The next morning, Freddie woke up with a callus on his left ring finger he hadn’t earned. He stumbled to the bathroom, coffee mug in hand, and noticed his hands moving. They weren’t his hands. His fingers spidered across the ceramic rim, finding a rhythm—a syncopated, scratch-funk groove that felt ancient.
Freddie Robinson hadn’t meant to download it. It popped up as a banner ad while he was trying to close eighteen tabs of guitar tabs:
His fingers moved off the cuff—no setlist, no plan, no memory. Just raw, greasy, righteous funk. He played a lick that sounded like a man getting fired, then a chord that tasted like cheap whiskey and regret. The drummer stopped to light a cigarette, mesmerized. The bassist missed his change because he was crying.
Freddie froze. The man’s face was weathered, but his eyes were young. Hungry. Familiar. Freddie Robinson Off The Cuff Download
The man smiled and held up a silver cufflink—identical to the downloaded file. “I’m the other Freddie Robinson,” he said. “And you just uploaded my soul into your fingers. The catch is… now I’m stuck in your spreadsheets.”
“Who are you?” Freddie whispered.
Freddie looked at his hands. They were trembling. But the callus on his ring finger was gone. The next morning, Freddie woke up with a
For the first time in his life, Freddie Robinson (both of them) grinned.
“So what now?” the accountant asked.
He didn’t play the blues. He became it. His fingers spidered across the ceramic rim, finding
At work, he couldn’t focus on spreadsheets. Numbers looked like chord charts. The quarterly report column B? That was a B-flat minor 9th. His boss, a man named Gerald who wore bow ties, asked for a pivot table. Freddie picked up a stapler and played it like a slide guitar. “Relax, baby,” Freddie whispered, and winked. He’d never winked in his life.
“Where’d you learn the ‘Off The Cuff’ lick?” the man asked.
Freddie Robinson (the accountant) played for forty-five minutes. When he finished, the room was silent. Then a man in a vintage leather jacket stood up.
By lunch, he’d quit. By 3 p.m., he’d traded his sedan for a battered ’67 Fender Twin Reverb amp. By midnight, he was on a tiny stage at The Rusty Nail , a dive he’d never dared enter. The band—strangers—let him sit in.