Dream Chaser (18 page)

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Authors: Angie Stanton

Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Love & Romance

BOOK: Dream Chaser
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Later, after my body felt beaten to a pulp, I dragged myself out of the auditorium to the bright
Ex
hall when I spotted Rick.

“Rick, wait up!” I called. He didn’t appear too happy to see me. Everyone on the squad had been avoiding me like the plague.

I hiked the strap of my bag higher on my shoulder and rushed over in case he tried to elude me. I could never seem to corner him or anyone else on cheer.

“We need to talk,” I huffed when I caught up with him.

“Hey, Willow.” His eyes wandered anywhere but at me.

“How’s it going? What have you been up to?” He looked like he’d bolt like a deer in hunting season.

“Not much. I’ve been pretty busy.” His grey eyes examined the trophy case across the hall.

“I know everyone’s avoiding me because I quit cheer, and I’m sorry about that. But I could use some help with Jilly.” I moved and blocked his view. More kids left the auditorium from rehearsal.

Rick turned and leaned his hand against the wall and stared at the high ceiling as if checking for water spots. “You can do whatever you want with your life.” He adjusted his arrogant chin.

“Don’t be this way. Can’t we talk?”

“We are talking.” He shrugged.

Normally, I would refuse to push so hard, but my whole life felt off balance. I needed something concrete. I needed my friends back. The show kids wouldn’t accept me. My grades were in the toilet, and something was seriously wrong with my dog. Oh yeah, the whole Eli situation still sucks.

I moved into the space between him and the wall where his hand rested. “Won’t you please look at me?” I let him hear the pleading part of my voice. “Don’t I at least deserve that?”

He glanced at me, so much in his eyes he wouldn’t reveal. Was it guilt?

“Rick, it’s not your fault I fell and it’s not your fault I quit cheer?” I tried to read his thoughts.

A loud squeal erupted across the hall by the
aud
doors. Rick and I looked over. Mike, from the show, carried McKenna piggyback.

After the group passed, I saw Eli. He stood watching me with
Rick
. To Eli, I’m sure it looked like Rick and I were all cozy.

“You’d rather be with them than us,” Rick said, interrupting my thoughts.

“No, it’s not like that.” And it wasn’t.

He glanced around and then leaned his round face close to my ear. “Listen, I’m really sorry I screwed up your catch, but Jilly is still pissed and there’s nothing I can do about that. I
gotta
go.” He pushed away from the wall.

So there it was. Rejected again.

“I guess I’ll see you around.”

“Sure. Whatever.” He shrugged and ambled away.

I looked up and noticed Eli was gone. The wide hallway now void of people other than the night janitor. And me.

Alone again.

 

 

 

Chapter 20

 

“It’s time to bring your performance emotions to the next level,” Tyson explained. Today he wore his hip hugging jeans and a fitted black t-shirt that stretched nicely over his toned upper body. It doesn’t matter if he’s gay or not, he’s damn fine to look at!
“You can be technically perfect and still deliver a flat performance. I want you both to think about what it is you want to accomplish in each song, lyric, and dance. The
way
you deliver each line or dance move needs to show that goal.”
When Tyson explains things he becomes so animated. It’s easy to see how passionate he is about theatre.
“Find a personal experience that fits the arc of the story you are telling.
In this case, a dance.
Know where the shifts in the story are, and change the tone of your performance each time you reach one.” He swung his hands in the air as he spoke.
Eli and I soaked in every word of his sage advice while still managing to mostly ignore each other.
“This dance is about the love of these characters, Zach and Lauren, the challenges they face and how they are going to deal with it. Can they overcome their problems? They want to be together, but Zach’s constant paranoia about Lauren’s safety is threatening to ruin it all.”
“Willow, Lauren wants to love Zach, but he’s making it so difficult. Her heart is his, but she is losing patience and trust in him. The first beat is love and friendship, than it changes to frustration. The next beat is anger, and the dance grows aggressive. Finally, Lauren gives up and surrenders to him, but she has mixed feelings about their future.” Tyson’s voice grew soft and his eyes worried for the characters he had created.
“Try to think of a time in your life where you’ve felt these types of emotions. It can be a different experience for each beat.”
Fear is the only thing I could think of.
Fear of falling.
Fear of Twinkie’s seizures getting worse.
Fear of singing in front of people.
And regret. I had plenty of that too! Regret that I hurt Eli three years ago. Regret that I was too gutless to try to crack through his steely defenses and talk about it. Regret that I hurt Jilly’s feelings.
Pretty sad state to be in.
Not much romantic love for me to draw from. Just fear and regret.
“What if I can’t think of any?” I asked risking embarrassment.
“If nothing comes to mind, make something up that you can relate to,” Tyson said. “For example, let’s pretend the dance is about a juice box.”
I raised an eyebrow at Eli. “Okay, we’re dancing juice boxes.”
“No,” Tyson laughed. “Think of it this way. First beat. You are thirsty. So desperately thirsty that you can barely breathe.”
Eli looked at him like he’d lost his mind. I had to agree.
“Second beat. You want a juice box. More than anything in the world, you need a juice box!
Nothing else matters.
If you don’t find a juice box you might die. It’s all-out panic.” Tyson swung his hands as he spoke
wide eyed
. I almost believed he wanted a juice box. If only I had one to offer.
 
“Third beat. There’s a juice box! You are saved! You will live! How do you feel? Elated? Ecstatic? I would think so. You drink the juice box. It is the most wonderful thing you’ve ever tasted; like
nector
of the gods. Show it. Final beat. You are satisfied; your thirst is quenched. Are you spent? Happy?
Maybe even euphoric?
If you believe it, the audience will too,” he said.
“Do you follow me?”
“Sort of.” But I wasn’t sure that I really did. I studied Eli and thought about what Tyson said.
“She’s looking at me like I’m a juice box,” Eli said. “Not sure if I really care for that motivation.
Tyson gave us his megawatt smile. “You can use any situation that speaks to you to deliver this technique. It could be studying for a big exam. Panic about the exam. Taking the exam.
Relief that it’s over.
Or maybe it’s defeat because you know you failed.”
“I can relate to that.” I thought about my pathetic grades in History and Foods.
Frustration and anger are pretty obvious. All I have to do is think about last week when Chloe and half the cast were such assholes, and I stormed out of rehearsal. That’s probably the most intense I’ve felt in my life.
“That’s good,” Tyson said. “The more real and honest the topic is for you, the more it will be true as you deliver your song or dance. Your audience will be captivated and compelled. When you dig in deep like this, you will elicit an authentic reaction from your partner.”
He turned to Eli. “For Zach, the first beat is his complete and all-consuming love for Lauren.”
Eli glanced my direction and huffed. It would take a Tony-winning performance for Eli to sell that one.
“Then Zach becomes over protective, obsessed with Lauren’s safety,” Tyson explained.
Eli shifted on his feet, and I knew how much he hated that he had to act this way with me.
“As Lauren grows frustrated, Zach deflects her anger and sidesteps her attacks with a steely determination to protect his true love. The final beat is his overwhelming relief that he has kept her safe. Got that?” Tyson said.
“Yeah, I think so.” Eli nodded.
“Great, let’s start this dance from the top, and I want you each to think of an experience where you’ve loved something more than anything.
More than life itself.
Something that brought you so much joy you could barely contain yourself.”
I thought about a turtle sundae, and Breezy as a baby with cute chubby cheeks and huge blue eyes. Then I remembered when I first got Twinkie, Twyla back then, and took her for a walk down our street. I loved her so much, and I couldn’t believe she was all mine. I could think of nothing else.
“Okay? You ready?” Tyson looked from me and back to Eli.
We nodded, and I wondered if Eli was thinking about the time he won a first place trophy at a major dance competition with his jazz solo, or if it was the summer his parents finally gave in and let him go to a month-long summer dance workshop in Chicago.
Tyson stepped back and started the lyrical melody. The notes started dreamy and romantic. My body loved the music and moved to it perfectly, but I couldn’t focus on Eli and think loving thoughts, even if the loving thoughts were about my dog.
Eli did better, except he focused over my shoulder and never actually settled his eyes on me, which was par for the course.

“Cut!” Tyson snapped off the music. “This is not going to work if you two refuse to engage with each other. This has been going on long enough.” He stomped over.
“Would you two stop being so damned polite to each other? You’re either going at each other’s throats or you’re tiptoeing around. Come here.”

I stepped closer, as did Eli, but he did it with a huff. Tyson took us by the arm to center stage and made us face each other standing only four feet apart.

“Look at each other,” Tyson said.

Eli crossed his arms and looked away.

“Eli! Look at her!”

He reluctantly turned to face me.

“You are both gorgeous. Don’t you see it? Eli, she’s got the face of an angel, she smells good and has all those nice girl parts.”

Eli rolled his eyes. I stuck my tongue out at him. Tyson frowned.

“Willow, look at him. He’s
buff,
he’s got that cool hair thing going on, he’s got movie star good looks. What’s not to love?”

Tyson was right. I snuck a quick look and had to agree. Eli was damned hot. We just had so much baggage it was hard to see.

“You two should be in an ad for Abercrombie for Christ sake!
I happen to know you guys used to spend every minute together. And now you act like you’ve just met. Well, jig’s up. The two of you have so much chemistry, it’s oozing out.”
I looked at Eli in confusion. What the hell was he talking about?

“You guys can keep denying it, but it’s there.
You have a couple other kisses in the show, but this is the money kiss, the one that makes the ladies in the audience weep with joy, and this won’t work until you two get past your crap. You need to get together and get comfortable with each other’s bodies. You’re dancers for
pete
’s
sake, and your bodies are instruments to perform emotion at the highest level. You touch in a lot of your dances, but it’s like you don’t feel. You’re just going through the motions and that’s
gotta
end.” Tyson paced as he lectured us.

“A true artist will put his ego aside and see the beauty of another human being Artists take those moments, trust their partner, and show their vulnerability. You need to get together and relax with each other. Spend some time and check each other out.”

I peeked at Eli. Tyson stopped pacing and faced us.

“I want you to get to know the contours of each other. Eli, get familiar with the small of her back, the curve of her neck, look at the elegance of her hands.
Willow,
touch his shoulders, his arms. They are the
power that lift
you. Look into his eyes. They hold so much untapped emotion. Meet him half way. Open up and really look at each other. Learn to find the trust in each other.”

My eyes met Eli’s. Tyson was right. Eli and I both knew it.

“You’re right,” Eli said.

“I’m sorry,” I said. “We’ve been stuck in the past.”

“We’ll figure this out,” Eli told Tyson.

And we would. I didn’t know how we’d get past the barrier, but I knew Eli was as much of a perfectionist, as am I. We would not fail.

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