Dance of Ruin: Chapter 8
Dance of Ruin: A Dark Enemies To Lovers Mafia Romance
The alarm hasnât gone off yet, but Iâm awake.
Have been for a while.
The sky outside my window is still a muted shade of gray, midway between dawn and night. My sheets are damp with sweat. My hands are clenched, like Iâve been holding onto the mattress to keep from falling through it.
I blink at the ceiling, the dull pre-dawn noise of New York the only sound. It could be any other morning where I wake up early to stretch before heading to the theater.
Itâs not.
Because today, I wake up to jagged fragments of memory. Nightmares that wrap around my chest and squeeze until I forget how to breathe.
I rub my face, digging my knuckles into my eye sockets, hoping pressure will erase the memories.
The bed.
The cold.
The nurseâs voice.
âYou were digitally penetrated, Mia.â
Mia. I gave them a fake name. I sat in that clinic with trembling hands and a queasy stomach, lying about who I was because for some truly fucked up reason, I was worried about my dadâs political aspirations, especially with his upcoming nomination to a Cabinet position.
Iâd just been raped, or assaulted, or whatever you want to call it, and I gave the nurse a fake name. Because even after waking up in that studio, naked and used and sick with myself, part of me was still thinking about Leonardâs career. His future.
God, am I fucked up.
I hate that part of me.
I push the covers off and swing my legs over the edge of the bed. The coldness of the floor grounds me for a moment.
I walk to the bathroom, shed the oversized t-shirt I slept in, and get into the shower.
Again.
I did this three hours ago. I got up around 2 a.m., trembling, and stood under the water until my skin was shriveled. But now I do it again anyway. The feeling didnât go away beforeâmaybe this time, it will.
I donât cry. Thereâs no energy for that. Only the sound of the water and the slick slide of soap against my skin as I scrub my body raw.
When I get out, I donât bother with makeup. I throw on black leggings and a black leotard with a hoodie over it. My ballet bag is already packed. I havenât touched my phone in three days.
The only texts Iâve answered were on that first night, and they were short, flat lies: âJust a bug. Iâm okay.â
Iâm not okay.
But Iâm going to class.
If not, Iâll fall apart.
If I donât dance, I wonât know who I am anymore.
I throw my hair into a quick bun, zip up my hoodie, and walk out into the pale morning.
The cold wind bites at my skin as I walk to the subway. I try to forget his hands. Try to forget the sticky residue on my stomach, the panic climbing up my throat when I opened my eyes and realized I was naked and alone.
The bed was stripped. The lights were off. The camera was gone. Actually, everything was gone from the studio, except the bare boxspring I was lying on.
Naked. Sore between my legs.
Cum on my fucking belly.
Those first few numb hours are a blur. I remember throwing up on the floor, and then finding my bag riffled through, with some cash, my iPad, and a pair of my fucking underwear missing from it.
My motherâs libretto of Swan Lake was also gone.
After that, I threw up again, yanked on my clothes, and ran out.
The nurse who saw me at the nearby clinic was kind. Sheâs the one who examined me and told me there was no evidence anyone had had sex with me. Theyâd used their fingers on me, though.
In me.
Thatâs when I vomited yet again, somehow.
She also told me theyâd run the semen sample from my skin through their database, but nothing had popped up. Her face had twisted when she told me she legally had to report this as a crime, and that when I was ready, she was going to need my real name.
I just nodded when she smiled again and walked out of the room to get the paperwork and the in-house therapist.
The second she left, I ran.
Today, Iâm going back to the one place Iâve always felt safe, the only place that still feels like it belongs to me.
The ballet studio.
The back door of the Zakharova Theater is traditionally where all the dancers meet up at the start of the day to shoot the shit, bitch and moan, or smoke before we go inside to destroy ourselves at the barre. Usually, I love standing out here with my friends.
Today, it feels foreign.
Lyra, Milena, Brooklyn, and Evelina are already there, huddled together. Lyra looks like a wreckâeyes puffy, hair hastily pinned, terrible body language.
Then they spot me.
âNaomi!â Milena says, breaking from the group to rush toward me. The other three follow. âHow are you feeling?â
Horrible.
Disgusting.
Violated.
I shrug tiredly. âIâmâ¦okay. It was just a stomach bug.â
Milenaâs brows knit. âYou were MIA for almost three days, solnishka.â
Her gaze lingers on me for another second before the others crowd around.
âSo⦠Whatâs going on?â I say, forcing a smile even though it feels totally hollow. Empty.
Lyra lowers her puffy eyes, shaking her head. âItâs justâ¦a lot to process. Itâs been a weird few days, you know?â
The rest of them nod solemnly in agreement.
Okayyy, Iâm definitely missing something.
âHave you gone to see her yet?â Evelina asks me. âI mean, I know you were sick, but Iâm sure sheâd love to see you.â
I blink. âIâ¦â My head shakes. âWhatâs going on?â
They all fall silent.
Milenaâs face softens.
âWait⦠You donât know?â
My stomach clenches. âIâveâ¦had my phone off for three days. What is it?â
Lyra squeezes her eyes shut, hugging herself. âSomeone set off a car bomb outside the Barone house at Vitoâs birthday party. Bianca almost walked right into it. Kratos pulled her back. Sheâs still in hospital.â
The words hit like a punch to the face.
âWhat?!â I scream. Vaughn catches my horrified expression and jogs over from the group of male dancers heâs been smoking with.
âYou disappeared on us,â he says with a frown.
âShe didnât know about Bianca,â Brooklyn says quickly and quietly before he can launch into any of his usual innuendo.
âFuck, are you serious?â
I ignore him and focus on Lyra. âSo Biancaâ ââ
âSheâs fine,â Lyra says quickly. âSheâs on bed rest now, but sheâs okay.â
I stare blankly at her.
âSheâs pregnant,â Milena says gently.
Something sparks in me.
Warmth. Joy. The first happiness Iâve felt in days.
âThe babyâs fine,â Lyra continues. âTheyâre monitoring her, keeping her off her feet for a while, butâ¦â Her mouth twists. âShe might have to quit the company. I think she was planning on staying at least into her second trimester, but now⦠I donât know.â
The words hang there, heavy and looming.
The idea of Bianca quitting ballet doesnât quite compute.
âSheâll be okay,â Evelina says again, her voice hushed.
Itâs time. The crowd of dancers begins to trail inside. Vaughn hangs back a second, studying me carefully.
âYou okay?â
I nod. âYeah, justâ¦this stomach thing.â
His brow furrows as he shoves his fingers through his dark hair, the tattoos on his forearms rippling. âShoulda called me, dude.â
I shrug. âItâsâ¦fine. I just needed some rest. Iâm totally fine now.â
âSo⦠Youâre saying youâre fine.â
I feel my lips curl slightly as he grins his roguishly charming grin at me.
âYeah, Iâmâ ââ
âFine,â he finishes. âWell, in that caseâletâs go get worked over by Madame K.â
He turns to follow the rest of the company inside. Before I can do the same, Milena pulls me slightly aside, her brow furrowed.
âAre you sure youâre okay?â she asks worriedly.
I nod, too quickly.
âYou look like youâve been through hell.â
My mouth opens. I want to tell her. Want to spill everything. But the words shrivel on my tongue.
âItâs just a bug,â I lie. My voice barely registers.
Milena doesnât press, but the concern in her eyes cuts deep.
âOkay,â she says softly. âJust⦠Donât disappear on us again. Please.â
I nod.
Inside, after I emerge from the changing room, the studio mirrors reflect a version of me I donât recognize. Pale, hollow-eyed, brittle. Weak.
I realize that Iâve actively been avoiding looking into mirrors sinceâ¦itâ¦happened.
A black, curdling sensation writhes inside me as I forcibly pull my gaze from my reflection.
âOdetteâs first entrance, please!â Madame Kuzmina, in her usual black shawls and glittering rings, is already shouting instructions at the rehearsal pianist, her voice slicing through the space like a blade.
Then, the pianist starts to play, and I take my first steps.
The role of Odette/Odile is grueling enough on a good day.
Today, it feels impossible.
Iâm rusty from the three days away, and it feels like thereâs a dead weight clinging to my back and throwing me off. When I try to hit that first arabesque, itâs like I suddenly have no balance at all.
With a grimace, I wobble, ankle shaking a little before I lose my balance entirely.
Embarrassment floods my face as I feel the eyes of everyone on me.
The piano stops abruptly.
âAgain,â Madame Kuzmina says sharply. The music starts again, and I launch into the steps thatâfranklyâI could do in my sleep at this point.
Except, again, my body fails me. It doesnât follow directions, and my mind even forgets what comes next.
Itâs a simple enough section. A sequence Iâve nailed a thousand times. But today, I canât seem to remember where my feet go, how to turn my head, what my arms do.
I manage to get through it without falling the next time. But when I start dancing with the prince, I crash and burn three times in a row. Kuzmina finally claps her hands.
âStop,â she says tightly in her Russian accent. âEveryone, take five. Naomi, over here, please.â
I follow her to the front corner by the rosin box, my heart pounding.
âYouâre not present today,â she says bluntly. âYour body is here, but your mind is elsewhere.â
I open my mouth. Nothing comes out.
âWhere are you, Naomi? A Swan Lake without a Swan Queen goes nowhere, yes?â
I nod stiffly.
âSo?â
âIâ¦â I shake my head, feeling anxiety clawing at my insides. âIâm justâ¦distracted, Madame. Iâm having an off day.â
âDancers donât get to have off days,â she murmurs quietly. Then she sighs, looking piercingly at me. âNaomi, do you still feel capable of this role?â
Itâs like a dagger to the chest.
âYes!â I blurt, more terror than I would have liked in my tone before I manage to rein it in. âYes,â I say again, more calmly. âIâm fine. I just⦠I had a stomach bug.â
Kuzminaâs gaze narrows slightly. âDove is more than capable. We could let her take over for a few more days. Just until you recover.â
For the record, I have nothing against our newest company member with the white-pink hair, subtle tattoos, and a somewhat aloof and mysterious demeanor. Sheâs a beautiful dancer. But Iâd be lying if I said I hadnât been having almost near-constant anxiety ever since she joined the Zakharova a few months ago and was immediately cast as my understudyâespecially since sheâs played it before.
I shake my head frantically. âNo. Please. I can do it.â
Madame holds my gaze for a long moment. Then she nods once, curtly. âLetâs do it again, then.â
Itâs only through sheer willpower that I make it through rehearsal. Itâs not my best work, and I feel pure shame and mortification every time I barely get through a simple section. But I do make it.
When the others filter out at the end of the day, I stay.
I canât go home. I canât go sit and stare at my four walls.
Besides that, I do need to practice. I need to fight through whatever darkness is trying to take this part of me.
I will not let that happen.
Plus, even if it was a disaster, todayâs rehearsal made me realize that dancing might be the only way I can feel anything at all right now.
I make my way to the main stage. Itâs dim now, and the house lights are off, casting the theater into shadows that stretch wide and deep. I flick the switch to turn on a couple of work lights.
Then I take my place, without music.
And I start to dance.
Itâs slow going at first. But I force myself to take the choreography step by step, pausing when I have to. Sweat clings to my skin and dampens my hair. My muscles ache and my feet scream for mercy. But I keep going, growing more and more confident as my muscles begins to remember what my mind momentarily forgot.
I finish my variation, breathless and lungs burning, finally nailing the bit that tripped me up earlier. For a moment, something close to pride surges through my chest, pulling my lips into a pleased little smile.
Then, something jarring sucks all the air from my lungs as the icy cold sharpness of it has me whirling, my smile shattering.
Itâs the sound of clapping.
Slow. Mocking. Coming from the darkened, empty seats.
My heart stutters and I freeze, eyes straining toward the shadowed rows.
Slowly, a shape begins to emerge from the darkness, dressed all in black.
Nico.
He materializes like smoke, a wraith pulling itself from the gloom. His frame unfolds from the shadows, his black leather jacket and icy blue eyes glinting under the work lights as he slowly ascends the stage stairs.
Still applauding, slowly.
He doesnât smile at first, just watches me with that same expression that he had on the rooftop before he licked my blood off his finger.
âBeautiful,â he says softly, flicking open a lighter and sparking the cigarette Iâve just noticed is perched between his lips. The cherry glows when he inhales, casting an eerie orange light across the sharp lines of his cheekbones and jaw. âYou really are something on stage.â
He exhales a plume of smoke, stepping closer.
âWhat are you doing here?â I whisper.
He tilts his head. âWell, Naomi, I came to collect.â
My dread only escalates, cutting through me like blades.
âCollectâ¦what?â I choke.
Nico stops just in front of me. I can smell the smoke curling off him, smell the leather of his jacket, feel his heat radiating through the space between us.
His smile is lazy. Dangerous.
Malicious.
âYou.â
My pulse skips.
âIâI donât know whatâ ââ
âIâm talking about your sex tape that happens to be in my possession right now.â
My brows knit. Iâm about to genuinely ask him what he even means, before it suddenly hits me like a cannonball to the chest, so hard I almost physically stagger back as nausea flares up inside me.
No.
In flashes, it all comes back. Drinking the sparkling water. Starting to feel hot. The silly feeling. The inability to move. Gus and Seb carrying me over, taking my clothes offâ¦
The camera facing the bed on a tripod.
Oh, my fucking God.
I want to throw up. Iâm going to throw up. But all I can do is gasp and choke, a fish flailing on the dock, desperately trying to get back into the water.
âThe darling ballerina of the Zakharova. The doting, perfect daughter of Congressman Kimâ¦or, should I say, Secretary Kim now.â
My mouth goes dry as he takes another drag of his cigarette.
âNicoââ I choke.
âNo.â His voice sharpens. âFrom now on, you only talk when I say you can.â
I blink at him. âPleaseâ ââ
He steps closer. âWhat the fuck did I just say?â
Before, on that rooftop, he had an edge to him. But even then, even after Iâd watched him kill someone, he wasnât like this.
Now, he doesnât just look angry.
He looks like he fucking hates me.
âWhat. A. Fucking. Scandal,â he hisses viciously through his teeth. âSo, hereâs how this is going to work. You belong to me now, Naomi. Entirely.â
My brain short-circuits, the walls of my reality closing in from every side.
âIââ My lips move, but no sound comes out. I take a shaky breath, trying again. âWhy⦠Why are you doing this?â I finally croak.
Something ripples in Nicoâs eyes, turning them from icy blue to an almost amethyst, vengeful darkness.
âSomeone tried to hurt my family the other night.â
I nod weakly. âIâI heard. Howâs Biancaâ ââ
âThat person was your father.â
No.
The world tilts and shifts under my feet. A roaring sensation fills my senses, clanging in my ears and pounding through my body to the point where I almost double over as the breath rushes out of my lungs.
âThatâ¦â I shake my head side to side, dazed. âThatâsâ ââ
âIâm not sure I can convey exactly how little interest I have in hearing the word impossible right now.â
My lower lip trembles before I capture it with my teeth, my pulse jumping madly under my skin.
âIf you truly think thatâs an impossibility, Iâd say you might not know Daddy Dearest as well as you think you do. If at all.â
The cold sensation I feel dragging down my spine speaks volumes. And loudest, it speaks one thing:
What heâs saying doesnât sound impossible.
Horrible? Yes. Appalling? Absolutely. Nearly impossible for me to wrap my head around.
Not completely, though.
A chill ripples over my skin as I hug myself protectively.
âBut Daddy Dearest just got himself Secret Service protection, which makes going after him personally more than a touch difficult for me.â
Nico steps closer, blowing smoke out of the corners of his lips as his eyes, still purply-blue, eviscerate me.
âSo Iâm not going to go after Leonard. Instead, Naomi, Iâm going to ruin you.â
He pulls a small card from his pocket and hands it to me. I barely even feel it when it slips into my hand. Then I glance down to it and see an address scrawled in tight black letters.
âTomorrow. Eight a.m. sharp. Wear something pretty.â
He leans in, his mouth near my ear.
âAnd remember,â he whispers, âyouâre mine now. My property. Am I clear?â
I donât answer. I canât.
He must take my silence as acknowledgement.
âUntil tomorrow, then.â
Without another word, he turns and walks off stage, disappearing into the shadows he came from, trailing smoke and the singed smell of my soul.
I stand frozen for a long, drawn-out moment.
Then my legs give out and I collapse to the floor.