When I texted Kyle earlier today, I didnât expect him to answer. Well, thatâs a lieâI knew he would reply because heâs a ray of sunshine, but I didnât expect him to accept my invitation. In a way, I wasnât ready.
And maybe thatâs why I now find myself with fidgeting fingers resting on my lap as Kyle and I stare at the pizza box that got here five minutes ago. I still havenât said a word, and neither has he.
Not awkward at all.
Silence consumes my apartment until, finally, I gather the little dignity I have left and say what Iâve been meaning to tell him for weeks now. âIâm really sorry, Kyle. I didnât mean to go MIA.â
Then Kyle does something I did not see coming. Not in a million years.
He smiles.
Just a tiny one, but itâs there.
âItâs okay,â he says, one hand reaching for the pizza box and opening the lid. The delicious smell of cheese and pepperoni blinds all my senses and gives me that small dose of serotonin Iâve been lacking. Or maybe itâs his forgiveness. âHowâs recovery going?â
âMy recovery?â
âYeah.â He takes a big bite of pizza and speaks with his mouth full. âAre you seeing any progress yet?â
Why isnât he calling me out for ignoring him for the past few weeks? Why isnât he telling me Iâm a horrible friend and he never wants to see me again? Thatâs what Iâd deserve.
âItâs going well.â My words are laced with skepticism. Surely heâll go off in just a moment. Itâs coming. âHowâsâ¦work?â
I hate myself for not being able to say The Norcastle Ballet out loud, but I almost had a mental breakdown earlier from just looking at the building, so thereâs that. Kyle, however, scans my eyes like he knows the truth Iâm hiding behind them.
âMaddie,â he starts, and I already know Iâm not going to like how this ends. I blow out a breath as I dump the pizza slice Iâve just grabbed back in the box. I donât have an appetite anymore. âI understand how youâre feeling. I promise I do.â
Weâre doing this.
âWe shared that dream, and then you got injured and lost the chance to prove yourself. Iâm so sorry it happened, Maddie. Iâm so incredibly sorry youâre going through this, butâ¦â
âBut Iâve been a shit friend,â I deadpan. Thereâs no heat in my voice, not even frustration at this point.
Iâm the worstâplain and simple. The notion that I hurt my friend, one of my best friends, because I was selfish enough to let my injury blind me is something I will never forgive myself for.
âNo, you havenât,â he says firmly, but I donât believe him. And because he must see that in my eyes, he adds, âI knew youâd come around eventually, and I knew youâd realize this wasnât the way to act, and thatâs all that matters. Iâm not mad at you, and I donât think youâre a terrible person, Maddie. Not at all. I just think you were hurt in more ways than one and didnât know how to handle it well. Everyone deserves a second chance.â
âIâm so sorryâ is all I can say, even though words could never be enough for the pain I must have caused him.
He shakes his head and takes another bite, as if me ignoring him for weeks wasnât that big of a deal. âPeople go through things. I get it. Just promise me next time youâll talk to me instead of going MIA.â
âI promise.â And I mean it. Heâs giving me a second chance, and Iâm going to make it count, even if I donât think I deserve it. âIt wasnât about you, Kyle. I promise it wasnât. Iâm so proud of you. Youâre a star, and I canât wait to see you shine on that stage.â
He smiles at that, genuine and warm. âThank you, Mads. Youâll get your chance to do the same sooner than you think. Youâll be back onstage before the year ends, Iâm sure of it.â
I shrug, not really feeling like raining on his parade. We both know if you miss an audition for TNB, thatâs it. Youâre out.
Iâm never going to be his dance partner again, but Iâll be cheering him on from the audience. Thatâs for sure.
He drops all conversations about ballet and my injury after that, and itâs not until he starts talking about a disastrous blind date he went on over the weekend, that I realize something. Something major, and probably something I shouldâve worked out a long time ago.
Iâm tired of feeling sorry for myself. Of being a downer, of telling myself my future is over just because I missed an audition.
If Kyle hadnât been such a compassionate angel, I wouldâve lost one of my closest friends because I got blinded by my own darkness. I didnât even try to fight back the intrusive thoughts, and thatâs what kills me inside. Because Iâm not a quitter. Iâm not one to run away when things get tough. Sammy and Grace raised me to shine, yet Iâm dimming my own light.
Kyle is rightâIâm not handling the aftermath of my injury well. At all. Iâm not doing myself or my loved ones any favors by making this cloud over my head even heavier. Because, when it finally pours down on me, Iâll drown.
Sure, my current situation is far from ideal, and Iâm allowed to mourn a future that isnât in the cards for me anymore, but I still have options.
When I recover in four weeks, I can go back to dancing. Maybe Iâll get into a masterâs program and find a new path. And if not, I can always turn to teaching jobs like Grace suggested.
My life isnât over, damn it. I refuse to wither away when Iâm only twenty-one, and I still have so much about the world and about myself to discover.
I donât want to be pitied; I just want my heart to be calm. And the first step to achieve that is to come to terms with the fact that my present doesnât look like I envisioned it, but it doesnât mean it has to be terrible.
I refuse to keep living in the past.
â½â½â½
âAgain,â his deep voice says. A commanding rumble Iâm so used to by now. âGood. Again.â
I let out a shaky, tired breath as I follow his commands. Turns out Dr. Simmons, my ankle, and resistance bands arenât a good combination. Who knew?
It doesnât matter that Iâve been focusing on this particular exercise for ten minutes, on the way my toes bend when I move my foot backward again and again. Today, for some reason, I canât keep my mind pinned in place. And so it drifts.
Not only is it returning to my missed auditionâthe traitorâbut now it also makes sure I donât forget about the whole Iâm-pretty-sure-someoneâs-watching-me moment at the park. For my own sake though, I pretend itâs all in my head. I think Iâve watched too many crime shows.
But hey, it canât rain every day. Because after much begging and assuring Monica that Dr. Grouchy had given me the thumbs-upâhe hasnâtâI finally convinced her to let me take a few shifts at the bar.
I canât wait tables for obvious reasons, but she liked the idea of me washing the dishes while sitting on a stool well enough to allow me to do it three times a week. It isnât much, but itâs far better than sitting at home.
âThatâs it. Once more.â
Iâm momentarily distracted by the warmth of his touch dripping into my skin as he guides my ankle the way he wants to. He isnât looking at me, doesnât seem to share this weird ache in my chest that expands every time his skin grazes mine, and itâs easy to get consumed by the voices in my head again.
I thought getting my job back at Monicaâs would help get my life back on track, but so far it has done nothing but remind me of how stuck I am.
I try to stay positive; I really do. But itâs difficult to keep going when the pressure of doing something with my life weighs down on my shoulders every single day, during every waking momentâI donât have a plan, and itâs driving me a little crazy.
Nope. Stop feeling sorry for yourself. We donât do that anymore.
âAgain,â Dr. Simmons instructs.
He must notice my head isnât into it today, because I swear he growls under his breath right before the warm weight of his hand settles between my shoulders. His gentle touch is a contrast to his mean scowl. âKeep your back straight.â
The shiver that has just traveled down my spine has nothing to do with the sound of that deep baritone caressing my ear. Absolutely nothing.
I tell myself his hand doesnât linger on my back for a bit longer than necessary, that Iâm just imagining things because Iâm delusional.
When he takes a step back, watching my ankle from a safe distance again, my head goes back to its favorite pastimeâoverthinking.
Sure, I canât exactly move normally, but my head is still on my shoulders, working at its full capacity. I could come up with a step-by-step plan.
Maybe my immediate future doesnât include The Norcastle Ballet, but it can includeâ¦something else.
âWell done. That should be all for today.â
Dr. Simmonsâs voice brings me back to reality. Weâve been doing some exercises with the resistance band for the past hour, and although I hated them at the start of the week, by now Iâm humbled.
For the first time in who-knows-how-long, I can actually feel my foot gaining strength. I shouldnât be surprised that he can do his job so well, but damn, heâs an actual magician.
The smallest ember of hope reignites in my chest.
I follow him to his desk, barely relying on my crutches at this point. Iâm still a bit on the fence about letting my foot touch the ground just in case I mess it up, but Iâve been slowly regaining that confidence by walking back and forth in my studio.
When he sits on his chair and a sudden frown mars his strong andâfineâhandsome features, a weird feeling sits in the pit of my stomach. Only, this time, it has nothing to do with my small, not-crush on him.
This isnât like his usual pissed-off-for-no-reason frown. This is a you-wonât-like-what-Iâm-about-to-say kind of scowl, and it makes my skin crawl.
âTomorrow at nine?â I ask, as if we hadnât been meeting at the exact same time for the past three weeks. Not-so-deep down, I know this is a poor attempt at distracting him from whatever made him frown so he wonât tell me.
It doesnât work.
âTake a seat, Miss Stevens. Please.â
Ah, shit. Swallowing, I donât sit down but lean on the treatment table instead. âIs everything okay?â Iâm almost too afraid to ask.
He sets those big hands on the desk, his fingers laced together, and starts, âAs you know, weâre halfway through your recovery process and everything looks normal. However.â
Iâm not ready. Iâm truly not.
He makes a thoughtful face I donât like one bit before he continues. âYou mentioned you had plans to join a professional ballet company in the near future.â
Itâs not a question, but I still give him an answer. âYes.â I did. Before it all went to hell, I did.
He makes another weird face I donât like, and bile rises in my throat. Itâs barely noticeable, but the way he turns his mouth to the side just slightly is very obvious to me.
For better or for worse, he isnât one to beat around the bush.
âThat level of skill might be too aggressive for an ankle that has just recovered from an injury like yours.â
Heâs not saying what I think heâs saying.
He isnât.
âFrom a medical standpoint, it would be wiser to avoid such high-risk activities for at least a year. Preferably longer.â
The small ember of hope whooshes out of my chest.
Dies.
Gone.
Just like that.
Heâs not⦠Heâs not sayingâ¦
âWhat are you saying?â I manage to ask through the thick fog clouding my brain. I must have misunderstood. Surely.
âYou should be able to return to ballet progressively.â He eyes me carefully, as if heâs afraid Iâm about to start bawling my eyes out. He isnât all that wrong. âIn your case, that progress will take twelve months or, as I said, a little longer. You can start with easy, nonaggressive routines next week, and weâll see how your ankle reacts to that.â
One breath in. One breath out. I can do this. I can have a civilized conversation about my health like any adult would.
I wonât start crying in front of him, damn it. My crying sessions are restricted to my shower so I can let it all out in ten minutes and be done with it for the rest of the day.
âJust to be clear,â I start, licking my lips that now feel like sandpaper. I need water. I need air. I need the last month of my life to disappear from existence. âI canât dance for a year?â
His cold gaze moves to my lips for a whole millisecond before his eyes land on mine again. âNo, thatâs not what I said. You can return to your activities progressively, starting next week. But you wonât be able to perform at the same capacity you didâletâs say, when you graduatedâfor at least a year. Just to be safe, I would advise eighteen months, and then weâll see.â
And then weâll see.
Iâm about to pass out. Or throw up. Possibly both.
Iâm not sure how I manage to do it because I can barely feel my body anymore, but I ask him, âCan I have some water?â
A minute later, thereâs a sealed bottle in my hands, and I gulp down half of it in seconds. Dr. Simmons still hasnât said a word, and his eyes havenât moved from my face.
Once I put the cap back on and set the water bottle on the treatment table, I stare at him. And he stares at me.
âMiss Stevens, I undersââ
âWhat am I going to do now?â I blurt out, catching both of us off guard.
I donât miss the way his frown deepens, but thereâs something else in his eyes now. Something I donât like. Something that looks a lot like pity.
âIâm sorry. I⦠I donât know why I just asked you that.â
I grab my bottle and my tote bag, heat climbing up my cheeks. I canât believe I just said that to him.
I wouldnât call myself a super private person, but Iâm not one to vent to strangers either. Or practically strangers, I suppose.
âMiss Stevens.â
Our eyes meet, but Iâm already on my feet with no plans to sit back down. âIâm sorry. I understand, ah, everything you said. Eighteen months. I wonât put any unnecessary pressure on my ankle. Thank you. Iâll see you tomorrow, Dr. Simmons.â
âOur session isnâtââ
âIâm sorry, but I really need to go. Iâll see you tomorrow.â
Later, when I get my free pass to cry in the shower, Iâll think about how Iâm going to face him in our next session. Right now, though, I need to get out of here if I want to keep bringing oxygen to my lungs.
I wonât be able to dance professionally for eighteen months. Maybe never again, if he thinks my ankle could be compromised.
The cold morning air caresses my face as I exit the clinic, and I wait for the pain to hit me. The frustration, the anxiety, the guilt. But nothing comes.
My chest is a void, and I feelâ¦
Nothing.