Steady, Even Now

A first car speaks quietly to the person who sold it to a stranger — sparse piano, solo cello at chorus and bridge, near-whisper vocal. Folk-chamber ballad, Episode #5.

Steady, Even Now
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A parking lot on a grey afternoon. Keys in an outstretched hand. The car speaks.
Not to the stranger. To you — the one who learned to parallel-park in an empty lot at seventeen, who left coffee cups in the holder and drove home once, very slowly, from a hospital, without the radio on. The car doesn't ask you to stay. It doesn't have to. It already has all of it: every commute, every detour, every time you sat in the driveway a few minutes longer before going inside.
The vocal sits close, almost at speaking volume — the kind of voice that only gets that quiet when it means what it's saying. Solo piano carries the whole arrangement without hurry, and cello steps in at the chorus and bridge with long, unheld tones that feel less like accompaniment and more like the car simply remembering alongside you. Nothing rises above a murmur. The dynamic ceiling is the point.
This is Episode 5 of Letters from Objects — a series of folk-chamber songs in which the objects of a life speak once, plainly, before the handoff.

[Verse 1] You learned to steer on a quiet road The wheel was wide, your hands were cold I felt you ease into the lane We'd be fine — we were fine — again
You left your coffee in my cup holder You cried once, just once, past October I didn't ask what it was for I just carried you a little more
[Chorus] I held you through the long commute Through the job you quit, the one you kept I held you when the city slept When you had nowhere else to go
[Verse 2] You drove home from the hospital slow The radio low, the windows fogged I knew the weight before you knew I just kept the road smooth for you
You brought back groceries, and music, and someone new You sat in me a while before you'd go in I never judged the waiting I was just glad to be the room
[Chorus] I held you through the long commute Through the job you quit, the one you kept I held you when the city slept When you had nowhere else to go
[Bridge] There's a stranger's hand on the wheel now He won't know the dent above the door He won't know what winter you drove through He just needs a car — I'm still a car
You don't owe me a look back I already have everything Every mile, a small weight Every start, a small yes
[Outro] Go on then The engine's warm I'll be fine I always was

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