She had called it the opportunity of her life, but even that felt too small once the lights washed over her and made the rest of the world disappear. The violin came first, a fragile thread of sound stretching into a room built for spectacle, not subtlety. Judges known for impatience and brutal honesty leaned forward, sensing something they couldn’t yet name, while a single hovering hand threatened to erase everything with one sharp buzz. Then the shift—her bow dipped, her fingers wrapped around the microphone, and “Goodbye My Lover” rose from her throat, not as a cover, but as a confession.
The man who had been seconds from rejecting her froze, his hand falling away from the buzzer as if burned. By the time the final note faded, the audience was already on its feet, and Simon stood too, not as a critic, but as a witness. Four yeses did not promise her a future, only a fragile doorway into it, hidden among a hundred other dreams. Yet whatever happens next, one truth now lives on video, in memory, and in her own bones: in front of millions, Gabriella Laberge didn’t just audition—she arrived.





