Chapter: 301
Vivian was furious when she saw Maria and Judy. She was even unhappier when she saw the two of them busy at the piano.
Vivian threw a cold smile out at Maria.
She then opened the glass door of the piano room and barged in uninvited.
“Maria, what are you doing here?"
When Judy was in the training program, Vivian and Sally were her roommates. Hearing Vivian's voice, Judy stood up and smiled. She was about to greet Vivian warmly but was stunned by the icy look that Vivian shot at her.
Vivian's gaze reminded Judy of the wild wolf that had run out of the woods last winter and had bitten Denis' old bull.
Judy was frightened by Vivian's piercing glare and shrank back.
"Can't you see that I'm practicing the piano with Judy?" Maria asked, less friendly than usual.
“Practicing the piano?"
Vivian guffawed, as if Maria had cracked a joke.
The two of them came from the countryside. What did they know about the fine art of playing the piano?
Vivian had learned to play the piano. Although she was not very skillful at it, she was an amateur at Level seven or eight.
“Can you actually play the piano?" Vivian asked Judy firmly.
Judy whispered nervously, "Not... Not really. Maria said I still have a lot to learn."
Maria said?
Did Maria even know how to play the piano?
Maria was a poor, semi-educated girl. She was an orphan raised by the relatives of the Jenkins family in the countryside, and she started working even before she finished high school. There was no way that she would have had a chance to play a piano in her life.
Vivian chuckled and intentionally asked, “Maria thought you didn't play the piano well, but maybe I will have a different opinion. Why don't you play a song? How about Franz Liszt's La Campanella? Give it a try."
Franz Liszt was a master of romantic music who lived nearly two hundred years ago and was known as the "King of Piano".
The piano music he created was legendary and required great skill to play. Only a master piano player could do justice to that piece of music, “La Campanella" was one of his representative pieces.