But Elias knew the secret. The released song—the Radio Edit—was a lie. A beautiful, polished lie about love and reflection. The real version, the one Timbaland trimmed down for radio, had a second verse that Atlantic Records made them cut. It wasn’t about a woman. It was about a brother.
Justin was pacing. Not the pop-star swagger you saw on TV, but a raw, knotted energy. He’d just ended a long-distance call with someone—Elias never learned who—and his jaw was tight. Timbaland, sitting backwards on a rolling chair, was building the beat from scratch. He wasn’t programming drums. He was unlocking them. A reversed cymbal, a heartbeat kick, and then that cavernous clap that sounded like two stones hitting water in a deep well.
Justin looked confused for a second. Then he saw Elias through the control room glass, holding that cracked mirror. Something clicked. Justin’s voice dropped an octave. He sang lines that never made the final cut:
Elias had been Timbaland’s second engineer that year—the one who fetched coffee, re-patched the SSL console, and tried not to breathe too loudly while genius happened. He remembered the night they cut the vocal take. It was 3:00 AM in Virginia Beach. The rain was hammering the skylights of the “Cave,” the studio built under Tim’s house. Justin Timberlake-Mirrors Radio Edit prod by Timbaland.mp3
But the full version—the one only Elias has—ends with a breath. Not Justin’s. Not Tim’s.
Elias didn’t scream. He didn’t cry. He just whispered, “Hey, D.”
Just two brothers, inhaling at the same time, 4,000 miles apart and twenty years too late. But Elias knew the secret
But Elias had the full session on a DAT tape in his closet. He never listened to it. Not once in eighteen years.
He finally deleted the file. Then he went inside to make breakfast for his daughter. And for the first time since 2006, he didn’t flinch when he passed a mirror.
The file sat alone in a folder named “LOST_TAPES_2006,” buried under corrupted project files and half-finished demos. The title was clinical: JT_Mirrors_RadioEdit_Final_Master_v3.aiff . But to Elias, it was the sound of a ghost. The real version, the one Timbaland trimmed down
Elias’s older brother, Dante, had died six months before that session. Car accident on the Belt Parkway. They were twins. Identical. When Elias looked in a mirror, he saw Dante’s face staring back with his own eyes. And that night, in the vocal booth, Justin didn’t know any of this. But Timbaland did.
“Sing about her like she’s already gone,” Tim said, not looking up from the Akai MPC.