First Night – Second Night – Third Night – Fourth Night – Fifth Night - Sixth Night – Home
Same city, same venue, last night of the tour. You’re headlining this time—if it can be called ‘headlining’ when the club is the size of your mom’s living room and the crowd are probably only here for the drinks promos—and you’re a little nervous. At first you think it’s because it’s the closing night of the tour and there’s a sense of things riding on tonight, but when he steps out of the shower in your motel room two hours before the show and you catch his eye and feel your stomach flop, you realise your nerves have nothing to do with the performance. You’re worried something will go wrong tonight like it has almost every night on this trip, and even as he waltzes over in a towel and kisses you on the forehead, you can’t shake that feeling of impending doom.
It could be worse, you figure. You could be going into your last show in a bad mood with each other and God knows you don’t need a crappy finale adding yet another spanner into the strained works of your relationship. You try to remain hopeful about it all, try to remind yourself over and over that things have worked out okay. You’re still clinging stubbornly onto that scrap of positivity when you later exit the motel with him, clinging as though your life counts on it.
It’ll be fine, you tell yourself. It’s better now. He apologised and you did too, when you lay together in the early hours of the morning, he with his head lolling lazily on your chest. You can’t help but flash him a watery smile just before walking into the venue and for an instant you think you can see doubt on his face, like he knows something’s up. You hope he’ll pull you into his arms and allay the worries running rampant in your mind, but he never does; instead he ruffles a hand playfully through your hair and slips past you through the entrance.
Inevitability—that’s the word that springs to mind. The feeling of powerlessness to stop the hurtling train coming right for you; the tight sensation in your gut as you see clearly what lies ahead of you and realise there’s nothing you can do about it. It’s easy enough to shake such thoughts from your head and tell yourself you’re being melodramatic, but before long those same thoughts creep right back in again.
It plagues you while you perform; it dogs your every heartbeat and drags you down like a lead weight in your stomach. You know it’s ridiculous that you should be worrying when things are going so well between you but you suppose that’s the way it’s always been—enough periods of contentment to fill the palm of your hand and enough spells of arguing and worrying and giving each other the cold shoulder to leave you wondering if any of it is really worth it. You tell yourself that the good makes up for the bad, no matter how infrequent the good might actually be. You always tell yourself this, and yet the doubt is always there.
When the show passes without event and you ready yourself to leave the stage, he takes to the microphone. He looks a little bashful; he’s never usually like this. He taps the mic once, twice, clears his throat to get everyone’s attention.
‘Thanks for being such a great audience tonight. I don’t know if you guys are aware of this but we’re on tour right now and this is our last show. We couldn’t have asked for a better crowd to share it with.’
There’s a cheer around the room. Partly this is the usual sort of concert banter these people are used to by now, partly it’s sincere. Maybe it’s just down to how much emotion you both put into the performance, but it felt like there was a connection with the crowd tonight and they seem to have felt it too.
‘Anyway, I just wanted to say thanks for being such a great crowd.’
When he chimes in again his voice is a little gruff. You think maybe he’s choking up and you fight the urge to tease him, contenting yourself with a subtle little smile where you stand on your part of the stage.
‘Since this is the last night of our tour, I thought I’d treat you guys to one last song. Only I’m going to ask my partner to sit this one out.’
It’s unexpected, and you have the horrible realisation that he’s probably going to sing to you. The prospect is somehow worse than performing in front of a roomful of strangers; at least then they’re focused on the music and not the god awful look of embarrassment on your face.
He only makes matters more embarrassing when he picks up his guitar and strums out the opening chords. It’s a song you both know well; your song. It’s the one he played for you on your first Valentine’s Day together, when you’d only been dating for a couple of weeks. He really did a number on you, sweeping you off your feet like that back then. You feel a little weird knowing that everybody else gets to hear the song he wrote just for you but you try not to think about it; it’s not like you’ll ever see these people again.
You’re happy now. He seems happy, too. Maybe things really will be okay.
Once the car’s loaded up with your gear and safely parked in the lot at the motel, he takes you out for a walk in the crisp night air. It’s a pretty densely-populated city so the light pollution blots out all but a few of the stars overhead, but it’s romantic nonetheless. He turns to you every once in a while to kiss you on the cheek or just catch your eye and every time he does it, you can’t help but grin like an idiot. It’s easier now to believe that you each have it in you to make this work, to find your own happy ending. It’s easier to hush the voice of doubt in the back of your mind.
He says he loves you at some point along the walk and you say it back without pausing to think. You do love him; no matter how much you might fight with one another, you’ll always have that.
You remember all the times you stopped to wonder if maybe that wasn’t enough to salvage things, but before such thoughts can blacken your mood you’ve pushed them right back out of your head.

