Dance too didn't have a clue, until she looked stage left and saw Kayleigh Towne walking forward, carrying a guitar and waving to the crowd.
She paused and blew them a kiss.
More unearthly sounds filled the concert hall, glow sticks waved back and forth, flashes from the prohibited cameras exploded like sunlight on choppy water.
Dance noticed that Suellyn and Mary-Gordon were now standing with Sheri Towne in the wings opposite, watching Kayleigh stride up to her father. They weren't alone. Art Francesco, from Global Entertainment, was now with them and chatting warmly with Sheri and her stepdaughter.
Onstage, Bishop bent down, hugged his daughter and she kissed him on his cheek. Kayleigh lowered a second microphone to her mouth and waited until the crowd grew silent.
"Thank you all! Thank you! ... My daddy was going to tell you we have a big surprise for you tonight. But I decided I couldn't let him get away with hogging the spotlight, like he usually does."
Huge laughter.
"Anyway, what we want to do tonight is open the show with something we haven't done for years. A father-daughter duet." A bit of South was in her own voice now.
More otherworldly applause.
She handed Bishop the guitar and said, "Y'all probably know my daddy's a better picker than me so I'm going to let him have the git-fiddle and sing and I'm going to do a bit of harmony. Now, this's a song that Daddy wrote and used to sing to me when I was a little girl. I think it was probably the first song I ever heard. It's called 'I Think You're Going to Be a Lot Like Me.'"
A glance his way and he nodded, the faintest of smiles curling into his weathered face.
As the surge of applause and hoots settled, Bishop Towne swung the guitar strap over his broad shoulders, strummed to test the tuning and he and Kayleigh adjusted the microphones.
Then he looked behind him toward the band, now in position, noted that they were ready and turned his attention back to the thousands of expectant fans, silent as thought. He started tapping his foot, leaned forward and counted out into the microphone, "One ... two ... three ... four ..."
Your Shadow 1. You walk out onstage and sing folks your songs.
You make them all smile. What could go wrong?
But soon you discover the job takes its toll, And everyone's wanting a piece of your soul.
Chorus:
When life is too much, just remember, When you're down on your luck, just remember, I'm as close as a shadow, wherever you go.
As bad as things get, you've got to know, That I'm with you ... always with you.
Your shadow.
2. You sit by the river, wondering what you got wrong, How many chances you've missed all along.
Like your troubles had somehow turned you to stone and the water was whispering, why don't you come home?
Chorus.
3. One night there's a call, and at first you don't know What the troopers are saying from the side of the road, Then you see in an instant that your whole life has changed.
Everything gone, all the plans rearranged.
Chorus.
4. You can't keep down smiles; happiness floats.
But trouble can find us in the heart of our homes.
Life never seems to go quite right,
You can't watch your back from morning to night.