Variation: Chapter 8
Variation: A Novel
PointePrincess50363: That Ballanchine technique hurts to watch. Bring back your sister to show you how to do it right RousseauSisters4
Two days later, I tucked my knees under me in the oversize chair, and stared across the formal living room at Hudson, the ticking of the grandfather clock filling the miles of silence between us as it counted away the late-morning hours.
After Gavin burst in about thirty seconds into our conversation at the bar, weâd agreed to meet somewhere we wouldnât be disturbed. Iâd thought delaying the conversation would give us time to compose ourselves, or at least make it less awkward. I was wrong.
âFive minutes.â Hudson broke the silence.
âIâm sorry?â
âThis might go a little easier if you pretend for the next five minutes that you donât hate me.â He leaned forward on the blue-and-cream-striped couch, and braced his elbows on his knees, ignoring the hot cup of coffee on the coffee table between us. At least one thing hadnât changed in the last ten years; he was wearing a Bruins cap.
âFive minutes isnât going to do it, and I doubt that would make this any less awkward.â
âLetâs give it a shot.â He pulled his phone out and showed me the timer. âTake it five minutes at a time.â
âFive minutes. Fine. I kind of thought youâd be in uniform after getting off a twenty-four-hour shift.â I tugged the sleeves of my sweater down over the heels of my palms. Soon, it would be too hot for my favorites. June was breathing down our necks.
âIf you want to see me in uniform, all you have to do is ask.â A playful smile tugged at his lips.
Warmth stung my cheeks and I quickly looked away. Flirting had been something heâd saved for other girls. âIs Caroline coming?â
âI havenât told her.â His smile vanished.
My spine stiffened.
âFirstââhe held up a pointer fingerââI havenât seen her, and this is the kind of thing you need to say in person. Secondly, sheâs been adamantly opposed to Juniper looking for her birth family before she turns eighteen, but I also feel that Juniper has a right to know things like her medical history, so my loyalties are kind of torn right now. Caroline gets one hint that Juniperâs been huntingâlet alone actually found youâand sheâll lock that girl down so tight supermax would look like a breeze.â
âBecause our family is evil incarnate?â I tilted my head at him and tried not to let the insinuation ruffle my feathers.
âBecause sheâs been terrified someone would come and take Juniper from the time the adoption agency called to place her.â
I bristled. âWe would neverââ
âI know that. You know that. But itâs hard to overrule anxiety with logic.â He curved the bill of his hat and glanced down at the designer rug Mom had paid too much money for. âI figured weâd piece together as many facts as possible, then come up with a plan before going to Caroline.â
My phone buzzed on the arm of the chair, and Kennaâs name flashed on the screen. I swallowed my guilt and hit the Decline button. It was the second time today sheâd reached out, and as much as I wanted her to stop, Iâd probably wallow even deeper into my little nest of misery if she did.
âAnd then we let her decide if she wants to tell Juniper.â And in the meantime, that little girl would just keep wondering. What a shitstorm. I shifted my weight and grabbed the bottle of Smartwater from the end table on my right like Kenna was in my actual ear, lecturing me about hydration. My ankle was sore from the early-morning workoutâIâd pushed hard on the Peloton this morning, then pushed a little too hard by escalating my calf raises to not-quite demi-pointe.
âHave you told Anne?â He lifted his brows.
âSheâs . . . delicate.â I ran my finger over the bottleâs label and debated how much to tell him, how far to let him in. How much did someone change in a decade? Had to admit, there was something ironically poetic to be said about how we were forcing ourselves full circleâfrom confidants, to strangers, and back to whatever this was. âSheâs in the middle of a divorce, and her feelings about children and motherhood . . .â I spoke toward the picture of Anne holding Eva as a baby. âItâs complicated for her right now.â Which was why Iâd scheduled this meeting knowing sheâd be out of the house.
Hudson nodded, looking at the collection of black-and-white photographs in their silver frames on the built-in bookshelves. âYou want to say it, or should I?â
I tracked his gaze to a photo of the four of us in tutus in our early childhood. For the last two days, my mind had scrambled over every prospect and come up with the same conclusion every time.
Juniper couldnât be Evaâs. Sheâd never been out of my sight longer than a week in those years. Neither had Anne. Sheâd left for college the same month Iâd joined the Company as an apprenticeâa full year before I graduated from high school.
âShe has to be Linaâs.â As inescapable as the truth was, I still couldnât wrap my mind around it, couldnât fathom that I didnât know my older sister as well as Iâd thought I had. I ripped my focus from the pictures and found Hudson watching me, waiting for me to finish the thought.
It had always been one of my favorite parts about him. He was decisive, reckless even, when taking action, but heâd always listened to me first, something I hadnât realized Iâd been missing in a house of four kids and busy parents.
âIf Juniper was born in May, then Lina had to have gotten pregnant in September,â I said softly, voicing the thoughts that had spiraled through my mind the last thirty-six hours. âWhich is when sheâd joined the San Francisco Ballet Theater.â
âThe one you wanted, right?â he asked softly, rising from the couch and walking toward the bookshelves.
I pressed my lips between my teeth to keep from denying it.
âYou did.â He glanced over his shoulder, picking up a silver frame that held a photo of Eva and me from the Haven Cove Classic when I was sixteen. âYou told me once that you didnât want to dance in someone elseâs shadow, and since your mother had danced in Paris and London, San Francisco was your number one choice.â
âI was there. I remember,â I finally forced out as I stood, putting down my water and walking around the coffee table to stand at his side.
âWhat changed?â
My gaze darted over the professional pictures, ninety percent of which were taken with us in costume, as though the only moments worth recording for public consumption occurred when we performed. âYou know what changed.â
âLina died.â He slipped his hands into his front pockets. âSo you turned down all the offers you got that day and went with the Metropolitan Ballet Company, like your mother wanted.â
Was that a hint of disappointment I heard in his voice?
âI donât exactly see you in Sitka,â I fired back. That had been our little joke of a dream. Him living in the middle of nowhere, rescue swimming, me in San Francisco, visiting when I could.
âSean died too. Cancer. I chose to come back to help Caroline with Juniper. Did you choose, or was that all your mother, living out her dreams with whichever daughter fit the shoe at the moment?â He folded his arms across his chest.
âSheâd just lost her firstborn. I chose to honor her wishes.â And that came out too defensive. We were still within our first five minutes. âAnyway, I saw Lina at Christmas, but she didnât say anything, or look different. The next time we were together was that summer. Sheâd declined an offer to renew her contract in San Francisco and came home to train with us in June to prep for auditioning for MBC again. She was determined and focused, but she acted normal . . . happy, especially after August auditions. She got the invite to join the Company, and that was what? Two weeks before the Classic?â I shook my head. âI know the proof is in Juniper, but I canât believe Lina would have a baby and not tell any of us. Not even Anne. They were close, way closer than I am with Eva. But unless I have another sibling I donât know about, Juniper has to be Linaâs.â
âIs there a chance Anne knows and never told you?â He rocked back on his heels and glanced out the window, then muttered a curse.
âSure, thereâs always that chance,â I admitted. âBut why would she keep it a secret this long after Lina died? None of it makes any sense.â
âYou have to be kidding me.â Hudson strode toward the entry hall.
âWhatâs wrong?â I hurried after him, my socked feet skidding in the foyer.
He practically consumed the entrance as he threw open the door, but I ducked under his arm to see Juniper drop her scooter in front of the porch steps.
Something in my chest sparked, then flamed slowly, like a campfire started with damp kindling, as Juniper unbuckled her purple helmet and tossed it on the ground next to the abandoned scooter.
âYouâre supposed to be at school,â Hudson lectured. âMrs. Ashbury is going to lose it when she realizes you snuck off.â
Her button nose lifted when she raised her chin at Hudson, and the morning sun caught the copper in her narrowed eyes as she stared him down while climbing the steps. She was fearless and determined and looked more than a little indignant. The flame in my chest spread, and my skin prickled. It wasnât déjà vu. They were all elements of Lina that Iâd recognized as familiar without truly seeing.
Holy shit, Iâd been blind. Juniper looked just like her.
âI sent her an email from Momâs account last night saying you were taking me to an appointment this morning.â She reached the porch and glared at Hudson. âShe has her hands full with the Gibbons twins, so we both know she isnât mourning one less kid in the class.â
âYou have your momâs password?â Hudson lifted his brows at his niece.
Our niece. I stared at her wind-snarled brown hair, the lines of her cheeks and chin, noting the similarities to my sister.
âJuniper0514 isnât exactly hard to crack,â she drawled.
I leaned back, my head brushing against Hudsonâs arm. The contact steadied my feet, but nothing calmed the speed of my heart. Juniper wasnât just a notification on an app, or a discussion to be had, a question to ponder. She was Linaâs very real daughter.
âYou canât excuse yourself from school and run amok!â Hudsonâs tone sharpened. âItâs not safe!â
âRight.â Juniper folded her arms across her chest. âBecause I was in sooooo much danger riding my scooter all six blocks from where Mom dropped me off at school. Mr. Lobos says hi, by the way. He was gardening in his front yard when I rode past. Super scary.â
Even the way she rolled her eyes was just like Lina. How had I missed it? I wobbled, and Hudson braced his arm around my waist before I could make an ass out of myself and fall.
Breathe. You have to breathe.
âNot the point. How did you know Iâd be here? I still have your phone.â His stern voice was at complete odds with the gentle pressure he used to keep me steady.
âI didnât know you were here until I saw the truck.â Juniper motioned to the royal blue late-model pickup in the driveway. âI came to see her.â That hand swung around, gesturing at me. âJust because you took my phone doesnât mean I canât log on to the website when Mom isnât using her computer. It notifies both people when it finds a connection, you know.â She looked at me, her entire expression shifting from fearless to apprehensive as she swallowed, her hands falling to her sides. âYou werenât lying. Youâre not my mother. But it says weâre related. How?â
So much for waiting for Caroline.
I took a deep breath and prepared for the world to change. âIâm your aunt.â
âSo you really have a ballet studio here?â Juniper asked ten minutes later, staring at the double doors off the foyer that kept the studio private.
âWe do.â I handed her a glass of lemonade as Hudson followed me out of the kitchen post-emergency-game-plan-session with his, not that either of us had a clue what to do. I sipped mine, hoping the quick burst of sugar would kill the knee-wobbling feeling of being way over my head. âMy father inherited this house. It was his favorite place to be. But the only way my mother would agree to let us spend summers out here was if he turned what had been a ballroom into a studio so we wouldnât miss the crucial summer months of training.â Reaching past her, I turned the handle and pushed the door open to reveal the L-shaped studio.
Juniper gasped and her eyes brightened in a way mine never had for the space.
âIt looks smaller from this angle than it is, because it runs down the side of the house.â I walked around her and into the studio, flicking the switch on the right as I passed. The lights came on, not that they were necessary this time of day. The twenty-by-thirty-foot space was perfectly lit by the wall of windows that made up the front and southeast faces of the house, and the line of continuous mirrors on the other side didnât hurt either.
The floor shone. The mirrors didnât hold a single fingerprint. There were no water bottles scattered around the windows, or ballet bags tossed against the wall. The speakers built into the ceiling were silent, and yet I was struck with the overwhelming urge to hurry to the barre before my mother caught me slacking.
âItâs beautiful,â Juniper whispered reverently, stepping inside.
âNo shoes.â I shook my head.
âOh, right.â Lemonade kissed the edge of the glass but didnât overflow as she kicked off her sneakers and hurried in, like I might retract the invitation if she waited too long.
âThat means you too,â I said to Hudson as he followed her in.
âI remember the rules.â He motioned toward his shoeless feet with his empty hand. âThough itâs been a few years.â
I sucked in a breath. The last time weâd been in this room together, heâd watched me practice the variation from Giselle for hours in preparation for the Classic. Heâd been my number one supporter and, little did he know, my biggest distraction. After all, who could concentrate when Hudson Ellis was in the room?
You can, because youâre not a teenager anymore.
Juniper walked past me and looked around the corner, where the true space began. âAnd you have a gym too?â
âThe last ten feet,â I confirmed, watching her expressions shift from wonder to curiosity as I caught up. âWhat we do back there makes it possible to do what we can up here.â
âThis is how youâre training away from the Company,â Juniper noted, setting her lemonade on the windowsill and climbing over the Pilates machine at the edge of the mat. âEva made it sound like you were quitting by coming out here.â
I blinked, and my steps faltered.
âShe watches Seconds,â Hudson reminded me in a whisper, reaching my side.
Oh. Right.
âI mean, most ballerinas rehab at their company.â She shot me a knowing look and walked by the free weights stacked along the mirror. It was an accusation and question all in one.
âIâm not quitting.â My spine stiffened at the implication. âI recover better on my own, withoutââcompetitors salivating over my demiseââeyes on me.â I took another sip of the tart lemonade and composed myself. âBesides, Eva knows how the algorithm works. Anything controversial or negative is going to get engagement.â And what she really wanted was followers.
âSo youâll be back for the fall season?â Juniper trailed her fingers along the barre.
âThatâs the plan.â In time to debut Equinox in the fall season, as long as Vasily liked what he saw on the recording and gave us the go-ahead.
âPushing it, donât you think?â Juniper crossed in front of Hudson and me, walking to the pictures that hung on the walls in the spaces between the windows. âIt took Michaela DePrince a year to recover, and you think you can do it in nine months?â
âI had a newer procedure, and eight, since youâre counting.â I followed her to the wall. âIâll have to rehearse at full strength the month prior. And I know the odds. Our family beats them.â
âOur family,â Juniper whispered, looking up at the earliest photograph in the room. All four of us were in tights and leotards at the barre, our hair pinned into buns. Eva couldnât have been more than two. âYouâre all named after prima ballerinas, right?â
âYes. Mom likes to set expectations early.â
âAlina is my mother, isnât she?â Her gaze slid to my oldest sister.
That comment hit me like a punch to the stomach. âWhat makes you think that?â I felt Hudson behind us, watching, but he stayed quiet as Juniperâs gaze shifted to the picture below, where the four of us wore matching leotards and skirts. I was seven, making Lina nineâone year younger than Juniper was right now.
Glancing between the two, my chest constricted. The resemblance was uncanny. I should have noticed the second I laid eyes on her.
âI thought for a second it might have been Eva,â Juniper said, moving down the line of windows, studying each photograph. âThe shape of our eyes is the same, and she doesnât seem the motherly type.â
Grandmaâs eyes.
âThe shape of your eyes probably comes from my dadâs mom, your great-grandmother, and just because you follow someone online doesnât mean you know them.â Though I couldnât exactly argue with her observation.
Juniper glanced my way and paused as though weighing my comment, before turning back to the pictures. âBut you would have known if sheâd had a baby, right? And you looked pretty shocked to meet me.â
âTrue.â I followed her line of sight to the next picture, where only three of us wore costumes, holding bouquets after a performance. Anne stood at our side, smiling for the camera, her arms empty. Sheâd quit at fourteen, when Mom told her sheâd never reach the level needed to be hired by a company.
My pity had rivaled my envy of her freedom.
âAnne doesnât dance, so she canât be my mother.â Juniper sighed at the photo and moved to the next wall.
âThatâs not how it works,â I countered, following her path. âAnd she can dance. Sheâs an amazing dancer.â My defenses bristled at Juniperâs skepticism. âItâs hard to grow up in a house like this. Hard to be great when . . .â My words trailed off before I could disparage my sister.
âWhen youâre surrounded by phenomenal,â Juniper noted, pausing at the next picture. All four of us stood outside the very first Classic, but again, only three of us were costumed. She crossed the final window and stared up at the last picture.
Eva and I were dressed for the barre, teaching a summer intensive, and Anne beamed beside us in a black dress and an engagement ring.
âHow old are you here?â Juniper asked, picking up her glass from the nearby windowsill.
âTwenty.â I couldnât help but notice that my smile didnât reach my eyes, and wondered if Iâd even manage that smile if someone snapped a picture right now. âIâd just come back from the first time my Achilles ruptured.â The last few words slipped into a whisper.
Juniperâs shoulders dipped and she looked up at me, both hands on her lemonade. âMy mother is Alina.â The statement was as decisive as it was laced with sadness.
âI think so,â I answered gently. âWe called her Lina. She was the oldest, and had the brightest smile, and the loudest laugh, and gave the best hugsâthe kind where you feel like love moves through osmosis, like she could infuse you with her joy.â My throat tightened.
Juniper glanced beyond me toward where I knew Hudson was standing. Iâd always been able to pinpoint him in a room without much effort. He was a magnet, drawing everything and everyone toward himâincluding me. Always had been. He and Lina were similar that way. âAnd sheâs dead.â
I nodded, my stomach twisting, knowing I was probably doing this all wrong. There should be therapists here, and Caroline, and a host of other support, and people who knew the right thing to say, like Anne. Instead, Juniper was stuck with me.
And I never knew what or how much to say, which was why Iâd always preferred staying quiet.
âHow did it happen?â she asked.
I swallowed, and the twisting tied my stomach into knots.
âJuniper.â Hudsonâs tone was a warning, and I heard the distinct sound of a phone vibrating.
âShe has the right to know,â I said over my shoulder as he reached into his back pocket and pulled out his phone.
He tapped a button and put it away. Our five minutes had turned into thirty.
âHow did it happen?â Juniper repeated.
âIt was a car accident.â I pushed the words through my dry throat.
âThat part was in the articles.â Her hands twisted on the sweating glass. âBut how did it happen? You were with her, right? Thatâs what the news said.â
âI donât remember.â I lifted my glass, but it was empty, which wasnât exactly helping the throat-closing feeling that always took hold when I tried to recall that night. âI know that we were coming back from celebrating after the Classic. I was told she lost control around a curve, and we hit a tree, and I . . .â It was nothing I hadnât been through in therapy dozens of times to help me move past it, but the words clogged my airway and my heart started to race. âI lived, and she didnât.â
You left her there to die. Momâs voice screamed in my head.
Tires squealed in my memory. Glass shattered. Metal crunched. No matter how much was missing from that evening, the moment of impact stayed with me. And parts of what memory I did have didnât match the official report, which made me question the rest of it.
âAllie,â Hudson muttered, suddenly filling my vision. He traded my lemonade for his. âHere, take mine.â
I gulped his down and concentrated on breathing deep and even. It was another reason for keeping lemonade in the houseâthe sour burst of flavor was supposed to help distract from anxiety attacks . . . or so my therapist told me.
âYou have every right to know,â he said to Juniper. âBut for now, you have to change the subject.â
âIâm fine,â I managed to say, and handed his glass back. âThank you.â I pushed the memories away like they belonged to someone elseâs story and faced Juniper. Her lips were pressed flat, and worry puckered her brow. âYou have nothing to feel bad about,â I promised. âIf I could remember more with any certainty, Iâd tell you.â
âHow can you not remember?â Juniper asked.
Hudson stiffened and his pocket started vibrating again.
âI hit my head so hard that I lost most of my memory from the hours before the crash, and then I didnât wake up for a couple of days.â Good job. I lifted my hair and tilted my head so she could see the scar that ran down my hairline.
âOh. Iâm sorry.â Juniper glanced between Hudson and me as he declined another call. âDo you . . . do you know who my father is?â
âI wish I did, but I donât.â She must have been seeing someone in San Francisco.
Juniper absorbed the news with a slow nod. âWill you tell me about herâmy birth mother?â
I nodded. âIf thatâs what you want. We should probably talk to your momââ
âNo!â Juniper shouted, and Hudson somehow managed to pluck her glass out of her hands before it spilled. âYou canât!â
Hudsonâs phone vibrated again, and I snatched all three glasses out of his hands, pinning one between my forearm and stomach. âJust answer it already.â
He shot me an apologetic look, then swiped the device to answer as he walked a few feet away. âWhat? Iâm not on today. He did what with the dog?â Hudson snapped, and we both pivoted as he twisted his hat backward.
Oh, thatâs exactly what I needed, Hudson Ellis to look even hotter than usual. What the hell was it about a backward baseball cap that made me feel seventeen again?
âAbsolutely not.â He sighed. âIâm in the middle of something, but Iâll be there as soon as I can.â He hung up and shoved the phone back into his pocket as he came our way. âSorry about that. Juniper, we have to tell your mother.â He relieved me of two of the lemonade glasses. âThank you.â
I almost asked if everything was okay, but entwining my life with Hudsonâs more than necessary was a bad idea given our current situation. âHeâs right, we have to tell her.â
âNo.â She shook her head vehemently. âShe would have felt like she had to listen to you if you were my mom, but she wonât let me see you if she knows youâre my aunt!â Panic filled her eyes. âSheâs made it crystal clear that Iâm not allowed to find my family until Iâm eighteen.â
Guess Hudson wasnât exaggerating about Carolineâs position. Heaviness settled in my chest. Finding out that Juniper existed only to be denied the opportunity to know her felt like losing Lina all over again. And if that night had gone differently, it would be Lina standing here, not me.
âBut you already found your family,â I said softly. âSo, if we arenât allowed to know you, then whatâs left?â I looked up at Hudson. âWhere do we go from here?â
Hudsonâs jaw ticked. âCaroline deserves to know.â
âWhat about what I deserve?â Juniper interrupted, her eyes watering. âMy mom wanted to adopt me. Alina wanted to give me up. They both got what they wanted. Why doesnât it matter what I want? Why do I only matter when I turn eighteen?â
âYou matter,â I whispered, my grip tightened on the glass. This was unfair on every possible level.
âOf course what you want matters,â Hudson assured her, palming the bases of both glasses in one hand and stroking his other over her hair.
âGood.â She swiped at her eyes with the back of her forearm. âBecause I want to know my biological family.â
âI donât see how thatâs possible without telling your mother,â I said gently.
âWeâll tell her,â Juniper promised, her gaze darting between us. âJust not yet. She has to get to like you first.â
That was never going to happen.
âWhich would also convince your mother that not all ballerinas are stuck up?â Hudson lifted an eyebrow, clearly on to her plan.
âTwo birds with one stone,â Juniper admitted, lifting her chin.
âI think you greatly underestimate how your mother feels about myââI winced at the slipââour family.â
âYou can change her mind.â Two little lines appeared between her eyebrows, and her gaze shifted quickly, like she was thinking. The smile that spread across her face was pure mischief. âUncle Hudson can bring you to my birthday party.â
Wait. What? My stomach hit the floor.
âThatâs usually classmates and family only,â Hudson reminded her.
âYour birthday already passed.â Sweat broke out on my palms at the idea of being anywhere near Caroline, carrying a secret like this.
âWe always celebrate my birthday Memorial Day weekend so the whole family can be here.â She turned a full-on grin at Hudson, bouncing on her toes. âAnd thatâs why itâs perfect! Bring her as your girlfriend. Mom let Uncle Gavin bring his girlfriend last year.â
My stomach abandoned my body. His girlfriend?
âAbsolutely not.â Hudson lifted his eyebrows. âNo.â
âJust pretend.â Juniper tilted her head at me . . . exactly like Lina. âYouâll get to know my family. Iâll get to know you, and once Mom knows how great you are, weâll tell her.â
I blinked. The scheming, the sneaking out, the general disrespect for authorityâthat was all Lina, too, though I didnât doubt Hudsonâs influence. But faking it so Caroline would like me was preposterous . . . and wrong.
âJuniperââ Hudson started.
Something rustled in the doorway behind us.
âI thought I heard someone in here!â The excitement in Anneâs voice was palpable, and I turned toward her without thinking, Hudson doing the same. She peeked around what appeared to be a sample centerpiece in her arms, a tall vase overflowing with pink-and-green flowers. âInteresting company to . . .â Blood drained from her face, turning her pale as the paint on the doors as she looked directly between us. âLina?â
The vase slipped from her hands and shattered.