We're making out on his sofa when I ask him about his piano.
"Yeah, I guess I'm pretty good, just a bit rusty. Here, let me show you."
Still shirtless and clad only in his boxer-briefs (which I notice are a little tented), he takes his seat at the upright piano in the corner. He opens an old music book to
Beethoven's Sonata #14, stretches his fingers & hands a little, and starts playing.
I stand there, in total awe, as the sounds of Moonlight sonata fills his cozy, 1-bedroom apartment. His long, delicate fingers move over the keyboard, effortlessly producing one of the most beautiful melodies ever composed. I watch the muscles in his broad shoulders and his back as his body lifts and falls with the rhythm. His right foot gently works the pedal beneath, and his eyebrows rise periodically as he deciphers the notes on the sheet in front of him, turning them into music. Tears begin to well in my eyes, at the beauty of not only the Sonata, but also of the man playing it.
I applaud wildly when he finishes, and he bows graciously.
"Wow! Noone's ever played just for me before!" I say, still a bit misty-eyed.
"And noone's ever given me a standing ovation in their boxers before," he says. He draws me close, and we continue making out.