However, on certain winter nights, if you walk past a village cârciumă (tavern) after the last guest has left, you might hear a single violin playing a frantic, impossible melody from inside a locked room. Do not open the door. Do not clap.
I grabbed the neck to stop it, but my fingers moved without my will. The țambal started humming. The dead man’s mouth opened—just a little. I saw frost on his lips. A girl’s voice came from the rafters, but she was not singing words. She was singing the space between the notes.
One winter solstice, the taraf was hired for a wedding at a manor near the forest’s edge. The căpitan (bandleader) fell ill after drinking bad wine. Without a fiddler, the wedding would be cursed—no dance, no luck, no children. Desperate, the villagers allowed Sorina to take his place, but only masked and hidden behind a curtain.
I played until my fingers bled. At the last chord, I looked at the door. She was there. Not beautiful. Not terrible. Just a girl with broken violin strings for hair. She nodded once, as if to say, ‘Finally, someone who remembers.’ Then she turned into the snow.