Variation: Chapter 5
Variation: A Novel
Dancegrl6701: Must be nice to get into every intensive you want.
Ryandnzx: Work harder.
Thirty-three.
I counted in my head as I sat on the ocean floor, my eyes closed behind the goggles, holding tight to the kettlebell weight Iâd thrown in twenty minutes earlier so I wouldnât float to the surface.
Thirty-four. The ocean roared deliciously around me, rising in a crescendo with each wave that threatened to push me to shore before ebbing again. It was the noise that finally allowed me to think, to simply exist beyond the incessant demands of everyone around me, asking when Iâd be back, asking how the rehab was going, asking if I was back at the barre yet.
Thirty-five. Rather than lie, Iâd simply left.
Thirty-six. The water drowned out everything but the feel of my own heartbeat and the beautiful aching need for air that reminded me I was still alive. Each time the pressure drove me to the surface for oxygen, it not only reminded me that my lung capacity was shit after going months without training, but also drove home the inescapable truth that I still wanted to live.
Thirty-seven. For a couple of terrifying months, I hadnât been entirely sure.
Thirty-eight. Damn, itâs cold. I really should have gone with the wet suit. The water was still freezing this time of year, and my skin had progressed from prickling to numb.
Thirty-nine. My lungs burned. I was out of shape. I should be able to hang for at least a minute, if not two, even against the driving waves.
Fortyâ
Something grabbed hold of my waist and pulled, wrenching my hand from the kettlebell, and flooding my veins with terror. My breath expelled in a scream of bubbles and my eyes shot open, looking for a sharkâ
Water rushed by as I was yanked upward through the ten feet of water that separated the sand from the sun. I fought the strengthâholy shit, those were arms around meâhauling my back against someoneâs chest. My lungs shrieked for the air Iâd so recklessly let escape, but the arms wouldnât budge.
We broke the surface, and I gasped for air, then quickly shoved my feet into the strangerâs stomach and kicked, propelling myself out of his viselike arms and into the open water beside the pier. âWhat the actual hell are you doing?â I shouted, turning around to face my attacker once I was a few feet away.
âSaving you!â the man shouted, sea green eyes locking with mine as we rose with a swell and dipped back down again.
My heart faltered.
Hudson? Had I gone hypoxic and started seeing things?
Gravity wavered. That was the only explanation as to why my stomach pitched against the waves, why I suddenly couldnât tell if the sky was above or below me, why my heart couldnât pick a rhythm, why I ceased swimming . . . and promptly sank.
Water rushed over my head.
I startled, then kicked back to the surface as Hudson reached for me. Sputtering at the first breath of air, I batted away his hand. Like hell was I ever going to let Hudson fucking Ellis think I needed rescuing. âIâm not drowning, you asshole!â
Those annoyingly gorgeous eyes of his flared. âAre you sure about that?â
Holy shit, itâs really him. His sandy-brown hair was cropped short at the sides and only slightly longer on top instead of falling into his eyes, but his voice, the way his brow knit, even the fact that heâd jumped in the ocean fully clothed all screamed that I wasnât hallucinating.
âSure about you being an asshole? Absolutely. And Iâm quite certain I wasnât drowning.â The years had carved away the traces of the cute boy Iâd known in his face and left the angles of a fully grown man whoâd become a stranger. A beautiful man with a strong square chin, full lips Iâd never had the chance to kiss, and eyes that had haunted my dreams for nearly a decade. And damn whatever was left of the broken little pieces, but my foolish heart leapt straight into my throat.
âThen what would you call whatever that was?â He motioned toward the water with his head, his arms busy treading water just like mine were. âBecause it didnât look like swimming.â
âWorking on my lung capacity!â How was this even happening right now? âUnbelievable.â Thatâs exactly what this was. Of all the times Iâd practiced what Iâd say if I ever ran into him, this was one scenario I hadnât envisioned.
Every emotion I kept locked tight in a little steel box when it came to Hudson flared to life, flooding me with disbelief, and yearning, and anger . . . so much anger. Thatâs what I held on to as I swam past him for the ladder mounted on the third pylon.
It had been so long that Iâd felt anything but numb that the anger was a blessing.
âWait, you were working out?â He swam my direction while I found the familiar wood and began climbing out of the water and onto the pier.
âWas being the key word there,â I said over my shoulder, continuing the ascent. The sun did little to combat the breeze on my ocean-chilled skin, and my teeth chattered as I made it to the top of the ladder, then quickly scrambled for the towel Iâd wedged between boards so it wouldnât blow away.
âThe water is still in the fifties!â The wood groaned under his weight as he climbed the ladder.
âAnd I have three more months to rehab an injury that should take another six.â I wrapped the towel and tucked it under my arms, more than a little conscious that I wore a completely unsexy black one-piece that was better suited for a swim meet than a chance encounter with . . . well, whatever Hudson had been to me. âAnd who are you to lecture me about water temperature? About anything? Let alone scare the shit out of meââ
âI thought you were drowning,â Hudson repeated as his head crested the edge of the pier.
âSo you said.â I tugged the towel closer. So much for that one revenge fantasy whereâoh my God.
Hudson made it onto the pier, and he was huge. Heâd been a little over six feet when weâd met, but heâd gained at least a few inches and a good forty pounds of what looked to be pure muscle with the way his white Bruins T-shirt clung to his chest and abs as he stood.
âI was trying to save you, Allie!â He had the nerve to look all wounded, like I was the one in the wrong here. âI thought you needed help.â
Save me? After all this time? Anger flushed up my neck, stinging my cheeks with much-needed heat. âYeah, well youâre a little late for that. And you donât get to call me Allie. Not anymore.â
Crap, that came out a little more aggressively than Iâd intended.
His eyes slid shut like he was in pain, and he breathed deeply before opening them again, his gaze momentarily pinning me in place. âBeen holding on to that one for a while, have you?â
A heartbeat passed, then a few more as I stumbled down all the possible avenues this conversation could take. I was too damn tired to fight with himâwith anyone, really.
âAbout ten years,â I finally admitted.
âSounds about right, give or take a few months.â The dip of his wide shoulders almost made me feel bad.
Almost. Then I remembered the hospital stay, and the rehab . . . and the funeral, and the anger overpowered the guilt with glee.
âWhat are you doing here, anyway?â I shifted my weight to take it off my aching ankle. The Achilles repair had been done by the best orthopedic surgeon in the country, but that didnât mean I was happy with how long it was taking to heal, or the rather grim prognosis. I was lucky to already be walking unaided, not that Iâd ever admit that out loudâespecially not to Hudson.
âI live here.â He ruffled his hand through his wet hair, sending water droplets flying, then looked over the edge of the pier, into the water. âAnd there goes another hat.â
âStill making a habit of jumping into the ocean to rescue perfectly safe swimmers?â I ran a hand down my low ponytail, squeezing the cold salt water out of my hair.
âOne, you werenât perfectly safe the first time I jumped in after youââ He looked away from the water, obviously giving up on the hat the cove had swallowed.
âThat was eleven years agoââ I argued.
ââand two, yeah, itâs my job to jump in and rescue people, but I thought Iâd learned not to take my favorite hat.â He dropped his arms to his sides.
ââand Iâm perfectly capable of swimming!â I finished, then blinked. His job? Silence hung between us as his words settled on me. âYouâre a rescue swimmer, arenât you? You made it.â The sixteen-year-old girl inside me stood up and cheered for him, but she was quickly hushed by the misanthrope Iâd become.
âYeah.â His lips quirked upward for a second, and he dripped water onto the pier. I probably owed him a towel or something, given that his intentions had been pure. âAnd youâre a world-famous ballerina.â He cocked his head to the side and searched my eyes. âOr do you prefer Seconds star?â
I huffed. âThatâs all Eva. I just lend her my name and do some of the videos to help her out.â Now we were talking about Seconds? This was officially the most surreal conversation of my life.
âI figured. You usually sought the praise of one person, not multiple millions.â He twisted the bottom of his T-shirt in his hands, wringing out more water.
He did not just say that. Pretty sure my therapist heard that all the way from New York City.
âItâs only one point one million,â I said. âAnd you donât know me well enough anymore to say what type I am.â Pulling my towel tighter, I walked past him on the aging pier, grateful Dad had it built twelve feet wide so I had plenty of room. âYou didnât answer the question, Hudson. Why are you at my house?â
To say Iâm sorry. To explain why I never called. That was the dream, wasnât it?
He followed me down the pier and across the wide platform that had served as the foundation of the boathouse until a storm took it out. âIâm keeping a pinkie promise.â
âWhat?â My eyebrows shot up in disbelief as I glanced back at him.
âI was banking on my niece being wrong, and you not being here, and now Iâm scrambling for a game plan, honestly.â He ruffled the water out of his hair.
âWell, Iâd certainly hate for this to be hard on you.â The sarcasm I shot his direction was strong enough to withstand the waves breaking on the beach as I started up the wooden steps that led to the house, Hudson only a step or two behind me. About halfway up, the ache in my ankle became a throb, and I gave in to the urge to limp. Just a little, though.
âI wouldnât have bothered you except . . .â He drifted off. âAre you all right? Juniperâthatâs my nieceâmentioned you were here recovering.â Was that worry in his tone?
No, thank you.
âI remember her name. Caroline and Sean adopted her that last summer I was here.â Not that Hudsonâs sister had known we were friends, and even if she had, she never would have let me near her baby. I glanced back to see him staring down at my ankle, where two pink scars flanked the silvery one, then continued up the stairs. âIâm fine.â
âYour Achilles? Again?â
âAgain?â I whipped my head around, my wet ponytail smacking me in the shoulder as I halted the climb to stare down at him. âSo you knew?â A whole other kind of scar split open inside of me, leaching scalding, fresh pain from a wound that had never completely healed. âYou knew it had been torn in the crash? You knew there was a crash?â Every worst fear and ugly thought resurfaced. Heâd known. Heâd freaking known, and still hadnât reached out. âAll this time, part of me wondered if you were mad at me for not showing up that night, and thatâs why you left for basic without saying a word. But you knew what happened to me?â His mouth closed in a damning admission of guilt. I reached past the pain for any emotion besides anger, but only found a drowned, watery sense of betrayal that I didnât have energy for. âI think I preferred not knowing for certain.â
âAllie . . .â He winced. âI mean, Alessandraâshit, that doesnât sound right either.â How did he have the right to look genuinely devastated?
âDonât give me that look.â I gestured at his stupidly beautiful face, nearly losing my towel. Of course heâd gotten better looking with age while my body had all but given out on me. I wasnât even thirty yet and I was falling apart. âYou donât get the honor of looking . . . ruined. Not when you apparently straight-up abandoned me. Do you know how many times I texted you? Called you from my hospital bed?â
The blood drained from his face. âThere arenât enough words in the English language to convey how sorry I am, how sorry I have been, and I know thatâs not enough.â
There were the words Iâd craved for so long, and now they didnât matter.
âYouâre right. Itâs not enough. I donât want an apology.â My fingernails scraped against the grain of the banister. âI want an explanation as to why my best friend couldnât be bothered to show up when I needed him most. You had days before you had to report to basic.â
He opened his mouth, then shut it and looked away.
âIf weâd been dating, I would have chalked it up to a really bad breakupâwhich is shitty enoughâbut losing your best friend without so much as a word?â My voice broke. There was no comparable pain. I never let anyone all the way in, but heâd been the closest.
âI was a stupid eighteen-year-old kid.â He white-knuckled the railing, and his jaw ticked. âAnd I made what I thought was the only choice I had, and it was the wrong one. By the time I figured out just how wrong, I was at basic and knew youâd never forgive me.â
My chest threatened to cave in.
âYou were a kid? Thatâs the best youâve got?â Fuck this. Hudson Ellis didnât get to know the depth of how heâd wounded me. I forced the hurt, the sour taste of betrayal, and the dying hope that heâd had some forgivable reason for ghosting me into a mental box and locked it away just like I did the physical pain during rehearsals. I refused to let it touch me. Then I plastered a practiced public smile on my face.
âShit,â he muttered.
âDoesnât matter.â I shrugged, then continued up the last few steps. âMaybe itâs hyperbolic to call us best friends when we were really just a summer thing. That particular summer was over. No need to drag up the past.â The words sounded hollow, but I choked them out. Iâd convinced myself to believe far bigger lies than this.
âYou have every right to an explanation.â
Hold up, was that anger in his tone? I wasnât turning around to look. The faster I got away from him, the better. âI donât think I want one, anymore. Nothing you could ever say would make it right. So, letâs just let it go. Obviously, you were too immature to handle what happened to me. Shit happens, right? Iâm only here for the summer. You should keep busy . . . rescuing people. It will be easy to avoid each other.â The breeze picked up as we reached the top of the steps and walked onto the perfectly maintained grass.
I startled.
A young girl waited for us, her hands gripping a cell phone in front of her petite frame, her brown eyes widening to the size of saucers as her gaze found mine. There was something familiar about the tilt of her button nose, the hints of copper in her eyes, but I couldnât put my finger on it. Had I met her before? At a performance? An intensive?
And what was she doing standing in the middle of my backyard?
I blinked in confusion as Hudson walked past me to stand behind the girl, putting his hands on her shoulders before turning those green eyes on me in an uncharacteristic plea. Hudson Ellis wasnât a guy who pleaded for anything. âIâm here because Juniper wanted to meet you.â
Oh. This was his niece. No wonder she looked familiar. Of course, heâd shown me pictures when she was a baby. Sheâd been a cute one, from what I remembered.
Juniper stared at me and handed him the cell phone. âDid you save her?â She risked a peek up at Hudson.
He kept that beseeching look aimed at me. What? Like I was going to be a jerk to a little kid? Maybe Iâd earned my reputation for being quiet, maybe even a little standoffish, but never mean. Only Hudson brought that out in me.
âI wasnât drowning,â I answered the girl, then retucked my towel and held out my hand. Her uncle might be an ass, but that wasnât her fault. âHi, Juniper.â The corners of my mouth tugged upward as her face lit up. She pushed her windblown hair out of her eyes before taking my hand silently. âIâmââ
âAlessandra Rousseau, I know,â she answered with a toothy grin. âYouâre the youngest principal dancer in the history of the Metropolitan Ballet Company, including your mother, who was a legend in her own right before she retired,â she gushed, her words running into each other as her grip tightened. âYour performance of Juliet was perfection, and your fouettés during Swan Lake last season were epic, and all I want to be when I grow up is you.â
Hudson winced.
What? Like I was a bad role model? I bristled, but didnât let it show. âWell, Iâm not much of a dancer right now, but thank you.â Pretty sure she was cutting off circulation to my fingers.
She shook her head with confidence, sending her locks flying again. âYouâre just injured. Youâll be back by next season.â Letting go of my hand, she waged war with the wind on behalf of her hair and lost.
âYouâre very kind to say so.â Crap, did Hudsonâs niece have to be the sweetest kid ever? âIâm guessing youâre a dancer? Is Mrs. Madeline your teacher?â
âNot exactly.â Her teeth bit into a chapped lower lip.
I glanced up at Hudson and immediately regretted it. That face, the way he looked at me like he knew me underneath the years of layers Iâd worn for everyone else, cut right through my defenses like that kettlebell through the water, and I hated it. Whatever string had tied us together all those years agoâfriendship or something that could have been moreâit had been unraveled to a thread, but was still there, as annoying and certain as physics. Time to snip and get it over with. Closure and all.
âThis is where it gets awkward.â His focus bounced over my features like he needed to memorize everything in detail in case this was the last time he ever saw me.
âOh, weâre just now entering awkward territory?â I arched a brow.
âPoint taken.â The asshole bit back a smile. âGo ahead and ask.â Hudson tapped Juniperâs shoulders. âI did my part and got you here, but she canât say yes if you donât ask.â
Juniper looked up at him with the kind of trust Iâd once given him, and I couldnât help but melt a little and worry a lot. I knew what Hudson did with trust.
âSo, Juniper,â I said, clutching my towel and crouching to her eye level, âwhat is it youâd like to ask me?â
Her gaze swung to mine, little flecks of copper catching the sunlight, and she took a big breath. âI want you to convince my mom that ballerinas arenât all horrible people.â
Okay, then. âIâm sorry?â
âShe thinks theyâre all spoiled rotten, and vicious, and meanââher head bobbed with every accusationââand that if I do ballet, Iâll become a stuck-up snot with body issues just like the tourists,â she blurted, her cheeks turning pink. âNot that I think youâre snotty! I know you arenât.â
âUmm. Thanks?â I stood slowly, my heart sinking at the thought of breaking this little girlâs. âLook, Juniper, Iâd love to help you convince your mom, I really would. But as great as she is and as much as she obviously loves you, unless something drastic has changed in the last decade, I have the wrong last name for the job. Sheâs not . . . overly fond of Rousseaus.â
Caroline had loathed us all, especially my mother.
âNo, itâs just your little sister she hates,â Juniper rushed. âEva, not you.â
Hudson groaned, his eyes sliding shut momentarily.
âWell, thatâs comforting to know.â I pressed my lips in a line and fought the irrational urge to laugh, something I hadnât done in months. âEva can be an acquired taste. Either way, Iâm afraid that Iâm the wrong person to ask. Youâd have far better luck picking a dancer from a local family to help you convince her. And you probably need a towel.â I aimed that last part at Hudson, backing up a step and preparing to turn toward the house. Anne was due back from her appointment any minute, and sheâd freak if she knew Iâd been in the ocean alone without a wet suit.
âIâm used toââ he started.
âNo, it has to be you!â Juniper shouted at me, panic pitching her voice higher as she broke away from Hudson. âYouâre the only one sheâll listen to! Not just because youâre the best, or the nicest, but because if you tell her I should dance, sheâll let me! Sheâll have to!â Each word grew more frantic until she was practically shouting.
âI donât have that kind of power,â I said gently.
âJust listen to me!â she begged. âSomeone has to listen to me!â
An ache bloomed in my chest, pressing tight against my ribs. How many times had I wanted to scream the very same thing?
âJuniper,â Hudson lectured softly, but the girl lifted her chin in the air and marched toward me.
âIâm listening,â I assured her. âWhy are you so certain your mom cares what I think?â
Juniper swallowed and glanced back at Hudson, who looked as confused as I felt, then locked her big brown eyes on me. âBecauseââshe straightened her shouldersââyouâre my biological mother.â