The Online Boyfriend Who Replied From My Favorite Singer’s Stage-eirian

The first thing I noticed was that my hands were shaking harder than the bass under the floor.

I had screamed myself hoarse for Theo Song before, but that night was different because Tanner Song, the man I had loved for a year without seeing his face, was supposed to be inside.

He had dodged every video call with a joke.

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He had sent voice notes in the dark.

He had fallen asleep on the phone with me while I listened to his breathing and pretended my heart was not doing anything embarrassing.

And now he had chosen Theo Song’s opening tour night for our first real meeting.

Lucy had called that a red flag wrapped in confetti.

“Men who hide like that are already lying,” she told me while curling my hair in the dorm bathroom.

I laughed because laughing was easier than admitting she might be right.

Tanner never asked for money, never pushed for photos, and never made me feel small.

He just existed between a voice and a promise, close enough to miss but too far away to touch.

The ridiculous part was that I met him while defending another man.

One year earlier, I had been scrolling through comments under Theo Song’s albums when I saw the same username criticizing everything.

The account was just numbers: 2.45.679.

Under Theo’s debut single, “Eighteen,” he wrote that the last note sounded afraid.

Under the ballad I loved most, he wrote that the bridge was technically correct and emotionally empty.

I was offended on behalf of a celebrity who did not know I existed.

So I messaged him.

If you sing so much better, prove it.

He answered like he had been waiting.

I do.

The first clip he sent sounded so much like Theo that I accused him of stealing audio.

The second clip was ten seconds of disaster.

The pitch wandered away from the melody like it had somewhere else to be.

I laughed out loud in my dorm bed.

Tanner confessed that his speaking voice sounded like Theo’s, but his singing voice belonged in a sealed box.

He said his company sometimes made him sing at parties because everyone thought the resemblance was funny.

He claimed it was humiliating.

I told him I could teach him.

He called me coach.

That was the beginning.

For months we argued over songs until he started asking whether I had eaten, and I started calling when I was too tired to be charming.

When he finally said, “Nia, I think I like you in a way that is getting dangerous,” I stared at the message for ten minutes before answering.

Same.

There were clues from the beginning, but ordinary girls do not assume their online boyfriends are Grammy-winning pop stars.

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