SILENCE IS CONTROL.”
My guitar didn’t buzz. It didn’t even hum. It was like it had gone to sleep. Or worse—forgotten.
I swallowed. “Where are we?”
Frodo pawed at the ground, then stared at a small, square speaker bolted into the ceiling.
No music.
No voices.
No noise.
The Museum of Memory
We found it buried beneath the city—an underground bunker labeled ARCHIVE: ILLEGAL MEDIA.
Inside were cracked vinyls, smashed amps, glitter-covered boots sealed in glass.
There was a picture of Prince. A poster from the Kendrick protest. A copy of Nirvana’s Unplugged CD. A pink cowboy hat labeled “Shania Twain, 1999.”
And in the middle, under a spotlight, was a broken guitar.
My breath caught.
It looked just like mine.
I touched the case and a hologram flickered to life.
A voice said,
“In the year 2042, the Global Noise Ban was enforced. Emotional disorder linked to musical influence. Control restored.”
I wanted to throw up.
They didn’t just ban music. They banned feeling.
The Girl in the Quiet
I turned a corner and saw her.
Sitting alone in a metal room, eyes wide, hands drumming on her legs even though no beat played.
She was maybe ten.
I walked in. “Hi.”
She flinched. “I’m not humming. I swear. Please don’t report me.”
I sat beside her. “I’d never. I miss it too.”
She looked at my guitar. “Does it work?”
I held it out. “Not right now. Not here.”
“Why not?”
“Because this place killed the music.”
She stared at me. “Can you bring it back?”
I didn’t know.
But I wanted to try.
The Song That Broke the Silence
Frodo jumped up on a console and bit a wire.
Lights flickered.
My guitar sparked.
I strummed—just once.
The note rang out, wobbly but alive.
And the world glitched.
The girl gasped. “Do it again.”
I played the same note.
Then another. Then another.
And suddenly—Frodo started purring.
A real sound.
Not silence. Not static.
Music.
The walls trembled. The glass cracked. The Prince boots fell over like they were dancing.
“Keep playing!” the girl shouted. “They can’t stop all of us!”
I laughed. Loud. Wild. Real.
And I played.
A messy, half-remembered, time-warped medley.
Grunge and gospel. Jazz and pop. Protest and punk.
Frodo yowled along. The girl clapped. More kids showed up. More strums. More stomps. More life.
We Brought the Noise
Security tried to shut us down.
But the kids were already singing.
Someone pulled a boombox out of a hiding place.
Someone else started beatboxing.
And me?
I stood on a table, eyes blazing, guitar howling, heart thundering.
And I yelled:
“YOU CAN’T BAN THE BEAT.”
Because you can take the stage.
You can smash the records.
But you’ll never kill the rhythm in a kid with something to say.
🎙️ Interlude 7 – After the Noise Came Back
We sat on a rooftop again.
Only this one was ours.
No time era. No glowing portals. No chaos in the sky.
Just the stars. Real ones.
And Frodo curled beside me, tail flicking slow like a metronome that wasn’t in a rush.
I strummed the guitar once—softly.
The sound was warm. Full.
I looked out over the city lights and whispered, “We did it.”
Frodo didn’t say anything, but his purr was louder than usual. Like he agreed without needing words.
“I thought I was too small to matter,” I said. “Too weird. Too quiet. Too everything.”
He rested his chin on my thigh.
“But maybe being too much is exactly what made it work. All those people I met—they weren’t trying to be normal. They were just… trying to be free.”
I thought about Mick Jagger’s swagger.
Langston’s poems.
Prince’s sparkle.
Metallica’s fire.
Nirvana’s ache.
Shania’s strength.
Celine’s soul.
Kendrick’s power.
J. Cole’s honesty.
2 Chainz’s roar.
And the girl in the future—just trying to hum again.
I hugged my guitar to my chest.
“They didn’t make me feel fixed,” I said. “They made me feel seen.”
Frodo looked up like, Yeah, kid. Took you long enough.
I scratched behind his ear. “I think I’m ready.”
The guitar buzzed gently—like a nod.
“Back to where it started,” I whispered. “Back to the Stones.”
Chapter Nine: We’re Still Standing (And I Brought My Own Damn Song)
The portal opened like a sigh.
No crash. No chaos. Just a shimmer of sound and memory.
We landed in a field.
Big stage. Giant screens. Thousands of people.
A banner flapped in the wind:
“THE ROLLING STONES – FINAL WORLD TOUR – 2022”
I swallowed. “We made it.”
Frodo adjusted his tiny sunglasses like he’d always known we would.
The crowd was wild. But something felt different.
I wasn’t afraid this time.
I wasn’t hiding.
Backstage – Again
I walked past security like I belonged there.
Because I did.
I found the dressing room by instinct. Same smell: sweat, guitars, and old magic.
And there he was.
Mick. Freaking. Jagger.
Sitting on a couch like the last fifty years had just been practice.
He looked up. Blinked.
Then grinned. “Well, look who bloody time-traveled back.”
I smiled. “Told you I’d make it.”
Keith peeked in behind him. “She’s taller now.”
“Barely,” I said.
Mick stood and walked over. “You look different.”
“I am different.”
He tilted his head. “Got a song of your own yet?”
I nodded. “I’ve got a lot.”
“Good,” he said. “The world doesn’t need more echo. It needs more noise.”
He handed me a guitar.
And I felt it.
The hum. The power.
Not from the strings—but from me.
Onstage – Just Before the Lights
They let me stand at the edge of the stage before the show.
Not to play. Just to be.
The crowd stretched forever.
I held my guitar like a flag.
And whispered:
“I was here.”
Frodo brushed against my leg and meowed.
Mick stepped up beside me.
“You ready?” he asked.
“Always.”
He smirked. “What do you call your band?”
I looked out at the crowd, then up at the stars, then down at Frodo.
Then I said,
“Soft Storm.”
Epilogue: The Song That Was Always There
I don’t remember every note I played that night.
I just remember how it felt.
Like my whole life had been building to one messy, rebellious, joy-drenched chord.
And I finally hit it.
Not to prove anything.
Not to be fixed.
Just to say:
“I’m here. I’m loud. I’m mine.”
And that?
That was the real music all along.
🎤 Epilogue: Soft Storm Starts a Band
We were home.
Like, really home.
My room still smelled like crayons and bubblegum lip balm. My rock collection was exactly where I left it.
Frodo was already curled on my bed like he hadn’t just helped me restart the entire future.
But something was different.
Me.
One Week Later – The Garage (Again)
We set up in the same garage I wasn’t allowed in back then.
Now? I had a key.
The posters on the wall were new—Nirvana, Prince, Kendrick, Shania, and one that just said:
“YOU DON’T HAVE TO SPARKLE TO MATTER.”
My three best friends were tuning their instruments:
- Lucas, drummer, ADHD, talks in metaphors.
- Danny, bass, quiet but fierce, writes lyrics like fire.
- Jay, keyboard and weird effects guy, lives off fruit snacks and chaos.
We called ourselves Soft Storm.
Frodo was our manager, obviously.
Band Practice
I stood there—guitar slung across my chest, sneakers scuffed, hoodie sleeves chewed on from nerves.
“Okay,” I said. “You guys ready?”
Lucas did a stick flip. “Always.”
Danny nodded, already in the zone.
Jay said, “Can Frodo be in our logo?”
I grinned. “Absolutely.”
Then I took a breath.
The kind of breath you take when you’re not trying to disappear anymore.
And I strummed.
It wasn’t perfect.
But it was mine.
And when we hit the chorus, I screamed the line I’d been waiting to sing since the day this whole story started:
“I’M HERE. I’M LOUD. I’M MINE.”
And my boys?
They screamed it with me.
Frodo purred.
The garage shook.
And for the first time, I didn’t feel like a problem to solve or a kid to fix.
I felt like the opening act for a revolution.