Variation: Chapter 18
Variation: A Novel
RousseauSisters4: dancers should make their own choices about their bodies, especially their feet.
By the time I walked into the house, the anger that had threatened to burn straight through that glass at Quinnâs studio had lowered to a simmer: still hot enough to burn the shit out of someone but controlled.
I walked up the back steps, then quickly dressed in leggings and a sports bra, throwing on a light wrap sweater before going downstairs and waiting, giving me just enough time to type out a quick email to my contact at NASDâthe National Association of Schools of Dance.
âThrow a water bottle near my niece,â I muttered under my breath.
It wasnât long before Hudson pulled in and walked Juniper up the front steps. Sheâd put on a zip-up jacket but still appeared to be in her tights and leotard as I opened the door.
âI know youâre madââ Juniper started.
âGo to the studio.â I gestured to the doors on the right as Anne came in the back door with Sadie.
âHey, youâre back!â Her tone shifted as her footsteps approached. âWhatâs going on?â She reached the foyer, then stared into the studio, her eyebrows rising as she saw Juniper. âSheâs here?â
âShe was taking class with Quinn Hawkins,â I told her, bending to pet Sadie.
âShe was taking class?â Anneâs mouth dropped, and she shot an accusing look at Hudson.
âDonât look at me. I found out this morning.â He hooked his thumbs in his pockets, and I quickly looked away before I got the slightest bit distracted by staring at him. This was not the time or place.
âWhat are we going to do?â Anne asked, unhooking Sadie from her leash.
âIâm going to handle it,â I promised.
Anneâs eyes flared for a second, and she opened her mouth, then appeared to think twice about whatever she was going to say. âAll right. Iâll be in the kitchen.â
A tiny gust of a sigh blew through my lips. I hadnât realized how much I needed her to trust my decision, my agency, until she did.
âFeel free to follow,â I said to Hudson as I entered the studio, finding Juniper standing dead center, picking at her jacket nervously. âYou lied to me.â
Juniper startled, her gaze flying to Hudson in an obvious plea.
He walked by me and leaned back against the wall across from the third mirror panel, then folded his arms across his chest, staying silent.
âYou. Lied,â I repeated.
âI never told you I wasnât taking class, just that Mom wouldnât let me.â She wrung her hands.
âA lie by omission is still a lie.â I would know.
âI just thought if I could take class and compete in the Classic, then one of her reasons for not letting me dance would be gone.â She shifted her weight.
âBecause the girls who place usually get scholarships,â I guessed.
Juniper nodded. âI wasnât trying for the elite levels. Iâm not delusional. But the beginner and intermediates usually score a tuition discount at Madelineâs.â
Next year, right? She had to mean next year.
She twisted, turning toward Hudson. âI went to Uncle Gavin because I knew youâd say no. Working to change Momâs opinion was already pushing it, but taking class would never fly.â
âYou were right. I would have said no. But this discussion doesnât involve me.â He pointed my direction.
âHow long have you been planning this?â
âFour months.â
Sheâd thought she was my daughter at the time, not Linaâs, but sheâd had more than a DNA test in place for this plan.
âAnd you went to Quinn because she was out of town?â I guessed.
She nodded. âShe had some bad reviews. Fine, a lot of bad reviews, but two of her girls and one boy placed last year in the Classic, and I figured Iâd already been learning from YouTube videosââ
âYou thought YouTube was a good replacement for a teacher?â I managed to keep my voice calm. There had been more than enough raised voices in this room over the years, and I didnât need to add to them.
âDonât get all elitist.â She crossed her arms. âNot everyone has access to professional mothers and private teachers and their own studio. Youâre lucky.â
Lucky wasnât the word that came to mind.
âSo instead of heeding your motherâs worries, you went to a poorly rated studio with an emotionally abusive teacher who throws things to get your attentionââ
âShe only does it when theyâre empty, and itâs justââ
âOnce or twice a class?â I finished for her. âAnd always down the line of the mirror during the rehearsal portion, but not when youâre at the barre, right?â
Juniper blinked. âHow would you know that?â
âBecause she learned it from my mother.â The words escaped, and I immediately wanted to snatch them back and stuff them into the dark places of myself that werenât up for observation. My fingernails bit into my palms, and I saw Hudson tense from the corner of my eye. âWhich is ironic considering my mother wouldnât approve of the horrific technique sheâs teaching.â
âMy technique isnât horrific!â Juniper threw her arms down at her sides.
âOut of the three of us in this room, Iâm the only one with the expertise to judge that.â I took carefully measured steps toward her. âAnd you have no business being en pointe.â
Juniper gasped, drawing her head back at the verbal blow. âI worked really hard, and Miss Quinn said I could if I felt ready. You canât tell me that I donât feel ready.â
âI can sure as heck tell you that you have no business in pointe shoes at ten years old.â Heat flushed my cheeks, but I swallowed most of the anger.
She tilted her chin. âThereâs no definitive answer within the community about when to start en pointe. And dancers should make their own choices about their bodies, especially their feet.â
âI donât know who youâre listening toââ
âEva said it in a Seconds.â She threw her arm out, pointing at the photograph near Hudson.
Of freaking course she did.
âSure, because sheâs the youngest and was always angry Mom made her wait, and she likes to say controversial things for views. Get off Seconds.â I breathed, deep and even, and reminded myself that she was ten, and the indignant anger that puckered her brow and clenched her fists was something I knew all too well. Finger by finger, I uncurled my hands.
A figure moved in the mirror, and I glanced over my shoulder to see Anne hovering silently in the doorway, watching Juniper with a mix of surprise and what looked like awe. This was usually the part of an argument where sheâd step in and take charge, but she hung back because Iâd told her to. It made all the difference.
âYou think youâre ready for pointe? Put your shoes on,â I ordered Juniper, then walked back to Anne. âAm I wrong?â I asked quietly.
âNo.â She shook her head, then brushed her curls out of her face. âYouâre absolutely right, and Iâm loving the assertiveness. Sheâs a smart one, and I donât doubt sheâs already back there thinking about how to run verbal circles around you.â
âSheâs Lina.â
A smile slowly curved Anneâs mouth. âSo handle her like you would Lina.â
âLike anyone ever handled Lina.â I scoffed.
She squeezed my arm gently. âBest of luck.â
Lina had constantly argued with my mother. She hadnât been the stereotypical eldest, somehow that personality type skipped straight to Anne, but sheâd definitely been the most outspoken. And she never changed an opinionâeven when she was wrongâwithout cold, hard proof.
Juniper needed data.
She tied the ribbons of her pointe shoes, and I bit my tongue about her particular selection as I made my way back to her. No wonder her feet had looked a little raw at the beach. âYou donât have to stay,â I told Hudson.
âIâm enjoying the show from my favorite seat in the house.â A corner of his mouth lifted.
Naturally, he was standing in the same place where heâd watched me for hours whenever Mom wasnât around. But the last time heâd stood there I hadnât known how he tasted, and now I most certainly did. I shut those memories down and focused on Juniper as she rose to stand on flat feet.
âGo ahead. Show me what youâve got.â
Juniper swallowed, then moved her feet into first position and rolled up onto her toes. âSee?â Her ankles wobbled, and she stepped forward to catch her balance. âIâm fine.â
Anne groaned behind me, voicing my exact feelings.
âNo teacher worth her salt would ever have allowed you en pointe.â I rubbed the bridge of my nose. âItâs Quinnâs fault. Not yours.â
âThatâs mean!â Her legs started to tremble.
âThatâs the truth, and thatâs what ballet is, Juniper. A few gorgeous moments built on a foundation of a lot of stinging truths, not just between you and your teachers, but you and your own body. Iâm not going to baby you, nor am I going to fill your head with false praises that will ultimately get you hurt.â
She plopped back down to her flat feet with a thud. âJust because you got hurt doesnât mean I will.â
Ouch. âAnd here I thought you respected my opinion because Iâm one of the best dancers in the world. Or have you found someone with a higher level of expertise from which to get your advice?â
Her mouth snapped shut.
âArguing with me will not change the fact that you donât have the strength, the control, or the alignment to be en point. Not to mention youâre wearing the wrong shoes.â
âTheyâre Blochs, like you wear.â Juniper folded her arms and pursed her mouth.
Okay, that was kind of sweet, but I refused to give into the warmth spreading in my chest. âAnd hereâs your first lesson: just because another dancer likes something doesnât mean itâs right for you. Youâre wearing a narrow box when you have nontapered toes, and that shoe isnât the right height for the thickness of your foot, which Iâve seen. It could be the right brand, but itâs definitely the wrong model for you. You need to be fitted, Juniper.â
Her eyes lit up. âWill you take me to be fitted?â
âSure, when I think youâre ready. Take them off.â I moved to the barre and did a few quick stretches since it had been a few hours since my morning workout.
Juniper walked over, and I outright sighed at the condition of her feet.
âTake the position by the first mirror panel,â I instructed when she stood in front of the second.
âWhy?â She backed up a few steps to comply. âI thought beginners were supposed to take the middle and leave the ends to the better dancers.â
âTrue.â I nodded. âBut you were standing in Anneâs place. Now you have your motherâs.â
Her eyes brightened, and her chest swelled as she glanced around the space, her gaze skimming over the mirror and the hardwood floor, finally landing on the barre. She took the lower of the two options.
âStill warm from class?â I asked.
She nodded.
âGood. Letâs start. Pliés.â I worked through the basics with her, mirroring my moves to demonstrate while I silently evaluated her strengths and weaknesses.
By the time we were done, sheâd stopped arguing and now stood silently, waiting with expectation in her eyes and a slightly raised chin. âYouâre phenomenal, but I already knew that.â
âYes.â I nodded. âYou can be, too, if youâre ready to listen.â
She glanced over at Hudson, who still stood against the wall as if heâd been built into the support structure of the house, then nodded at me.
âYouâre a beautiful dancer. I watched the entire class, not just barre. And for only having five months of instruction, youâre remarkable, Juniper.â
She smiled wide. âIâm a Rousseau.â
I nodded. âBut talent has to be paired with fundamentals, and you havenât yet developed the ones that make pointe possible. Iâm not just talking about the fact that the bones in your feet havenât developed enough. Please trust me when I say if you continue to do so, you will sprain or break your ankle.â
She sighed, but didnât argue, which I was going to take as progress.
âYou need to work on your foot articulation, need to be able to work each part of your foot, move each toe.â I pointed my right foot, then glided it over the floor in an arc as I swept it in front of me. âThereâs a difference between thatââI moved back to first position, then pointed again and jutted my foot forwardââand that. We do the basics over and over for this reason.â
âWhat else?â Her chin rose another half inch.
âStrength and control. You roll up into relevé, which means you need to strengthen your muscles so you rise in one burst of motion, and then you need to slowly roll your foot down with control, all of which takes time and practice to develop. Your alignment needs work too. Any flaws you have while flat will only be exaggerated en pointe, which leads to imbalance.â
âSo everything.â Her hand fell away from the barre. âI suck at everything.â
âNo.â I moved closer to her. âIâve already told you that youâre remarkable. Youâve only been doing this for five months. Give yourself grace, but check your ego. I just told you why you arenât ready for pointe, not that you suck. You donât. Ballet is a lifetime of development, of never settling for the skills you have now, knowing that you might be phenomenal, but still striving for that unattainable feeling of perfection.â
âAnd fun,â she added. âIt should be fun.â
âYes.â In theory. âAnd Iâm sure next year youâll be ready for the Classic, and youâll be phenomenal because you will have honed your fundamentals. In slippers. Beginners compete all the time in slippers. Both Eva and I did until we were thirteen.â
âBut Miss Quinn signed me up for the Classic this year.â
I somehow kept my face blank. âDid she?â After only five months? What the hell had she been thinking? Juniper would be going up against dancers with years of experience and training. âAs one of the exhibition dancers?â
âNo, in the beginner category.â Juniper rubbed her finger along the barre.
I glanced up at Anne in a plea for guidance, but she put her hands up, looking as stunned as I felt. âOkay, and how do you feel about that?â I asked Juniper.
âI donât want to embarrass myself.â Her voice dropped to a whisper. âI thought that if I was already en pointe, Iâd have a better shot at reaching top twenty.â
At getting hurt, maybe.
âI donât want to pull out of the competition. What do I do?â
I reached for the lone strand of hair that had escaped her bun and tucked it back behind her ear. âI really think you should consider talking to your mom.â
Juniper stiffened. âShe wonât understand. You know she hates ballet.â
âI know she loves you. And I bet she gives really good advice.â
She seemed to think it over, then shook her head. âI canât. If I make the top twenty, it will show her that Iâm good, that I could be as great as you are if she just lets me dance. And by then it will be the middle of August, and sheâll love you too. So, by the time youâre ready to go back to New York, maybe sheâll let me visit you and Aunt Anne.â
Anne took a deep breath and pressed her lips between her teeth.
âEva, too, of course. It will all work out.â
âJuniper . . .â The further we got into this charade, the worse I felt about it.
âI wonât dance en pointe,â she rushed. âIâll do whatever you say if we can just follow the plan.â
My heart clenched as I floundered and looked to Anne for the right answer, the right words.
âHow about we give Aunt Allie a minute to think, and you help me put together some energy bars in the kitchen?â Anne offered. âTheyâre chocolate.â
Juniper glanced between us for a second, then at Hudson. âOkay.â
âExcellent.â Anne led her out of the studio, then closed the door behind them.
âI think we should tell Caroline,â I said to Hudson.
âI agree.â He walked across the studio in his socks.
My ribs threatened to squeeze the air out of my lungs. âIt could mean Juniper wouldnât see us again for eight more years.â
âThis far into lying to her? Probably.â He lifted a hand, then dropped it, as if thinking twice about reaching for me, which was probably for the best considering the fact that Iâd nearly screwed him in a shower the last time heâd touched me. And he wants hours. Days. Nights.
âAnd sheâd pull her out of ballet.â The barre dug into my back as I leaned against it.
âNot sure thatâs a bad thing after what I saw at that class.â He folded his arms.
âNot everyone teaches that way.â Shit, that was defensive. I looked over at the picture of Lina, and my chest tightened another degree.
âWhat are you thinking?â
âLina loved to dance.â I studied her smile, the little lines that crinkled her eyes. âI mean, she really loved it. Sheâd been born a dancer, not told she was one. She woke up in the morning excited for class every day, and she spent more time in this studio than any of us. It was her oxygen, her food. She loved it in a way I never . . .â I shut my mouth so quickly my teeth clicked.
âYou loved it too,â he whispered.
I dragged my gaze from the picture to meet his.
âI was there, Allie. You loved it too.â He cradled the side of my face, and I struggled not to lean into the warmth, not to lean on him. I scrambled for my defenses and came up empty. âYou came alive on that stage in a way Iâve never seen. Maybe not the days your mom harped on you, but the day you danced that routine from Giselle instead of whatever sheâd picked out for you . . . that was love up there, and passion, and excitement. I saw it in your eyes.â
âVariation,â I muttered, dismissing most of his words. âItâs called a variation.â
âFine. Variation. Whatever it was, you loved it the same way she did. If you donât anymoreââ
âItâs not about me.â I stepped out of his hand. âJuniperâs just like Lina in so many ways that itâs uncanny, and if youâd cut Lina away from ballet, she wouldnât have survived it. If Juniper feels that wayâand considering all sheâs done to get around Caroline, she probably doesâthen . . .â I sighed. âLina should be here, but sheâs not, and I owe it to her to help Juniper, but thereâs no good solution in any of this.â
âI know.â He slipped his hands into his pockets. âAnd Iâve done my best to honor the promise I made to Sean that Carolineâs fears wouldnât hold Juniper back, but Iâm telling you right now that she canât go back to that studio. Iâd rather break her trust than watch someone break her down.â
There were two months left before the Classic, and Juniper was determined to compete. âSo itâs either she quits dancing, or goes back to Quinnâs and gets herself hurt, or you tell Caroline, which leads to her quitting by force . . .â I blew out a long sigh. Sheâd never be able to hide attending at Madelineâs, and I didnât know any of the other local studios well enough to send Linaâs daughter there, which left the only viable alternative. âSheâs done with school for the summer? How does she spend her time?â
âLast week.â He studied my face. âSheâs in the local activity program on the days Caroline works, and Gavin and I usually try to grab her when weâre off so sheâs not stuck there until seven.â
I nodded. âWhatâs your schedule like?â
âSuddenly interested in my actual life?â He dared a smile.
Too close. âYou wish. Whatâs your schedule?â
âI do wish. And itâs usually as close to nine-to-five as it gets. I pull four to six twenty-four-hour shifts a month, and I get a couple days off a weekânot always Saturday and Sunday. Why?â He tilted his head, and I absolutely did not look at his mouth.
Liar.
âBring her here.â I pushed out the words before I lost the nerve. âIâll teach her. Weâll just hope she knows her mom better than we do. Hopefully by August Iâve won Caroline over, and at this point . . . in for a penny and all that.â If we were going down, then we may as well do it with giant flames.
His brow knit. âYou mean that? You have time for that?â
âIâll make time.â I nodded.
âShe needs a consequence for going around our backs. Iâm not sure rewarding her with the best private tutor in the world is the right move here.â Two lines formed between his brows.
âWhat do you have in mind that doesnât involve asking her actual parent?â I challenged.
âNot sure yet, but Iâll have to come up with something. Sheâs broken the rules, lied, schemed, and manipulated every single person around her to get what she wants.â His jaw ticked.
âYeah, and sheâs only ten.â I started toward the studio door. âNot excusing her actions, but you know thereâs a label for that kind of behavior in adults.â
âCriminal?â he guessed. âDonât even think reckless. This isnât me.â
âMaybe.â I opened the studio doors. âI was thinking CEO.â