Variation: Chapter 12
Variation: A Novel
Mtn2Creek: Man, Iâm glad I never did ballet. That looks like torture, not training.
The sun peeked over the horizon, changing the white walls of my bedroom to delicate hues of pink and orange as I opened my eyes. My room had the best view of the sunrise.
But Hudson was right. I preferred sunset, preferred the anticipation of those hours when Iâd been able to sneak out to see him, or sneak him in here. The irony wasnât lost on me that weâd gone from completely concealing our friendship to faking a romance.
I groaned in frustration, realizing I wanted to see him, that my eyes had been open exactly fifteen seconds and I was thinking about him.
Sadie huffed in my ear and wiggled closer.
Right, she was why Iâd woken up. âAnother half hour. Come on, you know you can hold it.â I threw my arm over her back and snuggled into my pillow.
She. Licked. My. Face.
âAnother fifteen minutes?â I begged. Sleep had become my greatest friend, and maybe, if I was being honest, a coping mechanism that was quickly turning into addiction. In unconsciousness, there were no ankle injuries, no rehabs, no decisions to be made about how hard to push myself and when. There were endless possibilities and zero consequences.
The mattress jostled me as Sadie jumped down, shaking her head and jingling the newly minted tagsâone for her vaccinations and the other with her name and my numberâon her new pink collar at a decibel my head immediately disliked.
âFive minutes?â Was I seriously negotiating with a puppy?
She whined from the door, warning me to get out of bed now or clean up the mess she was going to bless me with.
âOkay, okay.â I forced myself out of bed and shucked off my pjâs, then slipped quickly into my usual morning workout gear, sliding my phone into the side pocket of my leggings. An object in motion stays in motion. Thatâs what my mother always preached, and the Rousseau girls were never allowed to stop moving.
Sadie pranced, and I opened my door as quietly as possible so I wouldnât wake Anne. Sheâd been up late with the planning committee for the Company gala. The Fourth of July was only a month away, and she was in crunch mode.
There was no point tiptoeing down the hall when Sadie took off at a run, her nails clicking against the hardwood as she bounded down the front stairs. I detoured only long enough to snag a bottle of water from the refrigerator, then walked Sadie down the long central hallway, past the dining room, office, and family room to the back door, groggily remembering to put in the alarm code before opening the door.
Sadie leapt across the porch and raced for the grass.
I closed the screen door quietly, then settled onto the outdoor love seat and twisted the bottle open. Hydrate, that was always the first order of the morning. I chugged half the bottle down despite the morning chill and checked on Sadie, who was happily sniffing around the bushes. She hadnât run yet, and always came back when I called her, but our relationship was only a week old, so I wasnât exactly counting on her to be a paragon of puppyhood.
It was beautiful out here, the clouds reflecting the pink of sunrise from the storm that had passed yesterday. Only when Iâd nearly finished the water did I open my phone and take it off Do Not Disturb. Three text messages popped up: two from Eva and one from Kenna.
Kenna: If you donât call me back Iâm going to send out a search party.
It was too early for the guilt that came along with that one, so I opened the next.
Eva: You should def shoot some rehab content tomorrow. People need to see youâre still alive.
Eva: Might be good to correct some misinformation too.
I sighed and clicked on the Seconds video sheâd sent accompanying the message. The app opened on my phone, and a video from a popular dancer started playing.
âSo letâs talk about the four reasons dancers are injured. First, physique.â The video transitioned to a dancer I was mildly acquainted with falling after heâd come back too soon after his third knee replacement. âSecond, technique.â I winced as a dancer inappropriately distributed her weight in an arabesque and rolled her ankle. âThird, mishap.â A pas de deux went incredibly wrong and the man dropped his partner. âAnd fourth, overuse.â
My stomach dropped to the porch as I appeared on the screen, going into the eighteen turns in the Giselle variation. Turn it off. Scroll. Now. It didnât matter that my brain threw out every warningâI couldnât look away, my gaze locked on the train wreck that ended my season . . . and maybe my career. There it was, the second Iâd faltered, lost my focus when Iâd thought Iâd seen him in the empty seat. The video didnât catch the sound of my tendon popping, but my brain filled in the audio just fine as I screamed and my castmates rushed to carry me offstage.
âPrincipal dancer Alessandra Rousseau had already had one Achilles repair, and rumor around the Company is she knew she was injured and went on anyway. That decision may have cost her a dream career.â The video transitioned back to the original poster. âSo what do you think? Was this mishap? Technique? Physique? Or overuse? Let me know in the comments.â
The little witch tagged us.
Like a masochist, I opened the comments.
Ballet4Life97: Definitely overuse. So stupid of her.
Ryandnzx: Could be physique. She looks a little out of shape.
Ballet4Life97: Good point, those costume seams are screaming
Dancegrl6701: A second achilles tear? May as well fill her spot. Sheâs not coming back.
OnPointe34: No shit right? Get out of the way for a corps member
CassidyFairchilde1: She could make it back.
Dancegrl6701: Sure, if she wants to teach. But dance? No way. Not as principal.
NYFouette92: From what I hear, theyâre already replacing her.
Bway11te: how do you throw a career away like that?
ReeseOnToe: Shame. Sheâs ballet royalty. Hope she heals
Tutucutex20: Fucking idi*t Play stupid games and all that.
Bright2Lit: Even if she comes back, sheâll never be 100
WestCoastPointe: Met her once. Pretentious and arrogant
OnPointe34: Really? Figures. Most nepo babies are
WestCoastPointe: Companyâs better off without her. Trust me. Diva.
I closed out the app and fought to breathe through the crushing, sharp pain blooming in my chest. Formal reviews in the Times had nothing on the casual viciousness of the internet.
Sadie plodded up the steps and climbed into the chair, her paw barely missing my thigh as she completely consumed my personal space and made herself at home, turning in the tight space and collapsing across my lap.
I sank my fingers into her fur and drew one breath, then another.
May as well fill her spot. Sheâs not coming back. As hard as I tried to let the comments go, that one stuck an ice pick in my soul and left a mark. Why would Eva send me something like that? Didnât she realize I was already well aware of what people were saying?
âI canât even escape myself out here,â I muttered as my heart rate slowed. Wouldnât matter where I went, the internet could follow. It was one of the reasons I hadnât wanted a damn Seconds account.
May as well fill her spot. Sheâs not coming back.
Yes, I was. It was as simple and as impossible as that. âLetâs get some breakfast.â
I took Sadie inside and fed us both, then hit the gym. The only person telling me what I could and couldnât do was me.
âHey, are youââ Anne peeked in through the open studio door, fully dressed for the day in white linen shorts and a blue polo, holding a small silver picture frame. âWhat are you doing?â She kicked off her sandals and walked in.
I swept my right foot forward back into first position, keeping my left hand on the barre. âRond de jambe. What does it look like?â I repeated the move, tendu to the front, pointing my foot, then drawing it out to the side, then back before bringing it back to first again.
âItâs seven a.m.â She studied the movement of my foot. âHow long have you been in here?â
âStarted my workout at six.â I repeated the move, testing my Achilles with each flex and point of my foot. The pain was minimal, whatever that meant. âCardio on the bike, Pilates machine, everything the doc prescribed.â No demi-pointe.
âTurnout looks good.â She walked over slowly, eyeing me like I was a wild animal poised for flight. âWhat else have you been doing?â
âI warmed up with the fouettés from Swan Lake.â Forward. Side. Back. First. The motions were muscle memory after decades in the studio, but my ankle wasnât quite getting with the program.
âHa ha. Very funny.â She folded her arms. âDo you do this every morning?â
I nodded. âWhile youâre asleep so I avoid the lectures.â
âAlone?â There was a definite purse to her lips.
âSadie keeps me company now.â
The golden lifted her head in the corner in response to her name, then went back to chewing on her toy.
âI thought you only worked out once a day, not twice.â A hint of disapproval slid into Anneâs tone. âYou have to take it easy on your ankle or youâll . . .â She sighed. âTrain yourself into the ground.â
âThis is easy. Iâm used to being in the studio ten hours a day.â I wasnât taking baby steps; I was barely crawling from where I wantedâneededâto be.
âIf you tear that tendon againââ
âI know!â I dropped my hand and yanked off my split-sole slippers. âIâm well aware that if I push and it snaps again, Iâm done.â One. Two. I tossed them at my canvas ballet bag beneath the windowsill as I crossed the studio floor. âBut if I donât push, donât fight to heal, Iâm done too. Theyâll replace me, Anne. Thereâs always someone waiting in the wings. Charlotte danced my part all of five minutes after they carried me off the stage that night.â I snagged my Hydro Flask and my phone off the windowsill, then opened it to Evaâs text message and handed it to Anne.
âYou are irreplaceable,â Anne said gently. âThere is no one capable of taking your spot, Allie. Youâre a once-in-a-decade talent.â She glanced down at the phone. âWhat is this?â
âWatch.â I sat on the floor and stretched my warm muscles between drinks of water, cringing when I heard the content creatorâs voice.
âThis is bullshit.â Anne crouched in front of me. âAllie, tell me you know this is bullshit.â Her eyes searched mine, and when I didnât respond, she scrolled down. âAnd please tell me you didnât read through these heinous comments.â She closed the app and put my phone on the floor. âWhy would Eva send something like that to you?â
âIâm sure she thought it would motivate me to hit the workouts harder. Which it did.â I put my feet into a butterfly stretch, sole to sole, then tugged my ankles toward my torso. âAfter it cut me into bite-size pieces.â
âPeople say stupid shit when thereâs no accountability for running their mouths,â she muttered.
âIt was both physique and overuse.â I released the stretch. âMy Achilles never fully healed after the accident, and I refused to slow down even when it became apparent I needed to. I had every intention of rehabbing post-Nutcracker season, but then Vasily offered me Giselle, and all I could think was . . .â My shoulders dipped.
âYou wanted to make Mom proud. I get it.â
âYeah.â But she didnât. Once Anne quit, the pressure evaporated off her shoulders, only to be redistributed between Lina, Eva, and me.
Now there were only two of us to carry it, and if I broke, it would leave only Eva.
âSpeaking of Mom.â She sat in front of me. âI looked through the pictures in their room last night.â
âFeeling nostalgic?â
She handed me the five-by-seven frame. âSomething wasnât sitting right about Lina.â
âYou mean the part where she hid an entire pregnancy from us? Or the part where she never mentioned sheâd had a baby and given it up for adoption?â I glanced at the photo, noting Momâs and Linaâs bright smiles, their heads leaned together in front of the lit-up poster advertising Don Quixote. âWhat am I missing, here? Mom went to San Francisco to see Lina perform. We all knew that.â
âTheyâre in full winter coats.â Anne sat up on her knees and tapped the glass at the top of the frame, where the poster read March 3-13.
âOh.â I looked over the picture again, searching for any sign of Linaâs pregnancy under the thick puffer jacket and finding none. âShe would have been seven months pregnant.â
âRight.â She took out her phone, pulling up the internet. âAnd I remembered that Iâd been on spring break from NYU that week and Mom wouldnât let me go with her. Said she needed the one-on-one time to get Linaâs head on straight because she was only in the studio company. She was disappointed that she wasnât an apprentice yet, let alone corps.â She turned the phone around to show me the cast for that season. âLina isnât on it.â She flipped back a few programs to the fall. âSheâs here.â Flip. âAnd here.â Nutcracker. âEven thereââLina Rousseau, Studio Company.â Then she disappears. Mom brought that picture home, but Lina isnât listed in the program.â
âThey staged the picture.â My heart started to pound. âMom knew about Juniper.â
Anne nodded. âGet dressed.â